A few samples of my work. You can find more in the other sections of the site. Please note that all work is protected by copyright. Contact me to discuss licensing if you are interested in using any of my pieces in print or online.


Doing meat differently

January 14, 2013   3:32 pm

Filed under: Blog,Portfolio,Radio — Tags: , , , , , — Phil @ 3:32 pm

A couple of years ago, I was sent out to interview John Duynisveld of Holdanca Farms. He’s a research scientist with Agriculture Canada who grew up on a farm, and who farms himself. On his land in Wallace, in northern Nova Scotia, he raises pigs, cattle, lambs, turkeys, and lots and lots of chickens. (He also has a pretty sweet-looking and very effective guard llama.)

After meeting John and spending some time on his farm, I became a customer, and much of the meat my family purchases now comes from him.  Here is my radio documentary (it’s under 10 minutes) on how John raises and markets his meat, and why he’s eschewed traditional approaches.

Raising the bar in Hammonds Plains?

August 8, 2012   8:11 am

Filed under: Blog,Portfolio,Radio — Tags: , , , — Phil @ 8:11 am

I was on Information Morning recently, talking about changes to the business culture of the Hammonds Plains Road.

Over the last decade, I’ve watched as the Hammonds Plains Road, in the western part of the Halifax Regional Municipality, has changed from semi-rural to sprawling suburban. The area is deceptive to drive through. There’s one main artery (which residents consider woefully narrow to serve their needs) and when you travel along it, you could well think you’re on any semi-rural secondary road. You pass a school, a couple of gas stations, a few small strip malls.

As you get closer to Bedford, it’s more clearly suburban — four-pad hockey arena, RIM customer service building, more visible density. But for much of the road, all you see on either side is trees and spaced-apart homes — with little indication that beyond them lie miles and miles of classic suburban sprawl: twisty subdivision roads, cul-de-sacs, and those generic subdivision names that could be anywhere. People identify where they live by their subdivision. You don’t live in Hammonds Plains, you live in White Hills (located in one of the oldest Black settlements in the province), Kingswood, Highland Park, Voyageur Lakes, and so on.

I’m fascinated by one particular spot on the road. For years it housed a convenience store called Chrissy’s Trading Post. Chrissy’s eventually closed, and since then a succession of pizza places have come and gone — each seemingly identical to the last. I keep wondering what the new business owners think is going to be different for them.

Farther up the road, there was a long-standing bakery called M&S Foods. It closed down a year or so ago, and we watched as somebody sunk a huge amount of money into renovating the place. The new business is called Edible Matters, and it finally opened in July. It’s more of a high-end cafe/eat-in/take-out kind of place. Sandwiches will run you over ten bucks, and you can buy items like homemade chicken stock and preserves to take home. I wondered if they stood a hope in hell of making it here, but also if the business was on the leading edge of a trend of more urban-style boutique-type businesses coming to Hammonds Plains. There’s a small cluster of them now, and I headed out to interview a couple of the owners, including Chris Burton of Edible Matters.

You can listen to the results here, on the website for CBC Radio’s Information Morning.

Little Free Library

July 25, 2012   11:42 am

Filed under: Blog,Radio — Tags: , , , — Phil @ 11:42 am
Diane Buckle

Diane Buckle and her Little Free Library

Diane Buckle of Indian Harbour, Nova Scotia, is steward of the province’s first Little Free Library. I first noticed it while driving by on the way to Peggy’s Cove, so I stopped in to chat with Diane about it.

The Little Free Library movement started in Wisconsin and has now gone international. Diane’s library (#1,955) opened in June. It was built for her as a birthday present by her husband, Jim.

I spoke with Diane about the library for Information Morning on CBC Radio, and you can listen to the interview here.

More Boundary Rock

June 23, 2011   12:17 pm

Filed under: Blog,Radio — Tags: , , , — Phil @ 12:17 pm

The Boundary Rock in 1899

If you missed it, you can hear my radio documentary “The Search for Boundary Rock” here, on the Atlantic Voice website.

