WE Vancouver, December 13, 2012

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DEC. 13 - DEC. 19, 2012 READ MORE ONLINE AT

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Also: The mayor’s creative side 5 Gifts for the home 8 - 13 Christmas Hot Tickets 14 - 16 Restaurant RIPs 17

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On TV she’s the Blue Fairy. To her kids she’s in tight with the Tooth Fairy. To us, Keegan Connor Tracy is one of the best dressed women in Vancouver 6 Rob Newell photo


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December 13 – 19,12-12-10 2012

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Who

are

Publisher Anne Devereaux • 604-742-8684 publisher@wevancouver.com

the week ahead

Dec. 13 - 19

Managing Editor Martha Perkins • 604-742-8695 editor@wevancouver.com Editorial staff Kelsey Klassen • 604-742-8699 kelsey@wevancouver.com Photography Editor Doug Shanks • 604-742-8691 photo@wevancouver.com Advertising Manager Gail Nugent • 604-742-8678 admanager@wevancouver.com Classified Advertising 604-575-5555 classifieds@wevancouver.com Creative Services Supervisor Robbin Sheriland Creative Services Staff Tara Rafiq Circulation Miguel Black • 604.742.8676 circulation@wevancouver.com 205-1525 W. 8th Avenue, Vancouver, BC, V6J 1T5 Facebook.com/ WEVancouver @WEVancouver Member of Black Press, B.C. Press Council, Canadian Community Newspapers Association. Published at Vancouver by the MetroValley Newspaper Group a Division of Black Press Group Ltd. Editorial submissions are welcome but unsolicited manuscripts will not be returned. Submissions may be edited for brevity and legality. Opinions in columns are not necessarily shared by the publisher. Copyright and/ or property rights subsist in all display advertising and other material appearing in WE. If, in the publisher’s judgment, an error is made that materially affects the value of the advertise­ment to the advertiser, a corrected advertisement will be inserted upon demand without further charge. “Make-good” insertions are not granted on minor errors which do not lessen the value of the advertisement. Notice of error required before second insertion.

Studio Ghibli fans rejoice

Celebrating 12 years of Beauty Night

Fans of Japanese animation (and some soon-to-be-fans) will be delighted to know about Castles In the Sky: The Masters of Studio Ghibli, a retrospective in Vancouver Dec. 14 – Jan 3. Studio Ghibli is the world renowned anime studio founded in Tokyo in 1985 by directors Hayao Miyazaki and Isao Takahata and producer Toshio Suzuki. Among its films are the classics Princess Mononoke, My Neighbor Totoro (pictured) and Spirited Away. Other Ghibli films that will be screened include Ponyo, Castle in the Sky, Porco Rosso, Kiki’s Delivery Service and more. Both Vancity Theatre (1181 Seymour) and Pacific Cinematheque (1131 Howe) will screen the movies. The Studio Ghibli films at the Vancity will be in 35mm in the English-language versions. Films at the Cinematheque will screen in Japanese language prints with subtitles. The Ghibli films are open to all ages. Princess Mononoke is classified 14A, all other titles are rated G or PG. The Vancity Theatre offers a special rate of $7 for youth under 19. For a complete list of films, tickets and showtimes visit VIFF.org.

Since 2000, more than 500 volunteers have donated their time, expertise and hearts to give more than 26,000 life makeovers to women living in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. Founded by Caroline MacGillivray (pictured left), the Beauty Night Society builds self-esteem and changes the lives of women living in poverty. The very first event MacGillvray held was attended by 73 women and 14 volunteers. Today, programming is offered four nights a week serving 200 impoverished women and youth each week. On Dec. 15, Beauty Night marks its 12-year anniversary at the Celebrate Dignity Gala at the Hive Vancouver. Hosted by Jessica Holmes, Canadian motivational speaker and comedian, this eco fashion show will feature 12 Beauty Night ladies. Tickets are $99 at CelebrationOfDignity.eventbrite. com. File photo

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The family-friendly Christmas at Canada Place event is back for its 25th year. Until Dec. 30, people are invited down to the waterfront to enjoy cheer, drink cocoa, and experience a longstanding Vancouver tradition. Stroll the Avenue of Trees and breathe in the fresh pine scent of custom decorated Christmas trees. At the Christmas Workshop, young visitors can enjoy crafts, storytelling, face painting and a life-sized “SantaGram” photo wall. One Vancouver Christmas tradition that pre-dates the Canada Place celebrations is the Woodward’s department store window displays. When the retail giant closed in 1993, Canada Place purchased the windows and they are now a proud part of the holiday decor at Canada Place. This year, tech-savvy visitors can download a mobile app and use a map to visit all the Woodward’s window locations. Find it at the Apple App Store or on Google Play. View the whole schedule of events at CanadaPlace.ca. Canada Place photo

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The creative side of politics Change is coming, says Mayor Gregor Robertson. We can shape it if we are creative

Being a politician is not all serious business: Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson shares a laugh with Mark Busse at Creative Mornings. Trevor Jansen photo

By Martha Perkins

W

hen you’re an organic farmer trying to figure out how to get your products to consumers, you need to find creative ways to get past all the giant food firms who rule the market. How about setting up your own farmers’ market? When you’re a mayor who’s constantly getting messages about why things can’t be done, you need to find creative ways to make things happen. How about using the city’s 40,000 street lamps as wifi towers and electric-car chargers? “Applying creativity has to be at the core of solving problems,” Mayor Gregor Robertson told the standing-room only Creative Mornings crowd at W2 Media on Friday. Change is coming, he added, and it’s better to embrace it than trying to stick to your current path. “We can shape that change for maximum, positive outcomes if we use our creativity.” Robertson was the first politician to be invited to the monthly forum for innovative ideas and

WEVancouver.com

conversation. The only caveat for him was that he had to stick to the theme of creativity. The only caveat for the audience was that they too had to stick to the theme in the question and answer period. No grilling him about taxes or garbage pick-up. Robertson started with his own journey to the mayor’s chair: a 12-year-old wannabe rock star

(who did Kiss covers); a young man’s travels through China to connect with Dr. Norman Bethune, a relative who is viewed as a hero to the Chinese (and with whom he shares a name); a sailing adventure across the Pacific with his wife Amy, fishing for dinner and anchoring off islands in quest of fresh fruit; and then back to BC where he and Amy started an

organic farm and Robertson and a friend started the Happy Planet juice company. Happy Planet’s first name was Creative Juices, which is something they had to tap into when it came to making money. “The only way to compete with the Cokes and Pepsis of this world is to be creative and hustle,” he said. As he travelled with his juice

truck, he became more aware of some of the problems facing us as a society. He wanted to help change things, but how? That’s when he turned to politics, something he could have never predicted happening. Now he’s a convert. “Politics is our most direct way to create change,” he told the youthful audience, “but very few of us get involved directly.” Facing the future, Robertson says that while Vancouver has and will continue to be powered by resource industries, “it’s the creative economy that’s growing in leaps and bounds.” Vancouver is the world’s third most important digital media hub following LA and London. More can be done to continue with that success and ensure that change is a positive force that moves us forward. “You need pressure points inside and outside the system,” Robertson said, encouraging people to become more involved in applying that pressure. “I don’t think it will come from same-old, same-old… We need to get more voices to the table and make people think they can help shape the city.” The next Creative Mornings is Jan. 4 with Joseph Wu, an origami artist and programmer. Tickets are free thanks to event sponsors — this past Friday it was Modo, next month it’s PowerShifter and, as always, W2 Media Cafe and the Society of Graphic Designers of Canada/British Columbia. They become available starting December 31 at CreativeMorningsVancouver.eventbrite.com.

December 13 – 19, 2012

5


By Sabrina Furminger

Once Upon a Time (now in its second season) has been a smash hit for ABC, and Tracy credits the show’s success, in part, to the dreariness of modern life. “In this depressive recessionary time where people, A, can’t afford to go out, and B, are really feeling the desperate heaviness of this time, you have this show,� said Tracy. “They don’t talk about the economy in Storybrooke [ably portrayed by Steveston, BC]. It’s like the rest of the world doesn’t exist, and I think that escapism is very timely.� While Tracy has plenty to share about Once Upon a Time, she can’t divulge quite as much about the yet-to-air Bates Motel, which co-stars Freddie Highmore as a young Norman and Vera Farmiga as his mother. “I can say that I portray a teacher who’s very influential,� she said. “You’re lucky if you have one of those come along, and I think that’s what she’s going to be for him.� When she’s not acting with the likes of Redford (“You just can’t help but be dazzled by him,� she said) or engaged in full-blown mommy mode, Tracy can be found on Twitter (@keegolicious), tweeting about any number of her passions: fashion, literature, French, New York Times crossword puzzles, and mixed martial arts. “[My interests are] certainly incongruous to some degree,� she said with a laugh. “I love the idea that I can be a polyglot and a mixed martial arts fan and a fashionista and a damn good mother all in the same package, [because] you have to have varied interests, and I come by them honestly.�

I

n Keegan Connor Tracy’s world, magic is not merely the stuff of fairytales. The last two years have been exceptionally magical for the Vancouverbased actress. First Tracy snagged the plum role of the Blue Fairy on ABC’s hit fantasy series, Once Upon a Time, a dream gig in which her spirited character regularly squares off against the wicked Rumplestiltskin, masterfully portrayed by Scottish actor Robert Carlyle (The Full Monty). Shortly thereafter, she was handpicked by icon Robert Redford to appear in his political action thriller The Company You Keep, currently snapping up awards and acclaim on the festival circuit. Now the seemingly ageless actress is gearing up for yet another high-profile role: that of Miss Watson, Norman Bates’ language arts teacher, on Bates Motel, A&E’s upcoming Psycho prequel set to premiere in early 2013. And Tracy has made all of these career strides while simultaneously immersed in the role of a lifetime: the mother to two young daughters under the age of four. “Magic still exists at our house,� said Tracy during a recent interview in a Vancouver pub. “[My older daughter] is fascinated that when the Tooth Fairy comes in the night, she leaves a little letter saying, ‘please say ‘hi’ to my friend the Blue Fairy.’� It’s not only magic that has led to this shining moment in Tracy’s career. The Ontario native has been working steadily in film and television for 17 years, with roles in films like 40 Days and 40 Nights and Final Destination 2 and TV shows like Battlestar Galactica, Jake 2.0 and Beggars and Choosers under her belt. But the Blue Fairy (and her counterpart, Mother Superior) has changed everything for Tracy — and fans might be surprised to discover how grueling and non-magical the work can be. To date, much of Tracy’s Blue Fairy work has been shot against a green screen, involving complicated harness work that finds her floating 30 or 40 feet off the ground for hours at a time, with an inanimate object usually standing in for co-stars such as Carlyle and Ginnifer Goodwin (Snow White). “It’s usually a piece of tape or a water bottle or sometimes the script supervisor has been a stand-in because I really like to have eyeballs to look into,� said Tracy. “Over the course of a long, long day [the harness] can get painful.� Physical challenges aside, her fairy-dustwielding alter ego is a source of ongoing delight for Tracy — even though the powerful being is far from the goofy and quirky fairy Tracy had expected to play at the outset. “When I got to say the thing about the curse in the Pinocchio episode, ‘after 28 years she’s going to come back and save us all,’ I couldn’t believe that I got to say that,� said Tracy. “It’s like when you get to say whatever the title of the movie is, and that’s your line in the movie.�

Bohemian chic — the photo

O

Keegan Connor Tracy photographed at the Marine Building by Rob Newell

Wish upon a star Once Upon a Time’s Keegan Connor Tracy enjoys a magic moment in her life as an actress, mother and lace-crazed fashionista

n a rainy afternoon in mid-November, the foyer of the Marine Building played host to a magical photo shoot with Blue-Fairyturned-WE-cover-girl, Keegan Connor Tracy. Dressed in a series of tightly cinched corsets from Lace Embrace Atelier and elaborate hats supplied by The Saucy Milliner, Tracy appeared perfectly at ease as she was photographed amongst the Burrard Street landmark’s art deco fixtures—hardly surprising considering her long-held passion for fashion. “I actually wore a feathered fascinator to my 8th grade graduation,â€? said Tracy, who described her everyday look as “bohemian chic.â€? “I love pulling together old and new‌. I have always tried to find something no one else would have.â€? Tracy is an avid fan of both Lace Embrace Atelier and The Saucy Milliner, two Vancouver designers who’ve created pieces for Once Upon a Time and who, says Tracy, whip up fashion magic for their customers. “Anything bespoke has a magic that makes it yours,â€? said Tracy. “I love supporting local artists who are stepping outside of this tendency we have to buy mass-produced, inexpensive pieces that don’t last. These are investment pieces that you can savour over time. It’s like slow food, but with fashion.â€? Once Upon a Time airs Sundays at 7pm on CTV.

