The Good Shopper Blog

"Canadian pride may not rest on our sleeves, but it resides deeply in our hearts."

Steve Miller


01
Dec
2011
03:31:41

Behind the Brand: ChillBed Industries Ltd.

By / Par: Wendy T. Gibson

Category / Catégorie: Contests

Happy December!  It's Day 1 of our Cross Canada Countdown and I am excited to tell you about our big giveaway and share a Behind the Brand interview with you! I'm excited because the giveaway is something that almost everyone would use and welcome. It's perfect for the person who is hard to shop for or who "has everything". It solves a problem that every laptop owner has experienced. It even improves the performance of your laptop computer! Best of all, it is made right here in Canada!

 

"Keeping you and your hard drive running cooler, for better performance and longer life." 

I'm talking about the ChillTab Laptop Cooling Stand . I had the pleasure of talking to its inventor recently, nine-time Canadian National Ultimate (Frisbee) Champion, Adam Berson. Adam has toured the world as an Ultimate Frisbee competitor and even made it to the Vancouver Ultimate Hall of Fame!

Adam is the owner/operator of ChillBed Industries Ltd., which has been in busness since 2000 and is located in Vancouver, B.C. .  The company makes the ChillBed Laptop Cooling Stand and the newly released ChillTab Universal Tablet Stand. I was impressed by Adam's conviction about his company and by how beautiful the stands are! I'll let him tell you in his own words.

 

"As company CEO, I strive to keep ahead of the game and provide quality aluminum Laptop and Tablet Stands that are both elegant and well designed.  I started ChillBed Industries Ltd. after purchasing my first laptop with the need in mind to keep it running cooler, for better performance and longer life."

"Since that time, I have seen laptops come and go, and the influx of tablets taking over the market. My desire is to continue to supply consumers with a top quality stand, made here in Canada, while still keeping quality and cost in mind. I take  pride in the fact that my company has maintained its Canadian roots and not bowed down to the desire to manufacture overseas. I am proud of the fact that we utilize Canadian products and services and that we recycle almost everything generated from the process of building our stands." 

Check out Adam as he auditions for the Dragon's Den  with Brett Wilson!

Okay Canada, Adam is giving away, not one, but two Laptop Cooling Stands!

 

You can win a 1 x 13" black Laptop Cooling Stand or a 1 x 15" black Laptop Cooling Stand.

How:

  1. Like the ChillBed Industries Ltd. Facebook page .
  2. Follow Chillbeds  on Twitter and tweet @BuyCndianFirst <3 #madeincanada @chillbeds 
We are giving away a stand in two sizes so add 13 or 15 to the end of your tweet and a winner will be chosen randomly for each size. 
 
You have until midnight Wednesday,  December  7, 2011, to enter. The winners will be announced here on the Good Shopper blog, Thursday, December 8, 2011
 

Good luck and good shopping!  

30
Nov
2011
03:31:41

Month #11 – Transportation

By / Par: 0 - Montreal, Quebec

Category / Catégorie: What's hot

Another month, another topic. This month I added ‘transportation’ to the Canadian-only landscape that is my life. It’s one of those topics where, in retrospect, I have no idea what my December, 2010 self was thinking. What is Canadian transportation? And how do I restrict myself to it?

darren11_carimage.jpg

I started by looking into the history of Canadian transportation. Did we maybe invent some unique form of Canadian transportation, like the seaplane (nope, that was the French) or the snowmobile (yep, thank you, Mr. Bombardier)? The list is actually pretty thin. Besides the snowmobile, we can claim partial ownership over the hydrofoil, the CanadaArm and, oddly, checking your bag.

Then I considered what makes a form of transportation Canadian? Well, Air Canada has “Canada” in the name, so that seems safe. I frequently take the “Canada Line” rapid transit service to and from downtown Vancouver. It was built for the Olympics last year, so that feels pretty patriotic. And I belong to a local car co-op, which seems very homespun and Canadian.

