SEPTEMBER 19 - SEPTEMBER 25 , 2013
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» NORTH VANCOUVER
HOLLYWOOD ENDING?
The B.C. film industry looks to be slowly rebounding after an apocalyptic start to 2013 » 29
‘FORGOTTEN WAR’ TRIBUTE » 37
Michaela Garstin photo
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vALLEy vISIoN - An artist’s rendering shows a revised plan for Lynn Valley Centre that includes a series of low- and mid-rise buildings. Submitted drawing
» NEWS
Bosa planning a ‘mountain village’ theme for Lynn Valley Because…everyone should know a little Italian!
New plans for Lynn Valley Town Centre, which don’t include any high-rises, were unveiled to the public last week MARIA SPITALE-LEISK S tA f f R e p o Rt e R
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ast Thursday area residents got their first look at revamped revitalization plans for Lynn Valley Centre — and, for the most part, they were pleased. Former West Vancouver mayor Mark Sager, who has been tasked with gathering public input on behalf of mall owner Bosa Development Corporation, unveiled architectural drawings to approximately 150 people gathered in the old Zellers store. “We are trying to capture the feeling of a mountain village so we are using a lot of natural materials here: a lot of stones, timber, peaked roofs — things that you would expect to find in other beautiful mountain villages, whether it’s Whistler or Banff or places like that,” said Sager of Bosa’s vision for Lynn Valley Centre. Bosa has scaled down their plans after hearing from the public this past year. Included in the previous iteration was a 22-storey residential tower. Sager said the new proposal calls for a series of six buildings ranging from two to 12 storeys — two of which are residential only, while the others are mixed use. In terms of density, the floor space ratio (FSR) would be around the 2.5 mark, which is lower than what is set out in North Vancouver district’s Official Community Plan (OCP). While no development permit application has been filed with North Van district hall yet, Sager is eager to see the plans approved by council before the year is out. “It has to be fairly soon, because you can’t leave this much space empty,” he said, referencing the old Zellers site, which has been vacant since March. Once the development permit application is approved, the interior and exterior of the mall would immediately undergo an extensive facelift. continued, PAGE 4
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» NEWS
continued from, PAGE 2
No tips yet in year-old disappearance of North Vancouver man
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ast week Mounties sent out a press release to coincide with the oneyear anniversary of the mysterious disappearance of a North Vancouver man with the hopes of generating some fresh tips. But so far, investigators are no closer to discovering the whereabouts of Tim Cameron, 53. “Unfortunately our investigator has not received anything as of yet. However sometimes information comes through third parties such as other police agencies and takes a while to surface so we remain hopeful,” said North Van RCMP Insp. Dave Attfield in an email to The Outlook on Monday. On August 18, 2012, Cari Wineberg dropped off Cameron, her common-law partner, at a bus stop on Marine Drive near Pemberton Avenue. According to the police news release, the couple was “experiencing difficulties in their relationship,” and “decided on taking a break.” “Tim asked me if it was over, and the last thing I told him was that it wasn’t impossible, but that it may take up to a year before I would even consider giving it another go,” Wineberg said in the statement. “With that, Tim just walked away. Other than a possible sighting the next day, nobody’s seen or heard from him since.” A short time later she contacted North Vancouver police and a thorough investigation was launched but police were unable to locate Cameron, who police say is a talented net-maker known to work in commercial fishing or in construction as a first-aid attendant. “Unfortunately, Tim was not your aver-
On Aug. 18, 2012, Tim Cameron (pictured at left) was dropped off at a bus stop on Marine Drive near Pemberton Avenue in North Vancouver. He has not been heard from since. Outlook photo (above)/RCMP handout (at left)
age guy living a predictable lifestyle,” said Const. Mary-Louise Zadravetz of the North Vancouver RCMP Missing Persons Unit in the police handout. “This makes investigating Tim’s disappearance more difficult. Now that a year has come and gone, this scenario of him coming back to perhaps mend their relationship, although possible, is looking less probable.” If you have any information about Cameron or his whereabouts, call the North Vancouver RCMP’s Unsolved Homicide/ Missing Person’s Unit at 604-969-7505 or 604-969-7568 and quote file #2012-22171. -The Outlook
Lynn Valley Centre 2.0 would have glass storefronts facing the parking lot to create a transparent effect, and public gathering spaces outside the mall. And while it is still premature to talk about new retailers, Sager did say there is a community desire to see a family restaurant come into the mall. In the meantime, a “secret” business will open in the old Zellers store at Lynn Valley Centre in November, said Sager. “[The store] is going to be quite fun,” he adds. At last Thursday’s informal session, Lynn Valley resident Linda Findlay stood up in favour of the entire Lynn Valley Centre revitalization. “There has to be compromise. Not any one group is going to get everything they want,” said Findlay, a mortgage specialist by profession. Her wish list for Lynn Valley town centre includes green spaces, open spaces and offices for professionals such as doctors and accountants. “After seeing the reworking of the plans here tonight, I think they might have just got it right,” said Findlay, who drafted a petition that she will be forwarding to council, asking them to support the Lynn Valley Centre redevelopment. Another proponent of the project, an Upper Lonsdale resident, said a lot of the discussion that has been going on in the municipality has been misinformation. “I would hope that if you are supporters for something differ-
ent than four-storey squat buildings that are going to cover every square foot of this municipality … that you will pick up the phone and phone council because they sure are hearing from all the no people,” said the speaker. Theresa-Marie and Dana Rousseau also spoke to The Outlook at the meeting, saying they chose Lynn Valley to raise their family because of the good schools in the area. But, for them, the local mall has left something to be desired. They like the idea of having a climbing wall inside Lynn Valley Centre, another part of Bosa’s plan. “I love that — a place for our kids to go to get them off computers,” said Theresa-Marie. When asked if there is anything about the proposal they don’t agree with, the couple said, “The opposition to change.” Meanwhile, Lynn Valley resident Hazen Colbert, a vocal opponent of large-scale development in the community, has asked council to not consider applications for buildings taller than eight storeys. Residents have yet to see if Safeway has revised their plans for East 27th Street. Their preliminary redevelopment application showed a 22-storey residential tower. Sager said he will meet with representatives from Safeway next week to learn more about their proposal. And later this fall, council will take a closer look at densification in the area, with a consultation report on the Lynn Valley Town Centre Implementation Plan expected. mspitale@northshoreoutlook.com
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New Bike Lids at City Hall Have you seen the colourful pods in Civic Plaza by the entrance to City Hall? Wondering what they are? They're called BikeLids and they're an innovative new bicycle storage system that provides protection from weather, vandalism and theft. Made with 100% recyclable materials, the pods are reinforced by steel and attached by a spring-loaded hinge to a durable frame. Each pod holds two fullsized bicycles which are secured to the interior frame with the cyclist’s own lock. They're easy to use: just LIFT, PARK and LOCK! 1. Lift the pod 2. Roll your bicycle into the pod 3. Use your own high quality lock to secure your bicycle to the steel frame inside 4. Close the lid Get more information at www.cnv.org/BikeLids
North Shore Culture Days: September 27 - 29 Culture Days is a three-day national celebration where artists, cultural groups and creative organizations raise awareness of arts and culture in the community. Here on the North Shore, we’re celebrating the second annual North Shore Culture Days with over 50 free, hands-on and interactive activities that invite the public to discover the world of artists, filmmakers, historians and musicians. Join us for the kick-off celebration on Thursday, September 26 at 5pm at Shipbuilders’ Square with music by the Adam Woodall Band. Come be inspired and celebrate the creative spirit in our community. There's something for everyone and all ages are welcome! Go to www.artsoffice.ca for a full list of events.
141 West 14th Street, North Vancouver BC V7M 1H9 | Tel: 604.985.7761 | Fax: 604.985.9417 | info@cnv.org
Central Waterfront Vision Community Survey The City is developing a vision for the Central Waterfront area and we want your input and ideas. We’re exploring community visions for retail, restaurant and public uses that will appeal to residents and visitors and create a revitalized Central Waterfront. Earlier this week, a well attended public meeting took place to launch the process, and the next step is gathering community input through the survey. The brief survey is online at www.cnv.org/ CentralWaterfrontSurvey
Lower Lonsdale Fall Festival SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 12pm - 3pm at LONSDALE QUAY MARKET PLAZA Hosted by the Lower Lonsdale Business Association, this family event is free and includes live music, activities for kids, a Farmer's Market, food samples from a number of Lower Lonsdale restaurants, plus the chance to get to know your local businesses. Visit the info booth for a chance to win great prizes! More information at LowerLonsdaleBusinessAssociation.com
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ProPerty brothers and style sisters - Anna Shimizu and Lucila Diaz teamed up with the Drew and Jonathon Scott for several episodes of Property Brothers filmed in Vancouver. Stacy Thomas/blurrdMEDIA
» CoFFee With
Inner harmony Two West Van-based interior designers balance high-profile clients, spending time with their kids and newfound fame from their work on the reality TV show Property Brothers
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it and they end up buying a fixer-upper.” est Vancouver interior designers Enter the Property Brothers, identical twins Anna Shimizu and Lucila Diaz felt Drew and Jonathan Scott, who help the coumore like magicians after pulling off ples discover the potential of a diamond in the nine renovations in less than five months for rough by using computer-generated imagery. the reality TV series Property Brothers. Drew brings his realtor expertise to the When they were accepted to work on the table, negotiating the purchase of the home, show, which airs on W Network and HGTV, while Jonathan, a licensed the producers warned them contractor, helms the renothat things were going to hapvations. But together, the pen very quickly. twins bring the antics. Those words pretty much set “They are super hard the tone for the taping of the workers, but they also have show and the design duo’s lives a comedic side to them. in between filming. They are always pulling “It was a very, very intenpranks,” shares Shimizu. sive first half of the year,” says reporter@northshoreoutlook.com The third season of Shimizu. Property Brothers marked Diaz nods her head in agreethe first time the show was filmed in ment. On this late summer morning, the Vancouver, and a homecoming for the Scott partners in the boutique, full-service design boys. firm Harmony Sense Interiors are savouring Figuring American viewers would identify their lattes on the back patio at Starbucks on with home prices south of the border, the first Marine Drive in Ambleside. half of the season took the twins to Austin, They are coming down from the high of being immersed in the world of lights, camera Texas, where they worked with $300,000 properties. Avid followers of the show saw and action for six months straight. Shimizu later on in the season how comparable homes sets up the premise of the show. “It’s about how a couple wants to have their continued, PAGE 34 dream home,” she explains. “They can’t afford
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WaviNG GOOdbYE TO SUMMEr Boaters in Deep Cove enjoy some fleeting moments of summer fun. Rob Newell photo
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Summer’s end - how to keep it going? A s a kid, I recall watching my dad swimming, and floating on his back in the water. It was like this amazing magic trick. It seemed he could do it as long as he liked — just float there, gazing up at the sky. I’d try and try, but sink like a stone. On Labour Day, the last day of summer for many people, my wife and I were out with our boys at Crescent Beach. The day was hot so I had a swim. The water was deliciously warm, and I tried my dad’s trick again. Eventually, I let go — mastering the knack of trying not to try — and felt a fantastic sensation as my head went back and my hips rose to the surface, almost of their own accord. My envy of my dad’s magic trick was justified: it felt fantastic. I could have stayed for hours. A day later, my short holiday was over and I went back to work and all that entails. We ushered our oldest son to Grade 2 and the youngtwitter.com/chrismbryan est into daycare. It was back to packing lunches, planning meals, and signing the kids up for activities, skirting that fine line between enough “exposure” to new things and driving us all bonkers with a jammed schedule. For many of us, the first week of
Chris Bryan
September is a time of excitement about new activities and projects, but for me there’s trepidation about overscheduling life and resenting it later. As life gets busy, carefree downtime evaporates. This past summer was one of my most enjoyable in years. The glorious stretch of sun helped, as did visits with family. A good summer can give you that sensation of floating. Life just seems so much simpler, easier than the rest of the year. The future, if your mind wanders that way, seems a quaint, imaginary place over the horizon. And when you’re on a holiday out of town, those feelings are magnified as you visit new places, enjoy the calm, the sun, the food, and wonder if it’s possible that life could always be thus. My wife and I gave the kids a break with their grandparents and spent the August long weekend in Montreal where we walked, cycled, meandered, and ate and drank our way around a city that seemed created for enjoying life. Residents seemed to spend their days migrating from café to bistro to bar. Patios were jammed. We also spent a little time in the Gulf Islands this summer, swimming, exploring, reading and skipping stones. Life was spent barefoot. It’s at times like this that people often muse about a “big change” in life.
Could I live here? they ask. Sipping a bowl of coffee at 11 a.m. on a sidewalk patio I wondered: Wouldn’t it be great to live in Montreal all the time? How about Gulf Island living? Maybe buy a boat, a kayak? Learn to sculpt or paint? Write crime novels? Browsing the local real estate listings is a common symptom of this state of mind. For most, it’s pure fantasy. A chance to briefly inhabit another life, if only in their mind. The rational, left brain is put into neutral. That’s the boring side that, when the time comes, is only too happy to remind us that our heads are in the clouds. That we’re seeing life through a summer lens, a time when life everywhere is different. Come back to Montreal in December, it sneers, when that sidewalk patio is buried under a freshly ploughed snow. And you think the Gulf Islands are peaceful now? Try January when it’s as quiet as the interior of an abandoned mine shaft. But hey, we all need to float a little sometimes. And when September returns, and we get back to our routines, many of us wish we could just float a little longer. Who knows? Maybe, like my dad’s trick, with a little practice, it just might be possible. -Chris Bryan is the editor of the Burnaby Newsleader, a sister paper of the Outlook
Delivery Stop and start 604.903.1011 circulation@northshoreoutlook.com Publisher Heather McKie 604.903.1022 publisher@northshoreoutlook.com Director Sales and Marketing Greg Laviolette 604.903.1013 greg@northshoreoutlook.com Editor Justin Beddall 604.903.1005 editor@northshoreoutlook.com Staff Reporters Maria Spitale-Leisk 604.903.1007 reporter@northshoreoutlook.com Michaela Garstin 604.903.1021 mgarstin@northshoreoutlook.com Regular Contributors Catherine Barr, Len Corben, Rob Newell Display Advertising Hollee Brown, Jeanette Duey, Tannis Hendriks, Pat Paproski, Kyle Stevens, Tracey Wait, James Young Ad Control 604.903.1000 Creative Services Doug Aylsworth, Maryann Erlam Editorial submissions are welcome, however unsolicited works will not be returned. Submissions may be edited for brevity, legality and taste at the Editor's discretion. Copyright and property rights subsist in all display advertising and other material appearing in The Outlook. If, in the Publisher's opinion, an error is made that materially affects the value of the ad 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 is required before second insertion. Opinions expressed in columns and letters to the Editor are not necessarily shared by the Publisher.