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A very mummery Christmas

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Emma Slipp recalls the year her family resurrected a bygone holiday tradition

First Come First serve ends December 21st, 2012

By Christine Lyon

W

hen Emma Slipp was a teenager, her family started practising an unusual Christmas ritual that set their holiday revelries apart from those of their neighbours’. “We’re mummers,” the Vancouver actress told the audience at The Flame: Holiday Season Edition storytelling event last month at The Cultch. Mummering, an old-fashioned custom used to usher in the new year — which Slipp likens to “Christmas carolling and trick-or-treating on crack” — is still practised in Newfoundland. Mummers don outlandish costumes, cover their faces, disguise their voices, noisily burst into unsuspecting homes and perform plays for the bewildered residents. “When the performance is over, it is assumed that you will be given booze, and then be joined by all the people in the house as you go to the next house.” Newfies love this “roving drunken costume party.” But she is from Nova Scotia. “No one had ever heard of mummering until the year that I was 15 and my very theatrically minded mother decided that mummering was going to be our new family tradition.”

WEVancouver.com

O F F

On Bowen Island live the Black Sheep Morris Dancers. Every Christmas they go a-mummering on the ferry to and from Horseshoe Bay, delighting commuters with the tale of King George and the dragon. Go to BowenBlackSheep.ca for updates on the Dec. 21 trek. In this story, Emma Slipp tells of the night the police caught her mummering with her family. Martha Perkins photo For their inaugural mummering tour, Slipp’s family presented Saint George and the Dragon (her father played the damsel in distress). The last stop was the home of the Wade family, who had a teenaged son. “So that house was the last place on earth I wanted to go with my father prancing around in a tutu,” Slipp says. They entered the house, drums pounding, whistles blaring, and it seemed, for one relieving moment, that no one was home. “But then my father opens the door to the TV room and a huge cloud of smoke hits us in the face,” Slipp recalls. There, eating munchies and watching The Trailer Park Boys, was the Wade boy and his friend. “We had to proceed with our medieval revel and they just sat there, stunned and very stoned, and I wanted to die.”

Back home, Slipp retreated to her bedroom, humiliated. Moments later, she saw an RCMP cruiser pull into the driveway. “Seems a bunch of masked freaks just made two poor boys watch a play,” Slipp overheard the officer tell her mother. Fortunately, no one was arrested for breaking and entering. “It turns out that the officer was a proud Newfoundlander, and when he heard the boys’ story and then matched our plates to their description, he just laughed at them and said, ‘You’ve been mummered, boys’.” Slipp regrets that she will not be home for Christmas. “I will be here, in this big damp city, wishing that I was dressed in a gold lamé gown, with a flowery pillowcase over my head, committing minor felonies with my dear family of Christmas terrorists.”

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gifts for the home

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ooking for an original gift idea for the interior decorator on your Christmas shopping list? Whether you’re buying for someone who’s just moved into new digs, or someone hoping to spruce up their existing living space, a beautifully designed household accessory is always a much-appreciated gift. WE Vancouver arts & style style reporter Kelsey Klassen and local lifestyles writer Taraneh Ghajar Jerven have scoured the city and compiled a list of this year’s must-have items for the house (or condo!).

Patch is a self-watering planter that enables you to grow herbs and lettuces year-round. Locally made in Richmond with post-consumer and recyclable materials, it comes in three slick designs: classic white, the line drawings of the Icon Jumble or the subdued grey ombre. The planters can be purchased flatpacked ($39.95 each, with a special holiday promotion of three planters for $99.95) or, for their Vancouver customers, fully assembled with soil and herbs ($59.95 each). Order online at Patch-33.myshopify. com, and with each purchase, a planter is donated to Growing Chefs to use in classrooms around the Lower Mainland as part of a volunteer initiative to educate kids about planting, harvesting, and cooking their own food. Assembled planters are 12” x 6” x 6” and fit neatly on a windowsill. — Kelsey Klassen

Designed by British papercut artist Rob Ryan, this gift boxed Four Season’s plate set is a design lover’s must have. The look is modern, but with a whimsical, romantic twist. $46; Available at The Bay downtown (674 Granville). — Kelsey Klassen

The Recipe Rock ($12.49): Did you know 70 per cent of cooks are abandoning their traditional recipe books for printed internet or magazine materials? The Recipe Rock is a stylish rock and magnet that holds up to eight pages of any printed recipe angled upright, and doesn’t eat up precious counter space. Across Canada at Sears, Home Outfitters, London Drugs, and gourmet shops. Online retailers include Cayne’s Superhousewares (CaynesHousewares.com), Cookworks (Cookworks.ca), Golda’s Kitchen (GoldasKitchen.com), London Drugs (LondonDrugs.com). — Kelsey Klassen

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Crack a door in any East Van condo and you’re sure to find a terrarium. But none so elegant as the hand-crafted hanging tear by Score + Solder. Founder Matthew Cleland scores each pane of glass and solders it into geometric designs, building his company name as well as artful homes for ecosystems, in his workshop on Pender Island. He leaves the plant selection to you. Suspended Teardrop Terrarium, $170. (Old Faithful, 320 W. Cordova, 778-327-9376, OldFaithfulShop.com). — Taraneh Ghajar Jerven

555 West Hastings 8

December 13 – 19, 2012 VERSION

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gifts for the home

Recreate the cozy scents of winter with Sydney Hale Co.’s hand-poured candles. Made with soy wax, the most festive editions include Fir + Sage — the aroma of Christmas — and Woodsmoke + Amber, which smells like walking into a wintery cabin with the fireplace going. Sydney Hale Co. candles just keep on giving: 10 per cent of the profits goes to animal rescue. When the candle is done, re-use the apothecary jar for a flower vase or drinking glass. Sydney Hale Co. Candles, $29.95. (Much & Little, 2541 Main Street, 604-709-9034, Muchandlittle.com). — Taraneh Ghajar Jerven

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December 13 – 19, 2012

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As a realtor and one of the hosts of HGTV’s Urban/Suburban, Sarah Daniels spends a lot of time in houses — which makes her appreciate the time she spends in her own home even more. Doug Shanks photo

The HGTV touch Five gifts for the home suggested by television show host Sarah Daniels

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GIFTS FOR THE HOME By Sarah Daniels

C

hristmas gifts are always a head scratcher. What do you get for friends, family, or co-workers and not blow the budget right out the window? Well, here are the top five wishes on my Christmas list. Who knows, maybe someone on your list will love them too! 1) Anything owl from Parliament in Gastown! Seriously, who doesn’t love the owl mugs (pictured previous page)? I already own some — and the salt and pepper shakers, but I can NEVER have too many!!! ParliamentInteriors.com | 115 Water | 604-689-0800

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throws for the couch (and for you) — add a best seller and the couch can be considered fully decorated! Chapters.Indigo.com | Various locations

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4) I love Kerrisdale Lumber... it seems like that old-fashioned store from Little House On The Prairie. It has everything! It would seem like the weirdest place to look for a gift but I adore the personalized address plaques you can order. You can have your full address in script, just the numbers, you name it. You need a bit of lead time but what a great custom gift! Kerrisdale Lumber.com | 6191 West Boulevard | 604-261-4274 5) If you’re ever down in South Surrey check out Kitchen Therapy in Grandview Corners — so many ideas. But my FAVE, and a big wish this year is the Soda Stream. You can literally make your own soda! And I mean all kinds of flavours. I LOVE the grapefruit! This pays for itself in no time flat and models start at under $100! Kids love it and you actually see what’s going into your beverage. So much fun to use, and SO tasty! They are also available at Soda Stream $149.99 London Drugs. So, there you have it! I guess I will have to wait patiently now till Christmas and see if Santa has been reading WE Vancouver!

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2) The florist that has my heart is Thomas Hobbs Florist in Kerrisdale. They make the most beautiful floral arrangements — and they last forever. The best part is that it doesn’t have to be expensive or even a custom order; you walk through the door and you’re in flower heaven! Who doesn’t love getting flowers? They have a great gift selection too! ThomasHobbsFlorist.com | 2127 W. 41st | 604-263-2601

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3) I love snuggling up on the couch with a good read under a cozy blanket — and I can find both at Chapters. They have great cozy

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December 13 – 19, 2012

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Christmas gifts for wine lovers CityCellar

By Kurtis Kolt

N

ot only does this week’s column run through some holiday gift ideas for the wine lover in your life, but it’s also testament to not giving any of the many goofy, heinous examples of wine paraphernalia on the market. Let’s just say if you’re thinking of giving a wine-themed gift that makes you laugh or you couldn’t see yourself using, then it’s probably not very appropriate for your oenologically-inclined family or friends. These include ‘The Wonky Wine Glass’ that’s tilted to the side so it spills when you swirl or, my personal favourite, ‘The Wine Rack,’ touted as a “boob-enhancing beverage bra!” Here are a few suggestions that are not only more tasteful, but gifts that will go to good use. Had A Glass: The Top 100 Wines Under $20 by James Nevison, $15-20 | Local Bookstores or Online My good buddy and wine writer James Nevison compiles this annual run-down of fantastic wines that are available across the province that’ll cost you less than 20 bucks and are pretty much guaranteed to please. Opening with a little overview of wine basics, the book is divided into sparkling, whites, reds, pinks and fortifieds with selections that span the globe. With food-pairing tips, an abundance of facts and his casual witty tone, James always has readers navigating local liquor store shelves with ease. With 100 wines to splash into, it’s definitely a gift that keeps on giving.

Riedel 1“O”12-08-29 Series Cabernet-Merlot Glass: Set of Two, WE_Sept2012_2.pdf 1:12 PM

$25-30 | Wine Shops or RiedelCanada.ca Good glassware makes all the difference when drinking wine, and you definitely want to get a bit of a swirl on to release all of those lovely aromas. I’m not the fancy kind of guy who has the proper glass for each grape variety, either. Most of the time when having wine around the house, my go-

to glasses are Riedel’s “O” Series CabernetMerlot version. Even for whites, or other reds from Pinot Noir to Syrah, the size and shape of these ones are perfectly ‘general’ enough to do all wine a good amount of justice. The lack of stem makes this range of glassware a little less likely to break for me as well, whether when doing the washing-up or that sweet move I have when crossing my leg too close to the coffee table when I seem to take out a stem or two with ease. Vancouver Urban Winery Gift Cards, any denomination | VancouverUrbanWinery.com Not only does Railtown’s hot, new city winery make wine from imported grapes under their Roaring Twenties brand (a New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc and an Argentinian Malbec), and keg wines that are served on tap around the city, but with a small retail store and a tasting bar offering various food and wine experiences, any wine fan will make good use of their gift cards that can be charged up with any amount. Check out their website for plentiful options.

Wine, Various Prices | Local Wine Stores Because, really, a good bottle of wine is usually the best gift of all. Talk to your friendly neighbourhood wine shop assistant about what kind of wines your loved ones usually like, and they’ll steer you in the right direction.

