Canadian Out of the Office
Posted: July 2, 2013 | Categories: Miscellaneous
One of my Canadian colleagues was out of the office on Monday and she had the funniest OOO message I've ever seen:
I am out of the office on Monday July 1 to celebrate Canada Day. I will have no access to email or voicemail and will be back in the office on Tuesday July 2.
Here are some fun facts about Canada that you may not already know:
- The Stanley Cup has its own bodyguard, but that doesn't mean Canadian hockey champions haven't put all kinds of different foods and drinks in it (everything from chocolate milk to popcorn and cereal!)
- British Columbian pioneers made use of the oolichan, also called candlefish, at nighttime. The small fish is so fatty that it can be dried, strung on a wick and burned like a candle!
- Canada's name comes from a misunderstanding between Jacques Cartier and some Iroquois youth who were pointing out a village (for which they used the word “Kanata”). They were actually trying to identify the small area which is present day Quebec City, but Cartier used the similar-sounding word “Canada” to refer to the whole area. Oops!
- The Narcisse Snake Dens in Manitoba have more snakes in a concentrated area than anywhere else in the world. Tens of thousands of red-sided garter snakes gather there every year. On the other hand, there are no snakes on the island of Newfoundland.
- Canada officially got its own national flag on February 15, 1965 — almost 100 years after it became a country (in 1867).
- Canada's official languages may be French and English, but our geese have their own language: scientists believe that Canada geese have as many as 13 different calls for everything from greetings and warnings to happiness.
- If you visit Dawson City, Yukon, you can join the “Sourtoe Cocktail Club” — all you have to do is finish a drink (of anything!) with a real human toe in the bottom. The club's motto says, “You can drink it fast, you can drink it slow — but the lips have gotta touch the toe.”
- In 1962, Pincher Creek, Alberta experienced the fastest, biggest temperature change ever recorded in Canada as a result of a Chinook (a warm, dry wind that comes off the Rocky Mountains). The temperature rose from -19C to 22C in just one hour!
- Between 1984 and 2008, it was illegal to sell pop (this is 'soda' for Americans) in cans in PEI. All carbonated drinks had to be purchased in refillable glass bottles. PEI was the only place in North America to have a “can ban.”
- Forget the Loch Ness Monster: Canada has its own mysterious lake creature, Ogopogo, who reportedly lives in Lake Okanagan, British Columbia.
And my absolute favorite fact: Canadians consume more mac and cheese than any nation on earth (source: https://www.canadiangeographic.ca/kids/fun-facts/).
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