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t was an extra delicious day this past Saturday at Park and Tilford’s Save-on-Foods store as the first-ever Top Chef North Shore event took place. Billed as a friendly culinary competition and fundraiser, store shoppers got a chance to sample each of the amazing offerings from all six participating restaurants. In the end it was the BC Children’s Hospital Foundation who came out the biggest winner as all donations raised go to support their efforts. Congratulations to all involved! 1 Save-on-Foods managers Ryan Dennis, left, and Ryan Duncan help collect donations along with charity drive leader Rosalia Calla. 2 Pretty plates are all part of the voting as Hurricane Grill chefs Ash Ranjbar, left, and Lino Marquez Vargas will tell you. 3 The Little District’s chefs Dustyn Harvey, left, and Justin Cummings serve it up right for charity. 4 The catch of the day: Fishworks chef Shallaw Kadir, centre, and teammates Patrick Heywood, left, and Colin Rasmussen. 5 Chef Matthew Formagin, left, teams up with Café for Contemporary Art owner Tyler Russell to show off their skills. 6 They’re teaming up in all the best ways to make things extra delicious. Indian Fusion’s chef
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Follow entertainment / events columninst Catherine Barr on these social media outlets Linkedin
Abby Sharma gets a cuddle from his beautiful fiancée and helper Nisha Arora. 7 Grouse Mountain’s Dino Gazzola, left, and Spencer Watts tempt tasters with their smoked salmon creation.
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At Mosquito Creek Marina Western Canada’s Largest Floating Boat Show! This Thursday through Sunday • September 19–22 • 2013
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Rosemary Rocksalt’s (left to right) Caitlin Wilson, Parise Siegel and Ken Sim gather around Pam Horton from the North Shore Disability Resource Centre at the store’s plaque dedication for a new wheelchairaccessible door. Michaela Garstin photo
» NEWS
N. Shore accessibility advocate tackles a frequent obstacles Pam Horton says every store on the North Shore should have a wheelchair-accessible front door MICHAELA GARSTIN S tA f f R E p o Rt E R t’s the seemingly small things that can make Pam Horton’s life difficult. Businesses that lack automated doors are one of her biggest obstacles — a problem she sees far too often on the North Shore. Even when stores are accommodating, the buttons are often in inappropriate places, making it difficult or impossible for Horton to get in on her own. Always ready to educate shop own“My dream is to ers on wheelchair accessibility, she approached Rosemary Rocksalt on have a bylaw that 16th and Lonsdale after noticing the requires that there store’s front door wasn’t wheelchair friendly. be push-buttons for “I’m the co-founder of Nurse Next Door, a home healthcare company, so doors... on all store I felt particularly embarrassed about fronts.” this blunder,” said Ken Sim, co-owner of Rosemary Rocksalt, at a recent Pam Horton plaque dedication to Horton, who Accessibility advocate works with the North Shore Disability Resource Centre. As someone who has MS and has used a scooter for 24 years, Horton’s expertise helped him work out the details and go beyond minimum codes for the door. Horton says new developers or store owners looking to put in wheelchair-friendly doors should seek the advice of people in wheelchairs to avoid putting buttons in the wrong places. “We can always find things wrong but the North Shore as a whole is pretty accessible,” she tells The Outlook. “The City of North Vancouver has been a leader around accessibility for years.” Small improvements, such as curve ramps and keeping sidewalks clear, are among the most important. Every public bus on the North Shore is wheelchair friendly and buses in North Van give audible location announcements, a valuable addition for people in wheelchairs who can’t look out the window easily. “These are big improvements, they matter,” says Johnstone, who recently helped the Centennial Theatre become completely wheelchair accessible. Her biggest vision, however, isn’t a reality yet. “My dream is to have a bylaw that requires that there be pushbuttons for doors… on all store fronts,” she says.
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Business and pleasure Capilano College music grad Cory Weeds hits a high note as a jazz club owner and musician
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2013 ABBOTSFORD ENTERTAINMENT & SPORTS CENTRE ABBOTSFORD, BC
Dr. A.C. Mahdaviani Dr. Karen Mudry • Comprehensive Eye Health and Vision Examinations • Quality Glasses and Contacts • Laser Surgery Co-management
The one-time Capilano College music student gradually developed an appreciation for jazz. All it took was one song, “Sundown” by Wes Montgomery, and something clicked. “It was just the feel, the swing, it had congas,” describes Weeds speaking from his celebrated Cellar Jazz Club on West Broadway. Weeds may have come a long way since his Capilano College days, but he has never forgotten his roots. “What Cap College did for me more than anything was introduce me to lifelong collaborators,” says Weeds. He was unsure of what path to take when he left college. “I didn’t want to practise 15 hours a day and then move to New York and turn the music world on its ear,” says Weeds. So he did what any carefree 21-year-old would do. Weeds told his parents, “I’m quitting school” and hit the road with the band, People Playing Music. After a couple years he returned home hellcontinued, PAGE 31
#107-2609 WESTVIEW DRIVE • NORTH VANCOUVER • 604.980.5367
ANNOUNCEMENT:
NEW ASSOCIATE TO JOIN OPTOMEYES - EYECARE
Dr. Bart McRoberts and Dr. Clark Bowden are pleased to welcome Dr. Sydney Davidson to their optometry practice. She is a graduate of the University of Waterloo and will be starting with Optomeyes in July, 2013.
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» TASTING NOTES
Coming soon: 2010 Bordeaux release all the wines that’ll break the bank, but there was just as much enthusiasm for this killer value with pencil shavings and fennel-tops on the nose, then currants and blackberries that glide across the palate. A nice little flinty grip gives it great structure.
Kurtis Kolt kurtis@kurtiskolt.com
Château la Garde | Pessac-Léognan | $39 Good and juicy with generous purple fruit and layers of dark chocolate, while bright and lofty in its tone. Can lay down for five or more years.
M
y friend Barbara Philip, a locally celebrated Master of Wine, cheerily greeted me at the door of a Farimont Pacific Rim ballroom in what’s become a muchanticipated annual event in the local wine scene. The 2010 French Bordeaux release will be occurring in the BC Liquor Stores’ Signature Stores throughout British Columbia on Sept. 28 and the Fairmont occasion gives the wine trade a sneak peek of what will be on offer. As the European wine buyer for BC Liquor Stores, these wines are the fruits of her Bordeaux travels, tasting and research two years ago; purchasing ‘“en primeur,” when they were still in barrel. Before I pass along my recommendations, many of which Barb gave me a personal “heads-up” on, here’s what she has to say about these lovely wines composed mainly of Merlot, Cabernet Sauvignon and Cabernet Franc that are heading our way. “In 2010, for the second vintage in a row, the region of Bordeaux produced spectacular wines. Since being selected for BC Liquor Stores more
Château Plince | Pomerol | $38 A Christmas cake full of currants, raisins and cinnamon. Fine-polished tannins make it drinkable now, but feel free to tuck it away for a decade or more.
TrèS mAGNIfIquE - Master of Wine Barbara Philip is excited about the arrival of the Bordeaux wines she chose for BC Liquor Stores. Kurtis Kolt photo than two years ago, wines for the 2010 release have been maturing in Châteaux cellars. “Here, the tannins have softened, flavours have become more complex and the wines, overall, have become more approachable. Like the excellent 2009s that preceded them, the 2010 Bordeaux have concentrated flavours and tannins that are both bold and ripe. Generally, the international wine trade and journalists describe the 2010 as more ‘classic,’ ‘restrained’ and
‘long-lived.’” Of course, it’d be easy to highly recommend the big classics, Château Mouton Rothschild and such, which run $1,800 per bottle. The bigger challenge for Barb as a buyer, and myself as a writer, is to find those gems with price-points that are a little more, ahem, “realistic.” Here’s what I got: Château Carignan ‘Prima’ | Premières Côtes de Bordeaux | $28 Sure, there was a buzz in the room for
Château Poujeaux | Moulis | $55 This one will come in handy of the rainiest of winter days. Rich and warm with mocha, figs and a gorgeous lift of bergamot keeping it from getting too heavy. Château la Serre | St-Émilion | $78 This reminds me of long summer days in cabin country back east. Boysenberries, Saskatoon berries, huckleberries, forest floor and a pinch of cinnamon. A charming walk through the woods. For more information on the big Bordeaux release, head to BCLiquorStores.com.
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» PURSUIT OF HOPPINESS
the legend is reborn: Horseshoe Bay Ale
GEORGE PAJARI
COntRibutOR
A
s all of you beer aficionados already know, Canada’s craft beer history started here on the North Shore slightly more than 30 years ago when John Mitchell and Frank Appleton opened the first brew pub in North America and the first craft brewery in Canada: the Troller Pub and Horseshoe Bay Brewery. Well, the brewery is no more but the beer that started the revolution has returned! To mark the opening of the relocated, expanded, and beautifully re-envisioned Troller Ale House, Howe Sound Brewing in Squamish is brewing the Horseshoe Bay Ale as per Mitchell and Appleton’s original recipe. After a year of renovations, the Troller has moved a block down the street into new digs and as an ale house will be offering a selection of 14 beers on tap along with gastropub nibblies. The craft beer selection will favour beers from BC Ferries’ destinations: Townsite Brewing in Powell River, Persephone Brewing in Gibsons, as well as
Lighthouse Brewing and Driftwood Brewing from Victoria. These will be complemented by offerings from Howe Sound Brewing (Squamish) and Whistler Brewing. Although already open, its official debut will be next Thursday (Sept. 26).
Beer of the Month: Deep Cove Brewers and Distillers’ Wise Crack West Coast Lager
Brewmaster Kevin Emms and the crew at Deep Cove Brewers and Distillers have found a delicious unique spot in the beer flavour spectrum with their pre-Prohibition-styled lager. In the ever-crowded craft beer market, finding a niche can be difficult, and does the world really need another IPA or pilsner? Lagers normally need refrigeration (or deep caves) as keeping the lager yeast happy requires cool temperatures. Neither was available at the end of the 19th century in California, so the creative brewers had to adapt their German lager heritage. The result was a beer style that is a combination of lager and ale styles: a beer fermented at ale temperatures using a lager yeast. Known generically as
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California Common, but better known from the original, Anchor Steam, this style is considered to be the only one (of the 60 or so major beer styles) to have originated in North America. Deep Cove’s take combines the best of a great historical beer style with flavour aspects that have made West Coast beers distinct from other regions: hoppy, bold, malty, and with distinctive lemon piney notes from Chinook hops. This is a great beer which is sure to become Deep Cove’s signature brew, available in growlers at the brewery and soon in bottles from better private liquor stores.
310.HIRE (4473) OR SPROTTSHAW.COM CALL CALL EAST VANC: 604.251.4473 OR VISIT VISIT SPROTTSHAW.COM It’s Pumpkin Season
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If Charlie Brown had been of the age of majority, he would have been in the pumpkin patch awaiting the arrival of the Great Pumpkin, not because of the presents, but because of the beer! It’s the season for pumpkin beer and many brew pubs and breweries will be bringing out their versions, and keeping in the historical vein of this month’s column, I’d like to point out pumpkin beer was very popular in the 18th century in New England primarily because of a shortage of quality grains from which to brew. So look for this other example of a heritage beer and enjoy the final days of summer. -George Pajari is a BJCP certified beer judge and elected member (ret’d) of the Institute of Brewing, London, UK. Reach him at zythesis@gmail.com and follow him at @zythesis.
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tips fresh
FROM THE EXPERTS AT THE MARKET THE SALMON SHOP As we speak, Kosta the Fishmonger is on the line to the fish boats off the coast of Haida Gwai (Queen Charlotte Islands). He’s ordering fresh halibut but not just any halibut. He picks only the biggest, they’re flakier and richer in oils, “that’s why they’re tender and have a sweeter flavour.” Also according to Kosta, this quintessential West Coast dish can be perfectly paired with a glass of Pinot Grigio. Be sure to make a trip to the Salmon Shop before for halibut season ends – November 15! Screaming Mimis moving in with the Salmon Shop and she’s brought fresh oysters with her!
Thursday, September 19, 2013 15
NEW AT THE MARKET “Too few people understand a really good sandwich.” James Beard Could there be any dish more simple, more convenient, and more universally appealing than a really good sandwich? From burgers and barbecue to brioche and Banh Mi, every nation has its sandwich – and its sandwich lovers. At The Sandwich Shop, we understand a really good sandwich. It’s about great, freshly baked bread. It’s about generous helpings of fresh, juicy ingredients. It’s about slow cooking and fast chopping, the soft embrace of pillowy bread around crunchy pickles and sumptuous deli. At The Sandwich Shop, it’s about time honored traditions from around the world applied to local ingredients, the refinement of mankind’s first and best “fast food.” We are here to understand a really good sandwich – and after tasting our work – you’ll know what James Beard was talking about.
THE SANDWICH SHOP N. WEST CORNER, MARKET LEVEL
THE SALMON SHOP | SCREAMING MIMI’S SOUTH EAST CORNER, MARKET LEVEL www.kostathefishmonger.com
ALL DAY CAFE Regina, owner of this iconic breakfast spot in the market, never compromises on freshness. Fresh local free run eggs are the main stars of the menu. Served steamed with toppings from local veggies to velvety hollandaise sauce on the signature bennies. There are two herbs that Regina recommends for you to try when making your own hollandaise sauce – nutmeg and estragon (aka terragon). Of course, you’re always welcome to come down to The All Day Cafe and have your bennies with a view!
THE ALL DAY CAFE
INTERNATIONAL FOOD COURT www.thealldaycafe.com
THE SOUP MEISTER Executive Chef Ralf Dauns, the Soupmeister, shares his secrets to creating a delicious soup: Add fresh ingredients to a strong stock (the Chef has many to take home if you don’t make your own; choose from veal, beef, fish, vegetable, or chicken). Then add the spice. Some of his favourites are pepper, cumin, paprika, tumeric, ginger, or corriander. To enhance your soup’s flavour without salt Chef Ralf says the key is to add some fresh herbs and for acidity, fresh lime or lemon or balsmic or rice vinegar. And, TLC of course.
THE SOUP MEISTER
N. WEST CORNER, MARKET LEVEL
www.soupmeister.ca for daily menu.
