Sooke News Mirror, April 16, 2014

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SOOKE

SOOKE NEWS MIRROR - Wednesday, april 16, 2014

laMpWOrK

lori steel makes beads out of glass. page B1

editorial

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entertainment

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sports/stats

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MIRROR Classifieds 18 • 75¢

Sooke is Selling!

Tammi Dimock

2013 Sooke Home Sales: 304 2014 Sooke Home Sales: 60 TAMMI DIMOCK

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Black Press C O M M U N I T Y

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Council backs away from MMPF

Concerns seen to out weigh benefits Pirjo Raits

Sooke News Mirror

An amendment to zoning Bylaw 582 would have seen Medical Marijuana Production Facilities as permitted uses in rural, agricultural and industrial zones in the District of Sooke. The amendment had already passed unanimously through first and second reading in February, 2014, but at the April 14 council meeting some members of council backed away from endorsing the bylaw. Amendments also included definitions of “horticulture” and “Medical Marijuana Production Facilities (MMPF).” A public hearing was held on April 14 to guage the public sentiment on the zoning amendment. Only one person stood up to speak to the issue. Michael Nyikes, president of the Sooke Region Chamber of Commerce, stated investors had met with the chamber and had multi-millions of dollars to spend on medical marijuana production facilities. “It is an economic development oppor-

tunity,” said Nyikes. “It creates local jobs and local convenience and additional tax revenue.” There were comments made about the tax revenue from those agricultural properties versus commercial tax revenue. If the property is used for agriculture, ie: MMPFs, then the tax rate is calculated accordingly. It would not be commercial. A motion was made by Councillor Herb Haldane to keep all MMPFs in the Agricultural Land Reserve. Discussion ensued on the agricultural zones located in the Whiffin Spit area and the possibility that MMPFs could be located there. Mayor Wendal Milne stated he was worried about the impact on neighbours if MMPFs were attached to a specific zone. Councillor Kerrie Reay said she felt this whole MMPF issue was moving too quickly and that marijuana was still an illegal drug. There was discussion on the rights of people who are already growing medical marijuana for themselves. Councillor Rick Kasper said he did not want to see “people’s

Shelly Davis

rights trampled.” It was made clear that on issues of what happens on ALR land, the Agricultural Land Commission was in charge and their authority trumped the district’s. Concerns were raised by referral agencies as to location of MMPFs, as in proximity to regional parks and trails, setbacks, access to site in case of emergency, hazardous materials on site and the need for a fire safety plan. Planner Gerard LeBlanc said that restrictions could be put into place in the bylaw to limit where MMPFs could be located. In March the Federal Court granted an interlocutory constitutional exemption allowing production of medical marijuana in a home or private dwelling legal, thereby preserving the rights of authorized users and producers. This would be for a set period before it came before the court again. In the end vote, it was a tie and the motion was defeated. Council made a motion to wait until the federal court case is settled to deal with this issue - in about nine months.

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Pirjo Raits photo

Fun for young and young at heart

Top, residents at Ayre Manor held a craft sale on April 10. Enjoying themselves, left to right, are 100-year-old Louise Heywood, Gwen Towell, Letha Andersen and Merna Fleming. Left, Jump Rope for Heart participants had a blast at Ecole Poirier on April 11. Britt Santowski photos

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Wednesday, April 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR

Wednesday, april 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR

Looking Back

A look back at what made the news in Sooke over the years. April 15, 2009 Construction turnaround not expected until 2011 Greater Victoria had a jaw-dropping monthto-month growth in the value of building permits but a marked slump in the number of new homes being built. At first blush, the two sets of construction figures released this week paint a contradictory picture of how the economic downturn is playing out here. The explanation is that the staggering 270 per cent jump in the value of building permits issued in February came from a single mega-project. April 14, 2004 Sooke receives another grant: $1.9 million for Highway 14 upgrades The District of Sooke shot and scored. Three times. Thursday morning, David Anderson, federal minister of the Environment and senior minister for BC, announced Sooke will receive $1.9 million for upgrades to two kilometres of Highway 14 though the community core from just west of Atherley Close to Charters Road. It is the third grant the municipality has netted under the Canada-BC Infrastructure program in the past year. Sooke also received $11.6 million last May for the community sewer project and $1.9 million last month to build part of a parallel route to highway 14. All three were applied for in 2001. April 14, 1999 Free Y2K Power Information (extracted from a Paid Advertisement) Governments, public utilities, big and small businesses and individuals are spending $millions on the “Y2K” or “Millennium” bug — but what about you? Will the well being of you and your family be compromised this January 1st? Will you be left in the dark without power? With a backup power source your family can feel safe and protected during any power outage — through the Year 2000 and beyond. Our free brochure, “Don’t be Left in the Dark” and other free

File photo

Local people who have worked toward an interpretive facility at Charters Creek were asked to pose on the occasion of a $228,800 donation from the Pacific Salmon Foundation (PSF) on April 16, 2010. Pictured with PSF reps Jim Shinkewski, Diane Ramage and Brian Riddell are locals: Liz Johnson, Wally Vowles, Bryan Mooney, Rollie Rose, /Elida Peers, Ray Vowles, Elden Smith and Al Jones. information regarding this problem and economic solutions for you, your family and your business is available now. April 13, 1994 Incorporation bid scrapped The Minister of Municipal Affairs has put the final nail in the coffin of the latest Sooke incorporation effort. Calling the Feb. 23 CRD decision to withdraw completely from the study “unprec-

edented,” Darlene Marzari announced Thursday that no more money will be made available for the Sooke Incorporation Restructuring Committee (SIRC). “The incorporation study process has become too polarized to continue, and should be temporarily discontinued,” she said. “I think a cooling off period is in order.” SIRC formed in December of 1992

to examine whether Sooke would benefit from incorporating as a municipality with its own mayor and council. Sooke is currently governed by the CRD. April 12, 1989 Sooke soil not good for septic systems Most of the soil types found in Sooke are not supportive of adequate septic systems, says the CRD water quality report, and it suggests that further studies are necessary to determine whether restrictions on future development should be imposed. The report revealed that of 11 different soil types in the area, 10 were in the “potentially troublesome” category. This does not mean that every septic tank absorbtion field in the area is likely to create problems, but it did indicate that the soil had general characteristics that could cause problems. The report warned that increased development and further subdivision “could result in significant sublateral flow to the water.”

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SOOKE SOOKENEWS NEWSMIRROR MIRROR-- Wednesday, Wednesday,april April 16, 16,2014 2014

Up Sooke

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traditional pit cooking at Journey Britt Santowski

Britt Santowski photos

Left, an obscured student at Journey waits, with arms full of salal branches, to begin the cooking process. Right, skunk cabbage leaves are laid down on top of the salal branches. Below, after serving the Elders, Journey students line up to feast.

Sooke News Mirror

MARK YOUR CALENDAR

THE 4TH AnnuAl on-farm Plant and Seed Sale will take place on the AlM Organic Farm at 3680 Otter Point Road in Sooke on Saturday April 26 from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. THE SAlE will feature a wide variety of vegetables, herbs and flowers both annual and perennial as well as seeds.

CLOthiNg DRivE

ClOTHing DRivE FunDRAiSER on April 27 for Ecole Poirier and the Canadian Diabetes Assocation. Donate gently used clothing, hats, linens, drapery, shoes between 10 and 11:30 a.m. at Ecole Poirier elementary school, 6526 Throup Rd. FOR EARliER PiCkuP call keli at 250-8881921

gEt READY

THE AnnuAl ROTARy Auction & Spring Fair TAkES PlACE On May 3 at SEAPARC. The annual event draws vendors, craftspeople and businesses under one roof.

Thumbs Up TO All THOSE Sooke businesses and residents who are sprucing up their premises, yards and curb sides after the winter.

On a windy Friday morning, Journey middle school saw early morning activity with the building of a pit and a morning-long cookout. Principal Laurie Szadkowski introduced the event in an email. “Students and staff from Mt. Olympus and Atlantis Neighbourhoods will be treated to a feast of veggies, salmon and crab cooked in a pit in our school yard. A pit, dug by our Facilities Department, lined with stones from DeMamiel Creek and ferns from the forest will be used to help cook the food after the fire has left a bed of coals.” Represented were the T’Sou-ke, Pacheedaht, and Tsawout Nations. Elder Earl Claxton Jr. looked after the slow roasting of the salmon, while knowledge keeper John Bradley Williams (Tsawout Nation), who works under Elder Earl Claxton, looked after coordinating the Pit Cook. Williams explained the process to groups of Journey students. First a deep pit is dug out, and lined with rocks along the bottom. A wood fire is started on top of the rocks in order to heat the rocks. At Journey, the fire was started at 6 a.m. Once the rocks were heated, after three hours of being in the fire, the ashes were removed. Then, the pit is quickly filled and covered. The filling process, which began shortly after 9:30 a.m., took a matter of minutes. The process began with placing a big wooden branch in the middle and then adding layers. These include a

layer of green salal branches (which, Williams pointed out is an excellence source of Vitamin C), ferns, and skunk weed leaves (don’t worry, assured Williams, the stinky smell comes from the flowers, not the leaves). The salal and ferns protect the food and provide flavour; the skunk weed leaves act as catchers, should any food spill from their burlap sacks. Then, the vegetables in burlap sacks were placed on top of the greens, and quickly covered with the same layer (skunk weed, ferns and salal). Once all the greens were laid and the stick removed, three big pails of water were poured into the pit, sending billowing wafts

of steam skywards. A tarp was quickly laid on top of the steaming pile and then covered with dirt. On a separate fire, salmon was posted on

a grill and positioned beside another fire. Claxton explained that the cooking process entailed four repositioning: after the

first roasting, the top and the bottom are switched, then the grill is turned front to back, and then switched bottom to top. The process

hardens the outer flesh, cooking up a tender and flavourful inside. By 1 p.m., the food was cooked. The pit had to be carefully shovelled, the tarp rolled up, and the cooked greens removed. Burlap bags were carried to the waiting tables and the root vegetables taken out. At the same time, the salmon came off the grill. After a prayer and blessing from T’Souke Nation Elder Shirley Alphonse, with Michelle Wolf drumming, the elders were served, and then the students, too, could dine. This Pit Cook was the first of two. Journey middle school has four neighbourhoods within. This Pit Cook was worked by — and enjoyed by — the Mt. Olypmus and Atlantis neighbourhoods. Next up, Utopia and Mystical Main will engage in the next Pit Cook, scheduled for April 25. The event was tied to the pursuit of knowledge. “We just wanted to bring a little bit of culture (and) celebrate spring,” said Michelle Wolf, who is with Journey’s Aboriginal education program.

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Our weather has been wonderful, especially when I talk to people in Alberta or Saskatchewan and even further East. Lots of calls because of the rough winter those provinces received this year. But... we have had a renewed interest in the Island from Europe and Asia... I had a gentleman come in the office who has lived abroad for quite a while, he said he has been to Vancouver for business many times over the years but had never made it to the Island. Once here, this is where he wants to live. Take it from me… slow down and smell the roses, we live in paradise!

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There are 1,440 minutes in every day. Schedule 30 of them for physical activity! Regular exercise is a critical part of staying healthy. People who are active live longer and feel better. Exercise can help you maintain a healthy weight. It can delay or prevent diabetes, some cancers and heart problems. Most adults need at least 30 minutes of moderate physical activity at least five days per week. Examples include walking briskly, mowing the lawn, dancing, swimming for recreation or bicycling. Stretching and weight training can also strengthen your body and improve your fitness level. The key is to find the right exercise for you. If it is fun, you are more likely to stay motivated. You may want to walk with a friend, join our walking group or plan a group bike ride. If you’ve been inactive for awhile, use a sensible approach and start out slowly.

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april 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR Wednesday, April

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Taking to the trades EMCS TASK students build for the future

Capital Regional District The Hartland Landfill Facility will be closed on Good Friday, Friday, April 18, 2014.

Hartland Landfill

Good Friday Closure

Hartland will reopen on Saturday, April 19 from 7 am to 2 pm. Registered account customers will have access to the active face from 7 to 9 am.

For more information, please call the CRD Hotline at 250.360.3030 or visit www.crd.bc.ca/waste/hartland

Please make sure your load is covered and secured.

Capital Regional District

Hartland Landfill

Easter Monday Closure Pirjo Raits photos

Top, T.A.S.K. students from Edward Milne community school put up a garden shed to be used by the Children’s Garden Club at Sunriver Community Garden. Below, students Drayven Bell and Tina Dickson beside the door they built for the garden shed. son, both in Grade 12 at EMCS. It took them three days to make. Both think they may take up welding and try to get work in Alberta after they graduate from EMCS.

Pirjo Raits

Sooke News Mirror

The T.A.S.K. program at Edward Milne community school is building a sturdy following of young trades people. On April 8, students from the program gathered at the Sunriver Community Garden to put into place a shed they built for the Children’s Garden Club through a grant provided by the District of Sooke. The shed will house equipment for the club, which teaches young children the joys and pleasures of gardening. Instructor Blair Hughes said the students planned, designed and did pretty much everything on the frame building. The project took about four to five days for framing an another two or three days will be spent on site assembling the structure. “They’re not working eight hours shifts,” said Hughes. “I guess it would be 20 hours on the shed.” The shed, when complete, will have cedar siding, windows and a door. The door was built by two female TASK students, Drayven Bell and Tina Dick-

Two years ago the school introduced the successful program called T.A.S.K. — Trades Awareness Skills and Knowledge.

WIN tickets!

For more information, please call the CRD Hotline at 250.360.3030 or visit www.crd.bc.ca/waste/hartland

Please make sure your load is covered and secured.

www.sookenewsmirror.com

Victoria’s

Over 200 New and Pre-Owned Boats for Sale

Times and Tickets available at bcyba.com Discounted Tickets available on line before May 1 Presented by

enter at: www.vicnews.com/contests

Save 15%

BC Residents Rate Hotel Renovated, Bow to Stern

Hartland will reopen on Tuesday, April 22 from 9 am to 5 pm. Registered account customers will have access to the active face from 7 to 9 am.

including a 1 NIGHT STAY Inner Saturday, May 3rd Harbour at the Delta Victoria May 1 - 4, 2014 Ocean Pointe Resort & Spa SIX SETS OF WINNERS TO BE ANNOUNCED!

The Hartland Landfill Facility will be closed on Easter Monday, Monday, April 21, 2014.

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Winner will be contacted APRIL 29TH, 2014. No purchase necessary. Odds of winning are dependant on the number of participants. The contest is open to all residents of British Columbia of the age of majority. One ballot per person. Valid ID may be required. Winners may be required to answer a skill testing question. Prizes must be accepted as awarded. CONTEST CLOSES APRIL 28TH, 2014.

Auction & Spring Fair Saturday May 3RD SEAPARC Leisure Complex 10AM - 10PM • FREE ADMISSION

Mammoth Silent Auction & Bike Sale Evening Dinner & Live Auction Over 70 Business Expo Booths Sooke Outdoor Plant Sale Rotary’s premier All Day Food, fundraising Live Music & event. Entertainment

Free Swim 1:00-5:00PM

Proceeds benefit local community.

www.sookerotary.com/auction


SOOKE SOOKE NEWS NEWS MIRROR MIRROR -- Wednesday, Wednesday, April april 16, 16, 2014 2014

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Pirjo Raits photo

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JOHN VERNON TESTIMONIAL #134

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The weather for the Easter long weekend is expected to be seasonal with mixed sun and rain.

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The Sooke News mirror office will be closed on Good Friday, April 18.

*Victoria Real Estate Board MLS

Coffee House & Specialty Roaster

Sooke volunteer: Mark Ziegler

Submitted photo

Mark Ziegler

chair, Rotary Auction chair, and now president. Mark’s planning,

research and supervisory experience equips him well for the leadership and coordination responsibilities. Mark and Bonnie love to hike the endless wilderness trails in the Sooke area, and both volunteer with the Volunteer Warden program of the CRD, regularly walking the Sooke Potholes, lending a watchful eye. Mark is also an active member of the Kludak Trail Society, fulfilling the position of secre-

tary and contributing his energy to trail clearing and repairs during seasonal work parties. He can also be called upon to help with trail clearing with the Juan de Fuca Community Trails Society, when the need arises. An avid runner, Mark is a member of the Sooke Trail and Road Runners (STARR) Club, tearing up the streets of Sooke every Saturday and Thursday, as well as almost every other day of the week.

