Monday, October 18, 2010
My before 30 list
1. Own a dog
2. Visit Berlin
3. Travel in Asia
4. Create my own organic garden
5. Bake my own bread
6. Make a piece of clothing and an accessory
7. Run a marathon
8. Become fluent in a second language
9. Live in a foreign country (hello Germany!)
10. Ski at one of the top 10 ski resorts
11. Try snowboarding
12. Become a better painter/drawer
13. Go skydiving
14. Learn to meditate
15. See Melrose Abbey in Scotland
16. Visit the Isles
17. See the Great Barrier Reef
18. Read 25 Classics
19. Become a good, healthy cook
20. Live in a fun 1920's flat
21. Bike to work everyday
22. Go to a rave
23. Go on a local diet for 30 days
24. Give up processed foods
25. Visit wineries across Canada
26. Live in residence
27. Bake Quiche
28. Go camping with friends
29. Go quadding
30. Live in B.C.
31. Go scuba diving
32. Have a hot tub
33. Take massage classes
34. Run my own cafe
35. Go paragliding
36. Become a morning person
37. Go for morning runs
38. Fly in a hot air balloon
39. Try being a vegetarian for at least a month
40. volunteer abroad
41. Grow lily of the valleys
Yes, some of these are AWEFULLY ambitious, but they should be.
I'm trying to think of some smaller things that would be easier to do in the next couple of year, but my mind works in grand ways.
One major thing that's changed is that I am no longer moving to Vancouver, but instead I will be studying in Germany in January!!
I am so very very excited, and I thought I would revive this blog to record my adventures there. I have just been accepted by the school, and soon I will have to pick my housing and my courses.
My to do list for Germany:
1. Buy plane tickets
2. Pick out courses, and apply for transfer credit
3. Get copies of application stuff to the abroad office
4. Get a Visa
5. Get Housing in Germany
6. Get READY TO GO!!
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
Dream Home
I think this kind of describes me as a person actually... a person wishing to be somewhere between a hippy and a chic urbanite professional. Well I can dream...




I don't remember where I got all of these photos from... they've been saved on my computer from god knows where on the internet. Specifically though, I love pictures from From Moon to Moon and Apartment Therapy. If I have pictures here that belong to you, and I haven't labelled them, it's not on purpose and please let me know.
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
I should be studying
Yep, I wasn't lying. If you thought this was morbidly fascinating and curiously intriguing at the same time here's another, that I won't post but you can peruse: http://www.etsy.com/view_listing.php?listing_id=22893385
Because it's awesome in a painful sort of way
Anyway, my favourites list has 42 pages. There are 20 items on each page, and I did the pitiful math.. but I won't tell you. Of course if you can multiply it's not a secret. But I find the greatest things! Such as these turtle coasters and this garden gnome:
Sunday, April 4, 2010
New Bike!
I've always wanted a bike like the one that I rented and rode around on in Amsterdam (and nearly died many times on). Never ride over tram tracks in Amsterdam- more often than not your tire will get stuck, and you will find yourself facing an oncoming tram with traffic on either side :)
That said, riding that bike around was probably the most fun I had in Holland, and I've been yearning for a coaster brake, high handle bar bike ever since. Why is it that everyone in my city buys mountain bikes?? Where are all the pretty cruising town bikes?
So this is my lovely new bike!

I knew it was the one for me immediately. I mean, it's called THE AMSTERDAM from Electra. The salesperson tried to sell me on the female version, but it didn't ride as nicely as the men's somehow... and the handlebars were way too low- they actually bumped my legs when I went to turn. Since the bikes only come in one size, I had to go for the men's, which was no big sacrifice. Because I love him :) Yes, the bike is a him and his name is Bas (a Danish name I'm fond of, pronounced Boss). I realize that giving him a Danish name sacrifices a part of my Dutch dream, but eh so what...
Also, I know that it's not terribly frugal or eco-friendly to get a new bike, but hopefully Bas will last a good long time, save the world a bunch of emissions, and save me a bunch of money on buying a car or riding the bus. So he'll make up for it.
Here's the female version. It's got a nice little dip in it doesn't it? Very pretty. But apparently being 5"7 makes me too big for a female bike.
To wrap up, I think I would like to give a little narrative as to why I felt I needed a new bike (and asked for it, not really expecting to get one). Firstly, my old bike is older than I am, and fairly unsafe. The wheels fell off unexpectedly (I'm serious), no matter how much I tightened them, possibly because I need to work on my arm strength. And every third rotation the chain skips.. or something. On occasion this slip has bumped me so bad I've nearly crashed. So my father told me that I wasn't allowed to ride it anymore until he fixed it; this was the summer before last. Last summer I wanted to ride my bike to the gym and back, and this was more or less the conversation that expired:
Me: Hey Dad, did you fix my bike? I'd really like to ride it, but I can't seem to find it.
Dad: Oh that, well you never rode it. So I fixed it and took it the lake.
Me: I didn't ride it because you told me you had to fix it first... Any chance it's coming back from the lake?
Dad: Nope. You don't ride it enough.
Tadah! Anna needs a new bike. I'm really happy that my parents did this for me, I can already tell this bike is going to be my baby this summer and in the new school year. Hey, everyone needs an LBB- Little Black Bike :)
Thursday, April 1, 2010
Good Guide
Good Guide is great for looking up products (cosmetics, cleaners, breakfast cereals, desserts, etc.) and seeing not just how they rate up as far as health, but also how their companies score on eco and societal friendliness. They rate each company on things like energy efficiency, corporate ethics, and labour ethics. This is a wonderful tool for me- I can now truly support companies that match my values!
So far my favourites are quite predictable:
burt's bees, kashi, silver hills bakery (mmm Squirrelly bread), nature's path
But the terrible raters were not so predictable. Weight watchers traditional grains bread, for instance- a health score of 0. Icky Acesulfame for sweetening (according to medicinenet.com, this kind of sucks as far as living a long life is concerned). Oh and the company is crap in the environment and social categories.
Anyhoo, Long and short of it is that I have wasted a lot of time on this site. It's fun, you just look around the house and type products into the database, and shock your stepmom with how likely it is to die from everything in the house :) No but really, I am not that morbid or paranoid, although I may never eat wonder bread again.



