THURSDAY NOVEMBER 8, 2018 VOL. 44, NO. 43
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REMEMBRANCE DAY ISSUE
On the centennial of the end of the First World War we remember those who have sacrificed in all conflicts in the hope of a better future
Welcoming Bowen’s new council BRONWYN BEAIRSTO EDITOR
In likely the best-catered meeting of the coming term, Bowen’s new council was sworn in at Cates Hill Chapel last Thursday. The inaugural council meeting featured no discussion of the official community plan or land use bylaws. Gary Ander became mayor of Bowen and the slate of councillors, Alison Morse, Michael Kaile, Maureen Nicholson, Sue Ellen Fast, David Hocking and Rob Wynen, took their oaths of office. Former mayor Murray Skeels addressed the new council and audience. He said that he saw this election as a vote of confidence as everyone who ran for re-election is returning to his or her councillor chair. “Your incoming council is strong and diverse,” he told the crowd. “They will reach decisions by governing together.” Ander then took the stage. “You’ve done a stellar job of leading basically a rookie bunch,” he told Skeels. “Now I get a well-oiled machine.” Acknowledging the close mayoral race (where his opponent, Melanie Mason got 49.9 per cent of the vote), Ander said he’d like to see Mason on committees and involved in the municipality in the coming four years. Ander also pointed to some of the key campaign issues that he plans on addressing, including the upcoming capital projects, rental housing, staffing shortages and transportation. “Bowen Island meet your new council,” he said. “I’m excited to get going.”
Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas standing before his latest Haida Manga work, Carpe Fin. The six pannels of the piece were hung together for the first time last weekend at Terminal Creek Contemporary in Artisan Square. Photo: Len Gilday
See Carpe Fin before it leaves Bowen forever BRONWYN BEAIRSTO EDITOR
Art lovers have one chance to see local artist Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas’s latest Haida Manga mural before it leaves for its permanent home at the Seattle Art Museum. The 12 square metres of intricate graphic narrative took 17 months to create with a 108-page Haida Manga
book coming out November 2019. The museum’s largest ever commission, the water colour and ink mural is on six panels of rare, Japanese, custom-made mulberry paper. “Everything that’s gone into it has been really thought out,” says Yahgulanaas, who even met with the chemist about the paper’s pigmentation. “I’m quite obsessive about it.”
“It is the latest, most complex and thoughtful piece to date,” he says. Carpe Fin is currently hanging in the Terminal Creek Contemporary exhibition space in Artisan Square as it awaits transportation to Seattle later this month. The work can be viewed until Nov. 25, by appointment only, though there will be a reception on Nov. 21 from 2 to 6 p.m.
Yahgulanaas, a prolific Haida artist and author, known for coining the Haida-Asian hybrid art form he calls Haida Manga, has had work in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, British Museum, Vancouver Art Gallery and Seattle Art Museum. His two previous Haida Manga murals include RED and War of the Blink. Continued on page 3
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Event Calendar Nov 9 2018 9:30 am Housing Advisory Committee
Nov 13 2018 7:15 pm Regular Council Meeting
Nov 16 2018 9:30 am Economic Development Committee Meeting
Nov 17 2018 9:00 am - 1:00 pm CPR/AED Training
Nov 19 2018 7:00 pm Advisory Planning Commission Meeting All meetings are held in Council Chambers unless otherwise noted.
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Request for Volunteer Library Board members
Help build the Community Centre
The Bowen Island Municipality and Bowen Island Public Library are seeking applications from Bowen Island residents interested in joining the Bowen Island Public Library Board. We are seeking applications from members of the public with diverse skills and interests who are committed to the ideals of open and equitable access to information through public library service. Key duties of the Library Board are: • Setting the strategic direction and goals of the library. • Determining policy and rules for managing the provision of public library services and for regulating the use of the library facilities and programs by the public. • Appointing and reviewing performance of the Chief Librarian. • Preparing an annual operating budget to present to Council. • Reviewing the annual operating budget and monitoring revenue and expenditures through the year. The Board meets 10 times per year on the third Thursday of the month. Interested individuals are asked to submit a one-page summary of their background, skills and expertise relative to the duties and responsibilities of the position. Information about the role of Library Board members can be found at bowenlibrary.ca/about-us/library-information/board-members/ and further questions can be emailed to info@bowenlibrary.ca. Interested applicants are asked to respond in writing, via email, fax or regular mail, with the requested information by Friday, November 16, 2017 at 4:00 p.m. to:
EVERY LETTER COUNTS SP SPREAD THE WORD HELP US BUILDD HE OUR COMMUNITY CENTRE C RE
Hope Dallas, Deputy Corporate Officer Bowen Island Municipality 981 Artisan Lane, Bowen Island, BC V0N 1G2 FAX: 604-947-0193 EMAIL: hdallas@bimbc.ca
Drinking Water and Persons who are Immunocompromised The Provincial Health Officer advises all British Columbians with compromised immune systems (such as HIV, organ or bone transplants, chemotherapy or medications that suppress the immune system) to avoid drinking water from any surface water or ground water that is under the influence of surface water, unless it has been boiled, filtered, distilled or treated with UV. Bowen Island and other areas in British Columbia use surface water sources (lakes, rivers, streams). This is not a general boil-water advisory for the general public, but rather is directed only at persons with compromised immune systems. If in doubt about your immune system status, please discuss this further with your physician.
Saturday, November 17th, 2018
First Aid with Amanda Municipal Hall, 9am-1pm CPR/AED Training
Learn the skills needed to recognize and respond to cardiovascular emergencies and choking for adults, children, and babies. Learn to use an automated external defibrillator (AED). Come learn with your Emergency Program volunteers. No charge. Contact Jennifer McGowan, BIM Emergency Program Coordinator to register jmcgowan@bimbc.ca
ESS volunteers are trained to provide for the immediate needs of evacuees and emergency responders affected by an emergency or disaster. Services provided by ESS include food, clothing, lodging and family reunification.