Mark shares his passion for running by coaching and mentoring students of the high school cross-country team at Edward Milne. Mark selflessly offers a helping hand and a listening ear to friends and neighbours as well, whatever the need. Sometimes when you need something done in a community, you ask the busiest person – Mark would be the first person that comes to mind!

rib and wild salmon with all the trimmings and decadent desserts by the Mix by Ric’s. Dignitaries such as Mayor Milne, Councillors Tait, Berger, Reay, Kasper and Pearson, as well as Fire Chief Sorenson were in attendance to enjoy the evenings festivities. Emcee Ron Larsen and Chamber President Michael Nyikes co-hosted the award presentations, numerous prize draws, and live auction, with every-

thing being captured by photographer Jack Most from The Most in Photography. Many emotional and impactful acceptance speeches were delivered by the award recipients, and there were a number of special surprises and announcements made throughout the evening. Music and dancing by Ron Larsen (www. djpro.ca) continued until midnight, and a free limousine service

ColdBrew. It’s back. Special price for April: $7/litre including bottle. $5 for refills M-Fri 6-6 • Sa/Su 7:30-6 Up Otter Point Rd. left on Eustace www.stickinthemud.ca @thesticksooke 250-642-5635

Capital Regional District Notice of

Chamber Chatter The Sooke Region Chamber of Commerce’s Business Excellence Awards held on Saturday April 5, 2014 at the Prestige Oceanfront Resort was a HUGE success! Tickets were completely sold out for this premier Sooke event, with over 100 attendee’s enjoying a cocktail and appetizer reception to the smooth sounds of Monte Saatchi playing spanish guitar, followed by a delicious dinner of prime

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Busy, busy

Mark Ziegler is a sparkling example of a senior who finds himself busier volunteering in his retirement than he ever expected to be. A lively, energetic and friendly 32-year veteran of the federal public service in Ottawa, Mark and his wife, Bonnie retired to Sooke in 2008 and immediately immersed themselves in the community. Mark quickly became an active member of Rotary, holding the positions of Foundation

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from LA Limo safely shuttled everyone home at the end of the night. There was a great sense of community pride and positive energy in the room throughout the evening, and a definite feeling that the people in the room were all part of something very special. The Sooke Region Chamber of Commerce thanks and appreciates all the sponsors, prize donors and individuals

who volunteered their time to make this event such a success. Please visit the Business Excellence Awards section on the Events page of the Chamber’s website for full list of the the finalists and award recipients, as well as the Member Gallery section of the Membership page of the Chamber’s website (www.sookeregionchamber.com) for photographs from the evenings celebrations.

Shirley-Jordan River Citizens’ Committee Official Community Plan Review Committee Meeting Environment, Parks & Trails and Development Permit Areas for Environmental Sensitivities Shirley Community Hall 2795 Sheringham Point Road, Shirley, BC April 23, 2014 at 7:00 p.m. Public Welcome to Attend For further information or to add your email to our contact list or to submit comments on the draft OCP, please email jdfinfo@crd.bc.ca or call 250.642.8100. We will send reminder notices of upcoming Citizens’ Committee meetings and events.

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Bright, fresh, 1952sqft, 3BR + Den, 3BA home minutes to Sooke Center and easy walk to schools. Extra large .22acre lot, flat and useable. Room for RV/boat. Kitchen is bright with morning sun plus access to deck and fenced yard. MBR with walk-in closet & 3pce. Ensuite. Downstairs is Den (could make 4th BR) and large Family room. This would be perfect set up for daycare or suite.

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Assault: Sooke RCMP are investigating a complaint of assault with a weapon. On April 9, 2014 at approximately 17:45 hours, a retired couple were walking their dog on the Galloping Goose trail near Manzer Road. A female was walking towards them and pulled out a can of pepper spray, and sprayed the couple. This investigation has lead to the arrest of a 45-year-old resident of Sooke, now charged with two counts of Assault with a Weapon. She appeared before a Judicial Justice of the Peace and was released on Recognizance with conditions, including not to be found on the Galloping Goose trail. The couple who were victimized in this attack have recovered with no

Wednesday, aprilMIRROR 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR Wednesday, April 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS

Police Beat

residents may notice, starting this week, is the RCMP speed enforcement accompanying the Speed Watch volunteers. Those choosing not to take

2205 Otter Point Road, Sooke Phone: 250-642-1634 Fax: 250-642-0541 email: info@sooke.ca website: www.sooke.ca

Upcoming Public Meetings Emergency Planning Committee Tuesday, April 22, 2014 at 9:00 am Submitted photo

Pictured at the Volunteer Fair are volunteers Ron Bilinsky and Ron Butler. sustained injuries. Sooke Speed Watch: The community of Sooke is well served by the detachment’s Speed Watch and Citi-

zens on Patrol program. With regard to Speed Watch, many of us are accustomed to seeing the volunteers out with the radar operated sign alerting us to the speed

we are travelling at. The volunteers provide this service in areas of concern, school zones, business areas, and spots with higher accident rates. One change

Rhodos, rhodos everywhere It’s early spring and that means eye-popping colours around every corner – tulips, daffodils, hyacinths, camellias, flowering plums and cherries, and, of course, rhododendrons. How lucky we are to live in a climate that allows us to feast on this visual banquet at the end of a gray, rainy winter. For all intents and purposes, we are just getting into rhodo season. Some varieties are already in spectacular bloom, with many, many more to come over the weeks ahead. What is so great about these shrubs, in addition to the gamut of colour their flowers offer, is that they generally look great year round. Moreover, they tend not to be on the deer buffet. Rhododendrons are much more variable than is generally realized. They range in size from tiny, only a few centimeters tall, to giants, more than 30 meters in height. Leaf and flower shapes also vary widely, and some species are highly perfumed. In certain areas, rhododendrons grow abundantly in the wild. So with thousands of cultivars available, the big challenge is deciding which ones to choose for a particular landscape or container. It’s spring, it’s planting time, and rho-

the free advice from Speed Watch to slow down, may wind up with a Violation ticket.

both seeds and cuttings. Please join us Wednesday, April 23, 7:30 p.m., at St. Rose of Lima Catholic Church on Townsend Road. New members welcome. Annual fee: $15. For more information, email: sookegardenclub@yahoo.ca or phone Rose at 250-6425509. The evening will also feature a parlour show, and contest potatoes will be available. Annual Public Plant Sale: The Sooke Garden Club will be having a huge plant sale at Evergreen Mall on Saturday, April 26, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Plants of every description will be available, and a landscape architect/arborist and several master gardeners will be on site to answer your gardening questions. Don’t miss this event. Come

The District of Sooke website at www.sooke.ca has information about your community – including: • Category B Community Grant Application deadline is April 30/14 • 2014-2018 Five Year Financial Plan public consultation • Proposed Sunriver Playing Fields • Updated information on current projects – including land development, road works, and more

Mayor’s Public Advisory Panels

early and meet the friendly faces of Sooke Garden Club members. Memberships will be available. Contributed by Loretta Fritz

dos (some already in bloom) are available for purchase at nurseries and garden centres everywhere. It’s the perfect time for Bill McMillan’s “Rhodos 101,” a presentation addressing the basics of rhododendron culture, care and problems. He will talk about the various kinds of rhodos, when, where, and how to plant them, and how to determine why a plant is not performing well and what to do about it. Bill McMillan, describes himself as a rhodo enthusiast rather than an expert. However, he has been curator of the Rhododendron and Hosta Garden of the Horticulture Centre of the Pacific since 2000 and has visited China twice to study species rhododendrons. He also propagates and grows rhododendrons from

What’s New!

The public is invited to attend the Mayor’s Public Advisory Panel meetings at the Prestige Resort Meeting Room: - Economic Development - 3rd Thursday of each month at 7:00 pm - Arts and Beautification - 4th Thursday of each month at 7:00 pm

This schedule is subject to change. Please call 250-642-1634 to confirm meetings. Council meeting agendas may be viewed at www.sooke.ca

15 Weeks Until The August 1st Exhibit Opening

Here is where it began, in early 1900s. Sooke lake was aquired by the city of Victoria to create a water system to supply the city that was fast running out of water. exhibit opens august 1

Proudly sponsored by Jim Mitchell - Accutax


SOOKE NEWS MIRROR - Wednesday, April 16, 2014 SOOKE NEWS MIRROR - Wednesday, april 16, 2014

www.sookenewsmirror.com

•7

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Naturalist James George French The Sooke Region has always attracted a variety of incredibly talented and interesting people. Among these is James George French, a naturalist who arrived on the island in the late 1800s from Bristol, England, where he had been a student of zoology and biology. Some reports say that he arrived on the Atlantic coast and walked part of the way across Canada. Sometimes early settlers were remittance men, and Mr. French may have been in this category. At any rate, he loved animals, and one of the first places he set up was in Saanich, where he established a menagerie of circus animals, which he overwintered while they rested up from their circus circuit. Among his tenants were a lion and an elephant, and his occupation drew a mixed reaction from his neighbours. This 1914 photo shows “Russki,” a bear that he kept in his Saanich pens. In 1889 he married into one of our early families. His bride was Dora Jane, eldest daughter of pioneers John Goudie and Mary Ann Vautrin. He preempted Section 79 (Renfrew District) in Shirley, and for the next decades alternated his time between Saanich and Shirley. The French children - Ivan, Hazel, Oscar, Wilfred and Daniel were all born in Saanich, though the sons chose to make their homes and earn their livelihoods in the woods industry throughout the Sooke/ Otter/Shirley area.

•7

Camosun Westside 2042 Otter Point Rd. BRUCE & LINDA MACMILLAN

250-642-4100

Sooke Community Choir presents

From Sea to Sea Saturday, April 26 at 7 pm

Tickets $10

Holy Trinity Church

available at Shoppers Drug Mart, Peoples Drug Mart, or at the door

For More Information: www.sookecommunitychoir.com

JOHN VERNON, PREC

250-642-5050

Skilled in animal husbandry, Mr French also kept animals on his Section 79 property and family members recall a series of cougars that were housed there. Children who grew up in the area recall that though fascinated by the animals, they felt somewhat intimidated by their keeper. The family carved a place in history for themselves through their pioneering settlement on the western shores, and their descendants now make their homes in many places throughout BC. James George French passed away in 1952. In time, the French family chose to honour their patriarch by making the beautiful oceanfront property available to the government of British Columbia as a park. French Beach Provincial Park, 145 acres of near-wil-

derness splendor, was dedicated on June 12, 1981.

Written By Evan and Emily in Grade 5

Updated 2BR, 786sf, top (2nd) floor condo, 4th from oceanfront end of bldg, on coveted sunny south side. This sundrenched unit has a premium ocean view location in the complex & is just steps to beach & sparkling waters of Sooke Basin. Extensive renovations incl: oak lam floors, interior doors, trim, paint, lighting & hardware. Updated BA w/new sink/vanity, tub & surround & toilet. Re-fin kit cabs w/new counters, ss sink, fridge, range & hood + DW. In-line DR. Spacious LR has cozy corner wood-burning FP & a wall of ocean view windows w/patio doors to fabulous view deck. Children & rentals allowed & pets w/some restrictions. Beachcombing, fishing, crabbing & kayaking at your door. Not just a home…a lifestyle. MLS #335217.

Photos: www.johnvernon.com

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visit: OPENHOUSESVICTORIA.CA

hom home hom ho o welcome

4 BEDROOM, 4 BATHROOM $398,000 IMMACULATE FAMILY HOME

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2 Levels, +2400 sq.ft, Close to Sooke Core, Bus & Schools. Modern Kitchen. Gas Fireplace. Oversized Single Garage. Fully Fenced Yard. 2 Bdrm Suite on Lower.

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6642 STEEPLE CHASE

$399,900

SATURDAY 11:00 – 1:00

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Clayton Morris

250-686-9814

MICHAEL DICK 250-642-6056 www.isellsooke.com

Sue Daniels

1000!

Nancy Vieira

Stacey Scharf

Brendan Herlihy

Michael Dick

Clayton Morris

$25,000

2-3 bedroom home with many updates. Located in a great family, pet friendly park. Access to private river front beach area.

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Mike Williams

New vinyl windows, newer oil tank & CSA approved wood stove. 3 bdrm/1 bath mobile. On bus route. Convenient to Elementary School. Large lot...garden, trees and a great place to hang out! Fenced & level. Lots of parking... great starter or retirement option.

CHEAPER THAN RENT!

RENTS UNDER

Sue Daniels

Managing Broker

Brand New 3 Bed/3 Bath Home * 1 Bdrm Legal Suite Close to schools * Mountain & Valley Views

SPACIOUS PET FRIENDLY FAMILY PARK

John Muir events This month, we have Culture Month, where we talk about stereotypes, and being aware of different cultures. We’re going to learn and study about different countries. This week, we are learning about people with autism, and how to help them learn and grow. At John Muir, we make sure all kids are included. Last Wednesday, we held a Carnival Night from 6 to 8 o’clock p.m. Thanks PAC and Adult Helpers, We’re had a lot of fun! Games and prizes! WHOOPEE! Last Wednesday, we also started Discovery Afternoons again! We got to choose from Fairy Gardens, Scrapbooking, Artist Studio, Runners-RUs, Weaving, and 3, 2, 1, Blast Off! We hope to get our #1 choice! That’s All, Folks!

Elida Peers, Historian Sooke Region Museum

SPECTACULAR OCEANFRONT CONDO ALMOST ON THE BEACH $149,900 #223 – 1991 KALTASIN ROAD

$800 $800 $750 $750 $700 $700 $600

1 bdrm 1 bdrm 1 bdrm 1 bdrm 1 bdrm 1 bdrm 1 bdrm

250-642-3240 6828 Eustace (lower) 6503 Beechwood (lower) 6847 Marsden (lower) 6658 Steeple Chase (upper) 2355 French Rd. N (lower) 2014 Govenlock (lower) 2416 Driftwood (lower)

Stacey Scharf Ppty Mgr

250-889-5994

#2–6716 WEST COAST ROAD *CEDAR GROVE CENTRE* 250-642-3240 www.pembertonholmes.com pembertonholmessooke@shaw.ca


EDITORIAL

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR Wednesday, April 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR

8 • www.sookenewsmirror.com 8 • www.sookenewsmirror.com

Rod Sluggett Publisher Pirjo Raits Editor Britt Santowski Reporter

The Sooke News Mirror is published every Wednesday by Black Press Ltd. | 1A-6631 Sooke Road, Sooke, B.C. V9Z 0A3 | Phone: 250-642-5752 WEB: WWW.SOOKENEWSMIRROR.COM

OUR VIEW

EDITORIAL CARTOON

Let the election games begin Councillor Maja Tait said it on Monday night - it’s election time. It starts in January and ends just before the election in November. What starts? If anyone has gone to council since the beginning of the year, it is obvious that the electioneering has begun. The waffling on decisions made earlier, the pleasantness among council members, the lack of out bursts and the cautious decisions or no decisions. No one wants to offend the electorate. That is a good thing, but it shouldn’t just be in the months before an election, this is something that should go on for the entire term of office - and it hasn’t in many cases. In fact, council meetings are rather staid these days, it was a lot more exciting when tempers blew and definite positions were taken on issues. Four-year terms are coming and we need to be ready for that. One has to seriously consider who they think will be the most conscientious and desirable candidate for council or mayor. Do we go with those we know or take a chance on someone new? That, of course, will be up to the voters. With four-year terms, there is no easy legal way to depose someone who isn’t “working” out. There is no probabtion period, no performance reviews. There is their record for sure, if they have sat on council already. What about those newcomers to the political arena? As in every community there are those who speak out and take stands for others, sit in on council meetings and committees to see what is going on. Those folks are likely the ones who will throw their hat in the ring. Now the waiting game begins. Few council members have declared whether they are running again or not. Rumours abound and tight lips are everywhere. They are waiting to see who is running to determine what they will run for - council or mayor. It will be an interesting seven months of gestation.

