POST 4 OF 7: SHOW-AND-TELL

This is Post 4 of 7.

6) SHOW-AND-TELL

Exclusively on Zoom, we’ll open the floor to club members who have “fancraft” projects to showcase!

7) GALLERY: MORE PHOTOS TO INSPIRE (RE: WRITING CHALLENGE) 

For folk not on Zoom with us, today, we offer, as an alternative to our Show-and-Tell, a few more photographs of those otherworldly sites and attractions that we hope will inspire from the writers among us a work of short genre fiction. (See today’s Post 1 of 7, item “4”, for all the details regarding our Writing Challenge.)

Devon Island and the Haughton Impact Crater, Nunavut

The Cheltenham Badlands, Caledon, Ontario

Hopewell Rocks, Hopewell Cape, New Brunswick

The Crooked Bush, Alticane, Saskatchewan

Le Grand rassemblement, Sainte-Flavie, Québec

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UFO Landing Pad, St. Paul, Alberta

The Moonbeam Flying Saucer, Moonbeam, Ontario

Spotted Lake, Osoyoos, British Columbia

Abraham Lake, Kootenay Plains, Alberta

Bear Rock and the Bear Rock Sinkhole, Sahtu Region, Northwest Territories

Akshayuk Pass, Baffin Island, Nunavut

Our next post will be up at 3:30PM; we’ll be asking, “What are you reading/watching?”

POST 3 OF 7: THE BREAK—NEWS, DISPLAYS, RAFFLE PRIZES

Time for the break! Grab a bheer, and read up on the latest club news, admire the model displays, and check out the raffle prizes! 

WARP 111 was reviewed in Guy Lillian’s TZD.

NB: Guy works from a template, hence the credit going to Cathy rather than Danny and Val. It should be correct for the next one! To view WARP 111, Click here.

Once upon a time one of the purposes of SF clubs was to put forth fanzines featuring work by the club members – Minneapolis had Rune, LASFS Shangri L’Affaires, New Orleans Nolazine. North of the border the practice still reigns,with excellent Warp, edited by the better-than-excellent Cathy Palmer-Lister. Class act: friendly, attractive, witty, inclusive. That could be either the editor or the genzine, but I better cut it out:it reads like I’m pitching woo. Anyway, a beautiful antique-ish cover by Ingrid Kallick leads to a brief lettercol, club news, and Keith Brathwaite’s anguished memorial to his friend and fellow MonSFFAn, Sylvan St-Pierre. Fan fiction and a good essay on “The Cold Equations”, one of SF’s most controversial and enduring stories, follow, as do a slew of decent genre reviews by Braithwaite. {Yes, I loved A Quiet Place II; no, I haven’t been able to see the “Zach Snyder cut” of Justice League [which I both fear – I loathed what Snyder did in Man of Steel – and anticipate] and never heard of The Nevers.) Donny Sichel’s report on the World Fantasy Con reminds us that the event will return to New Orleans in the near future … hopefully a near future where COVID is contained and Cathy & Co. can write up WFC for Warp.

 Display Table
Wayne is building model space ships

Starburst MK1 (B5), Hawk MKIX (Space 1999) same size
Scale 1/72, and the Jupiter 2. Bottom, right, Enterprise and BoP at  1/537 Scale.

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Dan Kenney is adding ratlines to his pirate ship, which in a former life was a Chinese junk. The ratlines are metal, he will straighten them later.

The Raffle Prizes  (Click to view full size)

Mecha Japanese Capsule Toy, donated by Brian Knapp

Supervillain/superhero Stikfas set donated by Brian Knapp

From Sylvain’s legacy: A set of Dr Who Trading cards

Multiple Hugo Award winner Vernor Vinge’s first full-length novel 1987 Paperback, a bit yellow, but looks unread. Cover Tom Kidd Donated by MonSFFA.