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gifts for the home

Vancouver Special

“I love everything in the store,” admits Vancouver Special owner Anne Pearson. Jenn Chic photo

A store that inspires the question “How many Christmas gifts for yourself are too many?” By Jenn Chic

A

nne Pearson is a recovering architect. She used to work downtown at a big firm with the best of them, but that was no fun. So she has created a haven for design junkies to get inspired and shop. Her store, Vancouver Special, appeals not just to the nerdy architect looking for the latest coffee table book on the Eames chair, but to everyone who can appreciate functional AND beautiful housewares, high-quality audio equipment, a great cookbook, and a nice cup of tea. “I love everything in the store,” says Pearson. She opened in 2008 on a very dangerous stretch on Main Street — if you’re on a budget. Pearson loves that many of her neighbours in Mount Pleasant, such as Eugene Choo or Smoking Lily, are long-standing independent retailers that are making it. With a recent expansion that doubles the size of the shop, Vancouver Special seems to be making it, too.

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“It really is a dream to have more space to showcase the furniture,” she says. Entering the bright, lofty showroom, it’s easy for customers to see how to incorporate design elements into their own homes. A Dot Cushion by Hay can add a much needed splash of colour. That wool upholstered coffee table by Bingo unfolds into a spare bed. Offering guests a seat in an Acapulco chair, just in from sunny Mexico, or a Mountain Beanbag, an insanely comfy line of beanbags from Sweden that represent the world’s tallest mountains, is fun! Vancouver Special invites in those who browse with open arms and well-displayed shelves. Although not crowded by any means, every pass around the store reveals a new surprise. Favourites such as the Yanagi kettle from Japan, Weck canning jars from Germany or the UK’s Rega line of turntables, broaden horizons beyond IKEA to see what the talent of the world really has to offer. And there are even

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for all that’s hip and happening in design, but also for what’s applicable to her. The latest arrival of wooden toys and children’s books hints at the fact that there is a new bundle of joy in her life. “Since becoming a mother I’ve

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HOLIDAY HOT TICKETS

Get in the Christmas spirit

Sophia Lee of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet returns to her hometown to perform as Clara in The Nutcracker. David Cooper photo

• LUMINESCENCE AT THE VANCOUVER AQUARIUM: Gaze at a display of 100-plus origami jellyfish that light up when eels give off electric charges, and learn how sea creatures create and reflect light in the depths of the ocean. Don’t miss the thrilling 4-D film The Polar Express, where you’ll feel the wind on your face, touch snow with your fingertips and smell hot chocolate in the air. Until Jan. 22. VanAqua.org. • SANTALAND DIARIES: True confessions of a Macy’s elf by popular humourist David Sedaris. From posts as Vomit Corner Elf to Water Cooler Elf to Cash Register Elf, Sedaris worked his way up the candy-cane ladder and lived to share his hysterical, behind-the-scenes anecdotes. Showcases the comic brilliance of Ryan Beil. Until Dec. 22 at Revue Stage (1601 Johnston). $25-$35 at ArtsClub.com.

• IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE: George Bailey’s guardian

angel swoops in to remind him that faith, hope, and family make life truly wonderful. Until Dec. 29 at the Granville Island Stage (1585 Johnston). ArtsClub.com.

• VANCOUVER CHRISTMAS MARKET: Named one of the world’s top 10 Spectacular Holiday Markets by Frommer’s, it’s an authentic “Christkindlmarkt” featuring traditional German crafts, cuisine and entertainment. A special children’s area gives youngsters the chance to make their own Christmas gifts and ride the children’s Christmas carousel. German bratwurst, Swiss raclette, brataepfel (stuffed baked apples) and schupfnudeln (German noodles). New this year is the X-mas Factor singing competition for the grand prize: a studio recording worth $10,000. Until Dec. 23, 11am-9pm. $2-$5 at the door. VancouverChristmasMarket.com.

Ballet night in Canada

• VANCOUVER WELSH MEN’S CHOIR: With select school choirs: Centennial Theatre, North Vancouver, Dec. 14, 8pm. Tickets $25, sr/student $22. VWMC.ca

Royal Winnipeg Ballet puts a Canadian twist in BC Ballet presentation of The Nutcracker By Jenn Chic

A

ndre Lewis, the artistic director for the Royal Winnipeg Ballet’s Nutcracker, which is coming to Vancouver December 14 to 16, has good news for hockey fans. “The ballet actually opens with a hockey game — two kids playing outside on a rink beside the house,” he says. “This is an opportunity for people to enjoy a special Christmas event and have their hockey fix.” The Royal Winnipeg Ballet was inspired to give the iconic ballet a new twist with a Canadian theme. It’s set at the turn of the century, with Mounties dancing amidst sugar plum fairies. This is the first time that RWB has presented The Nutcracker in Vancouver since 1988-89. Sophia Lee will be playing Clara, and is happy to be coming to her hometown for the production. She first fell in love with The Nutcracker watching it on TV. Her mother had taped the performance and Sophia’s favourite part was the Pas de Trois in Act 2, where one male dancer dances with two female dancers in pointe shoes. After that Sophia wore her pointe shoes around the house

and watched the video over and over much to the dismay of her family. This is her second year in the role and she looks forward to being the princess of every girl’s dream. “I want to make the audience truly believe that I am a little girl who starts out by dancing in her bedroom, gets a Nutcracker for her Christmas present, meets her dream prince, and dances with him after she becomes a princess,” she says. “The artistic staff of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet has given me such a big, wonderful opportunity and it will again be a special experience for me, being able to dance in my hometown, Vancouver.” Dancing alongside Sophia will be more than 70 children from Arts Umbrella and various dance schools in the Lower Mainland. They have been practising their parts here in Vancouver while Sophia and the RWB company practise in Winnipeg. “This is such a Christmas tradition — a fantastic way to herald the Christmas season,” says Lewis. “You know the story, you know how it ends but it’s a chance to be with your children, support the arts and be part of something very special.” The show runs December 14-16 at Queen Elizabeth Theatre. BalletBC.com and TicketMaster.ca

unforgettable musical about love and friendship. Based on the classic film, this tap-dancing delight brims with tunes including “Blue Skies,” “Sisters,” and the ever-popular “White Christmas”. Until Dec. 23 at the Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage (2750 Granville). ArtsClub.com.

• CAROL SHIPS PARADE OF LIGHTS: More than 50 boats decorated with 100,000-plus twinkling lights can be seen gliding through Vancouver’s waterways on peak evenings. The spectacle viewed from the shore is free, but the best experience is from the carol ships themselves. Until Dec. 23. CarolShips.org. • CANYON LIGHTS AT CAPILANO SUSPENSION BRIDGE PARK: Explore the forest and Treetops

Adventure, in addition to decorating gingerbread houses, listening to seasonal music from a Christmas band, taking part in glass ornament blowing demonstrations and joining a kid-friendly scavenger hunt. View a dancing light display along the colour-washed cliff-face. New for this year, visitors can board a complimentary shuttle departing from Canada Place every hour on the hour. Until Jan. 5 (closed Dec. 25), 4pm-9pm at Capilano Suspension Bridge Park (3735 Capilano Road). $12-$31.95, $65 (families). Capbridge.com.

• KARAOKE CHRISTMAS LIGHTS TROLLEY TOUR:

Grab a mic and lead the chorus on the Vancouver Trolley Company’s Karaoke Christmas Lights Trolley Tour. The trolley departs the Vancouver Christmas Market at 6:30pm and winds through the streets of Vancouver to Stanley Park for the Bright Nights light spectacle. Walk through Stanley Park’s twinkling plaza, then hop back on the trolley to VanDusen Botanical Garden for Festival of Lights. Until Dec. 30 (closed Dec. 25), 6:30pm. $25-$40 at VancouverTrolley.com.

• FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS AT VANDUSEN BOTANICAL GARDEN: The garden is transformed into a holiday

• HERITAGE CHRISTMAS AT BURNABY VILLAGE MUSEUM: Kids can meet Father Christmas, tour historical buildings and enjoy crafts, story time, Christmas baking, carolers and a festive scavenger hunt. Dec.15-Jan. 4 (closed Dec. 24-25). BurnabyVillageMuseum.ca.

wonderland with seasonal displays and more than one million sparkling lights wrapped around trees and trellises. Until Jan. 1 (closed Dec. 25), 4:30pm-9pm. $7.75-$14.25. VanDusenGarden.org.

• A CHILD’S CHRISTMAS IN WALES: This beautifully written, wistful memory about strange relations, snowy adventures and traditional holiday fun with five actors, original songs, is a must for all ages. It’s jolly, hokey and a delightful holiday treat! Dec. 12-23 at the PAL Theatre (581 Cardero). $15-$20 at BrownPaperTickets.com.

Free family activities, Canadian entertainment and the best of Christmas past and present. With old favourites and brand new added attractions Christmas at Canada Place promises something for everyone. Until Dec. 30 on the Vancouver waterfront. CanadaPlace.ca.

• BALLET BC PRESENTS CANADA’S ROYAL

WINNIPEG BALLET IN THE NUTCRACKER:

Choreographed by Galina Yordanova and Nina Menon,with costumes designed by Paul Daigle, Nutcracker is set in turn of the 20 century Canada and presents a unique take on the sparkling Christmas tradition, featuring endearing Canadian scenes such as a hockey game and a battle on Parliament Hill at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre (649 Cambie). Dec. 14-16. $30.25-$87.75 at Ticketmaster.ca.

• BRIGHT NIGHTS IN STANLEY PARK: The Stanley Park holiday train winds through the forest past two million sparkling lights, while the aromas of hot chocolate, fresh popcorn and roasted chestnuts bring back festive childhood memories. Kids can also visit Santa in his “living room” at the train station. Until Jan. 2 (closed Dec. 25). $6-$10 for train ride. Vancouver.ca • THE PEAK OF CHRISTMAS ON GROUSE MOUNTAIN: Guests begin their adventure by soaring 3,700 feet above the city aboard the Skyride, which has been transformed into a reindeer (complete with antlers and red nose). Visitors can meet real-life reindeer during a live comedy sketch at the wildlife habitat, take pictures at the reindeer photo board, participate in reindeer-themed crafts and get a reindeer tattoo. Until Dec. 24, 9am-10pm. GrouseMountain.com.

• WHITE CHRISTMAS: THE MUSICAL: An

• 25TH ANNUAL CHRISTMAS AT CANADA PLACE:

• VANCOUVER CHRISTMAS WISH BREAKFAST:

By donating a toy for needy children, Pan Pacific hotel will offer a hot buffet breakfast. Musical sounds by the Good Noise Gospel Choir, as well as Sophie Lui and Steve Darling from Global TV’s Morning News, and the morning crew from Rock 101! They say that more teenager toys are needed rather than stuffed animals. Dec. 13, 6-9am at the Pan Pacific Hotel (999 Canada Place).

• HARK THE HERALD ANGELS: Vivaldi Chamber Choir presents a Christmas concert of readings and song based on the role of angels in the Christmas story, together with arrangements of traditional carols by director David Millard. The evening will highlight six boy trebles and be accompanied by recorders, keyboard, and guitar. Refreshments to follow. Dec. 14, 8pm at Trinity-St. Mark’s Church (1805 Larch). $15-$20 at VivaldiChoir.org. • GIFTS-A-GO-GO: CHRISTMAS POP-UP SHOP:

Groovy one-of-a-kind artisan gifts stocking stuffers to fine finds. Dec. 16, 11am-5pm at the Performing Arts Lodges (581 Cardero). PalVancouver.org. • A DYLAN THOMAS CHRISTMAS: A CHILD’S CHRISTMAS IN WALES: Read by our favourite Welshman, Russell Roberts of Bard on the Beach. The familiar story is illustrated with an all-new set of Christmas carols and songs arranged by Vancouver Chamber Choir longtime artistic director, Jon Washburn. Dec. 14-16 at Ryerson United Church (2205 West 45).