If you are interested in learning more about becoming a community ESS volunteer, please visit http://www.bowenislandmunicipality.ca/ess or contact the Emergency Social Services Director at bowenESS@bimbc.ca
General Enquiries
Contact Us
Phone: Fax: Email:
Bowen Island Municipal Hall 981 Artisan Lane Bowen Island, BC V0N 1G2
604-947-4255 604-947-0193 bim@bimbc.ca
Find us on Facebook Hours: 8:30 am - 4:30 pm Monday - Friday, excluding statutory holidays Nov 8, 2018
Bowen Island Municipality
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Throughout the province, thousands of ESS volunteers train and prepare so that when an emergency or disaster affects their community they are ready to help.
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Remembering First Nations veterans BRONWYN BEAIRSTO EDITOR
Michael Yahgulanaas puts the final touches on Carpe Fin at Terminal Creek Contemporary Saturday. Photo: Len Gilday
Haida Manga attracts young people Continued from page 1 “Haida Manga is taking things we believe to be familiar and twisting them around and making them accessible to us, to the people today,” he says. Carpe Fin’s story is a reflection on Indigenous stories from up the West Coast including Alaska. Yahgulanaas says that his interpretation questions the range of humans’ relationship with the marine environment. “Are we just highly inefficient predators,” asks Yahgulanaas, “or have we just taken advantage of the amazing generosity of the ocean?” He used a story, at least 400-500 years old, about the man who invented the toggle harpoon, basically a more efficient killing machine. People were shocked and the inventor was abandoned on a reef.
“Some say he was left there,” says Yahgulanaas, “some say he was accidentally forgotten.” Yahgulanaas took that idea and shaped it into a new story. Carpe Fin is set in a coastal fishing village where there’s an oil spill, poisoning the local food supply. The ferry, which happens to be the Queen of Capilano, has mechanical issues and is incapacitated for a long
Print Making Anyone?
Halloween has passed and so have the grizzly costumes and pumpkins. Now thoughts are directed toward Christmas and year’s end. For many, givers and receivers alike, person-
while. There’s not enough fuel in the village for boats to get far offshore for food meaning that the village cannot rely on the outside world. The community must then grapple with how to feed itself. “Carpe Fin is about resilient relationships,” says Yahgulanaas. “How do we as an individual community, or how does any individual, manage a life so dependent on the ocean?” Yahgulanaas did the first sketches back in 2001, but the sheer scale required a partner, which he found in the art museum. Yahgulanaas says that the Seattle Art Museum commissioned the work after showing his last mural work, RED, A Haida Manga a few years ago. The museum had been worried about attracting youth, but when Yahgulanaas’s work came to the museum, there was a sharp increase in young people crowding to see the graphic hybrid. “We’ve noticed that elsewhere,” he says. “There’s a new appetite for a new approach to Indigeneity. We can only go so far if we are all looking at one another through a distorted lens “ “Haida Manga is so popular because it’s trying to open a way for people to see one another in a con-
temporary way.” “I want to do stories that are accessible to everyone,” he says. He notes that he likes this form because not everyone can read a totem pole, wade through an academic work, or predict what a government policy will mean, but every human is graphically literate. So the museum commissioned the six-metre-long comic strip. Yahgulanaas says the work probably won’t travel because the curators are likely to say it’s too delicate (though he adds that he considers it quite resilient.) Though not sure that he wants to commit another couple of years of his life for another mural anytime soon, Yahgulanaas is keeping busy. As we were talking he was preparing for a trip to Korea to give a keynote speech on the intersection of ecology, art and identity, which is tied to his work protecting Haida Gwaii years ago. He’s contributing to the design of three new towers to go up in Vancouver and his best-selling book Flight of the Hummingbird is being made into an opera. To see Carpe Fin, please call 604561-9895 or email info@tccontemporary.com.
al gifts rank highly and can create lasting treasures. Making your own greeting cards or other images is an affordable way to spread joy. To show you the basics I’m offering a couple of beginners courses in print making on Friday and Saturday, November 16 and 17 and
Friday and Saturday, November 23 and 24 at Island Pacific School. The courses are designed for practice at home. For more detail contact HansChristian Behm at 604 916 1027 or hcbehm@shaw.ca - HC Behm
Lynda Gray, author of First Nations 101, spoke at Cove Commons over the weekend. Her book is basically an introduction to First Nations issues in Canada, covering the Indian Act, Residential Schools, racism, taxation myths, media representation and more. Given that this issue is dedicated to Remembrance Day and National Aboriginal Veterans Day is November 8, Gray’s coverage of the treatment of First Nations veterans is particularly relevant. She writes that between 7,000 and 12,000 First Nations people (not including Metis, Inuit and non-status people) served in the First and Second World Wars as well as in the Korean War. “First Nations people endured
unique hardships during their service as they often faced racism and unequal treatment from their fellow servicemen,” she writes. Many First Nations people who served had to give up their government-regulated status and if they survived war, they often couldn’t return to their communities. “While all veterans were supposed to receive access to land, education, grants, loans and allowances for themselves and their children, many First Nations veterans were denied full benefits,” writes Gray. She notes that awareness of the sacrifices of First Nations veterans is growing (the book was written in 2011) with films, articles, community and government recognition. For those who are interested in more information, the Bowen Island library has a couple of copies of First Nations 101 and it’s available in book stores.
Tentrees bound for Bowen BRONWYN BEAIRSTO EDITOR
Small town to smaller town, song writer, musician and storyteller Gordie Tentrees is coming to Bowen next week. “I like to think that if you’re a folk music fan, jazz fan, country fan, blues fan, you’ll enjoy the show,” says Tentrees. Based out of Whitehorse, Yukon, Tentrees is touring his latest album, “Grit,” released last March. The last time the musician was here, six years and three records ago, he was nearing the end of a nearly 150-stop tour. Tentree’s touring schedule has mellowed over the half decade. This month he’s embarking on a mere 20-stop European tour. Before leaving the continent, Tentrees will be playing a few shows in the Lower Mainland in mid-November, including one at Tir-na-nOg on November 14. “There’s a lot of new material for those who came to the last show,” he says. “It’s something they haven’t seen from me or anyone else.” Though raised in a household with a folk music writer, it wasn’t until Tentrees moved to the Yukon
in his early 20s that he became interested in the music industry. Tentrees says that in the theatre, arts and music-steeped atmosphere of the Yukon, especially in the pre-social media world of 20 years ago, he realized that he could play along to folk music with a guitar. And so he started playing and singing and studying. “I had to learn how to be a musician backwards,” says Tentrees. Though he adds that in some ways, his late musical debut was an advantage. “I learned to appreciate it more,” he says. Two decades later, Tentrees tours the world with his music and he says that his show especially appeals to small town culture. His songs and music come from his experiences in such places. “I can’t really make it up,” he says. “It’s real. “It’s stuff I’ve gone through and I think people can really relate to.” Tentrees’ Bowen show is November 14 at 7 p.m. at Tir-nanOg theatre. Tickets can be purchased at Phoenix or at eventbrite. com/e/tir-na-nog-theater-gordietentrees-tickets-51923072307#tickets.