CILANTRO AND JALAPENO The secret to making authentic Mexican food? Use fresh ingredients say the staff at Cilantro & Jalpeno. And if you want it fresh, they’ve got the ingredients you need: Nopales, Poblano &, Jalepeno peppers, and tomatillos. Making your own salsa? It’s easy. Chop a few onions and tomatoes add cilantro and your favourite hot sauce. The best tip – enjoy their amazing Monster Burritto while you watch the chefs at work making all your faves to take home: 7 layer dips, Chipolte Mayo, Salsas, Gaucalmole, Crema and lots more. The real thing. Made fresh daily.
CILANTRO AND JALAPENO
CENTER AISLE, MARKET LEVEL
www.cilantroandjalapeno.com
SHARKY’S CHOPHOUSE SUNDAY ROAST BEEF COOKED TO PERFECTION - here are thermometer tips: RARE 140°F, MEDIUM RARE 145°F and MEDIUM 160°F. At Sharky’s we work hard to give you fresh top quality meats, specialty cuts and gourmet selections ready for cooking (we even have gluten free sausages). And, speaking of cooking, we make hot homestyle meals every day for you to enjoy at the market or take home. Here’s a sample from today’s menu, (changes daily) Shepherd’s Pie, Roasted Orange Pork Loin, Jerk Chicken with Rice Pilaf and sauteed veggies. $7.95 for a huge plate of real comfort food. Last tip – it’s time to order the bird for Thanksgiving!
FISH & CHIPS, AND MUSHY PEAS TRIED & TRUE! Montgomery’s is the real deal. The fish is fresh & flaky. You can choose from Alaskan cod or halibut – always good – or try the red snapper for a change. Chips are hand cut every day & they use local potatoes from Ladner (100 mile diet anyone?). And yes! They have real mushy peas. Affectionately known as “Yorkshire Caviar” the British would most certainly approve. Owners Derek and James say the market crowd favourite is a handy little sandwich called a Fish Buttie.
MONTGOMERY’S FISH N CHIPS INTERNATIONAL FOOD COURT
On twitter: Sharky’s Chophouse@sharkysHotMeals
SHARKY’S CHOPHOUSE
WEST SIDE, MARKET LEVEL 604.980.9870
MARGITTA’S. Margitta believes flowers are good for the soul and she keeps her shop brimming with natural beauty. Right now, to walk through her door is to be instantly inspired: the fall colours are stunning and the selection is at its peak. You’ll see Hydrangea’s, Roses, Delphiniums, Celosia, Sunflowers, Orchids, Chinese Lanterns, Campanulas, Anthuriums, Birds of Paradise, Gerber Daisies, Zinnias, & more. We often think of buying flowers for our friends and family, but Margitta’s tip? Treat yourself to a hand-tied bouquet ~ and you’ll be smiling all the way home!
MARGITTA’S FRESH FLOWERS
MARKET LEVEL 604.988.0028 | www.margittasflowers.com
OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK 9:00 AM TO 7:00 PM | RESTAURANTS OPEN LATER | WWW.LONSDALEQUAY.COM | 604.985.6261 The Market Parkade provides 2 hours FREE parking. On evenings and weekends, Lonsdale Quay Market also provides FREE parking at the ICBC Parkade.
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PAY IT FORWARD - Pure Magnolia owner Patty Nayel (middle) is donating revamped dresses to five women who gone through programs on the Downtown Eastside, including Claire (left) and Lisa. Submitted photo
» COMMUNITY
Wedding gowns revamped for five DTES brides-to-be A Lynn Valley designer is showing the upcycled dresses at a charity gala in October
MICHAELA GARSTIN S TA f f R E p o RT E R
Make cash not trash!
#ShouldaUsedVancouver
S
he’s “paying-it-forward,” wedding day style.
A North Van wedding dress designer is completely reworking secondhand, out-ofdate wedding dresses for five brides-to-be from the Downtown Eastside. “These women are unable to afford a wedding let alone a custom-made wedding dress,” says Patty Nayel, owner of Pure Magnolia in Lynn Valley. “…Everyone deserves to feel like a princess on their wedding day, regardless of their tax bracket.” The five women have gone though programs at the Crabtree Corner Family Resource Centre, a program for mothers in the poorest part on Vancouver. They are now engaged to be married and ready to start a new chapter in their lives. The upcycled dresses, along with the debut of Pure Magnolia’s 2014 collection, is showcas-
ing at the boutique’s Re-Vamp Charity Gala at the Vancouver Aquarium on Oct. 2. A mermaid-style dress is being made from a dress donated by Value Village for one of the recipients, Claire, while Lisa is opting for a seashell ball gown, the boutique’s most popular design. To help the five ladies look their best, North Van’s Zazou Salon and Spa is holding a pampering “Oprah-like” day, and Mirror Mirror Bijoux, a studio in Coquitlam, is designing custom jewelry. “We applaud the efforts of every women who has decided to take the path of sober living and recovery in the best way we know how, by creating sustainable custom-made wedding gowns,” says Nayel, who hopes the dresses will add a touch of sparkle on each woman’s wedding day. All proceeds from the charity gala go to YMCA Crabtree Corner. For ticket go to puremagnolia.ca or on Twitter at #pmrevamp. mgarstin@northshoreoutlook.com
Thursday, September 24 Parkgate Community Centre (Eric Bennett Lounge) 9:30 am - 11:00 am
Saturday, September 26 Lynn Valley Main Library (Fireside area) 10:00 am - 11:00 am
Jane Thornthwaite, MLA North Vancouver - Seymour
“Join Jane”
Visit my constituency office in Lynn Valley Village:
217-1233 Lynn Valley Road, North Vancouver, BC V7J 0A1
T: 604.983.9852
E: jane.thornthwaite.mla@leg.bc.ca
W: www.janethornthwaitemla.bc.ca
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Thursday, September 19, 2013 17
Shakespeare Homes takes North Van residence from rags to riches KERRY VITAL CoNtRibutoR
W
illiam Shakespeare was known for his literary masterpieces. Now a North Vancouver building company that bears his name brings that same attention to detail and zeal for perfection to every project. Mark Cooper, president of Shakespeare Homes, cites a recent full-house renovation as the perfect example of the work the company does. As a North Vancouver resident himself, Cooper says he and his team love working in the community in which they live and are very familiar with the building restrictions that make North Vancouver and West Vancouver different. The original home was built in the early 1960s, and it looked it. It had two storeys, no space for a garage and just didn’t work for the family. However, it was located on a seriously beautiful piece of property, backing onto a creek and with tons of natural greenery surrounding it. It was time to make the house match its surroundings. One of the homeowners had grown up in a heritage home and had dreamed of living in a similar place as an adult. So, he brought in Cooper and his team to make his dream a reality. “This was a great opportunity for the homeowners and my people to express themselves,” Cooper says. “We didn’t just construct something that looks like it’s from the 1800s, we actually built the home like it would have been then, while meeting today’s building codes and ensuring energy efficiency.” Working with Cooper’s team of professionals, includ-
dIggIn’ The new dIgs - Shakespeare Homes completely transformed a 1960s-era home in North Vancouver, adding, among other things, a third storey and detached garage. ing Susanne Doise of Sensitive Design, Shakespeare Homes tore the original house down to the broken foundation and began the process of rebuilding it. Among the changes are a third storey and a detached garage for the “man toys” of the homeowner. The garage is built to look like a carriage house, and has its own heat, power and bathroom, making it a true man cave. It’s built with a vaulted cathedral-framed
ceiling, making it an architectural masterpiece in itself. The homeowner is planning to install car and motorcycle lifts inside. The biggest challenge that Cooper found while planning and building the home were the strict rules governing the location and the height of the finished
continued, PAGE 24
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» RENONATION
Decorating for Thanksgiving as easy as looking outside KERRY VITAL ConTRibuToR
S
ummer has ended and fall will soon be well-entrenched. With the change of season comes the holidays, new colours and new decor ideas that suit any budget or taste. “The biggest trends for home decor in the fall are the colours and shades,” says Ikea Canada’s Alicia Zoffranieri. “The most popular shades during the fall season and around Thanksgiving are earth tones, such as “We’ve brought the outdoors in with decor and accessories inspired by nature’s beauty and woodland chocolate brown, grey, creatures,” says Aimee Beatty of Pier I Imports. black or cream.” Pier 1 Imports inhouse stylist Aimee Beatty agrees, noting, “It’s all about colour, specifically jewel tones in rich textures and distinctive silhouettes.” Among the luxurious colours will be deep purples, red and blues, along with nature themes. “We’ve brought the outdoors in with decor and accessories inspired by nature’s beauty and woodland creatures,” Beatty says. “You’ll see a lot of vibrant orange or green, and dark lilac or dark blue at Ikea,” Zoffranieri says. “Also trendy this year are patterns with elements of nature, such as trees or leaves.” Gathering your own leaves to decorate the Thanksgiving table can be a great activity for kids and adults alike. Hitting your local park and choosing the perfect leaves to make a centrepiece (perhaps mixed with some feathers, chestnuts or acorns) can become a family tradition. Just make sure to give them a rinse
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DESIGN
“The biggest trends for home decor in the fall are the colours and shades,” says Ikea Canada’s Alicia Zoffranieri. Above: Majken fabric.
ACROSS THE ACROSS THE ACROSS THE ACROSS THE NORTH SHORE ACROSS THE ACROSS THE NORTH SHORE NORTH SHORE NORTH SHORE NORTH SHORE NORTH ACROSSSHORE THE NORTH SHORE
continued from, PAGE 19
Shakespeare leads in the craftsmanship needed for fine home design results in Shakespeare leads in leads the craftsmanship Shakespeare in the craftsmanship the best neighbourhoods here. Shakespeare leads in the craftsmanship Shakespeare leads in design craftsmanship needed for fine home results needed for fine home designinresults in Shakespeare leads in the the craftsmanship needed forbest fineneighbourhoods home design results in best If you're thinking about altering, adding to, or needed for fine home design in the We're how we've made your the bestproud neighbourhoods here.results the here. needed for fineof home results in Shakespeare leads indesign the craftsmanship neighbourhoods here. the best neighbourhoods here. redefining your homealtering, and need If you're thinking about altering, adding to, ora complete If you're thinking about adding to, or home dreams real by building with some We're proud howhome we've made We're proud of how we'veyour made your the best neighbourhoods here. needed foroffine design results in If you’re thinking about altering, adding to, consultation or just a quick question answered redefining your home and need a complete If you're thinking about altering, adding to,oror – redefining your home and need a complete We’re proud of how we’ve made your home dreams home dreams real by building with some of the best designers, including our own. We're proud of how we've made your home dreams real by building with some If you'reredefining thinking your abouthome altering, to, or and adding need a complete the best neighbourhoods here. We're proud of how we've made your consultation or just a quick question answered – real bybest building with some ofincluding the best designers, consultation orme just ajust quickand question answered – youconsultation can callyour personally. redefining need a complete of the designers, including our own. ofyou the best designers, our own. home dreams real by building with some orhome quick answered I'd love to take abuilding look at that quality your home andaneed aquestion complete Shakespeare leads in the craftsmanship If you're thinking about altering, adding to, or –– home dreams real by with some you redefining can you call me personally. including our own. I’d love you to take aquality look at that can can call me personally. We're proud of how we've made your I'd love you to take a look at that quality consultation or just a quick question answered you call me personally. I'd love you to take a look at that of the best designers, including our own. on ouron website or atincluding our centre. consultation or just ahome quick and question – needed for fine home design results in quality our website or atdesign our design centre. of the designers, our own. redefining needanswered a complete home dreams byor building with some on ourbest website orreal at our design on our website at ourcentre. design centre. you can callyour me personally. President I'd love you to take a look at that quality you can call me personally. the best neighbourhoods here.quality President I'd love you to take a look at that consultation or just a quick question answered – President Shakespeare Homes of the best designers, including our own. Finalist - our Best Kitchencentre. Shakespeare Homes Homes onour ourwebsite website or at design Shakespeare Finalist -Finalist Best Kitchen on or at our design centre. & Renovations If you're thinking about altering, adding to, or - Best Kitchen you can call me personally. We're proud of how we've made your & Renovations I'd love you to take a- Best look at thatRenovation quality & Renovations Finalist House President Finalist -Finalist Best House - BestRenovation House Renovation President redefining your home and need a complete 604-988-2280 home real by building with some Shakespeare Homes Finalist Renovator of the Year on ourdreams website or at our design centre. 604-988-2280 ext.101 Finalist Renovator of the Year 604-988-2280 ext.101 ext.101 Shakespeare Homes Finalist Renovator of the Year Finalist - Best Kitchen Finalist - Best Kitchen & Renovations consultation or just a quick question answered – & Renovations President of the bestFinalist designers, including our own. Finalist - Best House Renovation - Best House Renovation Shakespeare Homes you can call me personally. Finalist 604-988-2280 I'd love youFinalist to take- Renovator a- Best look Kitchen at that Renovator ofquality the Year 604-988-2280 ext.101ext.101 of the Year Design: mapleweb.caDesign: mapleweb.ca Design: mapleweb.ca Design: mapleweb.ca
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sider taking some tissue paper in your favourite fall colours, wrapping clear glass vases or candleholders and securing the edges of the paper with clear tape to make an elegant addition to your tables or fireplace mantel. You can do a similar thing with those leaves you collected! Whatever your style or budget, decorating for Thanksgiving doesn’t need to be complicated. A little bit of creativity and some inspiration goes a long way towards making your home glow. Spending some time online on sites such as Pintrest and Tumblr will garner tons of ideas. Perhaps you’ll become your neighbourhood Martha Stewart.
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first to remove any bugs or dirt. Another great idea for the kids is to unroll a length of butcher paper on the table, provide some coloured pencils or crayons, and let them go to town making a tablecloth or placemats. The grocery store can also be a good source for decorations, including fall flowers (your local market will be able to advise on what’s growing in your area), pumpkins and other gourds. “We’re also seeing unique oneof-a-kind decor as a hit this fall,” says Beatty. “Each piece tells its own story while being part of the bigger style story in the room.” If you’re looking for something a bit more time-consuming, con-
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quesnswer our a o t d n o y d be The most nt above an the whole process. a phone e w re o n a “Ele st ugh ad us thro as always ju commend tions and le thoughtful realtor w re ly h ig uld h d friendly an essage away. We wo their home.” g m in t ll x e e s t r r o amily ing call o reenlees F anyone buy G o e t h T re o ~ n a Ele
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Thursday, September 19, 2013 21
The Benefits of Design Services Residential Renovations and Custom Homes The benefits of design services incorporated for renovations and new custom homes are many. What is the right amount of money and time to spend on residential architectural and design services for your new custom home or renovation? Part of the answer depends on your goals for the project but there are some basics that apply to all projects.