How to reach us: General: Phone 250-642-5752; fax 250-642-4767 Publisher: Rod Sluggett publisher@sookenewsmirror.com Office Manager: Harla Eve office@sookenewsmirror.com Editor: Pirjo Raits editor@sookenewsmirror.com Reporter: Britt Santowski news@sookenewsmirror.com Advertising: Rod Sluggett Joan Gamache sales@sookenewsmirror.com Circulation: circulation@sookenewsmirror.com Production Manager: production@sookenewsmirror.com Creative Services: creative@sookenewsmirror.com Classifieds: Harla Eve, office@sookenewsmirror.com Vicky Sluggett

2010 WINNER

ANOTHER VIEW

Farmland fight sheds little light B.C. Views Detailed debate on changes to the Agricultural Land Commission got underway in the legislature last week, while protesters played to urban voters outside. A couple of West Kootenay NDP supporters brought a basket of homegrown veggies down to help East Kootenay MLA Bill Bennett get through the winter on a 100-mile diet. A group of mostly UBC scientists wrote to Premier Christy Clark, embracing the popular assumption that the changes will automatically mean more exclusions of agricultural land, as well as expanded secondary uses in the Cariboo, Kootenay and North zones. This “jeopardizes species at risk, threatens many common species, and will impact many species prized for hunting,” they wrote. It makes me wonder if these university botanists and bird experts actually understand what farming is. You know, clear-cutting a forest and planting largely monoculture crops? Using big machinery, creating drainage, applying fertilizers, controlling diseases, pests and wild animals? Not backyard gardening, real farming of the sort that has fed more people than in all of human history? Have they heard that the largest cause of deforestation in North America is farming? Do they imagine habitat loss from

subdivisions sprawling across the Cariboo? Forests Minister Steve Thomson has been pinch-hitting for Fort St. John MLA Pat Pimm on the agriculture file as Pimm undergoes cancer treatment. Thomson took exception when NDP agriculture critic Nicolas Simons asked if he is aware people think the changes are to “neuter the chair of the Agricultural Land Commission.” Thomson, a former executive director of the Kelowna-based B.C. Agriculture Association, replied that the changes do not reduce the independence of the chair. Under further questioning from Simons, Thomson allowed that the current ALC chair, Richard Bullock, has provided no response to the government on the proposals. Kelowna-Lake Country MLA Norm Letnick was appointed Friday to replace Pimm as agriculture minister. But this ALC project is Bennett’s initiative, so I asked him about his changes to the appointment process. Bennett said the six regional panels, up to three people each, were set up by then-minister Stan Hagen in 2003 to provide local input. That worked well, he said, until Bullock came on the scene and began exercising his discretion not to appoint people recommended by cabinet. “The chair doesn’t like the regional panels,” Bennett told me. “It’s a pain in the ass for the chair to have to

deal with 18 farmers from all over the province in making decisions. It would be six farmers, because only one person from the regional panel actually sits on the provincial commission. “He thinks that it’s unwieldy, and he’d rather have the decision-making centralized in Burnaby. But we changed that. We decided as a duly elected government in 2003 that we wanted the regions to have a say on this stuff, so the intention of the legislation, we felt, was actually being defeated, because we hadn’t made it mandatory.” It will be mandatory soon, and Bullock’s days as commission chair appear to be numbered. “There’s no more discretion for any future chair to monkey with it,” Bennett added. One of Bennett’s key issues is denial of secondary residence construction to keep families on the land in the Interior. The legislation also introduces social and economic factors in weighing decisions in the North, Cariboo and Kootenay regions, where in most cases development pressure is an urban myth. The main ALC board will still have authority to revisit a local panel decision if the chair deems it inconsistent with the mandate to protect farmland. Tom Fletcher is legislature reporter and columnist for Black Press. Twitter: @tomfletcherbc Email: tfletcher@ blackpress.ca


SOOKE NEWS MIRROR - Wednesday, April april 16, 2014 2014

www.sookenewsmirror.com

•9

We asked: Are you concerned about online security?

Yes, particularly with the Heartbleed virus. I have changed all my passwords.

Sande Cummings Sooke

Clean up appreciated I’m not sure who is responsible for the amazing upgrades to the path along Whiffin Spit, but the workers did one amazing job. All the rocks we’ve all been tripping over are gone, the pot holes are gone — no more weaving around huge puddles for the “spitters.” The surface has been compacted and people pushing strollers and those using walkers can fairly easily make it to the end now, instead of just the first 50 feet. So many people enjoy walking along the Spit, locals and visitors alike and we will all enjoy it a lot more now; so thanks for the improvements. We appreciate it. Anne Boquist Sooke

Keep all vehicles out What a pleasure it is to hike the Sooke hills, Empress Mountain, the Potholes, and the whole area within the Sea to Sea Green Blue Belt. To date more than 10,200 hectares of the proposed Sea to Sea Green Blue Belt is provincial, regional and municipal park land, including Gowlland Tod Provincial Park, Goldstream Provincial Park, Sooke Mountain Provincial Park, and Sooke Hills Wilderness Regional Park Reserve.

No. I think there’s too much paranoia and fear.

Absolutely. I’ve always been nervous about online attacks. There are a lot of ways that increase the availability of personal online information. And when it comes to security, there’s too much to choose from and not enough information about it.

I should be, but I have lots of anti virus programs. It's definitely a concern.

Allan Bright Sooke

Brock Armstrong Sooke

Maureen Savoy Sooke

letters

An area of land sizeable enough to sustain whole ecosystems, this gem provides habitat for a wide variety of species, including the iconic bald eagle, the elusive black bear, and numerous rare and endangered plants and animals. While much of the land is covered with second-growth forest, pockets of old-growth persist, and many of the streams and rivers support salmon spawning. The main reason this wilderness area provides such a lush and healthy ecosystem is because there is no vehicle traffic allowed in this park system. Access must be limited to non-motor traffic or else the integrity and health of these parks will be lost. The encroachment of vehicles would inevitability bring too many human behaviors, noise, and pollution issues that are detrimental to a truly “wilderness experience” and would damage the restoration work that has been done (mostly by nature herself). With the provincial Liberals opening up park lands to resource extraction there is less and less area that is not vulnerable to human exploitation. I would like to thank the CRD, TLC, Habitat Acquisition Trust, The Society for the Protection of Ayum Creek, and local municipalities for

working together and having the vision and tenacity in creating such a magnificent wilderness area that is revered and appreciated by so many. I think what gets forgotten quite often is that these areas are not protected merely for people to enjoy, but for the wildlife and natural elements to thrive in and stay healthy. The heath of these ecosystems keeps us all healthier and happier. Keep up the great work and keep out the vehicles. Tom Eberhardt Sooke

Thievery runs amok A thief is a thief is a thief whether he/she/ they steal from homes, businesses or even dirt from the cemetery. In 1989 the Sooke Lions club spent almost every weekend for a year to revitalize the Sooke Harbour Cemetery. It was hard work, but work for the benefit of our community, that’s what we do. We continue to maintain that cemetery and part of that job requires dirt to be brought in for our use. To the persons unknown (thieves) who continue to take our dirt, please be advised that you have managed to get some 35 Lions members a bit upset at you. There is noth-

ing like going to a work party and find that some miscreant has stolen your supplies. Shame. To mitigate this continuing problem, we are forced to build a secure storage place for the dirt, this will take money away from other projects we do in the community. In closing, we want to thank the citizens of Sooke and area who have so strongly supported our club for the past 49 years. We will continue to do our community service knowing that there are a lot more of you good folks out there than the few bad who caused this letter to be written. Thanks for your continued support. Sooke Lions Club

Easter and bunnies don’t mix To whoever dumped the white Himalayan bunny beside Sooke Road near Awsworth, your former pet is now dead. You didn’t set her free you sentenced a domestic animal to death. I tried to catch her/ him when I first saw her one cold, rainy afternoon, but she was so frightened she ran farther into the ditch and I was concerned I’d scare her into traffic. Whenever I drove by I’d look for her, but

“Your Sooke Specialist” Sooke Open House

didn’t see her again, until I noticed her body lying on the other side of the road, some weeks later. It appeared she had been struck by a car, or it might have been caused by the steel brush bristle which protruded from her chest. I gave her a decent burial (so upsetting) in my yard rather than leave her there, with the hubcaps, coffee cups and other discarded things. Rabbits are wonderful, intelligent companions, much like dogs and cats. They are part of the family; at least a 10 - 15 year commitment, not rodents, nor good pets for children, never, ever Easter gifts (one wouldn’t give a reindeer for Christmas). Chocolate or plush only please! Ava Penberg Sooke

Open House Saturday April 19th 11:00 am — 2:00 pm Family Friendly — $309,000 New 3 bedroom home in Trickle Creek. 1,600 sq ft, 3 bathrooms, Gas FP, 5 Appliances & Fenced Yard. Backing on Green Space & Walking Trail. New Home Warranty. Visit us Saturday at 1162260 Maple Ave N. Questions? Call Michael direct at 250-642-6056. For more info and pictures visit us at isellsooke.com.

Compassion not competition Response to “Human Society Support,” Sooke News Mirror,

Cont’d on page 15

letters Deliver by mail or hand to our office, or e-mail editor@sooke newsmirror.com Letters should be 300 words or less, and we may edit for length, tone and accuracy. Please include contact information.

There’s more online www.sookenewsmirror.com


10 •

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Wednesday, april 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR

Wednesday, April 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR

Britt Santowski photo

Treasures found Saturday’s annual garage sale at SEAPARC was extremely busy, with the parking lot filled to capacity. In fact, some very creative (though questionable) parking was spotted.

Metchosin Metchosin Dental Dental Clinic Clinic Family Family Dentistry Dentistry and and Cosmetic Cosmetic Dentistry Dentistry

Poirier students to explore aquarium at night! We are students at Ecole Poirier and we think it is a great school. There is always something exciting to do like fun assemblies, jump rope for heart, and music Monday. Poirier is one of the few schools with our own song and motto which is JOIN IN! This year all the Grade 4 and 5 students get to go to Vancouver. We are spending the night

in the aquarium! All the boys get to sleep with the dolphins and the girls get to sleep with the belugas. The Grade 4 and 5 students are also starting literature circles. In our class we are making Pysanky eggs. Pysanky eggs are a Ukrainian tradition. We are also building cars for science. We do lots of cool art work and

get to play the ukuleles and the primary students get to play the recorders. All the Grade 2’s at Poirier are doing swimming lessons every Tuesday and Thursday. We think Poirier is a great elementary school and we hope you will be able to experience it. JOIN IN! By Ben, Nick, Grace and Reilly

• • • • • • • • • • • •

Root Canal Therapy Root Canal Therapy Crown & Bridge Crown & Bridge Oral Surgery Oral Surgery Porcelain Veneers Porcelain Veneers Hygiene Services Hygiene Services Zoom! Whitening Zoom! Whitening

• • • • • • • • • •

Orthodontics Orthodontics Full & Partial Dentures Full & Partial Dentures Emergency Cases Emergency Cases Digital XRays Digital XRays Tooth Coloured Tooth Coloured Restorations Restorations

New New Patients Patients Always Always Welcome Welcome Dr. Dr. John John H. H. Duncan Duncan D.D.S. D.D.S. 4632 4632 Rocky Rocky Point Point Road Road •• Metchosin Metchosin

250.478.6111 250.478.6111

Community

Calendar Thurs April 17

Fri April 18

Sat April 19

Sun April 20

Mon April 21

ADULT WALKING GROUP

VITAL VITTLES

ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION

ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION

PARENT & TOT DROP-IN

SEAPARC. 10-11 a.m. Registration required. Info 250-642-8000. ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION Cribbage 7 p.m.

Free lunch, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Holy Trinity Church. ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION Steak Night, 6 p.m. Karaoke with Pete & Megan 8-11 p.m. TODDLER TIME 10:30 – 11:00 a.m. Sooke Library. Hands-on activity, for ages 18-36 months. To register call 250-642-3022 or email sooke@virl.bc.ca.

Meat draw 3 p.m. EGGSTRAVAGANZA SEAPARC, 10:30-noon. Easter egg hunt times: Ages 1 - 4 at 10:30; Ages 5 - 7 at 11:00; Ages 8 - 10 at 11:30.

Sunday breakfast brunch, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., $5, children welcome. Drop-in Pool @ 1 p.m. EASTER SUNRISE SERVICE Ed McGregor park, 7:30 a.m.

Sooke Child, Youth, and Family Centre, 9:30-11:00. (250) 642-5152 for info. CALLING ALL QUILTERS Knox Pres. Church. All welcome. 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Call 250-642-0789 for info. ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION Euchre 6:30 p.m.

Admission by donation to the Sooke Food Bank. Bring your own baskets.

Happy Easter! All Community events which purchase a display ad will appear in our current community event calendar at no charge. FREE EVENTS will be listed at no charge, space permitting.

SHOPPERS 250-642-5229

DRUG MART

COMMUNITY CALENDAR DEADLINE: THURSDAY @ 3PM Items for Community Calendar must be non-commercial and free to the public. Please limit to 25 words.

Directory: Where to find what Child, Youth & Family Centre: 2145 Townsend Rd EMCS (Edward Milne Community School): 6218 Sooke Rd Family Medical Clinic: 1300-6660 Sooke Rd Holy Trinity Church: 1952 Murray Rd Knox Presbyterian Church: 2110 Church Rd Legion #54: 6726 Eustace Rd Library: 2065 Anna Marie Rd SEAPARC: 2168 Phillips Rd Village Foods: Right smack downtown, you can’t miss it

Tues April 22

Wed April 23

Why Tummy Time is Important. Sooke Child, Youth and Family Centre 10-11:30 a.m. PRE-SCHOOL STORYTIME 10:30 a.m. Sooke Library. 3-5 years old. Registration required. 250-642-3022. ADULT WALKING GROUP SEAPARC. 10-11 a.m. Registration required. Info 250-642-8000. YOUTH CLINIC Ages 13 - 25, 4-7 p.m. Family Medical Clinic. KNITTING CIRCLE Sooke Library, 6:30–8:00 pm. Free, all levels. Dropin. 250-642-3022. ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION Pool League 7 p.m.

People’s Drug Mart hosts a walking club starting out at 9:15. PARENT DISCUSSION GROUP Sooke Child, Youth, and Family Centre, 9:30-11:00 a.m. (250) 642-5152 for info. FREE ARTS AND CRAFTS Sooke Library. 4 p.m. - 8 p.m. All ages, no registration required. ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION Dominos 10 a.m. Ladies Darts 12 noon. Shuffleboard 6:30 p.m. TOASTMASTERS Upstairs at Village Foods, 7 p.m. For info 642-7520. SOOKE SENIOR BUS Shopping over the Malahat. Leaves the Community Hall at 9:30 a.m. $12. Home pick-up $14. Call 250-642-1521 to reserve.

BABY TALK

It’s Earth Day! Be kind to her. She’s the only planet we’ve got.

PEOPLE’S WALKING GROUP


SOOKE NEWS MIRROR - Wednesday, April 16, 2014

www.sookenewsmirror.com

Go Green use

Locally Owned & Operated Since 1974

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LANGFORD

SOOKE

772 Goldstream Ave. Open 7 Days a Week 7:30 am to 10 pm

6660 Sooke Road Open 7 Days a Week 7:30 am to 10 pm

We reserve the right to limit quantities

Your Community Food Store

We reserve the right to limit quantities

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Wednesday, April 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR

SOOKE NEWS MIRROR - Wednesday, April 16, 2014

www.sookenewsmirror.com

Come in Every Wednesday for our

Secret Super Saver Specials” in all departments

Stock Up Your Pantry

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Wednesday, April 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR

SOOKE NEWS MIRROR - Wednesday, April 16, 2014

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SOOKENEWS NEWS MIRROR MIRROR-- Wednesday, Wednesday,april April 16, 16,2014 2014 SOOKE Cont’d from page 9 April 9, 2014 concerning its opening paragraph and misinformation. “My support is to the Victoria Humane Society,” states the writer, Ms. Effa, as suggesting there is a competition and that people need to choose between the Victoria Humane Society, (VHS,) and the Sooke Animal Food and Rescue Society (SAFARS). First, we want to state the differences separating both societies. According to the writer, only VHS seems to have rules and policies, but because we all know this cannot be true let’s just talk about our charity’s different ethical approaches and principles. SAFARS’ main principle is to never lose our empathy and compassion to humans and animals alike. Our mission has been consistent from the start and our goal is to help the less fortunate pet owners in our community keep their pets. An example is when I, personally, helped Ms. Effa walk her dog three winters ago during all the days she was in convalescence. Regarding VHS’s ethical approach, we can use the reference we have from 2012 when Ms. Penny Stone was still the SPCA’s manager. It was me who asked her for help to assist Cathy Park before it would be too late. To my surprise, her response was to transfer me to the cruelty department instead of lending a hand to this lady who in the past rescued hundreds of cats and dogs from pain, starvation and abuse. Reference case: “Park called the SPCA, saying she needed to get rid of her animals to avoid cruelty charges. She was asking for help, and she knew she was starting to break down (Sooke News Mirror, February 26th, 2014 “Park given suspended sentence”). Second, VHS was created in November 2013 by Penny Stone, by her longtime friend Carol Broad and others. Mrs. Broad is the president and Ms. Stone is the executive director. Third, the Canadian Federation of Humane Societies, (CFHS), is composed by independent charities and these are not all shelters. VHS or SAFARS are not affiliated with CFHS

www.sookenewsmirror.com

letters

and; therefore, none of them have extra privileges. We are both registered charities. We invite readers to visit the federation’s website and to ask questions. Margarita Dominguez Sooke

Bad legacy We can thank the B.C. Liberals and specifically Gordon Campbell for rising hydro rates and less money in our pockets. Before being forced out of office with the lowest approval rating of any premier in Canadian history, Campbell agreed to buy unneeded power from run of river independent power projects at far above the market rates. This is now a huge unfunded liability as hydro has to sell excess power that it payed a premium for at lower market rates. That and regularly diverting dividends from hydro to other areas has left hydro in a mess that would cause WAC Bennett to turn over in his grave. This was just another sweetheart deal cooked up for B.C. Liberal insiders and financiers. Under the ruse of making B.C. self sufficient in power Campbell caused a gold rush mentality as companies (many foreign owned) rushed to stake out, dam and divert rivers to generate unneeded power too often with only token environmental oversight. After being run out of town on a rail, (not BC Rail as Campbell sold that to his cronies), the high priests of business who profited most from Campbell’s tenure sought to whitewash his shameful legacy by voting him “Builder of the Decade “ and supported his nomination to the Order of B.C. What a joke! Tax cuts to business were paid for by the old, poor, elderly, ill and young school children as Liberals cut funds to our most needy and vulnerable to pay for business’ tax cuts. Campbell’s accolades should read “Food Bank Builder of the Decade” and given the fishy smells around so many back room maneuverings, the “Odour of BC.” B.C. Liberal mismanagement of BC Hydro and our

right. Instead of disrespecting her and her organization on social media sites, shouldn’t rising hydro costs are we be saying thank Campbell’s legacy. you for recognizing the Ted Roberts problem we have out Sooke here? Thank you for using your skills and expertise towards the neglected, the forgotten, the strays and the I have been following abandoned... Oh, and the negativity from a thank you for all of local Sooke animal res- the unpaid hours, the cue towards a poten- behind the scenes work tial new rescue in East and all of the fundraisSooke (The Victoria ing, planning and other Humane Society) and I amazing things you do have one simple ques- for those animals (and tion: why is it so hard doing so without pubto be kind and support- licly bashing the other ive? I personally feel rescues). We need to grateful that Sooke has remember that Ms. an opportunity to bring Stone is also a volunin someone like Penny teer looking to make a Stone and her associ- difference, and that she ates to help the animals has chosen our comof our community. I feel munity to do it in. It’s as though she is being time to wake up and attacked and this is not be thankful, instead of

Thanks in order

being petty.