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HOLIDAY HOT TICKETS • 12 BANDS OF CHRISTMAS: Fairmont Pacific Rim partners with Shore 104FM for the 2nd Annual ’12 Bands of Christmas’ fundraiser in support of the Greater Vancouver Food Bank Society. Rock away to live bands and donate (canned goods or cash donations). Dec. 14, 7am-7pm at the Fairmont Pacific Rim. Shore104.com • THE WET SPOTS’ EAST SIDE

SPECTACULAR FAMILY CHRISTMAS:

Award-winning international musical sex comedy duo presents an outrageous, adultthemed monthly variety show at the Rio (1660 E. Broadway). Dec. 14, 8pm. $12-$15 at RioTheatreTickets.ca and at the door. • VANCOUVER BACH CHOIR PRESENTS EL NINO: The Canadian premiere of John Adams’ profoundly illuminating nativity oratorio El Niño. The oratorio weaves text from pre-Christian prophets, canonical and Gnostic gospels, and mid-20th century Hispanic poetry into powerful and staggeringly beautiful score. Dec. 15 at the Orpheum Theatre (884 Granville). $25-$59 at VancouverBachChoir.com. • GIANT VANCOUVER CRAFT FAIR: More than 150 vendors, live entertainment, fun activities such as face-painting and even a visit from Santa. Great Canadian Craft is proud to showcase the very best in local artisans from handmade crafts to locally inspired cuisine. All attendees are encouraged to support the food bank with a donation of a canned food item. Dec. 1516 at the Salt Building in Olympic Village. GreatCanadianCraft.jimdo.com. • 19TH ANNUAL WOMEN’S WINTER FAIRE: Combining art, culture and social activism, the Faire supports local artists, many whose livelihood depend solely on their art — talented resourceful women who lean toward using “upcycled”, recycled as well as new materials in wood, glass, textiles, and metal. Dec. 15-16, 11am at Heritage Hall (3102 Main). $3-$5 door donation for victims of Hurricane Sandy. SoundsandFuries.com.

A Messiah for the modern age By Christine Lyon

H

e may not be considered “young” by many industry standards, but, in the world of classical music, 41-year-old Vancouver conductor Leslie Dala is a relative spring chicken. “In the earlier part of the 20th century, most of the conductors were all white-hairs,” Dala says. “It was unthinkable that you would have somebody younger than that.” But times are changing, he explains. With the evolution of the recording industry, and in hopes of preserving the future of classical music, it’s no longer necessary to have a lifetime of experience before taking up the baton. Today, Dala says more and more passionate young conductors with an appetite for creating excitement are getting big opportunities early in their careers. Now in his third season as music director of the Vancouver Bach Choir, Dala hopes to create said excitement with El Niño. Written in 2000 by American composer John Adams, the contem-

porary nativity oratorio makes its Canadian debut at the Orpheum Theatre this Saturday. It tells the age-old story of the birth of Jesus Christ — with a few modern-day touches. The large-scale production features the Vancouver Bach Choir, six soloists — three of whom are countertenors — the Vancouver Bach Children’s Chorus and the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra. A percussion ensemble, keyboards and steel-stringed guitars add a contemporary sound. Meanwhile, the libretto — or the words of the opera — weave text from preChristian prophets, canonical and Gnostic gospels, and mid-20th century Hispanic poetry. While El Niño doesn’t have the same name recognition as popular Christmas productions such as The Nutcracker or Handel’s The Messiah, Dala promises the visual and musical impact of this concert will be hard to top. “I just think it’s an extremely important and relevant piece and I, among many other people, believe that John Adams is one of the most important living composers,” he says, explaining Adams has made an indelible mark on the

The Vancouver Bach Choir’s music director Leslie Dala is among a new generation of conductors eager to breathe fresh life into classical music. Karen Tregillas photo international music stage over the course of his career. Like much of Adams’ work, Dala says, El Niño transcends boundaries and will appeal not just to classical music aficionados. After all, there are guitars and drums. “These days people are so caught up with their iPods that music is usually just experienced through digital or technological means,” Dala says. “That’s great, but it has no comparison to what it is to actually walk into a hall and see people making music in real time, with their own voices, with their own instruments.” Dala experienced live music at an early age growing up in Toronto. For his Hungarian immigrant parents and their social

circle, classical music was part of everyday life. Like his three older siblings, Dala studied music and eventually found his way to Vancouver when he did his master’s degree at UBC. A lifetime of practise has paid off. In addition to his role with the Vancouver Bach Choir, Dala is also music director for the Vancouver Academy of Music and associate conductor and chorus master for the Vancouver Opera. And he’s only just getting started. The Vancouver Bach Choir performs El Niño at the Orpheum Theatre on Saturday, Dec. 15 at 8 pm. Tickets are $25-$59 at VancouverBachChoir.com or 604-696-4290.

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December 13 – 19, 2012

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HOLIDAY HOT TICKETS • BAH HUMBUG!: Victorian England meets Downtown Eastside in this reading with musical numbers of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol featuring Jay Brazeau, Margo Kane, and Jim Byrnes. Reconceived as a tale where Scrooge owns a pawn shop on Hastings Street, this imaginative all-ages production celebrates the transformative power of human redemption. Dec. 15 at SFU’s Goldcorp Centre (149 West Hastings). $10-$20 at SFUWoodwards.ca or at the door. • WINTER HARP: Dec. 12-13, 7:30 pm at the North Shore Credit Union Centre, Dec. 16, 3pm and 7pm at the ACT in Maple Ridge and Dec. 22, 7:30pm at St. Andrew’s-Wesley United Church. WinterHarp.com. • THE CHRISTMAS CAROL PROJECT: An enchanting, musical version of Dickens’ tale, The Christmas Carol Project is a unique and captivating blend of classic literature and contemporary folk music, perfect for the whole family. Brass Monkey Productions’ Juno-nominated folk musicians return for a third year in what is becoming a holiday tradition. Dec. 17-18. TheCultch.com.

Vancouver Opera Orchestra. Dec. 19-23, including matinees on Dec. 22 & 23, at the Centre in Vancouver for Performing Arts. Tickets at GohNutcracker.com. • THE MAGIC OF SANTA: From dancing Christmas trees and rockin’ reindeer, a singing snow queen, and jovial Santa, join Emily on her enchanted journey as she searches for her very own Christmas wish. Dec. 21, 7pm, Dec. 22, 1pm, 4pm and 7pm at the Pacific Coliseum (100 N. Renfrew). $22.50 at Ticketleader.ca. TheMagicofSanta.com. • 19TH WINTER SOLSTICE LANTERN FESTIVAL: The Dr. Sun

Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden and the Secret Lantern Society invite you to bring light into the world on the longest, darkest night of the year. Dec. 21, 6pm at Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden (578 Carrall). SecretLantern.org. • VANCOUVER CANTANA

SINGERS: A CHRISTMAS REPRISE 2012: Rediscover the joy of the season

• HOME FOR CHRISTMAS WITH MUSICA INTIMA: Serene melodies,

through music in the glorious environs of Holy Rosary Cathedral. Dec. 22, 2pm at the Holy Rosary Theatre (646 Richards). $18 at BrownPaperTickets. com.

• GOH BALLET’S NUTCRACKER: With its lush sets, gorgeous costumes and joyous dancing, Goh Ballet turns this traditional tale into a Vancouver classic that you can watch year after year. Featuring young dancers at the Vancouver ballet school, principal dancers with the New York City Ballet and live music by members of the

• CONTACT FEATURING DEADMAU5: Hosted by Blueprint Events, the CONTACT festival is being held at BC Place. Dance-inspiring performances from some of the globe’s hottest DJs, including Nero, Alesso, Chris Lake and Lazy Rich. The show will culminate with an unhooked performance by leading Canadian electronic artist, Deadmau5, who most recently was awarded “Best Electro House Artist” by Beatport Music Awards, and “most influential, relevant and forward-thinking person in electronic music”. Dec. 26. $65-$100 at LiveNation.com.

lush harmonies and timeless festive gems. Concert includes Christmas movie music as well as “carols wronged” – comedic twists on old favourites. Dec. 18, 7:30pm at St. Phillip’s Anglican Church (3737 West 27). $10-$35 at MusicaIntima.org.

Todd Talbot returns year after year to Irving Berlin’s White Christmas: The Musical at The Arts Club. David Cooper photo

Dreaming of a White Christmas By Gen Handley

S

ince the inaugural performance in 2008, more than 100,000 people have seen Irving Berlin’s White Christmas: The Musical. Todd Talbot has played the philandering Phil Davis since the production began. “We get a lot of people come back year after year. It’s great to be a part of that,” the 39-year-old says, his voice is still raspy having just finished a sold-out matinee.

So after 133 performances over the four years, he must be sick of all the Christmas songs. “Actually I’m not,” he says seriously. “I’m in the category of holding off on the music and decorations until December 1 at least, but after that I’m all for it. They don’t bother me at all. I was walking down in Granville the other day between shows and I was whistling the tunes – they’re contagious. “Some people might have a problem with them but I say, ‘get over it,’” he adds with a laugh.

He has a sort of ritual before every show. “I go up into the crossbar of the theatre, and then I stretch, do some vocal warmups, I listen to a couple White Christmas tunes on my iPhone, to get in the mood, and I sing through a couple of the tunes.” But there’s always one order of business to be taken care of before a performance. “You make sure you go to the bathroom because it’s a long time before a break,” he says. “Always remember to do that.”

ArtsClub.com

The bins are new. The goal is the same. The program launched in August 2012 with the installation of 60 new beverage container recycling bins at high-traffic Vancouver beaches and on Commercial Drive. The bins are designed to encourage more recycling in Vancouver and to help the City achieve its Greenest City 2020 Action Plan zero waste goal. The new bins are non-locking, self-servicing recycling containers. This will allow the bins to be self-serviced by residents or people wanting to retrieve the deposit refund attached to each container.

Return-It Man at the pilot program launch with United We Can Founder Ken Lyotier, Vancouver Park Board Commissioner & Chair Sarah Blyth, Encorp Pacific President & CEO Neil Hastie, and City of Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson.

E

ncorp Pacific (Canada) is a federally incorporated, not-for-profit, product Stewardship Corporation with beverage container management as its core business. Their mandate is to develop, manage and improve systems to recover used packaging and end-of-life products from consumers and ensure that they are properly recycled and not landfilled or incinerated. This model is commonly referred to as Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) or Industry Product Stewardship (IPS). Currently Encorp Pacific is recovering 80% of the beverage containers sold in BC and recycling them into new useable products.

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December 13 – 19, 2012

Finding ways to increase that number has meant years of research. In fact, research over the past 15 years by Encorp has shown consistently that “the heavy discarders” of beverage containers are primarily single males 18 – 34, located in urban areas, and residing in multifamily dwellings. One of the reasons they cite for throwing away empty beverage containers is the lack of convenience; specifically, the lack of dedicated bins. In an effort to recycle more beverage containers and help “the heavy discarders”, Encor p Pacific has launched a new pilot program in partnership with the City of Vancouver.

Throughout the year, a series of waste audits will be conducted before, during and after the pilot to benchmark and analyze their effectiveness. At the conclusion of the oneyear pilot program, project partners will determine whether to keep the receptacles in their piloted locations permanently or explore expanding the network of bins to additional areas of the city. The pilot program in Vancouver will also serve as a model for potential future Encorp beverage container recycling bins that will be placed in other B.C. municipalities. For more information on the pilot program visit, return-it.ca.

LEADERS IN THE INDUSTRY With your help, Encorp, the largest stewardship organization in the province, recycles one billion containers per year. B.C. is now a leader in industry product stewardship, recently receiving the highest ranking among Canadian provinces from EPR Canada.