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Keep the heat, get an energy audit MERIBETH DEEN BOWEN IN TRANSITION
The Write Stuff. The Undercurrent encourages reader participation in your community newspaper. You must include your full name and a daytime phone number (for verification only). The editor reserves the right to edit for clarity, legality, brevity and taste. Here’s how. To submit a letter to the editor, fax 604-947-0148 or mail it to #102, 495 Government Rd., PO Box 130, Bowen Island, BC V0N 1G0 or email editor@ bowenislandundercurrent.com. National NewsMedia Council. The Undercurrent is a member of the National NewsMedia Council of Canada, which is an independent organization established to deal with acceptable journalistic practices and ethical behaviour. If you have concerns about editorial content, please email editor@ bowenislandundercurrent.com or call 604-9472442. If you are not satisfied with the response and wish to file a formal complaint, visit the website at mediacouncil.ca or call toll-free 1-844-877-1163 for additional information.
The fact that so many Islanders enjoy the warmth of a furnace or wood stove through the cold and wet months doesn’t seem to save us from the shocking hydro bills that come simultaneously. For the past two winters, though, members of Bowen in Transition have been trying to help Islanders lower their costs while being more comfortable in their homes. Three years ago, the municipality purchased a thermal imaging camera through the carbon tax rebates offered through the province’s Community Revenue Incentive Program. Bowen in Transition kicked in two smaller infrared cameras that attach to smart phones and all three were donated to the library for residents to borrow. Since their acquisition, a team from Bowen In Transition has visited 46 local homes to take images showing the temperatures of interior walls, floors, ceilings, doors and windows, with the aim of finding ways to conserve interior heat and subsequently lower the amount of energy required to keep the home warm. The work is more than finding gaps in insulation or drafty windows; it’s about understanding how and where heat moves. A Bowen In Transition energy audit in my home revealed the reason why the bedroom in the south side of our house was sprouting mushrooms: the radiant heat of the wood stove was sucking air in from those far rooms, making them extra cold. That particular room only gets used on weekends and when we have guests, so we don’t heat it much. It is likely that the low temperatures mixed with high humidity created the perfect conditions for mildew, mould and fungus to flourish. We followed the team’s advice and got a dehumidifier. Now, the machine sucks moisture out of the air and warms the room at the same time. Next step for us is getting more blinds and drapes to stop the windows (which are actually pretty well sealed) from sucking radiant heat from our bodies and the fire. If you’ve already had an energy audit done, or want to try doing one yourself, you might want to borrow one of the library’s thermal imaging cameras and check out the impact of your home improvements. On Wednesday, November 14 at 7 p.m., Rod Marsh will be at the Library Annex demonstrating how to use them. If you want to book an energy audit, send an email to: bowenenergyaudits@gmail.com. The Bowen In Transition Energy Audit Team will spend an hour working with the thermal imaging camera in your home, offering you creative solutions and answering questions.
Welcome back, Slow Lane Dear Editor: Marcus Hondro’s Slow Lane Chronicles was a delightfully entertaining reminder that we are indeed “a giant fleshy, effusive aggregate” (and Marcus, no apologies necessary for the superb use of brackets.) Hopefully this is just the beginning of a classic revival! Tim Rhodes All Advertising and news copy content are copyright of the Undercurrent Newspaper. All editorial content submitted to the Undercurrent becomes the property of the publication. The undercurrent is not responsible for unsolicited manuscripts, art work and photographs. We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Periodical Fund of the Department of Canadian Heritage.
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Last chance to see Bowen dress codes exhibit INES ORTNER B.I. MUSEUM AND ARCHIVES
Our summer exhibit in the museum has been dismantled for some time, but we are grateful and would like to thank the following Bowen Islanders for their contributions: Elaina Waldman, Helen Wallwork and Sarah Haxby, Judi Gedye, Deborah and David Dagoli, Angie McCulloch, Kami Kanetsuka, Sam Knowles, Norma Dallas, Maggie Davidson, Bert Davies, and everyone who left wonderful comments about their impression of Bowen Island’s style. A few such impressions included: elegant and simple (Raya), nice, simple and pretty (Naomi), laid back and relaxed, colorful and one-of-a-kind. The fall exhibition, “Fashionably Bowen: Island Dress Codes?” Is in full swing and we had Samantha Adkins with her classes from BICS in the museum for uniform day show and tell with Cpl. Paulo Arreaga. He spoke about his work uniform and their elements, the way he is supposed to wear them and why. He also spoke to the excited students about
how he earned every part of his uniform, step by step during his training. However, the children’s favourite part was surely when they were allowed to wear some of his jackets, the life vest, the red serge and even his gasmask. We thank Cpl. Arreaga for his engaging presentation. New this fall, we’re offering curator’s tour of the exhibit. The tour will focus on the history and anecdotes of dress codes on Bowen; in the Legion and the Ladies Auxiliary, the Scouts and Brownies, the school, the firefighters and we look at garment pieces that challenged the established norms. The tour is on Friday, November 9, from 3 to 4 p.m. This will include enough time for questions and to explore the exhibit on your own. On Remembrance Day our exhibit will be open right after the ceremony until 3 p.m. The exhibit is on until Wednesday November 14. Our Winter opening hours for the museum are Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday 12 to 4 p.m. Please call 604-9472655.
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THURSDAY NOVEMBER 8 2018 • 5 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 8 2018 • 5
REMEMBRANCE DAY 2018
My Grandfather’s Song Setting aside pacifism in WWII that would never come. He did not attend any ceremonies nor speak of the friends he lost. No words for the scars. He carried on like nothing was wrong except for those far away eyes that sometimes swelled when he thought no one was looking. Somewhere in a field there is a boy my grandfather never left. The one thing he allowed us to carry with him. And we did and still do and see the boy everywhere and offer small fragments of songs found in the rain. Lisa Shatzky
Looking at the future
As Canadian millennial, born to relative peace at home, I have a hard time discerning the lines between glorifying war, reinforcing colonial relationships and remembering those who, willing or not, went to war.