What if I wanted to drive a home-grown car? What would my options be? I’m not talking about a Chevrolet that was assembled in Oshawa, but rather a real Canadian-designed and built vehicle.

Enter the Bricklin. Designed and manufactured in New Brunswick from 1974 to 1976, it’s the gull-winged equivalent of Magnum PI’s moustache. It looks like the sort of car that an early-career James Bond might drive. But not Connery or Moore’s Bond, it’s more of a Lazenby vehicle. Frequently called the worst car ever built, the two-door sports door was fraught with mechanical problems, and its creator, Malcolm Bricklin, struggled financially. He only ever built 2854 cars, and bilked the New Brunswick government out of $23 million.The story of the Bricklin was recently retold in that most sacred of artistic modes, musical theatre.

darren11_carvideoimage.jpg

I’ve been poking around various local contacts, trying to determine if anybody in the city owns a Bricklin. According to Wikipedia, roughly 1100 of them still exist. In the meantime, I just sticking to forms of transportation with “Canada” in the name, and my shoes from Roots.

Read comments here.

Bricklin photo courtesy of Alden Jewell.

Blog post re-printed with kind permission from Darren Barefoot - 1Y1C.

29
Nov
2011
03:31:41

Cross Canada Countdown

By / Par: Wendy T. Gibson

Category / Catégorie: Contests

How would you like to travel across Canada with us, starting on the first of December? We are going to start off in Vancouver, B.C., with a Behind the Brand interview and a really awesome, made in Canada  giveaway tomorrow, one that will make a great Christmas gift for almost anyone on your list! I know that I want one and my husband does, too!  I"ll tell you a bit more about it in a minute! Bwahahahahaha!

 

Every day, for the next twenty five days, we hope that you make the Good Shopper blog your destination for some helpful decorating, gift and DIY tips from bloggers all across Canada. If you are a Canadian blogger and would like to take part, just comment below with the link to your blog. We want to see what Canadians are doing to decorate, entertain and enjoy Winter over the holidays, so don't hesitate to let us know below!

 

Natural Plantation  

Our big giveaway starts Thursday, but we have quite a few treats, made in Canada, to share with you over the next twenty-five days! We'll let you know how to qualify as we go along. We want to get your creative juices flowing, too, so let's have a photo contest! We are looking for photos of your wintery Canada, your backyard after the first snowfall, the kids in their snowsuits, hockey on the rink at the park, the new puppy discovering snow, holiday decorations .... you get the idea! Just like us on Facebook  and post your photo there, starting Thursday. You will then be eligible to win a wonderful Winter Survival gift basket from Buy Canadian First member, Natural Plantation! Very luscious stuff!

 

Chillbeds 

We're also going to help you shop for the hard to buy for, with several different Canadian treasuries for seniors, husbands and pet owners, among others.  If you have a great gift idea for the hard to buy for, made in Canada, tell us about it! There may be something in it for you! (Wink wink, nudge nudge, say no more).

Okay, all I'm going to say about the big giveaway is that it starts tomorrow, the winner will be announced December 8th and we have two prizes to give away! Join us Thursday as we meet and talk to nine time Canadian National Ultimate Frisbee Champion, Adam Berson, for our Behind the Brand interview and giveaway! We'll tell you then how to enter to win!

When do you put up your decorations?

 :: images courtesy of Buy Canadian First members and ImageChef. 

 

 

 

27
Nov
2011
03:31:41

Interview with Lynn Coady

By / Par: Stacey Kazmir

Category / Catégorie: Canadians making waves

I was very excited to have the opportunity to interview Canadian-made author, Lynn Coady, for the Buy Canadian First Book Club! You can read my review of her book "The Antagonist", in last Monday's Good Shopper Blog. I also have a book winner to announce at the end of this post!

 

 

GSB: I loved the Canadian references in "The Antagonist", as Rank is at a Canadian University on a hockey scholarship. Was Java Joe's another Canadian kick back? I know there really is a Java Joe and that they are a Canadian owned and operated company. I took the Icy Dream and Java Joe references to really be Dairy Queen and Canadian icon, Tim Horton's.