PILOT SITES The location of the pilot sites had to be in areas of high pedestrian traffic and multifamily dwellings. Plus, near garbage cans with limited access to recycling options. With this mind, the following locations were chosen: • Kitsilano Beach • Second Beach at Stanley Park • English Bay • Sunset Beach • Commercial Drive between Venables Street and 13th Avenue

return-it.ca WEVancouver.com


The ORIGINAL

AUTHENTIC Thai Cuisine Flavoured with Chef Grace’s own

The dining room at Whistler’s Araxi is where Andrew Morrison had one of his best meals of the year. Andrew Morrison photo

CREATIVITY.

The good, the bad, and the ugly of the past year in food OnThePlate

By Andrew Morrison

W

ith the close of 2012 on the horizon, it’s once again time to take stock of the local food and drinkscape. I’ll be sharing my picks for the Top 10 Best New Restaurants of the Year in next week’s column, and the week after that we’ll be looking hard at what 2013 might have in store for us. But in order to make sense of the year ahead, it’s prudent to first look back on the good, the bad, and the ugly of the year that was. First, the bad. There were certainly some closures that I wasn’t too happy about (for entirely selfish reasons). I’m going to miss, for example, the fried chicken at Refuel; the boeuf bourguignon at Bistrot Bistro; the schnitzel at Cafeteria on Main; the duck confit at Cru; and just about everything I ever tried at Dale Mackay’s Ensemble (what a shame). I weep also for the loss of the undersung Mistral on West Broadway and the trail-blazing Pair Bistro on West 10th — two eateries that deserved a lot more love than they ever received. To be perfectly frank, I’m not all that choked up about the rest of the closures. The Flying Tiger on the West Side was never the same after chef Tina Fineza left; Ensemble Tap was a disastrous cautionary tale in hubris; themeless, pointless RTL in Yaletown lasted a year longer than it was ever welcome; nearby Cento Notti in the Opus Hotel was just as mercifully short lived as its horrifying predecessor (the tasteless 100 Days); and though I liked Hapa Umi and Goldfish enough, their replacements — Hapa Izakaya and Minami — made their quiet passings all the less painful. I did not shed a tear for the end of Keg baron David Aisenstat’s multi-million dollar behemoth Shore Club on Dunsmuir, which always felt like the last redoubt of the 1 per cent. (No surprise here — it’s slated to become another Keg.) Nor did I rent garments over the demise of the second location of Gord Martin’s Go Fish, which was nowhere near as delightful as the original shack at False Creek Fisherman’s Wharf. Martin then opened another restaurant, SoL, in Coal Harbour, but it lasted just two months. Thankfully, 2012 also brought with it plenty of newcomers worthy of our interest. Hastings’ Wildebeest — which I reviewed last week — was one of the best of the new crop, as was The Acorn on Main, which was one of three exciting new vegetarian restaurants (see also Heirloom on

12th and The Parker on Union). I’m a huge fan of the two new Spanish tapas joints — Espana on Denman in the West End and The Sardine Can on Powell in Gastown (the albondigas at the latter and chickpeas at the former are highly addictive). And since Tacofino was one of my favourite food trucks this year, I was an easy mark for its new brick and mortar location on Hastings. Joining them in the tables and chairs game was fellow food truck Pig On The Street, which just opened the aptly named Pig & Mortar, an “extremely porky” 30-seater on West 6th. Other new options for comfort foods abounded. Witness the roast beef, blue cheese and horseradish sandwiches at Chinatown’s new East of Main; the noodles cooked with poultry and pork pan drippings at Powell’s Asian BBQ-themed Fat Dragon; the fried chicken with maple syrup and waffles at Portland Craft; the extra fatty pork ramen at Harvest Community Foods in Strathcona; the corned beef with sambal gherkin mayo at the new Meat & Bread on Pender; the French onion soup at Gastown’s gussied Lily Mae’s; and the salted caramel brownies at Cadeaux Bakery. And speaking of bakeries, the long anticipated Beaucoup just opened up last week, and their croissants are worth crawling on your hands and knees for. Unlike 2011, which saw the city overrun by quality pizzerias, 2012 didn’t really have a defining trend. Vegetarian and Spanish did very well, but so did food trucks (again) with their brick and mortar transitions and the summer Sunday festivals in the back parking lot of The Waldorf Hotel (the closest thing to Portland’s awesome food truck pods we’ve seen to date). For drinks, I heard and read a lot more about craft beer and wines on tap than I did about cocktails, but I’ll be damned if I still didn’t drink more Negronis and Boulevardiers than was good for me. Altogether, 2012 was a year of treading water, and fine dining — at least how we used to know it — didn’t even show up at the pool. Despite pretensions here and there, Vancouver did not chamber a single restaurant of heavy calibre this year. For my own part, I counted only five flawless meals for 2012, and they were all in fine dining establishments, and only the fifth on that list — West — was in Vancouver (the others were at Araxi, Sonora Resort, The Pointe, and The Terrace in that order). Comfort food is fine, but it is entirely ordinary. Vancouver is due for some extraordinary, and I hope to eat some in 2013.

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December 13 – 19, 2012

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s a mother and baker, Mary Mackay knows that many of our Christmas memories are wrapped up in food. She’s constantly creating recipes that will become new favorites at Terra Breads. This year’s treat list includes “decadent” German stollen with rum-soaked raisins ($15.95), a holiday cookie tin that includes citrus fig sablé cookies and chocolate crackle cookies made with stout ($19.95) and a choice of either fruit or chocolate cherry panettone loaf. Here’s her recipe for what might become a Christmas morning tradition in homes across Vancouver.

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Chocolate Cherry Panettone French Toast 1 large egg 3/4 cup milk 1 tsp vanilla extract 1/4 tsp salt 1 tbsp granulated sugar 4 slices Terra Chocolate Cherry Panettone 8 tsp unsalted butter In a small bow, whisk together a batter of egg, milk, vanilla extract, salt and sugger. Transfer batter to a pie plate. Heat two 10” to 12” skillets over medium heat. Soak the panettone slices in batter, about 15 seconds per side. Allow excess batter to drip off. When skillets are hot, swirl 2 tsp of butter in each skillet, then place one slice of soaked panettone in each. Cook until golden brown, about 1 to 11/2 minutes on each side. Repeat with remaining slices. Serve warm and finish with your favourite toppings.

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December 13 – 19, 2012

WEVancouver.com


Paul Haldane is the executive chef of the Heather Group. Doug Shanks photo

A holiday Foodie Q&A You are... Paul Haldane, executive chef of the Heather Hospitality Group. I work at The Irish Heather. Describe your Christmas dinner at your house? Last year was a three-meat feast — mother-in-law did turkey, brother-in-law did prime rib, and I cooked two legs of lamb. All the trimmings, stuffing, sprouts, gravy for each meat, roast potatoes, loads of veggies! Is there anything that can’t be left off the menu without someone getting mad about traditions not being followed? Roast potatoes and Brussel sprouts – I would get mad if there weren’t any! Are you expected to cook or does your

family give you the day off? We all do a bit each. Did you ever have a Christmas dinner disaster? When I was a kid, maybe nine or 10, I opened the oven and got my finger caught in the handle and cut it really deep. You were cooking Christmas dinner when you were nine? Or were you just sneaking a peak? I was helping to cook. I’ve been cooking since I was knee high to a grasshopper. Any advice to the Christmas dinner chef? Get as much done the night or day before. Don’t fuss to much — it’s only one day, enjoy your time with family and friends, not cooking all day!

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December 13 – 19, 2012

19


FreshSheet

Food & Drink Happenings

Steamworks’ Blitzen ale now available in bigger bottles ‘Tis the season for festive beers and, more specifically, the highly anticipated Steamworks Blitzen ale. Starting this weekend, Steamworks Brewing Company will warm the hearts of craft beer lovers across British Columbia with the first-ever release of Blitzen Winter Ale in 650ml bottles. Every bottle depicts a sleigh-driven reindeer bursting through Vancouver’s Science World, ingeniously repurposed as a steampunk snow globe. Blitzen, an ode to Belgian Tripel, is a richly brewed winter ale with apple and citrus aromas, a toasted malt character and a creamy finish — enough to make any beer drinker sing holiday cheer. Blitzen Winter Ale will be available in BC Liquor Stores as well as private licensed retail stores.

Turkey time JD Farms has fresh turkeys in store right through to the New Year. As well, many of the Langley farm’s Lower Mainland retailers are taking some fresh turkeys early so that customers can have one for any early celebrations. Sizes range from about 8 pounds up to about 20 pounds.

Daniel Hospitality Group (DG) has been awarded first place as BC’s top hospitality employer, and second place as overall Best Company to Work for in BC (with more than 100 employees) in the annual survey presented by BC Business Magazine. This is the second consecutive year DG has been awarded the ‘Best Companies to Work for in BC’. Founded in 2001 by Daniel Frankel, the company currently operates and manages six landmark restaurants in Vancouver, including The Mill Marine Bistro, Burrard Bridge Bar & Grill (Pirate Pub), Prospect Point Café & Gift Shop, Stanley Park Pavilion, Stanley’s Park Bar & Grill. The latest addition is Tap & Barrel in Olympic Village and a second location opening at the Vancouver Convention Centre in 2013. “By receiving this award DG is encouraged and motivated to continue to work hard- cultivating our family-style work environment”, says Frankel.

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East of Main Cafe introduces “Eat. Drink. Give.” group dining menus. Group menus start at $25 per person and are designed for parties of eight or more. Guests are encouraged to eat delicious food and drink hand-crafted cocktails, knowing that all profits from their holiday feast will be given to Project Limelight Society, a free performing arts program for young people living in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. Participants learn skills, techniques and forms of expression, including clowning, creative writing, voice work, movement and improvisation. For reservations at East of Main, contact Tami Nasu at eastofmainevents@gmail.com or call East of Main at 604-899-2777.

DG snags employer award

Bring a guest and their buffet is

• • • • •

At the Slow Bean (99 West Pender at Abbott), art and performance live alongside great food. The recently opened restaurant is serving madefrom-scratch vegetarian bowls and plates for $3.50/$5/$8. Daily specials made in-house from the basics — lentils, squash, rice and more. Fresh green salads, hot tea, home-made Horchata. For info, email 99pender@gmail.com or visit Niners.ca.

Join the British Columbia Wine Appreciation Society and Good Life Vancouver for a weekend escape to wine country ending with Paraiso Events Spectacular! NYE 2013 Masquerade Gala at the Nk’Mip Conference Centre. Oliver and Osoyoos wineries have created dazzling holiday light displays for their annual Winter in Wine Country open houses. Visiting selected Oliver and Osoyoos wineries on Dec. 29 and 30 from 3 to 7pm so that wine-lovers can enjoy both the holiday lights and complimentary wine tastings. Three-nights all-inclusive package from Vancouver starts at $386.49 per person. Tickets at NYEToBCWineCountry-efbevent. eventbrite.ca.

Vancouver’s Tap & Barrel has just launched Flight Night, which runs every Wednesday. Each week, sommelier David Stansfield picks a flight of three wines and personally attends to serve the wine and experience the offerings with his guests. On December 12, he’s going to be including the Summerhill Organic Syrah — a single vineyard certified organic Syrah sourced from the Sekhoor family vineyard in Osoyoos. Stansfield describes the wine as “a big, mouth-filling wine with alluring notes of dark berries, coffee, and spice.” The restaurant is located in the Olympic Village at 1 Athletes Way, 604-685-2223. TapAndBarrel.com.

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Vancouver Foodster is recognizing and celebrating the best baristas, waiters and cocktail makers in the city and surrounding areas. Who makes the best coffee? Is the friendliest? Mixes the best cocktail? Who is the best server in all of your favourite restaurants? No one is off limits – male, female, young, or, notso-young, in the city or suburbs. People are invited to nominate their favourite barista, waiter, and cocktail maker by Monday, Dec. 31. The best of the best will be crowned Jan. 7. Nominate your favourites at VancouverFoodster.com.