For my undergraduate degree, I studied at a war monument. After the First World War, the then dominion of Newfoundland was reeling from profound losses. The Royal Newfoundland Regiment had been nearly wiped out in 1916 on the first day of the Battle of the Somme, in the advance on Beaumont Hamel, a battle that Newfoundlanders still commemorate with sobriety. As a monument, in commemoration of those who lost their lives, Newfoundland established Memorial University College in 1925. Today it’s known as Memorial University of Newfoundland, one of
the largest universities in Atlantic Canada. I think we have struggles ahead that our parents, grandparents, great grandparents couldn’t have imagined. When it comes to climate change, the action needed to halt warming at 1.5 degrees has been compared to global mobilization on the scale of the U.S. during the Second World War. The consequences of climate change include resource scarcity and war. The not-so-simple answer seems to be a form of unity. Education, institutional, traditional, communal or individual, can be a tool towards this unity. We don’t need to agree on everything, just that we want what’s best for the planet. Let’s make sure that there will still be people around to wear poppies in a hundred years time. Bronwyn Beairsto, Editor
I was born in the decade following the war—a baby boomer. No one talked about the war in our house, yet it affected my family daily. My father, Stanley Cameron, joined the army when he was 22. He hadn’t wanted to because he felt himself to be a pacifist, a difficult stance when his future father in-law was a lieutenant-colonel. But as news began to reach beyond Europe about the atrocities and suffering, he felt he had to put his pacifism aside. In quick succession he enlisted, married and was shipped overseas in 1942. He returned home to Edmonton in 1944, having been shot with a bullet that entered his throat and came out his back. By the time he returned, my older brother was two. My mother told the story of taking him to the hospital so father and son could meet for the first time. After the visit, my brother asked when they were going to see his dad. Families around the world faced similar difficulties reuniting after the war. My father never spoke of the war and he never complained, but it had a profound effect on his life. He had been the captain of the University of Alberta basketball team and now he had a crippled hand and nerve damage in one leg. His hand and arm gave him pain for the rest of his life. As well, he couldn’t tolerate loud noises or even not-so-loud noises. We were four children, raised in a house of unusual quietness. If our telephone rang, we never hollered up the stairs after whomever the call was for; we always walked up to tap on their door. I was in my 40s when I learned that the unnerving calm with which my father expressed himself at times when others would be shouting was not due to magnificent self-control but to the fact that his vocal cords
Places of Worship Welcome You BOWEN ISLAND UNITED CHURCH BOWEN ISLAND UNITED CHURCH Shelagh Mackinnon Marie Paul Rev.Rev. Shelagh MacKinnon
Helan Wallwork Helen Minister of Music: Lynn Williams
FOOD BANK
FOOD DROP-OFF BANK DROP-OFF
BOWEN ISLAND COMMUNITY CHURCH Pastor Clinton Neal ST. GERARD’S ROMAN 1070 Miller Road 604-947-0384 Service 10:30 a.m. Sunday School 11:00 a.m. CATHOLIC CHURCH
Sunday Mass: 10:30 a.m.
ST. GERARD’S ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH Administration Office: 604-682-6774 Mass: 10:30 a.m. Priest: Father James Comey
604-988-6304
CATES HILL CHAPEL
www.cateshillchapel.com 604-947-4260 CATES HILL CHAPEL www.cateshillchapel.com 604-947-4260 (661 Carter Rd.)
10:00 a.m. W 10:00 a.m. Worship
(661 Carter Rd.)
10:00 a.m. Worship • Sunday School: Tots to Teens Sunday School: Tots to Teens
Pastor: Dr. James B. Krohn
Pastor: Phil Adkins
were damaged. Raising his voice was an impossibility. In an odd way, it was a relief to know that in my wild teens I really had managed to infuriate him after all. I don’t think I truly understood the impact the war had had on my father until he was visiting me, my husband and our children one Remembrance Day. We were watching a ceremony on television when he burst into tears, jumped up and left the room. He apologized afterward. He explained he had suddenly been struck by the memory of a friend who had been shot and killed the day after the cease fire because the message hadn’t reached where he was fighting. Remembering the senseless loss overwhelmed him.
If my father were alive today, I know my writing about him would make him uncomfortable. But nonetheless, I think it’s important we remember the lasting trauma war inflicts on those who are sent to the battlefields, even if they themselves hold their suffering close and endeavour not to share it. Remembering can help us take action against racism and other forms of exclusion and privilege. It can help us construct a collective moral compass founded on compassion and tolerance. Remembering the consequences of war can guide us toward creating a world in which no one feels compelled to abandon their pacifism. Elaine Cameron (daughter)
On December 25, & January 1 service will begin with the 8:35 am sailing from Bowen Island and the 8:00 am sailing from Horseshoe Bay.
▼
BOWEN ISLAND Snug Cove
5:20 am^ 6:20 am> 7:30 am< 8:35 am 9:40 am 10:50 am 12:00 pm 1:10 pm 2:55 pm 4:00 pm† 5:10 pm * 6:15 pm 7:25 pm* 8:30 pm# 9:30 pm 10:30 pm
VANCOUVER Horseshoe Bay 5:50 am> 6:50 am< 8:00 am 9:05 am† 10:15 am 11:25 am 12:35 pm 2:20 pm 3:30 pm 4:35 pm 5:45 pm* 6:50 pm 8:00 pm* 9:00 pm# 10:00 pm
Distance: 3 NAUTICAL MILES Crossing Time: 20 MINUTES
Leave Horseshoe Bay
Service and Sunday School: 10:30 a.m. Service and Sunday School 10:30 am Collins Hall Bookings: Helen Wallwork MinisterCollins of Music: Williams HallLynn Bookings:
Stanley Cameron sitting with his then three-year-old son Peter Cameron in 1945. Photo: submitted
Schedule in Effect: October 9, 2018 to March 31, 2019
Leave Snug Cove
Eyes as blue as the shores of Normandy he told us only one story of a field near Ohmaha beach when the moon was bright and a quiet stillness hovered like a rare songbird about to vanish forever. There was a boy no more than ten with his head spilling into the earth. A beautiful boy, eyes still open and lips in the shape of a kiss. He spoke of sitting beside the boy through the night, taking his hand under a perfect sky bleeding stars and dust and perpetuity and waiting, waiting for something
* DAILY EXCEPT SATURDAYS > EXCEPT DEC 25 & JAN 1 < EXCEPT SUN AND DEC 25 & JAN 1 # DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAYS ^ EXCEPT SAT, SUN AND NOV 11, DEC 25 & JAN 1 † DC WEDNESDAY SAILINGS WILL BE REPLACED BY DANGEROUS CARGO SAILINGS. NO OTHER PASSENGERS PERMITTED.
