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Just for C
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de nti sts life + leisure
september/october 2017
contents
september/october 2017 Publisher Linh T. Huynh Editor Barb Sligl
Art Direction BSS Creative
Contributing Editor Janet Gyenes Editorial Assistant Adam Flint Contributors Timothy A. Brown Michael DeFreitas Janet Gyenes Manfred Purtzki Dr. Kellen Silverthorn Barb Sligl Roberta Staley Rich Warren Cover photo Janet Gyenes
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Senior Account Executive Monique Nguyen Account Executives Janice Frome Wing-Yee Kwong Production Manager Ninh Hoang CE Development Adam Flint Sales, Classifieds and Advertising In Print Circulation Office 200 – 896 Cambie Street Vancouver, BC V6B 2P6 Canada Phone: 604-681-1811 Fax: 604-681-0456 Email: info@AdvertisingInPrint.com
clockwise, from top left: Janet Gyenes; barb sligl; Janet Gyenes
Just For Canadian Dentists is published six times a year by Jamieson-Quinn Holdings Ltd. dba In Print Publications and distributed to Canadian dentists. Publication of advertisements and any opinions expressed do not constitute endorsement or assumption of liability for any claims made. The contents of this magazine are protected by copyright. None of the contents of the magazine may be reproduced without the written permission of In Print Publications.
FEATURES
15 Go west and deep into China’s mountainous fringes 28 Find peace in the bustling heart of Québec City COLUMNS
DEPARTMENTS
9 photo prescription
5 September/October mix 21 CE calendar 37 sudoku 38 small talk
The beauty of Bermuda
11 pay it forward Beyond the dental practice—finding a second, philanthropic career
12 the thirsty dentist
Dr. David Maskell
A different kind of terroir
14 motoring
In Print Publications 200 – 896 Cambie Street Vancouver, BC V6B 2P6 Canada
Going hybrid
34 the wealthy dentist
www.justforcanadiandentists.com
Printed in Canada.
36 practice management want to reach us? check out our website!
The new reality You’re worth more than you think
cover photo Ancient Buddhist temple in Huanglong National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in the southwest region of Sichuan, China (page 15).
September/October 2017 Just For Canadian dentists
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from the editor
Back to school
china
Any ideas, comments or questions? Reach us at feedback@InPrintPublications.com.
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challenged Christianity 500 into years ago with his revolutionary take on religion. Whether you’re interested in Lutheranism or just good beer, this monk’s old stomping grounds are worth discovering (page 5). Similarly, the Augustinian nuns who established Canada’s first hospital in Québec City have much to share (these were no timid nuns). Their monastère is now open to the public as a fascinating museum and hotel/retreat, where you can practise yoga and meditation or simply set up base in the heart of this country’s oldest city (page 28). Learn something new in this issue and the next time you travel and set foot on distant shores. Travel is life-long schooling.
janet gyenes
W
e all have preconceived notions of destinations. It’s easy to assume things about unfamiliar people and places. Much of the joy in travel is about serendipitous discovery, finding out that something’s not as expected. Yes, we can still learn something new and be surprised. In the far reaches of China, on the Tibetan plateau and amidst the mountains of the Sichuan region, surreal lakes are explained with fantastical stories and ornate temples hang above steep valleys. Jagged peaks puncture the skyline instead of spiky skyscrapers and the air is crisp and clear, allowing unreal colours to shimmer unfiltered (page 15). Simply put, China may not be what you think. Nor is Luther in Germany. There’s much more to the legendary figure who
In the mountains of Sichuan and the Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, profound connections are made (page 15).
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HurriCaine, HurriSeal, HurriView and HurriView II are registered trademarks of Beutlich Pharmaceuticals, LLC. Just For Canadian dentists 2017 HurriPAKSeptember/October and Snap -n- Go are trademarks of Beutlich Pharmaceuticals, LLC. CDA2 676 0214
what/when/where > September/October
style | food | drink | festivals | places | getaways | gear…
500 years
Long live
A tour of this monk’s old stomping grounds reveals the man who founded Lutheranism— and enjoyed good beer
T
his October 31 marks the 500th anniversary of the day Martin Luther nailed his 95 theses to the church door in Wittenberg, Germany, an action that’s now seen as the start of the Reformation. No matter your faith, that’s a pretty big historical deal. Nevertheless, you may well think—as I did—that Martin Luther isn’t all that interesting. But since he lived and worked in towns in eastern Germany that remain picture-perfect and seemingly unspoiled by time, you may well decide, as I did, that a trip to Germany is warranted this year. Think of it as Reformation tourism, while enjoying a dark beer in the famed Auersbach Keller in Leipzig or a Thuringian bratwurst in Eisleben, the town where Luther was born. Start in Erfurt, the town where Luther became a monk, just to wander through its astounding city centre, marvelling at the architecture of one of the most intact medieval and Renaissance cities in Europe. Not far away is one of those amazing German hilltop castles, Wartburg Castle, high above >>
Germany calling
Luther
mix
barb sligl
castle hideaway
Lutherstube, Luther’s room, in Wartburg Castle, where he lived for two years to avoid persecution and translated the New Testament.
September/October 2017 Just For Canadian dentists
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mix
greenhouse
September/October
beguiling
getaway
botany
You could be forgiven for feeling like Alice when you enter Botanist in Vancouver’s sample Fairmont Pacific Rim hotel. This new wonderland is composed of a restaurant, terrace garden, champagne lounge and a bar and cocktail lab, all surrounded by a profusion of plants (more than 50 species), like lush vines twisting up trellises and greenery from BC’s backyard. As its name suggests, Botanist embraces the bountiful Pacific Northwest in its cuisine and cocktails. On a recent visit, head bartender David Wolowidnyk, who dreamed up the cocktail menu with creative beverage director Grant Sceney, took me far down the rabbit hole, telling me the tale of three culinary-driven beverages crafted in the Cocktail Lab (a first for Vancouver) and served exclusively in the bar. “Gin is my favourite kind of vodka,” he quips, revealing the base spirit for the Pretty Bird, a coral-coloured cocktail served in a bird-shaped borosilicate glass that’s perched in a tangled nest. Clarified strawberries (they’re spun in the lab’s centrifuge) lend colour and sweetness to the cocktail, while dill seeds add spice. Ocean, a gin-based cocktail infused with sea buckthorn and blue algae is served in a Dali-esque glass bowl flowing over a piece of driftwood. Named for local spot Deep Cove, it’s a striking shade of blue. Curious and compelling describe my favourite cocktail crafted in the lab: Candy Cap Magic. Made with rye infused with the rare local candy cap mushroom, it’s presented inside a lantern, nestled into a bed of moss. Dry ice, made on demand in the lab, creates a wreath of mist in this fantastical forest diorama (see photo on page 12). botanistrestaurant.com —Janet Gyenes
Wartburg Castle left The famous church door in Wittenberg below left St. Mary, the first Lutheran church, in Torgau below right Thuringian Schwarzbier or black beer
travel back in time
>> the charming town of Eisenach. It’s where Luther hid out after the pope declared anyone could kill him without punishment. In Torgau, a town associated with Luther’s wife and where the first Protestant church is located, you’ll also find the oldest toy store in Germany. In Wittenberg, where Luther spent the bulk of his career, stand on the threshold of that famous church door. And then stop at the restaurant/bar, now called Zum Schwarzen Baer, where Luther left a substantial unpaid bar tab when he died. Along the way, you may begin to see Luther in a new light—as I did. It’s hard not to feel a touch of connection with him when you see the very tomb he laid atop in the shape of a cross the night before his ordination, the whale’s vertebra he used for a footstool while he translated the New Testament into German, the pulpit where he preached 3,000 sermons. You can see all those things in Erfurt, Wartburg Castle and Wittenberg—all within about 150 kilometres of one another.
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And you’ll discover another side of Luther, a lively and playful character who initially wanted to reform the church and make it more accessible to the people, not start a new church altogether; a music lover and composer who inspired Bach; a devoted father and doting husband; a gregarious partier; and a learned scholar whom people trekked across Europe to hear at a time when a day’s journey was some 30 kilometres. Stand in front of his monk’s cowl at the Luther House in Wittenberg and you may be able to visualize the man who once wore it. Even across five centuries, it’s still possible to get a vivid sense of a complex man who, quite by accident, changed history. Lutheran or not, proselyte or atheist, history buff or beer devotee, go to Germany this fall, or in any of the ensuing years during what the Germans are calling the Luther Decade. You’ll end up becoming quite intrigued if you go For more about Lutherby Martin Luther— related celebrations, just as I did. events and destinations, —Rich Warren go to visit-luther.com and for more on Germany: germany.travel
Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
Far left, clockwise from top left: ©WittenbergKultur e.V./Tourist-Information Lutherstadt Wittenberg“ barb sligl (2); Wolfgang Sens; bottom right: courtesy of Fairmont Pacific Rim
sip +
flower power
September/October
botanical bliss
mix
Harness some flower power with these fresh finds Written + produced by Janet Gyenes
editor’s
pick
Bare essentials There’s a powerful purity in Tiffany & Co.’s collections. Its new artisanal fragrance is no different, distilled down to the 180-year-old company’s trifecta of basics: bare skin, a scent, a touch of jewelry and one iconic colour. Master perfumer Daniela Andrier has captured the spirit of Tiffany’s legacy in this floral musk fragrance, using essences such as iris (inspired by an iconic Tiffany garnet-and-Montana sapphire brooch—grand prize-winner at the Paris Exposition in 1900), the embodiment of femininity and sophistication, complemented by base notes of sensual patchouli. The bottle itself is a sparkling showpiece; the facets at the base of the glass flacon were inspired by the cushion-shaped brilliant cut 82-facet 128.54-carat rare yellow Tiffany diamond. 50 ml eau de toilette, $120; Holt Renfrew, holtrenfrew.com
scent two
a boun of bloo ty ms
scent of a woman
Peacetime perfume Noble rose, patchouli, vetiver. Bliss in a bottle. Until you know where these aromatic ingredients come from: Afghanistan, Rwanda, Haiti. Barb Stegemann, founder of Halifax-based The 7 Virtues, was inspired to support these war-scarred nations (as well as the Middle East) by sourcing fair-market essential oils for her perfumes support farmers in their peacetime scent torebuilding For instance, the company one pays $8,000efforts. US for a litre of neroli (orange blossom oil) that’s used in its Afghanistan Orange Blossom perfume. It’s incentive to farmers to stop growing poppies that go into the heroin trade. Various fragrances, from $70; The 7 Virtues, the7virtues.com
Femininity unfurled “I wanted a green fragrance, a courageous scent that transports you to a vast garden filled with many flowers and plants, a bouquet of abundance,” says Alessandro Michele, describing his inspiration for Gucci Bloom, his debut perfume for women. The Italian scent fashion designer and Gucci creative director compares the three garden to a beautiful woman: wild, colourful and diverse. Michele worked with master perfumer Alberto Morillas who blended the scent from tuberose and jasmine (jasmine-bud extract also gives the fragrance its green essence) plus an inimitable flower from South India, Rangoon Creeper, which is making its first foray into perfumery with wild abandon. 30 ml eau de parfum, $90.00; Sephora, sephora.ca
September/October 2017 Just For Canadian dentists
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p h o t o p r e s c r i p t i o n m i c h a e l d e f r e i ta s Michael DeFreitas is an award-winning photographer who’s been published in a wide variety of travel publications. With his initials, MD, he’s been nicknamed “doc,” making his photography prescriptions apropos.