• 15

L. Parsons Sooke

Celebrate Canada Day To the people of Sooke and surrounding area. As the founder and past president, for 17 years, of the July 1, Sooke Canada Day events, I am very happy to say I have been in consultation with the Sooke Lions Club. They will be putting on this year’s event. They are trying to have an event for all ages and they need your support in any way you can. Please come and celebrate this special day for our country, town, and each other. Hope to see you all there. Judithe Ann Gatto Sooke

The Pastor's Pen On a cold and rainy weekend in a fishing village on the Big Island the Reverend was shaking hands at the door after services. Sister Mary Loverby stepped forward for her moment of personal contact with the Reverend. As he shook her hand gently she looked imploringly into his eyes and asked for forgiveness for not being in church for the previous 3 weeks. The Reverend smiled sincerely and said,” Sister Mary, we are always glad to see you and we hope that you are encouraged in your life by being here. I hope that you don’t believe you’re going to hell if you don’t come to church?” said the Reverend with a twinkle in his eye. Sister Mary’s eyes fell as she whispered, “but I thought you would be upset with me and that God would not like me if I didn’t come to church.” Her voice trailed off into silence. Kindly, the Reverend squeezed Mary’s hand and she looked into his eyes once again. “Church is people gathering to encourage each other and to praise the Creator for His goodness to us...and that you’re with us Mary makes all of us happy,” said the Reverend. A teary smile broke out on Mary’s face and fealing of peace warmed her right down to her toes. “I’ll be back next week, Reverend.” And she was. HOLY TRINITY Anglican Church 1962 Murray Road | 250-642-3172 HOLY COMMUNION SERVICE: Easter Vigil Sat 7pm Easter Sun Service 10am EVENING PRAYER: Saturday 5pm The Rev. Howard Jacques www.holytrinitysookebc.org

KNOX PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 2110 Church Rd | 250-642-4124 SUNDAY SERVICE 10:15 am Pre-Service Singing 10:30 am Family worship Rev. Dr Gordon Kouwenberg Parents Room and well equipped Nursery

SOOKE BAPTIST CHURCH 7110 West Coast Road | 250-642-3424 SUNDAY SERVICE 10:00 am Children, youth & adult ministries Email sookebaptistchurch@telus.net www.sookebaptist.com

ST. ROSE OF LIMA Roman Catholic Parish 2191 Townsend Rd. | 250-642-3945 | Fax: 778-425-3945 Saturday Mass 5pm | Sunday Mass, 10 am Thursday Mass 10:30 am Children’s Religious Ed: Sat. 3:45pm Office Hours: Tue 12-3 Wed 10-12 Thurs 1-3 Rev. Fr. Michael Favero

JUAN DE FUCA SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH 4251 Sooke Road | 778-425-3403 SATURDAY SERVICE

9:30 am Bible Study • 11:00 am Church Service Pastor: Mike Stevenson

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• 15

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16 16 •• www.sookenewsmirror.com www.sookenewsmirror.com

Wednesday, Wednesday,April april16, 16,2014 2014--SOOKE SOOKENEWS NEWSMIRROR MIRROR

A taste of India for those who enjoy ethnic food Britt Santowski

ally love to have a food truck. “It makes Indian food accessible,” said Barooah. For the time being, there is an online menu on her website (TastesOfIndiaInSooke.com) along with a gallery of photos of her meals and her contact information. Order by Tuesday at noon, and pick up on Wednesday after 5 p.m. (She will contact you when your food is ready.)

Sooke News Mirror

Did you know that the greater Sooke region (from Port Renfrew to East Sooke) has about 30 restaurants and eateries? We’re a bit scarce on ethnic diversity though, and if you’ve had a craving for a nice Indian curry, you’re probably thinking that you’ll have to drive to The Big City for a bite. Not any more. There’s authentic Indian food to be had in Sooke, from a local business called Tastes of India. The reason why many don’t know about it is probably because there is no restaurant and no signage. So far, it’s been just word-of-mouth and social media. The business is owned and managed by Pooja Barooah who hails originally from India. She received her MBA in the UK, and worked in Dubai as a realtor before she and her family landed here in Sooke. She is currently merging her passions (she’s an entrepreneurial soul with a foodie bent) and is slowly setting up culinary shop here in Sooke. Our palates will be the beneficiaries. And having enjoyed a sampling of her offerings, this reporter can speak to the quality of the food. A look through her online menu speaks to the affordability. Because she has very little overhead (no building and no employees — and she cooks from a rented, certified kitchen), she passes those savings on to the consumer. For about $35, you can easily feed a family of four; $45 will satisfy four hungry adults. For those who are unfamiliar with an Indian menu, or those who are more experimental, you can let Barooah build you a meal. Just let her know your dislikes (like, perhaps, coriander) and your heat tolerance, and she’ll quote you a price and prepare you something that should be to your liking. According to her website Barooah is “a full-time mom who loves to cook.” She offers authentic Indian take-out in Sooke every Wednesday, and is currently in the process of setting up cooking

The meals come individually packed with reheating instructions

There is nothing left for you to do but reheat accordingly, set the

table and eat. Leftovers can easily be frozen for another day.

Britt Santowski photo

Pooja Baroosh with her son Aryan. Barooah is making take-out Indian food.

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classes. “I’ve been cooking for as long as I can remember,” she said Friday, April 18 thru in conversation, “and I’m the biggest experiSunday, April 20 254 Trans-Canada Hwy 2955 Phipps Rd menter that there is.” The major influences in Turkey Dinner Duncan, BC Victoria, BC the development of her Served with mashed culinary skill were her potatoes, brussel sprouts, mother and her matersuccotash, turkey stuffing, nal grandmother. cranberry sauce “My mother is a really & dinner roll good cook. She hates cooking, but she’s such a good cook. My grandWith the purchase of Full 8 oz Dinner $17.95 mother, my mother’s any pizza at regular Light 4 oz Dinner $13.95 mother, is an amazing menu price. Don’t forget to finish off your cook. … She can cook dinner with a slice of our any meat dish to the Limit 1. Not valid with other offers. Valid only at participating famous deep dish pie! locations. Cannot be sold, transferred or duplicated. 1733-DM082012 perfect amount of salt without tasting it,” said Barooah. “I suppose it’s PHONE AHEAD 2036 Shields Road in my genes.” we’ll have it ready Barooah is also into Sooke 250-642-3314 when you arrive sharing the experience, table and eat. set the on the label. and will teach you how to cook your own Indian food. Her Facebook page also offers up recipes in her Notes (facebook.com/tastesofindiainsooke/). * Her primary taste testers are her Norwe* gian husband, Bjørn Lodding and her oneyear-old son, Aryan. Lodding, according to Barooah, is a very finicky eater, “and if he doesn’t like it, there is a chance that there is a significant amount of people that will not like it.” Their one-year-old son, Aryan, has already Purchase any two gallons of Dulux Paints developed a tolerance and receivePurchase a third one anyfree.* two gallons of Dulux Paints for spicy food. Probably April 14 to May 4. and receive a third one free.* acquired during invitro, April 14 to May 4. laughs Barooah. The family of three, VICTORIA VICTORIA LANGFORD along with their two 3303A Tennyson Ave. 1581 Hillside Ave. 109-2924 Jacklin Rd. 250-382-3114 250-592-1058 250-915-1016 rescue dogs, have taken up residence in Sooke, DUNCAN NANAIMO and are loving it. They 2-5311 Trans Canada Hwy. 424 N. Terminal Ave. are currently here on a 250-701-8492 250-754-4248 work visa through her Cannot be combined with any other offer or promotion. Buy any two gallons (3.0L-3.78L) of Dulux, husband, *who works *Cannot be combined withprice any other offerthe or third promotion. any two Glidden or Woodpride product at the regular retail and get gallonBuy (of equal orgallons lesser (3.0L-3.78L) of Dulux, COURTENAY Glidden or Woodpride at (3) thepromotional regular retail gallons price and getbethe third gallon (of equal or lesser as a corporate trainer value) free. All additional gallons purchased with product the three will value) free. All additional gallons purchased with the three (3) promotional gallons will be Unit A 2599 Cliffe Ave. discounted 33% off the regular retail price. All sheens included. All products may not be available in Victoria. atBarooah is discounted 33% off the regular retail price. All sheens included. All products may not be available all locations. See instore for offer details. At participating locations only. 250-331-0522 at all locations. See instore for offer details. At participating locations only. intending to stay. 2014 PPG Industries, Inc.©All rights is rights a registered trademark AkzoNobel 2014 PPGreserved. Industries,Dulux Inc. All reserved. Dulux is aof registered trademark of AkzoNobel Should ©their permaand is licensed to PPG Architectural Coatings Canada, Inc. for use in Canada and is licensed to PPG Architectural Coatings Canada, only. Inc. for use in Canada only. nency become a reality, Barooah would eventu-

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EMCS student represents Sooke

SOOKE NEWS NEWS MIRROR MIRROR-- Wednesday, Wednesday, April april 16, 16, 2014 2014 SOOKE

Britt Santowski Sooke News Mirror

Last week Edward Milne community school student Kayla Curtis competed in the semi-finals of the Public Speaking Contest, and represented EMCS among the competitors from three school districts (61, 62 and 63). The competition is hosted by Rotary Club of Royal Oak Centennial. Presenting students had a choice of eight topics presented to them by the Rotary and had three weeks to prepare. Kayla Curtis was among the six students who will move onto the finals, which take place on May 7 at 6 p.m., at Spectrum Secondary. “Kayla Curtis, Grade 11, representing Edward Milne Community School (EMCS) argued that university tuition in Canada should be free,” wrote Superintendent Jim Cambridge in his blog. “She spoke about the

Britt Santowski photo

EMCS student Kayla Curtis competes in Rotary Public Speaking Contest, continues to finals. After the initial jitters subside in the first moments of actually speaking, seeing that she has engaged her audience, she relaxes into her presentation. For those interested in (or forced into) public speaking, Kayla offers this advice: “Go ahead, write it, practice as much as you can, and go in and do it. If nothing else, it’s going to be a great learning experience.” The audience, too, tends to be sympathetic. “They want you

cost of education, and highlighted countries such as Finland who have abolished tuition fees.” Kayla is a natural at public speaking. “I like to talk,” she laughed, in conversation with the Sooke News Mirror, “and it’s really nice to talk for five minutes without anyone interrupting you.” Enjoying speaking helps, as does a bit of adrenaline. “It’s a little bit of a rush,” she admitted.

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to do the best you can,” Kayla observed. In an area long identified as the top human fear (followed by death and spiders, in that order), Kayla approaches public speaking with discipline and repetition. Her “formula” for success is spending onethird of her time writing the speech, and another two-thirds practicing in front of anyone who will listen. Practice also results in speech revisions, which are ongoing. Besides practicing her speech in front of friends, family and school supporters, she also engages her sevenyear-old brother, Jesse. “He had to listen to me practice at least a dozen times. I don’t think he knew what any of it meant, but he did give me a very nice round of applause.” “I found the whole event inspiring,” said

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There’s more online www.sookenewsmirror.com

SOOKEBUSINESSCENTRE Sooke Moving & Storage

We take care of all details... Your Moving & Storage Sollution Phone: 250-642-6577 • Indoor Storage Lockers • Container Storage • 8’ x 8’ x 20’ = $125/month • 24 Hour Security • Public Access Mon-Sat from 9am-5pm

Looking for some extra storage space for your funrniture, household goods and business needs? Or maybe a larger item like a boat, RV or vehicle... Secure Indoor Storage Warehouse

2018 Idlemore Rd. Sooke

24 hour Security System Individual Storage Units

Heated & Ventilated Forklift Services

www.SookeMovingAndStorage.com

HAIRE ELECTRIC

Auto Center Your Complete Auto Center 2079 otter Point rd. Sooke, BC V9Z 1G1

250 642-6665

HOME DECOR UPHOLSTERY FABRICS all stock Excludes Outdoor Fabrics

OUTDOOR DECOR FABRICS all stock includes NEW ARRIVALS

Vice Principal John Lyall, adding this was the first year EMCS has participated in the event. “She was great,” he said, referring to Kayla’s speech at the event. “She’s a very strong candidate. She wrote a very polished essay.” According to the Rotary Club of Royal Oak Centennial’s website, “The scholarships offered by the Rotary Club will be $1,000 for the best presentation, $750 for the runner-up, $500 for the third candidate and three ‘consolation’ scholarships for the remaining three finalists.” Tickets are available from the hosting Rotary Club, and cost $15. The finalists’ presentations will be followed with a finger-food reception at which the winners will be announced.

www.sookenewsmirror.com •• 17 17 www.sookenewsmirror.com

Dr. Louis e Morin & Associates OPTOMETRISTS

Eyecare & Eyewear

Since 1988

250-642-4311

Reg Price

Insured and Bonded (FSR-A) Brett Haire bretthaire@gmail.com

250-883-1588

Your ad could be here! HIGH IMPACT! LOW PRICE! 52 weeks - $13.25/wk 26 weeks - $1938/wk 4 weeks - $2510/wk 13 weeks - $2224/wk

call 250-642-5752 now QUICK, SAFE & MOST OF ALL FRIENDLY!

FRESH & DELICIOUS www.andythepizzaman.ca 250-642-5451

250-642-7900 shtaxi@shaw.ca

Change your outlook on life Recover your windows!

5

BUTTERICK PATTERNS

00 ea

3170 3170 TILLICUM TILLICUM ROAD

VICTORIA

LEVEL OUTSIDE OUTSIDE OF TILLICUM CENTRE LOWER LEVEL CENTRE ACROSSFROM FROMPEARKES PEARKESREC. REC.CENTRE CENTRE• •250-475-7501 250-475-7501 ACROSS

StoreHours: Hours:Mon.-Fri. Mon.-Fri.9:30am 9:30 am--9:00 9:00 pm pm Store Sat. 9:30 amam - 5:30 pm pm Sun Sun. and Holidays ampm - 5 pm Sat. 9:30 - 5:30 11:00 am11:00 - 5:00

Graceful Folds Blinds & Shades Graceful Folds Cleaning ~ Aromatherapy Fresh flowers ~ Organizing

(778) 350-MAID Yo u r a d c o u l d b e h e r e !

Wo o d & Fa u x Wo o d B l i n d s P l e a t e d & CAll e l l uStyles l a r S hof a dBlinds es Ve r t i c a l Blind s, Ro l l e/rDrapery S h a d e sHardware Custom Draperies A l u m i n u m & PV C H o r i z o n t a l s Quality installations Free in home consultation

Wide range of fabrics, CBM Products & more Contact Phyllis For a Free in home Consultation Contact Phyllis 250-642-2937 250-642-2937 plysionek@shaw.ca plysionek@shaw.ca

Yo u r a d c o u l d b e h e r e !

H I G H I M PA C T ! L O W P R I C E !

H I G H I M PA C T ! L O W P R I C E !

52 weeks - $13.45/wk 26 weeks - $19.60/wk 13 weeks - $13.55/wk 4 weeks - $25.45/wk

52 weeks - $13.45/wk 26 weeks - $19.60/wk 13 weeks - $13.55/wk 4 weeks - $25.45/wk

call 250.642.5752 now

call 250.642.5752 now


18 • www.sookenewsmirror.com A18 www.sookenewsmirror.com

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Wednesday, April 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR

Wed, Apr 16, 2014, Sooke News Mirror

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

DEATHS

DEATHS

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

COMING EVENTS

Svoboda, John Paul 1944 - 2014 John Paul Svoboda was born in Vancouver British Columbia November 17, 1944 to John and Emma Svoboda and Brother Ralph. He spent many years in Tofino growing up where he became involved in the commercial fishing and crabbing industry. During this time he became married and had two sons. His commercial fishing over the years took him from Alaska to the coast of Oregon where he left his mark and made many friends along the way. Later on John took an interest in the commercial shellfish industry where he spent much time on Denman Island working and making many new friends. John made his residences in Tofino, Sooke, Port Hardy, Comox, and finally settled in the Denman Island area. John enjoyed hunting, fishing, gardening, cooking for family & friends, and helping out others whenever he could. He was an environmentalist at heart with a great love for nature. A hidden passion few knew was his interest in art and writing. His memory will be held in the highest regard by his family, friends, and co-workers as a loving and caring friend, husband, and father.