Full box, Tom Kidd trading cards, Sylvain’s legacy

1982 – Prix Boréal, 1982 – Prix Rosny-Aîné, 1982 – Grand Prix de la science-fiction française, from Sylvain’s collection

Sequel to King Kong, being released just nine months after and is the second entry of the King Kong franchise. Sylvain’s collection

Hollywood Science: Hollywood’s depiction of scientists and their work; how accurately these films capture scientific fact and theory. Sylvain’s Collection http://cup.columbia.edu/book/hollywood-science/9780231512398

Three issues of Mad Magazine from the 1970s, including January 1978 – their very first Star Wars parody.

 

POST 2 OF 7: THE LAWS OF CARTOON PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY

This is Post 2 of 7 today.

We live in a world of science. We also live in a world of cartoons. Naturally, cartoon creators have their own self-consistent rules of science. The best known: Wile E. Coyote runs into thin air, but only falls after he looks down. Another character is shot by a cannonball, but the perfectly circular hole in his middle heals rapidly with no aftereffects.

About 10 years ago, I gave a MonSFFA presentation on the Cartoon Laws of Physics. One of the flaws in the Cartoon Laws of Physics is … nothing has been said about chemistry. And so I’ve updated my old presentation with a proposal (possibly for the first time) that the famed Cartoon Laws of Physics should be supplemented by the Cartoon Laws of Chemistry.

Some of the Cartoons Laws of Science have been confirmed in real life, at least partially. One such case occurred during World War II, in the interaction between the British heavy cruiser HMS Sussex and a kamikaze pilot. The kamikaze lost.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Physics of Roadrunner – Balloon Anvil

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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Who Farmed Roger Rabbit Disappearing Reappearing Ink

Iodine Clock Reaction Timed to Tchaikovsky’s Russian Dance from The Nutcracker

Alum in Looney Tunes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cartoon laws of Physics (University of Toronto)

http://www.dgp.toronto.edu/~karan/courses/csc2529/cartoonlaw.htm

Chemistry commentary (American Chemical Society)

https://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/pressroom/reactions/videos/2019/scientist-breaks-down-chemistry-in-iconic-cartoons-spongebob-popeye-and-who-framed-roger-rabbit.html

POST 1 OF 7: INTRODUCTION, WRITING CHALLENGE

This is the first of seven related posts constituting this afternoon’s MonSFFA e-meeting.

1) INTRODUCTION

This is our 23rd virtual MonSFFA get-together. The afternoon’s get-together will unfold both on Zoom and right here on the club’s Web site over the course of the next few hours, beginning with this first post, and followed by subsequent posts at 1:30PM, 3:00PM, 3:05PM, 3:30PM, and 3:45PM, with a final post at 4:45PM. All posts will also be available concurrently on MonSFFA’s Facebook page (www.facebook.com/MonSFFA), however, note that the interface best suited for taking in this meeting is this very Web site.

As we cannot yet, with reasonable safety for all, assemble in larger numbers indoors, this February 2022 virtual meeting has been prepared especially for you, MonSFFA’s membership. Sit back, check out each of the afternoon’s posts, scroll down leisurely through the proffered content, and enjoy!

Don’t forget to comment on what we’ve presented. Let us know what you think of specific topics or the meeting overall. Your input helps us to tailor these virtual meetings for maximum interest and enjoyment.

And, of course, you can participate, as well, on Zoom!

2) JOIN THIS AFTERNOON’S VIDEO-CHAT ON ZOOM!

To join our Zoom video-chat, which will run throughout the course of the meeting in tandem with the Web site-based content presented, simply click here and follow the prompts: This Afternoon’s MonSFFA e-Meeting on Zoom

If you’re not fully equipped to Zoom by computer, you can also join in by phone (voice only); in the Montreal area, the toll-free number to call is: 1-438-809-7799. If you’re from out of town, find your Zoom call-in number here: International Call-In Numbers

Also, have this information on hand as you may be asked to enter it:

Meeting ID: 837 4176 2830
Passcode: 873301

3) MEETING AGENDA 

In This Afternoon’s Virtual Meeting:

4) A WRITING CHALLENGE

Barring the emergence of another dangerous variant, Public Health restrictions will finally be lifted for good at some point soon, and with most of us having been largely relegated to our homes for almost two years, now, we’ll be itching to travel as winter recedes and with it, we hope, COVID-19. Here are a dozen possible destinations for your consideration, singular, curious, and unusual places likely to appeal in some way to SF/F fans.