Bermuda beckons
As Mark Twain wrote in his diary, “You go to heaven if you want, I’ll stay in Bermuda”
destination photography
From beach to 17thcentury ruins, capture the Caribbean charm of the island of Bermuda
go fish
michael defreitas
S
culpted by ocean currents and wind, Bermuda pops up from the Atlantic Ocean about a thousand kilometres off the coast of North Carolina. Lying well within North America’s temperate latitudes, Bermuda exudes all the characteristics of a Caribbean tropical paradise with its warm and shallow emerald waters, exquisite beaches and an African and British colonial history dating back to the early 1600s. On my first morning I hiked down to Horseshoe Bay Beach and set up my tripod and camera about 30 minutes before sunrise. Shooting directly into the sun tends to underexpose foregrounds, so I positioned the sun at the edge of my frame and overexposed (+1 stop on my exposure compensation). I used a fairly fast speed of 1/125 to almost freeze the wave as it rolled over the flat beach, allowing just a little movement. Then I walked to the other end of the beach and composed a shot of someone’s footprints heading into the sun. The footprints formed a leading line directing the viewer’s attention into the image. I returned later in the late afternoon and shot the beach from the high cliff on the south side of the bay with the sun behind me. Most people think that the fishhookshaped country is only one island, when in fact it’s an archipelago of about 180 islands. Twenty causeways and bridges connect the eight largest islands that form Bermuda proper, so as you travel around the country you’re actually moving from island to island, each with its own distinct characteristics that I tried to incorporate in my images. Fort Saint Catherine, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, perched on the northernmost point of St. George’s Island, affords an opportunity to incorporate the island’s history with the tropical topography. A mid-morning shot provides good light on the fort, the beautiful beach below and surrounding turquoise waters. Earlier or later in the day would provide better light on the fort and beach, but render the beautiful water dull. After capturing your exterior shots, go inside the fort for a wonderful museum documenting the country’s history. The country’s National Museum and Royal Naval Dockyards, on Ireland Island at
Bermuda’s connection with the Gulf Stream makes it a fisherman’s dream. As an avid fisherman, I always try to wet a line when travelling. Fishing action shots work best when you capture the excitement on the face of someone hooked into a fish. Shoot from below the angler with the rod pointing to a top corner of the frame to accentuate the action. I use a wide-angle zoom with a shutter speed of 1/500 second to get a sharp image.
if you go
For more info on Bermuda: gotobermuda.com
September/October 2017 Just For Canadian dentists
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the southernmost tip of the country is the main tourist area. The district around the cruise-ship terminal with its shops housed in the old ruins of the dockyard provides lots of
photographic opportunities including old red English telephone boxes/booths. I used the juxtaposition of the boxes with a modern cruise ship and the 17th-century
ruins to help link the island’s past and present. A wide-depth-of-field aperture of f22 rendered both foreground and background in sharp focus. Other points of interest in the Dockyard area: the clock tower, the interior of the old hall with its massive walls and the Maritime Museum at the Commissioner’s House with exhibits outlining the New World’s slave trade history. On the rise overlooking St. George stand the stark remains of the unfinished St. Peter’s Church, dating from 1874. The ribs of the outer walls offer many good image possibilities. I used shadows, arches and windows to highlight certain aspects of the Gothic architecture (see previous page, bottom left). Most of the country is just above sea level but there are a few spots like Town Hill (the island’s highest point at 76 metres) and Gibb’s Hill that offer some spectacular panoramas of the southern islands. When shooting panoramas, I try to incorporate various local aspects like the pastel-coloured houses
with stepped concrete roofs and the many offshore islets and coves. A number of local fish and produce markets are scattered throughout the island. They seem to pop up anywhere and most vendors are friendly. Still, I find an initial chat about their fish or produce helps to relax them so you can take pics (and, whenever possible, I always try to buy something that they’re selling). Use a medium wide-angle lens and get close to include the fish or vegetables and the vendor to make the image more interesting. Also, get detail shots. Most of Bermuda’s outdoor activities revolve around the sea. The warm Gulf Stream nourishes the world’s northernmost coral reefs around the islands, most of which are only a few fin kicks from shore. When shooting down on snorkellers, take your shot when they are moving or animated to avoid the “floating dead body” look. But if you have a small underwater camera like a GoPro, it’s always best to shoot them from below and try to include some of the reef structure. From reef to fort, there’s no limit to the iconic Caribbean shots this group of islands offers.
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Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
BROKERAGE
michael defreitas
photo prescription [continued]
pay i t f o r w a r d
r o b e r ta s ta l e y
Roberta Staley is an award-winning magazine writer and the editor of the Canadian Chemical News, published by the Chemical Institute of Canada. She is also a magazine writing instructor at Douglas College and a graduate student at Simon Fraser University.
Count your blessings
An unexpected diagnosis takes a dentist’s career beyond the standard practice
courtesy of Dr. david maskell
D
ave Maskell was in his early 50s, with a thriving dental practice 60 kilometres north of Edmonton in the town of Redwater, AB, when his wife Judy casually remarked, “Your right hand has a little tremor.” Maskell thought nothing of it. But as the months wore on, others, like his dental assistants, picked up on the slight shaking. “Too much coffee, nerves; you rationalize,” says Maskell. Then, Judy noted another physical oddity, remarking to her husband, “you walk funny—your right arm doesn’t swing like your left does.” What happened next was a medical odyssey encompassing a misdiagnosis and ineffective prescriptions. Finally a specialist made the correct—but devastating— diagnosis: Parkinson’s disease. Maskell lived in denial of the condition until, one day, while he was prepping a crown, his hand tremor made parts of the procedure “very difficult. I walked into the lab where Judy worked and said, ‘I can’t do this anymore; I’m done.’” Maskell put his practice up for sale. Due to its small-town location, it wasn’t snapped up right away, so Maskell kept the practice viable until a buyer came along, hiring associates to undertake dental procedures. Maskell continued to do diagnosis and treatment plans while his hygienists continued with cleanings. Meanwhile, he struggled through the “five stages of grief: denial, anger, negotiation, depression and finally acceptance. It took a couple of years.” Maskell wasn’t ready for forced retirement. A life-long athlete who played national-level amateur soccer with Edmonton United as well as a beer-league hockey team, he was still energetic, focused and driven. He began teaching at the University of Alberta Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry. But it wasn’t enough. Prior to the Parkinson’s diagnosis, Maskell had journeyed to Chisec in northern Guatemala for his first volunteer dental mission with the Alberta-based charity Kindness in Action (KIA). The experience was challenging, conflicting with Maskell’s principles about dental care that were honed at the world-renowned Pankey
Institute in Florida. “Their philosophy is relationship-based dentistry: know your patient and not just your patient’s clinical dental issues. Find out what makes them tick as a person,” says Maskell. Dentistry in Guatemala, where many people had never seen a dentist, was more pragmatic. Treatments were stripped down to the primacy of acute care, such as extractions, eschewing restorative work like fillings due to patients’ rampant tooth decay. To rid people of the source of infection, most treatment plans involved extensive oral surgery. Although it wasn’t dentistry according to the standards upheld in his Alberta practice, Maskell was confident that the “treatments made a small change for the better—these people were no longer suffering.” Maskell had participated in a handful of KIA missions before his Parkinson’s became an issue. When he became unable to provide treatments, KIA’s founder, Dr. Amil Shapka of St. Paul, AB, asked Maskell to take on a more administrative role as the charity’s vice-president. To date, Maskell has participated in 16 missions, many as group leader, travelling to places like Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Cambodia, Uganda and Tibet. He also organizes and administrates more than a dozen teams each year who travel to these developing nations. His wife Judy outfits and supplies the teams with sundries and equipment. The average team size, says Maskell, is 20 people, all of whom pay their own way. This includes four to five dentists, dental students, four hygienists and about 10 lay people. It isn’t just dental care that the teams bring to the countries they visit, Maskell says. It can also be modest infrastructure support. In one poor community in Esteli, Nicaragua,
Dr. Maskell’s diagnosis of Parkinson’s spun his life and career in a new direction
Maskell was invited to visit a family who lived in a tiny home with a rotting roof and missing front door. Two of the grown children had microcephaly, a birth defect where the head and brain are smaller than normal, caused by such diseases as the Zika virus. Later that night, at KIA’s poker tournament, which is regularly held on missions as a fun diversion, enough money was raised to fix the family’s house as well as the broken stove so the elderly mom could make tortillas to sell in the marketplace. “It’s been quite an adventure,” Maskell muses. “Early Parkinson’s led me to instruct at U of A. It also gave me time to administer KIA. The two have combined. I constantly tell my students stories from the missions I go on. Now they want to go. This year, two thirds of the third-year dental class is going on KIA missions. They get exposure to oral surgery and learn how people live in the developing world.” Travelling throughout the developing world, working with people who are often desperately poor, has clarified Maskell’s worldview. Despite the Parkinson’s disease that cut short his dental career, Maskell realizes “how lucky I am to live in Canada. We are all so lucky—so blessed. Where you are born influences your lot in life so much.”
