North Shore News August 15 2014

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Nick and Lisa Masee missing for 20 yrs

NorthVan couple’s disappearance still a mystery two decades on JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com

It has now been 20 years since one North Vancouver couple vanished like smoke in a breeze. Socialites Nick and Lisa Masee were connected to some of Vancouver’s

wealthiest citizens and a few of Howe Street’s disreputable denizens through Nick’s work as a banker and stock promoter. During his 37 years overseeing investments at the Bank of Montreal, Nick had dealings with scandalprone stock promoter

Harry Moll as well as Fred Hofman, an investment promoter and church treasurer who fled Canada in 1991 after being accused of running a Ponzi scheme that netted him $10 million. Nick had recently retired after 37 years at the Bank of Montreal and gone to work as a stock promoter and director for Turbodyne Technologies, a company specializing in low-emission

diesel technology. The company eventually got the attention of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission, which leveled fines on Turbodyne based on a string of misleading press releases in the late 1990s. On Aug. 10, 1994 the Masees were scheduled to discuss a California businessman’s proposal to invest $10 million in

Turbodyne over dinner at Trader Vic’s the night before the couple went missing. Nick called the restaurant that night to say they would be late, but neither the Masees nor the prospective investor ever materialized. However, there is a conflicting report from a waiter who had a vague recollection of spotting the couple that evening. On Aug. 11, Lisa, a

39-year-old hairdresser, made calls to the couple’s respective workplaces on Nick’s cellphone to say they would be away for a few days.The calls were routed through a repeater on Bowen Island, suggesting she was on or near the North Shore. When Lisa’s sister visited the couple’s Monteray See Investigator page 3

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Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A3

Investigator believes couple is alive From page 1

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Young bear killed in Dollarton highway crash BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com

A young black bear was killed after being hit by a car on Tsleil-Waututh Nation lands, Monday. North Vancouver RCMP were called to the 3000-block of Dollarton Highway just before 2 p.m. after the young female apparently darted out on to the road and collided with a car. RCMP members called for assistance from conservation officers but the bear had died from its injuries by the time the first car arrived. The driver’s vehicle sustained some damage,

but not enough to require a tow truck, according to North Vancouver RCMP. “It must have been awful (for the driver). I’m just glad the bear was killed on the road, not injured and pursued in pain off in the fog somewhere,” said Christine Miller, education co-ordinator for the North Shore Black Bear Society. Miller learned from a park ranger at the scene the bear was a yearling that had been reported to the society several times in recent months. It was also, apparently, malnourished. “Obviously, it wasn’t doing very well in its search for food,” Miller said. At the end of July,

Miller received a disturbing report about a bruin from a home on nearby Roche Place. “It had actually tapped on the window and looked in the window. I was very concerned about that,” Miller said, noting it indicated one of two things: “(Either) the bear is very young and naïve and not having a clue how he should behave in a community or somebody had been feeding him. Either way was a bad situation for the bear.” Strangely, the bear’s ear was tagged, indicating it had been relocated once before, but conservation officers haven’t moved

any similar bears from the area in the last year or two, Miller said. No one from the conservation office was available to say where the tag had come from. While the society usually cranks out education and signage that warns people to keep their yards free of attractants, Miller noted the garbage cans at nearby Cates Park were overflowing with picnic leftovers, during a recent trip. Miller said people should consider taking their picnic garbage home with them in an effort to make the parks less appealing to bears.

Avenue home several days later she found the door unlocked, their passports and car left behind, and their elderly cat abandoned. Thieves tried to break into the house three weeks later. Discussing North Vancouver’s missing persons files in 2012, RCMP Cpl. Sue Tupper called the Masee disappearance, “the biggest investigation that’s been done.” But despite the investigation and regular media attention — including a segment on NBC’s Unsolved Mysteries — the case has cooled over the past two decades, leaving police to sift through evidence and a wide range of rumours to find out if the couple absconded with a stash of spending money or if they were victims. “There were all kinds of rumours,” noted North Vancouver RCMP spokesman Cpl. Richard De Jong. “What it boils down to is either they both left on their own volition and had funds available to them to allow them to escape with false identities and live a life of Riley; or they met with foul play because of some kind of criminal activity,” De Jong said. “At this point we don’t have a lot of evidence to direct us either way.” When discussing the case in 2012, North Vancouver RCMP Serious Crimes Unit Cpl. Gord Reid talked about the challenges of following a case with no evidence, crime scene or bodies. “It wasn’t your typical missing in that, as far as I

