Pip: Welcome to The Proprietor Review, where Merritt, British Columbia turns out to be a surprisingly rich dateline for questions about time, food, disease, and geopolitics — all in one week.

Mara: We're moving through dreamlike writing and photography, a local dining scene, a hantavirus update for the Nicola Valley, and some bigger-picture thinking on trade, infrastructure, and energy corridors.

Pip: Let's start with the writing — and the dreams.

Dreamlike Writing And Reflections

Mara: Kevin Griffiths is working in a mode that sits somewhere between street photography and prose poetry — the question both posts are circling is what it means to catch a moment before time takes it away.

Pip: His post Dream World frames it through a camera on Voght Street: "The camera created a dreamy sense for this traveler on Merritt BC" — and the image really does carry that quality, something caught mid-float.

Mara: The consequence is that the photograph isn't documentation — it's closer to a sealed instant, the kind Griffiths describes elsewhere as a "public statement that might be followed, an artist presenting, or accidental — it is called a moment."

Pip: That word "accidental" is doing a lot of work. The best street photography usually is.

Mara: Time Lapse picks up that thread and pushes it further. Griffiths argues the phrase itself is a contradiction — time isn't something that lapses, it's something you either inhabit or lose to measurement.

Pip: He writes, "Lapsed time is a nag — it never supports, it yells going going gone, you couldn't ever catch it saying I'll be waiting for you."

Mara: So the practical upshot is a reorientation: stop tracking time by duration and track it by enjoyment instead. He calls still photography the model for this — it "caresses you," he writes, rather than stalking you the way video does.

Pip: Which is a genuinely useful distinction between media that demand your schedule and media that wait for yours.

Mara: Both posts land on the same underlying argument — presence over measurement, the caught moment over the recorded sequence. The photography and the prose are making the same case from different angles.

Pip: One through a lens on Voght Street, one through a surreal glowing clock. Kevin Griffiths is consistent, at least, in his enemies list.

Mara: From the texture of a moment to the texture of a meal — the local scene in Merritt has its own kind of presence.

Local Dining And Market Scenes

Pip: Kevin Griffiths turns a Boston Pizza lunch into a brief, five-star dispatch — the whole bill lands at fifteen dollars and seventy-five cents, tip at the till.

Mara: The post is called BP $15:…Lunch, and the notation is almost accounting: "Coffee refill included, 75 cents tax added total bill $15:75" — Fiesta Salad, five stars, done.

Pip: Affordable, unpretentious, and apparently satisfying. The Merritt dining economy is not suffering.

Mara: Cuisine, the companion post, zooms out to the farmers market on a Saturday morning during the May long weekend — same town, same instinct to document what's available and who's gathering around it.

Pip: From hantavirus to hydroelectric — the health picture comes next.

Public Health And Wildlife Risk

Mara: The question percypaschal is answering in Deer Mice spread, Andie's Virus is the one residents were probably already asking: does the Andes hantavirus outbreak in the news actually affect Merritt?

Pip: The answer is direct: "The short answer is no, the risk to you and the general public in Merritt is currently very low."

Mara: The upshot is containment — four passengers from the MV Hondius cruise ship returned to British Columbia, one tested presumptive positive, and that person has had zero contact with the general public while in strict isolation.

Pip: The post also reminds readers that a local strain carried by deer mice already exists in rural B.C., and the precautions are practical — wet down droppings with bleach rather than sweeping them airborne.

Mara: Grounded, local, useful. Now for the larger infrastructure picture.

Trade, Energy, And Infrastructure

Mara: Three posts this week are thinking about what holds systems together — drilling industries, river corridors, and the cost of fuel — and the tension running through all of them is between development and its consequences.

Pip: The CDDA convention post covers the 81st Annual General Meeting of the Canadian Diamond Drilling Association, scheduled for Victoria under the theme "Viva Victoria" — workforce pipelines, mental health in high-stress sectors, safety awards.

Mara: percypaschal's Trade and Energy: Black Sea River Systems takes the longer view: "These vast freshwater systems act as natural highways, enabling international trade and commercial navigation deep into the European interior."

Pip: What that means in practice is that the Danube, Dnieper, Dniester, and Don are simultaneously ecological assets and geopolitical pressure points — and the post notes that large-scale hydroelectric development has largely stalled under EU environmental mandates, shifting focus toward offshore wind and subsea energy corridors.

Mara: Bridge over River Kwai brings it back to ground level — Kevin Griffiths writing about gas prices, planned obsolescence, and the cycle of militarism with a benediction at the end: "enjoy the moment, be in the present, you have the secret now."

Pip: From Black Sea river systems to a Merritt gas pump, the infrastructure question stays the same — who pays, and for whose decisions.


Mara: Moments, meals, containment, corridors — this week's posts keep returning to the same underlying question: what's worth measuring and what's worth just inhabiting.

Pip: Kevin Griffiths would say stop measuring. We'll see what next week's dateline brings.