September/October 2017 Just For Canadian dentists
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the thirsty dentist janet gyenes Janet Gyenes is a magazine writer and editor who likes to dally in spirits, especially when discovering something like corenwyn jenever (a gin-like Dutch spirit)—straight or in cocktails like the “bramble.” Have a boozy idea or question? Send it to feedback@inprintpublications.com
Local infusion
T
he cloak of conifers in the Pacific astringent sloes to flavour gin, it’s an example Northwest’s untamed forest was my of elevating an ingredient that’s amply availchildhood playground. Those woods able and would otherwise be ignored. offered up curiosities like plate-sized funCall it “regional quirkiness,” to borrow a guses growing on the side of a mossy tree phrase used by a writer describing how, until or edible treats: a motherlode of sweet-tart 2006 Campari used to get its vivid red colour huckleberries that I picked by the ice-cream from a natural pigment called carmine, also bucketful. The dark-blue salal berries that known as crushed cochineal beetles. He hang in orderly rows between the shrub’s was writing about connoisseurs’ quests for waxy green leaves tasted mealy to me, but liberating long-forgotten vintage spirits from both of these foraged their dusty crawlspaces and how these timeforest gems have less tipples simply taste different than their become supportmodern-day versions thanks to their ing—if not star— locavore ingredients, many of which ingredients in cease to exist. of the forest…is stirred “Regional quirks” might be comup in the Candy Cap parable to the term terroir that’s used Magic cocktail from the almost exclusively in the wine world. Botanist (also see Soil, climate, terrain—they add up to a deep sense of place you can taste page 6) in the finished product. And it’s these regional characteristics that define what gets to be called Champagne or port, for instance, and protected by law. Ingredients, of course, play a part in the fiercely protectionist spirits industry: consider Scotch, tequila and bourbon. Distilling is about history and authenticity, but also differentiation, especially in today’s saturated marketplaces. All are driving forces behind TazaRay, the world’s first spirit distilled from sunflower seeds, at Dalton Moonshine Distillery located in the Appalachian Mountains in northsmall-batch spirits. Using foraged or hyperwest Georgia. The Butler family business local ingredients during distilling seems to wasn’t always legal, but it was borne out of be part trend and part throwback. survival. “There were mouths to feed, and For instance, when I first sampled Limited you could make a whole lot more money Gin, made by Bohemian Spirits in Kimberley, making moonshine than selling corn or jelly,” BC, the distiller told me he was a forester in is how Raymond Butler Sr. puts it. TazaRay is a previous life. To me, that amply explained a portmanteau of the Native American word why he was using wild botanicals such “Taza” that translates to “warrior and chief” as fir tips, cottonwood and my beloved (homage to Butler’s roots) and “ray” in reverhuckleberries, among others. He was botence to the spirit of the sun. The 74-year-old tling the essence of the forest. To wit: “All master distiller continues his family’s East hand-harvested in the Rocky Mountains, in Tennessee tradition of making moonshine, our backyard,” according to the manifesto now in Georgia, sticking to the family’s old on Bohemian’s website. Odd Society Spirits methods but changing up the ingredients. in Vancouver, BC similarly bottles a bit of the “We changed the recipe a little bit,” says woods (in limited-edition batches) using the Chuck Butler, Raymond’s son, describing salal berries I shunned as a kid in its West how his father always used malted sunCoast take on sloe gin. Like the Brits who use flower seeds as the primary grain in his
TERROIR
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Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
moonshine, along with malted wheat. For TazaRay, the wheat was replaced with corn (some malted and some milled but no more than 35% in total), creating an original and gluten-free spirit. “The flavour the sunflower seeds gives is a nutty finish real similar to a peanut,” says Chuck. “We age this unique product in used whiskey barrels to make a mild smoky flavour.” Another offering is TazaRay Red, which is aged in used red-wine barrels “to give a darkred colour a mild berry taste and a strong nutty finish,” says Chuck. Both products are bottled at 90-proof. Lucky Bastard Distillery in Saskatoon, SK, hasn’t been around for multiple generations like Dalton Moonshine Distillery, but prairie pride and local flavour underpin the microdistillery’s spirits, especially the Saskatoon berry liquor. The province’s capital city, after all, was named for the anglicized Cree word misâskwatômina that means “the fruit of the tree of many branches,” according to the Saskatooon Berry Institute. Farther east, Montreal-based Cirka Distillery’s spirits are an expression of “ici,” the French word for here. Precisely Québec’s terroir—water, grains and botanicals—embodied in the distillery’s two spirits: Vodka Terroir and Gin Sauvage. Vodka Terroir is distilled from 100% nonGMO corn grown in Québec and the “wild” in Gin Sauvage comes from more than 30 botanicals that infuse the spirit, found in Québec’s boréal forest. Bartenders, too, are getting in on the action. They’re not necessarily distilling spirits but infusing them with locally foraged ingredients. David Wolowidnyk, head bartender at Botanist in Vancouver’s Fairmont Pacific Rim hotel (see page 6) infuses rye with the candy cap mushroom for one of the bar’s signature cocktails. For me, it was a savoury sip of the West Coast woods. And upon reflection, perhaps a taste of my childhood terroir. Trend or throwback? It’s worth sampling the wilder side of distilling, whether savouring Saskatoon berry moonshine in the Canadian prairies or sipping sunflower liqueur in the Appalachian Mountains in northwest Georgia.
fairmont pacific rim
A taste of terroir is making its way into small-batch spirits
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motoring
D r . k e l l e n s i lv e r t h o r n Dr. Kellen Silverthorn is Just For Canadian Dentists’ automotive writer. He tries to keep one convertible and/or one track-day car in the family fleet.
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nyone with a passion for motoring must take an active interest in the electrification of our collective fleet. By nature I’m not an early adapter, nor a tech geek. Nor could I envision living with the range limitations of a fully electric vehicle (EV). However, as the newer plug-in hybrids gain in effective electric range I’m curious if that technology might fit my lifestyle. As a fortuitous coincidence the new Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid is re-invigorating the minivan segment. A cherry-red Pacifica Hybrid arrived for a one-week stay at the Silverthorn household. My only instruction was “the cord is in the
the new standard?
back.” Indeed the cord plugged easily into my home 110V wall plug and then into the Pacifica itself. A fully depleted Pacific Hybrid battery pack is 100% recharged to 56 km of range after 14 hours of 110V charging, or just two hours on 220 volts. I’m inherently too lazy to bundle the cord with me to seek out public re-charging stations on my travels. After all, a key plug-in hybrid feature is zero range anxiety. The Pacifica’s dinosaurjuice-fed V6 internal combustion engine kicks in once the 56 km of stored-wall-juice energy is spent. We live a 10-to-12-minute drive from our “to-do list” commercial district (groceries, gym, bank, take-out food). A return trip to this district depletes 24% of the Pacifica’s charge. Farther in the same direction is 2017 Chrysler Pacifica Hybrid
14
downtown, usually a 20-to-25-minute drive from home. A return trip downtown spends 50% of a fully stored charge. The airport and big-box stores are 30 to 35 minutes away with faster speed limits. A Costco return trip just drains the last ampere from a full charge upon my return. Thus, with a little pre-planning, the plug-in Pacifica meets all of our local metropolitan needs off an overnight recharge on 110V wall juice. So the Pacifica Hybrid can perform the utilitarian role required of our household…but how pleasant of a tool was our platinum-trim model to use? It drove quite reasonably for its intended mission. Its sight lines are great. It has an entire suite of modern safety and convenience features. Fit and finish aren’t Lexus-like, but they aren’t bad either. A sampling of standard “platinum” features includes navigation, leather seats (both heated and cooled), multiple DVD players with headphones, a serious Sirius radio and active noise cancellation. The latter auditory features are nice to have. Once the 56 km of wall juice is exhausted the “Electronically Variable Transmission” means the V6 gasengine noise and the vehicle’s speed profiles are not in cosmic harmony. The Pacifica’s badass stereo drowns that disharmony out nicely, which I fittingly figured out while the Sirius Classic Vinyl station belted out The Low Spark of HighHeeled Boys by Traffic. If needed, the Pacifica can swallow far more people and gear than a comparable priced SUV. The Pacifica will ride better too, despite hauling around 600 pounds of 12 KV battery. At present, no Pacifica of any kind is available with all-wheel-drive. The minivan stigma and the AWD non-availability may give some car shoppers pause but before holding onto those thoughts, let’s talk capital and operating costs. The price premium of the plug-inhybrid Pacifica over a similarly equipped dino-juice-only Pacifica is hard to determine given differences in standard equipment.
Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
For argument’s sake I’ll posit that the hybrid driveline capital cost is $2,000 more, though I suspect it’s far less. I’m paying $1.25 per litre for dino juice and $1.70 per 12 KW for wall juice. I’d spend $1,750 less on juice per year with the Pacifica Hybrid over the dino-juice-only Pacifica at our 15,000 km per year usage—assuming 90% of our driving is metropolitan on 110V wall juice. The cost/price scenario gets far more complex (and attractive) depending on where in Canada you live. The Pacifica’s hybrid design qualifies for the same substantial taxpayer-funded green purchase/lease rebates as a full EV in the three provinces with rebate programs: $14,000 in Ontario, $8,000 in Québec and $5,000 in British Columbia. If you live in one of these three provincial jurisdictions your fellow provincial taxpayers are going to subsidize your capital costs for this vehicle handsomely to then save you even more operating-juice dollars! Present and future carbon taxes will also fall less heavily on plug-in-hybrid drivers. What’s not to like? Alas, no cash contribution from Justin’s feds to green vehicle buyers just yet. Interestingly, The Donald has not yet cancelled the generous federal rebates to green car buyers in the United States. Have you noticed the giddy happiness of electrified car owners? I now understand it after my Pacifica Hybrid experience. Good ol’ cognitive dissonance is no doubt at play, “I made this alternative choice, so it must be good, because I am no fool.” Another is the “pre-paying effect.” We’ll enjoy each day of our St. Bart’s vacation far more if we paid for it all six months prior, than if we paid as we consumed each flight leg, each night’s hotel stay, each beach towel, each meal. The EV or plug-in hybrid is the prepaid version of the St. Bart’s vacation. But that’s not all. My own personal halo actually looked ever-greener as the week with the Pacifica Hybrid unfolded. Saving the planet is always laudable. Saving greenbacks while saving the planet is a no-brainer. Still not sold? Last perk: How much would it be worth to you for HOV lane access 24/7/365 and free use of toll highways? I’m just sayin’ the latest in plug-in hybrids are ponder-worthy.
FCA/Fiat Chrysler Automobiles
The Pacifica Hybrid packs a lot of perks into its minivan profile
travel the world
Spirit of Sichu an Deep in southwest China, within the region of Sichuan and atop the Tibetan plateau is a secluded and enigmatic land. Engage, connect and navigate selfie sticks amidst much beauty‌ + photography by Janet Gyenes
story
travel the world
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Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
travel the world
G
lancing nervously to my right, I see the muscular shoulders of the mountains leaning against the milky-green Minjiang River in Sichuan province in southwest China. If the massive yak I’m reluctantly sitting astride decides he’s had enough, he could launch me over the railing with little more than a shrug. Aside from that, I could almost pretend I was in the Canadian Rockies range overlooking one of its glacier-fed rivers. I remind myself that this stoic beast is not some mechanical bull I’m trying to ride in a country bar. So I smile at his wrangler, who’s holding my iPhone, spreading my arms wide open as if to say, “You win.” I had tried to persuade the thin man wearing a cowboy-like hat to pose beside the animal, but he wouldn’t budge—until I agreed to get into the saddle. “He’s a show yak!” one of my travelling companions declares. She’s right. The animal’s white coat is immaculately combed. Red pompons adorn his thick horns and his saddle is swathed with silky fabric. He’s not unlike a giant stuffie you win at the fair. Indeed, yaks are prized pack animals here in the remote reaches of the Aba Tibetan and Qiang autonomous prefecture. This encounter is one of many eye-opening stops on a bus ride that started in Chengdu, Sìchuan’s capital, and travelled north on Highway 213, tracing the Minjiang River, a thin thread pinched between the Minshan and Longmen mountain ranges. I’m part of a group of North Americans headed to Jiuzhaigou Valley National Park, then driving through a 4,000-metre mountain pass to reach Huanglong National Park. These are just two of the country’s 52 UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Only Italy has more with 53, but it shares many sites with other countries. I can quickly rattle off many of Italy’s natural and manmade wonders. China’s? I can barely think of any besides The Great Wall, much less pronounce their names or pin them to a map. China is often characterized by superlatives and broad brushstrokes, but it’s impossible to define the DNA of a country of 1.38 billion people, spread across a region just slightly smaller than Canada, solely by its opaque political system and modern megalopolises that are pincushions of skyscrapers shrouded in smoggy skies. As Confucius said, “Real knowledge is to know the extent of one’s ignorance.” My consciousness-raising began on the outskirts of Chengdu, just before I met the yak, when our guide Thea Yang pointed out the Dujiangyan Irrigation System, which supplies water to the Chengdu plains. The World Heritage Site was constructed in the 3rd-century BC and is the only surviving no-dam irrigation system on the planet. Yang also points out previous page Huanglong Ancient Temple, Huanglong National Park. top row from left Panda Lake, Tibetan village, woman in traditional
Tibetan attire at Five-Colour Pond; all Jiuzhaigou Valley National Park. bottom row from left Fish in Panda Lake, Jiuzhaigou Valley National Park; Yak and Minjiang River, Highway 213; Tibetan prayer flags. September/October 2017 Just For Canadian dentists
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a giant statue of Li Bing, the system’s engineer and designer. Nearby is Fulong Temple named for Li’s feat in “suppressing” an evil dragon to free the area from floods and harness the Minjiang River, a tributary of the Yangtze, Asia’s longest river. We’re not far from Wenchuan county, the epicentre of the devastating 8.0-magnitude earthquake that left 87,000 people dead or missing in 2008. Passengers on the bus drift to sleep, but I can’t rip my gaze from my window on this world. Every blink reveals another rapid-fire snapshot that lasts an instant before being subsumed by the next. In the villages, white homes have wooden fretwork surrounding their windows, garlanded with bright-red chili peppers. It’s an Instagram-worthy shot that, with the right filter, could easily be one of southern Spain’s pueblos blancos or white towns. Then there are Tibetan prayer flags strung in their unwavering order of five colours—blue, white, red, green, yellow—fluttering perpetually and sending spiritual vibrations to the heavens. Distant stone watchtowers and tombs are ominous relics of ancient times. I spot a woman embroidering. Another is braiding her long black hair. Men shovel and smooth concrete. Chicken strut and peck dangerously close to traffic. We pass restaurants with monstrous decals of chickens, yaks and whiskered fish beckoning (or terrifying) from their dusty windows. At another roadside stop I buy a bag of dried yellow cherries with sticky stems intact and watch vendors tend to eggs steeping in tea-like liquid, corn cobs bubbling in hot water and lumpy yams roasting on a metal grill. Near Qiang we stop for lunch and feast on local vegetables—peppers, mushrooms, cabbage—roasted in clay pots and swimming in soups, chicken seasoned with lip-numbing Sichuan peppercorns, plus delicious jerky-like yak. We continue northward to Jiuzhaigou Valley, if you go named for the nine stockaded Tibetan villages To learn more about in the area and famed for its old-growth Huanglong National Park, forests, ribbon lakes and glacial valleys that Jiuzhaigou Valley National Park soar to 4,752 metres in the southern Minshan or SIchuan’s other scenic spots, Mountains. Here, we board another big bus go to the Sichuan Tourism website: tsichuan.com to explore the 720-square-kilometre park. This sister-park with Yosemite, Yellowstone and Olympic National Parks in the US is home to reclusive giant pandas, a goat-antelope called the Sichuan takin and 140 species of birds. It’s late October and the leaves have begun their chameleonic change from jade to ochre and rust. I walk the wooden boardwalk that traces the 320-metre-wide arcs of Nuorilang Waterfall, mesmerized by its water droplets, evanescent prisms reflecting beams of light. (At the time of writing, a 7.0 magnitude earthquake rocked Jiuzhaigou county, killing 24 people and affecting natural sites in the region like Nuorilang.) Elevated walkways traverse a number of Jiuzhaigou’s lakes, which bear fanciful names such as Crouching Dragon, Panda and Tiger, among others, and have a fantastical backstory:
Selfies in front of Five-Colour Ponds and Huanglong Ancient Temple, Huanglong National Park; Panda Lake, Nuorilang Waterfall; Jiuzhaigou Valley National Park. bottom row from left Huanglong Ancient temple (2), Huanglong National Park; Tibetan village, Jiuzhaigou Valley National Park. top row from left
September/October 2017 Just For Canadian dentists
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travel the world
don’t miss The 38th Annual
Dental Forum in hawaii! Maui February 3-10 &/or Kauai February 10-17, 2018
For details & registration, visit
www.dentsem.com or call 952.922.1707
Dental Seminars & Symposia, LLC
For travel information, call Linda
800.826.6644
or email linda@travelleaders-cf.com
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Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
a boy gave a mirror made of wind to goddess Semo. It slipped from her fingers, smashing into 114 pieces, creating the valley’s looking-glass lakes. Five-Colour Pond is a shapeshifter. Bending at various angles, I try to spot its ombré blues, greens and its most elusive shade: purple. I snatch a glimpse of the violet, but like trying to grasp a fistful of smoke, it vanishes into thin air. Visitors snap selfies. A goddess-like Tibetan woman wearing traditional attire patiently poses for me. Then they all disappear down the boardwalk and for a few seconds I have the surreal site all to myself. The next day we head back south to explore Huanglong National Park, a 650-kilometre valley. Its terraced travertine ponds are smudges of turquoise, green and yellow, creating the appearance of a huang long or “yellow dragon” ambling through the virgin forest. Discovering this mythical landscape starts with a vertical journey by cablecar. It reels us toward the valley’s precipitous peaks, many mantled in snow, including 5,588-metre Mount Xuebaoding (“Snowy Treasure Peak”), which wears its white coat year-round. From the top, everyone must travel on foot via a boardwalk that traverses the slopes, skirting panoramas of carved valleys, steaming hot springs, misty cascades, limestone formations and three Buddhist temples that date back to the Ming Dynasty. I join the pilgrimage of people decked in puffy down coats trudging along and find myself in the centre of a selfie with a group of giggling girls. The air is rarefied this high up and some visitors take refuge inside oxygen bars along the way. Everyone seems blissful, if not breathless, swallowed up by the spellbinding beauty. I step inside the Huanglong Ancient Temple and a teenaged girl asks me to take her photo as she holds skinny sticks of incense. I oblige and we exchange WeChat details (China’s version of messaging service WhatsApp) on our iPhones. We’ve made a connection through nature, spirituality and technology. It’s a few more shades of Sìchuan, shaped by the forces of nature, both absolute and esoteric. A land of dragons, Tibetan goddesses, teenagers snapping selfies and roadside show yaks, perhaps best encapsulated by more wise words from Confucius: “Wherever you go, go with all your heart.”