Does an Original Home Design Cost or Save You Money?
According to Doug Kerr of Kerr Construction, there is a rule in the construction business called the 1-10-100 rule. The way it works is, if you made a change at the design stage that cost you $1 dollar, that same change would cost you $10 dollars to do during the construction phase and $100 dollars to do after construction is complete. A real life example of this would be deciding to move a wall a few feet over. You decide which of the three stages you would prefer to make the change in. 1 Take one hour in the design stage to redraw some lines on a drawing – Cost $100 2 Take a day with the crew on site to move the wall once framed – Cost $1,000 3 Take a week or more to rebuild the wall including all the drywall, baseboards, paint electrical etc. after the job is completed – Cost $10,000
Cut Cost and Delay
If you want to cut out cost overruns and time delays on projects then the answer is to properly design it before you start construction. That is the only way you can accurately set and stick to a budget.
Getting What You Want
There are many reasons to renovate your home or to build a new custom home. Almost as many reasons as there are homeowners. Spending the money on a proper
design process will help isolate exactly what it is that you want as well as address what you are willing to spend. Fully completed drawings and design specifications provide a road map for the builder to construct. The designs give the homeowner a way to see how the building will turn out, says Kerr. You don’t want to be in a situation where you have spent a large amount of money on a home renovation or new home and not get what you really wanted. A properly done design process prevents this from occurring as well as providing the clearest picture of what the budget will be.
How Much Will My Renovation Cost?
Without a proper design package there is no way to really know. Every contractor will give you a different price because they will be using different materials, procedures and standards. If you want to be able to compare apples to apples, you need to have an accurate detailed design done first. A proper design package means all the drawings, including engineered drawings, 3D and shop drawing of special details, and a complete specifications list of all finishes and fixtures. Without the full design package the prices are going to be all over the map, asserts Kerr. Asking “what will my new kitchen cost?” before you get a design package done up is like asking “What does a new car cost?” without specifying what car with what features. Good luck with your project. For more information about how the design process works and how it can benefit you, please call 604.263.0343 or visit us at our kerrconstruction.ca website. Doug Kerr is the owner of Kerr Construction in Vancouver. With over 26 years of experience in the renovation and new home construction business, he has developed the Kerr System for designing and building. With this Design/ Build system he has helped hundreds of clients achieve their dream homes while also winning multiple national and provincial building and renovations awards. Being a former world-class athlete on the Canadian National Ski Team, he has the determination and work-ethic to achieve any goals set. He subscribes to core values which include helping people, honesty, growth and excellence. Using these values throughout Kerr Construction, he is able to deliver top-quality completed projects for the clients.
kerrconstruction.ca | 604.263.0343 | info@kerrconstruction.ca
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24 24 Thursday, Thursday,September September19, 19,2013 2013
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Fixing Up Your Home:
Protect Your Housing Investment Your home is an investment in living as well as in savings. If neglected, it will pay no dividends. If properly maintained and improved, it will pay a high yield in comfort and usefulness for your family and in avoidance of costly repair bills. Home improvements also tend to raise neighborhood standards and, as a result, property values. If You Do It Yourself If you are handy with tools and have the experience, you can save money by doing many jobs yourself. If You Use a Contractor If you plan to use the services of a contractor, take care to choose one with a reputation for honesty and good workmanship Before you sign, get the contractor to spell out for you in exact terms: n n n n
How much the entire job will cost you. How much interest you will pay on the loan. How much you will pay in service charges. How many payments you must make to pay off the loan, and how much each of these payments will be.
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Most contractors conscientiously try to give their customers service equivalent to the full value of their money. Unfortunately, home improvement rackets do exist. Here are a few common sense rules to follow: n Read and understand every word of any contract n Never sign a contract with anyone who makes fantastic promises. Reputable dealers are not running give-away businesses. n Avoid wild bargains. The best bargain is a good job. n Never consolidate existing loans through a home improvement contractor. n Do not let salespeople high-pressure you into signing up to buy their materials or services. n Be wary of salespeople who try to scare you into signing for repairs that they say are urgent. Seek the advice of an expert as to how urgent such repairs are. High-pressure and scare tactics are often the mark of a phony deal. Annette Denk is a realtor with 19 years of real estate experience as well as building and construction. A Top Producer - Medaillion Club, and working for her clients in their best interest.
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Dynamic Equipment Rentals is your “All of the features and fixtures of the home one stop source forfrom, allPAGE your continued 17 construction, have been selected to fit that period of time,” says. home and garden equipment rental needs. Cooper The entire renovation took about 14
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product, as well as the regulations around its months, including three months dealing with stream-side location. • Pressure washers the variance process. “We weren’t able to move the house within “The house has been appraised well beyond the lot because of the setback restrictions,” • Compactors normal market value,” Cooper says. Cooper says. “So, we had to renovate and add Because Vancouver can be a generally within the•existing Lawnperimeter.” & Garden rainy city, what to do with water runoff was When you walk onto the property, the first an important part of the building process. •probably Paint notice Sprayers thing you’ll is the dormers The city had originally asked Shakespeare on the third storey. The heritage influence Bobcats, Excavators to pump the storm water up to the district is readily • apparent, and continues with the system on the street. However, that wasn’t double-exposure cedar shingles that cover • Ladders an easy thing to accomplish due to the slope much of the house, the wood double-hung of the property. Instead, Cooper designed a • Concrete Equipment windows and the exposed rafters and sofwater treatment system for the home that fits. The outdoor space will soon include an • Scaffolding • Generators collects, stores, filters and then releases the outdoor fireplace and seating area, compleback into the natural environment surmenting the stone retaining walls that have • Air Tools & Compressors water rounding the house. been constructed to allow greenery to return In fact, the District of North Vancouver to the property. Brand-new decks and patios • Log Splitters called the new house a “masterful example of afford the homeowners gorgeous views of the • Carpet Cleaners stream-side protection.” city, something that they didn’t have in the Shakespeare prides itself on being a highoriginal house. Hand-cut granite is featured • Utility Trailers quality build-green company, and this is evithroughout the exterior, including a doubledent in the home. All of the shingles are made wide chimney and front entrance. • Tile Saws from British Columbia wood, and much of the Inside the house itself, the vaulted ceilings • Scissor other building materials have been sourced include hand-cut rafters Lifts to showcase that locally as well. heritage charm. • Jacks • Pumps “It was built with environmental steward“There was a lot of architectural and homeship in mind,” Cooper says. owner design involved,” Cooper says. “There’s • Lighting Equipment In fact, the old cedar roof system was recyreal craftsmanship here. Nobody frames like cled into several structures, including the • Heaters this anymore. It’s very rare.” table in the meeting room at Shakespeare Even the accessories inside the house are Homes’ office. heritage-style, including an authentic castThe house is unrecognizable from what it iron claw-foot tub. The character kitchen is built in an open-plan layout with custom mill- started out as. Where it once was in danger of sliding down the steep slope into the stream, work and plenty of space to entertain. There is also a suite on the ground level that has its the house is now truly a masterpiece and perfect for the family who lives in it. own private entrance.
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Upcycling:Turning trash to treasure KERRY VITAL ConTRibUToR
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veryone has heard the adage “one man’s trash is another man’s treasure.” This has never been more true with the recent trend to “upcycle,” or turn something that may no longer be useful into something new. “Upcycling is the act of taking an unused item and literally turning it into an item you will use,” says Amber Bosma, marketing manager for UsedEverywhere.com. “Essentially you take something that’s no longer wanted or needed and turn it into something fabulous.” Almost anything can be upcycled, from old furniture to clothing to continued, PAGE 27
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26 Thursday, 26 Thursday, September September 19, 19, 2013 2013
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» RENONATION
Many things to think about when replacing a garage door KERRY VITAL ContRibutoR
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garage door is often one of the first things you’ll see as you pull up to your house, but one of the last things you think about until it doesn’t work. It’s something that can add a lot of curb appeal to your home, and there are many options to choose from when it comes to materials and appearance. If you’re considering replacing your current garage door, it’s best to start with a professional opinion. “The first thing you should do if you are interested in buying a new garage door is call a sales representative, and have that person come visit your home so that they can take all of the necessary measurements of your garage,” says James Matheson, account manager for Overhead Door Co. of Vancouver. “Most companies provide free estimates, so there is no financial obligation required.” He or she will then go over your options with you and give you advice on what would work best for your particular needs. “You may be trying to keep the garage warm for the purposes of using it as a workshop, in which case you would most likely choose from a range of fully insulated garage doors,” Matheson says. “Or maybe you’re tired of looking at the square raised panels on your garage door because that’s what everyone else has, and so now you would like to have something a little bit fancier such as an elegant-looking carriage house-style garage door with decorative spear hinges and handles.” There are several different materials available for
Garage doors are available in a variety of different materials, including steel, vinyl, fibreglass, wood and aluminum. garage doors, including steel, vinyl, fibreglass, wood and aluminum. “Most common garage doors today are made with galvanized steel sheet metal, from which you have a choice between insulated and non-insulated models,” says Matheson. “Non-insulated garage doors tend to be the least durable, as they are constructed from only one exterior layer of sheet metal, which makes them very easy to dent.” Fully insulated doors are built with three layers: an exterior layer of sheet metal, an interior layer of sheet metal and a middle layer of either polyurethane foam or polystyrene. There are also semi-insulated garage doors which have an exterior sheet metal and an interior vinylbacked insulation. However, Matheson notes that those
can be damaged easily as there is no protection for the interior vinyl. “Wood garage doors are also very durable, but they require much more maintenance over the years, and they are quite expensive when compared to modern-day galvanized steel doors,” says Matheson. “While wood garage doors don’t necessarily dent, over time they can rot and eventually fall apart depending on how much weathering they are exposed to, and also depending on how regularly the door gets re-painted or re-stained. In comparison, sagging, re-finishing and rot are three issues that you never have to be concerned about with regards to galvanized steel doors.” Garage door design has come a long way from the oldfashioned raised squares that Matheson calls “Standard Raised Panel.” “People will often look at something like a Long Raised Panel or ‘Ranch Panel’ style, which instead of having, say, eight square panels ... you would instead have four long panels going across the door,” Matheson says. “The long-panel design is much less busy and can be considered a contemporary design.” However, if you’re looking for something a bit more stylish, you may consider installing a door that looks like one from an old carriage house. “These types of garage doors simulate old-style swing doors, and can be fitted with decorative hinge and handle hardware to give the garage door the authentic carriage house look,” notes Matheson. “Despite the fact that these doors look like swing doors, they still go up and down like a regular garage door.” Coast has the Brands you Want, and the Expertise you Need! Vancouver: Surrey:
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construction materials. “I think the most popular upcycle I’ve seen lately involves pallets,” says Bosma. “I’ve seen pallets turned into garden swings, into bed frames and into beautiful coffee tables!” Other creative projects include turning old clothing into pillows (or a dog bed for man or woman’s best friends perhaps?), making jars into lanterns or candleholders or updating an old mirror with a new frame or paint. “That bulky old television cabinet turns into a kid’s play kitchen,” suggests Bosma. “The inherited grandfather clock you don’t like but want to keep becomes a stylish shelf.” If craft projects fill your heart with dread or conjure up some bad memories of school projects, you don’t need to worry. Upcyling doesn’t need to be complicated and it doesn’t have to require unlimited creativity. “Use the Internet to follow upcycling blogs for inspiration,” Bosma says. “For example, the UsedEverywhere.com blog has an upcycling series that shows you
items that can be found inexpensively or even for free on our websites and then offers several upcycling options for that item.” Pintrest and Facebook are also a great source for upcycling ideas. “Choose good quality items to upcycle,” says Bosma. “The item itself may be ugly, but what’s important is the quality of the material. An upcycle can be as simple as a lick of paint and new handles or as complicated as your imagination allows.” Upcycled items are more than just unique; they’re also much kinder to the environment. “Why throw it away when it can be reused and given a new lease on life?” says Bosma. “If you love unique pieces of furniture then upcycling is the way to go, plus you get to add your own flair if it’s a do-it-yourself project. And best of all, if you’re like me and you love to bag a bargain, upcycling your own items is much cheaper than buying new.” Suddenly spending weekends scouring garage sales sounds much more appealing! You never know what treasures you’ll find or what will inspire your next project.
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Thursday, September September 19, 19, 2013 2013 29 29 Thursday,
HOLLYWOOD ENDING? The B.C. film industry looks to be slowly rebounding after an apocalyptic start to 2013 MICHAELA GARSTIN
ON SET - North Shore Studio’s president Peter Leitch stands in front of a facade of townhouses used for movies and TV shows. Michaela Garstin photo
T
he first half of 2013 is labelled as the worst in B.C. film industry history. Thousands of people were out of jobs, including many of the 5,000 trade professionals living on the North Shore. At the worst point, the Save BC Film campaign reports 90 per cent of the province’s 28,000 film workers, such as costume designers, production managers and casting directors, were unemployed because of tax credit cuts imposed by the BC Liberal government. But the industry is picking up, including in North Van where 50 Shades of Grey is rumoured on several blogs to film at North Shore Studios in midNovember. While it’s widespread news the salacious book-to-movie adaptation is filming in Vancouver, the exact location hasn’t been officially confirmed,
although Peter Leitch, president of the studios, did give hope. “If that’s what they say, then maybe it’s true. I can’t confirm it,” he told The Outlook while giving a tour of the lot’s eight studios, where crews are hustling back and forth on the sets of TV shows Falling Skies, Tomorrow People and Fairly Odd Summer. 50 Shades of Grey – which is rumoured to be filmed under the discreet working name The Adventures of Max & Banks — is set to be a major feature film and would likely bring back an enthusiasm to the North Shore film industry that was seen with blockbuster film series Twilight a few years ago and The X-Files from 1993 to 2002. “B.C. is never going to be the lowest price but we still need to be competitive,” says Leitch. “If it was all about price, we would be out of business here.”