We’ve added a little something extra, too, to the mix, here, in the form of a writing challenge to occupy you during the remaining weeks of winter. We’re looking for original short stories or works of fan-fiction, between roughly a thousand and three thousand words—science fiction, fantasy, or horror; your choice! With the weird and wonderful destinations below, we hope to inspire you to author a fantastic, fanciful, frightening, or funny tale. Each entry includes a story prompt designed to get your creative juices flowing, but feel free to ignore our suggestions and go your way.

So have fun with it, and we look forward to reading your stories in a future issue of Warp!

A DOZEN OTHERWORLDLY SITES AND ATTRACTIONS TO VISIT IN CANADA

Devon Island and the Haughton Impact Crater, Nunavut 

Devon Island is the world’s largest uninhabited island and part of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. It is located in Baffin Bay north of Baffin Island. So otherworldly is Devon Island’s landscape that the Mars Society there established the Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station in order that scientists may simulate missions to the Red Planet.

Formed some 39 million years ago when a meteor about two kilometers in diameter slammed into what was then a forest, the Haughton Impact Crater adjacent the station is considered the best Mars analog on Earth. NASA’s complementary Haughton-Mars Project is also in operation at the crater during the summer months.

This landscape may well inspire a science fiction story about a mission to Mars, or another planet having a similarly hostile environment. What might the explorers from Earth find there, and what perils might they face?

The Cheltenham Badlands, Caledon, Ontario

Situated between the villages of Inglewood and Cheltenham in the primarily rural municipality of Caledon, the Cheltenham Badlands are an exposed and greatly eroded section of the Queenston Formation, which formed during the mid- and late-Ordovician Period, between roughly 470 and 443 million years ago. Characterized by rounded hills and gullies, this terrain is composed chiefly of brick-red shale, interlaced with layers of green shale, sandstone, and limestone. Representing probably the best example of badlands topography in Ontario, the area easily suggests the strange landscape of an alien world on which a tale of the far-flung future might be set.

The story could begin with the crash-landing of a spaceship on this world and detail the efforts of the crew to survive until a rescue mission arrives from distant Earth. Having salvaged from their wrecked craft what equipment and stores were not irreparably damaged or destroyed in the crash, they are faced with a dearth of vital supplies. Their first priority is to locate a source of water and find a way to farm the harsh soil, perhaps employing vegetable scraps and seeds derived from their remaining onboard food supply to cultivate fresh and progressively more produce. They spy in the distance a herd of large, centipede-like animals foraging on the scant indigenous flora. These beasts may well offer a supply of protein-rich meat.

But there’s something else out there, amid the knolls and furrows; something primordial and predatory, lying in wait, still and patient, the natural colouring and texture of its skin perfect camouflage for these surroundings, rendering the enormous, snake-like creature effectively invisible—until it moves to strike!

Hopewell Rocks, Hopewell Cape, New Brunswick

The Hopewell Rocks, also called the Flowerpot Rocks, are the principal tourist attraction of the village of Hopewell Cape on Shepody Bay, part of the greater Bay of Fundy. A geological formation composed largely of dark sedimentary conglomerate and sandstone, the Rocks have been eroded by the famous Fundy tides. With glacial retreat after the Ice Age, surface water seeping through cracks in the shoreline bluffs, over time, separated the Rocks from the cliff face. Further, tidal waters, rising—by up to 16 metres—and falling twice a day, have worn down this collection of towering pillars, most acutely at their base. Visitors are able to descend to the beach at low tide for a closer look.