shanghai / edmonton / prague / whistler / osaka … | c a l e n d a r
ce
A n intern ation a l guide to continuing dental Education
fall 2017 + beyond
shanghai
At the Jade Temple
Graffiti at M50
East Nanjing Road
Prayer beads
Roof lines of the Jade Temple juxtaposed with modern Shanghai
Old Shanghai Teahouse
The Bund
Solitude in Shanghai: Find flickers of tranquility in China’s largest city (CE events in Shanghai + beyond are highlighted in blue.)
janet gyenes
T
he low morning sun hides behind the buildings huddled up to East Nanjing Road in Shanghai’s Huangpu district. A few blocks from the Bund, thousands flock to this pedestrian stroll to shop at its 600 trendy boutiques, businesses and Qing Dynasty-era department stores. But for now, it’s still slumbering. The massive façade of an Apple store hasn’t yet transformed into a glass birdcage for a captive audience. Instead, it’s the backdrop for a cadre of women dancing in formation. Like delicate birds, they flap their arms, snapping open and shut broad yellow-and-red fans that seem like plumage extending from their fingertips. This scene is a not-so-rare respite from the cacophony of China’s largest city. Once flooded with trade in tea, silk and opium, more than 4,000 years of history has shaped this port city on the East China Sea. So too has the Huangpu River (a tributary of the Yangtze), carving this metropolis of 24 million people into two distinctive areas on its east and west banks.
seek out the temple’s namesake 1.9-metre buddha; Pudong (its name translates to “east bank”) lives up to its Instagram persona, its skyline spiked with high- photography is prohibited, adding to the solitude. altitude skyscrapers such as the spaceship-like Oriental To explore the modern, artful side of Shanghai, Pearl TV Tower (its third sphere is actually called Space take a one-kilometre walk from the temple to the M50 creative park, tracing tea-stained Suzhou Creek. Capsule) and the 101-storey Shanghai World Financial Formerly the Xinhe Cotton Mill, the revamped industrial Center, a neo-futurist building that looks like a colossal space with graffitied walls is now a warren of ultra-cool bottle opener. Puxi, or “west bank,” is framed by the Bund, a one-kilometre-long riverside promenade lined artists’ studios, galleries and cafes. Chat with artisans with heritage buildings, including the 1929 art as you snap up their fashionable handmade leather goods, jewellery and ceramics. After deco Fairmont Peace Hotel. [more] With its mega-tall towers and throngs, drinking in new Shanghai, head to Old Check out Town, a cataclysm of cutting-edge and Shanghai often draws comparison to New meet-inYork City. Or Paris, thanks to the trove of ancient where smoggy silhouettes of towers shanghai.net villas and wutong (plane) trees lining the rise behind the winged eaves of wooden structures. Elbow past the crowds and climb streets in the former French Concession. But the staircase to the Old Shanghai Teahouse, a this not the US or Europe. Chinese culture and 1930s throwback with the aura of an antiques shop. quiet can be found in Shanghai’s spiritual spots such as the Jade Buddha Temple in the Jing’An district. Here, peek Settle in, sip tea (or beer) and devour juicy dumplings in inside the halls where worshippers kneeling on colourful this second-floor enclave while listening to the chirp of cushions murmur prayers to gilded deities. Be sure to live music being performed. — Janet Gyenes September/October 2017 Just For Canadian dentists
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Ethics
Endodontics
Cosmetics/Aesthetic
Anesthesia/Sedation
c ece c awhen lendar where
topic
sponsor
contact
website
University of Alberta
780-492-5391
dentistry.ual berta.ca/cde
Multiple Dates
Edmonton Alberta
Sep 15-18 - Edmonton - IV Conscious Sedation Program (Session 1) Oct 25-31 - Edmonton - IV Conscious Sedation Program (Session 2) Dec 16-21 - Edmonton - IV Conscious Sedation Program (Session 3)
Sep 15Oct 02
Vancouver British Columbia
Mastering Adult Moderate Conscious IV Sedation
Sea to Sky Dental-Ed
778-984-0915 See Ad Page 37
dental-ed.com
Sep 15Oct 02
Vancouver British Columbia
Mastering Adult Moderate Conscious Oral Sedation
Sea to Sky Dental-Ed
778-984-0915 See Ad Page 37
dental-ed.com
Nov 03-19
Sacramento California
IV Moderate Sedation Training For Dentists
Conscious Sedation Consulting
888-581-4448
sedationcon sulting.com
Dec 18-21
Miami Beach Florida
Anesthesia Update
Northwest Anesthesia Seminars
800-222-6927
nwas.com
Feb 16-18 2018
Vancouver British Columbia
Mastering Pediatric Sedation; A Nitrous Oxide/ Oral Pediatric Minimal Sedation Course
Sea to Sky Dental-Ed
778-984-0915
dental-ed.com
Ongoing
Leuven Belgium
Biocompatible And Durable Restorations With Glass Ionomers From GC
GC Europe
See Website
gceurope.com
Ongoing
Amsterdam Netherlands
Academic Center For Dentistry Amsterdam (ACTA), Department Of Oral Function, Section Of Oral Implantology And Prosthetic Dentistry
ITI International Team for Implantology
41-61-270-8383
iti.org
Monthly Courses
Vancouver British Columbia
Botox, Dermal Fillers, Lasers
Pacific Training Institute for Facial Aesthetics
855-681-0066
ptifa.com
Ongoing
Vancouver British Columbia
Course #1 Shaping, Cleaning,And Obturation Of Root Canal Systems Course #2 Re-Treatment & Other Complex Cases
Endodontics Unsponsored
604-987-2285
vancouverroot canals.com
Nov 03-04
South Hackensack New Jersey
Intense Endodontics: A 2-Day Hands-On Workshop
Essential Dental Seminars
888-542-6376
essentialsemi nars.org
Apr 25-28 2018
Denver Colorado
Annual Session 2018
American Association of Endodontists
800-872-3636
aae.org
Oct 13-27 2018
Japan Cruise
Dr. Brian D. Janine – What’s HOT, What’s NOT And What’s NEW In Endodontics!
Kennedy Professional Education Seminars
877-536-6736
kennedysemi nars.com
Oct 21-25 2018
Key Biscayne Florida
TMD Complete: Cases Start To Finish
The Pankey Institute for Advanced Dental Education
800-472-6539
pankey.org
Ongoing
Online
Family Violence: Implications For Florida Dental Patients And Practice, Updated 1st Edition
Western Schools
800-953-8731
western schools.com
Jun 08 2018
Fairfield New Jersey
Ethics & Recordkeeping
Dental Studies Institute
973-808-1666
dsi-nj.com
Travel and Learn, Maui
2 0 1 Palm Springs, CA Orthodontic Symposium, Hawaii 8 Ski and Learn Whistler, BC
22
MORE CE Full-access CE calendar and destinations at justforcanadiandentists.com/ce/
new CE to be placed
January 29 - February 2 February 8 - 10 February 23 - 25 March 26 - 30
Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
MORE CE Full-access CE calendar and destinations at justforcanadiandentists.com/ce/
Infection
Geriatric Dentistry
General Dentistry
ce
calendar
ce
when
where
topic
sponsor
contact
website
Sep 21-24
Shanghai China
China Dental Show CSA Annual Meeting
Reed Sinopharm Exhibitions
86-010-8455 6607
chinadental show.com
Oct 19-21
Kelowna British Columbia
2017 TODS Meeting: Multi-Topic Conference
Thompson Okanagan Dental Society
250-832-2811
todsmeeting. com
Oct 26-28
Osaka Japan
39th Asia-Pacific Dental And Oral Care Congress - Bridging Excellence In Dental And Oral Care
Conference Series
800-216-6499
dentalcare. conferenc eseries.com
Nov 04-11
Tahiti & the Society Islands Cruise
Updates In Dentistry / Dental & Medical Symposium At Sea On The 5-Star All-Inclusive Luxury Small Ship Paul Gauguin
Professional Education Society
877-737-7005
pestravel.com
Jan 29Feb 02 2018
Maui Hawaii
Travel And Learn
UBC Continuing Dental Education
877-328-7744 See Ad Page 22
dentistry.ubc. ca/cde
Feb 08-10 2018
Whistler British Columbia
Ski And Learn
UBC Continuing Dental Education
877-328-7744 See Ad Page 22
dentistry.ubc. ca/cde
Feb 23-25 2018
Palm Springs California
Golf And Learn
UBC Continuing Dental Education
877-328-7744 See Ad Page 22
dentistry.ubc. ca/cde
Mar 09-16 2018
Turks & Caicos
Oral Medicine, TMD, Oral Pain-Diagnosis & Meds - Dr. Gary Klasser
877-536-6736 See Ad Page 24
kennedysemi nars.com
June 2018 to June 2020
Gainesville Florida
888-550-4590 See Ad Page 20
ce.dental.ufl.edu
Aug 06-16 2018
East African Safari
Kenya And Tanzania - Experience The Wildebeest Migration And The Big Five, Maasai People, Ngorongoro Crater With Dr. Michael Goldberg-Periodontist
Mindware Educational Seminars
888-574-8288
mindwaresem inars.com
Oct 11-22 2018
Prague Vienna & Budapest
Direct & Indirect Procedures Plus CAD/CAM With Dr. Sam Halabo
Mindware Educational Seminars
888-574-8288
mindwaresem inars.com
Ongoing
Online
Periodontal Disease In The Baby Boom Population
Advanced Continuing Education Systems
888-844-2237
aces4ce.com
Ongoing
Online
Treating The Aging Baby Boomer: Looking Through Dental Care The Crystal Ball
800-543-2577
dentalcare.com
Nov 03
St. Paul Minnesota
Dental & Medical Management Updates for An Aging Population
University of Minnesota
800-685-1418
smile.umn.edu
Ongoing
Online
Preventing And Controlling Healthcare Associated Infection In The Dental Practice
eDen Education Pty
800-773-7571
e-deneduca tion.com
Sep 15
Edmonton Alberta
Perio Celebration Day
University of Alberta
780-492-5391
dentistry.ual berta.ca/cde
Oct 21
Los Angeles California
Emerging Diseases, Infection Control And California Dental Practice Act (October 2017)
University of Southern California
213-821-2127
uscdentalce.org
new CE to placed Comprehensive Dentistry Program Classbe 30 AGD University of Florida
Kennedy Professional Education Seminars
MasterTrack Course
HANDS ON EXTRACTION CLASSES
Stop Referring your Retirement Money to the Oral Surgeon. Come Learn How to Remove Teeth Quickly and Confidently by Mastering the following procedures: Flaps, Sectioning, Removing Bone with Hand Pieces, Closing Sinus Perforations, Stopping Bleeders, Incising Abscesses and Placing Drains, Removing Wisdom Teeth, and MUCH more.