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For those who love, time is not. Missing you today and always.

Family Owned & Operated OfďŹ ce: 250-642-5598 • Cell: 250-361-8136 www.clarkshomerenovations.ca neilnbev@shaw.ca Renovations

Tubs, Sinks, Taps, Vanity, Drains, Hot Water Tanks

RooďŹ ng, Framing, Drywall, Bathroom, Kitchen, Laminate, Decks

SOOKE CRISIS & Referral Centre, 2043 Church Rd. Open 10am-1pm, Mon.-Fri. 250-642-0215.

BC Business License - City Licence - WCB - Liability Insurance Fall Arrest Training & Equipment

Free Estimates

Seniors Discount

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

DEATHS

DEATHS

Winter, Deborah Anne

(nee McFetridge) April 20, 1954 - April 13, 2014 It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of Deb, after a lengthy and courageous ďŹ ght against cancer. Deb is survived by her loving husband Ken, her children Elizabeth and Vincent Pungente, her mom Florence McFetridge, brother Robert (Louise) McFetridge, sister Linda (Bill) Bussanich, as well as several aunts, and many nieces, nephews and great friends. Deb was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba and came to Victoria in 1957. Deb was passionate about gardening and had her own business for many years. She enjoyed volunteering in the Sooke community. Many thanks to all the doctors, nurses, home care workers and Sooke Hospice for the wonderful care given to Deb, with special thanks to Dr. T. Vally and Dr. E. Anderson. In lieu of owers, donations may be made to the Sooke Hospice or the Cancer Society. Celebration of  life details will be placed in the Times Colonist.

SOOKE MEALS on Wheels, 1585 O’Neill Road, Sooke, BC V9Z 0T5. 250-642-2184.

Easter Sunday Vintage, Retro and Collectible Show/Sale

EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS

EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS

EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS

EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS

UP TO

$1000* OFF TUITION IF YOU START YOUR PROGRAM BEFORE JUNE 30, 2014

*Conditions apply

MEDICAL OFFICE ASSISTANT Career Opportunities: Medical Office Assistant O Dental Office Assistant Pharmaceutical Firms O Medical Supply Firms Medical Clerical in Research & Care Agencies Medical Transcriptionist MSP Billing Clerk O Ward Secretary

CALL VICTORIA: 250.384.8121 OR VISIT SPROTTSHAW.COM

TURN YOUR REFUND into a Donation to the Sooke Food Bank at the Sooke Bottle Depot. Also accepting cash and non perishable food items.

$4 @ Mary Winspear Centre, Sidney, BC. April 20th, 9:30-4pm. 100 tables/60 dealers (Early Birds: $20 @ 8:30am) For info: 250.744.1807 or josiejones@shaw.ca

KNOX PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 2110 Church Rd ANNUAL PLANT SALE

9am to 1pm Saturday, April 26 EVERYONE WELCOME SOOKE SENIOR BUS Shopping over the Malahat Wed., Apr 23rd Home pick up $14 Hall 9:30am. $12 Contact June 250-642-1521 TIRED OF The same old Hollywood Schlock? Rent Awareness Film Night documentaries $3, Video To Go. Film list: awarenessfilmnight.ca

INFORMATION CONTACT LOAN Cupboard call 250-389-4607. Need a ride? Call 250-389-4661.

PERSONALS MEET SINGLES right now! No paid operators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 1-800-712-9851.

LOST AND FOUND FOUND, black duffle bag. Come to Sooke Glass, identify contents to claim 250-6423711 LOST SMALL white and grey cat. Last seen at Guardian Village, Grant Road. Please call 250-642-9979

TRAVEL GETAWAYS LONG BEACH - Ucluelet Deluxe waterfront cabin, sleeps 6, BBQ. Spring Special. 2 nights $239 or 3 nights $299 Pets Okay. Rick 604-306-0891

#/092)'(4

#OPYRIGHTx AND ORx PROPERTIESx SUBSISTx INx ALLx ADVERTISEMENTx ANDx INx ALLx OTHERx MATERIALx APPEARINGx INx THISx EDITIONx OFx BCCLASSIÙED COM x 0ERMISSIONx TOx REPRODUCEx WHOLLYxORxINxPARTxANDxINxANYxFORMx WHATSOEVER x PARTICULARLYx BYx Ax PHOTOGRAPHICx ORx OFFSETx PROCESSx INxAxPUBLICATIONxMUSTxBExOBTAINEDx INxWRITINGxFROMxTHExxPUBLISHER x!NYx UNAUTHORIZEDxREPRODUCTIONxWILLxBEx SUBJECTxTOxRECOURSExINxLAW !DVERTISEÖACROSSÖ6ANCOUVERÖ )SLANDÖANDÖ"RITISHÖ#OLUMBIAÖ INÖTHEÖBEST READ ÖMOSTÖTRUSTEDÖ COMMUNITYÖNEWSPAPERS

INFORMATION DID YOU KNOW? BBB Accredited Businesses contractually agree to operate by the BBB’s 8 Standards of Trust. Look for the 2014 BBB Accredited Business Directory Eedition on your Black Press Community Newspaper website at www.blackpress.ca. You can also go to http://vi.bbb.org/directory/ and click on the 2014 BBB Accredited Business Directory

CLARK’S HOME RENOVATIONS

Service & Installations

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS

TIMESHARE CANCEL YOUR TIMESHARE. NO Risk Program STOP Mortgage & Maintenance Payments Today. 100% Money Back Guarantee. FREE Consultation. Call Us NOW. We Can Help! 1-888356-5248.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE! Absentee ownership! Candy vending route. 6 new machines placed into 6 new busy stores! $2500 investment, not employment! Call after noon only! 951-763-4828. GET FREE Vending Machines. Can earn $100,000 + per year. All cash-retire in just 3 years. Protected Territories. Full details call now 1-866668-6629. Or visit us online: www.tcvend.com


SOOKE NEWS MIRROR - Wednesday, April 16, 2014 Sooke News Mirror Wed, Apr 16, 2014

DRIVERS/COURIER/ TRUCKING

www.sookenewsmirror.com • 19 www.sookenewsmirror.com A19

PERSONAL SERVICES

PERSONAL SERVICES

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

RENTALS

TRANSPORTATION

ESTHETIC SERVICES

LEGAL SERVICES

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

APARTMENT/CONDO

AUTO ACCESSORIES/ PARTS

CRIMINAL RECORD? Pardon Services Canada. Established 1989. Confidential, Fast, & Affordable. A+BBB Rating. RCMP Accredited. Employment & Travel Freedom. Free Consultation 1-8NOW-PARDON (1-866-972-7366) RemoveYourRecord.com

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

DRIVERS WANTED

AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 w/ Airbrake • Guaranteed 40hr. Work Week & Overtime • Paid Travel & Lodging • Meal Allowance • 4 Weeks Vacation • Excellent Benefits Package

Must be able to have extended stays away from home. Up to 6 months. Must have valid AZ, DZ, 5, 3 or 1 with airbrake license and have previous commercial driving experience.

Apply at:www.sperryrail.com, careers & then choose the FastTRACK Application.

BUSINESS SERVICES

DONE RIGHT MOVING $70/hr. Senior Discount. Free Est’s. No travel time before or after. BBB accredited. Call Tyler at 250-418-1747.

APARTMENT/CONDO MANAGER TRAINING

• Certified Home Study Course • Jobs Registered Across Canada • Gov. Certified www.RMTI.ca / 604.681.5456 or 1.800.665.8339

HELP WANTED CREW REQUIRED; N/S, mature, responsible individual for May 15th to Aug. 31st with possible extension to mid Sept. on 75’ yacht with private crew quarters. Must have previous boating experience, preferably on BC coast, be computer savvy and have working knowledge of diesel engines. Please send resumes to Michael iyw.michael@shaw.ca THE SOOKE NEWS Mirror cautions readers about sending money to obtain information about any employment opportunities.

TRADES, TECHNICAL ATTENTION: Utility Tree Workers. Quad L Enterprises Ltd. is looking for Certified Utility Arborists and Slasher Operators. Full time work. Email hr@isley.ca or fax 780-532-1250

COMPUTER SERVICES

DROWNING IN debt? Cut debts more than 60% & debt free in half the time! Avoid bankruptcy! Free consultation. www.mydebtsolution.com or Toll Free 1-877-556-3500 BBB Rated A+

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. UNFILED TAX Returns? Unreported Income? Avoid Prosecution and Penalties. Call a Tax Attorney First! 1855-668-8089 (Monday-Friday 9-6 ET).

INSURANCE

Painting

DRYWALL

KILL ROACHES! Buy Harris Roach Tablets. Eliminate Bugs- Guaranteed. No Mess, Odorless, Long Lasting. Available at Ace Hardware & The Home Depot. SAWMILLS FROM only $4,897 - Make money & save money with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. Free Info & DVD: www.NorwoodSaw mills.com/400OT 1-800-5666899 Ext:400OT.

MISCELLANEOUS WANTED STEEL BUILDINGS/metal buildings 60% off! 20x28, 30x40, 40x62, 45x90, 50x120, 60x150, 80x100 sell for balance owed! Call 1-800-4572206 or visit us online www.crownsteelbuildings.ca.

GARDENING

ROOFING & SKYLIGHTS

ELITE GARDEN MAINTENANCE & LANDSCAPING

AFFORDABLE ROOFING

* Clean ups * Design * Lawn restoration * Renovating Older Gardens * Patios * Landscape Projects WCB * Insured

ED’S HAULING

Cheap disposal of furniture, appliances, junk and what have you? U&I type moving with covered pick-up truck.

Ed & Faye 250-642-2398

WE’RE ON THE WEB Thousands of

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.

ads online updated daily 250.388.3535

*New Construction *Reroofs

*Repairs

Call Deano

250-642-4075 SHORELINE ROOFING. Reroofing specialist. WCB / BBB member. Quality & satisfaction guaranteed. 250-413-7967. shorelineroofing@shaw.ca

STUCCO/SIDING PATCHES, ADDITIONS, restucco, renos, chimney, waterproofing. Bob, 250-516-5178.

WELDING 250-642-0666 WINDOW CLEANING SQUEEKY CLEAN Window and Gutter Cleaning Service. FREE ESTIMATES. Sooke/local 250-514-0165

250-642-1900

2 Bedroom Condo Steps from the Beach. Fresh paint! May 1 $850. N/S, ref req. 250-6427291

COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL

AVAILABLE Private office space available in central location, located in secure professional building. this bright, spacious office has much to offer a successful business. Receptionist Monday-Friday; hydro; water; washroom facilities; internet, both hard wired and wireless; alarm system and comfortable waiting area for clients. Available June 1. $500 per month plus gst. Call Sue at 250-642-3240, for more information or for an appointment to view.

SOOKE WATERFRONT 2 BR log cottage. Large sunroom/studio, $1000 + utils., n/s. 250-642-2015

RECREATION

RV RESORT ON THE LAKE

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 2-4 PM. 2614 Ernhil Dr. Totally renovated 3 bdrm, 2 bath home. New exotic H/W floors. Lrg 8’ shower of master bdrm. Large landscaped fenced lot. Must see. $459,000. BONUS: WE WILL PAY YOU THE REALTOR FEES ON CLOSING. phone (250)590-1632. SIDNEY CONDO for Sale in the Shoal Centre. Thinking of downsizing or buying into a great investment? There’s 1 bdrm, 1 bath, a full kitchen, all appliances and has 4th floor views of Malahat & gorgeous sun sets. Presently rented at $1475/mo. Asking $273,000. Across from Library & Rose gardens. Call (250)655-1956, by appt only. A Real Gem in the Heart of Sidney.

RV SITES REDUCED SPRING pricing. Beachfront Avorado RV Resort. New sites for sale $49,500. Co-op Resort w/Lifetime Ownership! Call (250)228-3586 or online at: www.avorado.com

OTHER AREAS 20 ACRES $0 Down, Only $119/mo. Owner Financing, NO CREDIT CHECKS! Near El Paso, Texas. Beautiful Mountain Views! Money Back Guarantee. Call 1-866-8825263, Ext. 81. www.sunsetranches.net

ALL YOU NEED IN PRINT AND ONLINE www.bcclassified.com

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES CA

AUTO FINANCING

SOOKE OFFICE SPACE

EAST SOOKE cottage. ocean, mountain, farm views. References. F/S, W/D, pet negotiable. Avail May 1 $700/mo. 250-642-2915 briarglen@islandnet.com

Mobile Units +++ Steel Sales

To view call

APARTMENT/CONDOS

WELDING

DRIVER ENT. LTD.

From $675 per mo Refs required.

COTTAGES

FOR SALE BY OWNER

PATCHES,Drywall, skimming, match the textures, coves, fireplaces. Bob, 250-516-5178.

1 Bdrm Suites in Sooke

REAL ESTATE

NANAIMO WATERFRONT 2nd floor condo. 1500 sq.ft. LR/DR/2bdrms with view, den, gas FP, secure bldg. 2 underground parking spaces. Maintenance fee includes hot water/gas/landscaping. 1 pet OK. View anytime. $339,900 Reduced to $329,000. (250)7539123

PLASTERING

HAULING AND SALVAGE

With Katrina, Gary or Matt at Kemp Lake Music Cafe

216-3095 Interior/Exterior Residential & Commercial Specializing in heritage homes

778-678-2524 elitegarden@telus.net

MUSIC LESSONS

250.388.3535

DAN KITEL

GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB. 1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com

ART/MUSIC/DANCING

CLASSIFIED ADS MEAN MORE BUSINESS

KILL BED BUGS & THEIR EGGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Complete Treatment Program or Kit. Available: Hardware Stores, Buy Online: homedepot.com

PAINTING

PERSONAL SERVICES

250-642-7875

SOOKE MOVING AND STORAGE Indoor storage, self contained, various sizes, 24 hr. security. Container storage 20x8x8=$125per.mo. . Public access 9-5pm. Mon.- Sat. 2018 Idlemore Rd. 250- 642-6577 BBB Accredited

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

www.sookemovingandstorage.com

CONCRETE FINISHERS & Form Setters. Edmonton based company seeks experienced concrete finishers and form setters for work in Edmonton and Northern Alberta. Subsistence and accommodations provided for out of town work; Fax 780-444-9165. Jobs@RaidersConcrete.com.

All Ages All Levels

Quality with competitive prices for all your home needs. *Installation and repairs of decks, fences *Minor plumbing and electric Ticketed in municipal water, sewer w/exp in carpentry & an eye for curb appeal. Senior & new referral discount. One call does it all. 778-679-4724

MOVING & STORAGE

FINANCIAL SERVICES

EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS

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

BRAD’S HOME CARE

Sites available at Great Rates. Daily, weekly, monthly. Pool, Hot tub, exercise room, laundry, putting green, hiking, fishing, Pickle Ball Court. Free coffee in one of the best clubhouses on the island. Nanaimo area. www.resortonthelake.com 250-754-1975 or

MARINE BOATS

admin@resortonthelake.com

SHARED ACCOMMODATION VICTORIA $475-$550. incl. Quality Housing for quality people. Call 778-977-8288

SUITES, LOWER 3 br upper, Large garage, n/s, cat ok, refs, $1175+. 250-6426225 $650. One Br suite, full kitchen and bath, laundry, separate entrance, ocean view, Sheringham Point. 250-646-2592

SUITES, UPPER 1 BR APT. 4 pc bath, full kitchen. Close in, access to cable TV and computer hook up. $625. 250-642-3420 Judy SOOKE: QUAINT 1 bdrm $675/mo. Pets considered. Avail. now. (778)352-1618.

BUYING - RENTINGSELLING Call us today to place your classified ad

CONNECTING BUYERS AND SELLERS www. bcclassified. com

250.388.3535

Professionals Connecting Professionals

Where CAREERS come true!

www.localwork.ca


20 •• www.sookenewsmirror.com www.sookenewsmirror.com 20

Wednesday, april April 16, 16, 2014 2014 -- SOOKE SOOKE NEWS NEWS MIRROR MIRROR Wednesday,

Britt Santwoski/Pirjo Raits photos

Got news?

Action in Sooke

Got something going on? Want people to know about it? Send the editor an email: editor@sookenewsmirror.com or call 250-642-5752 and ask for Pirjo.

There has been a lot going on in Sooke over the past week.

Capital Regional District

Top left, Mathiew Morris works at the clay table during the Family Art Day at SEAPARC sponsored by the Sooke Community Arts Council.

Arts Development Deadlines Friday, May 2nd Project Grants - provide project funding for arts organizations.

Top right, June Wesley had her knitting needles out while promoting the Sooke Fall Fair Needlework Section at the Shirley Craft Day last weekend.