A fantasy story is evoked by this landscape, perhaps involving a local fisherman assisting a beautiful mermaid who has come ashore one morning to escape a ravenous sea serpent. Not a one of his family or friends believe his yarn, of course, known as he is for spinning such tall tales over a pint or two!

The Crooked Bush, Alticane, Saskatchewan

Also called the “Twisted Trees” or the “Crooked Tress of Alticane,” this copse of hideously deformed aspens can be found near the abandoned village of Alticane, Saskatchewan, today considered a ghost town. Prominent in the province’s folklore, the existence of the trees is sometimes attributed to paranormal forces.

Genetic mutation is offered as the scientific explanation for this botanical anomaly, the aberration likely originating with a single tree as aspen’s propagate through a shared root system to form large, clonal groves. A cordon surrounds the warped thicket for purposes of protection, and to contain any further spread of the malformation to other, bordering aspens, which stand straight and tall.

A Lovercraftian horror story, perhaps, may emerge from the fevered dream provoked simply by having gained knowledge of these accursed aspens, for one can scarcely comprehend what blasphemous monstrosity long ago may have marred this small patch of wood, leaving trunks and branches gnarled and bent. Ever are these blighted trees a reminder to the multitude and variety of life which teems over this inconsequential globe of the paltry place we denizens of planet Earth hold within a universe ravaged by outrages evil, dark, and unimaginable!

Le Grand rassemblement, Sainte-Flavie, Québec

On a rock-strewn beach overlooking the St. Lawrence River stand some hundred strange stone and wooden figures, arrayed so as to appear a column of people wading ashore. The creation of Quebec artist Marcel Gagnon, these figures are simple in design, carved heads atop a post or pillar, some hunched, exuding a haunting quality, all worn by the weather and tides, those farthest out on the beach disappearing and reappearing with the ebb and flow of the great river.

The artist initially began carving the effigies as figure studies for his vivid impressionistic paintings but eventually repurposed them as an art installation, which can be viewed at his Centre d’Art Marcel Gagnon in Ste-Flavie, a small town on the Gaspé Peninsula.

Some kind of ghost story, perhaps, or dark fantasy involving a curse long ago cast upon the local townspeople suggests itself, here.
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The Enchanted Forest, Revelstoke, British Columbia

A family-friendly roadside attraction in the Monashee Mountains some 30 kilometres west of Revelstoke, The Enchanted Forest places over 350 kitschy, handcrafted figurines of faerie folk and storybook characters amongst the towering cedars of an old-growth forest. The roster includes Snow White and the Seven Dwarves, Goldilocks and the Three Bears, the Three Little Pigs, Winnie-the-Pooh and Friends, Humpty Dumpty, the Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe, the Tooth Faerie, the Pied Piper, along with mermaids, gnomes, a dragon, and many more!

Folk-art sculptor Doris Needham and her husband, Ernest, built the attraction largely by hand as a retirement project, opening their wonderland to the public on July 1, 1960. The Enchanted Forest has since expanded to encompass eight acres of fun for the whole family.

Faerie folk and the like can make for an inviting fantasy tale, maybe involving the many characters, here, magically coming to life so as to uplift the spirits of a traumatized and forlorn child.

UFO Landing Pad, St. Paul, Alberta

The east-central Alberta town of St. Paul built the world’s first UFO landing pad in 1967 as part of Canada’s nationwide Centennial Celebrations. Paul Hellyer, then Canada’s defense minister, flew in by helicopter to officially inaugurate the structure.

A plaque put up beside the pad reads:

The area under the World’s First UFO Landing Pad was designated international by the Town of St. Paul as a symbol of our faith that mankind will maintain the outer universe free from national wars and strife. That future travel in space will be safe for all intergalactic beings, all visitors from earth or otherwise are welcome to this territory and to the Town of St. Paul.

Hellyer, who died last year at age 98, publicly announced in 2005 that he believed in the existence of extraterrestrials, that he and his wife had once seen a UFO, and that at least four species of aliens from other star systems have been visiting Earth for thousands of years, some of them now based on Mars, Venus, and the moons of Saturn! He also urged governments around the world to help solve the global climate crisis by employing the alien technology they have secreted away all these years.

