Bill's Genealogy Blog

Bill Buchanan is a long-time genealogy enthusiast, living in Spruce Grove, Alberta, Canada. This blog will describe my experiences as I research my family history and help others.

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Location: Spruce Grove, Alberta, Canada

I am a retired online school teacher. I love family history. Since 2007, I have spent much of my time providing part-time support for the world's largest free family history site https://familysearch.org This is very rewarding. I have helped others with the Family Tree and related FamilySearch products.
In 2010-2018 I served in the Edmonton Riverbend Family History Centre. I have a FHC blog at Bill's Family History Center Blog For information the Latter-day Saints and family history click https://www.comeuntochrist.org/

Saturday, September 06, 2014

Rob's Novel


I am re-reading the epic fantasy novel written by my son Rob. The first chapter is one of the most gripping introductions I have ever read in a fantasy novel. It really pulled me into the story. Then, there is continuous action, with an interesting cast of characters: Morganna: the orphaned child mage, Corr: the mage who is her rescuer and mentor, Loren: the swordsman protector, Zac: the young officer who sees the rightness of her cause but is bound to follow orders, Kharak: the bear-like warrior devoted to Morganna; and on the opposing side, the Green Queen: a powerful mage with a thirst to become a god at any cost, Arios: her general and champion, an imprisoned god of destruction, and a twisted and corrupted army.

Rob has put together an engaging novel, that I find to be a real page-turner. I have recently read the "Divergent" series and the first two books of the "Percy Jackson and the Olympians" and I find "The God Chronicles" compares very favorably with both, but is more of adult fiction than juvenile fiction.

I like reading the paper version, but it is also available as an inexpensive e-book for about $4 from Chapters Indigo.

Siding the Garage

We have finished siding the garage, and are very satisfied with the results. Notice that the new siding on the garage matches the siding on the home.

Our last major siding project was when we built our house in 1977. It was done using Masonite hardboard siding, guaranteed for 20 years, and still looking great after over 35 years. Vinyl should last at least that long.


Masonite is HEAVY and awkward. Cutting it required a jigsaw. But vinyl is feather light, and still a bit awkward, as it is highly flexible. I would still consider it a 2-person job for that reason. Cutting it across was easily done with a pair of aviation tin-snips ($12 at Home Depot) and longitudinal cuts were easily done by scoring with a utility knife and folding on the scored line. Watching the YouTube videos greatly simplified the task!


Local History Books

One of the very best sources of family history is found in local history books.

Living near Edmonton, Alberta, I have good access to the Provincial Archives of Alberta. They have a huge number of local history books for Alberta. I have been thrilled to find the stories of many of my relatives there. I have purchased a few local history books myself, I and recently donated my copies of the Breton and Carnwood area history books to the PAA.




Online, the free Canadian OurRoots/NosRacines project has many local history books digitized for all of Canada. These can be found at http://ourroots.ca/ You can print or download and save copies of the most interesting pages.
My most recent "discovery" is Manitobia.ca which seems to have most of the local history books for Manitoba. Since my father's family were pioneer settlers in the areas of Neepawa and Riding Mountain, there are wonderful stories about them and their kin. I have spent the last 3 days enjoying their stories.
This free site is fabulous, although I found that downloading the local histories there was different than I expected. Unlike Our Roots, you download the entire book as one PDF file, which is better but did not always work. (On a different computer, the books opened in a viewer instead of downloading, and the viewer would not let me copy the text properly.) As usual, if one browser doesn't give the results you want, try another browser.

I found myself constantly looking up births, marriages and deaths on the free Manitoba Vital Statistics database http://vitalstats.gov.mb.ca/Query.php The two sites work beautifully together.


And I would sometimes look the families up in the census records to verify what I was finding.

Did I have fun? Certainly. A few weeks ago I listened to a talk called "It's All About the Dash" i.e. What happened between the individual's birth and death dates? Local histories can often answer that question. 


In one of the Manitoba books, I found that a relative of mine was not only one of the two founders of the town of Neepawa, but had previously been a member of the North West Mounted Police, and had helped build Fort McLeod and Fort Calgary, the two earliest NWMP forts in Alberta. What full and exciting life he lived! It deserves to be remembered.