TV ARTIFACTS - Wayne Bennett, production manager of the TV series Psych, sits in a armchair for sale at the show’s set decoration and wardrobe sale at North Shore Studios last week. Michaela Garstin photo
It’s the province’s natural setting, skilled professionals and matching timezone with L.A. that will keep the industry going, he adds, despite cuts to tax credits in B.C. and more competitive breaks in Ontario, Quebec and some U.S. states. Although filming on the North Shore appears to be relatively thriving, at least compared to earlier this year, it’s a delicate balancing act. Many insiders doubt there will ever be nearly as much action as the industry’s heyday during the early 2000s. If locally-made movies and TV series decide to shoot in eastern Canada or down to the U.S., (Louisiana, North Carolina, Georgia, Illinois and Michigan are among some 40 states that offer incentives that can lure B.C. business with them) then B.C.’s industry could return to where it was five months ago. “You have to watch it, it can change quickly. In L.A. it got very difficult and expensive to film in neighbourhoods, that’s part of the reason why they left,” says Leitch, stopping at a set decoration and wardrobe sale from the detective comedy-drama series Psych that filmed at the studios for eight seasons. The next day people lined up for 45 minutes to buy the discounted props and clothes, which can run $50,000 per episode. “Everyone is busy right now. We hope it lasts.”
A few minutes away, under the Second Narrows Bridge, gritty facades line war-torn streets with blown-out cars and squalid, deserted buildings — a post-apocalyptic Boston following an alien invasion (cover photo). This is a set for Falling Skies, a science-fiction TV series produced by Steven Spielberg and staring Noah Wyle and Tom Mason, that premiers its fourth season next summer.
Towering lights will soon shine on the streets at night as actors and crews start filming again at the Dollartonarea location and Riverview Hospital, a deserted mental health facility in Coquitlam. Over in West Van, the TV show Almost Human has applied to Transport Canada for permission to fly helicopters low enough to film scenes over the Upper Levels Highway and along the seawall this weekend.
“If it was all about price, we would be out of business here” Peter Leitch
North Shore Studios
But despite the upturn in B.C.’s film industry, John Quee, owner of production supply store Thomas FX in North Van, says his business can’t survive on solely servicing movies produced in this province. He has made a deliberate attempt to create a global appeal so location doesn’t affect his bottom line. Whether a movie is filmed in Vancouver, the eastern U.S. or Europe, productions still buy from the store’s website. His credits include most TV series and movies filmed in B.C., including Twilight, Supernatural (he supplied several thousand body parts), Tomorrowland, Falling Skies and Almost Human. Outside B.C. he’s sold to hundreds of other productions, such as The Hobbit, Total Recall 2, The Book of Eli and Cinderella Man.
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30 Thursday, September 19, 2013 30 Thursday, September 19, 2013
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Editor
Bowen Island Undercurrent MOVIE CENTRAL - John Quee (left), owner of North Vancouver’s Thomas FX sells masks used in movie productions and by Halloween partiers. Photos posted to Twitter of George Clooney (below) bar-hoping in downtown Vancouver this weekend
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“Out of 20 new calls, four or five have been from Vancouver. A smaller and smaller per cent of them are from Vancouver,” he tells The Outlook. “So if you don’t go global, you can’t survive in this market.” The first major signs the Vancouver film industry was slowing down occurred in 2008, he explains, when the economy crashed. “The world changed, the film industry was hit just as hard.” Then unions started fighting with each other and the situation got worse, he adds. And, earlier this year, local filmmakers were hit again. Currently, a 33 per cent tax credit is offered in B.C. but only for labour costs, while Ontario and Quebec offer a 25 per cent credit on all production expenditures. This gap has led the province’s estimated 25,000 industry professionals to call on the government for more support for their threatened livelihoods. Now that the local industry is picking up, Quee is happy but emphasizes that his business will remain global and not depend on B.C.’s economy.
In town filming Disney’s sci-fi production Tomorrowland, George Clooney was spotted bar-hoping in Vancouver on the weekend – a testament to B.C.’s rebounding film industry. He was first seen at Joey Burrard downtown when a starstruck Twitter user posted “OMG GEORGE CLOONEY IS AT MY BAR HOLY S--- LOL” and then uploaded a photo of the eligible bachelor waiting for a drink. Then, posing with three thrilled fans, another
photo of the Hollywood A-lister was Tweeted outside the sushi restaurant Minami in Yaletown, where he stopped for sashimi and a martini. And soon, if the blogs and websites including Production Weekly are correct, 50 Shades of Grey’s leading stars Charlie Hunnam (Christian Grey) and Dakota Johnson (Anastasia Steele) will soon be caught at cafés and restaurants in North and West Vancouver.
“If you can’t go global, you can’t survive in this market” John Quee
Thomas FX owner But there’s no assurance the buzz will stay, as industry insiders experienced first hand earlier this year. The volatile local film industry definitely isn’t as it was during its peak, says Quee. “Choices are being made for economic reasons, not creative reasons,” he says, comparing tight production costs today to those a decade ago. Pointing out dozens of different contractors involved in running North Shore Studios, Leitch warns, “One of the differences in this industry is that it’s project based.” Although optimistic about the future, he knows, in the blink of an eye, movies and TV series can easily decide to pack up and relocate elsewhere.
mgarstin@northshoreoutlook.com twitter.com/MichaelaGarstin
Thursday, September September 19, 19, 2013 2013 31 31 Thursday,
www.northshoreoutlook.com www.northshoreoutlook.com continued from, PAGE 12
bent on reinventing the jazz scene in Vancouver, after seeing the upbeat offerings in jazz clubs across North America and overseas. “It just seemed like there was a real lull in the [Vancouver jazz] scene,� recalls Weeds. Craving a jazz venue to call his own, he went to BCIT where he learned business skills and specifically how to start a music promotion company. Opportunity knocked soon after: Weeds was hired by the then-owner of the Cellar Jazz Club to do his first gig. “I will never forget it,� says Weeds. “I was really sick. I had the flu. But I thought, ‘Wow, the Cellar, what a cool spot.’�
With his heart on his sleeve, Weeds outright said to the owner of the club: “Whenever you are ready to sell, let me know.� Five months later he read an article in a local newspaper that said a west side Vancouver jazz club was for sale. Weeds was in his early 20s at the time and also broke. Somehow, he convinced his parents to loan him $80,000 for his nightclub venture. “I didn’t think it was going to be successful,� admits Weeds. “Why should it be successful? I’m a young punk kid.� Thirteen years later and Weeds is proving himself wrong. The Cellar Jazz Club is perennially listed among the world’s finest jazz venues by Downbeat magazine.
When he started the Cellar, Weeds figured his foray into club-ownership would put an end to his own career as a saxophonist. Being around jazz greats only inspired Weeds to continue making music himself. His 2012 album, Up a Step, earned Weeds his first Juno nomination for Traditional Jazz Album of the Year. And his new project, With Benefits, with Bill Coon, Lewis Nash, and Peter Washington, is proving to be his most successful yet, spending 21 weeks so far on the JazzWeek charts. Stay tuned for the release of his album Let’s Go featuring a collaboration with renowned trombonist Steve Davis. From Sept. 26-29, Weeds will celebrate
the 13th anniversary of Cellar Jazz Club with a weekend-long party that will see him perform with the legendary, 77-yearold pianist Harold Mabern — a one-time side-man for Miles Davis — and his trio. Weeds will record with Mabern, one of North America’s surviving jazz greats, later this fall for the Cellar’s award-winning Cellar Live record label. “It’s something that I am nervous and honoured about,� says Weeds. Cory Weeds’ Cellar Jazz Club 13th Anniversary Bash will have 8 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. seatings. The cost is $59 which includes a two-course meal. For more information and reservations call 604738-1959 or visit info@cellarjazz.com
BE
Âť NEWS
NV kidney transplant recipient taking part in Ambleside charity walk Four months after receiving a new kidney, Bob Johnstone is up to the 2.5 km walk MICHAELA GARSTIN S tA f f R E p o Rt E R
A
North Vancouver man who recently underwent a successful kidney transplant will be showing off his new strength at the 2013 North Shore Kidney Walk & Run on Sunday, Sept. 22. Bob Johnstone, who was given a new kidney at the end of May, is this year’s run honouree. Marianne Farmer, a good friend and retired RCMP officer, donated her kidney to Johnstone, who has a form of kidney disease that is passed down from parents to children. “I have all the energy in the world now, it’s unbelievable. I can’t thank Marianne enough for what she’s done,â€? says the 62-year-old, who will be walking two and a half kilometres for the event, which starts at Ambleside Park at 9 a.m. and ends at Navvy Jack Point Park near 21st Street. Runners will keep going another 2.5 kilometres to Dundarave Park. Johnstone arrived at St. Paul’s Hospital a few NEW LIFE - Bob Johnstone with his hours before his transfriend Marianne Farmer, who donated a plant surgery, his friend kidney to him at the end of May this year. already in the operating Submitted photo room. “Marianne told me she was donating a kidney on June 27th of last year. It took all that time to get everything approved for the tissue match and other things,â€? he told The Outlook, adding he felt better very shortly after the operation. “As soon as they put the kidney in, it started working right away‌ My colour came back to my skin within half hour.â€? He was out of the hospital within five days, and his friend left a day before. “The first criteria is a matching blood type. If you don’t have the same type, you can’t get the kidney,â€? he says, adding his wife wasn’t a match. Because finding an suitable match causes some people to wait up to five years for a transplant, Johnstone is urging people to register as organ donors. Eighty-five per cent of British Columbians are in favour of organ donation, according to the Kidney Foundation, but only 19 per cent are registered. For more information or to sponsor Johnstone, visit northshorekidneyrun.ca. mgarstin@northshoreoutlook.com twitter.com/MichaelaGarstin
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Town Hall MeeTing
Facilities System Renewal Funding West Vancouver is hosting two town hall meetings to discuss funding models for necessary facilities upgrades at various District locations.
September 25, 2013 | 6–8 p.m.
Marine Room at the Seniors’ Activity Centre
October 9, 2013 | 6–8 p.m.
Seaview Room at Gleneagles Community Centre
The meetings will discuss how to fund necessary District facilities upgrades over the next 20 years, including the option of creating a facilities upgrade reserve fund. For more information, visit westvancouver.ca/facilitiesrenewal.
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32 Thursday, September 19, 2013
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*No purchase necessary. Open to Canadian residents (excl. Quebec and Territories) who have reached the age of majority in their province of residence. Contest runs until Oct. 20, 2013, at 23:59:59 (ET). Prizes offered: Three (3) prizes, each consisting of an amount of $8,000 redeemable at a designated travel agency, for a getaway to a Canadian destination of each winner’s choice. Agency fees apply and vary based on getaway selected. To enter, see rules and details at 100goodreasons.ca/contest. Map © Department of Natural Resources Canada. All rights reserved.
Thursday, September September 19, 19, 2013 2013 33 33 Thursday,
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» SIGN ME UP Shaquille O’Neal at the 2011 We Day event in Vancouver.
North Shore Equestrian Centre Riding Lessons September thru June for adults and children aged 8 and up.
Outlook file photo
Also booking weekday Daytime private, semiprivate and group lessons.
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We Day coming to Vancouver
2013 lineup includes Honourable Romeo A. Dallaire, former Canadian Lieutenant-General, and former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan
F
ree the Children has unveiled its 2013 lineup for We Day in Vancouver, featuring former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and the Honourable Romeo A. Dallaire, former Canadian LieutenantGeneral, author, and public speaker. The event will be hosted by MTV host AliyaJasmine Sovani, and will feature musical guests Hedley, Down With Webster, and the Kenyan Boys Choir. Other speakers include Spencer West, Robin Wiszowaty, and humanitarian crusader Martin Luther King III. As usual, founders Craig and Marc Kielburger will be on hand to lead the cheer for youth and the future in front of 18,000 screaming teenage students in Rogers Arena. We Day 2013 will be held in Vancouver on October 18. (Toronto’s We Day goes on
»
there’s more online
www.northshoreoutlook.com
Comment online. Add to the story or read what your neighbour thinks. Be a part of your community paper.
Le
sh u t
September 20, and the event will dip south into Minnesota for October 8.) We Day is an annual tour by Free the Children and its affiliate organization, Me to We, which urges and encourages social change. All in attendance are invited, and all have participated in some kind of social service, whether its volunteer work around the community or for their school, or the “coin drive” from 2012. Several North Shore high schools have participated. Past We Days in Vancouver have included Desmond Tutu and Magic Johnson in 2012, and Mikhail Gorbachev, Mia Farrow, and Shaquille O’Neal in 2011. To find out more about this year’s event go to weday.com. -Black Press
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34 Thursday, 34 Thursday, September September 19, 19, 2013 2013
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continued from, PAGE 7
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cost an upwards of $800,000 in Vancouver. Property Brothers was filmed in five North Shore neighbourhoods: mid-Lonsdale, Lynn Valley, Seymour area, British Properties and Ambleside. Harmony Sense Interiors was also contracted to work on four other featured homes that were scattered throughout the Lower Mainland. As is the case with most home design shows, there was an accelerated renovation schedule that Shimizu and Diaz had to adhere to. Under normal circumstances, the women will spend three weeks devising an interior design plan with the homeowner, and then months delivering the final product — depending on the scope of the project. But for Property Brothers, their ingenuity was put to the test. “On a good project, we would have two weeks to plan,” recalls Shimizu. After working with each budget-conscious couple to craft a home decor wish list, Shimizu and Diaz would set off on a scavenger hunt across the North Shore. “It was literally running from place to place,” says Diaz.
Their go-to stores were HomeSense and The Other Room furniture store in North Van. “That’s a fantastic place for contemporary furniture,” describes Shimizu. “We went there a lot actually.” On one occasion they searched high and low for an elusive statement piece to bedeck a living room in a British Properties’ home. The interior design gurus found what they looking for, a sculptural light fixture, on sale for less than a quarter of the original price, with a few days to spare. Once the cameras starting rolling, Shimizu was surprised by the continuous filming with few breaks in between. The lulls, which usually occurred in the middle of the night, were when Shimizu and Diaz went to work behind the scenes, decorating the rooms in the house down to every last detail like the napkins. The ladies laugh as they recall hanging the artwork and how each time it would draw the attention of the Scott brothers. “We had no idea how tall the brothers were. And they are super tall,” says Shimizu. “We would always have this argument with them, because artwork should always be at eye level — and our eye level is not their eye level.”