So what if a UFO actually touched down in St. Paul one day? What would be the reaction of local, national, and foreign governments, the military, the scientific community, religious leaders, and the ordinary people of the town? And would the extraterrestrials share the sentiments inscribed on that plaque?

The Moonbeam Flying Saucer, Moonbeam, Ontario

Speaking of UFOs, the small northern Ontario town of Moonbeam has erected a flying saucer monument next to the town’s visitor centre. With the National Transcontinental Railway providing access to the agricultural land and natural resources of the environs, the town was founded and settled by Quebecers from the Laurentians and Montreal in the early 1910s and ’20s. French is spoken by almost 80 percent of townspeople.

The slogan “Where the moonbeams blend in with the Northern Lights” is used to promote tourism and while no documentation exists as confirmation, the town’s name is attributed to early pioneers who often reported flashing lights falling from the sky near area creeks and ponds. They called these mysterious lights “moonbeams.” That’s a potential sci-fi story right there!

Spotted Lake, Osoyoos, British Columbia

Northwest of the Okanagan town of Osoyoos in B.C.’s Similkameen Valley, the endorheic Spotted Lake, rich in salt and various minerals, was historically and is still revered by the territory’s First Nations people as a sacred site thought to proffer therapeutic waters.

In the summer, evaporation exposes concentrated deposits of calcium, magnesium sulfate, and other elements and compounds, which, combined with seasonal precipitation, form small, colourful pools of water, lending the lake its distinctive spots. Also formed around and between these spots are natural hardened-mineral pathways.

A medieval fantasy story could be conjured up around such a lake, the waters of which an evil sorceress might exploit to brew her magical potions.

Abraham Lake, Kootenay Plains, Alberta

When the Bighorn Dam was built in 1972, a sizeable tract of land was flooded to create Abraham Lake, Alberta’s largest reservoir, situated on the North Saskatchewan River in the Kootenay Plains area of the Canadian Rocky Mountains. Tourists and nature photographers are drawn to the site by a bizarre phenomenon.

Rotting vegetation at the bottom of the lake releases methane gas which coalesces into bubbles that, in winter, become trapped in ice as they rise towards the surface, creating weirdly beautiful columns of globules beneath the frozen lake surface.

Consider a story that serves as an allegory for climate change: on an icy planet or moon in some distant solar system, perhaps a similar wonder occurs, and maybe within each ice-encased pocket of gas thrives a completely alien civilization populated by exotic miniature beings! But what would happen to those beings if that frozen world began to warm?

Bear Rock and the Bear Rock Sinkhole, Sahtu Region, Northwest Territories

The Sahtu Region includes Bear Rock, an outcropping considered hallowed ground by the Dene people. It is said that in ancient days, when giants roamed the Earth, fabled Dene law-giver Yamoria slew a trio of enormous beavers that had been drowning hunters, and that Bear Rock was the mountain over which he draped their gargantuan pelts, leaving the dark, reddish stains which distinguish the rock to this day—a bit of Beavra fan-fiction can certainly spring out of all of that!

Characterized by underground waterways and the gradual dissolution of soluble rock like limestone and dolomite, the karst landforms of Bear Rock and the vast surrounding domain include numerous pinnacles, poljes, turloughs, caves, and sinkholes.

Of the many sinkholes pitting this pristine and remote wilderness, the largest and most remarkable is the Bear Rock Sinkhole, likely the result of a cave-in and one of North America’s finest examples of a vertical cover-collapse event. Inaccessible by road or trail, the ovate Bear Rock Sinkhole lies between the towns of Tulita and Norman Wells and is roughly the length and width of a football field, its vertical walls plunging some 40 metres to the pool of cerulean blue water below.

But what if beneath the surface of that water was discovered a portal to the past, or to another dimension? Or, if supernatural satanic horror is your groove, a portal to hell?