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In remembrance of all who value peace and democracy - past, present and future, thank you from the Bowen Children’s Centre.
RCAF pilot Bob Pratt, centre, stands with his engineer who was killed during the war (left) and rear gunner (right). Photo: submitted
Honouring R.A. PRATT wing
commander WW11 and recipient of the DISTINGUISHED FLYING CROSS for valour and courage at the age of 22.
Every year Movement takes a moment to remember... Remembrance Day is a time when we at Movement like to take a moment to reflect. We are so lucky in this country to have the freedoms we do, fought and won for us by our veterans. But also in the current political and global climate it seems that now more than ever, it’s important to remember that some ideas are worth fighting for...and against Movement Global at Artisan Square Bowen is now open again on WED, FRI, SAT, & SUNDAY 11-5
RCAF pilot Bruce Mitchell while stationed in Britain during the Second World War. Photo: submitted
Bruce Mitchell My dad, flight-lieutenant Bruce Mitchell enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air Force and learned to fly in 1941, when he was just 18. After basic training he was stationed in Northern England and flew U-Boat patrols over the North Sea. During one mission, the engines on his Anson aircraft failed and his only option was to land belly-first on the open water. He managed to bring the plane down safely, giving the crew time to escape in a dinghy from which they were later recovered. He suffered facial lacerations during the rough landing and was sent to Royal Victoria Hospital in East Grinstead, Sussex, where he and others –including airmen suffering terrible burns from cockpit fires –were treated with the new art of plastic surgery. The hospital became renowned for pioneering this reconstructive work and its wartime patients (including my father) became lifetime members of the “Guinea Pig Club.” My dad died in 1976, ten years before my own son was born. But a couple of years ago I was surprised to see a photo of my dad in his wartime flight gear tucked into my son’s wallet and I realized that he felt a special connection to this grandfather he had never met. Steve Mitchell (son)
People commemorated on the Bowen Island Cenotaph include: Charles D. Redmond (d. 1915), Cameron L. Smith (d. 1917), Miles B. Green (d. 1916), Lewan Tugwell (d. 1915) and Norman Vickery.
Robert (Bob) Alexander Pratt Born in Toronto in 1921, as a young boy Bob Pratt’s family moved West. His father worked for the railway and so Robert, his two older sisters, mother and father when he was home, spent a few years living on Bowen Island. At 19 Bob volunteered to serve in the Second World War. Part of the Royal Canadian Air Force, Robert became a pilot out of Halifax, coincidentally flying with the 424 Halifax squadron. Over the course of the war, Bob flew 49 missions, when the average was a good 20 fewer than that. At 22 Bob received the Distinguished Flying Cross. The Germans had hit his Halifax with a direct blast as the plane was returning to England after bombing Berlin. The plane’s engineer died immediately and the plane was severely damaged. Bob could have chosen to fly to Sweden, but said later that he wanted to return the engineer to England
and he (Bob) was getting married that weekend, so they headed for Britain. The injured plane and crew (Bob had sustained a head injury) just made it over the white cliffs of Dover to safety. Over the course of the war Bob won five other medals for valor and flying. In the last few weeks of the war Bob was a wing commander, an instructor for new pilots arriving. Like many veterans, Bob didn’t like to talk the war but participated in many Royal Canadian Legion events. Bob lived out most of his adult life in Ontario, at one point working for Volkswagen, an ironic turn of events as he’d bombed the Wolfsburg Volkswagen plant during the war. He was featured in the Knowledge Network series Warriors of the Night. Bob died in 1998 from cancer. As told by Bob Pratt (son)
Cameron Smith
Cameron Smith in 1915. Photo: Bowen Isand Museum and Archives
“Let Peace be their Memorial” Join us at our OPEN HOUSE
UNION STEAMSHIP GIFT SHOP for warm beverages & sweets
Cameron Linklater Smith was the only son of Herbert and Margaret Smith. These early pioneers settled on Bowen at the end of the 19th century. Cameron was an outstanding marathon runner and his awards were many. Cameron is commemorated on the Bowen Island Cenotaph. He enlisted on March 19, 1915 and was killed on April 9, 1917 at Vimy Ridge. During the war Cameron participated in foot races held between various active divisions. In an effort to honour, remember and recognize Smith, his niece and grand-nephew nominated him as an inductee in the pioneer category of the B.C. Sports Hall of Fame. Their nomination attempts were unsuccessful. Ines Ortner (Bowen Island Museum and Archives)
Remembering the service and sacrice of the Danish Resistance members and their families.
Sunday November 11th, 12 noon Let’s join together in remembering the service and sacrifice Call us at 947-0707 #2
With loving respect from Pernille Nielsen and family .
