Over the Labor Day weekend we went to a local fair, the 'Brome Fair'. It was a bit nostalgic because when we lived in Connecticut, every year we also went to a local fair - you know the kind, with fried food, games, rides and farm animals. This was the same, but was even more similar since Brome is in a part of Quebec that is heavily anglophone. There are a few of those areas in Quebec, including the West Island of Montreal. A region is termed 'anglophone' when a majority of families speak English at home as a first language. What we've noticed is that most young people in Quebec are bilingual, and talking to natives, it seems to be a trend. The Quebec language law has done a good job keeping French relevant (holding a job is impossible without at least an intermediate level of spoken French), but parents are increasingly realizing that English is important for their kids to learn. Speaking of languages, my wife and I are starting a French conversation class in a few weeks, offered by a local non-profit. It's geared towards new immigrants, they call it 'francisation', since you not only learn to speak French, you learn about local culture. I'm looking forward to it since improving my spoken French has been difficult for me. I work remotely for an American company, so I don't have much chance to practice conversation, and most people we interact with on a day-to-day basis (grocery store, coffee shop, etc) speak English. So that tends to be the default language once they sense you struggling with French. I continue to read and listen to French as much as I can in the meantime, and I was pleased to see a french-language phlog in the list here at SDF [0] (best viewed in elinks). [0] gopher://sdf.org/1/users/flonlo/