Waldorf Hotel Cereal Bar There’s nothing better than a bowl of cereal and Inspector Gadget in the morning, right? Why not head down to the Waldorf Hotel to their amazing “Cereal Bar” featuring 42 different types of cereal from all over the world. They are certain to have all your favourites as well as imported brands. WaldorfHotel.com.

Monk McQueen’s closing After over 26 years in its premier oceanfront Stamps Landing location, the Monk McQueen’s Fresh Seafood and Oyster Bar has announced that it will be passing the reins to the Mahony family of Vancouver for a new Mahony & Sons location as of Jan. 1, 2013. With a plan to renovate and reopen in summer 2013, this is the third location for the Vancouver-based Irish pub themed chain; the Monk’s Group will maintain ownership of the building. The last service will be Dec. 31. —courtesy of BC Les Clefs d’Or

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December 13 – 19, 2012

at the Holiday Inn Vancouver Downtown Join us on December 25th for a traditional Christmas dinner with all the fixings, $32.95. Seatings at 4pm and 7pm. Reservations recommended. 1110 Howe St. 604.623.6856

Pink Elephant Thai marries old world Thai culture and tradition with all that is fun, sexy and hot—hot pink, that is. Book your Christmas dinner party with us! Enjoy authentic Thai cuisine with our signature cocktails and martinis. DJ every Friday. 1152 Alberni Street 604.646.8899 www.pinkelephantthai.com

WEVancouver.com


‘Obsessively sourced’ teas at O5

Simon Mizera prepares a matcha tea shot. Rob Newell photo

By Martha Perkins

Robson MedicaL

I

f a cicada was to bite you — probably thinking you were something else altogether — it might hurt a little. But when the beetle bites into a certain tea leaf in Taiwan, things get interesting. That bite somehow changes the leaf’s chemistry and results in a tea that has a slight peachy taste with absolutely no bitterness. Pedro Villalon tells this story as he’s pouring a cup of Oriental Beauty, one of the exotic teas that he and his partner Brian Noble is introducing to Vancouverites at their W. 4th tea salon, O5. Here, the storytelling is part of the experience. This is a place that while eschewing snobbery, also wants to turn Vancouver into a place that cares as much about its teas as it does it wines and coffee. Just as 20 years ago your only choice for coffee was “milk and sugar?”, Vancouver now prides itself on its many micro roasters, each with a devoted line-up of customers. Give Vancouver a few years, and its burgeoning tea scene will have the same status, Villalon says. He laughs when he says that the only thing that tea “experts”, like many other experts, agree on is that they know the best way to do things and everyone else is wrong. He shies away from any titles, calling himself a tea hunter. He travels the world — and Asia in particular — looking for teas that are special and richly nuanced. No vanilla-infused flavours here. The teas that he lovingly scoops out of their containers get their flavours from the leaves themselves. Just as the farmers took care in growing the tea trees, Villalon and Noble honour the farmers’ commitment by creating a space that aesthetically and

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even ergonomically pays tribute to such dedication. In Asia, you drink teas sitting upright on the floor. North Americans don’t share the same penchant for being on ground level so while there are chairs at O5, they don’t have back rests. With nothing to lean on, you naturally keep your back straight. This is an unhurried place, not the type of tea salon where you’re tempted to drop by for a quick cuppa. The Japanese “kettles” are carefully chosen; the teapots were custome designed for O5. The charcoal which helps filter the water comes from a store that caters to the charcoal crowd. O5 calls itself a “terroir based, obsessively sourced rare tea bar + boutique.” (The O stands for their obsession with origin. The five stands for the five nationalities of the team members including “a tea hunter, a master barista, a Japanese flower arrangement expert and a chef who cut her teeth in two of Vancouver’s best restaurants.”) O5 has partnered with Kale and Nori for special food and tea tasting events. The next one is December 19. Tickets are $50 and this month’s featured teas are from Korea. For more information go to O5Tea.com and KaleandNori.com

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Discover the freedom that balance can bring!

Trevor Kallies, the bar and beverage director for the Donnelly Group, shares his way of keeping spirits bright this holiday season. Photo at Killjoy Barbers by Rob Newell Hot Holiday Punch Serves 10-15 people 26 oz High Juniper & Aromatic Gin 13 oz port 6 oz lemon juice 1 peel from entire lemon (no pith, cut into 8 pieces) 1 peel from entire orange (no pith, cut into 8 pieces) 6 star anise 3 tbsp honey 10 cloves 1 cup sugar 200 g chamomile rose tea leaves In a large pot, heat gin, port, lemon juice, and honey just below boiling. Slowly stir in sugar until it dissolves. Add lemon peels, orange peels, star anise, cloves and tea leaves and keep heating below boiling for 20 minutes. Do not allow punch to boil. Serve warm in a heat-safe punch bowl.

WEVancouver.com

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Hyde Park misses the mark despite Bill Murray’s best effort Hyde Park on Hudson

Directed by Roger Michell Starring Bill Murray, Laura Linney The always delightful Bill Murray shines as US President Franklin D. Roosevelt in Roger Michell’s Hyde Park on Hudson, which makes it all the more disappointing that the movie never really comes together. Set in 1939, the biographical comedydrama tells the story of the love affair between FDR and distant cousin Marga-

ret Suckley (Laura Linney). The film also follows the events of a weekend in which the King (Samuel West) and Queen (Olivia Colman) of England visit the presidential country estate in New York. The potential exists for great storytelling and the performances are top notch (also watch for an exceptional Olivia Williams as Eleanor), aside from an unusually bland Linney, but Hyde

Park struggles all the way through to find a strong narrative and satisfying climax. There are moments where some scenes work and the actors transcend the mundane script. West and Colman are fantastic in their respective roles; one has to wonder if the Thor Diakow tale would have been better served as a comedy focused on them and not the sordid, melodramatic story of the president’s mistress. The

veteran Murray is also quite effective in his stately role, bringing just enough quirkiness and charm to engage the audience. Despite a promising start however, the movie eventually turns into a murky collection of patchwork scenes with no way to tie them all together. The result is an emotionless exercise in average filmmaking. In the end, Hyde Park on Hudson amounts to a wasted opportunity that even Bill Murray himself can’t salvage.

Movie Reviews Bullying damages our kids. Do something about it.

THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY

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Starring Martin Freeman, Ian McKellen Directed by Peter Jackson Given that Peter Jackson never intended to direct the prequels to his Lord of the Rings trilogy, viewers may rightfully feel concerned that The Hobbit will be saddled with a mastermind just as reluctant as its protagonist. And while the finished product evinces that Jackson remains fervently committed to the technical elements of filmmaking, it also reveals that his storytelling skills have abandoned him. Undoubtedly, Jackson has been hamstrung by the decision to expand J.R.R. Tolkien’s concise text into three epic films. Whereas the Rings films were propelled by a compressed narrative rife with incidents and developments, the pace here shifts between languid and lumbering. After the wizard Gandalf (Ian McKellen) informs homebody Bilbo (Martin Freeman) that he’s destined for adventure (specifically: liberating a dwarf kingdom from its dragon occupier), he’s called on by 13 raucous dwarves who illustrate that nothing is more irksome than forced gaiety. As these squat adventurers linger about Bilbo’s hovel for an interminable spell, it becomes increasingly apparent that Jackson is banking on — and, in turn, abusing — the goodwill he accrued with Rings. Having been well served by two seasons of Game of Thrones, fantasy fans are left to scrounge

Ian McKellen as Gandolf in Peter Jackson’s disappointing first chapter of The Hobbit trilogy. for scraps amongst the untrimmed fat here. Despite some duly elaborate action sequences, the film only proves riveting during Bilbo’s high stakes encounter with the tragic creature Gollum (Andy Serkis). These tense minutes remind us of what Jackson’s capable of and underscore how seldom the remaining three hours meet that standard. Perhaps recognizing this, he closes this chapter with the telling line, “I believe the worst is behind us.” With two instalments yet to come, let’s hope that’s the case. — Curtis Woloschuk

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out after dark OUT AFTER DARK is a weekly feature highlighting social and cultural events around Vancouver. Got an upcoming event? E-mail us at outafterdark@WEVancouver.com. On Twitter: #OADVan

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1 Bitter Tasting Room cook Kale Hegberg, assistant manager Jonny Tyson,

bartender Shea Hogan, Heather Hospitality Group director of operations Chris Marshall, Belmont Barbershop professional barber Paul Donnici, and Bitter Tasting Room manager Simon Little (front) at the Movember Shave-Off on November 30. 2 LobsterMatt founder and chef Matt Audet brought his East Coast lobster cooking skills and Maritimes charm to a hungry crowd at Jules Bistro in Gastown on December 9. 3 Moeski Consulting Inc.’s Karin Bohne and friend Mike Morrell got crackin’ at LobsterMatt’s dinner and wine pairing event at Jules Bistro. 4 The Anthology blogger Kelsey Dundon and Flare magazine West Coast correspondent Anya Georgijevic (left to right) clutched their signed copies of Scott Schuman’s second book The Sartorialist Closer at Secret Location on December 4.

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Santa’s little witch

rant/rave! E-MAIL: rantrave@wevancouver.com Please send your rants by email only. All rants are the opinion of the individual and do not reflect the opinions of WE. The editor reserves the right to edit for clarity and brevity, so please keep it short and (bitter)sweet.

Flushed with dismay

Sarah FortisBC, Dispatch Coordinator

A safe holiday is a happy holiday Make safety a priority this holiday season with these simple tips: • Never kick or hit your meter if ice builds up. Call us for assistance at 1-888-224-2710. • After a snowfall, brush snow away from your meters by hand and clear a path for the safety of our meter readers. • Around your fireplace, consider using a hearth safety gate to help protect small children from the heated glass. For more winter safety tips, visit fortisbc.com/safety.

FortisBC uses the FortisBC Energy name and logo under license from Fortis Inc. (12-336.4 12/2012)

I work in an office of women only, so imagine my surprise when, during a brief interlude in the staff washroom, I discovered that the last person to use the facility had left an empty roll of toilet paper. What? After years of teasing men for being the culprits where washroom etiquette is concerned, I discovered that all women do not come with the gene that tells them it’s polite to put on a new roll when you’re the one who finishes off the last one. Do I owe an apology to all my former male co-workers?

Santa had a very naughty, ratty-looking, skinny short girl steal a backpack from his gym last Friday! He watched you come in and head straight for the area where all the elves keep their gear stored. Then he watched you head towards the door where you escaped with a stolen backpack. You got away even though someone tried to stop you. We spoke to the elf whose backpack was stolen and were told that it only contained keys to their home. (Signs were left out not to leave valuables in your gear.) Get some help, woman, before it is too late! Santa

Priorities We have a new bridge, a new perimeter road, and now the promise of a new tunnel! We also have homeless shelters, crowded hospitals, and 119,000 children living in poverty. Scrooge would be proud!

Anonymous

I’m too sexy for my beer I like beer — it makes me look sexier and it makes others look sexier to me. My issue is that I usually like to order draught beer; however, there have been a few times that I have ordered it and it tastes like crap. I have been drinking this stuff in the woods since Grade 7 and have an idea of what skunky beer tastes like; have you ever had my uncle’s “Wonder Brew”? If you are a server in the city and someone politely requests a new beer because it tastes bad, please do not question them by saying “Nobody else has a problem with it; we cleaned our lines yesterday!” which happened to me on Commercial Drive one night. I call that bullshit (with a capital B!). If you are a beer drinker in the city and your beer doesn’t taste right, speak up! I’m the one paying for the beer and I’m the one tipping, so please do not insult me! Anonymous

Mallydee

The view from a bus driver’s seat To the anonymous person complaining about bus drivers being aggressive (“Hey bus drivers,” Rants, Dec. 6.) Try being in our shoes when we signal to go out and people either speed up so we can’t pull out or they refuse to yield. I’ve waited 30 to 60 seconds at times to pull out and no one yields. What do you suggest? Wait until no cars are coming? On Davie, Granville, Burrard and all the other busy streets, that will never happen. We usually are five to 10 minutes late on average just driving on Davie during busy times; add 30 to 60 secs per stop waiting for someone to let us out and now we will be on an average another five minutes late. We usually can’t make up this time, especially during rush hour. Do the math. Oh, and by the way, when we are late, people verbally reprimand us. Have you ever had to pull out from a parking spot and the traffic keeps coming and no one gives you a break?