could tell, neither of the people seemed to live what we would call high-risk lifestyles or had serious mental health issues or had gone hiking in the North Shore mountains,” Reid said. There have been several prevalent rumours surrounding the case, including one connecting the couple’s disappearance to a multimillion-dollar Las Vegas gambling debt, but none have borne fruit for investigators. The couple is safe, according to private detective Ozzie Kaban, who was hired by Nick’s son in 1994. “When people disappear, they either float up or they show up someplace. At this point we have no . . . indication he is fish bait,” he told the North Shore News in 2007. A few months before the couple disappeared, Nick opened a Cayman Islands bank account and deposited $100,000.The money wasn’t accessed, but opening the account indicates Nick may have been planning to flee, according to Kaban. There were also reports Nick attended a funeral in early August, telling an acquaintance he was in trouble and needed to get out of Vancouver. Despite being hired by Nicholas’ son, Kaban said the pair’s relatives were less than fully co-operative with his investigation, raising his suspicions. “(I’m) hoping that one day he’s going to knock on the door and say: ‘Here I am. How do you like my sun tan?’” Kaban said. Nick Masee would be 75 today. Lisa would be 59.

Man who sent ‘cryptic’ letters pleads guilty JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com

A 54-year-old man is in jail after pleading guilty to criminal harassment in North Vancouver Provincial Court Tuesday. Stephen Christopher Hoy is awaiting sentencing for violating his no-contact order with five females while he was in jail in June. “No contact directly or indirectly means you can’t send letters or send somebody to contact anybody or whatever the case may be,” said RCMP spokesman Cpl. Richard De Jong. Hoy is also facing charges of breaching

his recognizance and attempting to pervert, defeat or obstruct justice. He pled guilty to all charges. Hoy’s sentencing is scheduled for Oct. 2. Hoy was found guilty of two counts of criminal harassment in 2007 for sending letters to New Westminster teenagers. Speaking to The Province newspaper in 2008, New Westminster police Sgt. Ivan Chu described the letters as “cryptic and bizarre.” Hoy served five months in jail for the offence. He was convicted of breaching the order of his probation in 2008 and again in 2010.


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Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A5

Sex assault suspect chased through Altamont

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BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com

What started as a report of a man on the highway Sunday escalated to a police pursuit through some West Vancouver backyards and ended in a suspect being sent to Prince George to face sex assault charges. West Vancouver police first responded to a report of a shirtless man darting in and out of traffic on Highway 1 near Cypress Bowl Road just before 4:30 p.m. Police arrived and the suspect fled down the highway, through a break in a fence and down into the residential area below. “Someone not wearing a shirt and running very fast through a residential area obviously generates a lot of attention and a lot of calls,” said Const. Jeff Palmer, West Vancouver police spokesman. “We got him cornered into a yard (on Rosebery

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A6 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

VIEWPOINT PUBLISHED BY NORTH SHORE NEWS A DIVISION OF LMP PUBLICATION LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, 100-126 EAST 15TH STREET, NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. V7L 2P9. DOUG FOOT, PUBLISHER. CANADIAN PUBLICATIONS MAIL SALES PRODUCT AGREEMENT NO. 40010186.

Dirty deeds W

hen Michael Sona faced a guilty verdict on Thursday in the infamous robocalls trial, the federal Conservatives were quick to deny any involvement, insisting they ran a “clean and ethical” campaign. Then what defines a “clean” campaign might mean something different to politicians than it does to the rest of us. Sona was a Tory staffer who was using the party’s closely guarded database of voter identification and he was convicted largely on the testimony of other Conservative campaign workers. Despite the party washing their hands of the staffer who misled voters in the 2011 federal election, the fiasco is part of a larger trend of our elections and politicians getting noticeably dirtier. Shortly after, when the Tories admitted to hiring a firm to call up random homes in Montreal Liberal MP Irwin

Cotler’s riding to make the totally untrue suggestion the MP was about to resign, the party defended their actions as “freedom of speech” and “only spreading rumours.” Even the Conservative Speaker of the House called the campaign reprehensible. Attack ads, campaign budgets financed by vested interests and misleading rumour campaigns are all vile, at every level of government, no matter who is perpetrating them. And they’re driving people away from the polls. In the last federal election, 61.1 per cent of Canadians voted, while 55.9 per cent of British Columbians cast their own ballots. But legislation allows this dirty pool to continue.The trouble is: the job of cleaning up elections currently falls to the people who have benefited most from the status quo.