Classes offered Four Times a Year! Contact us or visit our website for upcoming dates.
48 CE Hours on Live Patients Approved PACE Program Provider FAGD/MAGD credit. Approval does not imply acceptance by a state or provincial board of dentistry or AGD endorsement. 4/1/2016 to 3/31/2020. Provider ID 218239.
Contact: Dr. Tommy Murph T: 843-488-4357 or E: drtommymurph@yahoo.com
Retire Years Earlier!
www.WeTeachExtractions.com September/October Just For Canadian dentists
23
Implantology
ce calendar ce when where
24
MORE CE Full-access CE calendar and destinations at justforcanadiandentists.com/ce/
topic
sponsor
contact
website
Annual Fellowship Program Jun 20-25 & Jul 19-23, 2018 CII Campus San Diego And UNLV Campus Las Vegas
California Implant Institute and University of Nevada, Las Vegas
858-496-0574
implanteduca tion.net
A.A.I.D.Vancouver Maxicourse
888-teeth-99
vancouvermaxi course.com
Multiple Dates
San Diego California and Las Vegas Nevada
Multiple Dates
Vancouver British Columbia
Sep 14-16
Santo Domingo Dominican Republic
Live Patient Third Molar Extraction
Implant Seminars
305-944-9636 See Ad Page 35
implantsemi nars.com
Oct 12-14
Santo Domingo Dominican Republic
Live Patient Implant Placement
Implant Seminars
305-944-9636 See Ad Page 35
implantsemi nars.com
Oct 14-15
Seattle Washington
Seattle Dental Implant Continuum Session 1 Of 4
Implant Seminars
305-944-9636
implantsemi nars.com
Oct 28-29
Santo Domingo Dominican Republic
Live Patient Facial Rejuvenation
Implant Seminars
305-944-9636 See Ad Page 35
implantsemi nars.com
Oct 28Apr 22 2018
New York New York
Comprehensive Implantology Continuum, Part 1 Option 1, 6 Weekends: 2017-Oct 28-29, Nov 18-19; 2018-Jan 20-21, Feb 10-11, Mar 17-18, Apr 21-22
212-305-7124
dental.colum bia.edu/ce
Nov 07-11
Puebla Mexico
Wehrle Implant Immersion Course
Ultra Modern Dental Group
222-285-1572
ultramodern dentalgroup. com
Jan 20-27 2018
Secrets Resort Huatulco Mexico
Problem Solvers For Restorative Dentistry Dr. Howard Strassler
Kennedy Professional Education Seminars
877-536-6736 See Ad Page 24
kennedysemi nars.com
Feb 09-10 2018
Gainesville Florida
Implant-Based Planning And Treatment Options For Full-Arch Fixed Restorations
University of Florida
888-550-4590
ce.dental.ufl.edu
Feb 17-24 2018
Montego Bay Jamaica
Implant Placement & Maintenance Dr. Hoda Hosseini
Kennedy Professional Education Seminars
877-536-6736 See Ad Page 24
kennedysemi nars.com
Apr 05-07 2018
Halifax Nova Scotia
Foundations In Implant Dentistry Dr. Michael Gillis (Implant Surgery Session 3)
Gillis Dental Implants
902-405-0077
gillisdental implants.com
Apr 15-26 2018
Tokyo Japan Cruise
Precision, Productivity And Profitability Of Implant Prosthetics With Dr. Robert Vogel
Mindware Educational Seminars
888-574-8288 See Ad Page 32
mindwaresem inars.com
Jun 17-28 2018
Tour of Spain
Enhancing Diagnosis, Case Acceptance & Restorative Outcomes For Implants With Dr. David Little
Mindware Educational Seminars
888-574-8288 See Ad Page 32
mindwaresem inars.com
AAID Vancouver MaxiCourse: Comprehensive Dental Implant Training Post-Grad Program
2017: Sep 22-24, Oct 20-22, Nov 17-19, Dec 8-10 2018: Jan12-14, Feb 9-11, Mar 16-18, Apr 13-15, May 4-6, Jun 1-2
new CE toColumbia University be placed
Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
MORE CE Full-access CE calendar and destinations at justforcanadiandentists.com/ce/
Orthodontics
Oral Surgery
Medical/Dental Issues
ce
when
where
Ongoing
topic
calendar
ce
sponsor
contact
website
Cayman Islands Various Topics And Dates
Cayman Islands Medical & Dental Society
345-945-4388
caymancham ber.ky
Oct 13-14
Brisbane Australia
2017 ADIA Queensland Dental Show
Australian Dental Industry Association
02-9319-5631
adia.org.au
Nov 11
Victoria British Columbia
Emergency Medicine 10 Minutes To Save A Life
University of Victoria
250-472-4747
continuingstud ies.uvic.ca
Jan 12 2018
Orlando Florida
Update On Medical Emergencies 2017: How To Save A Life, Including Your Own
University of Florida
888-550-4590 See Ad Page 20
ce.dental.ufl.edu
Feb 03-10 2018
Maui Hawaii
Medical Emergencies, New Methods & Materials, Wellness
Dental Seminars & Symposia
952-922-1707 See Ad Page 20
dentsem.com
Feb 24Mar 03 2018
Eastern Caribbean Cruise
Treating The Apprehensive Dental Patient, Medical Emergencies And Practice Jewels You Can Use On Monday
Continuing Education, Inc./University at Sea
800-422-0711 See Ad Page 27
continuingedu cation.net
Sep 23-29
La Esperanza Guatemala
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Alaskan Cruise
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Mixco Guatemala
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Sep 22-23
Toronto Ontario
Level I – Introduction To Orthodontics Session 1
Rondeau Seminars
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Sep 27
Shanghai China
AO Global Outreach Program
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Sep 29-30
Calgary Alberta
Level I – Introduction To Orthodontics Session 1
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Oct 20-21
Las Vegas Nevada
Orthodontic Case Finishing Conference
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Nov 10-11
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Case Finishing And Mechanics
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Orthodontic Symposium
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25
Practice Management, Technology and Planning
Prosthodontics/ Restorative
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The Management Of Complex Cases And Treatment Planning: Case Discussion (Stage I)
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Dec 23Jan 07 2018
Buenos Aires to Valparaiso Cruise
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Caring For An Aging Population: Clinical Strategies For The Dental Team
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Caribbean Cruise
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26
Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
WHEN LOCATION
Oct 13 & 14, 2017 Patterson Dental, Richmond, BC
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travel at home
Retreat redux
Old is new in story
+ photography
by
Barb Sligl
Inside the courtyard of the Séminaire de Québec, just steps away from Le Monastère des Augustines, another of Quebéc City’s (and Canada’s) founding Catholic institutions (and home to the long-standing Université Laval). The sundial at the top right corner of the door is inscribed with the Latin text, Dies nostri quasi umbra: Our life on earth is short and fleeting.
