Outlook West Vancouver, December 19, 2013

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DECEMBER 19 - DECEMBER 22, 2013

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» WEST VANCOUVER

TO PRESERVE AND PROTECT

CAROLLERS BRIGHTEN SPIRITS AT LGH

Wishing all of our valued clients a Safe & Happy Holiday Season!

INSTANT REPLAY: JEROME PATHON’S RIVER CITY RELAY

A HOLIDAY WINE LIST TO CELEBRATE

Rob Newell photo

A plucky non-profit society’s mission to defend North Shore heritage » 10

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2 Thursday, December 19, 2013 2 Thursday, December 19, 2013

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Season’s Greetings! Warmest wishes for a wonderful holiday season and a very happy New Year.

Jane Thornthwaite, MLA North Vancouver-Seymour 217-1233 Lynn Valley Road, North Vancouver, BC V7J 0A1

604.983.9852

Jane Thornthwaite

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jane.thornthwaite.mla@leg.bc.ca | www.janethornthwaitemla.bc.ca

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An outdoor gathering spot at Park Royal Village. Michaela Garstin photo

» NEWS

Which ‘Village’ will come out on top?

While Park Royal Village has become a main gathering spot in West Van, revitalization of Ambleside Village is beginning to take shape MICHAELA GARSTIN S tA f f R E p o Rt E R

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s staff for the District of West Vancouver busily prepare plans to revitalize Ambleside — festival streets, new gathering spots and the like – Park Royal Village has become a main hangout spot. Besides the bustle of Christmas shoppers, more people are using Park Royal Village to visit with friends, go on first dates and even walk their dogs. Outdoor seating around four cafés and take-out shops has made the mall a popular meeting spot, often rivaling or outdoing Ambleside Village.

Jordan Sturdy MLA West Vancouver – Sea to Sky 6392 Bay Street, West Vancouver, V7W 2G9 P: 604 922 1153 F: 604 922 1167 Jordan.sturdy.mla@leg.bc.ca www.jordansturdymla.ca

continued, PAGE 6

“This time of year always reminds me of how fortunate we are and to remember those who are having a tough time”. Quality Properties in West Vancouver, North Vancouver and Downtown Vancouver ~ Realtor since 2002

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44 Thursday, Thursday,December December19, 19,2013 2013

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» NEWS

North Van students to dance and shoot their way to graduation Dance and hockey academies have been added to the North Van school district’s list of specialty programs MARIA SPITALE-LEISK S tA f f R e p o Rt e R

S

ome North Vancouver students will soon earn graduation credits by practising dance and playing hockey, as the North dANcINg WITh joy - Front row, left to right: Instructor Vancouver School District looks to Katie Gillett, Sonia Ellis, president of Seymour Dance expand its academy offerings. and director of the future Windsor Dance Academy and In October the North Shore instructor Emily Tellier with students of Seymour Dance. Winter Club and Seymour Dance Rob Newell photo responded to the school district’s request for proposals for specialty said assistant Supt. Mark Jefferson. programs. “I think anytime a student can be engaged in By offering innovative programs that peak an area of interest it enhances their education students’ interest and, at the same time, are sustainable, is how the North Van school discontinued, PAGE 29 trict plans to keep enrolment numbers steady,

The latest news and information from the City of North Vancouver

Season's Greetings from the City of North Vancouver The City of North Vancouver extends holiday greetings to its residents, businesses and visitors. The City website has been wrapped in a holiday theme with seasonal info at your fingertips. Visit www.cnv.org/CelebrateTheSeason for festivities taking place throughout the community, sustainable holiday ideas, snow clearing and preparedness information, plus seasonal safety tips. City Hall will be closed from noon on December 24 to December 27, and on January 1. If you have an emergency regarding sewer, water or roads during this time, please call 604-988-2212. Enjoy a safe and happy holiday season!

North Vancouver City Firefighters Christmas Tree Chip-Up Saturday, January 4 from 8:30am - 4:30pm, Rona Parking Lot at Park & Tilford Wondering what to do with your Christmas tree after the holidays? Recycle it! Drop by with your tree and enjoy a free hotdog, coffee or hot chocolate. This charity event is by donation with all proceeds going to the North Vancouver City Firefighters Scholarship Fund. The recycled trees are used in the many parks, paths and gardens throughout the City. www.cnv.org/CelebrateTheSeason

Get Connected with CityConnect CITY NEWS AND UPDATES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Staying connected is easier than ever. Our new CityConnect service allows you to subscribe to website content and receive emails updates whenever there’s new information about your topics of interest. It’s easy to subscribe. Just type in your email address, check off your areas of interest and hit submit. An email confirming your subscription will be sent to your inbox to complete the process, so be sure to confirm, and away you go. Sit back and enjoy website updates right to your inbox. www.cnv.org/CityConnect

New Garbage Collection Schedule Starts January 2014 The City is changing garbage collection service to every other week. Beginning in January 2014, garbage collection for single-family homes will be collected every second week, while Blue Box recycling, GreenCan and Yard Trimmings will continue to be collected every week. The first non-collection week for garbage will be January 13th. Garbage limits will remain at two 77-litre cans per collection and extra garbage tags will continue to be available for purchase at City Hall. There is no restriction on the number of GreenCans or Yard Trimmings cans. The City's 2014 Collection Calendar has been delivered to all residents and outlines collection days for both garbage and recycling for each zone. Extra copies of the calendar are available at City Hall or find it at www.cnv.org/collection

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6 Thursday, Thursday,December December19, 19,2013 2013 continued from, PAGE 2

District of West Van staff, however, want to draw residents to Ambleside — the area they insist is the “heart of West Vancouver.” Bob Sokol, West Van’s director of planning, says Ambleside is the centre of the municipality and it will be more noticeable once a number of district-led initiatives are complete. “I think Ambleside can compete [with Park Royal Village], and I think there are times it does,” he says. “Check it out during the summer. There are thousands of people walking along the waterfront. What we want to do is a better job of providing people reasons to cross the railroad tracks to Ambleside.” But Park Royal Village continues to attract more people, especially during

www.northshoreoutlook.com the evening when many cafés and restaurants are closed in Ambleside and Dundarave. Rick Amantea, vice-president of Park Royal, says the outside shopping centre was built to replicate a quaint seaside town with ample spots for people to relax and socialize. He says part of the mall’s original vision was to create a community where people could meet up with friends. “In many ways, we put more emphasis on the experience than the shopping.” The Village’s buildings, which are part of the plan to create a “friendly” community, have won awards, including Innovative Design and Construction of a New Centre from the International Council of Shopping Centres. Even small features such as drinking fountains for dogs and bicycle racks

were added deliberately. And more people could soon call the mall home. Two new towers — 19 and 24 storeys with 289 residential units — are proposed for where White Spot is now. The property’s owner, Larco Investments, calls the development a “community within a community.” Despite this, Sokol says Ambleside Village is the heart of West Vancouver. Since Ambleside has attributes Park Royal does not (take the waterfront and museum, for example), he says the two areas provide different experiences. “If we tried to compete with Park Royal head on, we would lose. There are a much higher concentration of commercial uses.” According to the Ambleside Village Centre Strategy, the focus will be on independent stores, not large chains.

“Revitalization of Ambleside is one of this council’s priorities, and it has been priority for many councils,” says Sokol, adding the area is already the centre of government and has the largest concentration of residents in West Van. Council envisions Ambleside as a busy pedestrian-oriented centre, especially along the two “festival streets” on 14th and 17th streets. When construction is complete, festivals and weekend events will be hosted along the streets, which will have room for additional seating, public art and street vendors. Council also hopes Grosvenor’s mixed residential/commercial development on the 1300-block of Marine Drive, narrowly approved on Dec. 2, will attract residents to the waterfront.

mgarstin@northshoreoutlook.com twitter.com/MichaelaGarsitn


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» COFFEE WITH

Carollers make spirits bright for LGH shut-ins

Holiday Hours

@ Your Library Our hours for the holiday season are as follows: OPEN, closing early at noon

Tuesday, December 24

Wednesday, December 25 CLOSED

dECk THE Halls - Lions Gate Hospital employees, from left, Rosemary Hill, Rev. Andres Rebane and Pat MacDonald spend every Christmas Eve singing to patients.

Thursday, December 26

CLOSED

Friday, December 27

OPEN

Saturday, December 28

OPEN

Sunday, December 29

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Monday, December 30

OPEN

Tuesday, December 31

OPEN, closing early at 5:00pm

Wednesday, January 1

CLOSED

All other hours are as usual. All the best to you for the holiday season! Lynn Valley Main Library 1277 Lynn Valley Road 604-984-0286

Rob Newell photo

Rosemary Hill has orchestrated Christmas carolling on Christmas Eve at Lions Gate Hospital for the past couple of decades

decked out in festive attire. The only warm-up is a festive lesson in germ spreading and the importance of hand sanitizer. Hill never knows from one year to the next who is going to show up and with what reporter@northshoreoutlook.com instrument. Most Christmas Eves they can count on Mike group of 30 unrehearsed Tanner and his guitar. The accomplished musisingers sounds like a choir of angels to cian heard about the festive philanthropic gig someone confined to a hospital bed on years ago from his mother who is a palliative Christmas Eve. Rosemary Hill helms this makeshift ensemble volunteer at LGH. “He has a wonderful connection with the comprised of Lions Gate Hospital employees patients,” says Hill. and patients’ families. Soon the choir migrates to the highest point Carolling is a LGH holiday tradition that was in the hospital, the palliative floor. And the singconceived 30-some-odd Christmases ago by paling begins. A stirring rendition of “Silent Night” liative nurse Muriel Wessel. comforts the palliative patients during what is “She wanted to bring some joy and recognize the patients who couldn’t be with their families, seemingly their last Christmas. Slowly, as the train of carollers move on, the and offer them a piece of Christmas,” recalls harmony fades into silence. Hill while bustling around the hospital on Carrying blue Duo-Tangs filled with Monday. On top of her busy schedule as an ostomy and Christmas song lyrics, they continue to sing their way through the middle floors —which wound nurse clinician, Hill makes time every holiday season to organize the carolling. For this house the surgical and maternity wards — eventually winding up at the bottom in the life-long warbler, who today is aptly wearing a chaotic emergency room. Hill says the singred sweater, it’s Handel’s “Hallelujah Chorus” ing has a calming effect on those people that that keeps her in the Christmas spirit. didn’t plan to spend their holiday at the Every Christmas Eve, the carollers arrive at the hospital — some donning Santa hats, others continued, PAGE 8