Behind council’s sober second thoughts Napoleon’s retreat from Moscow was bloodier, but West Van council’s U-turn on its slamming of proposed liquefied natural gas tankers on Howe Sound was quicker. Councillors at the Aug. 4 meeting volubly backed off their unanimous decision two weeks earlier when they had asked Ottawa to ban Asianbound tankers from waters uncomfortably close to the western shores of West Vancouver. I pause. Let’s be fair. This is what politicians should do more often, right? — have sober second thoughts, admitting mistakes first time around. By this measure, Mayor Michael Smith deserves praise for the frankness that slick politicians avoid when they give a 3,000-

Trevor Lautens

This Just In

word, non-answer to an unwanted interview question. At the second-thoughts council meeting Aug. 4, Smith commendably took full responsibility for the July 21 decision. “All blame lies at the feet of the chairman of the meeting,” Smith was quoted by News reporter Jeremy Shepherd. “My legendary impatience

CONTACTUS

sometimes gets the better of me after over an hour of going around in circles on a debate.You get desperate to call a question, any question.” (If you can recall any time that former mayor Pamela GoldsmithJones publicly admitted to her blunders, jog my memory.) On that point — what the hell did we agree to? — Coun. Craig Cameron was equally candid: “I didn’t know what we voted for.” His only vote he’s been embarrassed about in three years on council, he confessed. Returning now to my usual sunny cynicism: Why council’s hasty retreat? Wild guess: Largely because John Weston, MP for West VancouverSunshine Coast-Sea to Sky Country — the LNG tankers would sail through

the population heart of his riding — wacked council’s motion, the way it was passed, and its timing. Otherwise he’s OK with it, one might drily say. Strange. Does Weston carry such clout? Another wild guess:Yes, if he’s the messenger boy for the big guy, Prime Minister Stephen Harper, and by proxy for an equally agitated Premier Christy Clark. (As indispensable Sun columnist Vaughn Palmer recently noted, Clark vowed in 2011 that the first LNG export venture would be “operational by 2015.” Not.) If my take is correct, Harper, Clark and the oil and gas industry don’t need the distraction of yet another protest. The Howe Sound LNG plant, a subsidiary of

Pacific Oil and Gas, owned by a Singapore billionaire, would be small potatoes compared with the proposed Northern Noway Gateway project. But it’s our small potatoes. The issue hits close to home. So was council’s first decision correct? Or its second? Or will it be its third, next month? Coun. Michael Lewis expects more information will uphold council’s original decision opposing the project. Predictably, industry leaders say LNG is safe. Predictably, opponents, including chemistry doctorate Eoin Finn, cite the worst case: An LNG tank explosion destroyed a square mile of Cleveland and killed 130 in 1944. Extraction industries are locally popular, generating prosperity and

jobs. Unless something goes hugely wrong. Hello, Mount Polley. ••• Agent 7p2sd4g angrily writes: “Just as dear old Dal Richards was about to sign off on his delightful Harmony Arts concert at John Lawson Park (Aug. 7), who should enter, accompanied by 100 or so (mostly) female followers, right at the foot of the stage, but Justin Trudeau. Absolutely tasteless, and downright rude. Poor Dal looked shell-shocked.” Or was Dal willingly cooperating? We may never know. Also speculative: Lisa King’s front-page photo in the Aug. 7 News was a great shot — worthy of an award-winner — of Justin Trudeau dancing See It’s Amateur page 10

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Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A7

VIEWPOINT

Now’s a perfect time for BC Libs to get greener The recent disaster of the collapse of the Mount Polley mine tailings pond may force the BC Liberals to finally revisit a key policy decision made early on in its first mandate: the cutting back of environmental protection measures. Since 2001, critics have denounced the province for turning a blind eye to environmental protection, and have long warned a disaster was just around the corner. Well, that disaster has now occurred. As of writing this, it is still not clear why the tailings pond failed and dumped 10 million cubic metres of water and 4.5 million cubic metres of mine slurry into Polley and Quesnel Lakes. Energy and Mines Minister Bill Bennett has denied that a lack of inspections played any role in the pond collapse and has insisted the number of annual mine inspections is pretty well the same as five years ago. He may well be proven

Keith Baldrey

View from the Ledge

right that inspections (or a lack thereof) played no role in the tailings pond collapse, but the Mount Polley disaster has nevertheless refocused attention on the BC Liberals controversial historical record when it comes to protecting the environment. That controversy pretty much started right after Gordon Campbell and the BC Liberals were swept into power in 2001. It was obvious early on the BC Liberals did not share the same zeal for environmental issues that characterized much of what

the previous government, formed by the NDP, seemed to be all about. The environment ministry lost a quarter of its staff. Not only did the BC Liberals cut resources for environmental protection, it implemented a fundamental and philosophical shift when it came to this issue. It essentially moved to a self-regulating and self-enforcement model for natural resource companies. Penalties were increased for violations of environmental protection rules and regulations, but companies were essentially allowed to police themselves. Critics predicted this would translate into more incidents that could threaten environmental values. Indeed, over the years, there have been a number of tailings pond failures and breaches of dams, including the collapse of an earthen dam near Oliver in 2010 that destroyed five homes.