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Grow a new age Victory Garden ELAINE CAMERON BOWEN FOOD SOVEREIGNTY
At my first Bowen Remembrance Day commemoration, I was amazed by the crowd filling the street, spilling over onto the sidewalks and grass. It was clear from the speeches that Bowen residents were taking the time not to glorify the wars but to recognize the consequences of wars and the sacrifices they demand. The First and Second World Wars forced changes and sacrifices at home as well as abroad. As the economies of all combatant nations focused on the war effort, every household felt the impact. One of these impacts was on food. Food needed to be shipped to soldiers and, in the Second World War, to allied countries. Slogans such as, “Serve apples daily and you serve your country too,” urged Canadians to focus their diet on “patriotic” foods not needed for shipping overseas. Because vast quantities of food needed to be exported, some foods were not as available at home. Across the country, Canadians gardened to add to their home supply and support the war effort. In the First World War, under the Ministry of Agriculture’s campaign, “A Vegetable Garden for Every Home,” residents of cities, towns and villages used backyards to grow vegetables in what became known as “Victory Gardens.” During the Second World War, many Canadians saw the value of a home garden, but the Federal Ministry of Agriculture did not. A 1942 government pamphlet actively discouraged novice gardeners from wasting seeds and “garden tools, fertilizers and sprays, which are made from materials needed by Canada’s war industries.” But Canadians were experiencing shortages of basic foods like potatoes, carrots and onions. Many citizens ignored the government and turned their yards into gardens. Organizations like the Victory Gardens Brigade in Victoria
wrote letters to the federal government pointing out the value of home food production. Finally, in early 1943, the government realized there would be more food available to ship overseas if Canadians were eating from their gardens. In an about-face, the government said, “every bit of land that is suitable should be put into a garden.” Canadians who hadn’t done so already began to turn soil and plant seeds with enthusiasm. Everywhere backyards became gardens, many with chickens. By the end of 1943, the Greater Vancouver area had an estimated 52,000 gardens. Bowen, population about 200, with orchards, and small vegetable, dairy and poultry farming, was no exception. During the World Wars, Canadians, with and without government support, rose to the demands of critical food shortages and the need to ship food overseas. There were Victory Garden competitions and newspapers ran articles and columns on gardening, preserving food, and creative recipes that adapted to what foods were and weren’t available. Today, even though our store shelves are loaded with a never-before-seen diversity of food, many people want the benefits of eating food grown locally without chemicals or the need for long-distance transportation. Home vegetable patches are experiencing a revival. Many people are gardening for the first time, learning new skills, enjoying the taste of food from just a few steps away and appreciating the added self-reliance offered by growing some of their own vegetables and herbs. This harks back to the war efforts: “For many proponents of Victory Gardening, the movement of amateurs into the field of gardening was one of the campaign’s benefits: it was teaching Canadians a new set of domestic skills which, in the process, increased their self-sufficiency.” Our future food crises are likely to be caused by climate change rather than war. But it’s reassuring to know that Canadians are up to the challenges.
Bowen Island Remembrance Day events November 10
7 p.m. Village of Widows screening and discussion at Belterra Common House.
THURSDAY NOVEMBER 8 2018 • 7 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 8 2018 • 7
NEVER FORGET, ALWAYS REMEMBER
November 11
Around 10:50 a.m. (as soon as the ferry leaves) the Remembrance Day ceremony starts at the Cenotaph. The community choir, led by Lynn Ellis-Williams, will sing. Participants will lay at least 35 wreaths. 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Soup and sandwiches at the Legion. Everyone welcome. By donation. 1 to 3 p.m. “Songs for Peace and Community: looking back with grief and gratitude, looking ahead with hope and love” at Bowen Court. Presented by SongCircle, drop-in, by donation. Around 4 p.m. (sundown), bells will toll 100 times to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the end of the First World War. The United Church, Catholic Church, Cates Hill Chapel and the cenotaph will all have bell ringing.
They gave their tomorrows so we could have our today
Lest we forget
Remembering all those who served and made our world a better place “Let peace begin with me” From all of us at The Snug
Lest we forget.
On November 11, Remembrance Day, we observe a moment of silence to remind us of the service and sacrifice of the men and women who protect our freedoms, to honour the fallen and to stand with those who mourn.
We will not forget.
We Will Remember Them Bowen Building Centre, 1013 Grafton Rd Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. | Saturday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
8 8 •• THURSDAY THURSDAY NOVEMBER NOVEMBER 8 8 2018 2018
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MOUNTAINSIDE ANIMAL HOSPITAL & 24 HR. EMERGENCY IS OPEN!
While Bowen Veterinary Services is temporarily closed, Mountainside Animal Hospital is available to take care of all your pets needs including 24/7 emergency and critical care services, routine appointments, vaccinations and surgeries etc. Located only 10 minutes from Horseshoe Bay just off Hwy. 1 at the Capilano Road exit. Mountainside Animal Hospital & 24 Hour Emergency Services 2580 Capilano Rd. (exit 14), North Vancouver, B.C. (604) 973-1247 www.mountainside24er.ca info@mountainside24er.ca Transport Options: Cormorant Marine Water Taxi- (604) 250-2630 North Shore Taxi (pet-friendly)- (604)922-2222 We will continue to check messages and emails daily at Bowen Vet.
Phone: 604-947-9247 Email: reception@bowenvet.com
Remembrance Day Ceremony, Sechelt, B.C.
R0011476470
V7W 2G5
100 bells for 100 years
LYNNE ROEDDE HARTLE
R O YA L C A N A D I A N L E G I O N B R A N C H 1 5 0
On November 11, at sundown, communities across Canada will mark the hundredth anniversary of the end of the First World War with the ringing of 100 bells. The ringing of bells emulates the moment in 1918 when church bells across Europe tolled as four years of war came to an end. At sunset on November 11, the bells will ring at Parliament Hill, city halls, places of worship, military bases and naval vessels across the country to honour Canada’s veterans and commemorate the end of the First World War. On Bowen at dusk (which looks to be around 4:30 p.m.), there will be ringers from Bowen Island Fire Department, The B.C. Ambulance Service and the Legion at the Cenotaph in the cove. Ringers will also be at the Bowen Island United Church, Cate’s Hill Chapel and St. Gerard’s Mission. All members of the public are encouraged to attend this moving ceremony. When you hear the bells toll on November 11 take a moment, pause, remember all those who served and sacrificed.
School children remember SARAH HAXBY
C O M M U N I T Y S C H O O L C O O R D I N AT O R
Bowen Island Community School is asking students to reflect on the question: how do we remember? All students will attend a respectful, whole-school assembly on Friday, November 9 in the BICS gym as well as participating in activities inside and outside of the classroom in the week leading up to Remembrance Day. BICS student council members are volunteering to hand sew poppies for all the assembly’s special guests as well as hand-making the BICS wreath, which will be at the school assembly as well as being placed at the cenotaph at the community service on November 11. As an act of respect and community service, BICS intermediate students will be learning about the history of the names on the Snug Cove cenotaph and as part of a beautification and remembrance project, they are planting daffodil bulbs in the Bowen Island Memorial Garden as well as cleaning plaques in the Memorial Garden and picking up any litter so that it will be clean and welcoming for people visiting the garden before and after the Remembrance Day service.