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hospital. With this large group snaking through the narrow hospital hallways, sometimes it’s hard to keep everyone on the same page, says Hill with a smile. “But we do get some pretty good harmony going,” she adds. The singers will routinely pause and encircle around the doorway of a four-bed hospital room. Earlier in the day, Hill will have checked in with the patients on each ward to make sure everyone is comfortable with the festive company. The carollers rarely get turned away. Hill offers a sobering reminder that there isn’t always family present at every patients’ bedside. “They are thankful that people would opt to be in a place on Christmas Eve where there are sick people, and sing to them,” says Hill. “And I believe it offers them hope, I really do.” On one occasion Hill remembers how the singing comforted a spouse standing by the bedside of a dying loved one. And while every song is well-received, “Joy to the World” is a perennial favourite of the patients. Often the singers will take requests. For the LGH staff who participate in the carolling, it’s a special chance for them to step away from the clinical side of their job and offer some spiritual healing. LGH oncology nurse clinician Pat MacDonald, a patient herself a couple Christmases ago, was awakened by the singing she heard while lying in her hospital bed. Clutching her IV pole she sauntered alongside the train of carollers, singing all the way. “It was just fantastic,” says MacDonald of that memory. LGH chaplain Rev. Andres Rebane explains how some patients become tearful when they hear the music echoing through the halls. “It’s not a bad thing that they are overcome,” says Rebane. “Music is quite healing. It brings into your memory the good things about Christmas and family.” For Rebane, Christmas carolling conjures up bittersweet memories from his youth. He grew up in Estonia in the 1970s, while it was still under Soviet occupation. Normally it would snow, which Rebane found comforting because Christmas was not to be celebrated in public at that time. “You weren’t even allowed to put out a Christmas trees until after the 25th,” recalls Rebane. So his family would hunker down in their home for some clandestine carolling which brightened their spirits. “It was just this kind of sacred, happy, good feeling,” says Rebane. After about an hour and 20 minutes, the LGH carollers wrap up their performance. The afternoon usually wraps up with everyone enjoying a mandarin orange before going on their way to see their families. Hill leaves with a greater appreciation for life and its fragile nature. “I’m grateful that I can walk out the hospital doors feeling well and healthy,” says Hill. mspitale@northshoreoutlook.com

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» CAT’S EYE

S

1 CBC’s Miyoung Lee, left, is seen in the VIP tent with friend Heidi Carton. 2 CTV movie critic and Travel Guys star Jim Gordon chats with Joti Samra before the start of the show. 3 It’s a great show for families as Capilano University registrar Karen McCredie and husband/writer Andrew McCredie look forward to a tour of the stables with son Callum and daughter Grace. 4 Global TV news anchor and North Vancouverite Anne Drewa brings along mom Terrie for a night of VIP treatment. 5 I never miss a chance to horse around with the stars of the show. Cavalia’s Odysseo cast members, riders and acrobats take photos with the crowd in the Rendez-Vous lounge. 6 VIP hostess Julie Shaw makes sure everyone goes home with a souvenir.

Cat Calls: Do you have an upcoming event? Email: cbarr@westvancouver.com

Cat’s Eye online

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»

et your senses on stun because Cavalia’s Odysseo is a spectacle to behold. Dubbed a Cirque du Soleil with horses, this event is a must see for the holiday season. With scenes that shift from the magical and dreamy to high energy shows of strength, this is animal magnetism at its best. There’s also a finale that you have to see to believe. Last week marked the grand opening night and the tent was filled with the who’s who of the Vancouver scene. Actors, media personalities and dignitaries were treated to the VIP treatment inside the Rendez-Vous lounge complete with full dinner buffet, champagne, wine, dessert and more. It’s a night to remember that you too can partake in via the VIP package experience. And don’t forget to visit the stables after the show for a close-up meeting with Vancouver’s newest and fanciest “neigh”-bours.

1

2

Catherine Barr.com

Follow entertainment / events columninst Catherine Barr on these social media outlets Linkedin

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10 10 Thursday, Thursday,December December19, 19,2013 2013

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» COVER STORY

To preserve and protect A plucky non-profit society’s mission to defend North Shore heritage BY JuSTin BEddall

North Shore Preservation Society president Peter Miller stands in front of the Flamborough Head. Rob Newell photo

Peter Miller’s electric Nissan is parked on the port side of the hulking stern of the HMS Flamborough Head on this drizzly December afternoon. With classical music playing softly on the stereo, Miller stares out of a fogged-up window with a slightly sullen expression as helmet-clad workers move up and down the scaffolding attached to the rusty maritime artifact located just steps from the Pinnacle Hotel on the Lower Lonsdale waterfront. Miller knows that the last remaining Burrard Dry Dock-built “Victory” ship, a supply vessel that survived enemy-infested waters in the Atlantic during the Second World War, is about to make its final voyage — this time to the scrapyard, piece by piece. The 40-foot, three-storey stern section and engine is being dismantled not far from where it was launched on Oct. 7, 1944. At the time, North Vancouver was a bustling shipbuilding hub supplying more than 150 of the 10,000-ton merchant ships to the Royal Navy for the war effort. The bespectacled Miller is today dressed in a grey sports coat, blue plaid shirt and brown corduroys that, along with his British accent, make him easy to mistake for, say, a history professor — but he’s not. A retired architect, Miller is the president of the North Shore Preservation Society and when it comes to protecting the past, he’s scrappy, outspoken and ever vigilant. “…the North Shore Heritage Preservation Society is — once again — dismayed at the North Vancouver City Council’s failure to respect the proud history of its community,” wrote Miller last week, in a letter to the editor sent to The Outlook, about the pending dismantling of the Flamborough stern. Looking out the car window, Miller says he’s surprised and saddened by CNV council’s decision to dispose of the Flamborough “because this was going to be the artifact to demonstrate the scale of the product the North Vancouver shipyards

was turning out for the war effort.” Even worse, he’s concerned that “this opens the door to the possible dismantling of the yellow crane,” he says, pausing to look over his left shoulder at the iconic shipbuilding crane situated a few hundred feet away at Shipbuilders’ Square, “for similar reasons, i.e. liability and future maintenance expense to the city.” ***** The stern section of Flamborough Head was originally obtained by the City of North Van in 2001 for $1 from the Artificial Reef Society before the rest of the ship was sunk near Nanaimo Harbour to create a recreational dive site. Originally, the plan was to incorporate the stern as part of a then-planned maritime museum for the North Vancouver Museum and Archives. But when an ambitious National Maritime Centre was later slated for the redeveloping Lower Lonsdale waterfront, the stern was to be a centrepiece there. However, in 2007 the plan was scuttled when provincial funding was lost. “It was tabbed to be part of the national maritime centre so when the funding fell through for the national maritime centre from the provincial government I think that was the beginning of the end,” says CNV Mayor Darrell Mussatto. Since then, plans for the stern have been adrift and now the temporary cradle that’s held it upright for more than a decade needs to be replaced — something

the city says will cost big bucks. This July CNV council voted to use the Pipe Shop located in the historic waterfront precinct as North Vancouver Museum’s new space but it won’t have a strictly maritime theme. Barb Pearce, CNV’s director of special projects, who is directing the waterfront project, explained in an email that “There is no space or opportunity for the stern or engine to be used in conjunction with this new museum.” “Faced with the need to either replace the cradle with no plan in place for the stern, or to dispose of the stern, Council directed staff to proceed with the disposal,” she added. That happened after an in-camera meeting in September, with council voting unanimously in favour of spending up to $250,000 to dispose of the stern. (The Artificial Reef Society was first contacted to see if they had any interest in the stern or engine but they declined; a U.S. organization is interested in the engine.) The disposal cost is so steep because the stern contains amounts of asbestos, lead-based paint and pigeon poop — also considered a hazardous material — that’s accumulated through the years. To date, the city has paid around $381,000 to have the stern of the Flamborough removed from the rest of the ship, transported to North Van, moved to its current location and shrink-wrapped. As for the other heritage items located

The HMS Flamborough Head in 1945. North Vancouver Museum and Archives photo

in the central waterfront area, Pearce said there are no plans to dispose of the yellow crane or the historic Pacific Great Eastern Railway Station, which is being temporarily relocated while work is being done on the subsurface at the foot of Lonsdale. Miller, while complimentary of the city’s integration of maritime history into the redevelopment of the waterfront, bristles about the fact that the stern’s fate was decided behind closed doors. But Mayor Mussatto explains the decision was made in-camera “because there’s some liability issues with regard to the stern of the ship at its current location and liability and lawyer’s advice is kept in-camera.” “We invested a lot of time, money and energy into [the Flamborough Head] so it was not an easy decision and I can probably say for council it wasn’t an easy decision for them as well.” Still, he realizes the decision has rankled some members of the preservation society. “I feel for them. I think it’s understandable, it is a piece of heritage but we have to weigh all the information we have and we have to make a decision. And we made a tough decision.” Still, the mayor notes that there’s still a significant heritage component to the area, including Parcels 3 and 4, the Coppersmith’s and Pipe shops, refurbished shipbuilding crane and other vehicles


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Thursday, December 19, 2013 11