The Boundary Rock, marking the meeting of counties in southwestern Nova Scotia, was once a significant landmark. But, as wilderness traveller Bob Johnston says in the documentary, “It’s fallen so far out of folklore that nobody even knows where it is anymore.”

If you have listened to the documentary, you’ll know we found something that had us baffled. Well, Bob Johnston, the man who put 10 years of research into finding the rock, has a theory he shared with me — that the position of the flagging tape was coincidental. Here’s Bob.

You know, rocks back there are as big as a house, ugly, and made of granite. Not something that you need to flag with tape to draw attention to it. They sort of stand out on their own. And people that travel back there are creatures of habit. They normally mark rocks with spray paint. An ugly habit, but I have seen it done many times.
In my humble estimation you found somebody’s snowmobile trail. The Tobeatic is laced like a tennis racket with them. You see, the snowmobilers love to run back there. And their favorite targets are the “Indian turnpikes” (eskers and ridges), followed by lakes and barrens. Many times while travelling I have come across trail tape and markers that just didn’t make any sense, until I got curious and tried to figure them out.

This is normally how the snowmobile thing works:They will cross a lake and leave its surface at a prescribed point. At the first oppertunety they will get back on a ridge or barren so they can get rolling again. The eskers are easy to follow, you just stay on them. But clearings and barrens are a different bird. You have to know where to enter and exit them to hit the next part of the trail. This is what I propose you found with the trail tape. You really get a good incidence of this on the barrens between Moosehide and Sandbeach lakes. The portage trail runs top to bottom, but the flagging tape runs left to right. Also up on Stoney Ditch lake, the portage trails are at the upstream and downstream ends of the lake, but on the right side of the lake there was trail tape marking where the snowmobile trails left the lake.

Search for Boundary Rock

June 16, 2011   2:17 pm

Filed under: Blog,Portfolio,Radio — Tags: , , , , , — Phil @ 2:17 pm

How does a massive rock disappear?

The Boundary Rock was once a southwestern Nova Scotia landmark. Hunters and fishermen had their picture taken by (and on) it. It even appeared on a postcard. But sometime over the last century, its precise location seems to have dropped out of our collective memory.

In my latest radio documentary, The Search for Boundary Rock, I join Paul Maybee and a group of four others, as we head into the remote Tobeatic Wilderness area for a week. Our goal: to find the rock and drag it back into history. This is Paul’s third attempt. But this time, he’s far better prepared than he’s ever been. With the help of experienced trekkers — including Bob Johnston of New Minas, who has spent 10 years researching the Boundary Rock — Paul is convinced we can find it.

The documentary first aired on CBC Radio’s Maritime Magazine (now called Atlantic Voice) in June 2011. You can listen to it here.

 

Below is a selection of my photos from the trip. Click anywhere to be taken to the full set on Flickr.

www.flickr.com

Friends of Redtail succeed in protecting forest

December 13, 2010   3:24 am

Filed under: Blog,Radio — Tags: , , , — Phil @ 3:24 am

In the fall of 2009, I spent some time with  The Friends of Redtail.They are a citizens’ group who were fighting to save several hundred acres of forest in Pictou County, Nova Scotia from being clearcut. The Friends of Redtail had a vision that went beyond simply buying this land in order to protect it. People I interviewed repeatedly referred to “a new ethic” of land ownership.

My half-hour radio documentary on the Friends of Redtail aired as the deadline for purchasing the land was looming — with them far short of their financial target. Eventually, they gained an extension from the company, and this week announced in an email that their efforts have paid off:

Today Friends of Redtail Society has officially become guardian—and student—of 313 acres of forestland, waterway and life giving habitat. This is a momentous day in a journey that began one August day in 2006. This is a day of reflecting, a day worthy of marking and celebrating.

You can listen to my documentary here. It first aired on CBC Radio’s Maritime Magazine in December 2009.









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