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playful colours - A vibrant children’s area designed by Harmony Sense Interiors for a Property Brothers episode. Stacy Thomas/blurrdMEDIA
Any disagreements between the two parties were playfully settled on the paintball course at the base of Capilano Road. The women say their foray into reality TV offered them some valuable insight for their company. “We really learned we are capable of delivering on time and on budget, because there was no room for error [on the show],” says Diaz. And while they haven’t inked any deals as a direct result of the show — their episodes only started airing three weeks ago — the women are poised to grow their business. “We are really starting to see all the seeding that we have done over the years starting to take shape,” says Shimizu, who met Diaz a decade ago while they were doing their MBA at UBC’s Sauder School of Business. The two women bonded right off the bat, partnering on almost every school project. Diaz decided to pursue a career in interior design, rather than marketing, after she finished the MBA program. “I call [marketing] answering emails all the time, and all the creative fun part gets missed,” figures Diaz. Meanwhile, Shimizu went off and worked at an art gallery. But the two friends always kept in touch and even collaborated on some side interior design projects before eventually going into business together. “We just had this chemistry and we really synced with each other in our work styles, and we just carried that through on to our professional lives,” says Shimizu of the genesis of Harmony Sense Interiors. Right out of the gate the designers scored a high-profile gig: a facelift of the Sutton Place Hotel lobby residential tower. They have also worked on a PNE prize home and landed the cover of BC Home Magazine. Two years ago Harmony Sense Interiors was a finalist for the Georgie Awards, which celebrates excellence in B.C. home building. Designing their personal spaces is another challenge the mothers pull off seamlessly. Shimizu compromises with her kids, by letting them decorate their rooms after she has chosen the foundation pieces. “My son is enthralled with the world and geography so he loves maps and atlases. My daughter, she is all about dance and dolls,” explains Shimizu. And, in Diaz’s small condo, organization is key. “You cannot avoid kids having toys, but there should be a place for them,” says Diaz. “I tell my kids, ‘You can have all the Lego pieces you want but when you are finished they go in this drawer so we can have a nice living room.’” Both Diaz and Shimizu abide by the same design philosophy: “Every space has to be harmonious and balanced.”
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Property Brothers airs Tuesdays on the W Network at 8 p.m. and on Wednesdays on HGTV at 9 p.m. Harmony Sense Interiors (harmonysense.com) will be at the Interior Design Show West from Sept. 19-22 at the Vancouver Convention Centre West.
mspitale@northshoreoutlook.com
Thursday,September September19, 19,2013 2013 35 35 Thursday,
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» DRIVE TIME
Revved up to be selling Mitsubishi vehicles on the Shore
CAN YOU H EAR TH E WH EEL S TURN IN G? J O H N N Y’S W I L L PU T T H E B R A K ES TO T H AT!
Longtime North Van car dealer Simon Tai’s showroom is now full of 2014 models from Mitsubishi
S
imon Tai never really planned to get into the car business.
“It was a coincidence,” he admits. An immigrant from Hong Kong, he arrived in B.C. in the early 1980s to go to school. Originally he dreamed about becoming an engineer but instead ended up in the sciences, majoring in astronomy at UBC. Then came a chance opportunity that he should probably be thanking his lucky stars for. A friend asked him if he’d like a summertime job selling cars. He figured ‘OK,’ that sounds like a good summer job. “I always loved cars.” “That was August 1, 1987,” he recalls sharply. It was the Mazda dealership at Kingsway and 12th. By the end of the month Tai was the top salesman; it was the beginning of a very successful career. Later, the owner moved Tai to his nearby Toyota dealership, where he’d become the top salesman regionally and nationally, selling 300350 new cars a year. And when you add the used cars, his number was up to 400 or more. “I’m not kidding,” he says with a chuckle.
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HoT wHEEls - Simon Tai, who has been selling cars on the North Shore for more than two decades, sits behind the wheel of the all-new 2014 Mitsubishi Outlander. Outlook photo
continued, PAGE 36
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continued from, PREVIOUS PAGE
The natural salesman later became a GM at the dealership and then, in 1992, he set out on his own, leasing a location on Marine Drive in North Van in December and securing a Suzuki franchise. Today, two decades later, Tai is still at the same location serving North Shore clients — many of whom have been with him since the beginning. “We’ve been serving the North Shore for over 20 years.” Of course, starting a dealership from scratch wasn’t easy. But he built a business based on trust. Soon came referrals and repeat customers. “I worked seven days a week. I was younger then I had all kinds of energy,” he says. Some of his longtime customers have purchased as many as 10 cars from him, he says proudly. “Friends and family buying cars. Honesty is the best way to do business.” And he never gets tired of meeting new people. “I get to meet a lot of different people every
day. Every customer has a different story. I enjoy dealing with people.” Today Tai wears several different hats: dealer principal, GM, sales manager and occasionally floor salesman. He has 12 employees, many long term — like his service manager, who has been with him since day one. After Suzuki’s recent decision to pull out of Canada, Tai officially became a Mitsubishi dealership in July. He didn’t need to be sold on the brand. “Nice quality. Made in Japan, very good warranty — best warranty in the world,” he says noting the one exception is the RVR crossover which is built in the U.S. He’s excited about the 2014 Mirage, Mitsubishi’s all-new three-cylinder, five-door hatchback, which he should have by the end of the month. “The most fuel-efficient gas engine in Canada,” he says. He’s also waiting for the arrival of his own Mitsubishi, the Lancer Evolution, or Evo. “That is a beautiful car,” he says.
Thursday,September September19, 19,2013 2013 37 37 Thursday,
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TOWN HALL MEETING REZONING APPLICATION Harbourside Waterfront
On Sunday, North Shore Rescue flew a group, including Deacon Gordon Barrett and Chief Warrant Officer Tom Holland (left), to Hastings Lake for a ceremony to honour Pte. Donald Hastings, a soldier from North Van who died in the Korean War. Right: Pte. Donald Hastings in his Canadian military uniform, second from left. Submitted photos
Ceremony honours North Shore’s only soldier killed in Korean War On Sunday a plaque was placed at Mount Seymour’s Hastings Lake to honour Pte. Donald Hastings MICHAELA GARSTIN S tA f f R E p o Rt E R
A
rriving by helicopter on Sunday afternoon, a group gathered deep in Mount Seymour’s backcountry to honour the North Shore’s only soldier to die in the “forgotten war.” A plaque was placed beside Hastings Lake, a secluded body of water dedicated to Pte. Donald Hastings who was killed in South Korea on Oct. 15, 1952. “At the cenotaph in North Van, I would see names listed for World War I and II, but only one name for the Korean War,” says Guy Black, a former Blueridge resident and military history buff who spearheaded renaming “The Lake with No Name” after Hastings. After discovering the small lake on the east side of Mount Seymour Provincial Park didn’t have an official title, Black sent for Hastings’ military file and made an application to honour the North Van soldier. “Talking with historians, they told me the Korean War is in the shadow of World War II,” says Black, who hopes permanently commemorating Hastings will help people remember the “forgotten war” this year — the 60th anniversary of ceasefire — and in years after. Pte. Hastings grew up in Lower Lonsdale and later moved to Calgary, where he married, joined the army and served in the merchant navy during the Second World War. When war broke out in Korea in 1950, he joined 26,000 other Canadians in battle. He was fatally wounded while on patrol with the 1st Battalion Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry at Tombstone Ridge. “His body was never found,” says Black, who sought out Hastings’ relatives for more historical information, including his sisterin-law in Parksville. With the help of North Shore Rescue, Black visited Mount Seymour to have a plaque honouring “North Vancouver’s Korean War Hero” set in a large rock overlooking the lake. A week later, another group including
Deacon Gordon Barrett and Chief Warrant Officer Tom Holland, who represents Hastings’ regiment, flew three kilometres from the mountain’s parking lot for a formal ceremony, where flags for Canada, British Columbia and Hastings’ regiment were placed beside the plaque. “Last year [Black] contacted the team about how ‘The Lake with No Name’ was renamed,” says Tim Jones, North Shore Rescue’s team leader, who organized the helicopter transportation. Earlier this week, four team members cleared a larger area for a second helicopter to land. Often overlooked in high school textbooks, the Korean War was significant, explains Black as he waits for the helicopters to arrive. Canada sent eight destroyers to Korea on the side of the United Nations. From 1950 to 1953, 516 Canadians died, including 38 British Columbians. “It’s the third highest casualty wise in Canada,” adds Black, who works for ICBC and now lives in Port Moody. In late June Black travelled on foot from Coquitlam to Simon Fraser University and over the Second Narrows Bridge to meet Korean War veterans, dignitaries and others along the way. He collected stones to use for a “Gapyeong ceremony,” an offering of stones as a memorial to the nearly 20,000 South Korean and allied soldiers who died in battle. Concerned the Korean War could be overlooked, B.C. Senator Yonah Martin worked to have a national day of remembrance enacted into law. July 27, the 60th anniversary of the armistice, marked the first year Korean War Veterans Day was held in Canada. “It had been on that day for years, but it wasn’t a law,” Martin told The Outlook at the top of Mount Seymour. “We have national days for other wars and I had the feeling that everyone thought it was about time to have one for Korea too.” mgarstin@northshoreoutlook.com twitter.com/MichaelaGarstin
Date:
Monday September 30, 2013
Time:
6:30-7:30pm 7:30-9:00pm
Meeting Location:
Material on display Presentation and discussion
300-889 Harbourside Drive, North Vancouver
Concert Properties has made an application to the City of North Vancouver to rezone the properties at 801, 889 & 925 Harbourside Drive and 18 Fell Avenue. The application proposes amending the Zoning Bylaw by introducing a new comprehensive zone allowing for a mixeduse development comprised of residential condominium and rental homes, office, neighbourhood serving retail and a hotel. The uses, densities and heights proposed in the rezoning application are consistent with the Official Community Plan amendment adopted in July of 2012. The rezoning also incorporates an updated conceptual design, thorough traffic and parking assessment and proposed community benefits. A Town Hall Meeting has been scheduled to give interested members of the public an opportunity to learn about and respond to the proposed rezoning prior to a Public Hearing. Materials will be on display and the applicant will give a presentation. A facilitator will lead a discussion following the presentation at 7:30pm.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION: Applicant Farouk Babul Concert Properties Ltd. 604.602.3796 FBabul@concertproperties.com
City of North Vancouver Emilie Adin City of North Vancouver 604.982.3922 EAdin@cnv.org
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38 Thursday, September 19, 2013 38 Thursday, September 19, 2013
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Fresh idea Some low-income seniors living in Lower Lonsdale will now have access to fresh produce as part of the North Shore Food Box Cooperative offered by Hollyburn Family Services Society MARIA SPITALE-LEISK S tA f f R e p o Rt e R
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resh fruits and vegetables are often out of reach for seniors on a fixed income, either because of the cost or mobility issues that prevent them from making it to the grocery store. Hollyburn Family Services Society, which provides outreach services to some of the North Shore’s most vulnerable people, identified a need for food security among low-income seniors through a survey that was sent out to their clients earlier this year. Now, thanks to a new food box program, that’s starting to change. “Hi. Come in. Welcome.” A warm greeting is offered the moment someone walks through the door of this multi-purpose room in the basement of North Shore Neighbourhood House. The sun is streaming in through the doorway, as volunteers keep busy assembling fruit and vegetable packages in the centre of the room. There is a lot of laughing coming from this blended group of 20 seniors and young adults who make up the North Shore Food Box Cooperative. Charles Phoenix is one of the first shoppers to arrive. Wearing a fedora that shields his eyes, he quietly peruses the selection of fruits and vegetables compartmentalized on a table along the back wall. “I’m going to take some of these trees,” says Phoenix as he reaches for some broccoli. The 80-year-old, who lives in a nearby affordable housing complex for low-income seniors and adults with disabilities, has been spared a trek downhill to the closest supermarket, which is many blocks away on Esplanade. “So far the evidence of what I have seen here is really nice fresh food,” says Phoenix of the North Shore Food Box Cooperative set-up. “Almost a little bit of everything — veggies, bananas, cheese, yogurt.” His small box filled with fresh produce that would sell for as much as $25 in a grocery store will only cost him $15 today. The food box program was born out of an intergenerational mentorship project — “Honoring Our Past, Nurturing Our Future” — spearheaded by HFSS. Supported by provincial money, the initiative focuses on collaboration between seniors and youth ages 19 to 24. Through workshops and activities there is a transmission of intergenerational knowledge that occurs. Kristen Pring-Mill was one of the young participants in the 10-week program. Each week she would bring in a short comedic script for the seniors to act out. “I guess one of the things that is fun about this group is that many of them have never performed before,” says PringMill. For Maureen Reierstad, the companionship helps abate any feelings of isolation. The 73-year-old is just starting to get back on her feet again. A year and a half ago, Reierstad’s life turned upside down on a dime. She lost her long-time job, her mother died and her personal life went sideways — all at once. “I was in financial straits, definitely to the point where I had no grocery money,” she recalls.