IDEA Grants - support arts programming by organizations not eligible for other CRD funding programs. Deadline for receipt of Project and IDEA Grant applications is Friday, May 2, 2014 at 4:30 pm. For details please visit: www.crd.bc.ca/service/ arts-funding

Bottom the pit-cooked food is retreived at Journey middle school.

CRD Arts Development Service 625 Fisgard Street, Victoria, BC V8W 1R7 T: 250.360.3215 artsdevelopment@crd.bc.ca

Capital Regional District Notice of

Juan de Fuca Electoral Area Parks and Recreation Advisory Commission

CRD board approves budget for 2014 ing on what services they receive. The impact for each municipal and electoral area, and additional information about the 2014 financial plan, are available at www.crd.bc.ca/about/financial-accountability Overall the CRD’s budget has two components: the operating portion, and the capital portion. Operating costs pay for the daily business of the CRD. This portion of the budget pays for labour costs, supplies, programs, services and repayment of debt for major projects. Requisition funding and income from fees and service charges, and other grant funding sources fund the operating budget. The capital investment is included in an annual plan to sustain and enhance infrastructure in the region. This includes acquisition of buildings, facilities, construction of trails, and upgrades to capital assets, such as water treatment plants and sewers. The 2014 Financial Plan received preliminary approval by the Board in November 2013. The plan was prepared based on the development of service plan summaries, which support the work plan and resource requirements for the upcoming year. The service plan summaries are approved by various CRD Board standing committees and commissions. For local services, the respective commissions review and recommend their budgets through the Electoral Area Directors to the Board. In the three electoral areas this process includes a significant amount of work undertaken by many appointed commissioners who volunteer their services in the Southern Gulf Islands, Salt Spring Island, and Juan de Fuca.

Any inquiries or correspondence for the Commission can be directed to: 3 – 7450 Butler Road Sooke, BC V9Z 1N1 E: jdfinfo@crd.bc.ca T: 250.642.1500 F: 250.642.5274

$$ $$ FREE FREE MONEY MONEY $$ $$

Bottle Bottle Drives!!! Drives!!! $$Bottle FREE Drives!!! MONEY $$

Pick forBottle Bottle Pickup up for DrivesDrives * Free * Free FULL REFUND for FULL REFUND for * All Beverage Containers * All Beverage Containers * Immediate Payment Immediate Payment * SOOKE Please call toBOTTLE arrangeDEPOT date & time Please call to arrange date & time.

250-216-6315 250-744-8906

2039 BOTTLE Idlemore , Sooke SOOKE DEPOT

erra related costs via requisition. These costs may be collected via requisition, user fees or a combination of both as decided by the participating municipality. The CRD began planning for wastewater treatment facilities in 2006, at the request of the Minister of Environment and to bring the region into compliance with federal and provincial requirements. • The three Saanich Peninsula municipalities will see a significant decrease in CRD requisition costs due to the retirement of debt related to borrowing for the CRD Saanich Peninsula Sewage Treatment Plant. • Included in this year’s budget is funding for the new post-disaster fire hall buildings for North Galiano Island and for East Sooke, with values of $700,000 and $2.3 million respectively. • For the Capital Regional Hospital District (CRHD), the requisition is set to increase by 1.99 per cent. The CRHD provides local share of capital costs for the development of health infrastructure in the region. The CRD provides a range of key services: • regional services are provided to all residents • sub-regional services are provided to residents of participating municipalities • local services are provided to individual municipalities, electoral areas or groups of residents within local service areas. Where someone resides will determine how the CRD budget affects them. For some municipalities the CRD requisition has gone down, for others it has increased. This affects each municipality and its taxpayers differently, depend-

Public Welcome to Attend

250-216-6315 250-744-8906

In late March, the Capital Regional District (CRD) Board approved its 2014 budget, focused on enhancing infrastructure and providing services that are priorities for the region. The 2014 operating expenditure portion of the budget ($192.6 million) pays for a range of more than 200 CRD services to over 360,000 people in the region. In addition, the 2014 capital budget targets $130.2 million in capital projects. The Seaterra program accounts for $63.2 million of the capital budget, and the remaining $67 million will be invested in growth upgrades, construction of trails, electoral area fire hall construction and improvements to the drinking water and sewer systems. The increase in CRD’s core operating costs has been limited to 1.17 per cent, which will primarily be offset by an approximate 1 per cent increase in the tax base resulting from growth and new construction over the past year. The major impacts of the budget are: • Final $2 increase to the regional parks land acquisition levy – the levy will now stabilize at an average $20 per household. The parks levy generates more than $3.7 million to secure park land within the region. • Splitting the final funding for the Island Corridor Foundation over 2014 and 2015 will result in a $300,000 decrease in the 2014 budget. • The primary increase in the budget affects the core municipalities participating in the Seaterra program. Seaterra is building the foundation for wastewater treatment for the core area. Seaterra accounts for a 2.59 percent increase to the requisition for those municipalities which have chosen to recover their Seat-

Regular Meeting Juan de Fuca Local Area Services Building #3 – 7450 Butler Road, Otter Point, BC Tuesday, April 22, 2014 at 3 pm.

BONUS PRIZE: 6 hr cruise for 6 persons on the Duchess of Sooke value $500.00 Bonus Prize can be used to increase profits for your organization by way of raffle, auction or to reward your volunteers Cut this ad out and return to driver to be eligible for Bonus Prize Draw

of organization BONUSname PRIZE: 6 hr cruise for 6 persons on t


SOOKE NEWS NEWS MIRROR MIRROR-- Wednesday, Wednesday, April april 16, 16, 2014 2014 SOOKE

www.sookenewsmirror.com •• 21 21 www.sookenewsmirror.com

Sports & Recreation Sooke River 10K run results

Sooke News Mirror

The race results for the Sooke River 10K are in. There were 360 participants, with the fastest runner (Derek Vinge, of the Comox Valley Road Runners) crossing the finish line after 33:14 minutes. Sooke had 37 runners registered, with Matthew Thomson of the

Sooke Trail and Road Runners (STARR) leading our pack. He placed 51st overall, with a time of 41:14. The top female runner was Kim EbbsCanavan, who placed 86 overall, with a time of 44:59. Upcoming in a week and a half is the Times Colonist 10K walk/run, on Sunday, April 27. You must pre-register to run, as there are no race day

registrations. Registration ends at 6:00 p.m. on Saturday April 26, at the Fitness Expo, which will be held at Crystal Gardens. The start time is 7:50 a.m. for wheelchair athletes, 8 a.m. for runners, recreational and competitive walkers, and recreational wheelchair athletes. The 1.5K family run heads out at 11 a.m. Race maps are

available at their website, http://www.tc10k. ca/, under the Race Info tab. Last year’s top competitive runner in the TC 10K, from Sooke, was Dr. Anton Rabien, who completed with a time of 34:54 and placed 35 overall. The top placing female runner from Sooke was Sarah-Mae Pyndus, with an overall time of 40:58.

Seahawk’s football spring clinic Local Seahawk football players participate in the first annual spring offence clinic. Guest Coaches included Tom O’Niell (the biggest guy in the picture) starting guard along with the Hamilton TiCats of the C.F.L.

Beside him is Paul Ozieretti, coach of the U.B.C. T h u n d e r b i rd s . Far left is Jay Prepchuk, from the top quarterback camp in Canada. To his left is the former Winnipeg Blue Bomber and McGill Redman coach Jerome

Nanaimo Spring Invitational swim meet On April 12-13, Sooke swimmers from Island Swimming attended the Nanaimo Spring (LC) Invitational. The swimmers from Sooke performed exceptionally well at the Nanaimo Riptides Spring Invitational Long Course (50M) Swim Meet. Out of 32 swims we had 31 best times. Attending were, Lucy Bridal (13), Takahara Turnowski (13), Clarke Hopkins (11) and Nicholas Ralph (11). We had swimmers qualifying for the Vancouver

LOOKING FOR AN Auction Bedroom Suite Couch Deli Esthetics Fuel Garage Sale House Investments Jungle Gym Kiln Living Room Suite Moving Company Nail Care Open House Poultry Quilt Rolling Pin Sail Boat Venetian Blinds Window Washer Xylophone Yard Work Zebra

⍟ SEAPARC SNIPPET Erdman, alongside local kicking coach Andy Duke, a former Sooke resident and Saa-

Island Regional Championships in June, which will also be held in Nanaimo. These results for the top eight finishes are as follows: Clarke Hopkins (11 and under) placed first in the 200m breaststroke, third in the 100m freestyle; third in the 200m backstroke, third in the 100m backstroke and fourth in the 50m freestyle. Nicholas Ralph (11 and under) placed eighth in the 50m butterfly.

Lucy Bridal (13 and under) placed seventh in the 100m backstroke, sixth in the 200m backstroke; sixth in the 200m freestyle, seventh in the 100m Breaststroke, and sixth in the 200m individual medley. Takahara Turnowski (13 and under) had best times in the 100m backstroke, the 50m freestyle, the 200m freestyle, the 100m breaststroke, and the 200m individual medley. Submitted by Frank Comerford

Ariah Cummings photo

The runners left the start line at 11 a.m. on a picture-perfect Saturday.

Britt Santowski

Please send sports tips to Britt Santowski at: news@sookenewsmirror.com

nich police detective. A great day was had by all with many compliments from the

coaches on the skills and sportsmanship from our Sooke boys! Andy Carrier

~ Egg Hunt Times ~ Ages 1-4 10:30am • Ages 5-7 11:00am • Ages 8-10 11:30am Admission by donations for the Sooke Food Bank (food or cash) Event in partnership with Sooke Disposal

Tribute for VE DAY MAY 3rd, 2014 - 6:00pm VE DAY - May 4th, 2014 Victory in Europe - May 8th, 1945 BATTLE OF ATLANTIC

Family Breakfast Upstairs 0900 - 1100 hrs. ONLY $5 p.p.

Parade Form up at Evergreen 1200 hrs.

March Off 1215 hrs. O’Canada & Ceremonies at the Cenotaph Approx. 1230 hrs.

Refreshments in the Branch Lounge for Adults & Upstairs for the Youth

250.388.3535

Easter Eggstravaganza at SEAPARC Saturday, April 19th 10:30 - 12:00 Egg Hunts • Spring Crafts • Face Painting • Bounce Houses

Sponsored By: Sooke Legion Branch 54, Shoppers Drug Mart, Sooke Lions Club & AdrenaLINE

Candlelight

ENTERTAINMENT: SOOKE CHOIR SOOKE PIPES & DRUMS GUY MARCHI

Registration is now open for Spring/Summer Programs at SEAPARC including summer camps. Do not delay, register today!

www.seaparc.ca

FOR REGISTRATIONS AND INFORMATION, PLEASE CALL: 250-642-8000


T:5.8125”

Wednesday, April april 16, 16, 2014 2014 -- SOOKE SOOKENEWS NEWSMIRROR MIRROR Wednesday,

22 •• www.sookenewsmirror.com www.sookenewsmirror.com 22

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Fourth quarter comeback gives Pre-Atom Seahawks first win lers grasping for air. Will Daoust, Weston White, Gabe Nelson and Heath White also carried the ball for the balanced and effective Seahawk offence, while Tagish Page and Carson Campbell provided key blocking. On defence, Dayton Planes, Logan Bainbridge and Michael Lundell were strong, making key tackles late to first set-up, then preserve, Sooke’s comeback win. Youngsters Trystan Schroeder and Mitchell Sutherland worked hard and played tough against a physical Gordon Head team. The Seahawks have no game next week due to Easter, but play again in two weeks against their rivals from Langford, the Westshore Warriors. Kick-off is 11 a.m. Apr. 27 at Westhills Stadium. Submitted by Nathan Lowther Photographers name: None Usage info: None

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win. This came one play after James Mullen hustled from his defensive tackle position to push the Raiders’ fastest player out of bounds after a long run into Seahawks territory. That play capped an outstanding game from Mullen in which he made numerous tackles-forlosses on defence, and displayed some power running and strong blocking on offence. The offence was led by Christian Kaisinger, getting his first ever start at quarterback. Kaisinger did a good job getting the ball to his running backs, and scored his first ever touchdown on a quarterback sneak. Brody Reinsch rounded out the Seahawks’ scoring, converting after a firsthalf touchdown. He also contributed a few long runs after serving up some wicked straight-arms that left would-be tack-

S:6”

For the second week in a row, the Sooke Pre-Atom Seahawks football game was decided in the game’s final plays. This time, though, the good guys came out victorious with a 20-19 win over the Gordon Head Raiders on April 13 at Windsor Park in Oak Bay, improving their record to 1-1. Hunter Swift again dominated all aspects of the contest. His power running and pancake blocks opened up running lanes for his teammates. He also scored Sooke’s first touchdown, and then tied the game with a great 40 yard run with about a minute left to play. Swift put his Seahawks ahead for good on the following convert when he carried seemingly the entire Gordon Head team five yards for the winning point. Swift’s game-saving tackle on the last play of the game sealed the

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PAC-COR-14-02A_5.8125x6_Seniors.indd 1

1083235

Studio #: JWT #: 1064243 Client: Participaction Job Name: PAL BC & PAC Campaign Version/Item: Seniors Campaign: PAL BC & PAC Campaign Rev: 1 No of Pages: 1

FILE: PAC-COR-14-02A_5.8125x6_Seniors.indd Sauce Designer: SP Mech Size: 5.8125” x 6” Safety: None Trim: 5.8125” x 6” Bleed: None

Gutter: None Pub Date: None Publication: Blackpress Publications Ad#: PAC-COR-14-02A_5.8125x6_

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Created: 3-19-2014 11:27 Saved: 3-19-2014 11:29 A Printed: 3-19-2014 11:29 A Print Scale: None Printer: Xerox 700 Color E Server Media: Print Type: Newspaper Vendor: None

DOC PATH: Studio:Volumes:Studio:CLIENTS:Participaction:1083235_PAL_BC_PAC_Campaign:DOC:PAC-COR-14-02A_5.8125x6_Seniors.indd FONTS: Helvetica Neue (57 Condensed, 45 Light, 75 Bold, 55 Roman; Type 1), Interstate (LightCompressed; Type 1) IMAGES: Older_adults_power_walking_4C_NEWS.tif CMYK 827 ppi 29% Studio:CLIENTS:Participaction:1083235_PAL_BC_PAC_Campaign:SUPPLIED:HR:Older_adults_power_walking_4C_NEWS.tif Final_PAL_logo2_copy.ai 20.41% Studio:CLIENTS:Participaction:1083235_PAL_BC_PAC_Campaign:SUPPLIED:HR:Final_PAL_logo2_copy.ai HealthyFamiliesBC_Stacked_CMYK_pos.eps 18.96% Studio:CLIENTS:Participaction:HealthyFamiliesBC_Stacked_CMYK_pos.eps Participaction logo 2007 4C.eps 9.64% Studio:LOGOS:Participation:Participaction logo 2007 4C.eps IMAGE USED IN PREVIOUS JWT DOCKET #’S: None

YELLOW

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SOOKE NEWS MIRROR - Wednesday, april April 16, 2014 2014

www.sookenewsmirror.com •

23

Evelyn Petrie photo

Where friends meet

Reader’s Photo of the Week

Sooke News Mirror reader Evelyn Petrie took this photo of the west wing of Mt. Quimper, on a November day. This week’s Reader’s Photo of the Week is sponsored by Stone Pipe Grill. We welcome your submissions. Send your good quality jpeg photos to: editor@ sookenewsmirror.com.

Excellent selection of Lunch & Dinner Items & Great Burgers too! Enjoy our Nightly Fresh Sheet of Tantalizing Specials Casual Dining Kids Menu Lunch 11am - 4:30pm Dinner at 4:30pm Reservations & info 250.642.0566 2038 Otter Point Rd • www.stonepipegrill.com

The Royal Canadian Legion Br. #54 Phone: 250-642-5913

Your Weekly Horoscope CANCER - Jun 22/Jul 22 You are very good at bringing together people, Cancer. Use this ability to create a social forum this week. Encourage those closest to you to exchange ideas. ARIES - Mar 21/Apr 20 Aries, your self-confidence and enthusiasm have made you a natural leader. This week belongs to you, and others will rely on your leadership skills.

LEO - Jul 23/Aug 23 Don’t let others make decisions for you, Leo. This week take control of your life and be more assertive regarding the goals you want to accomplish.

TAURUS - Apr 21/May 21 A unique experience has inspired you to make a difference, Taurus. If you want to volunteer, there are many organizations that need help. Find the right fit for you.

VIRGO - Aug 24/Sept 22 Virgo, technology is foremost on your mind this week. Focus on ways that technology can better your life and advance your career. Seek the advice of others.

GEMINI - May 22/Jun 21 Change is right around the corner, Gemini. Take the time to listen to what the stars are trying to tell you so you can make the best decisions.

LIBRA - Sept 23/Oct 23 Libra, seek guidance from friends and family when faced with a puzzling problem. Different perspectives can shed light on the problem and make it easier to solve.