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Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
travel at home
In 1639, a group of women came to New France to found Canada’s first hospital in Québec city. Now they’re welcoming you to stay at Le Monastère des Augustines…
le monastère
September/October 2017 Just For Canadian dentists
29
travel at home
L
eaves rustle, birds twitter, a Québec flag flutters in the wind. I’m atop ancient fortifications, older than the Citadelle of Québec, in the Parc du Cavalier-du-Moulin. Tucked away amidst the quiet streets behind Château Frontenac and in the Citadelle’s shadow, this pocket park (dating to 1663) is quite hidden by a veil of trees. I have it almost to myself, the only other occupant a young man seated against one of the leafy trees. He smiles, says bonjour and continues sipping his wine. How French. I wonder if any of the Augustines stood here. I found out about this little-known hideaway in the guest-room literature at Le Monastère des Augustines, where I’m staying while in Québec City. It’s just one gem I’ve discovered thanks to the centuries-old monastery-turned-retreat, founded even before this park. It began as the first hôtel-dieu (the French name for hospitals established by nursing orders of nuns) in what was then New France, funded by a French duchess and founded by three young nuns from Dieppe. They arrived in 1639, less than three decades after Champlain
himself in 1608—voyageurs, explorers and adventurers just as he was. Their efforts fostered 12 monastery hospitals and 2,000 nuns over the centuries. Today there are just eight sisters left from this particular monastère. Their average age is 84 yet they chirp “Bonjour!” to guests and happily welcome them into what’s still their home. Don’t think staid. Despite the mission of this completely refurbished hotel/retreat (a multi-million-dollar update) to keep the Augustines’ tradition alive, it’s surprisingly modern. “Contemporary” rooms have ensuite bathrooms, while more-traditional cell-style rooms share bathrooms (there are 65 guest rooms in total). It’s a form of sustainable and cultural tourism that gives guests a historical and enriching experience that’s far beyond the standard hotel. I attend one of the vespers held in the once-segregated section of the adjoined church (an L-shape with separate wings for the nuns and the public during mass in the days of cloistered life) and get tingles hearing their sweet-and-pure voices, a stark contrast to their wrinkled faces. I think of the inscription “Prier comme un ange” that I noticed earlier: “…after years of practice she prays as naturally as she breathes. Silently or aloud. From awakening to bedtime. In the cloister and in the hospital. Prayer slakes her thirst for the absolute. Prayer makes her heart rejoice.”
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Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
I silently thank the sisters for sharing this. And all of this surrounding me. With almost 400 years of history, Le Monastère des Augustines is a treasure, a living museum. I meander through the exhibit of some 1,000 objects from the 40,000 artifacts in the Augustinians’ 12 monastery hospitals: the trunk of the fondatrices, the three women who crossed the Atlantic to found this place in 1639; a surgical instrument set from circa 1730, used to extract musket balls from soldiers wounded during the Battle of the Plains of Abraham; an anesthesia mask from the mid-19th century; a prayer book decorated with embroidery; the 21-piece habit of the sisters that has not changed since the 6th century. Down one hall is a wooden statue, painted in vivid red, blue and gold, Notre-Dame de la Victoire; Jesus, of course, is found in another, as are various other embellished or unadorned figures. “Everything that looks old in the monastère actually is,” says Marie-Eve Perron, marketing director of the monastery. I come across a replica of a nun’s room, stark yet lovely. In each of these humble cells is a rack with a curved, custom peg upon which a sister’s veil could hang crease-free. Black-and-white photos throughout also make me smile, like “Novice et postulantes au jardin” from 1945, in which the nuns sport wide grins in the courtyard garden. left The view of Lower I’m almost reluctant to venture Town from the Clergy outside the sanctuary of the Battery. opposite, top row convent again, but Vieux-Québec, from left Display of crucithe oldest part of the city, is just fixes and cannonballs in the vault of Le Monastère steps away. I stroll past Château des Augustines; Québec Frontenac, Dufferin Terrace and City’s oldest house in Vieuxthat secret park (shhh), and then Québec; an Augustine walks continue up 310 steps to the in the garden. opposite, middle Citadelle and Plains of Abraham— row from left The leafy view peaceful and eerie as an undevelfrom Parc du Cavalier-duoped monument of that epic 1759 Moulin; under the arches of battle between French and English. the monastère’s courtyard; a replica of an Augustine’s This is where Canada began. And room. opposite, bottom row as its first city, Québec is like a from left Looking into the dragonfly in amber…caught in courtyard of the Séminaire another time, a beautiful oddity de Québec; Château because this 409-year-old city still Frontenac; bust of King stands between the Old World Louis XIV in Place Royale. and the New World. In the Lower Town, I stop in front of a bust (by the famous Italian sculptor Bernini) of King Louis XIV in Place Royale square—it was his predecessor, Louis XIII, who deployed those three sisters long ago to start the continent’s first hospital. My head spins. It’s all still so audacious. As I walk along the Clergy Battery, atop the city’s ramparts, past Côte de la Montagne (once a path used by natives long before any European set foot here), I see little girls in checked uniforms playing amongst the cannons. They’re from the Ursuline school (another enduring relic, started by another group of nuns who travelled across the Atlantic aboard the same ship as the Augustines in 1639). I edge along the high wall with a bird’s-eye view of the Lower Town and St. Lawrence River far below. It’s as if I’m walking back in time, through a diorama of steep metal roofs glinting in the sun, their vertical lines of tiles laid in the traditional French “baguette” style. As I continue past the Séminaire de Québec, I remember its sundial marked with the Latin phrase, Dies nostri quasi umbra: Our life on earth is short and fleeting. Words that seem to echo in this old city. Back at the monastère it’s lunchtime and, here, that means mindful eating. “Slow cooking” (no microwave on site) with local ingredients. Some dishes are even inspired by the archives, including the most ancient cookbook in Canada. I remember the handwritten
travel at home
travel at home “Sucre à la Crême au Chocolat” recipe I saw in the museum (these nuns knew the value of indulgence too). There’s also tisane du monastère and digestive et tonnifiante à déguster made of ginger, lemon, fennel, thyme and maple syrup. And organic Québec products like honey wine, Vidal wine from Domaines des Salamandres and bière blonde biologique from microbrasserie La Barberie. Everything is connected to the centuries-long traditions and wisdom of the sisters. Breakfast is eaten in silence, a ritual that evolved out of the need for balance prior to long days in the frenzy of the hospital, tending patients. “The best state of equilibrium is a mix of action and contemplation,” is how Perron explains the Augustines’ ethos. So the sisters take their meals in silence. I venture to do the same at breakfast the next day. It’s an exercise of hyperawareness without the usual distractions: smartphones, newspapers, idle chit-chat, TVs. It’s revelatory. But, while silence at breakfast is expected to be adhered to, the rest of what the monastère offers is optional. You’re encouraged to leave your cell phone with reception (another exercise in confronting withdrawal). There are yoga and meditation classes, craft workshops and holistic-health sessions. “We propose experiences and our clients decide for themselves,” says Perron. I partake in the early morning “Awake” series, during which “breathing, movement and meditation rouse the body and help you get in touch with your very essence.” Propped atop one of the monastery’s meditation cushions, I inhale the signature “1639” essential-oil blend of cardamom, cedar and citrus that’s inspired by the nuns’ long-time use of aromatherapy (for its beneficial effects in the hospital). It’s anything but woo-woo. After three mornings of this, I actually feel refreshed (again, revelatory for a non-morning person). There’s also a “Creation” workshop on mandalas, drawing, colouring and scrapbooking. Anything you create becomes a gift for a hos-
if you go
pital patient at the connected Hôtel-Dieu de Québec. A midday “Vitality” program For more on Le Monastère might include yoga or a guided “energy des Augustines and its offerwalk.” More yoga—qi gong, vinyasa ings go to monastere.ca. For flow, yin—takes place in the latemore on Québec City and afternoon “Healing” session, and the Québec: quebecregion.com and quebecoriginal. evening “Inspiration” series showcases com/en. films, book discussions or some other talk promoting inner calm, peace and serenity. During a yoga session in the whitewashed stone vault (dating back to 1644, one of the oldest in Canada), it’s as if I’m enveloped by layer upon layer of time and spirit. So much has happened, so many have been here before me. I glance at a display of cherubic angels and crucifixes next to pitted cannonballs (relics from the Battle of the Plains of Abraham that crashed through these walls). The juxtapositions are surreal—spiritual yet secular, old yet new, traditional yet contemporary, horror and healing. But somehow it all melds seamlessly in this forward-thinking, modern-day retreat. And it reflects the core purpose of the Augustines: balance, wellbeing and inner peace. One morning I find a spot in the courtyard and watch a group silently trace the square path, walking under contemporary arches (12 arches for 12 monastery hospitals) that contrast the ancient stonework. Some are barefoot, some have their eyes closed, some seem to be mouthing a mantra. I close my own eyes and settle into a form of meditation, letting myself absorb a little of the magic of this place—so old yet so invigorating. I tell myself that I can practise these rituals, continue these lessons upon my return home. And I do buy the 1639 essential-oil blend and a meditation cushion at the gift shop. But my most treasured takeaway might be something one of the yoga instructors said about breath being the bridge between body and soul. Much like this place.
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Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
t h e w e a lt h y d e n t i s t M a n f r e d p u r t z k i Manfred Purtzki is the principal of Purtzki & Associates Chartered Accountants. You can reach him at manfred@purtzki.com.
Beat the taxman
While you can…dental corporations are hit hard by new tax proposals
Minimize
solution from page 37
poration in 2017 paid $300,000 in dividends to three family members with no other income. The comthe impact of bined personal tax on this divithese harsh dend is about $30,000. Under the proposals, before proposed tax regime, this dentist they become will no longer be able to income split, increasing the personal tax the law burden from $30,000 to $70,000. Dentists have taken for granted that the proceeds from the sale of their practice are tax free because of the capital gains exemption. The lifetime capital gains exemption of $835,716 in 2017 is available to each shareholder who owns the shares directly or indirectly through a family trust. The dentist, spouse and one child can presently claim an exemption of $2.5 million, a tax saving of almost $600,000. The TOSI rules determine whether or not a family member is eligible for the capital gains exemption. It basically means that if you cannot income split with a family member, then you also cannot use the capital gains exemption. The rules will become effective in 2018. The government allows you to lock in the capital gains exemption on any capital gains on your dental corporation shares accrued prior to 2018. There is more bad news! The tax proposals want to penalize you for using the low corporate tax rate for accumulating savings in the corporation. Here is an illustration of what the government wants to achieve. An employee earns $100,000 of income, which he plans to invest. After paying personal tax of 50% or $50,000, he has $50,000 left— assuming he can invest 100% of net income— which he invests in equities at 6% per year for 10 years. In 10 years, his savings total $80,000. The dental corporation earns $100,000, pays tax at, say, 15%, which leaves $85,000 for investing in the same portfolio as the employee. In 10 years, the investment in the corporation has grown to $135,000. The shareholder takes the investment out and pays a personal tax of $35,000, leaving $100,000 of after-tax income compared to the employee’s $80,000. The proposal is to tax the shareholder $55,000, so that he ends with the same $80,000 as the employee. There has never been a greater urgency to work with your dental CPA to plan tax strategies to minimize the impact of these harsh proposals, before they become law.