P.S. What in the holy heck is a “sleeve” anyway?

THANK YOU!

Anonymous

WIN AN iPAD! 16th Annual

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December 13 – 19, 2012

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Free Will Astrology By Rob Brezsny • Week of December 13 ARIES (March 21-April 19): Can you manage to be both highly alert and deeply relaxed? Could you be wildly curious and yet also serenely reflective? Can you imagine yourself being extra hungry to crack life’s secrets but also at peace with your destiny exactly the way it is? If you can honestly answer yes to those questions, you’ll get a lot of help in the coming week. The universe may even seem to be conspiring to educate you and heal you. You will receive a steady flow of clues about how to get closer to living your dreams. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): In the coming week, you would be wise to deal with your vulnerability, your fallibility, and your own personal share of the world’s darkness. If you refuse to do that, either out of laziness or fear, I’m worried that you will reinforce a status quo that needs to be overthrown. You may end up rationalizing your mistakes, clinging to false pride, and running away from challenges that could make you smarter and stronger. Don’t do that, Taurus! Be brave. Be willing to see what’s difficult to see. There will be big rewards if you choose to explore the weaker and less mature parts of your personality.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “Instinct tells us that sharks are more deadly than delicious fatty foods,” writes Jason Daley in Discover magazine. But “instinct is wrong,” he adds. In fact, eating food that tastes good but is actually bad for us is a far greater threat than shark bites. That’s just one example of how our uneducated urges can sometimes lead us astray. I invite you to keep this possibility in mind during the coming week, Scorpio. It’s by no means certain that you will be misled by your natural inclinations, but it is crucial that you monitor them with acute discernment. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): For the last six decades of his life, Pablo Picasso created art that was adventurous and experimental. He didn’t invent abstract painting, but he was instrumental in popularizing it. And yet in his early years he was a master of realism, and had an impressive ability to capture the nuances of human anatomy. Commenting on Picasso’s evolution, travel writer Rick Steves says that when he was young, “he learned the rules he would later so skillfully break.” I suspect you’re in a

phase of your own development when you could profit from doing the same thing. So I ask you, Sagittarius: What are the rules that are so ripe for you to bend and twist as you graduate to a more mature level of self-expression? CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Through some cosmic intervention, a sad or bad or mad story will get tweaked prior to the final turn of the plot. Just as you’re getting ready to nurse your regrets, an X-factor or wild card will appear, transforming the meaning of a series of puzzling events. This may not generate a perfectly happy ending, but it will at least result in an interesting and redemptive climax. What is the precise nature of that X-factor or wild card? Perhaps a big secret will be revealed or some missing evidence will arrive or a mental block will crumble. And it’s likely that you will have an epiphany abut how valuable your problem has actually been. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Be honest. Have you had any of the following symptoms? 1. Lack of interest in trivial matters and a yearning for big, holy mysteries. 2. Unfamiliar but interesting impulses rising

up in you and demanding consideration. 3. Fresh insights into people and situations you’ve known a long time. 4. An altered sense of the flow of time. 5. Out-of-theblue recall of long-forgotten memories. If you haven’t experienced any of the above, Aquarius, I must be totally off in my analysis and this horoscope isn’t for you. But if you’ve had even two of these symptoms, you are on schedule to get what those of us in the consciousness industry call a “religious experience.” PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): You just might be able to teach a statue to talk this week — or at least coax a useful message out of a stone-like person. You could also probably extract a delicious clue from out of the darkness or wrangle a tricky blessing from an adversary or find a small treasure hidden in a big mess. In short, Pisces, you now have a knack for accessing beauty and truth in unexpected sources. You can see what everyone else is blind to and love what everyone else has given up on. You’re practically a superhero. Use your powers wisely, my friend. Be benevolently unpredictable.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In the 1968 Olympics, Bob Beamon broke the world record for the long jump. His leap was so far beyond the previous mark that the optical device designed to calculate it didn’t work. Officials had to resort to an old-fashioned measuring tape. After that, the word “Beamonesque” came to signify a feat that vastly outstripped all previous efforts. According to my analysis, you Geminis will have an excellent chance to be Beamonesque in 2013. I expect that you will at least surpass your own peak levels of accomplishment. If you have not yet launched your ascent, get started now. CANCER (June 21-July 22): The fire ants that invaded the southern US back in the 1930s are an annoyance. They swarm and bite and sting. The venom they inject makes their victims feel like they’ve been burned. Two communities have decided to make the best of the situation. Auburn, Georgia and Marshall, Texas both stage annual Fire Ant Festivals, with events like the Fire Ant Call, the Fire Ant Round-Up, and the Fire Ant Chili Cook-Off. (To win the latter, your dish must contain at least one fire ant.) Maybe their example could inspire you, Cancerian. Is there any pest you could develop a more playful and festive relationship with? Could you possibly turn into the equivalent of a Fire Ant Whisperer? LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): While reading William Kittredge’s book The Nature of Generosity, I learned about the oldest known sentence written in ancient Greek. It was inscribed on a wine jug that dates back to 740 B.C. Translated into English, it says, “Who now of all dancers sports most playfully?” Another possible translation is “Which of these dancers plays most delicately?” I’d love to make something like that be your mantra in the coming week, Leo. The time is right for you to do more dancing and playing and sporting than usual — and to seek out companions who’d like to help you achieve recordbreaking levels of those recreational activities. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): In the movie Groundhog Day, Bill Murray plays a man who gets trapped in a timeloop. Over and over again, he experiences the same 24 hours. When he wakes up each morning, it’s still February 2. At first it drives him crazy, pushing him to the verge of suicide. But eventually he decides to use his time wisely. He becomes a skilled pianist and a fluent French-speaker. He does good deeds and saves people’s lives. He even learns what he needs to do to win the heart of the woman he desires. This transformation turns out to be the key to gaining his freedom. Near the end of the film, he escapes to February 3. A comparable opportunity is looming for you, Virgo. You have a chance to break a spell you’ve been under or slip away from a rut you’ve been in. Generosity may play a major role. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Events in the immediate future may have resemblances to reading a boring book that’s packed with highly useful information. You might feel that there’s a disjunction between the critical clues you need to gather and the hohum style in which they are offered. It’s OK to be a bit disgruntled by this problem as long as you promise to remain alert for the partially disguised goodies. Don’t fall asleep in the middle of the unspectacular lesson.

WEVancouver.com

December 13 – 19, 2012

25


24 WEVancouver.com

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS 7

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C & C Electrical Mechanical

FINANCIAL SERVICES

DROWNING IN DEBTS? Helping Canadians 25 years. Lower payments by 30%, or cut debts 70% thru Settlements. AVOID BANKRUPTCY! Free consultation. www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1 877-556-3500 If you own a home or real estate, ALPINE CREDITS can lend you money: It’s That Simple. Your Credit / Age / Income is NOT an issue. 1.800.587.2161. INCOME TAX PROBLEMS? Have you been audited, reassessed or disallowed certain claims by Canada Revenue Agency? Call Bob Allen @ 250-542-0295 35yrs. Income Tax experience, 8.5yrs. with Revenue Canada. Email: r.gallen@shaw.ca

www.paintspecial.com

All kinds of re-roofing & repairs. Free est. Reasonable rates. (604)961-7505, 278-0375

Mainland RooďŹ ng Ltd. 25 yrs in rooďŹ ng industry

Family owned & operated. Fully ins. We do Cedar Shakes, conversions, concrete tiles, torchon, fibreglass shingles, restoration & repairs. 20 yr labour warr. 604-427-2626 or 723-2626 www.mainlandroof.com

356

bradsjunkremoval.com

Haul Anything... But Dead Bodies!!

604.

PAINT SPECIAL

RECYCLE-IT!

Running this ad for 8yrs

3 rooms for $299, 2 coats any colour

(Ceiling & Trim extra) Price incls Cloverdale Premium quality paint. NO PAYMENT until Job is completed. Ask us about our Laminate Flooring & Maid Services.

338

JUNK REMOVAL

Recycled Earth Friendly

• Estate Services • Electronics • Appliances • Old Furniture • Construction • Yard Waste • Concrete • Drywall • Junk • Rubbish • Mattresses & More!

On Time, As Promised, Service Guaranteed!

PLUMBING

604.587.5865 www.recycleitcanada.ca

PETS 477

FLOOR REFINISHING/ INSTALLATIONS

Century Hardwood Floors 604-376-7224

281

GARDENING

WEED FREE Mushroom Manure 13 yards - $180 or Well Rotted 10 yds - $200. 604-856-8877

283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS ALWAYS GUTTER Cleaning Service, Repairs, 20 yrs exp. Rain or shine.7dys/wk.Simon 604-230-0627

287

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

Additions, Home Improvements Restorations, Renovations, & New Construction. Specializing in Concrete, Forming, Framing & Siding. 604-218-3064

PETS

AMERICAN BULLDOGS $1200 Ready for Xmas 4 females, 3 males 1st shots dewormed(604)230-1999

HARDWOOD FLOOR REFINISHING âœś Repairs & Staining âœś Installation âœś Free Estimates

220.JUNK(5865)

Serving The Lower Mainland Since 1988

604-475-7077

275

RUBBISH REMOVAL

604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley

• ELECTRICAL • FULL PLUMBING SERVICES • HVAC GAS FITTING *Free Est. *Licensed *Insured 24hr. Emergency Service

www.centuryhardwood .com

182

FIVE STAR ROOFING GL ROOFING. Cedar shakes, Asphalt Shingles, Flat roofs, WCB Clean Gutters. $80. 604-240-5362

ABBA MOVERS & DEL Res/comm 1-4 ton truck, 1 man $35/hr, 2 men from $45. Honest, bsmt clean up. 25yrs Exp. 24hrs/7days 604-506-7576

PASTRY BAKER BEST FALAFEL INC 2013 Commercial Drive, Vancouver, BC, V5N 4B1

Duties:Prepare dough for baklava, Basboosa, Atter,(Syrup), Barazeh, Eish Al-Saraya, Halva, Honeyed Carrots, Katayef, Nammoura – Arabian, pies, rolls and sweet goods, cookies and cakes and icings and frostings according to recipes or special customer orders, Operate machinery, Bake mixed doughs and batters, Frost and decorate cakes or other baked goods. Apply by mail or email at: best.falafel@hotmail.com

MOVING & STORAGE

1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Real Professionals, Reasonable. Rates. Different From the Rest. 604-721-4555. 2guyswithatruck.ca Moving & Storage Visa OK. 604-628-7136

NIRVANA Restaurant at 2313 Main Street in Vancouver is Hiring F/T FOOD BEVERAGE & SERVERS. No experience required. Salary would be $10.50/hr and min work 40hrs/ week. Must be available for weekends and evenings. Knowledge of Hindi or Punjabi an asset. Please send your resume to: 604-876-2911 or email at: ddhani@yahoo.com or meet in person at restaurant.

LOOKING TO HIRE? Reach Out To QualiďŹ ed Candidates Today!