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THURSDAY NOVEMBER 8 2018 • 9 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 8 2018 • 9
BOWENBEAT
Top left: Bowen FC’s fall adult co-ed league championship team last weekend. The league will start up again in the fall. Left to right: Finn Corrigan-Frost, Frazer Elliott, Teun Schut, James Woods, Morgan Quarry, Connor McLeod, Gabe Sentlinger, Mia Sentlinger and Jed Rees. Missing are Tim Yu and Chris Wilson. Photo: submitted Above: Volunteers setting up for the Little Red Church’s fall supper Sunday. Left to Right: Santosha Naismith, Lynn Williams, Makena Coker and Sheila McCall. Photo: Marcus Hondro Below: Two out of three of the island’s outstanding Welsh brothers (Charlie and Benny Boy) were at the fall supper at the Bowen Island Lodge Sunday to help their mom, Mary Ann, pack up. Photo and caption: Marcus Hondro
Bottom left: Cpl. Paulo Arreaga letting some BICS students try on his gear during a presentation at the Bowen Island Museum’s dress codes exhibit. Photo: Ines Ortner
COAST ISLAND MINISTORAGE
604-916-1358
CLEAN, DRY STORAGE On Bowen Island
storage@coastislandministorage.com coastislandministorage.com
10 • THURSDAY NOVEMBER 8 2018
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Bowen Island Community
MARKETPLACE Or call to place your ad at
604-630-3300
Email: classifieds@van.net
BC WIDE CLASSIFIEDS CRAFT FAIRS/ BAZAARS
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FINANCIAL SERVICES TROUBLE WALKING? Hip or Knee Replacement, or other conditions causing restrictions in daily activities? $2,000 tax credit $40,000 refund cheque/rebates Disability Tax Credit. 1-844-453-5372
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TODAY'S PUZZ
BOWEN HOME SERVICES love the life you live Landscape Lighting Irrigation
Seascape Bruce Culver
Office: 604-947-9686
Cell: 604-329-3045
DAY RATE SPECIAL $1300
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Window Blinds On Bowen 778-995-1902
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THURSDAY NOVEMBER 8 2018 • 11
Healthy tips of advice
First tip: live your life on an island
Mary Coleman, MSW, RSW Breathe! It’s a cliche, but a simple way to soothe an anxious brain. Shift your breathing rate to activate your natural calm response, the powerful “rest and digest” system. Soften your belly to breathe in 5 counts and exhale equally. compassionmindedcounselling@gmail.com
Natasha Currah, Functional Movement Specialist: Positively Fit Training Studio
Courtney Morris, R.Ac, DCH
Denise Richard, Five Blossom Gatherings Beginners Tai Chi Easy and light this work is distinguished by 7 specific moves. The practice is gentle and takes you outdoors in support of your core connection. Open your heart and mind for practice reclaims good grounding and health. www.fiveblossomgathrings.com
Fall and winter is the time of year to restore our energy by going to bed earlier, sleeping later and eating warm nourishing food. If you feel like staying home more this is normal. Come spring and summer your yang will rise and all of a sudden you will want to be up later and more social. Stay active but don’t overdue it. Enjoy the coziness of fall/winter. www.courtneymorrisacupuncture.com
Want to feel great again in your body? Let’s work together! I assess and coach clients to prevent and recover from injury, mitigate muscular pain, all while challenging their current abilities. I show them what’s possible in their body. I am passionate about helping people move better so they can do what they love pain free.
Creating Space and Time for Healing: A tip that has been essential for me (especially going into the darker months) is cultivating a daily intimate (into-me-I-see) practice. With all our daily distractions it can be hard to hear the soft, still voice within. Creating a gentle practice that links breath with body movement is good for the mind/body/spirit and can become as natural as brushing teeth over time. www.becounselling.ca
Vicky Frederiksen, Certified Shiatsu practitioner, Experience Shiatsu
Mary Letson, PT Coach, Owner Positively Fit Training Studio
Relieve headaches and stress using Shiatsu self massage. One simple tip is to find a ledge between your eyebrows and massaging for one minute. This will reduce muscle tension, improve circulation and concentration, and relieve eyestrain if at a computer for hours. v.gathe@gmail.com 778-881-9012 Call, text or email for appointment or gift certificate.
Short days, cold and rain puts a dent in our energy levels. When you need it most. This year, tell winter who’s in charge. The trick is to remember how you feel after your workout: energized, happier, relaxed. On your game. So pull on your sneakers and make like a snow globe – shake it til you are all a-glow!
HEALTH & WELLNESS Dr. Susanne Schloegl M.D.
Appointments Mon, Wed, Thurs, Fri, 9am - 5pm ECG and HOLTER monitoring Artisan Square
Bowen Island Chiropractic
Dr. Tracy Leach, D.C. Certified provider of Active Release Techniques Artisan Square Tues. & Fri.
