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Written by Mack on 23-09-2007 04:57 - Registered
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Okay, read through Chapt four and took
You are a helluva writer, because if I wasn't actually in Prince George I would think I was in Prince George.
Couple of comments for the readers. When you are in Prince George you still feel like you are in a forest. And the trailer park has the nicest real estate in the city, possibly the world. If the Carrier First Nation was swept from Prince George long ago they have since swept back in. The smell, ah the notably Canadian odour of pulp and paper, with which I am familiar from more than one place, like Hinton, Alberta, or Campbell River BC, is noticable. But you fail to mention that once the paper production abates, a glorious smell of cedar wafts in the breeze, for the city is amid an interior rainforest and they aren't all spindly pine and raggety spruce. You fail to mention the temperate nature of the forests, that they grow back almost too quickly, and that the rain falls in the autumn like a dew. One last thing, regarding air quality, one June morning in downtown Toronto I stepped out onto the porch the greet the morning, took one look at the giant yellow ball of pollution roiling in the sky, and returned to my apartment for another shower. Air quality is not a problem peculiar to Prince George. |
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