built at the historic shipbuilding site. “I would say that our heritage component is equal to or greater than what Granville Island had on their site.” And, as he notes, there are still plans to display the massive 22,000-pound propeller the city purchased back in 2010 from the HMS Rame Head, a sister ship of the Flamborough, that is currently located next to the stern near Site 5. The cost to salvage the prop was just over $90,000. “The propeller is not part of what we are having to dispose of; we are hoping to keep the propeller and have it refurbished and have it part of the site,” says Mussatto. For Miller, the difference between a prop and stern is all about scale. He rolls down the driver’s side window and looks up admiringly at the Flamborough. “It’s exciting, it’s dramatic... an informative object.” He imagines a young child asking dad about the stern and then looking at an information display board with an image of the 441-foot Flamborough with a dotted line indicating the size of the stern in relation to the size of the vessel to put its behemoth size into context. “A concept of what was here. What was built here.” Miller agrees that in its current state the rusted and shrink-wrapped stern is a bit of an eyesore. But, looking over at the yellow crane, which has been resplendently refurbished, he images the same with the Flamborough, its rusty stern painted Royal Navy colours, with a information panel about its history and model class. He calls pieces like this historical “placeholders,” significant buildings and artifacts — ones that have often been documented in newspaper articles, photos, and paintings — that endure today as physical evidence of the past. “You remember these heritage [pieces] and you remove our connection to the past when you remove them.” And he’s not just thinking locally with his vision preserving history. Heritage landmarks aren’t only community assets, they draw visitors and tourists. In his letter to The Outlook, he notes: “Not only do these structures [honour] the important and unique shipbuilding and wartime past of North Vancouver, but their retention and integration into the development of the Lower Lonsdale area would have many positive consequences — by leveraging additional reinvestment in Lower Lonsdale, attracting more visitors and tourists, and creating an area with unique identity, rather than just another generic shopping and eating area.” ****** Peter Miller’s penchant for preserving the past can be traced back to when he was young lad growing up in London, a city steeped in centuries-old history. He vividly recalls visiting Kensington Palace, The Tower of London and Hampton Court Palace, where he’d touch the iron and brickwork and imagine that Henry VIII could have walked there. As a young architect, Miller worked on heritage projects in the U.K. and later Japan before relocating to Vancouver in 1979 to work for the renowned architecture firm Thompson, Berwick & Pratt. He recalls flying to Vancouver for an interview and walking down Robson Street and admiring a block of heritage homes. Five months later when he returned to start his new job, he strolled down the same block and all the houses had been razed. “What happened to the homes?” he asked. The response he got went something like, “Oh they were just a bunch of old houses.” He was floored by the general “lack of awareness and lack of sensitivity to the past.” Of course, not everyone had such a cavalier connection with history. The first Vancouver project he worked on was the ambitious restoration of the Manhattan Building at the corner of Robson and Thurlow that was built in 1907 and “saved by demolition” by its forward-thinking owner. “It’s one of the pleasures of restoring an old building — [maintaining] all the connection to history,” he says noting that he has decades-old photos of the iconic building with streetcars on Robson Street and women walking the streets carrying parasols. Every time he passes the building — which he does regularly, especially when taking visitors sightseeing — he has a certain sense of satisfaction. “I’m very happy to see it still there.” The North Shore Heritage Society, a group he helped start along with David Pike, his wife Gillian Welsh and some others, is determined to do the same in North and West Vancouver. The society was formed back in 2005 as a response “specifically to save a house in West Van, the Hodgson House,” explains Miller. Hastily, they prepared a report for West Van council on the house and its historic value. continued, PAGE 12

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And while the home was eventually sold and barged away, the experience left them “prepared to jump when there was news of another house in jeopardy.” Since then, the society has been involved in promoting the conservation of numerous heritage homes and buildings, including West Van’s Binning House (1939), which is currently at the centre of a legal battle over its sale, the Green-Armytage Residence (1903) at 23rd and Lonsdale and the iconic once-electric-blue heritage building (1912) on West Eighth that “could have been demolished” but has now been refurbished to its past glory. The group now has over 80 members and 200 in total on a distribution list to fan out information about “old buildings” and other heritagerelated matters. To promote local conservation, the group publishes a twice-yearly newsletter, distributes questionnaires to municipal councillors on their attitudes toward heritage, routinely speaks at council meetings to advocate on behalf of heritage buildings, negotiates with owners of heritages sites to keep the structures part of the local streetscape and does media interviews to promote heritage matters. In 2007, the society released its list of the North Shore’s Top 10 Endangered Heritage Sites. Number one on that list was “North

Vancouver Schools,” specially Ridgeway (1911) and Queen Mary (1914). Since that time both have undergone restorations, with Ridgeway (pictured above) already reopened and Queen Mary soon to follow. “There’s another success,” he says of the heritage schools. “Credit for that goes to the parents and teachers of those schools. Initially it was too expensive and a liability and looked what happened… its now an asset.” Miller hasn’t completely given up hope that Flamborough can be saved but his optimism is sinking. “I think that’s the phrase, ‘faint hope,’” he says. Defending heritage sites from demolition can be tireless and thankless work at times, but Miller notes the core group of members on the North Shore “feel that it’s worth it.” “The little that we’ve got left should be treasured.”

Flamborough Head by the numbers 381,000

Total cost the city has paid since 2001 to have the Flamborough stern removed, transported to North Van, moved to its current location and shrinkwrapped

441

Total length (in feet) of the Flamborough Head, which is approximately as long as a Canadian Football League field

11

Top speed for the 8,718-tonne Flamborough Head in knots (20 km/h)

What do you think about the dismantling of the Flamborough Head? “It was of course my dream that we would use the stern of this ship along with the engine and giant propeller as a permanent display attached to a building facing outward towards the sea. That was my vision for the future on the waterfront and it celebrated our shipbuilding past. That ship, the Flamborough Head, that was built on this site during the Second World War and that shipyard was once the economic heart of our community. It could have been a wonderful addition to our waterfront and now that is not to be.” Bob Fearnley Former CNV councillor who played a vital role in acquiring the propeller for the planned Flamborough display

383,000

The number of rivets required to put together the hull of a Victory ship

rejoice! Christmas Services

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Welcoming all to West Vancouver Presbyterian Church to celebrate a timeless story with Carols and Candles, Promise and Peace.

Christmas Eve

7pm – A family/community service of candlelight, carols, choir, instrumental music and the Christmas Story 10pm – A contemplative service of candlelight, carols, choristers and communion 2893 Marine Drive at 29th West Vancouver 604.926.1812 www.wvpres.com

St. Stephen’s Anglican Church CHRISTMAS SERVICES AND EVENTS

December 24th Christmas Eve

4:30 pm Family service 11:00 pm Midnight Service

December 25th Christmas Day 10:00 am Service

Everyone Welcome! Join us in the Joyous Spirit of Christmas Celebration.

885-22nd Street, West Vancouver 604.926.4381

Christmas at

St. Francis-in-the-Wood Sunday, Dec 22nd 5pm Nine Lessons & Carols by Candlelight Tuesday, Dec 24th 4pm Family Communion Around the Crib 8pm

Community Carols

11pm Midnight Mass Wednesday, Dec 25th 10am Family Eucharist

Highlands Christmas Season Christmas Eve Services 4:30pm – Children’s Christmas Pageant 6:30pm – Family Choral Christmas 8:30pm – Hand Bells & Communion 11:00pm – Praise Band & Candlelight Christmas Day Service, 10:00am Edgemont Village Community Christmas Dinner Wednesday, December 25 at 1pm (for reservation call 604.980.6071)

St. Francis-in-the-Wood

4773 South Piccadilly Road, West Vancouver 604 922 3531 • stfrancis@telus.net www.stfrancisinthewood.ca

Highlands United Church 3255 Edgemont Blvd., North Van. www.highlandsunited.org | 604.980.6071


Thursday, December 12, 19, 2013 13

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» TASTING NOTES

Wholehearted holiday wine tips

S

o, I pretty much have two guest columnists this week. You see, last week I’d cast a wide net to a few key wine and restaurant industry pros, looking to get holiday wine recommendations. While it can occasionally be like pulling teeth trying to get busy restaurant folks to drop me a quick email during a hectic time of year with their choices, there are others who embrace the request wholeheartedly, sending me epic manifestos. There’s so much thought and care in some of them, that it would crush me to hack them down to a sentence or two. In saying that, this week I’m letting two of the nicest guys is the business grab the reins around here.

Kurtis Kolt kurtis@kurtiskolt.com

Casa dos Vinhos Selected Rich Madeira | Portugal $28.03 | BC Liquor Stores This recommendation comes from Jason Yamasaki, the mild-mannered, whip-smart sommelier at Chambar. “My favourite part of Christmas is being able to cook for my family for three days straight. Whilst always equipped with a glass of growers Champagne while I’m chopping, peeling, stuffing, and roasting, I am also uniquely armed with an arsenal of fortified wines, my counter always replete with sherry, port, and madeira. The particular madeira I’ve selected is a warming, sweet, and vivid expression of this traditional and relatively unloved fortified wine. Lengthy oxidative winemaking delivers an array of gastronomic flavours that I love to sip alongside candied walnuts and pecans. Why do I love this so much though? I use it in sauces and gravies to reveal a galaxy of flavours that will astound your guests and have them licking their plates. Finally, zest some orange into your best rendition of a butter tart. Pour a splash of this alongside and discover your new favourite winter warmer.” Velenosi 2010 La crima di Morro d’Alba | Italy $20-25 | Private Wine Stores Originally from Leeds, Alex Thornley runs the wine program at Homer Street Cafe & Bar, listing an incredibly sharp and dynamic selection of bottles. “For this holiday season, I’m going with a fairly unusual wine, there are only 150 hectares of the Lacrima grape planted in the Marche region of Italy, and it is shared between 18 producers. Though obscure, the wine is absolutely stunning and is my new wine crush. Don’t be afraid of all the strange words on the front — just buy it, open it, and drink. The naturally thin skin of the Lacrima grape means it has very little tannin, minimal acid, and basically goes down like juice — blueberry juice to be precise. If you like a lighter style of red and are looking for something other than Pinot or Gamay Noir this Christmas, Lacrima could be your new crush, too. Gorgeously expressive, it borders on opulent. It leans towards a New World, fruit-driven style of wine, but is most definitely sleek and sexy with some Old World intrigue. Easy to like, it suggests violets, wild blueberries, raspberries and a hint of purple wine gums on the nose, feels soft, light and silky as it glides across the tongue, and bursts with blueberry and wild red fruits on the palate. You can drink it anytime — there is no need to be paired with food. But it’s also extremely versatile, so if you do pair it with some holiday fare, go with lighter cheeses, turkey, pork or chicken. It is especially good wine to pair with good times and friends with board games on Boxing Day.” As always, if you’re having trouble finding something or just want to say hi, find me via KurtisKolt.com or on Twitter @KurtisKolt.

To read previous Tasting Notes columns visit northshoreoutlook.com

May your Christmas be merry & bright!

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Perfect Pairings:

Kurtis Kolt teams up with City Market Just in time for the holidays, Outlook wine columnist Kurtis Kolt is hunting the aisles of Loblaw’s City Market in North Vancouver in search of the perfect pairings to go along with his weekly wine picks. Now, let’s get pairing: When I was recently walked the City Market aisles, a jar of the PC Black Label Ontario Montmorency Sour Cherry Fruit Spread jumped out at me. I’m a sour cherry nut, but it’s so rare to come across them in any form – and then if you do, what do you do with them? Doing a little web research on the product, I learned the simple trick of making turnovers with a little cream cheese filling inside squares of puff pastry. The simple directions? Fold, seal and bake until flaky and golden. A nip of the Jason’s recommended wine, the Casa dos Vinhos Selected Rich Madeira with that — are you kidding me? Sounds like heaven. Another suggestion was to stir it in with Dijon mustard and wine vinegar, and then brush the mix onto your holiday ham. All of that sounds like it would go down an absolute treat with Alex’s (from Homer Street Cafe & Bar, left) recommendation of the Velenosi 2010 Lacrima di Morro d’Alba. All of those berries mingling together? Lovely. With that wine in particular though, I started thinking of how its juiciness would lap up any salty or smoky foods. Lac Brome Smoked, Dried & Sliced Duck Breast, whether in a pasta or wrapped around figs, would certainly provide a perfect pairing. Combining the duck breast with the sour cherry spread — now that would be the ultimate. I’m thinking either wine would shine.