LC: Hmm...I thought I made Java Joe's up! I didn't realize there was actually a coffee franchise called that. Yes, your instincts were correct, I imagined Icy Dream and Java Joe's as through-the-looking-glass versions of DQ and Tim Horton's.

GSB: How important is it to you to have Canadian connections in your book?

LC: I write stories that are set in contemporary Canada and my characters are Canadian. What's important to me is being straightforward about that, not pretending otherwise or feeling hamstrung by silly fears that there's something provincial or problematic about setting a work of fiction in the Canadian here and now. What's provincial is that fear itself. No one complains about Roddy Doyle setting his novels in Ireland, or JM Coetzee setting his latest books in Australia. This is the only country I know where the question even comes up.

 

GSB: You have so much insight into a tough Canadian "thug" like Rank, getting into university on a hockey scholarship, sitting outside on a couch in the snow BBQing (love it!) - how did you research your novel?

LC: The only stuff I really had to research was hockey and the juvenile court system. It's not hard to do research on hockey in this country, fortunately. What I did in this case was, I wrote the hockey-related scenes as best as I could and then gave a draft of the book to two gentlemen friends of mine who played hockey in high school and university--they were my technical advisers. They pointed out anything I got wrong and reassured me about the things I got right.

The university scenes didn't require much research outside of a university education and having male friends. Sitting outside on a couch in the snow--hasn't everyone done that at some point in their twenties?

GSB: I love that our world has evolved so that in our books characters are using email and Facebook. Do you find our new ways of communication easier to include in your books or do you think it's hard to keep track of what a character might email, text, tweet or post on Facebook?

LC: Facebook was used pretty deliberately in "The Antagonist"--I didn't really mean for it to seem like just a regular part of Rank's life, I wanted to show him discovering it as a tool, as a means of reconnecting with his past. The novel couldn't have happened without Facebook, and in fact it was my own experience with Facebook that inspired a crucial element of the novel--Rank's past coming back to haunt him in a very immediate way, yet a way that feels both real and unreal at once. When I started writing "The Antagonist", Facebook was still pretty new, so I had an awareness of incorporating this new technology into the story, but with something like email--email has become so ubiquitous these days that I now write about characters emailing each other without giving it a second thought, the same way I'd write about them watching TV or using a coffee machine. Recently, I wrote my first short story that involves people texting one another. I think all the new communications technology amounts to something writers can't help but embrace--this is how people speak to one  another now and that makes it central to the stories we tell about contemporary life.

GSB: What Canadians do you look towards for inspiration in the world of authors and journalism?

LC: With authors, I admire my fellow East Coasters Lisa Moore and Michael Winter and David Adams Richards and my fellow Edmontonians Greg Hollingshead and Marina Endicott. To give Toronto its due, I've been really enjoying How Should a Person Be? by Sheila Heti. And there are so many great journalists and non-fiction writers in Canada, one of them being my friend here in Edmonton, Curtis Gillespie, with whom I work on the magazine Eighteen Bridges. There are a lot of great journalists who I follow on Twitter, like Chris Turner, Judith Timson, Stephanie Nolan, Kady O'Malley, Doug Saunders and Carl Wilson.

GSB: What is one piece of advice you can pass on to a Canadian teenager dreaming about becoming an author?

LC: Read everything until you figure out what you like. Then figure out why you like it. Then write like that.

GSB: Thank you so much for chatting with me, Lynn!! I look forward to catching up with your other books "Strange Heaven", "Play the Monster Blind", "Saints of Big Harbour", and "Mean Boy".

 

Now is the time to get ready for our next book. We'll be reading "Light Lifting", by Canadian author, Alexander MacLeod. "Light Lifting" is said to be one of those rare debuts: a breathtakingly good collection of short fiction that heralds the arrival of a significant new talent.