Lower Lonsdale resident Charles Phoenix, who lives on a low-income budget, peruses the produce in a multi-purpose room at North Shore Neighbourhood House. He will save $10, and a long walk to the grocery store, by purchasing his fruits and vegetables through the North Shore Food Box Cooperative. Maria Spitale-Leisk photo
The staff at Hollyburn, which delivers B.C. Housing’s Shelter Aid for Elderly Renters (SAFER) program, provided Reierstad with the resources she needed to get her life back on track. “I’m not very clever asking for things, especially when people are doing things for me,” says Reierstad. Linda Brown has a similar tale of adversity. In 2007, after falling and fracturing her elbow, she was unable to hold down a full-time job and subsequently her apartment went into foreclosure. Hollyburn staff also helped her find affordable housing. However, her monthly income is a $920 Persons With Disabilities (PWD) benefit, $700 of which goes towards her rent. “Without this [North Shore Food Box Cooperative] I wouldn’t be eating,” says Brown. Reierstad and Brown, along with the other food box program volunteers, take home a bag of groceries when they leave. However, Leya Eguchi, Hollyburn’s coordinator of seniors programs, says they are not looking for a hand-out. “Everyone is here on their own accord because they want to help each other,” adds Eguchi. Hollyburn was only temporarily hosting
continued, PAGE 39
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Thursday, September 19, 2013 39 Thursday, September 19, 2013 39
» CONTEST
Home & Harvest Great Garden Contest C
North Shore Food Box Cooperative volunteers, from left, Linda Brown, Leya Eguchi, Hollyburn Family Services Society coordinator of seniors programs, Victor Amato and Kristen Pring-Mill. Maria Spitale-Leisk photo continued from, PAGE 38
the food box cooperative at North Shore Neighbourhood House. Starting next week, the volunteers will deliver the fruits and vegetables to a seniors’ affordable housing complex in Lower Lonsdale. “The goal was not to create a supermarket here,” explains Eguchi. The group is learning as they go with this pilot project. Right now they source the produce from wholesalers. Soon, they hope to tap into a community resource next door to North Shore Neighbourhood House — the Edible Garden Project. “We are looking at getting food from them and partnering with farmers,” says Eguchi. The food box cooperative supplements Hollyburn’s overarching Seniors at Housing Risk Outreach Program. This past year alone, Hollyburn social workers helped 235 marginalized seniors secure affordable housing and/or income support. “I’m getting up to 20 calls a day,” says Eguchi. “The concern is that these people are about to lose their housing.” According to Eguchi, with the baby boomer generation now entering retirement age, the number of seniors needing outreach services is expected to swell. mspitale@northshoreoutlook.com twitter.com/MariaSpitale
alling all gardeners! Fall, the brief finale to the growing season, is a beautiful time to show off your garden in all its autumn glory. Rusting leaves, nodding anemones, fall vegetables, gourds or fall-blooming bulbs. Share photos of your garden, lawn, window box, planter, garden bed, or whole garden – flowers or vegetables. Three finalists will be chosen, and their photos will be published in The Outlook and displayed at the West Vancouver Community Centre lobby during this year’s Pumpkin Fest celebrations to be held on Oct. 5 and 6. The winner will be announced at Pumpkin Fest on Oct. 6 and will receive “The Great Canadian Fall Garden Cleanup” ($500 value) from Great Canadian Landscaping. Give your garden that extra TLC, and email your photos to info@westvanpumpkinfest.ca with the subject “Great Garden Contest.” Check out Home & Harvest and other events that are part of Pumpkin Fest at westvanpumpkinfest.ca. Pumpkin Fest is a fundraising event of the West Vancouver Community Centres Society. All proceeds benefit the West Vancouver Community Centre. Garden Tips of the Week
Get Pruning! It’s time to go through your fall gardening checklist to get your garden ready for winter. According to Jason Black of Great Canadian Landscaping, fall is a great time to prune, plant and clean up. “From fall through spring, your plants are in their dormant stage. It’s important to get your pruning done before the cold weather hits.” September Checklist: • Prune down your perennials, such as hostas and daisies. • Prune your hedges – cedars, laurels and yews will be better at springtime if excess weight is removed. • Pull weeds before they go to seed to reduce the number of weeds next year. • Add compost or manure to garden beds. • Cleanup leaves to avoid rotting of turf below. Look for more gardening tips next week, and check out the Home & Harvest section of the Pumpkin Fest on Oct. 6 at the West Vancouver Community Centre. Check out www.westvanpumpkinfest.ca.
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40 Thursday, September 19, 2013 40 Thursday, September 19, 2013
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North Shore cops cycling 900 km for charity this week MARIA SPITALE-LEISK S tA f f R e p o Rt e R
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hree North Shore police officers are putting their pedals to the metal this week as they bike 900 kilometres in nine days to raise money for pediatric cancer programs and research. The trio are riding alongside hundreds of law enforcement officers and paramedics participating in the 2013 Cops for Cancer Tour de Coast. Wearing matching jerseys, they are cycling en masse through the Sea to Sky corridor, Sunshine Coast, North Shore and Greater Vancouver from now until Sept. 26. It’s a poignant journey for West Vancouver Police Department Const. Nicole Hartwig, whose mom was diagnosed with cancer mere weeks after she was accepted into the Cops for Cancer program. The rookie police officer was with her fiancé on vacation in Hawaii when she got the fateful call from her family. “Mom’s sick” were the first words spoken by her brother on the other end of the line. Since February, Hartwig’s mom has endured six chemotherapy sessions to treat her B-cell lymphoma — a blood cancer of the lymph glands. But today, Hartwig has some happy news to share about her mom’s healing journey: “As of a couple weeks ago she was put into remission.” Her family’s brush with serious illness has spurred them into action to help raise money for the Cops for Cancer campaign.
“Every time someone comes into my mom’s house she makes them hand over a toonie or they are not allowed inside,” laughs Hartwig, whose family alone has donated $7,800 to her Cops for Cancer personal fundraising page. She was the first Tour de Coast rider to raise $7,000 — and is well on her way to reaching her goal of collecting $10,000 for cancer research. “When you have something you truly believe in, there are a lot of people willing to help. You just have to ask,” says Hartwig of the outpouring of financial contributions she has received. Hartwig, along with fellow WVPD Const. Griffin Gillan, recently received a cheque for $5473.05 from Fresh St. Market in Ambleside. Gillian, a second-year participant, signed up for the charity bike ride after watching the Cops the Cancer cavalcade roll past him every year. He knows the uphill challenges that are in store, after getting a taste of the terrain last September. “I remember the hill coming out of Lund, that was one of the memorable hills,” he says. The camaraderie amongst the riders is evident: if someone is struggling to make it up a hill, another rider will come along and place a hand on their back to help propel them to the top, recalls Gillian. continued, PAGE 41
Thursday, September September 19, 19, 2013 2013 41 41 Thursday,
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VALOR
» ENTERTAINMENT
Paper Trails to release first EP next month Band to go on cross-Canada tour next summer to promote album release
M
att Polidoro feels like fate intervened when he began his new band earlier this year. After the Port Moody guitarist broke ties with his former ensemble, Men of the West, Polidoro called on his drummer friend, Chris SallisLyon, to join his outfit called Paper Trails. Polidoro and Sallis-Lyon — a North Vancouver resident who studied jazz percussion at Vancouver Community College — had competed against each other in a battle-of-the-bands hAppy TRAIls - Paper Trails is a blues rock/folk contest at the Roxy; they also had band made up of Matt Polidoro, Lucas Drever and worked together on a Men of the Teile Iantorno of Port Moody and Les Hill and Chris West album. Sallis-Lyon from North Vancouver. Submitted photo Soon, the pair had Polidoro’s best friend Lucas Drever to play guitar and, two months later, Teile Iantorno along once in a blue moon and consists of the on vocals. The trio recruited her on the spot types of musicians that any manager would after she pulled over her vehicle and recorded kill to work with,” Dunn-Roy said. “Their a song on her cell phone. “When we heard her, drive, focus and overall passion for music far it was like ‘Holy cow,’” Polidoro said. “We knew succeeds that of most musicians attempting she was the one.” to make it in this business and, to add to the Two months later, luck struck again when mix, I was gifted with a group that could also Sallis-Lyon’s friend, Les Hill, a former jazz back up their big dreams with even bigger drummer and teacher, signed on as the basstalent.” ist. “And since then, everything has flown by This month, Paper Trails started working so fast,” Polidoro said. with music producer Jordan Oorebeek to cut Paper Trails put on its first show — mostly two original songs for a five-track, self-titled in front of friends — at the Kozmik Zoo in EP; the other three songs will be recorded June. But also in the crowd was Kate Dunnby students at Harbourside Institute of Roy of Kapital Entertainment, who Polidoro Technology, of which Sallis-Lyon is an alumsaid was so impressed that she immediately nus. asked to manage the group. Polidoro hopes the album will be out later The next month, Dunn-Roy organized the next month; it will be followed by a cross-CanPaper Trails to appear at Granville Island’s ada tour next summer to promote the release. Backstage Lounge. “And we had double the “We feel very fortunate to have done so well crowd and that was on a Wednesday night,” in such a short time,” Polidoro said. “It’s like he said. “It’s all because of Kate.” it was meant to be.” “Paper Trails is the type of band that comes -Jannis Warren continued from, PAGE 40
said North Vancouver RCMP Supt. Chris Kennedy in a press release. Cops for Cancer was initiated in 1994 when an Edmonton police officer posed for a photo with a young cancer patient who was being teased at school because of his hair loss. The program launched in B.C. four years later and has since raised over $25 million for the Canadian Cancer Society. Each of the three North Shore police officers participating in Tour de Coast has an online donation page at copsforcancerbc.ca.
Like Hartwig, North Vancouver RCMP Const. Marie-Eve Beaupre family has also been affected by cancer. Her aunt was diagnosed with breast cancer a decade ago. Beaupre’s motivation for participating in Tour de Coast is two-fold: to stay in shape and to give back to the community. The Quebec City native had no idea what to expect when she moved to North Vancouver four years ago. “I didn’t know anything about B.C., except that it was in the west of Canada,” says Beaupre. mspitale@northshoreoutlook.com Since exploring the North Shore’s myriad twitter.com/MariaSpitale trails, including the ones in the Seymour Demonstration Forest, she’s become hooked on biking. Still, the tales she’s heard from seasoned Cops for Cancer riders make Beaupre a litVALUE PRICED tle nervous. Mediterranean Grill “There’s a lot of hills that people barely dine in • take out • delivery make it up because it’s so steep,” she says. 1356 Marine Drive • North Van • kypriaki.ca • 604.985.7955 “The people cheering you on, that’s what motivates you.” Beaupre raised $900 through donations from the RCMP Musical Ride when it Host of CBC Radio’s made a stop at Mahon “If I had known he was The Debaters going to be THAT good, Park on Aug. 21. In I would have cancelled total, $10,839.63 was Centennial Theatre him” ~ Steve Martin raised for the Cops North Van for Cancer campaign y” nn Fri, Nov 8 - 7:30pm fu y from that single event dl “wicke rald He le in North Van. nic ro Ch ax Centennial Box Office: - Halif “The North 604 984 4484 Vancouver RCMP www.centennialtheatre.com Detachment would like to thank everyone who came out to help make this a successful day,” www.shantero.com www.stevepatterson.ca
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FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS
INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...............1-8
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EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
OBITUARIES
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...9-57 TRAVEL.............................................61-76 CHILDREN ........................................80-98 EMPLOYMENT .............................102-198 BUSINESS SERVICES...................203-387
108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
130
GET FREE VENDING MACHINES Can Earn $100,000.00 + Per Year. All Cash-Retire in Just 3 Years. Protected Territories. Full Details CALL NOW 1-866-668-6629. Website WWW.TCVEND.COM.
An Alberta Oilfield Company is hiring dozer and excavator operators, Lodging and meals provided. Drug testing required. Call (780)7235051Edson,Alta
114
PETS & LIVESTOCK ......................453-483 MERCHANDISE FOR SALE...........503-587 REAL ESTATE ...............................603-696
MARINE .......................................903-920
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ASETY HOLDINGS Inc. o/a MicaBella in Tsawwassen & Lonsdale (N.Van) Req’s F/T Mineral Make-Up sales rep’s $13Hr & F/T supervisor with 1 to 2 Yr’s Exp. $17Hr. Email: asety3@gmail.com
Power sweeping,power scrubbing and pressure washing. Must be hard working with a good attitude. Burnaby based. Must be available to work nights and weekends. Good driving record & abstract required. Experience and Air Ticket beneficial. Email: jobs@atlasg.net or Fax: 604-294-5988
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EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
BC Cancer Foundation Legacies accepted. 604.877.6040 or visit: bccancerfoundation.com
130
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
109 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
HELP WANTED
FOOD & APPLIANCE PRODUCT SAMPLERS Need To Get Out Of The House, Talk To People & Create Extra Income? Try part-time work as a Food Demonstrator 6-10 days a month in local grocery, drug & department stores. Job Description: You must be a go-getter able to work on your own who enjoys talking to people & doing basic cooking. Great for men & women, seniors, retirees & mature adults.
Digital and Print Traffic Specialist
Availability: contracts would consist of 2-3 days on Fri. Sat. and/or Sun. (must be able to work all 3 days) from 11-5 or 6.
COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS 21
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
COMING EVENTS
Black Press is hiring a Digital and Print Traffic specialist based in Surrey, BC. Working with our BC national, digital and local sales divisions, this member of our ‘controller team’ will coordinate the scheduling and traffic of online campaigns as well as provincial print bookings. This individual provides inventory estimates, monitors campaign performance and tracks advertising data. They will provide analytics to both management and sales as required as well as scheduled reports. The position requires an organized individual who thrives on a fast pace without compromising detail. It is essential to enjoy delivering a high level of service to clients and colleagues alike.
21st Century Flea Market. Sept 22 10am-3pm. Croatian Cultural Ctr. 3250 Commercial Dr. Adm $5.
DRIVERS WANTED
GROW MARIJUANA Commercially. Canadian Commercial Production Licensing Convention October 26th & 27th. Toronto Airport, Marriott Hotel. www.greenlineacademy.com. Tickets 1-855-860-8611 or 250870-1882.
TRAVEL 74
TIMESHARE
CANCEL YOUR TIMESHARE. NO Risk Program STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Consultation. Call Us NOW. We Can Help! 1-888-356-5248
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TRAVEL
AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 w/ Airbrake • Guaranteed 40hr. Work Week & Overtime • Paid Travel & Lodging • Meal Allowance • 4 Weeks Vacation • Excellent Benefits Package
.Class 1 Drivers for log haul & Process operators. Info@lydellgroup.ca Fax 780-542-6739 Alberta
CLEANERS
Light Duty and Heavy Duty Cleaners required for Ultra Tech Cleaning Systems in downtown & Burnaby areas.
Must be able to have extended stays away from home. Up to 6 months. Must have valid AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 with airbrake license and have previous commercial driving experience. Apply at:www.sperryrail.com/ careers and then choose the FastTRACK Application.
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Pay starts at $10.50/hr. Training provided in North Burnaby.
Must have experience. Good pay. Apply in person or email: 201-1420 Adanac St., Vancouver info@utcs.com
Call JMP Marketing at 604.294.3424, local #30 JMP Marketing Services BC’s largest demo company since 1979
Black Press Community News Media is an internationally recognized newspaper publishing group with more than 190 community, daily and urban publications in BC, Alberta, Washington, Hawaii, California and Ohio published at 14 regional printing centers. Black Press has over 160 websites as well as the Victoria based free classified site UsedEverywhere.com. Black Press employs 3,300 people across North America.
SEEKING EDITOR. Peak Publishing publishes The Powell River Peak Wednesday subscription newspaper, Friday TMC, Weekend Shopper and an online edition. Send resumes to Joyce Carlson, publisher@prpeak.com. Closing date: October 4, 2013.
EDUCATION
THERE’S A CRITICAL DEMAND for qualified Medical Transcriptionists in Canada. Enroll today with CanScribe and be working from home in one year. 1.800.466.1535 www.canscribe.com info@canscribe.com
Requirements: • Fully fluent in English • Own a car to carry supplies • Be well groomed & bondable • Able to carry medium weight equipment into stores.