Akshayuk Pass, Baffin Island, Nunavut

Appropriately dubbed Land of the Gods, Akshayuk Pass is an ancient river bed and traditional Inuit travel corridor bordered by towering granite peaks, among them imposing Mount Odin, arrowhead-shaped Mount Loki, and other summits the names of which derive from Norse mythology—though unverified, it is believed that the earliest European exploration of the region was by Norse adventurers in the 11th century. The area, today within Canada’s Auyuittuq National Park in northeastern Baffin Island, draws first-class mountaineers from around the world.

Of note is Thor Peak, also called Mount Thor, dramatically thrusting skyward, a sheer precipice, offering rock climbers one of the world’s highest vertical drops! The spectacular vista surrounding Thor inspires a fantastical winter realm populated by Ijirait (shape-shifters), Chenoos (cannibalistic ice giants), the Qiqirn (a dog spirit), and other mythological creatures of the north to be found in aboriginal legend. One imagines a hero embarking on a precarious trek to the mountain in search of his or her destiny.

If a work of fan-fiction is your fancy, meanwhile, Mount Asgard is a twin-towered, flat-topped mountain of the type suitable for hollowing out by a Bond villain as his secret lair, or by the Rebel Alliance as a hidden base.

Our next post will be up at 1:30PM; we’ll be exploring the “science” of cartoons!

CLUB’S FEBRUARY VIRTUAL MEETING IS THIS AFTERNOON!

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Scintillation Progress Report

From Jo Walton:

Scintillation Progress Report

Progress!

We’re delighted to announce that Scintillation 3 will be taking place on the weekend of 10-12th June 2022, in the Holiday Inn, Montreal, the same one with a pagoda on the roof where Scintillation 1 and 2 took place. We will have program, expeditions, a picnic, and as much fun, friends, and conversation as possible under the circumstances. We may have an outdoor hangout area. We’re doing out best to have Scintillation in a difficult situation. We want to see you! We have missed you all so much. We’re not waiting until the pandemic is over, because we don’t know what over even means any more.

Programme

There will be a fun programme, created by Jo Walton. If you would like to be on programme, or if you have any ideas for program, email programme@scintillation.ca

Debra Doyle Memorial Dumplings

Debra Doyle was a beloved member of the Scintillation community. In one of her last posts to the Scintillation Discord she said how much she was looking forward to eating dumplings at Scintillation. In memory of her, we’d like to give someone doing the con on a budget money to take a friend and have a dumpling lunch. If you qualify, email dumpling@scintillation.ca — we’ll put the names in a hat and draw one at random to enjoy the dumplings Debra would have liked to share.

Pandemic Safety

While the pandemic continues, it seems to us that summer is a safer time for conventions, which is mostly why we’re doing it in June. We will be requiring masks and proof of vaccination, and any other health measures required by the province of Quebec. All attendees must be fully vaccinated.

Coming to Scintillation

We will inform members nearer the time what the situation is for entering Canada — right now the border is open, and it’s possible to fly here from overseas or the US, and to drive here from the US. The train is not presently running across the border, but it may be by then. Via Rail trains are running from other parts of Canada. Canada currently requires a recent PCR test for entry, but this may change. It also requires downloading the ArriveCan app and filling it out, and this is less likely to change.

Hotel

The Holiday Inn has raised prices for function space by more than fifty percent since 2019. Unfortunately this means we will not be able to have the Saturday evening reception or the Games Room — but we will have games in the con suite. We’re hoping to be able to afford the Reading Room in addition to the Big Room. We have also reluctantly raised membership rates for new members, and instituted the Bonus Membership (see below) as a fundraiser. The hotel room rate is still under negotiation, we will put it on the website when we have it.