SCORPIO - Oct 24/ Nov 22 Scorpio, give ample thought to what you really want out of a particular relationship or situation. You might have to make big changes, but such changes are worth the effort. SAGITTARIUS - Nov 23/Dec 21 Try to show others this week that you are a thoughtful person who has a lot of life experience, Sagittarius. Assert yourself calmly and effectively to get your point across. CAPRICORN - Dec 22/ Jan 20 Trust the people you love, Capricorn. They may grow weary of not knowing which way you lean. Be firm when making decisions and others will respect you for it. AQUARIUS - Jan 21/ Feb 18 It is not always easy to think and act dif-

General Meeting every 4th Tuesday, 7pm • Members and bona fide guests welcome

CYSTIC FIBROSIS

FUNDRAISER

ferently from those around you, Aquarius. But your willingness to take the road less traveled is why you’re such an effective leader.

Help us celebrate Tom Lott’s 75th Birthday

PISCES - Feb 19/Mar 20 Pisces, someone close to you is having problems that he or she cannot express. Your intuition will save the day. FAMOUS BIRTHDAYS APRIL 20: Miranda Kerr, Model (31) APRIL 21: James McAvoy, Actor (35) APRIL 22: Marshawn Lynch, Athlete (28) APRIL 23: Craig Sheffer, Actor (54) APRIL 24: Shirley MacLaine (80)

Saturday, April 19th Cocktails at 5:30 Dinner 6:30 Tickets at Bar $10.00

MoNDAYS

Euchre

6:30

TuESDAYS

pool League

7:00

WEDNESDAYS

Nascar Dominos Ladies Darts Shuffleboard Cribbage

N THuRSDAYS FRIDAYS

SuNDAYS

$

12

SUPPORT THE FOOD BANK donate non-perishable food items

MEAT DRAW

7:00 10:00 12 noon 6:30 7:00

EVERY SATuRDAY @ 3:00 pM

Special Draw sponsored by Legion Cribbage Club, Apr. 26 HAMBURGERS & HOT DOGS AVAILABLE

SUNDAY BREAKFAST BRUNCH 9AM - 12:30PM $5 CHilDREN WElCoME

FRIDAY Steak Night

ANNIVERSARIES / BIRTHDAYS /

6-7:30 PM GROUP PARTIES WELCOME! ONLY Hosted by RTeam Ball Team

with Pete & Megan BLUEGRASS JAM KARAOKE 1st and 3rd Sundays Every Friday

APRIL 25: Jason Lee, Actor (44)

2:30 pm - 5:00 pm

8:00 - 11:00 p.m.

DROP IN POOL TOURNAMENT 2 SUNDAY OF EACH MONTH LEgION RIDERS 2 wEDNESDAY OF EACH MONTH AT 7 PM nd

nd

APRIL 26: Stana Katic, Actress (36)

CHECK OUT OUR WEBSITE: SookeLegion.ca

SOOKEFOURCAST

$10

Your weather forecast for the next FOUR DAYS!

EXPRESS BREAKFAST

What you need to know about the weather to plan your weekend.

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

Rain High 10 Low 7

Isolated Showers High 11 Low 7

Light Rain High 10 Low 7

Light Rain High 12 Low 9

Hours of sunshine 1

Hours of sunshine 7

Hours of sunshine 2

Hours of sunshine 3

MON-FRI 8-11am Only at The Mix by Ric’s

Located in the Best Western Premier Prestige Oceanfront Resort

W W W. S O O K E N E W S M I R R O R . C O M


24 •

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR

www.sookenewsmirror.com www.sookenewsmirror.com

Do you know about fishing?

Oliver Katz

BROOMHILL

 Immaculate 3 bedroom 3 bath + den townhome in ‘The Alders’

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Submitted photo

Where in the World?

Day Time HT Time HT Time HT Time HT 10:52 11:36 12:24 13:15 14:10 06:37 07:59 09:46

Fiona Phythian

living to fit your lifestyle today

tionally well call to view!

WEEKLY TIDE TABLES 9.5 9.5 9.5 9.2 8.9 7.2 6.6 5.9

Blair Robertson

B. Com Urban Land Economics

 The Elm offers perfect one level

shaker cabints & SS appliances

Pictured here in front of Meniji Shrine in Toyko Japan are Vanessa Ridley, Ali Hobson, Adonica Neary and Nadine Nicholson. They went to Japan during Spring Break on a school district trip.

02:52 03:21 03:57 04:40 05:32 02:19 04:05 15:18

Daniela Novosadova

Personal Real Estate Corporation

If you know a thing or two about fishing and would like to contribute to a fishing column in the Sooke News Mirror, send along a sample of your writing style and a photo or two. The fishing column should be no more than 200 words and talk about fishing in the Sooke to Port Renfrew area. Send your ideas, stories, what have you, to the editor at: editor@ sookenewsmirror.com.

17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24

Wednesday, april 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR

2.0 2.0 2.0 2.3 2.6 8.2 7.9 7.2

17:32 18:33 19:38 20:45 21:45 15:09 16:08 17:06

7.5 7.2 7.2 7.2 7.5 3.0 3.3 3.6

21:17 21:40 22:13 23:00

6.6 6.6 6.9 7.2

22:34 7.9 23:15 7.9 23:51 8.2

TIMES ARE IN STANDARD TIME, HEIGHTS IN FEET

Residential/Commercial and Bin Service.

250-642-6480 www.sookeshometeam.com

EASTER EGG HUNT Sunday, April 20 FIND AN EASTER EGG AND GET...

250-642-3646

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Plus a sweet surprise for the kids - Egg must be opened by cashier Limited quantities. 1 Egg per purchase.

OPEN GOOD FRIDAY

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SALE ENDS April 20, 2014


Arts & Entertainment

SOOKE NEWS NEWS MIRROR MIRROR -- Wednesday, Wednesday, april 16, 2014 SOOKE April 16, 2014

www.sookenewsmirror.com www.sookenewsmirror.com

B1 •• B1

Inspired by nature, bead maker finds her passion Pandora move over Pirjo Raits

Sooke News Mirror

T

he colours of the glass rods in Lori Steel’s studio are mesmerizing. It’s a rainbow of Murano glass in every shade under imaginable. The walls are lined with bins and boxes of beautifully crafted glass beads, each one metic-

ulously made by hand. Lampwork is a centuries old technique of making beads by melting glass by blowing and shaping with tools and hand movements. The flame comes from propane, butane or natural gas, the glass from Italy and the inspiration from Mother Nature. Ever since the fifth century, artisans have been practicing the art of lampworking. It is dif-

Pirjo Raits photo

Lampworker Lori Steel

ferent than glass blowing in that torches are used rather than furnaces. It’s a precise and complicated art, gaining popularity for the unique glass beads created by the artist. Steel likes the reactivity of the glass and the fascinating results when other materials, like silver, is added to the beads. The metals stick to the molten glass and change the surface colour of the

beads. “I just love to make the beads,” said Steel. “I love the whole process of melting the glass.” Steel has an artist’s heart and she found the inspiration for lampwork from the Sooke Fine Arts Show. She entered three pieces in the show and they sold. That was her impetus to try making her living at creating individual one-of-a-kind glass beads. “That inspired me to go ‘wow!’ I could actually make a living doing this,” said Steel. “Definitely the Sooke Fine Arts gave me the push.” Nature with all of its shapes, striations of colour, patterns and symmetry is her inspiration. Her larger beads can mimic rocks and crystals, leaves and seeds. She translates what she sees around her in nature onto the beads. She fashions individual beads, bracelets and earrings. While at markets she

demonstrates her art and chats with people about what she does. People are fascinated by what she does, as attested by the numbers who watch her work. She loves it all. She hasn’t looked back and is, in fact, looking forward. This is her first year as a full time artist and she is thrilled at the reception to her work. She is not a relative unknown, she spent many years doing stunned glass and teaching others in the Metchosin area. She has a studio called Inspiration and she taught people to make mosaic tiles and stained glass. Once she touched glass though, it was all over. Glass beads and the thrill of the flame and what it creates is her love. Courses, workshops and inspiring instructors have taken her to places where she perfected her art. The Arrowmont School of Arts & Crafts, in Gatlin-

burg, Tennessee was where Steel learned many of the techniques and master lampwork instructors such as Corina Tettinger, Andrea Guarino and Holly Cooper brought her to new heights in creativity. Steel has been in Sooke for 14 years and started Dragonfly Organic Art. She sells at prestigious markets in Vancouver, Calgary, Courtney and Victoria. She will be setting up her booth at Bastion Square in Victoria for the summer months and at Circle Craft, the Filberg Festival and two art markets in Calgary later in the year. Locally she sells at the Sooke Harbour House and the new Inspire store on Eustace Road. For more information on Lori Steel and her art go to: dragonflyorganics.ca; or www.facebook.com/ dragonflyorganicart.

Pirjo Raits/Submitted photos

Top and bottom, pendants made by Lori Steel. Clockwise: from right, Lori Steel at work with the torch making beads. Middle right, Steel applies surface design onto a molten bead, below detail of decorated bead. Centre, a selection of bead bracelets and far left string of handmade beads.

RECRUITMENT

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1-855-678-7833


WEDNESDAY, Wednesday, APRIL april 16, 16, 2014 2014 -- SOOKE SOOKE NEWS NEWS MIRROR MIRROR

B2 B2 •• www.sookenewsmirror.com www.sookenewsmirror.com

Arts & Entertainment

Songs of the American west on tap at folk society concert The Sooke Folk Music Society is very pleased to be welcoming back Hank Cramer to our April Coffee House this Saturday, April 19. Please note that for this month only, our Coffee House is being held at Sooke Baptist Church out on West Coast Road. Hank Cramer is one of the best-loved folksingers in the American West. He is widely known for his booming bass voice, smooth picking on a vintage flat-top guitar, and his wry sense of humor. He has a repertoire of over a thousand modern and traditional songs, spanning the genres of Celtic, Appalachian, Maritime, cowboy, and plain old folk music. He is more than simply a performer, however. He is a historian and educator who weaves music and history into presentations which bring to life the rich story of America’s westward movement, and give his audiences insight into the “folk process” by which traditional songs evolve and change to describe new events. Cramer was born in North Carolina. His father was a Green Beret, his mother an elementary school teacher. Hank’s father, Captain Harry G. Cramer was the first American soldier killed in Vietnam in 1957. Hank’s mother never remarried. Hank inherited a gift of music from his father, and by high school was a prominent performer in glee club, choir, and school musicals. He earned a history degree at the University of Arizona, paying his way by working nights and weekends as a radio dee-jay and coffee house folksinger. After graduation, Cramer pursued a unique life journey involving adventure, hardship, travel, and public service. He has been an underground miner, an Army officer and paratrooper, a 9-1-1 emergency communicator, a deepwater sailor, and a wrangler for a highcountry outfitter. These life experiences make Hank’s songs ring with the special authentic-

Submitted photo

Hank Cramer performs on Saturday. ity of someone who has “been there and done that.” A full-time touring musician for over 10 years, Cramer now has 19 CD’s and several movie soundtracks and music videos to his credit. Cramer’s music has garnered professional recognition in the music industry. He has been selected to receive the Humanities

Washington Award for 2011. Heartland Public Radio named his recording of My Sweet Wyoming Home to the Top Five Cowboy Songs of 2007. Texas Public Radio “Random Routes” listed two of Hank’s songs in their Top Twenty of 2007, while Northwest Public Radio’s “Inland Folk” chose his CD Songs From Maurie’s Porch as

one of the Top Ten Folk Albums of 2006. After 9/11, Crameerinterrupted his music career to resume military service. He taught Army ROTC at the University of Washington, then volunteered to deploy as an adviser and trainer to the Afghan National Army. He was injured during this tour of duty, medivaced back to the U.S., and is now retired from the Army Reserve. Cramer married Kit McLean of Winthrop, Washington in 2000. She is a high-country wrangler in one of America’s most scenic mountain ranges. She is also a photographer, a local historian, and published author. The Cramers live on a small ranch in Washington’s Methow Valley with their many critters. Come out this Saturday, April 18 to the Sooke Baptist Church on West Coast Road for an evening of lively music with Hank Cramer, Doors open at 7 p.m. with open stage at 7:30 and our feature at 9.

VALUE OUR FOOD OUR FARMERS OUR COMMUNITY

VALUE OUR FOOD OUR FARMERS OUR COMMUNITY

Arts UE and crafts day VAL

Britt Santowski photo

OUR FOOD OUR FARMERS OUR COMMUNITY

Dhalia Tholcke at the craft table during the Sooke Community Arts Council’s Family Art Day at SEAPARC. OUR FOOD

VALUE

VALUE

OUR FARMERS OUR COMMUNITY OUR FOOD OUR FARMERS OUR COMMUNITY

Value Your Farmer Forum The last in a series of three Sooke Region Food CHI Society Workshops

r e t s a E Eggstravaganza AT THE SEAPARC LEISURE COMPLEX

SATURDAY, APRIL 19 10:30 am - 12:00 pm - Easter Egg Hunts - Spring Crafts - Face Painting - Bouncy Castles

Admission by donations for the Sooke Food Bank (food & cash accepted)

EGG HUNTS Ages 1 - 4: 10:30 am Ages 5 - 7: 11:00 am Ages 8 - 10 11:30 am Event in partnership with:

Help develop a food-growing community. Sooke Region Food CHI, Transition Sooke and Sooke Farmland Trust joined by special guests Merville Organics, Comox Valley, discuss how a community can support its farmers and OUR FOOD more food-growing initiatives. OUR FARMERSEveryone is welcome! OUR COMMUNITY

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2014 7pm – 9pm Edward Milne Community School 6218 Sooke Road VALUE

VALUE

Suggested donation $10 at the door. OUR FOOD Refreshments provided. OUR FOOD OUR FARMERS OUR FARMERS Latecomers welcome, is limited. Y however seating COMMUNIT OUR COMMUNITY OUR Please reserve yours by emailing bjacobsc@gmail.com or mary@almfarms.org, or call 250.220.0683 www.sookefoodchi.ca

O OU


1000

SOOKE NEWS MIRROR - Wednesday, April 16, 2014

www.sookenewsmirror.com

• B3

Village Food Markets Counter

Apple Baker y Pies

Wishing You a

Happy Easter BlloVaurietriess in

Deli Fresh Grade A Young

Turkeys

A 150g

4

All Sizes While Supplies Last

99

375g

ea

y r e c o r G

Island Gold e it Medium, Wh

Eggs 18 pack

3

4.39/kg

8”

Bick’s

Grocer y

Baby Dills, Yum Yum or Sweet Mixed

Meat

1

7

2/ 00

Pickles 1L

5

2/ 00

98 /lb

Produce

89 Yams

California Med/Jumbo

ea

$1.28/kg

58

¢ /lb

We e k l y S p e c i a l s i n E f f e c t , P r i c e s A d v e r t i s e d a r e C a r d h o l d e r P r i c e s We d n e s d a y, A p r i l 1 6 , 2 0 1 4 - T u e s d a y, A p r i l 2 2 , 2 0 1 4 O p e n 7 : 3 0 a m - 1 0 : 0 0 p m , d a i l y i n c l u d i n g h o l i d a y s # 1 0 3 - 6 6 6 1 S o o k e R o a d • L o c a l l y O w n e d & O p e r a t e d • We r e s e r v e t h e r i g h t t o l i m i t q u a n t i t i e s

S E E C O M P L E T E L I S T O F S P E C I A L S O N L I N E AT W W W. V I L L AG E F O O D M A R K E T S . C O M B.C. Transit Bus Passes, Lotter y Centre, Gift Cer tificates and Canada Postage Stamps • Proud member of Sooke Region Chamber of Commerce


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Wednesday, April 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR

SOOKE NEWS MIRROR - Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Alberta Beef AA or Better

Rib Eye Grilling Steaks

1

Smoked Hams

All Varieties

Grimm’s

500g ...................................

Sizzlin’ Smokies

450g ...................................

6

450g ...................................

ea

Snack Crackers

5

99

Grolsch

3

Hot Chocolate

3

ea

Cheddar Cheese

Muffins

Sidekicks

Pure Pumpkin

111-167g

5

4/ 00

Crystal Light Liquid

Drink Mixes

48 mL.......................... San Remo

6’s

3

2/ 00

Grocer y

1 kg ...............................

5

796 mL .........................

¢ Cling Wrap

99

ea

Kikkoman Panko

Bread Crumbs 227g ..................................

Glad

199 ea

30m .................................. Honey Maid

Wafers or Crumbs

400g..................................

ea

1L......................................

1

ea

299 ea

284 mL...........................

99¢

Campbell’s

Broth

900 mL ..............................

398 mL

199 ea

B E C A U S E

W E

We e k l y S p e c i a l s i n E f f e c t , P r i c e s A d v e r t i s e d a r e C a r d h o l d e r P r i c e s We d n e s d a y, A p r i l 1 6 , 2 0 1 4 - T u e s d a y, A p r i l 2 2 , 2 0 1 4

Alcan

Aluminum Foil 100ft.........

Italian Bread or Crustini Buns 99 ea

3

510g-8’s ......................