182

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

604 575 5555

HELP WANTED

2 Satellite Antennas Installers (reqd). Sal:$20.00/hr. F/T, Pmt. 6+ months exp. Duties: Install / test / repair antennas and related equip. Follow specifications. Test installed system conformance. Replace or repair defective parts. Attach antenna base to footing after concrete dries. Use hand & power tools and equipment. Lang: English. Contact Myron from Blue Universe in Vancouver, BC. Work at various locations in BC. Apply at mgates@blueuniverse.ca or fax (604)568-4671

PERSONAL SERVICES

CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866 10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fitter. Aman: 778-895-2005

115

EDUCATION

CHIHUAHUA, FEMALE, 1 year old, long hair, $500. Please call 604-794-7347

115

EDUCATION

BECOME AN OPTICIAN IN ONLY 6 MONTHS Optical Dispensing is a high-growth industry with good pay and job security. Train for a “Career With Vision�. START YOUR OWN BUSINESS!! startsFeb. Feb.20th, 11th, 2013 $ starts 2012 $ $ Hurry

BC B.C.COLLEGE COLLEGEOF OFOPTICS OPTICS #208 - 10070 King George Blvd., Surrey, BC www.bccollegeofoptics.ca

604.581.0101

WEVancouver.com


WE Vancouver Thursday, December 13, 2012

PETS 477

PETS

CATS OF ALL DESCRIPTION in need of caring homes! All cats are Spayed, neutered, vaccinated and dewormed. Visit us at fraservalleyhumanesociety.com or call 1 (604)820-2977

WEVancouver.com 25

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE 545

FUEL

1YR Seasoned Alder Birch Maple Clean, Split, DRY & Delivered. Family Operated for 20 yrs. (604) 825-9264

548

FURNITURE

REAL ESTATE 627

*NEW QUEEN MATTRESS SET* Pillow Top in Plastic. Mfr. Warranty Must Sell $200 ~ 604-484-0379

560

CHINESE SHAR-PEI PUPPIES MINI’S/TOYS - M & F $1200.00 604-315-8774 WWW.WRINKLESRUS.COM COCKAPOO-POO PUPPIES Vet checked. Non-shedding. VERY CUTE! $575. 604-541-9163 GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES P.B. $1200: Born Sept. 29th. 2 Male, 1 Female. (778)863-6332 NEED A GOOD HOME for a good dog or a good dog for a good home? We adopt dogs! Call 604856-3647 or www.856-dogs.com PITBULL puppies. 5 males, 4 females. 6 wks old. White & brown. $350. each obo. 604-300-0807

MISC. FOR SALE

AT LAST! An iron filter that works. IronEater! Fully patented Canada/U.S.A. Removes iron, hardness, smell, manganese. Since 1957. Visit our 29 innovative inventions: www.bigirondrilling.com. Phone 1-800-BIG-IRON.

GREAT GIFT IDEA!! ChillSpot is The COOLEST Dog Bed-A new and innovative, thermodynamically cooled dog bed, that enhances the cool tile surfaces our pets rely on during the warm weather months. Use promo code COOLGIFT For 10 % off! www.chillspot.biz

CHECK CLASSIFIEDS

bcclassified.com 604-575-5555

587

TOOLS

603

ACREAGE

20 Acres FREE! Buy 40-Get 60 acres. $0-Down, $168/mo. Money Back Guarantee, NO CREDIT CHECKS. Beautiful Views. Roads/Surveyed. Neaer El Paso, Texas. 1-800-843-7537 www.sunsetranches.com

587

TOOLS

Growing into, or growing out of?

810

AUTO FINANCING

700

818

TRANSPORTATION

CARS - DOMESTIC

845

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL 2 hr. Service www.a1casper.com (604)209-2026

LOOKING FOR A DEAL ON A NEW VEHICLE? Save up to 40% OFF your next new vehicle... No games or gimmicks, deal direct with local dealerships. www.newcarselloff.com No qr code reader? Text info: 778.786.8271

RENT TO OWN

STOP RENTING RENT TO OWN No Qualification Required, Flexible Terms! Cloverdale – 60th Ave &176th St. Spacious 742 sf. 1 Bdrm. Condo. Only $880/mo. Option Fee Required 604-657-9422

706

TRANSPORTATION

TOP CA$H PAID TODAY For SCRAP VEHICLES!

RENTALS

838

RECREATIONAL/SALE

1996 22’ SLUMBER QUEEN 5th wheel. Interior like new, has to be seen to appreciate. New stereo, back up camera, new HD antenna, m/w, a/c. Includes hitch. $6,500. 604-625-7761 Aldergrove.

APARTMENT/CONDO

The Scrapper

AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Minimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673

WE’RE ON THE WEB www.bcclassified.com

940 ADULT PHONE SERVICE

736

HOMES FOR RENT

940 ADULT PHONE SERVICE

940 ADULT PHONE SERVICE

Auto Financing 1.800.910.6402

HALF house for rent. Opposite Esquimalt High on 828 Colvile Rd. 3 Bedrooms, large yard for pets and kids. 250-885-8002 or 250-8858090

TRANSPORTATION

REAL ESTATE

Wolf X Shepherd pups, $450. blk w/markings, view parents. chrisjo@telus.net (604)869-2772

AUTO FINANCING

BIG BUILDING SALE... “”THIS IS A CLEARANCE SALE. YOU DON’T WANT TO MISS!”” 20x20 $3,985. 25X24 $4,595. 30X36 $6,859. 35X48 $11,200. 40X52 $13,100. 47X76 $18,265. One End wall included. Pioneer Steel 1-800-6685422. www.pioneersteel.ca

HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper?

Swiss Mountain pups, short-hair, family raised, gentle, vet chck, dewormed. $500. 604-795-7662

810

TRANSPORTATION

WE BUY HOUSES! Older House • Damaged House Moving • Estate Sale • Just Want Out • Behind on Payments Quick Cash! • Flexible Terms! CALL US FIRST! 604-657-9422

MATTRESSES starting at $99 • Twins • Fulls • Queens • Kings 100’s in stock! www.Direct Liquidation.ca (604)294-2331

HOMES WANTED

TRANSPORTATION

810

AUTO FINANCING

DreamTeam Auto Financing “0” Down, Bankruptcy OK Cash Back ! 15 min Approvals

1-800-961-7022

www.iDreamAuto.com DL# 7557

818

CARS - DOMESTIC

Sell your Car! with the &ODVViÀeG

Power Pack…

Sell your vehicle FAST in the highest read community newspapers & largest online sites!

LiPiteG Time Offer!

12

ONLY

UsedVancouver.com BUY & SELL USED STUFF ONLINE, FREE!

2010 VENZA: Like new, only 20,000 kms, fully loaded, automatic, 6 cylinder, dvd system. $22,800. 604-575-5555.

3-LINE EXAMPLE

Size not exactly as shown

$

Power Pack iQcluGeV

WE PRINT AD: Includes photo and 3-lines for one week. BCClaVViÀeG.com ONLINE AD: BC-wide reach! For one week!

USEDVancouver.com

ONLINE AD: Local reach — until you cancel it!

Call 604.575-5555 M8 E : F L M< IÊ J L I98 E N < < BCP

WEVancouver.com

December 13 – 19, 2012

27


WEEKLY SPECIALS 100% BC Owned and Operated Prices Effective December 13 to December 26, 2012. ( 2 weeks ) We reserve the right to limit quantities. We reserve the right to correct printing errors.

Grocery Department Salt Spring Organic Fair Trade Coffee

Meat Department

J.D. Farms Grade A Specialty Turkey

Barbara’s Bakery Cheez Puffs

assorted varieties

assorted varieties

from10.99

2.29

Canadian Heritage Organic Maple Syrup assorted varieties

19.99

Breyers Ice Cream

WOW!

PRICING

product of Canada

reg 8.99

Oasis Health Break Fresh Juice

PRICING

1.66L product of Canada

assorted varieties

2/7.00

3/6.99

1.75L +dep+eco • product of Canada

Organic California Grown Garnet and Jewel Yams

Relax and let us cook your Turkey Dinner for you! Try our delicious holiday meal complete with specialty turkey and all the trimmings, made exclusively by our Executive Chef Antonio Cerullo.

220g • product of USA

( found in the dairy isle )

WOW!

PRICING

Bulk Department All Brookside Chocolate

assorted varieties

3.99

bags or bins

2/5.00

PRICING reg 5.89

20% off regular retail price

425-454g • product of BC

Health Care Department

1 dozen • product of Canada

Celestial Seasonings Tea assorted varieties

Stahlbush Island Farms Frozen Vegetables

2/5.00

assorted varieties

WOW!

PRICING

20 count product of USA

Organic Meadow Organic Butter

reg 2.99

New Chapter Zyflamend

Fruitcakes or Stollen

300-400g product of USA

regular retail price 225-908g

6.99

2/5.00

946ml

5.99 Armstrong Cheese assorted varieties

from 7.99

WOW!

PRICING reg from 11.49

600g • product of Canada

Camino Organic Chocolate Bars

2/5.00

Hot-Kid Rice Crisps

regular, light or classic

assorted varieties

from 3.99

2L • product of Canada

3/5.49

package of 6

20.99 37.99

2.00 off

regular retail price ( available frozen or fresh )

120 veggie caps 240 veggie caps

• Normalizes adrenal function, and therefore overall health and energy • Improves overall ability to deal with excessive stress

Choices’ Star of the Season Program

WOW!

PRICING

November 1st – December 24th Your donation of only $2 supports the growth of healthy communities. Now in its 11th year, Choices’ Star of the Season enriches the lives of families all across Metro Vancouver and the Central Okanagan. Kindly donated by Calabar Printers, Choices’ Holiday Stars may be purchased between November 1st and December 24th for a donation of $2.00.

Look for our

WOW!

For more details on each neighborhood house, please visit www.choicesmarkets.com

PRICING

2011, 2012 Awards. Your Loyalty has helped Choices achieve these awards. Thank you!

www.choicesmarkets.com Kitsilano

Cambie

Kerrisdale

Yaletown

Rice Bakery

South Surrey

2627 W. 16th Ave. Vancouver 604.736.0009

3493 Cambie St. Vancouver 604.875.0099

1888 W. 57th Ave. Vancouver 604.263.4600

1202 Richards St. Vancouver 604.633.2392

2595 W. 16th Ave. Vancouver 604.736.0301

3248 King George Blvd. South Surrey 604.541.3902

LL Regeneration

Brad King Ultimate Vegan Anti-Stress

no egg and non dairy options available

100g • product of China

Rose Dew

Rose Dew provides hydrating care for dry skin while LL Regeneration is tailored to people 30 and older.

Pumpkin Pies 6 or 8”

100g • product of Canada

Dairyland Egg Nog

17.99 20.99

Rice Bakery

assorted varieties

120 softgels

AnneMarie Borlind 3 Piece Gift Set

Mince or Butter Tarts, Almond Bites or Cranberry Pecan Squares

product of USA

60 softgels

The whole, active constituents of Turmeric, delivered in New Chapter’s Zyflamend, work as a 100% herbal anti-inflammatory to help relieve joint pain. Save $5 with in storecoupon!

1.00 off

assorted varieties

454g product of Canada

24.99 39.99

Bakery Department

2/3.00

Kitchen Basics Cooking Stocks

salted or unsalted

.98lb/ 2.16kg

No. 1 size • product of USA

Que Pasa Organic Tortilla Chips

WOW!

5.98

5lb product of Canada

WOW!

PRICING

Deli Department

Kettle Brand Potato Chips

7.98

5lb box product of USA

Organic Table Carrots from Fountainview Farm in Lillooet, B.C.

2.99lb/ 6.59kg

6.99

assorted varieties

Vitala Free Run Omega-3 Large Eggs

WOW!

Toupie Hams

assorted varieties

1L

Organic California Grown Satsuma Mandarin Oranges

3.99lb/ 8.80kg

155-198g product of USA

400g • product of Canada

Produce Department

Choices at the Crest 8683 10th Ave. Burnaby 604.522.0936

Kelowna 1937 Harvey Ave. Kelowna 250.862.4864


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