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First time playing Ticket to Ride: Rails and Sails

The PolyBlog
December 30 2021

Jacob, Andrea and I really enjoy board games, or well, any interactive games really. Dice, cards, board. We have quite a few. Each Christmas, I usually add a few more.

This year, one of our additions was Ticket to Ride: Rails and Sails. If you haven’t played a Ticket to Ride game before, it’s relatively simple. You have a board with a whole bunch of train routes laid out. For example, the classic edition has North America with tracks running from the East Coast to the West Coast, with lots of stops in between. Going from New York to Los Angeles, you’ll probably pass through about six other cities. Each “segment” is made up of 1-6 train car lengths, and a colour…so if you want to go from New York City to the next segment, that might be two black train cars long. If you pick up two black train cards, you can play them and claim the route — putting two of your train cars on the spaces. The goal is that there are a bunch of “ticket” cards that tell you to go from Vancouver to Miami, or El Paso to Knoxville, and if you complete the route, you get the points on the card. You take turns collecting cards and building routes, while trying not to get blocked by someone who takes one of your needed segments. It’s fun, but can be a bit repetitive. Some people add some house rules, but we tend to play standard when it is just the three of us, with a small tweak to the rules to make it less frustrating.

The rails and sails game, by contrast, uses the entire world as a map, or at least an old version of the world with old world or local names. But when you reach a port city, you stop building train networks and start building ship networks. So if you want to go from Marseilles to New York, you have to go through Edinborough, as that’s where the ship lanes go. And then take a train down to Marseilles.

It was a LONG game today. It wasn’t a lot more complicated, but it did change the dynamics and strategy for playing. But there are also a LOT of pieces to build networks with (both rails and sails), so it takes a long time to trigger the end of the game. We might use some house rules to shorten that time in the future, but it made for a much more lively game and was generally less frustrating but also less competitive too. There were few blockages, with really only 1 minor about mid-game and 1 major one near the end. In both cases, Jacob took a route that I was about to take, causing me to have to re-route considerably. There were a few quirks that didn’t quite work right, but that was also because we missed a rule that allows you to use wild cards as ships, not just trains.

Definitely a winner, with the only real complaint being the length. The rest is just noise. I’ll take the win — for buying the game. The winner for the ACTUAL game was Jacob by a considerable margin.

Posted in Family | Leave a reply

Home again, home again

The PolyBlog
December 29 2021

When I was young, that was a phrase my mother used to say regularly. We’d get home from a trip to the cottage or Belleville or simple errands, and her or my dad would say “home again, home again”. Sounds simple enough, yet it has been weighing on my mind over the last few years.

Where is my home?

Jacob finds it funny that when we go to Peterborough, Andrea and I often refer to it as going home for the weekend. Even going to the cottage sometimes gets shortened in similar phrasing. But of course, the cottage clearly isn’t our home, and I’m not going to my “ancestral home” physically, although Andrea’s parents live in the same house she was in for high school. So it’s certainly familiar to her. But is it “home”?

When I moved out from my parents’ house and went to Victoria, home was still their house. Perhaps less so, sure, as it applies to everyone who moves out and knows they will never return permanently, but it was still “home” more or less. Residence certainly wasn’t, nor the basement apartment I rented in Victoria. I lived in Vanier, Sandy Hill, Carlingwood x 3, and Arlington Woods. None of them ever felt like “home”.

When my dad passed away, my parents’ house stopped feeling like home, although it was not completely related. More like a gradual transition over many years that phased out after he passed. Andrea and I rented a place on Parkdale for a couple of years, but I don’t know that it ever felt like home. It was just where we lived.

Even Roundhay, the first house we bought, didn’t entirely feel like home. We brought Jacob home there, he spent his first year roaming there. He played in the cupboards, explored, scooted, laughed and cried. When I look back, I feel something about that house, a bit of nostalgia, but it didn’t feel like home. We moved to Centrepointe, and we’ve been here a fair while now. Most of Jacob’s life, in fact. Yet I haven’t often felt like it was home so much as the house we lived in.

It’s a hard idea to share and convey. After all, I feel anywhere I am with Andrea and Jacob is home. They’re my home, not a building, right? And that holds with the best wisdom of psychology, that separating from your parents, leaving the nest, is not about leaving their house but about moving away from their span of control. Leaving them, not leaving the home.

Yet that is not entirely true. There is a physical component somewhere in there. And as I drove back to Ottawa today, I felt it. Maybe it’s a side effect of COVID, that I’m spending so much time here now, that the sense of “other” identity one might have from a workplace or anywhere else is generally gone. I work, live and sleep here. I have my personalized office. It’s where Jacob and Andrea are, most of the time.

I went home for the holidays and then I came home afterwards. Home again, home again.

Posted in Family | 4 Replies

2021 in review — volunteering

The PolyBlog
December 18 2021

I struggle to maintain a good perspective on my volunteer work in the last year. I count my HR guide as part of that, and that went well. But for astronomy, all of the star parties were “off” due to the pandemic and I did very little on that front, including transferring lead to someone else. I also failed big time on a large project for RASC, and that one haunts me a little still.

For RASC, overall, I tended to finish stuff off and back away. By March, all of my duties will be kaput.

I’ll still be involved with AstroPontiac, but not much else at that point. I just need to hunker down and focus on myself.

I did some good work at least for the National committee, and maybe that’s good enough for now.

Posted in Health and Spiritualism | Leave a reply

2021 in review — writing

The PolyBlog
December 18 2021

I did NaNoWriMo this year, and pumped out 50K words on the HR guide. I’m going to do some more writing over the holidays and hoping to launch in early 2022. That’s good progress, albeit much later in the year than I originally hoped.

I also hoped to do some other fiction writing, but I didn’t make a lot of progress on that…a few chapters here and there. I’m happy with the overall increase for the websites, and bumped up my number of reviews overall. Not as many as I hoped, partly as they are far too detailed in their present form. I need to find some shorter formats for the new year. I did, however, do a fair amount of planning in the year.

Posted in Health and Spiritualism | Leave a reply

2021 in review — computers, media and websites

The PolyBlog
December 18 2021

I survived a major catastrophe early in the year on the website front, but barely. Still, it’s still alive. Another crash happened in early fall, and I escaped relatively unscathed due to processes and backups I put in place earlier in the year. Things are much more stream-lined now, and I made some progress on my photo galleries but not in the way I originally expected. I’ve also stepped back from it for several months.

Yet at home, I don’t feel like I have a good setup for backups and usage across computers. I am doing better with OneDrive on two machines, and a bit more with other PCs, but I need to do a full backup soon.

For media, I got an Apple TV and I love it. I expect I may have to give in and get one in the basement too. I don’t have music well setup yet, but I feel like I turned a major corner on streaming.

Posted in Health and Spiritualism | Leave a reply

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