Congratulation to our winner, Peggy O'Reilley, who has won a copy of Lynn Coady's novel, "The Antagonist"! I look forward to chatting about the book with you in our Buy Canadian First Book Club on Facebook and I will be in touch as to how you can claim your prize!

To win a copy of "Light Lifting", please answer the question at the end of our review, which will be published on Monday, December 19, 2011. The winner will be announced the following week. Good luck and thanks so much for participating!

:: images courtesy of Chapters-Indigo. 

21
Nov
2011
03:31:41

Enter to win "The Antagonist"

By / Par: Stacey Kazmir

Category / Catégorie: Canadians making waves

Welcome to month four of the Buy Canadian First Book Club! We have had a great time learning about all of our fantastic Canadian authors! Don't forget to "Like" the Buy Canadian First Book Club on Facebook where we discuss the books, authors and choose what we will read next. You can also find out who won today's giveaway, next Monday, when my interview with Lynn Coady, is published!

 

 

Lynn Coady is a novelist, editor and journalist. Originally from Cape Breton Island, Lynn now resides in Edmonton. Her latest novel, and this month's book choice, "The Antagonist", was shortlisted for the 2011 Scotiabank Giller Prize.

"The Antagonist" is written as a series of emails and Facebook messages from Gordon Rankin ("Rank"), to an old university friend whom Rank has discovered has written a novel mirroring Rank's own life! Funny, sad and, I think, a fantastic perspective from a true male, Lynn has taken me out of my comfort zone in a great way.

I'm not usually interested in a "thug" like Rank - a 6"4' hockey player, a bouncer at his dad's Icy Dream franchise, then a failing university student, but Lynn's insight and steady stream of details into Rank's history is a fantastic read.

 

 

Rank is not happy to have his life stolen by Adam, his old friend, and put into a novel. He also doesn't believe Adam told the whole story.  Through these emails, Rank is now looking back at his own life and his relationship with his dad with a fresh perspective.

I loved that Rank was in university on a hockey scholarship and that his father, Gord, thought back in 1981 that no one would be interested in a coffee franchise. I also loved how, in university, Rank and his friends sat on a couch in the snow, BBQing. That sounds really close to something I did in college, too ... ha ha! These Canadian connections really brought the novel to life for me.

I can see why "The Antagonist" was short listed for the 2011 Scotiabank Giller Prize. I was so impressed with this novel and can't wait to read the rest of Lynn Coady's books.

Be sure to keep up with Lynn's blog online and follow her on Twitter for all her latest news and information.

Contest Giveaway:

Here's a chance to win your own copy of Lynn Coady's book, "The Antagonist", and read along with us! The winner will be announced in my interview with Lynn Coady, here on the Good Shopper blog, next Monday. Just answer the following question to qualify in the comment section below. Good luck!

What is your favourite Canadian winter sport?

14
Nov
2011
03:31:41

CPR Tweet-up

By / Par: Stacey Kazmir

Category / Catégorie: Tips and tricks

I'm heading to a Canadian  Tweet-up event this Wednesday in London, Ontario. November is CPR Awareness month and the Canadian Red Cross is hosting a free, four hour CPR certification course for its Twitter friends. This course will follow new guidelines released in 2010.

There are six #RedCrossCPR classes being held in several provinces across Canada.  Halifax, St. John’s, Edmonton, Toronto, Richmond Hill (York Region) and London will each host Tweet-ups this Wednesday, November 16, 2011 and I am honoured to be part of organizing the London Tweet-up.

With seventy per cent of cardiac arrests happening at home, taking a CPR course is a simple action that could help save a loved one’s life. In fact, effective bystander CPR, when used in conjunction with an AED (Automated External Defibrillator)and administered immediately following cardiac arrest, can double a person’s chance of survival.

Working at the Boys and Girls Club during college, I was certified in CPR. Now, as a Mom of two very fun-loving boys (one of whom has already has already received his first stitches), I think that this is the perfect time to get recertified, especially considering the new guidelines.