Premier Christy Clark has made it clear her government’s core philosophical value is to “grow the economy,” particularly through the natural resource extraction industry. In particular, it has championed the mining industry and the natural gas sector. However, as practices such as fracking become more controversial and as various infrastructure around the province

(such as dams, tailings ponds and pipelines, for example) gradually age, her government will undoubtedly feel more pressure to ensure more serious environmental disasters do not occur. While the BC Liberals rightly feel their surprise re-election in 2013 was strongly tied to its proindustry platform and a much weaker pro-industry platform put forth by the NDP, they may risk losing

support if there are any more major accidents. As Finance Minister Mike de Jong puts together next year’s budget, he may ponder whether it is politically prudent to revisit the resources he has allocated to two ministries given short shrift in his threeyear fiscal plan. The environment ministry is scheduled for See No Downside page 11

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A8 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

FlexFuel vehicles are E85-ready From page 1 popular with the highperformance, souped-up car “tuner” community, including one of the founding partners and North Vancouver resident Amir Nazary.With a higher octane level than gasoline, E85 can give your engine a 20-percent boost in horsepower, said Devin Redlich, coowner. At the same time, the carbon emissions from the tailpipe are about 40 per cent lower. Nazary and other tuners typically have to drive to a station outside Seattle to fill their jerrycans. “He didn’t want to do that. He felt this is ridiculous. He felt this is a perfectly viable product to be sold in B.C., especially in Vancouver where there’s a lot of environmental sentiment where people want to reduce their carbon footprint,” Redlich said. During the 1990s push by the U.S. government for more energy independence, congress offered incentives and mandates for the Big 3 North American automakers to begin selling vehicles that are capable of running on ethanol fuels. Many “FlexFuel” vehicles are being

>VZ5 f/c/5e /3 >5+/)a H3/3Z:U#4 a3\/U:W&-/4a) 9OR `2aW 82V8% G\a Ua.3 +W:4a43 9OR 43/3Z:U Z4 :234Z)a Ha/33Wa% sold from local car lots but, without anywhere local to buy the fuel, dealers haven’t been pushing FlexFuel as a feature, Redlich said. “These people are E85ready and they don’t even know it,” Redlich said, “We routinely have people come into our station who have been putting regular pump

gas into a flex fuel vehicle for years and years and years. They put one tank full of E85 in and they suddenly realize the way their car was meant to perform.” Others who want to use E85 must reprogram their vehicle’s onboard computer, which runs about $500, Redlich said.To take it a step

farther, the vehicle can be fitted with an aftermarket fuel injector though that’s more for the hardcore enthusiasts, he added. Expect a tank of E85 to cost about the same as Chevron’s 94-octane gas, Redlich said. But, like any fuel, ethanol fuel isn’t without its ethical

bldGd MIKE WAKEFIELD

trappings. Critics argue it literally “burns food” and its production has a larger carbon footprint than petrochemical fuel. Redlich acknowledged the drawbacks, but said he’s never seen any evidence that ethanol production has “moved the needle” on global food prices.

And unlike gas, ethanol is renewable, he added. “You can grow millions of acres of corn every year if you want to and that can go on forever,” he said. “There’s only so many dead dinosaurs we can pump out into people’s gas tanks.” The retro-inspired logo, pumps, colours, and Arcade Station name is meant to endear the new business to West Van residents, who Redlich said can expect full service at self-serve prices. “We want to distinguish ourselves from the Chevrons and Shells of the world who have great big, flashy signs and pumps that have built-in colour-computer displays and such and it’s all selfservice,” he said. “If we’re going to embed ourselves in the neighbourhood and really make ourselves part of the West Van community, we need to set ourselves apart from that.” That is winning praise from the North Shore Historical Preservation Society which values the site for its West Coast Modern architecture, according to Peter Milller, society president. Arcade is holding a grand opening BBQ this Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

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Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A9

Where great people meet great customers dUa :` 30: ZU3a585a3Z1a 4Z^U4 3\/3 0/4 5a+aU3We )Z4+:1a5a) VZ44ZU^ `5:V / V2W3Z&24a 35/ZW :U l:WWe-25U g:2U3/ZU% bldGd HFbbhk9; ALAN BARDSLEY

Signs stolen from Hollyburn trail Conservancy group baffled by theft BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com