14 14 Thursday, Thursday,December December19, 19,2013 2013

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» RECIPE

Traditional Irish pudding Lovingly made by the grandmother of Helen Murphy, of Celtic Creations in Lonsdale Quay Ingredients 7oz of butter 12oz currants 8oz raisins 8oz sultanas 2oz mixed peel 1oz chopped almonds 6oz plain flour 2 heaped teaspoons of mixed spice 1 rounded teaspoon of nutmeg 7oz soft brown sugar 2 eggs, beaten Rind and juice of one lemon 1 tablespoon of black treacle 4 tablespoons of Guinness or milk 2 tablespoons of Brandy (optional) Method Combine all ingredients together. This recipe is for a two-pint glass bowl and should be steamed for 6 hours. Make sure to seal it well with parchment paper and make a lid with tinfoil tied with twine. Don’t forget that everyone in the house should stir the pudding before steaming, this will bring good luck for the year ahead.

Helen Murphy Rob Newell photo

Helen’s story My grandmother Elizabeth McCarthy(nee Redmond) was born in Ringsend, Dublin in 1894. Her father was a sea captain and her mother a homemaker to seven children. Her family moved to beautiful West Cork, Bantry Bay when she was young. Her father captained a large ship called the “Princess Beara.” When my grandmother finished school she didn’t go to work but attended the Lace Room in the nearby convent. In later life she received an award from the Taoiseach(President) Charles Haughey for her

eyewear artartinin eyewear Come see our great Holiday gift ideas!

lacework. My grandmother met my grandfather James McCarthy, a Bantry native, in the late 1920s but she had enrolled to study midwifery at the National Maternity Hospital in Dublin. She fulfilled her education and graduated in 1932. She returned to Bantry and married James in 1933. They later had one daughter, my mother Maura McCarthy. They moved to Dublin in 1946 when the factory my grandfather was working in burnt to the ground. My grandfather started working at Boland’s mills and my grandmother worked as a midwife for the Eastern Health Board. She worked on the north side of Dublin and, when needed, in some of the poorer parts of the inner city. I remember her telling stories of delivering babies on newspapers and putting them in open drawers when families had no cribs or bedding. We would often cut up older sheets from home so she could distribute them to families in need. She truly was a remarkable, strongwilled lady, she had time for everybody, she was a good listener and she made changes happen for the better. She delivered her last baby when she was almost 80 years old. She was a beautiful crafter and I owe my love of all things handmade to her. She showed me how to knit, crochet and more importantly how to make a Christmas pudding. Having recently emigrated from Ireland I was lucky to get a job in Celtic Creations on Lonsdale Quay. I am a traditional felt maker creating unique pieces of art with wool fibres and I am sure it was my grandmother’s input that led me on this very happy path.

- Helen Murphy

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Do you know someone who is dedicated to making a difference in the community? Capilano Mall’s Catch the Spirit campaign is looking for “holiday heroes” nominations. Enter anyone who has made a special effort to improve their community. Winners will receive a $500 shopping spree. Details are available at catchthespirit.ca. On the same webpage there is a chance to win one of two $10,000 shopping sprees, as well as $2,500 donated to a charity of your choice. The Catch the Spirit webpage also includes “North Pole Virtual World,” kids’ games, a colouring page and a Christmas cookbook with appies, desserts and main courses.


Thursday, Thursday, December December 19, 19, 2013 2013 15 15

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» GIFT LOCAL

High-five worthy gifts Prepare for a standing ovation on Christmas Day

If the sports fan on your list hasn’t been naughty this year — like last year when he tried watching the basketball game on his smartphone while eating Christmas dinner — then head to Bauer’s Framing and Art in West Vancouver. There, you will find some stunning framed photos from Vintage Sports Images, an online retail store that features original negatives and slides from a wide array of sports. As well as purchasing already printed, framed and matted images, you can also buy a unique negative or slide and have your own print made — making your present a “one-of-akind” photograph. For more information or to order images contact Eric Olsen at sales@vintagesportsimages.com or visit vintagesportsimages.com. Bauer’s Framing and Art is located at 210-16th St.

1. Blair Peters, a partner in Vintage Sports Images, stands beside a limited edition photo of his boyhood idol Bobby Orr that is available at Bauer’s Framing and Art in West Van. Along with some classic images of Number 4, there’s also a Johnny Unitis Black and White (1960s), Roger Maris Colour (1960s), Bobby Orr and Cheevers Colour (1970s). Each costs $455 framed. You can also place orders for other photos that are loaded on an iPad on site until Dec. 21. 2.

A negative of the Toronto Maple Leafs playing in the 1955 Stanley Cup.

» X-MAS DECOR

Deck the halls

I

t’s no secret Christmas is Marie and James Noel’s favourite holiday — their festive last name gives that away. The owners of Bella Doni, a floral and home decor shop in Lower Lonsdale, have some last-minute holiday decorating advice. Consider picking an orchid over a poinsettia for your Christmas flower, says Marie, who calls the brilliant red-and green-leafed plant too common. “An orchid looks great throughout the year and can last forever if you take care of it,” explains Marie. Then there’s the anti-Christmas tree (right) — a curved, lemon cypress “Grinch” tree that’s selling like hot cakes at Bella Doni. The store is also an excellent source for fresh wreaths and garland, which should be ordered a week in advance. Placing a handful of Christmas bulbs

in a bowl is a simple way to add a hint of festivity to a room. Bella Doni carries ornaments, priced between $5 and $15, in a variety of colours, materials and themes that range from the sea to the stars. And, for the host and hostess on your Christmas list, check out Bella Doni’s assortment of candlesticks and wine bottle toppers. Marie recommends Frenchmilled, Christmas-scented “Nutcracker” soaps ($34.95 per box) made from allnatural materials. Bella Doni is located at 117 West First St. and online at belladoni.com.

» PET PRESENTS

Give your fido a treat

W

as your dog not overly excited with the adorable Santa costume you gave him last year? You can make up for it this year with something delicious from North Vancouver-based Red Dog Deli. They’ve got some delicious stocking stuffers, including Lamberoni Stix and Lamberoni Nibbles for dogs that are made of lamb meat, lamb tripe and organic oat fibre treats. They’ve also got lots of delicious treats for your favourite feline. For more go to reddogdeli.com

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16 Thursday, December 19, 2013

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e s a Ple

Mothers Again st Drunk Driving (MAD D Canada) is a Registered C Charitable Org anadian anization whic h is volunteer-d rive and to support n. Their mission is to stop im victims of this paired driving violent crime. 2010 Statistic s:

Call Rudolph for a safe ride home this holiday party season. Operation Red Nose is a free, designated-driver service that offers the convenience of bringing people home in their own vehicles after they have been out drinking.

Drinking and driving can take away everything that matters most to you:

your freedom, your job, your reputation, your future and even your life. Make a commitment to yourself and others to drive sober this holiday season. This heartfelt message is brought to you by the following North Shore businesses:

The program is provided by the North Shore Rotary clubs, whose members, along with 250 total volunteers, donate their time over the five weekends in November and December that Red Nose is operational. There is no cost for the Operation Red Nose service, but donations are accepted. Last Christmas, program volunteers provided 305 safe rides, drove a total of 6,467 kilometres and raised over $18,000 to support youth

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Godey said the program is always in need of volunteers. Operation Red Nose roles include being a designated driver or navigator. There are also opportunities to man the phones and dispatch new calls from Operation Red Nose headquarters at the ICBC Claim Centre on Lloyd Avenue. Anyone wanting to volunteer for the program can call Yazdi at 778-288-8996 or email volunteer@nsorn.org.

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Tobys wishes you a safe & Happy Holiday!

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Nose really brings home the awareness of road safety and the dangers of drinking and driving. Hansen, who is also a District of North Vancouver fire fighter, has responded to the scene of several fatal car accidents that were caused by a drunk driver. “Normally it’s the person that hasn’t been drinking that gets killed,” says Hansen. Operation Red Nose will be in service for December 20 & 21, and on New Year’s Eve. For a safe ride home on the North Shore or Bowen Island, call 604-619-0942 between 9 p.m. and 3 a.m.

Peter Hansen, president of the North VanLions Gate Rotary club, said Operation Red

Please don’t drink and drive. Have a safe, Happy Holiday!

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programs on the North Shore. Artists For Kids and the North Shore Youth Safehouse are perennial recipients of Operation Red Nose donations.

Child Care Centres North Vancouver

Be careful. Be safe.

Merry Christmas & Happy New Year

Thursday, December 19, 2013 17

Wishing you and yours a safe and happy Holiday Season!

• an estimated 2,54 a minimum 1,08 1 individuals were killed in m 2 of these fata (approx. 43%) lities were imp otor vehicle crashes; airment relate d • based on the above statistic, 3.4 - 4.1 Canad impairment-re ians died per d lated crashes ay in • estimated co st of impairmen tproperty dam age-only crash related driving deaths, injuri es and es in 2010 is $2 Your Support 0.62 billion Helps: MADD Canada’ s victim servic es and program than 20,000 vi s help to supp ctims each year ort more , to volunteers, an d to deliver dea train over 300 victim services th notification 15,000 medical training to mo , police, firefig re than hter and victim services perso For more info nnel. rmation abou t MADD Canad visit: www.m a, and to don add.ca ate please

Hosted by Nort h Shore Rotary Clubs, this free, designated-dri ver service gets yo u and your car home safely. La st Christmas, North Shore vo lunteers provi ded 305 safe rides, drove a total o f 6,467 kilometr es and raised al most $18,000 programs on th to support you e North Shore th . Your donation accepted and s are happily greatly appreci ated. Get home fro m your holida y party safely call Operation ... Red Nose - 60 4-619-0942.

Please Have A Safe Holiday Season & Don’t Drink & Drive.

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16 Thursday, December 19, 2013

www.northshoreoutlook.com

www.northshoreoutlook.com

e s a Ple

Mothers Again st Drunk Driving (MAD D Canada) is a Registered C Charitable Org anadian anization whic h is volunteer-d rive and to support n. Their mission is to stop im victims of this paired driving violent crime. 2010 Statistic s:

Call Rudolph for a safe ride home this holiday party season. Operation Red Nose is a free, designated-driver service that offers the convenience of bringing people home in their own vehicles after they have been out drinking.

