New Products from The Magical Blend Montreal

From the Editor: From our inbox to you…. :)

New books from The Magical Blend A Pagan Supply Store….

Located in Montreal, Canada…

The ritual in the secret forest. Stock Photo - 10926726

Graphics thanks to 123rf.com

The Egyptian Book of the Dead (Paperback)
by E. A. Wallis Budge $22.50
Your Chinese Horoscope 2013
by Neil Somerville $17.95
Divine Arcana of the Aurum Solis
by Jean-Louis De Biasi $25.50
Doors to Past Lives and Future Lives
by Joe H. Slate $18.50
The Inner Guide to Egypt
by Alan Richardson and B. Walker John $18.95
The Key of the Mysteries
by Eliphas Levi and Aleister Crowley $27.95
The Pathworkings of Aleister Crowley: The Treasure House of Images
by Aleister Crowley and J. F. C. Fuller $15.50
The New Mythic Tarot
by Juliet Sharman-Burke and Liz Greene $29.99
No Death No Fear: Comforting Wisdom for Life
by Thich Nhat Hanh $16.50

Please Click Here to go to The Magical Blend Website.. 

 

 

August 16 2012.. New Links and Connections Added…

From the Editor: Hi folks… below are the links and connections added to our links and connections page… 

Post’s can get “lost” in a weblog making it difficult at times to locate the information you are looking for… Hence our Links and Connections Page… be sure to check it out if you are looking for a service or product…. :) 

New Links for August 2012: 

Hubby and I love the Adirondacks and have for the last 5 years or so gone there for a vacation… we both love the mountains and the forests that make up the Adirondack park. We enjoy hiking the trails and I have collected some “patches” representing the hikes we have done, which now reside on my Jean Jacket…. :) 

There are a few shops within our Vacation range that we have visited over the years and these we would like to share with you. While they are not local to us, they still represent a community, and are mostly small business trying to make a go of it…. Please view the three listed below, and visit them if you feel inclined if you are ever in the area…. :) 

Long exposure of water churning through the rocks at Lower Split Rock Falls in the Adirondack Mountains of New York Stock Photo - 11545871

 The Mountaineer... www.mountaineer.com This is a huge shop in a big older building all on its own along a nice country road in the Keene Valley area… they have everything one could need, for all outdoor adventures… Lake Placid (not far from Keene Valley) and area has stuff to do outdoors all year round… hiking, fishing, biking, skiing …. you name it they got it… (this is where I got most of my patches… ) 

key notes  - button Stock Photo - 8039225

Ambersound...Phone… 518 891 3114... a lovely little music store in the heart of  Saranac Lake… Mike the owner, is friendly and informative.. He has lots of unique stuff, instruments and cds…. and he enjoys the local talent…. Hubby bought his travel guitar from Mike and he is very happy with it… thanks Mike… :) Ambersound is located at: 52 B Maine Street, Saranac Lake NY 12983

 

Now for Local Whitby News…. :)

Work Life Balance signpost Stock Photo - 14094848

A new and big health food store has just opened up in Whitby… it is huge… when I popped in a few weeks ago they had just opened and didn’t have all the stock they intend to carry, but they still had a big selection.. Healthy food stuffs including gluten free and natural sweetener alternatives, vitamins, herbs, sports nutrition, organic produce, bulk foods, personal care, R.O. water and more…. 

TNS Health Food is owned by Amin and Jocelyn Herati it is located at 

1618 Dundas St. East Unit 2 Whitby, L1N 2K8 …

Operating Hours are: 

Monday to Friday 9am to 9pm 

Saturday 10am to 6pm 

Sunday 11am to 5pm 

Please call 905-240-6066

Graphics thanks to http://www.123rf.com

3 Piece Stacking (one inside the other) Dresser “boxes” Stars and Moon…

3 round stacking containers with lids smaller fits into medium, medium fits into large…. stars and moon painted on each box… 

Made in Indonesia of resin… 

$20:00 includes shipping:  

$10:00 pick up only        ***Update…March 26 2015 price is now $5:00.. :)**

We will arrange to meet with you at a prearranged time in Whitby @ The Whitby Mall… :) 

Payment Options: Credit Card/Invoice through Pay Pal please choose correct button below  (with shipping or pick up only) :  Cash: Money Order

If paying by cash at pick up please email us to place your order. 

If paying by money order, please email us to place your order. 

Buying just this item? choose the “buy now” button… :) 

Wish to continue shopping?  Choose the “add to cart button” … :) 

All of our prices include applicable taxes.