FLAGGERS NEEDED. No Certification? Get Certified, 604-575-3944
FLAG PERSONS & LANE TECH PERSONNEL
THE PALMS RV RESORT www.yumapalmsrvresort.com Rated top 2% in America. 6-5-4-3 Monthly Specials. Starting at $637.50mo. (+ Tax/Elec.) Toll Free 1 855 PALMS RV (1-855-725-6778)
NO EXPERIENCE REQUIRED
Please email your resume with a brief cover note by Sept. 21, 2013 to teamwork@blackpress.ca
WE WILL TRAIN! COMPETITIVE RATES Must Have Valid TCP Certificate, Reliable Insured Vehicle And Provide A Clean Drivers Abstract!
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION
Please E-mail Resume: grasdald@telus.net
108 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
GUARANTEED Job Placement: General Laborers and Tradesmen For Oil & Gas Industry. Call 24hr Free Recorded Message For Information 1-800-972-0209
A Great Janitorial Franchise Opportunity
• Annual Starting Revenue of $12,000 - $120,000 • Guaranteed Cleaning Contracts • Professional Training Provided • Financing Available • Ongoing Support • Low Down Payment required A Respected Worldwide Leader in Franchised Office Cleaning. Coverall of BC 604.434.7744 info@coverallbc.com www.coverallbc.com
115
EDUCATION
115
EDUCATION
**ATTENTION: JOB SEEKERS!** MAKE MONEY! Mailing Postcards! www.PostcardsToWealth.com NOW ACCEPTING! ZNZ Referral Agents! $20-$60/Hour! www.FreeJobPosition.com HOME WORKERS! Make Money Using Your PC! www.SuperCashDaily.com Earn Big Paychecks Paid Every Friday! www.LegitCashJobs.com
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EDUCATION
115
EDUCATION
115
EDUCATION
HEALTH CARE ASSISTANT Our HCA program is for students with
110 strong wills and warm hearts. Learn how -
ALL CASH Drink/Snack Vending Business Route. Complete Training. Small Investment Required. 1888-979-VEND (8363). www.healthydrinkvending.co
blackpress.ca X bclocalnews.com
to work with a team of health care professionals to identify and address the unique needs of each unique client. Career Opportunities: Community Health Worker O Care Aide Home Support O Acute & Complex Care
CALL EAST VAN: 604.251.4473 OR VISIT SPROTTSHAW.COM
www.northshoreoutlook.com
EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 131
PERSONAL SERVICES
HOME CARE/SUPPORT
MIND BODY SPIRIT
173
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 287
Spiritual Reader & Healer Solve all problems, relationships, family issues, stress & depression, aura, living conditions, jadoo, juju, voodoo, mojo, black magic, protection against enemies, luck, success. 100% Guaranteed Result !!!!! BEST LIFE COACH
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ongoing training and support. A young person is waiting for an open door... make it yours.
182
604.708.2628 caregiving@plea.bc.ca www.plea.ca
134
HOTEL, RESTAURANT, FOOD SERVICES
ACCENTUS is hiring experienced Medical Transcriptionists to work from home. Candidates must have 1 year of acute care experience. Apply today! Send resume to: hr@accentus.ca.
FRASER SHINGLES AND EXTERIORS. Sloped Roofing / Siding Crews needed at our Edmonton branch. Great wages. Own equipment is a MUST. For info contact Giselle @ 780 962 1320 or at email: giselle@fraserexteriors.com
$45/Hr
1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Across the street - across the world Real Professionals, Reas. Rates. Best in every way! 604-721-4555.
283 GUTTERS & DOWNSPOUTS ALWAYS! GUTTER Cleaning & Roof Blowing, Moss Control,30 yrs exp., Reliable! Simon 604-230-0627
287
HOME IMPROVEMENTS 1 DAY INSTALL COMPLETE BATHROOM REMODELING Free Estimates
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RUBBISH REMOVAL
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Ask us about $20K Gov’t Grant or visit: www.bchousing.org/HAFI - 1 Piece Seamless Acrylic Walls - Custom Showers, Tubs, Glass Doors - Wheelchair Accessible Showers
560 RUBBISH REMOVAL FLEETWOOD WASTE Bin Rentals 10-30 Yards. Call Ken at 604-294-1393
JUNK REMOVAL
HOT TUBS NO PROB!
604.587.5865 www.recycleitcanada.ca
www.paintspecial.com
bradsjunkremoval.com
604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley
Hauling Anything..
PAINT SPECIAL 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.
332
PAVING/SEAL COATING
ASPHALT PAVING • Brick Driveways • Retaining Walls • Foundation Repairs • Sealcoating 604-618-2304
338
PLUMBING
DISPOSAL BINS by Recycle-it 6-50 yard Bins
Delivery & Pick-Up Included Residental & Commercial Service
Starting from
199
$
604.587.5865 4.58 587 87.58 58665 58 65
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20 YARD BINS AVAILABLE We Load or You Load !
604.220.JUNK(5865) Serving Metro Vancouver Since 1988
DISPOSAL BINS By Recycle-it
Journeyman Call 604-345-0899
PETS
GL ROOFING. Cedar/Asphalt, Flat roofs, WCB Clean Gutters - $80. 604-240-5362. info@glroofing.ca
Eastcan Roofing & Siding •New Roofs •Re-Roofs •Repairs Liability Insurance/BBB/10% off with ad
604.562.0957 or 604.961.0324
10% DISCOUNT. MG Roofing & Siding. CB. Re-roofing, New Roof Gutters.
604-812-9721
COME SEE!! Preview at 8:30 am Saturday, Sept, 21st More Details and Pictures at: www.allcityauctioneers.com
604-514-0194 STEEL BUILDINGS/METAL BUILDINGS 60% OFF! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-457-2206 www.crownsteelbuildings.ca
566 MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS TENOR SAX
627
HOMES WANTED
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
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477
PETS
CATS GALORE, TLC has for adoption spayed & neutered adult cats. 604-309-5388 / 604-856-4866 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 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 SIAMESE X kittens beautiful Flame Point $100/ea. 2 Tabby Kittens $35/ea. family raised 604-794-5972
2010 VENZA: Like new, only 20,000 kms, fully loaded, automatic, 6 cylinder, dvd system. $22,800. 604-575-5555.
3-LINE EXAMPLE 639 REAL ESTATE SERVICES • DIFFICULTY SELLING? •
Difficulty Making Payments? No Equity? Penalty? Expired Listing? We Buy Homes! No Fees! No Risk! www.GVCPS.ca / 604-786-4663
TRANSPORTATION 810
AUTO FINANCING
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NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that creditors and others having claims against the estate of CHARLES GEORGE BRAAKSMA, who died on November 15, 2012, are hereby required to send particulars of those claims to DEANNA NICOLE DRAHOVZAL, c/o Brawn Karras & Sanderson, 309 - 1688 - 152nd Street, Surrey, BC, V4A 4N2, Attn: Kirsten E.H. Wharton, on or before October 10, 2013, after which date the estate’s assets will be distributed, having regard only to the claims that have been received.
PRIME LAKEVIEW LOTS Aluminum patio cover, sunroom, railing and vinyl. 604-521-2688 www.PatioCoverVancouver.com
CRESCENT Plumbing & Heating Licensed Residential 24hr. Service
RE: CHARLES GEORGE BRAAKSMA, Deceased, formerly of 2201 - 138 Esplanade, North Vancouver, BC
Over 60 Various seized and Impounded vehicles being sold with no min. prices or starting bids. Seadoos, Trailer and Motorhome 2008 Moped.
REAL ESTATE
SUNDECKS
NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS
SAT. Sept. 21st, 10:30 AM 231 Ewen Avenue, New Westminster, BC
Delivery & Pick-Up Included Residential & Commercial Service • Green Waste • Construction Debris • Renovations • House Clean Outs
100% Heating & Plumbing 24/7 Certified, Insured & Bonded
SEIZED VEHICLE AUCTION
$400. Call 604-859-5925
372
VEHICLE Auction - Sept 21 @ 10:30 am- 60 Cars, Trucks, SUV’s, RVs - www.allcityauctioneers.com
MISC. FOR SALE
6 - 50 Yard Bins
604.587.5865 www.recycleitcanada.ca
TRUCKS & VANS
HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper?
Starting from $199.00
10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fitter. Aman: 778-895-2005
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS RUBBISH REMOVAL
But Dead Bodies!!
BRO MARV PLUMBING 24/7 Plumbing, heating, plugged drains BBB. (604)582-1598, bromarv.com
604-477-4777 www.bathtime.ca
356
851
MERCHANDISE FOR SALE
263 EXCAVATING & DRAINAGE
WEED FREE Mushroom Manure 13 yards - $180 or Well Rotted 10 yds - $200. 604-856-8877
WE’RE ON THE WEB
Time to buy a new car?
604-537-4140
HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
GARDENING
AUTO CREDIT - Guaranteed Auto Loan. Apply at: uapplyudrive.CA or Call toll free 1.877.680.1231
LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE
Running this ad for 8yrs
BAJ EXCAVATING DEMO, Sewer, storm, drainage, remove concrete & blacktop, old house drainage. Call 604-779-7816.
SCRAP CAR REMOVAL
The Scrapper
P/B blue males Ready to go. 1st shots & tails/dew claws done. ULTIMATE FAMILY GUARDIAN $800. 604-308-5665
From 1, 3, 5, 7 & 10 Ton Trucks Licensed ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 Men Free Estimate/Senior Discount Residential~Commercial~Pianos
LEGAL SERVICES
YOUR ELECTRICIAN $29 Service Call Lic #89402 Same day guarn’td We love small jobs! 604-568-1899
by MERCEDES, black, loaded, immaculate, 56,000 kms, $13,500, Call: 604-746-9069
PATTAR ROOFING LTD. All types of Roofing. Over 35 years in business. 604.588.0833
Need CA$H Today? Own a vehicle? Borrow up to $25,000 Snapcarcash.com 604-777-5046
281
356
www.affordablemovers.bc.com
821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS 2004 CHRYSLER CROSSFIRE,
AFFORDABLE MOVING
TRADES, TECHNICAL
Experienced SHINGLE SAWYER wanted. Will pay top $$ for experience. office@valiantlogsort.ca or fax 604-942-0805
AUTO FINANCING
#1 FREE SCRAP VEHICLE REMOVAL ASK ABOUT $500 CREDIT $$$ PAID FOR SOME 604.683.2200 AAA SCRAP CAR REMOVAL Minimum $150 cash for full size vehicles, any cond. 604-518-3673
By RECYCLE-IT!
ELECTRICAL
810
TRANSPORTATION
845
• Furniture • Appliances • Electronics • Junk/Rubbish • Construction Debris • Drywall • Yard Waste • Concrete • Everything Else! **Estate Clean-Up Specialists**
260
PETS
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
329 PAINTING & DECORATING
188
477
TRANSPORTATION
MOVING & STORAGE
AAA PRECISION PAINTING. Quality work. 778-881-6096.
CRIMINAL RECORD? Don’t let it block employment, travel, education, professional, certification, adoption property rental opportunities. For peace of mind & a free consultation call 1-800-347-2540.
PETS
ITALIAN MASTIFF (Cane Corso)
356
135 INCOME OPPORTUNITY
.OILFIELD OPERATORS with Class 1. Apply at: 1-800-9SANJEL
353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS
.
* WENDY’S RESTAURANTS * ** CAREER FAIR ** If you have gained valuable experience in the restaurant industry and are a proven leader, this could be the opportunity you are looking for! We are currently recruiting for Restaurant Management team members in our BC market. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24th between 2:00 PM - 6:00 PM COMFORT INN ABBOTSFORD 2073 Clearbrook Rd, Abbotsford Telephone: (604) 8596211 HOLIDAY INN LANGLEY 8750 – 204th Street, Langley Telephone: (604) 882-2000 WENDY’S RESTAURANT 480 W. 8th Avenue, Vancouver Telephone: (604) 8758933 WENDYSJOBS.CA
160
320
FINANCIAL SERVICES
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.
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
Complete Dry-wall & Renovation services. Textured ceiling specialist. Phone Steve (604)613-4861
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HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES
Always Done Right With Integrity.
www.gadryconsultation.com
Thursday, September 19, 2013 43
Size not exactly as shown
$
12
Power Pack LQFOXGHV North Shore Outlook PRINT AD: Includes photo and 3-lines for one week. %&&ODVVLÀ HG FRP ONLINE AD: BC-wide reach! For one week! USEDVancouver.com ONLINE AD: Local reach — until you cancel it!
call 604.575-5555 « W E S T VA N C O U V E R « NORTH VANCOUVER
44 Thursday, September 19, 2013
www.northshoreoutlook.com
G N I C R ONTEST! U O L O C L O O H C S BACK TO Colour this sheet, complete the form and return to any Kin’s location by Oct. 6, 2013 for a chance to win passes to Go Bananas & a lunch bag filled with goodies from Kin’s!
R U O Y n i s ’ t Wha ag? b h c n lu
ck in ou’re ba y t a h t Now
school,
*Artist Name: *Artist Age: *Parent/Guardian Name: *Phone Number: *Email: Please check this box if you do NOT wish to receive our e-newsletter. * Required fields Please provide your signature below to authorize us to display your child`s first name and age on Facebook. Signature
Date
Please visit www.kinsfarmmarket.com/colouring for contest rules.
Keep your brain and body happy! Eat healthy!
Prices effective: September 18th to 22nd, 2013 *While Quantities Last LOCAL SUPER SWEET CORN, LOCAL SWEET GOLD BEETS & LOCAL SUPER SWEET CARROTS NOW AVAILABLE! Sweet & Crunchy
Gala Apples
Sweet & Juicy
Prune Plums
Large Cauliflower
Locally Grown
California Grown
79¢/lb
79¢/lb
Sweet & Juicy
Fresh & Tasty
Fresh & Flavourful (Ilb clamshell)
99¢/lb
2/$4.00
Locally Grown
Organic White Peaches
Green Field Peppers
Washington Grown
Locally Grown
$1.69/lb
Capilano Mall
Lynn Valley Centre
Lonsdale Quay
Park Royal
OPEN Same as mall hours
OPEN Same as mall hours
*FREE 2 HR PARKING*
OPEN 9am to 8pm everyday
20 - 935 Marine Dr. Across from Walmart 604.904.0257
Fresh & Nutritious
122 - 1199 Lynn Valley Rd. Near Save-On-Foods 604.986.1382
123 Carrie Cates Court North-east of First floor 604.988.6969
OPEN 9am to 7pm everyday
496 Park Royal South Behind White Spot 604.922.8926
2/$3.00
Campari Tomatoes
Local Hot House Grown