West Vancouver conservationists are asking who would want to vandalize (and steal) some interpretative signs placed along a trail on Hollyburn Mountain. The Old Growth Conservancy Society learned recently that two signs placed along a trail off Cypress Bowl Road had been uprooted. The trail near the No. 5 parking lot is mainly used by mountain bikers, but

the sad part is the sign was meant to commemorate the spirit of co-operation between the mountain bikers and conservationists, said Alexandra Mancini, society present. One of the signs told the history of how grassroots environmentalists lobbied to stop the area from becoming a golf course in 1990 and how the stewardship group and mountain bikers worked together to make the trail safe for all users, as well as the trees. “Who the heck would take these signs and what would they do with them?” Mancini asked. “We’ve really scratched our heads.” The two signs together cost more than $5,000, with the cost partly picked

up by the District of West Vancouver. After three hours of rooting around in the underbrush, society members found one of the signs but the other remains missing. But with no witnesses and no evidence at the scene,West Vancouver police investigators have little to go on. Unless new information comes in, the investigation is closed, said Const. Jeff Palmer,WVPD spokesman. “Anyone who thinks they may have seen anything, we certainly would have a look but at this point, it would appear there is no available means to identify a suspect,” he said. Anyone with information is asked to contact West Vancouver police.

publicnotice LEASE OF PROPERTY TAKE NOTICE THAT, pursuant to Section 26 of the Community Charter, the Corporation of the City of North Vancouver is subleasing a commercial space presently leased from 366466 BC Ltd., having a civic address of 8 Lonsdale Avenue, legally described as Lot 3, Block 176, District Lot 274, Plan BCP 39824. The intended sub lessee is the Tap & Barrel Restaurants Ltd. (BC0468564), a company registered under the laws of British Columbia. The intended annual basic rent is $319,687 for years 1 to 5 and $341,000 for years 6 to 10. The term of the lease is for 10 years with 2 renewal options for an additional 10 years each. If you have any questions, please contact Ian Steward, Property Services Coordinator, Community Development, at 604-983-7358 or email isteward@cnv.org. North Vancouver City Hall 141 West 14th Street, North Vancouver, BC V7M 1H9 Tel. 604.985.7761 | Fax. 604.985.9417 | www.cnv.org

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A10 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

INQUIRING REPORTER Transit police have a safety campaign for bus drivers, there’s a phone app for riders to instantly report incidents, and educational workshops with foreign students to raise awareness of transit safety. Last year, 134 transit assaults were reported in Metro Vancouver, up from 117 the year prior. Earlier this month, a transit user got house arrest for repeatedly punching a North Van bus driver in the head. TransLink has appealed to Canada’s justice minister to stiffen sentences for people who attack bus drivers. What are your thoughts on public transit safety? Let us know at nsnews.com. — Stefania Seccia

Paula Hrushowy North Vancouver “I take the SeaBus. I love it. It’s relaxing.”

Do you feel safe on public transit?

Sarah Friesen North Vancouver “I do feel safe. Most people mind their own business and bus drivers are really polite to me.”

Constance Thomas North Vancouver “Yeah. (I use it) mostly for appointments now. From Surrey, I used to take it every day to work.”

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Angela Katelieva North Vancouver “Yeah, I take it every day.”

It’s amateur hour on the AM dial From page 6

in a steamy, almost orgasmic clinch with Pamela Goldsmith-Jones, John Weston’s Liberal opponent in next May’s federal election. But was it winning politics? My guess is that it turned off as many voters as it turned on. ••• Agent C8tt0j4 reports “turmoil” at CKNW. Right, vertigo must be swirling in management/ ownership heads — dropping its best and most loyally listened-to segment, Cutting Edge of the Ledge, with top Victoriawatchers Vaughn Palmer and Keith Baldrey, hosted by Bill Good. The Three Wise Men, I called them. Except for sharp Mike Smyth, NW is wildly shuffling the deck, conscripting mostly affiliate Global TV staffers as temp fill-ins replacing

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Good and Philip Till — it’s radio’s new Amateur Hour. Complete disclosure: I hold parent company Corus Entertainment stock. I sell my shares, you guys could be done like dinner! •••

Closing in Ambleside: Familiar, colourful and long-established Amadeo, and Redfish Kids Clothing, consolidating its business at its Hornby Street store after only two years in West Van. ••• One of my most respected Agents,Y8c5scu, conjectures what town hall will never admit about the delay in a joint policefire department building: The police and firefighters don’t like each other (not a unique wariness). The plan for a “combined safety building” in fact showed two separate edifices joined only by an atrium. rtlautens@gmail.com


Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A11

Alert citizen’s quick action leads to arrest Police nab suspect in theft from auto in Edgemont STEFANIA SECCIA sseccia@nsnews.com