Existing Members

If you have an attending membership in Scintillation 3, either from the Kickstarter, or purchased online, or bought in person on the Sunday of Scintillation 2, you can either use it to attend Scintillation 3 or, if this timing does not work for you, roll it over to Scintillation 4. (Scintillation 4 will take place in 2023, dates TBA.) Please contact members@scintillation.ca to let us know whether you will be using your membership or rolling it over. We’d really appreciate it if let us know as soon as possible, and definitely by the end of March. The same applies to people who have supporting memberships in Scintillation 3 — you can convert them into attending memberships at any time, but letting us know your intentions before the end of March will help us know how many new memberships we can sell. Between the end of March and the end of May, if we are at capacity and you have not already informed us you are coming you may need to be added to the waitlist, so please let us know.

New Memberships

We are selling new memberships on the website http://www.scintillation.ca New memberships are limited and may sell out. We will stop selling them when we reach capacity. How many we have available depends on how many existing members want to attend. Right now, we have memberships available. New memberships cost $90. Membership sales will close when we are at capacity or at the end of May, whichever happens first. There will be no at door memberships. If there are no memberships available on the website, you can email members@scintillation.ca to be placed on the waitlist.

Benefactor Memberships

Benefactor memberships are bought by those who can afford to pay for both themselves and for another person who will enhance the conversation to come to Scintillation. Benefactor memberships are presently available and are one of the things we love about Scintillation. Benefactor memberships presently cost $160.

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Bonus memberships are new as a fundraiser for 2022 — bonus memberships cost $50, and are an add-on to an existing or new membership. Anyone with a bonus membership is entitled to two free signed Tor books by Jo Walton, your choice of books while supplies last. The books will be delivered at con. The money raised will help pay for a better and safer sound system, and for the Reading Room.

Scintillation Online

Scintillation will never have a virtual convention, or a virtual component to the in person convention. But Scintillation does maintain an active 365 days a year online Discord community where you can hang out and talk with other members of the Scintillation community, listen to and take part in playreadings, our pretend radio program, gift exchanges, Eisteddfodau, etc. No, really! We’ve been doing this ever since March 2020, and all Scintillation people of goodwill are welcome to join us. https://discord.gg/7V3bMzMJ

Come if you Like

You can come if you like, but it is not the best time:
the weather’s uncertain
the trees are still teetering on rust’s edge
we have cake, but it is not the right cake
and we haven’t been cleaning.
But come if you like.

You can come if you like, but it is not the best time:
work is beginning all round
there are things I have to get done
I can’t spare more than fourteen hours a day
and the best of the flowers are over.
Do come if you like.

You can come if you like, but it is not the best time:
I should train the birds to form hieroglyphs
proclaiming your name to the sky
and persuade the city to organise a special festival
and shed three stone and ten years.
Still, come if you like.

You can come if you like, but it is not the best time:
the best time is the enemy of the good time
come now, come in possible time,
come and share some time while we’re breathing,
let weather fall on us.
Come whenever you like.

(10th September 2010)

Another hobby shop closes its doors

https://epaper.montrealgazette.com/article/281732682901085

It’s the last whistle stop for Dorval hobby shop

After 27 years, retiring owners now look forward to enjoying the models they sold

JOHN KENNEY
David Jenkins, from left, Paul Crépin and Anthony Chan at the Jonction Hobby Express shop in Dorval. The store is set to close after 27 years as the owners begin their retirement.

The Jonction Hobby Express shop in Dorval is slated to close its doors in March or April after a 27-year run on Cardinal Avenue, a few blocks west of the Pine Beach train station.

David Jenkins, one of three owners, is still hoping to sell the business to someone who will maintain the shop which has become a popular spot for Montreal hobby enthusiasts who specialize in miniature trains and plastic model building.

Although the hobby business has seen better days, Jenkins said the main reason for closing up shop is that he and his co-owners are getting up in years and want to retire.

“It’s time to start enjoying ourselves,” said 70-year-old Jenkins, who co-owns the shop with Paul Crépin, 65, and Anthony Chan, 77.

Chan, who was working the front cash on Saturday, said he is looking forward to retirement. “It’s time for me to enjoy some of the model trains I collected over the years but never had time for.”

Jenkins said the hobby business has become a grind in recent years due to competition from online shopping and the fading interest of young people who used to account for a big chunk of the plastic model business.