2

169

99¢

399

5

7

2/ 00

230-250g

99

ea 600g

Gladware

99

375-398 mL

ea

Finish

Dishwasher Gel or Powder

499

ea 1.6L - 1.8 kg

Foil-wrapped Chocolate

Easter Bunnies ...

A B O U T

O U R

679ea 49 1/100g

429ea 49 Easter Eggs ........ 1 /100g

Batteries 1-4 pack

Foil-wrapped Chocolate

Jelly Beans ........

ea

Meow Mix Selects

Cat Food

3/ 00 78g

K I D S !

We e k l y S p e c i a l s i n E f f e c t , P r i c e s A d v e r t i s e d a r e C a r d h o l d e r P r i c e s We d n e s d a y, A p r i l 1 6 , 2 0 1 4 - T u e s d a y, A p r i l 2 2 , 2 0 1 4

¢ 49 /100g

Dried Unsulphered

99 3/100g

Organic

389ea

Blueberries ........ 1kg bag

Quick Oats ................ Honey Roasted 170g bag

Sesame Sticks ............

Together we have raised over $26,130 for our local schools.

C A R E . . . .

1kg bag

Trail Mix ............

Eggs ..................

ea

2

Mountain

Nutty Club or Robin M&M

Duracell

Beets

Bulk

1/100g

ea 30’s

Royal City

Dry Roasted Peanuts

ea

Salted or Unsalted Econo 05 Mixed Nuts ...........

399

Unico Stuffed

Cuban Coffee 2/ 00

ea 454g

4

5

2/ 00

Cubita Villaggio

199

142g

Plastic Cups

3-5 Pack

ea 375 mL

ea

Tenderflake Lard

ea

5lb bag

Solo Square Bottomed

Glad

Manzanilla Olives

3

Money’s Sliced

89 Mushrooms

Grocer y

Maple Leaf

Planter’s

270g

2/ 00

ea

Dairyland and Village Food Markets are both teaming up to donate money to local schools. We’re proud to offer a full range of high quality Dairyland products and help our schools overcome funding shortages for activities and programs. Milk Money is a great fundraiser everyone can participate in! Sign up Now!

B E T T E R

+dep

348 mL

599

299

Potato Chips

Cranberry Sauce

Olive Oil

Clamato Juice

Old Dutcch

Oceanspray

99¢

Mott’s

ea +dep 1.89L

3/ 99

San Remo Extra Virgin

ea

5lb bag

Grocer y

Pepsi

9

ea

ea

All Varieties 12 pack

Unico

2/ 00 Tomatoes

Sea Salt

Royal City

2 Watermelons .......198 Green Giant Russet California 98 98 Potatoes ....... 1 Carrots .........2 California, Large Organic! 48 98 Cauliflower............ 1 Spring Mix .3

ea 454g

/lb $8.80/kg

English

5

Canadian

Imported Personal Size

98ea

Pineapples ..........

Campari Tomatoes

5

5

Corn on the Cob

B.C. Grown! Hot House

4/ 00

Stuffing

3

1 98 2

341-398 mL

Kraft Stove Top

2/ 00

Knorr

3

Florida Peaches & Cream

Hawaiian

3

6/ 98

3 skewers/tray

/lb 4.37/kg

Fresh Pork Back

99

ea

98

/lb $19.81/kg

Produce

499

Peppers

99

Ribs

Prawns

B.C. Grown! Red, Yellow or Orange

Vegetables

ea 600g

120g

8

Frozen, Raw, Skewered .................

Dozen

Del Monte

899 Dempster’s

ea 425-475g

ea +dep

ea

ea

General Mills

99

99

99

1199

4/ 00

Oatmeal Crisp Cereal

Non-Alcoholic Beer 4 pk

3

2/ 00

475 mL

ea

99

+dep

Salad Dressings

Scottowels

ea

Armstrong

4

Kraft

Ultra Select a Size

500g

1.2 kg ............................

ea

3/ 00

225g

Cadbury

4

2L All Varieties

2/ 00

1

99 Beef Burgers

Beach Oysters . 6

Lamb Loin Chops

499

/100g

m Fresh in the shell Mediu 99

Fresh, Imported

Harvest

Coca Cola

Christie

2 Roll

375g ...................................

99 Wieners

Grimm’s Original, Beef or Cheddar

5

8

Harvest Original or All-Beef

Harvest Original or Applewood

Bacon

ea

2

Seafood

42

/lb 19.81/kg

/lb $4.39/kg

European Wieners 99 Sausage Rings

4

Sockeye Fillets

99

Grimm’s Smoked

or Smokies 375-450g .......

N WILD PREV. FROZE

Boneless

99

Mitchell’s Boneless

• B5

Happy Easter

Village Food Markets

Meat

www.sookenewsmirror.com

199ea


B4 •

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Wednesday, April 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR

SOOKE NEWS MIRROR - Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Alberta Beef AA or Better

Rib Eye Grilling Steaks

1

Smoked Hams

All Varieties

Grimm’s

500g ...................................

Sizzlin’ Smokies

450g ...................................

6

450g ...................................

ea

Snack Crackers

5

99

Grolsch

3

Hot Chocolate

3

ea

Cheddar Cheese

Muffins

Sidekicks

Pure Pumpkin

111-167g

5

4/ 00

Crystal Light Liquid

Drink Mixes

48 mL.......................... San Remo

6’s

3

2/ 00

Grocer y

1 kg ...............................

5

796 mL .........................

¢ Cling Wrap

99

ea

Kikkoman Panko

Bread Crumbs 227g ..................................

Glad

199 ea

30m .................................. Honey Maid

Wafers or Crumbs

400g..................................

ea

1L......................................

1

ea

299 ea

284 mL...........................

99¢

Campbell’s

Broth

900 mL ..............................

398 mL

199 ea

B E C A U S E

W E

We e k l y S p e c i a l s i n E f f e c t , P r i c e s A d v e r t i s e d a r e C a r d h o l d e r P r i c e s We d n e s d a y, A p r i l 1 6 , 2 0 1 4 - T u e s d a y, A p r i l 2 2 , 2 0 1 4

Alcan

Aluminum Foil 100ft.........

Italian Bread or Crustini Buns 99 ea

3

510g-8’s ......................

2

169

99¢

399

5

7

2/ 00

230-250g

99

ea 600g

Gladware

99

375-398 mL

ea

Finish

Dishwasher Gel or Powder

499

ea 1.6L - 1.8 kg

Foil-wrapped Chocolate

Easter Bunnies ...

A B O U T

O U R

679ea 49 1/100g

429ea 49 Easter Eggs ........ 1 /100g

Batteries 1-4 pack

Foil-wrapped Chocolate

Jelly Beans ........

ea

Meow Mix Selects

Cat Food

3/ 00 78g

K I D S !

We e k l y S p e c i a l s i n E f f e c t , P r i c e s A d v e r t i s e d a r e C a r d h o l d e r P r i c e s We d n e s d a y, A p r i l 1 6 , 2 0 1 4 - T u e s d a y, A p r i l 2 2 , 2 0 1 4

¢ 49 /100g

Dried Unsulphered

99 3/100g

Organic

389ea

Blueberries ........ 1kg bag

Quick Oats ................ Honey Roasted 170g bag

Sesame Sticks ............

Together we have raised over $26,130 for our local schools.

C A R E . . . .

1kg bag

Trail Mix ............

Eggs ..................

ea

2

Mountain

Nutty Club or Robin M&M

Duracell

Beets

Bulk

1/100g

ea 30’s

Royal City

Dry Roasted Peanuts

ea

Salted or Unsalted Econo 05 Mixed Nuts ...........

399

Unico Stuffed

Cuban Coffee 2/ 00

ea 454g

4

5

2/ 00

Cubita Villaggio

199

142g

Plastic Cups

3-5 Pack

ea 375 mL

ea

Tenderflake Lard

ea

5lb bag

Solo Square Bottomed

Glad

Manzanilla Olives

3

Money’s Sliced

89 Mushrooms

Grocer y

Maple Leaf

Planter’s

270g

2/ 00

ea

Dairyland and Village Food Markets are both teaming up to donate money to local schools. We’re proud to offer a full range of high quality Dairyland products and help our schools overcome funding shortages for activities and programs. Milk Money is a great fundraiser everyone can participate in! Sign up Now!

B E T T E R

+dep

348 mL

599

299

Potato Chips

Cranberry Sauce

Olive Oil

Clamato Juice

Old Dutcch

Oceanspray

99¢

Mott’s

ea +dep 1.89L

3/ 99

San Remo Extra Virgin

ea

5lb bag

Grocer y

Pepsi

9

ea

ea

All Varieties 12 pack

Unico

2/ 00 Tomatoes

Sea Salt

Royal City

2 Watermelons .......198 Green Giant Russet California 98 98 Potatoes ....... 1 Carrots .........2 California, Large Organic! 48 98 Cauliflower............ 1 Spring Mix .3

ea 454g

/lb $8.80/kg

English

5

Canadian

Imported Personal Size

98ea

Pineapples ..........

Campari Tomatoes

5

5

Corn on the Cob

B.C. Grown! Hot House

4/ 00

Stuffing

3

1 98 2

341-398 mL

Kraft Stove Top

2/ 00

Knorr

3

Florida Peaches & Cream

Hawaiian

3

6/ 98

3 skewers/tray

/lb 4.37/kg

Fresh Pork Back

99

ea

98

/lb $19.81/kg

Produce

499

Peppers

99

Ribs

Prawns

B.C. Grown! Red, Yellow or Orange

Vegetables

ea 600g

120g

8

Frozen, Raw, Skewered .................

Dozen

Del Monte

899 Dempster’s

ea 425-475g

ea +dep

ea

ea

General Mills

99

99

99

1199

4/ 00

Oatmeal Crisp Cereal

Non-Alcoholic Beer 4 pk

3

2/ 00

475 mL

ea

99

+dep

Salad Dressings

Scottowels

ea

Armstrong

4

Kraft

Ultra Select a Size

500g

1.2 kg ............................

ea

3/ 00

225g

Cadbury

4

2L All Varieties

2/ 00

1

99 Beef Burgers

Beach Oysters . 6

Lamb Loin Chops

499

/100g

m Fresh in the shell Mediu 99

Fresh, Imported

Harvest

Coca Cola

Christie

2 Roll

375g ...................................

99 Wieners

Grimm’s Original, Beef or Cheddar

5

8

Harvest Original or All-Beef

Harvest Original or Applewood

Bacon

ea

2

Seafood

42

/lb 19.81/kg

/lb $4.39/kg

European Wieners 99 Sausage Rings

4

Sockeye Fillets

99

Grimm’s Smoked

or Smokies 375-450g .......

N WILD PREV. FROZE

Boneless

99

Mitchell’s Boneless

• B5

Happy Easter

Village Food Markets

Meat

www.sookenewsmirror.com

199ea


B6 •

www.sookenewsmirror.com

Wednesday, April 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR

Village Food Markets

Baker y

Deli

Last ones of the year!! Made from scratch

Hot Cross Buns

3

49

6’s

Bird’s Nest Cookies

Brown or White

Dinner Buns

7

Lemon or Keylime

Made In-Store

Dair y

Dairyland

3

Whipping Cream 1L

Dairyland

Sour Cream

Tropicana

............ ..............................

2 499 2/ 00 5 399

.....................

........................ Orange Juice 1.75L ......

2

19 ea

Frozen

3ea9 ea

ea +dep

399

NOW ea 225g OPEN Earth’s Balance UNTIL Buttery Flavour 10 PM Spread Ever y Day!

399

ea 425g

..............................

250 mL ...........................

5

Chocolate Chips

Pastry or Shells 255-397g 299 ea Drink Mixes

400

3/

Breyers Double Churn

2/ 00 Caminio Organic

Tenderflake

Bacardi

750g

............

Chip Dips 225g............

6 Pack

Vegetables

...................

...... 400g ........................... m a re C ed p ip Wh

Nalley

Pita Bread

Green Giant

ea

Dairyland Aerosol

/100g

/100g

............... 500 mL .....................

Spinach Dip

1

Yam Potato Salad

99

/100g

19

/100g

ea 12 pack

/100g

59

1 ¢ 89

Scones

99

1

Pastrami

19

Blueberry

Chiffon Pies ea 8”

3 69 3

ea 12 pack

Dozen

99

Smoked Turkey 7 Layer Dip

99

2/ 00

8

ea 12 pack

1

Schneiders

Ice Cream

1.66L.....................................

699ea

Snowcrest Frozen

Cranberries 300g...................................

Natural Foods

Crofter’s

Organic Jam

299

ea 235 mL

GimMe Organic

Seaweed Snacks

1

99

199ea

A

Dragsosenenson ’ Den Love Child Organics

Baby Food

128 mL

ea 10g

We e k l y S p e c i a l s i n E f f e c t , P r i c e s A d v e r t i s e d a r e C a r d h o l d e r P r i c e s We d n e s d a y, A p r i l 1 6 , 2 0 1 4 - T u e s d a y, A p r i l 2 2 , 2 0 1 4

3

2/ 00


Tales of Cougar Annie SOOKE SOOKE NEWS NEWS MIRROR MIRROR -- Wednesday, Wednesday, april April 16, 16, 2014 2014

Commemorating a coastal legend

UNSTOPPABLE GOD’S LOVE PURSUING YOU

The details:

Cougar Annie Tales Edward Milne community theatre 6218 Sooke Rd. Monday, April 28 Doors 7:30 p.m. - Show 8 p.m. Info: 250-885-7100 Tickets at the door or in advance at the Sooke Regional Museum, E.M.C.S. ticket office, Stick-in-the Mud Coffee ( EMCS students - $5 at the door)

C

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Cougar Annie’s garden and immersing herself in the folklore surrounding the legendary pioneer-settler. “While most of my research happened during the three years I spent on her land. I have since traveled around Vancouver Island, Manitoba, and Alberta. I have been conducting interviews with relatives, collecting photos, news clippings, and letters,” states Kadoski. After five years of writing and researching there is now a show called Cougar Annie Tales. It has been recently adapted as a solo theatre piece with support from the Other Guys, Kate Rubin, and Intrepid Theatre. Now her award winning, critically acclaimed one-woman show has been touring around B.C., and recently showcased at Pacific Contact. Drawing upon many sources, including Annie’s family, Cougar Annie Tales uses dramatic narrative, images, letters, and original compositions to celebrate the unconventional life of one of B.C.’s most colourful characters. For more information on Katrina Kadoski go to: www. katrinakadoski.com

ENGINEERED HARDWOOD HICKORY 6”

E

derness by Annie provided food and income throughout her long life. The bounty on cougars supplemented her income and she earned her moniker of Cougar Annie by shooting over 70 of the animals. Annie gave birth to eight more children in this remote location. In 1961 Annie married for the fourth and last time. It was an unsuccessful marriage to a man, 12 years her junior, who drank, stole from the store and sometimes beat her. This man tried to run Annie off a cliff to get the farm but she was wilier than he was and ran him off with her shotgun. When he left never to return around 1967, he was not missed. Annie rarely left the property until old age and blindness forced her removal to Port Alberni, where she died just shy of 97. In 2007 Katrina Kadoski moved to an off-the-grid historical homestead /garden located 33 miles North of Tofino. It used to belong to a settler who became known as Cougar Annie. Shortly after arriving she began writing songs about Cougar Annie’s very interesting life. Kadoski spent close to three years at

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FROM

alifornia-born Ada Annie Jordan settled in the Clayoquot coastal rainforest in 1915 with her first husband, Willie Rae Arthur and three young children. Willie was a “remittance Man” from Glasgow with an opium addiction and a wealthy Scottish family who sent him regular cheques to keep him in Canada and to avoid him embarrassing his upper class family. Annie came to this isolated coast to help save him from his habit. A five-acre garden carved out of the wil-

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Wednesday, April 16, 2014 - SOOKE NEWS MIRROR

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16.97

$

227.00

$

$

#44882 66948

117.00

$

#77985 00238

5

97.00

Solid Wood Teak oil finish

50 Piece, Ideal for gardens or planting beds • Waters 75 sq. ft. area • Precise watering for healthy, beautiful landscaping • Attaches easily to your outdoor faucet

Flexon

$

60” Bench with Popup Table

77.00

• Acacia wood

#PTWB01290

• •

Shopping Mall Bench •

$

#B002810

Wood slats Powder coated steel frame

Teak oil finish

$

• •

Solid Acacia Wood Teak Oil Finish

15.97

Your $ Choice

Wooden Love Seat

Planter/Bench

#PTWB01280

#37063 10885 #37063 10887 #37063 10889 #37063 11062 #37063 11063

Zero Gravity Chair

• All natural solid wood • Folds completely for easy storage • Curved back

steps

#6006

26" Tempered glass top Brown steel frame UV treated PVC wicker

Side Mount Hose Reel • •

4' (1.22m) leader hose 150' (45m) of hose capacity

(hose extra)

#99971

39.97

$

#49206 23883

29.97

$

Prices in effect until April 27, 2014 • While Stock Lasts • Shop Early For Best Selection • www.SleggLumber.ca


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