ON THE MARK E/U+:21a5 VZ.a)&Va)Z/ /53Z43 kWca =a-5Z4 4\:04 / 0:5X `5:V \a5 ZU43/WW/3Z:U =243A' :U )Z48W/e 3: Ha83% O ZU 3\a /35Z2V ^/WWa5e /3 f:53\ E/U+:21a5 <Z3e l/WW' !S! Da43 !S3\ H3% G\a /53 ZU43/WW/3Z:U +:U4Z)a54 3\a 1:+/-2W/5e :` V/5X4 /U) 4eV-:W4 24a) ZU V/8& V/XZU^ /U) \:0 0a Ua^:3Z/3a :5 `/ZW 3: Ua^:3Z/3a 3\Z4 +:V8Wa. +:)a% bldGd MIKE WAKEFIELD

When one North Vancouver man watched a suspicious character tugging on several car door handles at 3:30 a.m. in his neighbourhood, he did something about it. In the early morning hours of Friday, Aug. 8, the witness — a member

of the Block Watch program on the 3000block of Brookridge Drive — called police to report that a man was going around and checking door handles of parked cars until finally entering an unlocked vehicle. The man provided police with valuable information including a depiction of the suspect, according to a North Vancouver RCMP media release. With the help of the Lower Mainland Integrated Police Dog Service, the suspect was located and arrested nearby. “Our officers were greatly assisted by the

prompt action of a concerned resident,” said Cpl. Richard De Jong, North Vancouver RCMP, in the release. “Police continue to encourage citizens to report any suspicious activity in their neighbourhood.” The 42-year-old suspect was known to police and has been charged with theft and breach of a court order. He remained in police custody until his court appearance, according to the release. Police are taking this opportunity to remind car owners to keep their vehicles locked and remove all valuables from sight.

No downside to gov’t painting itself with greener brush From page 7

such as inspections and enforcement. And the energy and mines ministry, which conducts those tailings ponds inspections, has its small annual budget of $21 million frozen for

a tiny ($6 million) lift to its current annual budget of $134 million. That doesn’t suggest any major increase for environmental protection measures,

the next two years. Given inflation and other cost pressures, it’s hard to see how that translates into more inspections. Clark has tried to distance herself from her predecessor, Gordon

Campbell, in a number of areas since taking over from him. Perhaps she will use the Mount Polley disaster as an opportunity to distance herself from Campbell even further

by implementing a more aggressive approach to environmental protection. The government will understandably never abandon its support for natural resource industries, including

mining. But there’s not much political downside to painting itself with a greener brush. Keith Baldrey is chief political reporter for Global BC. Keith.Baldrey@globalnews

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A12 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

BRIGHT LIGHTS

Charity Golf Tournament

by Paul McGrath

Nancy Dekanich' Maureen Richichi' Lori Blockberger /U) Val Johannesen

Julia Staub-French' 7/VZWe Ha51Z+a4 :` 3\a f:53\ H\:5a a.a+23Z1a )Z5a+3:5' Mary Beveridge' 3:25U/VaU3 +\/Z50:V/U /U) Michelle Tice' 7/VZWe Ha51Z+a4 :` 3\a f:53\ H\:5a )Z5a+3:5 :` )a1aW:8VaU3 The 21st Annual Seymour Charity Invitational Golf Tournament, July 24 at the Seymour Golf and Country Club, brought 125 women golfers together to raise funds for the Family Services of the North Shore’s Campanioning Community Care program. Participants enjoyed lunch before a Texas Scramble start, a silent auction and a raffle grand prize for a Play and Stay at Rowena’s Inn on the River and the Sandpiper Golf Course. The event has raised $460,000 for local charities over the years.

Judi Whyte /U) Annabelle Marsh

Wendy Frisby /U) Kathy Forrest

Gillian Watson' Darbie Connibear' Sharon Schultz /U) Laurel Miher

Jeanne Douglas /U) Sharon Walker

Earle MacDonald /U) Greg Moody

Please direct requests for event coverage to: emcphee@nsnews.com. For more Bright Lights photos go to: nsnews.com/galleries.

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Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A13

YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE

to ARTS & CULTURE

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SquamishValley music fest hit all the right notes

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THE GIVER b>m9 !P

STEFANIA SECCIA sseccia@nsnews.com

Epic weekend

For the Squamish Valley Music Festival, everyone came out for the artist lineup, but stayed for the weather, free water and friendly atmosphere. The fifth annual Squamish Valley Music Festival from Aug. 8 to 10 blew up in size compared to past years. It nearly tripled its grounds — from 30 to 81 acres – and nearly doubled in attendance — from 19,000 in one day last year to 35,000 people who came out on Sunday alone. “The artists are so impressed, and I think how do you not be in such a beautiful site?” said Laura Ballance, festival spokesperson. “It really shows our province so well.” The festival unfolded over three sites: Centennial Field, Logger Sports Grounds and

