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About Hastings County, ON

Walking the Walk

03-06-09
Bob Foster
Bob Foster: Real Estate Agent in Belleville, ON

It's easy enough "talk the talk" but I am very grateful to have an office manager who also knows how to "walk the walk". Edie Haslauer is away from us for a month while she distributes bedkits to children in Kenya.

Edie is the kind of person who doesn't say much about her personal values - she just shows them by example in the way she lives. At a recent staff meeting she told us that she would be away for a month and detailed who would be taking over her role in training sessions and staff meetings. Today I got an email from one of our admin staff that let me know more about what she is doing, and here it is:

Sleeping Children Around the World (http://www.scaw.org/) is an organization that gives 100% of every donation to children in need. Here are some details from their website:

"Sleeping Children Around the World [SCAW] donations provide bedkits to children of any race and/or religion who will benefit the most; typically being located in underdeveloped and developing countries.

"Each $35 donation (Canadian funds) provides a bedkit that consists of a mat or mattress, pillow, sheet, blanket, mosquito net (if applicable), clothes outfit, towel and school supplies. Bedkit contents vary from country to country depending upon local needs.

"Since its founding by Murray and Margaret Dryden in 1970, SCAW has provided bedkits for over 900,000 children in 32 countries. In 2009 the one millionth child will receive a bedkit."

You can find a blog maintained by Edie and other members of "Team Kenya" at -

http://scawlivereports.blogspot.com/2009_03_01_archive.html

Feel free to check out the site and send the team some encouragement for the wonderful work they are doing.

The Power of Shared Knowledge in Blogging

03-06-09
Bob Foster
Bob Foster: Real Estate Agent in Belleville, ON

Twenty years ago the only way to share what you knew with a broad audience was to publish a book, write a magazine or newspaper article, or get on a radio or TV broadcast. In each case the barrier was that some "gatekeeper" (a publisher, editor, producer etc.) had to understand your material well enough to be convinced that there was value in what you had to say before they would put time, money and other resources to work giving you access to an audience.

The effect of this was that information was highly isolated. When I was doing a thesis at that time, I spent weeks looking at catalogues of articles with relevant source material, then the task was to obtain and search through massive amounts of material on Microfiche film rolls. A lot of wonderful expertise was never shared on Microfiche, and what information was shared was often hard to find. The net effect was tremendous inefficiency as we failed to transfer knowledge effectively. Mot innovation was through local solutions that had little effect in solving similar problems elsewhere.

Then came the Internet, and suddenly anyone could publish to a worldwide audience, as we do each time we write a blog post here at ActiveRain.

So, how has this affected the sharing of knowledge?

I am in steep learning curve again because I am in the first year of my new career a realtor. I can ask questions at a staff meeting or training session and draw on the collective experience of perhaps a dozen people. The information I get is very valuable, because it relates to our local market.

For most of my questions, though, I go to a worldwide staffroom populated by more than 130,000 real estate professionals. I use the search feature on ActiveRain to look for answer to problems, and I always find a rich resource in previous blog discussions.

When I post questions in my own blog, I find that AR members are tremendouly responsive, and it's not unusual to get half a dozen replies within 5 minutes. The replies will always provide a range of opinions, which is a richer resource than drawing on any one person's knowledge.

In a way, the Internet has become not only a great repository of human knowledge, but a very effective way to facilitate the discourse needed for human knowledge to develop more rapidly and more completely than has ever been possible before.

Winter's Winding Down in Quinte, Ontario

02-18-09
Bob Foster
Bob Foster: Real Estate Agent in Belleville, ON

Winter can take a while to leave here in Ontario. In fact, there was one time that our family went to a reunion in Western Ontario on May 20th, and we had a sprinkling of snow!

Overall, though, the signs of winter losing its power are already here. Longer days, strong sunshine and melting snow are all welcome signs.