Drinking and driving can take away everything that matters most to you:

your freedom, your job, your reputation, your future and even your life. Make a commitment to yourself and others to drive sober this holiday season. This heartfelt message is brought to you by the following North Shore businesses:

The program is provided by the North Shore Rotary clubs, whose members, along with 250 total volunteers, donate their time over the five weekends in November and December that Red Nose is operational. There is no cost for the Operation Red Nose service, but donations are accepted. Last Christmas, program volunteers provided 305 safe rides, drove a total of 6,467 kilometres and raised over $18,000 to support youth

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Godey said the program is always in need of volunteers. Operation Red Nose roles include being a designated driver or navigator. There are also opportunities to man the phones and dispatch new calls from Operation Red Nose headquarters at the ICBC Claim Centre on Lloyd Avenue. Anyone wanting to volunteer for the program can call Yazdi at 778-288-8996 or email volunteer@nsorn.org.

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Nose really brings home the awareness of road safety and the dangers of drinking and driving. Hansen, who is also a District of North Vancouver fire fighter, has responded to the scene of several fatal car accidents that were caused by a drunk driver. “Normally it’s the person that hasn’t been drinking that gets killed,” says Hansen. Operation Red Nose will be in service for December 20 & 21, and on New Year’s Eve. For a safe ride home on the North Shore or Bowen Island, call 604-619-0942 between 9 p.m. and 3 a.m.

Peter Hansen, president of the North VanLions Gate Rotary club, said Operation Red

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programs on the North Shore. Artists For Kids and the North Shore Youth Safehouse are perennial recipients of Operation Red Nose donations.

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Be careful. Be safe.

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Thursday, December 19, 2013 17

Wishing you and yours a safe and happy Holiday Season!

• an estimated 2,54 a minimum 1,08 1 individuals were killed in m 2 of these fata (approx. 43%) lities were imp otor vehicle crashes; airment relate d • based on the above statistic, 3.4 - 4.1 Canad impairment-re ians died per d lated crashes ay in • estimated co st of impairmen tproperty dam age-only crash related driving deaths, injuri es and es in 2010 is $2 Your Support 0.62 billion Helps: MADD Canada’ s victim servic es and program than 20,000 vi s help to supp ctims each year ort more , to volunteers, an d to deliver dea train over 300 victim services th notification 15,000 medical training to mo , police, firefig re than hter and victim services perso For more info nnel. rmation abou t MADD Canad visit: www.m a, and to don add.ca ate please

Hosted by Nort h Shore Rotary Clubs, this free, designated-dri ver service gets yo u and your car home safely. La st Christmas, North Shore vo lunteers provi ded 305 safe rides, drove a total o f 6,467 kilometr es and raised al most $18,000 programs on th to support you e North Shore th . Your donation accepted and s are happily greatly appreci ated. Get home fro m your holida y party safely call Operation ... Red Nose - 60 4-619-0942.

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18 Thursday, December 19, 2013 18 Thursday, December 19, 2013

www.northshoreoutlook.com

Âť PURSUIT OF HOPPINESS

The City of North Van gets its first brewery

Wednesday, December 4, 2013 - North Shore News - A29

with a rich Christmas dessert. Another winter seasonal of note is Bridge Brewing’s The Grinch Winter Ale, a delicately spiced dry, yet warming, dark ale with the classic holiday blend of nutmeg, allspice, clove, and the soft flavours of molasses and vanilla, that will keep you cosy through the solstice celebrations. You will also find toasty malty brews from R & B Brewing (Auld Nick), Deep Cove Brewers and Distillers (Smooth Criminal Nitro Oatmeal Stout), and Granville Island Brewing’s very limited release Chocolate Imperial Stout (aged in Jack Daniel’s casks), just to mention three others. Now you know what to ask for from Santa.

GEORGE PAJARI CONTRIBUTOR

T

his Friday (Dec. 20) will see the launch of the first brewery in the City of North Vancouver. Green Leaf Brewing is located at the Lonsdale Quay Market and strives to be an environmentally friendly brewery with, for example, a bar made of reclaimed wood and a brewhouse that reclaims water otherwise lost to evaporation. Founder and director Martin Ebadi sees the Quay as the perfect location for a small craft brewery. “Customers can come to the market to pick up fresh food and now, fresh beer,â€? said Ebadi. “We’re trying, to the extent pos sible, our ingredients to source Mushroom Madness locally and hope to The fungally affected genius  be able to produce an organic beer if we can of Brewmaster Todd Graham get the hops we need.â€? of R & B Brewing, combined Friday will represent a soft with the talents of Chef Hugh launch with their first two brews Â? Carbery made for a palateon offer: a rich dark stout and Aagiftexpanding they will keepofoncask-condiusing. pairing Â?

hop-forward pale ale. tioned mushroom beers matched � A � louder and more rambuncperfectly with mycologically tious grand opening will be infused food at the first (and  ­

scheduled in the new year along weDGEMONT desperately hope, annual) ILLAGE with special events such as brew- Fall Mushroom Beer Feast held PARK ROYAL VILLAGE LYNN VALLEY VILLAGE master dinners in conjunction at The Bottleneck (below the with Quay restaurants. Follow DUNDARAVE VILLAGE DENMAN STREET € Commodore on Granville) last them on twitter or Facebook for month. ‚ � ƒ announcements. The beers included a chante-

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relle crystal weizen wheat beer, a burdock root and nettle Belgian ale, and finally a heavy winter ale with pine mushrooms.The mushrooms, burdock, and nettles were all locally sourced. Inspired, astounding, and delightful. Rumours are that the master is working on some herbal beer recipes for an as-yetunannounced event in 2014. -George Pajari is a BJCP certified beer judge and elected member (ret’d) of the Institute of Brewing, London, UK. Reach him at Open 8am to 10pm VALUE PRICED zythesis@gmail.com 3230 Connaught Crescent North Vancouver, BC, V7R 2V6 CUSTOMER SERVICE: 604 987 7917follow • edgemontmarket.com and him at @ Go online to sign up for our weekly e-flyer. zythesis.

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HE A LTHY living Regular check-ups, early detection key to optimal eye health

According to Ambleside optometrist Dr. Bart McRoberts, who has been in practice for 40 years on the North Shore, the key to optimal eye health is early detection of Sight Threatening Diseases. A couple of the more concerning eye conditions – glaucoma and macular degeneration – can be caught much earlier, thanks to new diagnostic tools such as High Definition Ocular Coherence Tomography – which is basically MRI for your eyes, and Auto Florescence – which allows you to look below the surface of the retina, than was ever possible before.

Thursday, December 19, 2013 19

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The risk of developing glaucoma, dubbed “the thief in the night” because it has no symptoms in the early stages, is another reason early detection is important. “You can lose at least 50 per cent of vision from glaucoma before you would know it,” explains Dr. McRoberts, founder of Optomeyes clinic. Anyone over the age of 40 should be routinely tested for glaucoma, a gradual loss of mid-peripheral vision, where the fibres in the optic nerve slowly die. Eventually, all that is left to look through is a narrow tube.

“Hereditarily, if you have a father with it — your risk goes up. A mother, even more. A sibling; the risk goes way up,” says Dr. McRoberts. The new OCT digital imaging instrument allows Dr. McRoberts to actually measure how thick the optic nerve fibre layers are — and detect the disease five or six years earlier than before possible. So far this high definition scan is only available at a few optometry clinics in B.C., including Dr. McRoberts’ offices. And, as of a month ago, Dr. McRoberts has offered to do genetic testing on people with macular degeneration. The latest research shows that there are two distinct genetic types of this disease and each responds very differently to the recommended supplement treatment. By testing his patients, Dr. McRoberts learns who should take which type of supplements to control or even improve the condition. “It’s going to change everything with macular degeneration treatment, and definitely improve outcomes,” says Dr. McRoberts, of the genetic testing. In general, people aged 65 and older should see their optometrists annually for a dilated eye exam and retinal digital imaging. Those who fall into the 20-65 age category should have their eyes Dr. Bart McRoberts checked every two years. Exceptions to this are people who have particular ocular risk such as diabetics. Annual eye exams are important for youth under the age of 19 because their eyes are constantly changing and growing in those years. “Kids can have large vision changes from year to year,” says Dr. 210-1555 Marine Drive, McRoberts, who adds the advent of technology and computers has created an increase in the number of nearsighted children. There West Vancouver are myopia progression treatments for these children as well. The 604.922.0413 key here is to prevent high prescriptions from occurring. 101-40258 Glenalder Place, One final piece of advice from Dr. McRoberts is ”our practice is Squamish big on ocular nutrition. Eat your leafy greens, Pharmaceutical grade omega-3s and orange peppers, and avoid fried foods.” 604.892.5055

NEXT FEATURE Davies Home Healthcare and Pharmacy has been serving the North Shore with quality medical supplies and pharmaceuticals since 1974. Our expert staff of pharmacists, and technicians can provide you with a full range of products for a healthy life style. We specialize in Mobility, Orthopedics, Home Safety, Ostomy, Diabetic needs and much more. Make Davies Home Healthcare and Pharmacy your first call. Davies delivers to the North Shore! 1401 St. Georges Ave. North Vancouver 604-985-1481 www.daviesrx.com

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20 Thursday, 20 Thursday, December December 19, 19, 2013 2013

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» INSTANT REPLAY

Jerome Pathon and the River City Relay There were big local connections to one of the NFL’s most unforgettable touchdowns

A

rguably the most bizarre – if not the most spectacular – touchdown in the entire 94-year history of the National Football League was a TD scored by a Canadian. Not just any Canadian, mind you, but one from right here in North Vancouver. It was 10 years ago on Dec. 21, 2003, that New Orleans Saints’ wide receiver, Jerome Pathon, a Carson Graham grad from 1993, dove into the end zone to complete an absolutely incredible 75-yard touchdown on the last play of a game against Jacksonville Jaguars. The TD became known as the River City Relay. You can still find it on the Internet by Googling “River City Relay” and “YouTube.” New Orleans, with a won-lost record of 7-7, needed to win this road game in Jacksonville plus their final game of the season the following week at home versus Dallas (which they did win) in order to have a chance for a wildcard playoff berth. Jacksonville was 4-10 which certainly made it a winnable game for New Orleans. lencorben@yahoo.ca However, with a mere

seven seconds left in the fourth quarter, Jacksonville led 20-13. New Orleans did have possession of the ball but it was way back on their own 25-yard line. They needed a miracle touchdown in one play to get the game into overtime. And they got it. But it’s how they got it and what happened next that will forever be ingrained in the memories of those who witnessed the game in person or on TV or who were on the field itself. When the ball was snapped from the 25-yard line to begin the last-gasp play, quarterback Aaron Brooks dropped back to the 18 and heaved a pass to Donté Stallworth along the right sideline at the mid-field stripe. As he caught the ball, he spun 360 degrees and then ran left, picking up a couple of blocks including one from Jerome Pathon as the clock reached .00, making this the final play for certain. At Jacksonville’s 33, Stallworth lateralled the ball to Michael Lewis runService, Quality & Value by Word of Mom ning down the left sideline. Lewis was tripped up at the 25 but managed to hand the ball back to Deuce McAllister. McAllister was swarmed at the Serving the North Shore for 14 Years 20 but somehow was able to lob the ball back across the field. Whether he could actually see Pathon in the centre of the field or not is impossible to tell on the video but Pathon, in