“The younger generation is not interested in it. They don’t want to work with their hands. If it’s not electronics, they don’t want anything to do with it.”

Jenkins said it’s hard to compete with prices offered by giant online retailers like Amazon who ship merchandise directly to consumers.

He said independent brick-andmortar hobby shops have to constantly evolve in order to survive. Another issue is the rising retail prices of model kits.

“You remember buying a Spitfire for $1.49 at Woolworth’s as a kid?” he said. “Now it’s $159.95, that’s the mail price. The regular price is $225. That’s one of the reasons the hobby is dwindling.”

“Prices have gone crazy,” he added. “We’re talking about a model car, a railway car, a gondola, in HO scale that 27 years ago would have sold for about $20. We’re looking at $62 today for a little car. It’s also getting harder and harder to get supplies.”

He said plastic models of Second World War era German tanks and planes are among the bestsellers, but the British Spitfire fighter plane remains a classic.

Jenkins said the shop always catered to both beginners and serious hobbyists. He noted the store policy was to offer merchandise repairs free of charge to clients aged under 15.

Jenkins said the store also steered proceeds from in-store coffee sales and miniature train repairs toward the annual Christmas fund at the local Dorval Legion.

Jenkins says Jonction Hobby Express, with its retro pegboard walls, is the last of its kind in Montreal. He said Tedd’s hobby shop in the Pointe-claire Plaza might partly benefit from its closure, but the miniature train hobby business caters to a niche clientele.

Jenkins said the historic role that national railways played in Montreal’s development as a transportation hub provided a strong base of customers eager to collect miniature rail cars of Canadian National and Canadian Pacific.

A black and white railway crossing sign sits in the window of the shop that is located in a strip mall facing the railway tracks next to Cardinal Avenue.

“This was the location for train watching,” Jenkins said. “There was a time when we’d have a group of guys who’d bring their own deck chairs and sit outside the store and watch the CN and CP trains roll by. We had people from Plattsburgh and Burlington, Vt. Then they’d come back inside the store and buy the locomotive or boxcar they had seen go by.”

Customer Yves Baron, a retired Air Canada employee, laments the store’s closing because he often met people from other local hobby clubs. “There are not a lot of clubs around so this place was special.”

Interestingly, sales soared recently after the store announced it was closing. “It’s been crazy in here lately, especially on Saturdays. Our shelves are emptying quickly,” Jenkins said.

Unless a new buyer is found soon, the store will continue selling off its remaining inventory, then close.

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When it comes to mass extinction, meteorite size doesn’t matter

When it comes to mass extinction, meteorite size doesn’t matter

New research shows it’s the composition of the rock a meteorite hits, and not the impactor’s size, that causes an extinction-level event.

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RELATED TOPICS: METEORITES | LIFE
Near-Earth objects pass by our planet in this artist's rendering.
Near-Earth objects pass by our planet in this artist’s rendering. ESA – P.Carril

It’s a well-known story in our planet’s past: A giant space rock slams into Earth, causing a catastrophe that ends in mass extinction. You might think that when it comes to determining which hits will cause such widespread devastation, the size of the incoming impactor is what matters. But new research suggests that something else might matter more: The composition of the ground where that meteorite hits.

The work, published Dec. 1, 2021, in Journal of the Geological Society, focuses on explaining why some meteorite impacts cause mass extinctions, while others don’t. For example, the famous impact that killed the dinosaurs and left the Chicxulub crater was much smaller than many other impact events that didn’t cause massive loss of species. Why might this be?

It’s all about the dust

An international team of researchers, including experts in mineralogy, climate, asteroid composition, and paleontology, tackled this question by examining 33 impacts over the past 600 million years. Specifically, they looked at the minerals in the massive amount of dust that an incoming meteorite throws up into the atmosphere. That dust can profoundly change Earth’s climate — and it is that climate change which researchers think is a major cause of mass extinctions following impacts.

READ MORE

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Montreal Science Fiction and Fantasy Association