Not local to one of the Tweet-ups? Find out what's going on this November in your area and join us Wednesday night by following hashtag #RedCrossCPR on Twitter. You can also use the Red Cross Course Search to find out what courses are happening in your area.

I look forward to regaining the knowledge of knowing how to react in an emergency situation and knowing that I have the power to help someone.

Are you certified in CPR?

11
Nov
2011
03:31:41

Remembrance Day

By / Par: Andrea Willowcat - St. Jean Baptiste, Manitoba

Category / Catégorie: Canadians making waves

I missed the Remembrance Day ceremony at the school the other day but I am thrilled that my middle child did attend with her peers in their kindergarten class. I am grateful to know that she too will learn how precious her freedom and liberties are and why. There is also another reason that this day is important to me; my grandfather passed away on this day in 2004. Despite the years that have passed, for some reason, this year's post has been difficult to write.

I will remember by attending a nearby ceremony today in St. Pierre Jolys, Manitoba and I will honour veterans by wearing a poppy on my coat. I will answer the questions that my little ones have and teach them of the sacrifices that have been made. I will remember my grandfather and how he stood in respect anytime he saw a solider in uniform. This was important to him, to honour those who fought for freedom and right.

 

How will you remember?  The Veterans Affairs Canada  website has this tag-line and it is such a valid question. Over two million Canadians  have served for justice and freedom and  117,000 Canadian men and women have given their lives. You can participate onlineby joining the Remembrance Day social media sites (FacebookTwitter and YouTube )  and attend a service today. Take your friends and children and remember why we are so fortunate to live in Canada.

How will you remember?

Tags / Balises: Culture, Family, Heroes, Remembrance Day
07
Nov
2011
03:31:41

Canadian Moms Who Blog

By / Par: Stacey Kazmir

Category / Catégorie: Canadians making waves

Today, I would love to share some made-in-Canada blogs with you. I've gathered some of my favourite blogs written by Canadian Moms!

Tales of a Ranting Ginger

 

Tales of Ranting Ginger is written by Canadian Mom, "Gingermommy". She is very vocal in Canadian social media and you can find her on Facebook, Twitter and her blog. Gingermommy is one of my first online visits of the day, because she always has some great Canadian deals to list, fun stories about her family and amazing giveaways. One of my recent favourites is her post about Lunch Inspirations, something I think we all need!

Maple Leaf Mommy's Blog

 

Maple Leaf Mommy is an outstanding member of the blogging community. A recent speaker at this year's ShesConnected Conference, "Maple Leaf Mommy"  is becoming an expert on blogging and a great go-to girl about everything! She also shares some very sweet stories about her two little ones and youwill even see a guest post or two from her husband! The perfect site to visit for sweet family stories, fun giveaways (have you seen that she is giving away TWO coffee makers?) and great Canadian content.

Mom vs the Boys

 

Mom vs. the Boys is a Canadian stay-at-home mom to three boys under the age of five! Also a recent speaker at this year's ShesConnected Conference, "Mom Vs. the Boys" is a fun and friendly Canadian mom to follow. She blogs about great Canadian companies, sweet stories about her boys and more. I loved her recent post about redoing her Blogging Headquarters - so fun!

MTM Button

 

Multi-Testing Mommy is THE place to head for awesome recipes, craft ideas, family information and giveaways! She's in the midst of running a Blog Hop full of Canadian Cookies and Holiday Treats! I adored her recent post about Pumpkin decorating too. "Multi-Testing Mommy" writes a well-rounded blog that every mom should check out.

 

Looking for coupons and deals? Look no further than Talking Momcents - she knows her stuff! A Canadian mom of two who shops the deals and finds the freebies, "Talking Momcents" always has something new to share. Besides the deals, she recently posted an amazing catch of the recent Aurora Borealis. Always full of suprises, Talking Momcents is a daily must read.

 What's your favourite Canadian mom blog and why? 


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