Len Corben

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full stride, caught the hot potato 21 yards from the goal line and dashed for paydirt, taking advantage of a block by Brooks and then outsprinting the last Jaguar defender and diving across the line for an utterly astonishing major. Just as astonishingly, placekicker John Carney – who had made 131 consecutive converts and had missed only once in 230 attempts over the previous 121 games during some 8+ seasons – then miss-kicked the convert that would have put the game into overtime. New Orleans went from absolute elation to complete deflation instantly. Talk about a kick in the stomach. Catching up with Jerome Pathon this week (that’s a pun folks), I learned just how it was that our local lad was able to finish off that magnificently bizarre play. You see, Jerome – who celebrated his 38th birthday on Monday and will be back in town for Christmas by the time you read this – played a lot of soccer and competed in track and field (long and triple jump mostly) as well as football in the Gordon Sturtridge League and at Carson Graham while growing up in North Van. But he also played two seasons of rugby at school while in Grade 9 and 10. He believes it was his experience on the rugby field that led to that New Orleans’ TD. “I think it stems back to my days at Carson Graham and my short career as a rugby player,” he says. “Instincts really just kicked in. You know, as soon as I threw the block for Donté and realized he was going to get tackled, I got back up and just kind of trailed the play as a back would in rugby. I didn’t know where the ball was actually going to

get to me but still to this day – and I’ve spoken to Deuce McAllister – I have no idea how he managed to see me because he was being tackled. “When I caught the ball, I just looked directly straight ahead of me and gave everything I got to get to the end zone.” That’s Jerome diving unmolested over the line for the TD in the photo accompanying this story. Did he hear Jaguar footsteps behind him or was the dive in celebration of the impossible? “On the previous three downs that we had, we were just running verticals,” he explains. “I had run probably the equivalent of 400 yards before that play even happened. People don’t realize how exhausted we were, especially me. When I caught the ball, I had felt Aaron Brooks’ block. I didn’t know who else was behind me. “And so,” he adds, laughing at the thought, “I didn’t want to be the guy who got tackled at the two-yard line. So I gave it everything I got. If the guy was going to tackle me, he

Happy Holidays

As you get ready to enjoy the holiday season, your North Shore fire departments would like to remind you about fire safety. Candles: Candle related fires are a year round concern, but especially during the winter season. Use them under careful supervision and remember to extinguish all candles before leaving the room. Lights & Decorations: Try to use decorations that are flame-resistant and check all lights strings for worn or broken cords. Always turn off light strings before going to bed or leaving the house. Smoke Alarms & Carbon Monoxide Detectors: Make sure your smoke alarms and CO detectors are functioning properly. Practice your fire escape plan and make sure your chimney and vents are properly maintained.

In case of emergency call 911

Seasons Greetings from your local fire departments

NORTH VANCOUVER DISTRICT

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WEST VANCOUVER DISTRICT

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was going to tackle me in the end zone. It wasn’t going to be on the two-yard line.” Now there’s something else rather amazing about that long-ago contest. Only two North Shore-raised athletes have ever played in the NFL, Pathon and Sentinel’s Rob Meier, a twoway standout

Thursday,December December19, 19,2013 2013 21 21 Thursday,

with the Spartans who went on to play 10 years with Jacksonville as a defensive tackle. Meier was playing the day of that River City Relay, though he wasn’t on the field when the touchdown was scored. “Football players’ memories aren’t usually very good,” he quips over the phone from his home in Jacksonville on Sunday after taking part in the Jaguars’ annual alumni weekend, “but, yeah, I remember that play. It was pretty shocking.” But there’s still more. Mitch Berger of North Delta also played in the game for New Orleans. It would take a bit of research, since Berger had a 14-year NFL career with seven different teams, but it’s possible that the River City Relay game is the only time three B.C. boys have ever played in the same NFL game. You should also know that Berger was a major part of the game, kicking off to begin the game, punting three times and kicking off after the Saints’ first touchdown. He was also the holder of the ball on the miss-kick.

This is episode 493 from Len Corben’s treasure chest of stories – the great events and the quirky – that bring to life the North Shore’s rich sports history.

Cut out to be a star - Former Carson Graham athlete, Jerome Pathon went on to star as a wide receiver for the New Orleans Saints. Pathon family collection


22 22 Thursday, Thursday,December December19, 19,2013 2013

www.northshoreoutlook.com

FESTIVE GIVING - Principal Brad Lund (back, from left), and teachers Tina Brown and Melissa Naccarato helped Caulfeild elementary students, including (clockwise from left) Annika, Kyra, Maya, Elizabeth and Maya, make Christmas crackers to put in hampers for those in need. Michaela Garstin photo

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Santa looking to swap outdated ride for super economy sleigh NORTH POLE - Driveway can exclusively reveal that Santa Claus has been visiting local dealerships kicking tires—ahem, rails—in his search for a new ride. Ever conscious of the increasing cost of gas and effect his multi-million-kilometre Christmas flight has on the environment, Santa seems to have opted for 2014 Ford Transit Connect Wagon for his next sleigh. The wagon promises a fuel economy of 7.84 L/100 kms fuel economy,which means the sleigh will be kinder to the environment than his current means of transporting gifts to the world’s children. As an added benefit, the EcoBoost engine – which is finely tuned for high-speed performance – would offer speeds much faster than Santa ever travelled in his former 36-hoofpowered sleigh. The expected upgrade comes as a record number of children earn spots on the “nice” list, increasing the payload weight of his bag of gifts beyond the normal tow rating of his nine-reindeer team. Santa told me that changing his mode of transportation will not compromise his ability to remain true to his mission. “My goal is and always has been

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giving presents to good the nine reindeer look girls and boys, and a new forward to some time sleigh will make that off. Every year, the process more effective,” flying animals travel he says. “Let’s face it, 200,194,557 kms and every year there are more they’d like some time to children who earn presrest, he says, explaining ents. Things are simply there are still splinters getting out of control, embedded in his hoofs and my old sleigh just from a particular wooden My goal is and isn’t going to be able to roof in northern BC. always has been hack it much longer. With “You really can’t beat giving presents to the new sleigh, I will be this new sleigh,” says able to travel faster and good girls and boys, Goddard. “It offers carry more toys.” and a new sleigh will outstanding fuel econFord engineers develomy without sacrificing oped the Transit Connect make that process power. It even offers more effective. Wagon sleigh concept an electric windshield weeks after hearing of defroster, making short Santa Santa’s dilemma during work of icy windshields cold weather testing in in wintry conditions. So, the North Pole. if there’s a foggy Christmas Eve, we “This is a winning situation for all,” won’t need a red-nosed reindeer to says Darren Goddard, chief engineer guide Santa around the world.” for Ford Transit Connect Wagon. “The Some extras appear to have swung increased efficiency means added time Santa in the direction of the Transit for Santa to enjoy milk and cookies at Connect. SYNC with MyFord Touch stops. His new ride will offer 100 cubic offers a touch screen display with feet of cargo space and versatility to navigation so Santa can easily find haul up to 2,000 pounds, which Santa all the good children, even in more will need.” remote areas. Reindeer spokesperson Dasher says The child observation mirror would

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allow him to keep a close eye on his gifts in the second and third row. From its 60/40 three-passenger second-row bench seat through fold-flat second- and third-row seating with third-row independent fore-and-aft sliding capability, the wagon quickly adapts to accommodate multiple combinations of elves and presents. The MyKey programmable ignition key restricts maximum speed should a mischievous elf get behind the wheel while Claus is down a chimney leaving gifts. With eight cupholders, Claus and his elves would have plenty of space to take along a few glasses of milk as they continue through their busy night. Rain-sensing wipers would keep Claus on the move, as there’s always a chance he’ll encounter nasty weather. “As always, we are busy making toys and checking long lists,” says Santa. “That said, Merry Christmas to all!” Of course, Mrs. Claus will have the final say on this purchase because, as any dealership owner will tell you, women make the final decision in 80 per cent of new vehicle purchases. Keep your eyes peeled Tuesday night to see if Santa got his Christmas wish.

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Safety Tip: If you’re travelling across our province to spend time with family this holiday season, be realistic about travel times and check out the road conditions via DriveBC.ca ahead of time so you can prepare yourself and your vehicle for any challenging weather you may encounter.

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drivewayBC.ca


24 Thursday, December 19, 2013

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driveway

2014 Mitsubishi Mirage Even though we have high fuel prices in Canada, the trend is away from small fuel-efficient cars to larger vehicles. Subcompact and even compact sales are down but sales of small SUVs and even mid-sized vehicles are up. There are a couple of things at play here. The first is the stronger (not so much in the last two months) Canadian dollar over the last several years, which has allowed carmakers to jam more content into their cars and often the retail price has dropped too. The second is that vehicles are becoming more fuel efficient, so buying a slightly bigger car isn’t much of a hardship. With this as a backdrop, it is interesting to see that Mitsubishi has introduced a three-cylinder fuel saving car at the smallest end of the market.

Looks The Mirage is sold in two trim levels; the base starts at $12,498 and comes pretty sparsely equipped. It’s a small car with a little price tag. The much bigger Nissan Versa is cheaper at $11,898 and has buckets more power. The car that most people will choose is the Mirage SE which offers many more goodies, but the price jumps dramatically to $15,398 and with the automatic transmission it lands at $16,598. At this price, there are plenty of options in the subcompact class. Styling is not what I would call eye-catching. Cars like the Ford Fiesta or the Kia Rio have much more appeal and features for similar money to this SE Mirage. Zack Spencer

Inside On the plus side, the Mirage SE does come nicely equipped. The front driver’s seat has adjustment and both front seats have very good seat heaters that bring your backside up to the appropriate temperature in short order. The centre cluster is nicely finished and it features Bluetooth with streaming audio. There is an auxiliary jack but no USB jack to charge your phone. The back seat is small and the rear cargo area is what one might expect from a little car. But this vehicle does not live in a vacuum. The Kia Rio, with more features, like satellite radio, is only a $1,000 more and is way up on space and horsepower. The Nissan Versa Note is massive in comparison, and for $1,700 more has push button start and even a backup camera. So yes, the Mirage is nicely equipped and has a good price but there are other options out there that are as good if not better.

