Ellie Kennard
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elliek.zeroes.ca.ap.brid.gy
Ellie Kennard
@elliek.zeroes.ca.ap.brid.gy
Request a follow. Approval setting is just to stop bots or scammers. If your profile has a genuine profile pic plus info, maybe some posts, that'll do it.
Vegan for the […]

🌉 bridged from ⁂ https://zeroes.ca/@elliek, follow @ap.brid.gy to interact
First bike ride of the year!

Boy Oh Boy, does that ever feel great! There's nothing like a bike ride to lift the spirits.

10ºC and lovely and sunny! We did about 10km, including connecting our farmers' market veggie collection, but that was perfect to start for […]

[Original post on zeroes.ca]
January 14, 2026 at 7:27 PM
January 11, 2026 at 4:16 PM
Zaz is obviously thinking that whatever I decided was important enough to disturb her rest had better be good.

It is, Zaz. It's Caturday! Your favourite.

Happy Caturday to all who celebrate.

#elliekposts #catsofmastodon #zaz #zazthecat #caturday #cornishrexcats
January 10, 2026 at 5:43 PM
Reposted by Ellie Kennard
Health Canada suddenly being really good.

> Confirms that SARS2 transmits w/o symptoms

> Confirms it hangs in the air and is primarily spread via breathing

> Recommends correct filtration and masking

> Confirms it passes to your pets and that you should mask around them when sick

This is […]
Original post on zeroes.ca
zeroes.ca
January 10, 2026 at 6:00 AM
Price increase of ~15% at podiatrist = decrease in the number of visits annually. Simple.

I can do math.

#gouging #healthcare #corporatepricegouging #elliekposts
January 7, 2026 at 7:16 PM
Nova Scotia Health

NS health (re)mandated mask wearing in all public health facilities on December 18, 2025.

Currently there are outbreaks of COVID, Influenza A and Influenza B in my local hospital (Kentville), in wards on the same floor as the radiology […]

[Original post on zeroes.ca]
January 2, 2026 at 11:54 PM
Night all!

I actually got out this afternoon, the first time in days and I did a short walk with Joni. I was so glad just to be out that I did a lot of just standing and looking. Looking at the clouds, the light, the trees... Everything. What a joy. It was cold […]

[Original post on zeroes.ca]
January 1, 2026 at 12:07 AM
Old fashioned (French) pressure cooker question/help request

Some might remember that my Breville instant pot type pressure cooker broke down a few weeks ago. I sent it to them following their instructions, and they will apparently repair it and send it back to me […]

[Original post on zeroes.ca]
December 31, 2025 at 6:19 PM
That's enough for me for today.
Goodnight all.
Take care and be kind. To everyone and everything.
December 31, 2025 at 1:01 AM
Gotta shut down for the night here. Ice and rain are making for very ugly conditions out there. Stay safe everyone.
Goodnight all.
xo
December 30, 2025 at 2:23 AM
How is it that Bluesky profiles can comment on my posts but I can't respond nor even let them know they need to Bridge?
If they aren't bridged, how do they even see my posts?
I was informed of responses to my post by brid.gy but there is no suggestion as to what to do about it.
Thanks
Ellie
December 29, 2025 at 2:00 AM
Reposted by Ellie Kennard
This (young?) grey heron looks like it's been through some stuff.
December 28, 2025 at 8:07 PM
Are there any wildlife experts who would care to hazard a guess as to what this might be? Bobcat? Lynx? Very poor quality short video and first comment contains similar poor quality image. It's larger than the fox. But doesn't look like a coyote. And no visible […]

[Original post on zeroes.ca]
December 27, 2025 at 7:41 PM
Battle of wills.

Zaz is so cross! She really didn't want her picture taken and did her best to make it almost impossible. She pretty much fought tooth and claw to make it hard to get this photo. She had just been fighting with a tail that didn't want to be bitten […]

[Original post on zeroes.ca]
December 27, 2025 at 5:55 PM
A boggled mind is the new norm.
I'm not sure I'd know what to do with an unboggled one any more.

A friend with a 'cold' (?), feeling ill went into the hospital to spend the night with her sister who needs someone with her at night.
I'm sure she wore her baggy blue. (Except when she had to blow […]
Original post on zeroes.ca
zeroes.ca
December 25, 2025 at 5:07 PM
There must be a better way to remove cat hair from a washing machine after washing pet blankets, other than running a dark fabrics wash immediately afterwards.
I did put them all though a cold drier for 20 minutes, hoping to get rid of it. But.. no. Some still remains.

Anyone?

#fedihelp #pets […]
Original post on zeroes.ca
zeroes.ca
December 24, 2025 at 10:54 PM
@FediTree
Please generate my tree!
December 24, 2025 at 3:39 PM
Reposted by Ellie Kennard
Timeline Cleanse

Swans & ducks on a drizzly day
#birds #photography #nature
December 23, 2025 at 5:09 PM
Now Chris Rea? No!
He was only 74.
Passed away in hospital after a short illness.