34
sudoku 1 easier solution 1 9 8 2 5 6 4 3 7 4 2 7 3 1 9 8 6 5 3 5 6 8 7 4 9 2 1 5 3 9 1 4 2 7 8 6 7 4 2 6 3 8 5 1 9 8 6 1 7 9 5 2 4 3 2 7 3 9 8 1 6 5 4 9 8 4 5 6 3 1 7 2 6 1 5 4 2 7 3 9 8
Puzzle by websudoku.com
Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
solution from July/ August 2017 contest
T
he federal government wants to remove all the benefits of being an incorporated dentist. Forget saving taxes by income splitting with family members, selling your practice without paying capital gains taxes, or turbocharging the growth of your corporate retirement nest egg. To stop income splitting, the proposals call for an extension of the “kiddie tax,” which currently applies to children under the age of 18. The kiddie tax or “tax on split income” (TOSI) was introduced in 1999 and it imposed the top personal tax rate on dividends paid to minor children. TOSI was effective in eliminating income splitting and so the government plans to extend the kiddie tax to all adult family members aged 18 or over for any amounts paid which exceed the reasonableness threshold. You exceed this threshold if the payment to the shareholder exceeds what an arm’s length party would receive considering any labour and capital contributions the individual made to the practice. The proposed rules will put an end to income splitting in most cases and the dentist will have to report just about all the income from the company. To illustrate the impact, a client’s dental cor-
sudoku 2 harder solution 4 9 6 8 7 3 1 5 2 2 7 1 6 9 5 4 8 3 5 3 8 4 2 1 9 6 7 3 8 7 2 6 4 5 9 1 9 2 4 1 5 8 7 3 6 1 6 5 9 3 7 8 2 4 6 5 9 7 4 2 3 1 8 8 4 2 3 1 9 6 7 5 7 1 3 5 8 6 2 4 9
Puzzle by websudoku.com
practice management Timothy A. Brown Timothy A. Brown specializes in dental practice appraisals, brokerage, consulting, locum placements, associateships and practice financing across Canada. You can reach Timothy at timothy@roicorp.com.
Insiders’ revelations
Your practice has untapped potential and hidden revenue—exploit it
I
was talking to a potential client the other day who said that he did not think his business was worth much. He never imagined that he’d sell it for a profit. I asked what his annual sales were, what his net income was and whether he had thought about establishing a transition plan. He said that his kids had planned to take over the business, but instead moved on to other professions in technology and software and
overspent, living well within his means. His business was founded on sweat equity. As we conversed, he began to reveal more and more, especially after asked about his client list. He proudly confirmed that he had a very vibrant list: a steady, loyal clientele that had served him well for many years. I asked again about his annual revenue, which he was reluctant to reveal. I respected his reluctance to disclose his financials; as I’m a broker, he must have thought I was just trying to get a business listing. We talked more about his industry and where it was in terms of growth or decline. Eventually he related that he’s in a highgrowth industry, felt that his “old-fashioned” business something he knew How much system wasn’t right for them. all along yet had business are you I inquired further. I asked whethnever exploited to leaving on the er he had a loyal, repeat client list. I its full potential. He asked if he had a continuing revenue admitted that he did stream. I asked if he had ever thought not want to buy the of selling to his employees. Perhaps one equipment, hire more of his competitors might be interested? staff and move toward He was stubborn and proud. He paid computerization to upgrade nothing for the company because he to the necessary technology—do the started it on a bootstrap budget more than things that would allow him to face his new 50 years ago. He never borrowed from the competitors. He readily acknowledged that, bank throughout his career. He sacrificed on while his long-term clients remained loyal food, cars, the house he lived in and never to him, lately some had concerns about his
As a broker and appraiser these are the type of insights that present themselves when meeting with business or practice owners
36
Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
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slow delivery and service. They never complained about his quality nor his price, only about not getting his goods fast enough. He further admitted that he was slow, but he was good. In fact, he said, “I’m the best” and I believed him. So what do you do? What would you do—buy his business? Is his business likely to fail because of the competition? Should he upgrade? I know there are at least two mindsets on this, depending on whether we’re discussing a business or a dental practice. One would believe this business is an easy picking to compete against. The other thinks of buying this business and doubling the revenue. As a broker and appraiser these are the type of insights that present themselves when meeting with business or practice owners. The hidden value of the business is often uncovered with minimal effort. Practitioners or entrepreneurs regularly want to tell their stories and confide in their trials, tribulations and triumphs over the years. One thing they’re not able or likely to do is tell a potential buyer how much business they left on the table. They might humblebrag about it and say, “If somebody younger or more competitive takes over, they will do better than me.” This revelation is left to a third party acting for the seller, and that’s where a broker comes in. The truth is, every business or practice has untapped potential and hidden revenue. You can ethically exploit it yourself or a buyer can. Your call.
For Canadian Dentists of British Columbia
diversion
sudoku Solve puzzle #2 for a chance to win a $50 VISA gift card!
adult and pediatric sedation courses: both oral and IV certifications
Each sudoku puzzle has a unique solution that can be reached logically without guessing. Fill in the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 square contains the digits 1 through 9.
canadian dental anaesthesia assistant course
dental office emergencies workshop mock emergency drills
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GOOD LUCK!
sudoku 1 easier solution on page 34
9 8 4 3 1 4 2 4 9 2 3 5 4 8 6 3 5 7 2 9 9 4 8 6 5 4 7 3 9 6 3 7 2 5 3 9
sudoku 2 harder solution in next issue
$50 Visa Gift Card winner: Dr. Gregory L. Perras of Edmonton, AB
7
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Puzzle by websudoku.com
8
9 3 4 1
2 6 5 1 5 3 1 6
2 6
Sudoku Contest entry form (solve + send in sudoku!)
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1. Entry form must be accompanied with solved puzzle. Only correctly solved puzzles entered into random draw. 2. Send puzzle + entry form to Just For Canadian Dentists, 200 – 896 Cambie St., Vancouver, BC, V6B 2P6 or fax 604-681-0456. Entries must be received by October 13, 2017. 3. Prize: $50 VISA Gift Card. 4. Contest can be changed and/or cancelled without prior notice. 5. All entries become property of In Print Publications. 6. Employees of In Print Publications and its affliates are not eligible to participate.
September/October 2017 Just For Canadian dentists
37
s m a l l ta l k
dentists share their picks + pleasures
dr. david maskell appreciates the good things in life, now more so then ever (read his story on shifting his perspective and career, page 11). When he’s not devoting his time to philanthropy, his travels include memorable places like Il Falconiere in Tuscany, a Relais & Châteaux hotel in a 17th-century villa (with a Michelin-starred restaurant), enjoyed even more with a renewed perspective: “By changing the lives of others you can’t help but change your own.” Wise words. My name: David Brian Maskell I live, practise in: Redwater, AB My training: B.Sc., DDS, Pankey Institute Why I was drawn to dentistry: Combination of art and science My last trip: Guatemala Most exotic place I’ve travelled to: Amazon Basin, Peru Best souvenir I’ve brought back from a trip: Tibetan prayer flags
A favourite place that I keep returning to: Chisec, Guatemala
with: iPod and speakers
Minirig speakers and subwoofer
Favourite city: New York
Can’t believe I’ve never been to: India
Favourite book: The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
I’d describe my home as: A white elephant
Don’t need to go to: Hawaii
Favourite film: The Big Lebowski
Dream vacation: Six months in India
Must-see TV: Alone
If I could travel to anytime, I’d go: 2060 to see my grandkid’s kids My jet-lag cure: Adapt to local clock upon arrival when travelling I always travel
Best meal anywhere: Sichuan meal in Chengdu, China
Favourite band/ album/song: The Kinks, Sleepwalker, “Life Goes On” My first job: Unloading bales of shopping bags
My car: Ram 1500 Last purchase: Pup tent Last splurge: First class to China My fridge is always stocked with: Mouldy leftovers My guilty pleasure: Chocolate
My go-to exercise/sport: Gadget or gear Soccer I could not do without: Sailfish caught off Pacific coast of Guatemala
Favourite spectator sport: Hockey Celebrity crush: Jenna Jameson
myself: Listen better The word that best describes me: Articulate
I’d want this with me if I was stranded on a desert island: Solar-powered iPod
I’m inspired by: Darwin and Dawkins
My secret to relaxing: Fishing
A cause that’s close to my heart: Kindness in Action (see page 11)
A talent I wish I had: Play guitar A big challenge I’ve faced: Parkinson’s disease One thing I’d change about
My motto: Once is a mistake, twice is stupid
On my must-do list: Learn Spanish If I wasn’t a dentist, I’d be: A lawyer
A “wow” hotel/ resort I’d happily stay at again: Il Falconiere, Dr. Maskell Cortona, and some of his Italy favourite things: Il Falconiere in Tuscany, The Kinks album and Douglas Adams’ book…
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Just For Canadian dentists September/October 2017
top photos courtesy of Dr. David Maskell; bottom left photo: il falconiere
Memorable restaurant: River City Café, New York
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