Drive What this little car was designed to do is deliver impressive fuel economy. This is achieved by placing a 3-cylinder engine under the hood and matching it to either a 5-speed manual transmission or a continuously variable transmission (CVT). With just 74hp, this car is way down on power

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The 2014 Mirage has a very low starting price and comes nicely equipped. zack spencer compared to the rest of the subcompact set, even the Fiat 500 has 101hp and the Nissan Versa has 109hp. This combination of small packaging and small engine deliver a rating of 5.3L/100km in the city and 4.4L on the highway. In my mostly city driving I was achieving 7L/100km. The problem with such a small engine is that it often needs to be pushed hard to accelerate and pass other traffic. The engine and CVT are loud, especially when the car is cold. The steering is very light for easy maneuverability but at higher speeds it feels too vague. This car is happy cruising because the engine settles down to a lower RPM and the noise level drops. Ask this car to perform and it’s an experience filled with noise and vibration.

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www.northshoreoutlook.com

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2014 GMC Acadia Denali: Full-size luxury The 2014 GMC Acadia Denali is truly a full-size crossover vehicle. That’s right, an eight-passenger crossover that is big enough to haul eight adults and still have room to store your gear. Saturday is my usual run around day; picking up things, dropping off people, some of whom I don’t know but someone in my family has volunteered me to drive anyway. You know the kind of day, the one that finds me buying things that we don’t need but can’t live without, returning things that apparently we can live without, and providing hourly updates to my wife on what I have accomplished thus far. Hectic and stressful. Well, this particular Saturday I had the Acadia Denali and with a few hours driving this vehicle I was actually relaxed. Luxurious seating and a premium Bose stereo system with steering wheel controls that drowned out all the chatter from the back seats. It also came in handy for when they tried to include me in the conversation; with a simple push of the volume button I could yell back “sorry, I can’t hear you.” All three rows receive the same level of luxury. French stitching on all of the leather seats with a choice of colours, Ebony or Cocoa Dune. The second row seats are a SmartSlide flat-folding 60/40 split bench while the third row is a 60/40 split bench that folds flat as well. The third row is surprisingly comfortable and has enough leg room for adults. The steering wheel is leather wrapped with mashifted into manual mode. hogany wood grain trim; it also features a tilt and Pump frequency: 13.3/ 8.8 L/100 km (City/ telescopic steering column. The centre of the dash Highway) is the location for the colour touch Radio/NavigaWarranty support: Basic 3 year/ 60,000 km tion screen with IntelliLink. A 165 mm (6.5”) colour Power-train 5 year/ 160,000 km touch screen display, AM/FM stereo with CD player, Roadside assistance 5 year/ auxiliary audio input jack, Bluetooth 160,000 km streaming audio, hands free calling and At first, I was a little skeptical a rear seat entertainment system. about this vehicle but after the If you’re excited about cup holders then first few kilometres, I changed hold on to yourself, this vehicle has 12. my mind and found it to be I know because I had to clean each one. very comfortable and fun to Twelve in an eight-seater, go figure. drive. Although there is lots of The Acadia comes standard with room inside it does not give the driver and front passenger airbags, impression of a big SUV, and seat mounted side impact bags and At first, I was it manoeuvres quite well. With side curtain air bags. Traction control a little sceptical the latest technologies added, and stability control with roll stability I found it easy to use and very about this vehicle control are also standard. Forward useful. Shoulder checks are collision alert, lane departure warning, but . . . after the something I do by habit, but rear cross traffic alert and side blind first few kilometres, with the side blind zone alert zone alert are some of the latest I found it to be a feature it is like having someone technologies that have gone into this else take a second look, which is very comfortable vehicle. comforting. Power: and a fun to drive Sticker price: $57,695 The 3.6 Litre V6 engine puts out 288 horsepower at 6,300 rpm with 270 ft vehicle. ian.harwood@drivewaybc.ca pounds of torque. The transmission Ian Harwood GMC Acadia Denali offers a luxury ride, inside and out. Submitted photoS is a 6-speed automatic that can be

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» COMMUNITY

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‘Now That’s Ugly’ It’s that time of the year again: Ugly Christmas Sweater Day

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riday (Dec. 20) is Ugly Christmas Sweater Day, as proclaimed by the mayors of both North Van municipalities. Raise money for the Children’s Wish Foundation of Canada by wearing your hideous holiday sweater — and have fun doing it. You can purchase your $5 Ugly Christmas Sweater Day button online at nowthatsugly. com. Now That’s Ugly Society co-founder Jordan Birch started the annual tradition six years ago in his living room, after inviting his friends to wear their ugliest Christmas sweater to a party he was hosting. Since then his non-profit society has raised $50,000 for various charities including private donations to cancer-stricken families, Basics for Babies and the Union Gospel Mission. While it was an unusual request, North Van district Mayor Richard Walton said he is happy to support any initiative that creates goodwill. “This one is really fun, it makes people laugh,” said Walton. Meanwhile, North Van city mayor Darrell Mussatto echoed Walton’s sentiments, saying campaign organizers are doing their part by spreading goodwill to other people. An Ugly Christmas Sweater Day wrapup party will be held at the Commodore Ballroom tomorrow night (Dec. 20) at 8 p.m. -Outlook staff

Clockwise from left, Ugly Christmas Sweater Day co-founder Jordan Birch, North Van District Mayor Richard Walton, North Van UCSD organizer David Reeve and North Van City Mayor Darrell Mussatto.

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www.northshoreoutlook.com www.northshoreoutlook.com spring with the top 19 players making the cut. Academy participants would attend classes in the morning and then head down the road to the NSWC interest,” explained Jefferson. in the afternoon for hockey instruction in areas that Starting in September, two streams of students, include defensive tactical training, offensive skills 40 in total, will receive dance training in a variety and goaltender development. There is also dry land of styles — including ballet, jazz and hip hop — and training and nutritional as well as career counselling qualify for Royal Academy of Dance and PE credits. embedded into the program. Pilates, yoga, and Capoeira, a Brazilian martial art Competing in the E15 league, the academy stuthat fuses elements of dance, acrobatics and music, dents would play 40 to 50 games per season against will also be practised by the students. teams from Washington, Alberta and across B.C. Open to those in grades 8 to 12, the dance acadThree short-listed head coaches have experiemy is designed for serious performing arts ence in leagues ranging from Junior A, the students. The schedule, which has them in Western Hockey League to Europe. the dance studio every other afternoon for an Oldenborger, a WHL veteran himself, hour and a half, allows the academy particisaid there is no question the Sutherland pants to remain in a traditional high school academy will produce high-caliber hockey setting and study alongside their peers. players. “This way they can balance their workload Equally important to the success of the better,” said Jefferson. academy is ensuring the Sonia Ellis, owner of the acclaimed hockey players maintain Seymour Dance school with a 40-year history their grades, specifically on the North Shore, is thrilled about her new Sonia Ellis a C-plus average, added partnership with the school district. Oldenborger. PE credit is “I am excited about the opportunity this given to those participating brings to students who wish to dance during in the academy. school hours and being able to earn high school credE15 hockey programs are currently its at the same time,” said Ellis, adding she sees many offered in the Delta, Abbotsford and students struggling to match their schedules. Burnaby school districts. For its part, The dance academy, which costs $155 per month, the North Van school district is hoping will be offered out of Windsor secondary, located withthe E15 hockey academy, which carries in walking distance to the Seymour Dance studio. In an annual cost of $13,500 per player, the next three years, 96 Seymour Dance students are will attract students from beyond its scheduled to enter high school at Windsor. borders. Meanwhile, the NSWC and the school district are There is a hurdle the NSWC will hopeful an elite Midget-level (E15) hockey academy have to overcome before the academy will start in September. can be approved. At a public meetNSWC director of hockey operations Jeff ing on Nov. 26, the school board voted Oldenborger, who put forward the proposal, said to support the partnership between the E15 league fills the void in player development Sutherland and the NSWC. However, between the Midget and Major Midget levels. the board is also awaiting the out“Midget is the first year where they go to a threecome of the labour dispute between year age gap,” said Oldenborger, explaining in some Canadian Union of Public Employees cases an underdeveloped 15-year-old might be going (CUPE) members and the NSWC that up against a mature 17-year-old on the ice. has been ongoing since May, before Those in the minor hockey community are findthey make a final decision on the acading few Midget players bring the strength and size to emy. compete at the next level. The school district also has a basketThe new NSWC hockey academy — which is affiliball academy, to be offered at Seycove ated with Hockey B.C. and Hockey Canada Sports secondary, in the pipeline. Jefferson Schools — allows Grade 10 Sutherland secondary students to join a highly-competitive league of strictly said, while they are just finalizing the details of the partnership, Seycove was 15-year-old players. Tryouts would be held in the continued, PAGE 4

given special consideration because of its position in the Seymour area where only 25 per cent of the NVSD’s total enrolment comes from. Approximately 800 students are enrolled in “enhanced programs” in the NVSD. That educational smorgasbord includes a digital media academy, a culinary program, sports academies, as well as Advanced Placement and International Baccalaureate programs — to name five specialized areas of study.

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INDEX IN BRIEF FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...............1-8

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FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS 7

OBITUARIES

TRAVEL 74

TIMESHARE

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS ...9-57

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 115

EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT/EDUCATION 160

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114

OIL & GAS INDUSTRY GUARANTEED Job Placement

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

EXPERIENCED CLASS 1 Drivers, F/T, P/T needed for California & Arizona produce hauling, excellent pay and benefits+ safety bonus and home time. Call Jerry or Brian 1-877-539-1750.

HIGHWAY OWNER OPERATORS $3500 SIGNING BONUS Van Kam’s group of companies req. Highway linehaul owner operators based in our Surrey terminal for runs throughout BC and Alberta. Applicants must have winter and mountain driving experience/training. We offer above average rates and an excellent employee benefits package. To join our team of professional drivers, email a detailed resume, current driver’s abstract and details of your truck to: careers@vankam.com or Call 604-968-5488 or Fax: 604-587-9889 Only those of interest will be contacted. Van Kam is committed to Employment Equity and Environmental Responsibility.