https://www.bbc.com/news/live/c0q5g3v02qjt

#soundtrackofmylife #crisrea
December 22, 2025 at 3:18 PM
Reposted by Ellie Kennard
George Monbiot makes his point with a dash of meatless humour and legislative somersaults today.
#EuropeanUnion #vegan
https://www.monbiot.com/2025/12/22/mincing-our-words/
Mincing Our Words
The absolute madness of the proposed new food rules. By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 20th December 2025 Most of what you eat is sausages. I mean, if we’re going to get literal about it. Sausage derives from the Latin _salsicus_ , which means “seasoned with salt”. You might think of a sausage as a simple thing, but on this reading it is everything and nothing, a Borgesian meta-concept that retreats as you approach it. From another perspective, a sausage is an offal-filled intestine, or the macerated parts of an electrocuted or asphyxiated pig or other animal – generally parts that you wouldn’t knowingly eat – mixed with other ingredients that, in isolation, you might consider inedible. For some reason, it is seldom marketed as such. But to the legislators of the EU, a sausage can now have only one meaning: a cylindrical object containing meat. Never mind that cylindrical objects containing no meat have been marketed under names such as “Glamorgan sausage” (_selsig Morgannwg_) for at least 150 years. Never mind that even Germans once felt the need to call animal sausages _mettwurst_ , to distinguish them from other kinds. Never mind that almost everyone knows what “veggie sausage”, “vegan sausage” or “plant-based sausage” mean. A recent survey of 20,000 Dutch people found that 96% are not confused by such terms, which is probably a higher percentage than those who can readily distinguish left from right. The consumer must at all costs be protected from an imaginary threat. For the same reason, members of the European Parliament decided, burgers must also contain meat. It happens that no one is sure why a burger is called a burger. They were once called “Hamburg steaks”, but no clear link to Hamburg has been established.Nevertheless, before the term was abbreviated, meat patties were widely known as hamburgers, whose literal meaning is an inhabitant of Hamburg. If “veggie burgers” are misleadingly marketed, so is any burger not made from the minced inhabitants of a north German city. Last week, the European Council and European Commission tried and failed to make sense of all this. They were unable to agree a common position with the European Parliament, and bumped the decision to January, when a new council presidency will have to deal with it. I can’t blame them. You cannot make sense of a senseless policy. The parliament’s food literalism is remarkably selective. Given the time of year, perhaps I should point out that there is no meat in mincemeat, which is used to fill mince pies. Many years ago there was, but the meat component fell out of fashion. Minced meat, by contrast, _is_ meat – I’m sure that’s not confusing. Similarly, sweetbreads are meat, but sweetmeats are not. None of these terms appear to cause any problems for legislators, though they have insisted that the only permissible definition of meat is “edible parts of the animals referred to in points 1.2 to 1.8 of Annex I to Regulation (EC) No 853/2004”, which is, let’s face it, how it’s commonly understood by shoppers across the EU. If a vegetarian hotdog is to be ruled out, as the parliamentarians demand, on the grounds that it contains no meat, the meat version should be ruled out on the grounds that it contains no dog (hothorse should in some cases be permissible). They might also be shocked to discover that there is no beef in beef tomatoes, butterfly in butterfly cakes, cottage in cottage pie, baby in jelly babies or finger (mostly) in chocolate fingers. And don’t get me started on buffalo wings. All this must be deeply confusing to shoppers. Like Wednesday Addams, who, when offered girl scout cookies, asked whether they contain real girl scouts, we puzzle every day over what such names really mean. Human beings are entirely incapable of pattern recognition, derived and secondary meanings, metaphor or conceptualisation. Language never evolves, and nor does food. This is why, when confronted with “pigs in blankets”, “toad in the hole” or “spotted dick”, people curl up on the floor, banging their heads and moaning weakly (OK, there might be other reasons). Everything can have only one meaning, and this meaning must be what legislators say it is. If you are thinking “benefit of Brexit”, I’m sorry to disabuse you. If the European Council and Commission eventually decide that terms such as veggie burgers and vegan sausages are to be banned in the EU, they are likely to be banned in the UK as well, for fear of jeopardising trade agreements. Already, after a court interpretation of a previous European decision, terms such as oat milk, soy butter and vegan cheese are prohibited on UK labels, but not – because consistency is for suckers – coconut milk or peanut butter. So what explains the selectivity? Lobbying. The decision in the European Parliament is a response to pressure from the meat and dairy industries, which have long been seeking to stamp out competition. It has no more to do with preventing confusion than a Rocky Mountain oyster has to do with a marine bivalve. It’s about protectionism. This is why peanut butter and coconut milk are still legal: they seldom compete directly with animal products. These anti-competitive practices have a long history. In the 19th century, the US dairy industry managed first to get margarine declared a “harmful drug”, then had its sale restricted under the 1886 Oleomargarine Act. It’s reassuring to know that legislators made just as good use of their time then as they do now. The livestock lobby is immensely powerful. Its campaigns are reinforced by rightwing influencers, who wage war against a wide variety of plant products (vegetable oil, soya, almonds, avocados, any plant-based meat substitute), often on entirely spurious health or environmental grounds, while conveniently ignoring the far greater impacts of animal products on human bodies and the living planet. The food industry knows that words are a powerful weapon. If Moses had promised the Israelites a land of mammary secretions and insect vomit, I doubt many would have followed him to Canaan, though these are accurate descriptions of milk and honey. It knows that if plant-based foods have to be marketed under alien and alienating names, this will depress their market share. The livestock lobby seeks to normalise and naturalise the cruel, grotesque, planet-wrecking realities of its industry, while casting plant-based foods as unnatural and wrong. As usual, it has made minced meat of European legislators. Though I should point out that I don’t mean that literally. www.monbiot.com ### Share this: * Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X * Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook * Click to share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads * Click to share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky * Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn *
www.monbiot.com
December 22, 2025 at 1:05 PM
Springhouse Market #halifax spirit of giving

This wonderful little restaurant business has a community minded program in place to help people in need of food or a warm drink. It's their community meals program. As they put it:

'...we’re thinking a lot about how […]

[Original post on zeroes.ca]
December 21, 2025 at 6:39 PM
Reposted by Ellie Kennard
The foxes have been fairly quiet of late. That's not entirely true. We can *hear* them calling, but we're seeing them less frequently as they get down to their winter business. Lopa the vixen is still showing up on a semi-regular basis and she's looking in […]

[Original post on social.vivaldi.net]
December 21, 2025 at 3:18 PM