Preview Image Price without shipping/Pick up only

Preview Image Price with shipping

Please note if you purchase several items from us at one time and you choose all prices with shipping, we will do our best to reduce your shipping costs as we package your order. If we can reduce the cost we will supply you with a refund reflecting the reduced rate. :) 

New Moon Ceremony Friday August 17th Oshawa Location

New Moon Ceremony

with Julie Ditta and Friends

Moon Lookout Stock Photo - 4401289

Friday, August 17

The new moon  is an optimal time for seeding intentions. It is a time to focus on wishes and desires that provide clarity of mind and fill your heart with promise. When it comes to setting goals or planning ahead for your future, there is no better time to get started than during the new moon.

7:30 pm 

          Concession 7
         east of Oshawa  
            Refreshments
                  $10.00
         Please Call Julie for directions or to register for this event @ 
905-666-8238

FYI: From The David Suzuki Foundation: Fuelling the Future requires bold vision:

From the Editor: From our inbox to you….

 

Lining of the long pipeline on a countryside Stock Photo - 7332022

Fuelling the future requires bold vision

B.C.’s Christy Clark was right to walk away from a national energy strategy promoted byAlberta’s Alison Redford at a provincial premiers’ meeting in Halifax in late July. She just did it for the wrong reasons. 

Clark said she won’t sign on unless B.C. is guaranteed a bigger share of benefits from the proposed Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline project. But all the money in China, Alberta, and Enbridge’s bank accounts won’t be enough to undo the damage from a major leak near one of the thousand waterways the dual pipeline would cross, or from a supertanker spill along the B.C. coast. 

B.C.’s premier should have renounced the proposal because it’s focused more on tar sands, pipelines, and markets than on getting Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions under control by shifting from fossil fuel dependency to a more efficient system based on conservation and renewable energy. 

Canadians want and need an energy strategy. We need it to combat the ever-increasing damage from global warming, to make better use of our resources, to ensure energy security for all Canadians, to respect the rights of aboriginal people, and to create long-term jobs and economic prosperity. That calls for a better plan than quickly digging up all our bitumen and coal and selling it to China and fracking the hell out of every piece of ground that might have some gas in it. 

Oil, gas, and coal are valuable and finite resources. All represent energy from the sun that has been stored through photosynthesis and concentrated over millions of years. We waste a lot of it, especially when we burn it in private automobiles that use only about 15 per cent of the energy to move the car. Because a car typically weighs 10 to 20 times more than the passengers it carries, we’re only getting about one per cent efficiency from the fuel. 

Instead of wasting 99 per cent of this complex and useful non-renewable chemical mix, we could use more of it to make everything from bicycle tires and computer keyboards to heart valves and artificial limbs. And surely we can even find more efficient and less polluting ways to use it for fuel. 

A rational energy strategy – one that benefits Canadians more than multinational corporations and the repressive regime in China – would recognize the value of our limited resources not just for fuel and products but as a way to generate steady revenue to help us shift to renewable energy. 

What would such a strategy look like? It’s already too late to stop global warming, but we can contribute to making it less severe. That means shifting away from fossil fuels as quickly as possible. Canada would have to reduce its emissions by 80 per cent from 1990 levels by 2050 to do its part to avoid dangerous warming over 2° C. Instead of doubling oil sands production, we need to reduce the energy we get from fossil fuels by more than 70 per cent. 

The target is possible if we transform our energy system over the next 40 years, according to the Trottier Energy Futures Project, a joint effort between the David Suzuki Foundation and the Canadian Academy of Engineering. Renewable energy use would have to double. Energy production from non-hydro renewables such as wind, solar, and biomass would have to increase 150 times from today’s levels. We would also have to make our country 50 per cent more energy efficient. This could be accomplished by building only net-zero buildings by 2050 and retrofitting existing buildings to the highest efficiency standards. 

It would take vision and commitment, including unlocking financing to enable energy efficient retrofits and renewable energy development, training workers to retrofit homes and install local renewable generation, building a flexible electricity grid, and converting refineries to biofuel production from biomass byproducts. 

Although the 2007 plan Premier Redford and her fellow leaders hope to build on mentions renewable energy and climate change, it doesn’t offer the bold vision needed to realize the many benefits – and the necessity – of reducing our reliance on fossil fuels. We need a broad and comprehensive strategy. Had Premier Clark embraced and articulated such a vision, she would have been seen as a real leader. 

By David Suzuki with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Editorial and Communications Specialist Ian Hanington.

For more insights from David Suzuki, please read Everything Under the Sun (Greystone Books/David Suzuki Foundation), by David Suzuki and Ian Hanington, now available in bookstores and online