115

GENERAL LABOURERS

EDUCATION

INTERIOR HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATOR SCHOOL. NO Simulators. In-the-seat training. Real world tasks. Weekly start dates. Job board! Funding options. SIGN UP ONLINE! iheschool.com 1-866-399-3853

• Labourers • Tradesmen • Class 1 Drivers

Call 24Hr. Free Recorded Message 1-888-213-2854

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. INCOME TAX PROBLEMS? Have you been audited, reassessed or disallowed certain claims by Canada Revenue Agency? Call Bob Allen @ 250-542-0295 35yrs. Income Tax experience, 8.5yrs. with Revenue Canada. Email: r.gallen@shaw.ca C- 250-938-1944

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 287

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

329 PAINTING & DECORATING Renovate Now 604-451-0229

www.paintspecial.com 604.339.1989 Lower Mainland 604.996.8128 Fraser Valley Running this ad for 8yrs

PAINT SPECIAL 3 rooms for $299, 2 coats any colour

Always Done Right With Integrity.

Complete Dry-wall & Renovation services. Textured ceiling specialist. Phone Steve (604)613-4861

320

MOVING & STORAGE

MOUNTAIN MOVERS- Your trusted choice for residential moving services. (778)378-6683

AFFORDABLE MOVING www.affordablemoversbc.com

$45/Hr

338

PLUMBING

LOCAL PLUMBER $45 Service Call Plumbing, Heating, Plugged Drains. Mustang Plumbing 778-714-2441 BRO MARV PLUMBING 24/7 Plumbing, heating, plugged drains BBB. (604)582-1598, bromarv.com 10% OFF if you Mention this AD! *Plumbing *Heating *Reno’s *More Lic.gas fitter. Aman: 778-895-2005

From 1, 3, 5, 7 & 10 Ton Trucks Licensed ~ Reliable ~ 1 to 3 Men Free Estimate/Senior Discount Residential~Commercial~Pianos

• Hot water tanks • Furnaces • Broilers • Plugged Drains 778-862-0560

604-537-4140

Ray Johnson Plumbing, Heating, Gas & HVAC. Serving North Shore Since 1940. 24/7. 604-988-4121

LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE

NIGHT TIME Restaurant Cleaners needed 7 nights/wk, lower mainland area. (604)572-0070

1PRO MOVING & SHIPPING. Across the street - across the world Real Professionals, Reas. Rates. Best in every way! 604-721-4555.

134

329 PAINTING & DECORATING

HOTEL, RESTAURANT, FOOD SERVICES

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

CRESCENT Plumbing & Heating Licensed Residential 24hr. Service

COOK, Genji Japanese Restaurant (North Vancouver). F/T, 1-2yrs exp. High School Grad. $15-18/hr Fax: 604-980-6886 WANTED F/T Cook at SUSHI DEN Rest. 609 Abbott St. Vancouver. 2 yrs. exp., high school diploma. wage: $2240/mth. 40hrs/wk. Apply: sushiden94@gmail.com duties: cook Japanese meal, plan menu, create item. Staff training.

142 OFFICE SUPPORT/CLERKS EVENCE Ltd is a furniture supply company and we are looking for an administrative assistant for our busy office. This position requires strong organizational skills, attention to detail and good interpersonal skills. Duties include but are not limited to data entry, reception and production administration. The Successful candidate will: -Have strong analytical and communication skills, -Be a self-starter who is able to work with minimal supervision, -Have a sound knowledge of MS Office (Excel, Word, Outlook) Candidates with more than 2 years experience will be given preference.Salary is very attractive with other benefits attached. Please forward resume and cover letter to tass@offurntre.com for consideration.

115

EDUCATION

Need CA$H Today? Own a vehicle? Borrow up to $25,000 Snapcarcash.com 604-777-5046

188

LEGAL SERVICES

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.

125

FOSTER/SOCIAL CARE

125

FOSTER/SOCIAL CARE

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 260

ELECTRICAL

Lic. Electrician A+, BBB member Expert trouble shooter, All types of Electrical work 24/7 604-617-1774

Become a PLEA Family Caregiver. PLEA provides ongoing training and support. A young person is waiting for an open door...make it yyours. caregiving@plea.bc.ca 604.708.2628 w w w. p l e a . c a

115

EDUCATION

115

EDUCATION

115

EDUCATION

HEALTH CARE ASSISTANT Our HCA program is for students with strong wills and warm hearts. Learn how 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

110 -

CALL EAST VAN: 604.251.4473 OR VISIT SPROTTSHAW.COM


www.northshoreoutlook.com www.northshoreoutlook.com

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES 353 ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

PETS 477

PETS

REAL ESTATE 603

RENTALS

ACREAGE

736

10% DISCOUNT. MG Roofing & Siding. CA. Re-roofing, New Roof Gutters.

SOUTH SURREY Short Term or Long term

604-812-9721

Sold Your House? Downsizing? Renovating? Just bring Your Clothes.

GL ROOFING. Cedar/Asphalt, Flat roofs, WCB Clean Gutters - $80. 604-240-5362. info@glroofing.ca

Fully Furnished & Equipped Like New Townhouse. Only 3 years old. Immaculate Deluxe, 2 bdrm. + Rec. Room/Office + 2 Full Bath T/House. Flr. to ceiling storage + storage rm. in garage. 6 s/s appli. d/w, w/d, Garburator. Crown Mouldings, 9ft. ceilings, H/W laminate flooring and slate tile. Gas F/P & Alarm. 1 car garage parking. Covered patio lower & outdoor patio upper. Amenities room incls. full gym, outdoor hot tub & pool. Walk to Morgan Heights shopping. NO Smoking inside & NO Pets! $2350/month. Available March 1.

Great Pyrenees pups, female, 1st shots, parents on site, ready now $600. Call (604)798-5069 LABRADINGER cross pups, ready to go born Oct 17, $500/each. Call (604)845-3972 LOVE BIRDS. 5 baby peach faced love birds.1 month old. Like being together. $50/pair or $75 single bird. 604-859-5752 (Abbotsford) 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 PATTAR ROOFING LTD. All types of Roofing. Over 35 years in business. 604.588.0833

356

RUBBISH REMOVAL

HOMES FOR RENT

P/B GERMAN ROTTWEILERS 3 female pups. Vet ✓. Ready to go. $500/each. 778-899-3326 TOY YORKI-POOH, 2mos old. Paper trained, shots and dewormed, 2 lbs. Mom & Dad - 5lbs ea. $700. 604-351-3347

Beautiful 2 acre South Island property, homes and garden $715,000 www.CobbleHillHome4Sale.com

250 743 9882

625

FOR SALE BY OWNER

604.488.9161

LADYSMITH HANDYMAN Special. 3bdrms up, 1bdrm suite down. Owner carries $1200 month (250)753-0160.

TRANSPORTATION 810

YORKSHIRE Terrier Puppies. 2 males, ready to go. Shots, dewormed. $1200 ea. (604)304-1131

AUTO FINANCING

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE 548

FURNITURE

www.rugcanada.com

JUNK REMOVAL By RECYCLE-IT! 604.587.5865 www.recycleitcanada.ca

PETS 477

Tribal, afghan persian rugs at great prices

PETS

Blue Italian Mastiff & Matiff/Boxer X pups, ready for good homes, view parents, vet checked/1st shots, $500. Text to view (604)819-2697 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 CHIHUAHUAS, tiny tea cups, ready to go now, 2 males. $650. Call 604794-7347 Chocolate Labradoodle Puppies non-shedding, multi generation. Ready soon! $995. 604-355-9881. GERMAN SHEPHERD Pups & young adults. Quality German & Czech bloodlines. 604-856-8161.

Tel: 604-299-3324 560

MISC. FOR SALE

DISCONNECTED PHONE? National Teleconnect Home Phone Service. No One Refused! Low Monthly Rate! Calling Features and Unlimited Long Distance Available. Call National Teleconnect Today! 1-866-443-4408. www.nationalteleconnect.com. HOT TUB (SPA) COVERS. Best price. Best quality. All shapes & colours available. 1-866-652-6837 www.thecoverguy.com/newspaper? 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

NANAIMO 3 HOUSES. Ocean & City views. Reas. Down! Owner carries . 250-753-0160 Townhouse for Sale. Abbotsford. 2 floors, 1660 sq ft per floor. Walk out bsmt. Upper floor view of mtns, Matsqui flats & Mission. 3/bdrms, 2 car garage. Call to view. 1 (604)856-8177 or 604-308-5489

627

HOMES WANTED Need A Vehicle! Guaranteed Auto Loan. Apply Now, 1.877.680.1231 www.UapplyUdrive.ca

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

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

autocredit 911

821 CARS - SPORTS & IMPORTS 2007 MERCEDES. A luxury car like no other. This fully loaded Mercedes S550 4-Matic S class. Premium and comfort package includes - navigation, voice command, heated and cooled seats, power rear shades and blinds, premium sound system, panoramic roofs both front and rear. Absolutely has it all. Very clean inside and out. No accidents. 150,000 km. Asking $29,500 OBO. Contact me via email for further information at:

jsarowa@shaw.ca or 604-897-1546

845

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

TOP CA$H PAID TODAY For SCRAP VEHICLES! 2 hr. Service www.a1casper.com (604)209-2026

#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 The Scrapper

CASH FOR X-MAS CASH for all Vehicles FREE Towing QUICK Service ALWAYS Available 778-865-5454

Thursday, December 19, 2013 31 Thursday, December 19, 2013 31


32 Thursday, December 19, 2013

www.northshoreoutlook.com

y a d i l o H h s e r F ! s e p i c Re Sweet & Nutritious, California Grown

Yams (3lb bag)

$1.00/bag

*Reg Price $2.99/bag Valid with coupon only at all Kin’s locations

www.kinsfarmmarket.com/recipes

Valid December 18th to 22nd, 2013

Limit One Per Family - While Quantities Last - 5522

Get Your 2014 Calendar Today! Prices effective: December 18th to 22nd, 2013 *While Quantities Last Fresh & Nutritious

Sweet & Fresh

Broccoli Crowns

Red Seedless Grapes

California Grown

California Grown

$1.29/lb

$1.99/lb

Fresh & Nutritious

Orange, Yellow & Red Field Peppers

$1.69/lb Mexico Grown

Sweet & juicy

Sweet & Fresh

Sweet & Juicy

Korean Mandarins

Grape Tomatoes

Large Navel Oranges

Korea Grown

for $5.00

California Grown

99¢/lb

3 boxes

69¢/lb

Mexico Grown

Capilano Mall

Lynn Valley Centre

Park Royal

122 - 1199 Lynn Valley Rd. Near Save-On-Foods 604.986.1382

496 Park Royal South Behind White Spot 604.922.8926

Lonsdale Quay

OPEN Same as mall hours

OPEN Same as mall hours

OPEN 9 am to 6 pm everyday

*FREE 2 HR PARKING*

20 - 935 Marine Dr. Across from Walmart 604.904.0257

Check our website for holiday hours!

123 Carrie Cates Court North-east of First floor 604.988.6969

Visit website for store hours


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