Before winter leaves, though, I thought you might enjoy a few pics:

1) A pick-up game of friends playing hockey on the mill pond in Stirling, Ontario.

hockey on the mill pond in Stirling, Ontario

2) A Great Grey Owl. We had one of these that decided to feast on a dead rabbit near our driveway, just after dusk each day, for about a week this winter. If we were coming in late, we needed to drive slowly to persuade him to fly away. My wife and I each learned that after close calls when he almost became a hood ornament by flying out in front of the car. He certainly wasn't afraid of us.

I'm glad things turned out ok. What a beautiful bird. I took this pic of another great grey about a mile from our home.

great grey owl

3) Down at Glenora, near Picton, Ontario, we have a ferry that operates year round to take people from the highway on one shore to its next section on the other in a place where it has not made economic sense to build a bridge. The operators tell me that the constant runs of the two ferries manage to keep the ice broken up, and that it is only in really nasty weather that they have to close down.

Glenora ferry in winter


4) And this will be happening very soon. Already with the cold nights, warms days, and lots of sunshine, the sap is running and people will soon be collecting enough to turn it into delicious maple syrup. The equipment has obviously been updated since the natives used to collect sap and boil it in birchbark containers, but the taste always says, SPRING!

- Bob Foster

Hoax? Genuine Threat? Check this address!

02-13-09
Bob Foster
Bob Foster: Real Estate Agent in Belleville, ON

I get warnings about Internet threats on a regular basis and I'm sure you do as well. Some are genuine, but many of them are sent by well-intentioned family and freinds who are trying to protect me who have been drawn into forwarding and promoting a hoax.

So how do you sort out which threat messages are real and which ones are hoaxes before you hit that "Forward" button?

First, go to this website -

http://www.symantec.com/business/security_response/threatexplorer/risks/hoaxes.jsp

The folks at Symantec are usually on top of both the new virus/ phishing threats and those messages that contain hoaxes. If you enter part of the title from the message you have received into the search function there and the message you received comes up, with a full description of a hoax, please DO NOT FORWARD THE MESSAGE. That only makes it easier for hoaxes to propogate, and it may even be an embarrassment when you get a message back from someone you forwarded it to, telling you that you too were drawn into a hoax.

Still not sure?

Try this .. go to Google search and enter the title of the email you are wondering about, then add "+ hoax". There are a number of other great sites out on the Internet that also keep tabs on hoaxes, and it might be that you will find a description of one that you are dealing with there. Hoaxes tend to be long-lived, and I have sometimes had to tell people that something they thought was a genuine threat started as a hoax more than 5 years ago.

If you try both of the techniques above and see no evidence of a hoax - start forwarding!

Keeping warm in Canada

02-05-09
Bob Foster
Bob Foster: Real Estate Agent in Belleville, ON

I have lived through a very interesting period of time. When I was youngster I used to save a carrot for the milkman's horse, and rush out to give him a treat as the milkman delivered to our house. Now, my Blackberry alerts me anytime one of my email accounts receives a new message.

My personal life carries parts of the old and new everywhere I look. I spend a fair bit of my time doing webwork on the sites I have created for my listings, but then I head our into our livingroom and throw more wood on the fire to banish the cold of a Canadian winter from our home.

fire

As I do this, and identify myself with humans who have burned wood for 10000 years or more, but I find myself doing a quick check for environmental concerns. Environmental is a word that only came into usage part way through my lifetime, and only came to the forefront of our concerns in the past few years.

Old wood heat ... new concerns.

So, is the flame hot enough to reduce particulate emissions? Check.

Are we only using recycled products (slabwood) so that no trees are being cut to heat our home? Check.

Are we only releasing carbon into the atmosphere that would be released anyway if this wood was left to rot on the forest floor? Check.

I am grateful for being born when I was, for seeing so many changes in our transition to our new society. I am grateful for my connection with a past of 61 years ago, and I am also grateful for the chance to help create a better future for my grandkids born in the last couple of years.

This is an amazing time to be alive.