SUN PEAKS SUMMER b>m9 nn

Hendrickson Fields interspersed with food trucks, camping sites, vendor setups, and four stages:Tantalus, Stawamus, Meadow and Blueprint Arena.The first two were reserved for the biggest acts, while the last two showcased upand-coming bands and DJs. “It’s been two years of planning, but decades of experience that have come together to create a really great event here in B.C.,” she said. Where does Squamish fit in with this insurgence of festival attendees from across the globe? According to Ballance, a conservative estimate of $20 million is expected to have pumped into the local economy thanks to the three-day festival. “We’ll see afterwards.We’ll be able to do some analytics around that,” she added. “The business community certainly seems happy with the impact the festival has brought, and I think that’s a combination of positive spin into the

FIVE STAR MOTEL b>m9 nP

community and a fun-loving and very wellbehaved festival for the most part.” The three days went off without any major drawbacks, mostly thanks to the 550 security staff members — a mixture of plainclothes and visible officers who worked closely with the RCMP. “The festival has been incredibly problem free,” she said. “We’re really pleased with the response to the event and to the lineup and how everything’s gone. I can’t say enough about it.” While the festival itself ran smoothly for organizers with only a small fraction of festival goers quietly escorted off the premises by police, the collection of attendees ranged from all ages and backgrounds — from young partiers to families. In its past incarnations on a smaller scale, the festival attracted big names such as Metric, the See Squamish page 28

BLUERIDGE CHAMBER MUSIC FEST b>m9 T!


A14 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

CALENDAR Galleries

ARTEMIS GALLERY 104C-4390 Gallant Ave., North Vancouver.TuesdaySunday, noon to 5 p.m. 778233-9805 artemisgallery.ca BELLEVUE GALLERY 2475 Bellevue Ave.,West Vancouver. Gallery TuesdayFriday, 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m., Saturday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. and by appointment. bellevuegallery.ca BIENNALE INTERNATIONAL PAVILION Shipbuilders’ Square, 15 Wallace Mews, North Vancouver. SundayThursday, 11a.m.-6 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 1-9 p.m., closed Mondays. 604-682-1289 www.cnv. org/vancouverbiennale Tours: Hourly guided tours are available.Admission by donation. BINKLEY SCULPTURE STUDIOS 535 East First St., North Vancouver. 604-984-8574 michaelbinkley.com BUCKLAND SOUTHERST GALLERY See more page 15

COUNTRY POP DUO I:-eU @ IeWaZ^\ ?mZWWa48Za( 8a5`:5V 3:UZ^\3 ZU heUU E/WWae bW/c/ /3 P 8%V% /4 8/53 :` 3\a hZ1a ZU heUU E/WWae EZWW/^a 42VVa5 +:U+a53 4a5Za4% G\a h/U^Wae 4Z43a54 5aWa/4a) 3\aZ5 )a-23 /W-2V' !+=,< / !,A)"&$' ZU n"!T :U g;g Ia+:5)4% 7:5 V:5a :U 3\a )2: /U) 3\aZ5 V24Z+ ^: 3: U4Ua04%+:V$ aU3a53/ZUVaU3$):44Za5$5:-eU&/U)&5eWaZ^\&5Z4a&3:&3\a&:++/4Z:U&/3&+-+&8W/c/&!%RPMnOT% bldGd KAROLINA TUREK

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Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A15

CALENDAR

CITY ATRIUM GALLERY 141 West 14th St., North Vancouver. Monday-Friday, 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m.604-9886844 nvartscouncil.ca Archipelago: Works by Ilze Bebris will be on display until Sept. 8. CITYSCAPE COMMUNITY ART SPACE 335 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. MondaySaturday, noon to 5 p.m. 604-988-6844 nvartscouncil. ca Urbanity: An exhibition featuring paintings, sculpture and graffiti by Thompson Brennan, Mark Ollinger, Jon Shaw and Scott Sueme will run until Aug. 30. The Gift Box: Buy local from two display cases dedicated to local artisans who specialize in high quality, hand-crafted and unique gift items. Art Rental Salon: An ongoing art rental programme with a variety of original artwork available ranging from $10 to $40 per month. DISTRICT LIBRARY GALLERY 1277 Lynn Valley Rd., North Vancouver. nvartscouncil.ca NorthVancouver Community Arts Council will present an exhibition of paintings of animals and wilderness by Marisa Pahl until Aug. 26. Evolution of the Emoticon: Maziar Mehrabi combines his appreciation for comic book superheroes and villains with his fascination for emoticons in a graphic art exhibition that runs from Aug. 27 to Oct. 21. Opening reception: Saturday,Aug. 30, 2-4 p.m. FERRY BUILDING GALLERY 1414 Argyle Ave.,West Vancouver.Tuesday-Sunday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m., closed Mondays.604-925-7290 ferrybuildinggallery.com Hollyburn Ridge — Celebrating Mountain Art and Culture: Mixed media works by artists of the Hollyburn Ridge Association will be on display from Aug. 19 to Sept. 7. Opening reception:Tuesday,Aug. 19, 6-8 p.m. Meet the artists: Saturday,Aug. 23, 2-3 p.m. THE GALLERY AT ARTISAN SQUARE 587 Artisan Lane, Bowen Island. Daily, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 604-947-2454 biac.ca