778-828-5681
www.drtracyleach.ca
BODY VITALITY MASSAGE THERAPY James Goldfarb RMT HOLISTIC BC#05279 COUNSELLING Fri, Sat, Sun, Mon Brooke Evans,
MSW, RSW
Call 604-288-2860 604-781-3987 text 250-726-8080
brooke@becounselling.ca becounselling.ca www.bodyvitality.ca
604-947-9755 EXT #1
Online Booking: www.birchwellness.com
MASSAGE THERAPY
@ Artisan Square
MARY MCDONAGH RMT
Dr. Utah Zandy 604-947-9830
ALICIA HOPPENRATH RMT
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT OPEN TUESDAYS & THURSDAYS
KIM HOWDEN RMT
Community Healthcare
Family Dentist
NexGen Hearing
INHABIT
Artisan Square 604-947-0734
604-281-3691
Alternate Fridays 10am - 4:30pm
Massage Therapy Matthew van der Giessen
FREE
RMT
596 B. Artisan Square
604-730-1174 Natural Family Medicine
Dr. Gloria Chao
Horseshoe Bay 604-921-8522 www.bowenislanddental.com
Call us at
Hearing Testing On Bowen Island @ Caring Circle West Vancouver
At entrance to Artisan Square Suite #597
Located in Artisan Square
604-947-9986
Naturopathic Physician
BOWEN ISLAND WELLNESS CENTRE 604-947-9755
BOWEN ISLAND
HARMONY SHIRE RMT
Dr. Dana Barton
Matthew van der Giessen RMT While we may want our aches and pains to be fixed, our bodies just want to be loved. Like tree rings, they show the imprint of the slings and arrows of life but our tensions reveal our attitude towards ourselves. InhabitCentre.ca
Brooke Evans, MSW, RSW BE Counselling
Celebrating 29 years
SOMATIC CENTRE
(778) 952-3757 566 Artisan Square www.inhabitcentre.ca
Breathe Move Touch
Dr. Alea Bell, ND Naturopathic Doctor
778-891-0370
Courtney Morris, R.Ac Registered Acupuncturist, Homeopath, Doula
604-338-5001
Mary Coleman, MSW, RSW Compassion minded counselling
778-233-4425
CATHERINE SHAW Dr. Traditional Chinese Medicine/Acupuncturist
❦
MARY MCDONAGH RMT, DCH Registered Massage Therapist
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SANDY LOGAN Registered Physiotherapist
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HEIDI MATHER
Julie Hughes, RPC
Registered Acupuncturist Registered Nutritionist
778-858-2669
Book online bowenislandwellnesscentre.ca
Counselling
Psychotherapist ~ Hypnotherapist Online & Artisan Square
Dr. Diane Greig PhD, RCC #701, CSCH 604-727-7794 • drdianegreig@gmail.com
Psychologist Dr. Carolyn Nesbitt PhD, R.Psych #1484
604-376-9801 www.CarolynNesbitt.com
Lifelabs Dr. Zandy’s Office Tues - 6:45 - 8:45 a.m. Thurs. - 6:45 - 8:45 a.m. For routine lab tests. Specialized tests & children may be referred to the mainland.
12 2018 12 •• THURSDAY THURSDAY NOVEMBER NOVEMBER 8 8 2018
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COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Thursday November 8
Duplicate Bridge Bowen Court 6:45 - 10 pm Info call Irene 604-947-2955
Friday November 9
“Tone & Texture” New works by Janet Esseiva Catching Stars Gallery 11 am - 5 pm Exhibit runs until
November 19th. Submit an entry form at the gallery before Nov 15th to win a free mini workshop with Janet -Saturday Nov. 17th.
Snug Cove Blues Band Bowen Island Pub 7-10 p.m. Enjoy a bluesy evening and the pub’s dinner special.
Dinner at the Legion Bowen Island Legion Dinner served at 6:30 pm “Members and guests”
Free Art Demo, Janet Esseiva Catching Stars, 1-2 pm
Saturday November 10
Bowen Island Trail Society Social Municipality Council Chambers 10:30 - 12:30 pm Guest speaker, Ken Orr, VP of Mountain Clubs of B.C. Come share your ideas on growing BITS Eagle Cliff Community
Association AGM Collins Hall 11 a.m. Contact eccabowenisland@gmail.com for more info Michigan Rattlers + Cannery Row Bowen Island Pub 8 - 1 am Advance tix $15 at Pub or $20 at the door.
Sunday November 11
DID YOU GET YOUR VOTING PACKAGE?
Vote in the 2018 Referendum on Electora| Reform October 22 to November 30, 2018 B.C. is having a referendum on what voting system to use for provincial elections. This is a big decision so make sure to vote.
HOW CAN I VOTE? Registered voters have been sent a voting package in the mail. If you haven’t received one, contact Elections BC by midnight on November 23, 2018 to ask for one.
How can I ask for a voting package?
Call 1-800-661-8683
Visit elections.bc.ca/ovr Visit a Service BC Centre or Referendum Service Office
For a list of service office locations, call us or visit elections.bc.ca/ovr
What are we voting on? You are being asked:
should we keep the current First Past the Post voting system or move to a system of proportional representation?
if proportional representation is adopted, which proportional system do you prefer? - Dual Member Proportional (DMP) - Mixed Member Proportional (MMP) - Rural-Urban Proportional (RUP)
You can answer both questions or just one and your ballot will still count. Find out more about all four voting systems by calling us or visiting our website.
See Remembrance Day schedule on page 7.
Monday November 12
Seniors Keeping Young 1070 Miller Road Exercise at 9 am, coffee at 9:45, Guest speaker, Pat Boston, speaking on WW II at 10, Yoga at 11:15. Annual membership $20 or drop in $3.
Tuesday November 13
Art Workshop 1070 Miller Road(Seniors Court) 9 - noon. Informal painting-drawing group meets every Tuesday. All stages and ages welcome. Drop-in $7 Free Hearing Test Caring Circle 10 - 3 p.m. NexGen Hearing visits Bowen to provide free hearing tests. 604-281-3691 Bowen Island Community
Wednesday November 14 Reduce your Energy Costs Library Annex 7 p.m. Presented by Bowen In Transition
WorkBC Career Advisor Library Flex Room 2-5 pm. Free drop-in sessions with a WorkBC career advisor. Career advice, including resume, and interview help. Reduce Your Energy Costs Bowen Island Library 7 p.m. Pre- register at bowenenergyaudits@gmail. com Gordie Tentrees Tir-na-nOg Theater 7 p.m. $15 advance tix at Phoenix or $20 at door 12 Step Codependency Group Elliott Hall, 1070 Miller Road 6:30 - 7:30 pm
FREE
Tuesday November 13th
10am-3pm
Caring Circle, Snug Cove
HEARING TESTS & NexGen Hearing HEARING AID CLEAN & CHECKS 604-281-3691
Refer to information from all sides in the debate, make an informed choice, and remember to vote by November 30, 2018. Deadline: You can ask for a referendum voting package until midnight on November 23, 2018
1-800-661-8683 | elections.bc.ca
Annual General Meeting Saturday, November 24th 10:30am at Bowen Court All very welcome
Lunch Bowen Island Legion 11:30 1:00 pm “For the great price of $5 a bowl of soup, artisan bread, dessert and coffee or tea. Today’s choices are Hearty Bean & Vegetable (v) or Cheesy Bacon & Potato. “ Regular council meeting BIM 7:15 p.m.
Photo by Sarah Haxby