GORDON SMITH GALLERY OF CANADIAN ART 2121 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver.WednesdayFriday, noon to 5 p.m. and Saturday, 10:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Adult admission by donation/children free. 604-998-8563 info@ smithfoundation.ca A Journey Exposed: Gu Xiong, a transcultural artist with a strong sense of global interconnectivity will examine the effects of globalization with an exhibition until Aug. 23. Gallery Tours: Thursdays at 12:30 p.m. and Saturdays at 1:30 p.m. Registration required. IAN TAN GALLERY 2202 Granville St., Vancouver. MondaySaturday, 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sunday, noon-5 p.m. Paintings of whimsical nature scapes by North Shore artist Dana Irving will be on display from Sept. 6 to 30. LYNNMOUR ART STUDIO AND GALLERY 301-1467 Crown St., North Vancouver. Saturday and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m. or by appointment. 604-9294001 nsartists.ca/garyeder Contemporary and Abstract Paintings by Gordon Oliver, Robert Botlak and GaryW. Eder. PARK & TILFORD GARDENS 333 Brooksbank Ave., North Vancouver. Art Under the Arbor: Stroll through the gardens and view works of artists from the North Shore Artists’ Guild Aug. 16 and 17, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. nsartists.ca PRESENTATION HOUSE SATELLITE GALLERY 560 Seymour St.,Vancouver. Wednesday-Saturday, noon6 p.m. satellitegallery.ca Welcome to Screenland: Artists explore how the internet affects personal lives until Sept. 13. RON ANDREWS COMMUNITY SPACE 931 Lytton St., North Vancouver. 604-987-8873 or 604-347-8922 Mixed Bag: Photographs, watercolours, prints and necklaces by Ingalora Dwyer; pottery tea pots by Barbara Matthews; and

pottery in a variety of shapes by Sue Rankin will be on display until Sept. 7. SEYMOUR ART GALLERY 4360 Gallant Ave., North Vancouver. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. daily. 604-924-1378 seymourartgallery.com Main + Hastings: Panoramic photographs of Vancouver by Ross den Otter will be on display until Sept. 6. Reception and artist talk: Sunday,Aug. 17, 2-4 p.m. Curator’s Talk: Every Thursday at noon there will be a 20-minute curator’s talk with background on the current show in the gallery. SILK PURSE ARTS CENTRE 1570 Argyle Ave.,West Vancouver.Tuesday to Sunday, noon-4 p.m. 604925-7292 silkpurse.ca Surrender: Textile artist Fariba Mirzaie’s work will be on display until Aug. 24.

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SPACE EMMARTS STUDIO 1432 Rupert St., North Vancouver.Wednesday and Friday, 2-5 p.m. and by appointment. 604-770-2545 originals@emmarts.ca STARFIRE STUDIO 6607 Royal Ave.,West Vancouver. 604-922-5510 starfireattheferries.com 195 STUDIOS — ARTISTS ON PEMBERTON 195 Pemberton Ave., North Vancouver. 195studios.ca TARTOOFUL 3183 Edgemont Blvd., North Vancouver. 604-9240122 tartooful.com WEST VANCOUVER MEMORIAL LIBRARY 1950 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. 604-925-7400 westvanlibrary.ca Harmony Arts Exhibition will run until Aug. 25 in conjunction with the annual festival. WestVancouver District Art Instructors Exhibition: Works using a variety of media, styles and approaches by teachers will be on display from Aug. 28 to Oct. 20. WEST VANCOUVER MUSEUM 680 17th St.,West Vancouver.TuesdaySaturday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. 604-925-7295 westvancouvermuseum.ca The And of the Land: Perspectives on landscape by artists from British Columbia will run until Aug. 30. See more page 19

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Heat: Encaustic paintings by Lea Rochon will be on display until Aug. 17. Faces & Places: A debut art show by Diana Izdebski including photography by Rafal Izdebski will run from Aug. 20 to Sept. 14. Reception: Saturday,Aug. 30, 7-9 p.m.

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A16 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

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Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A17

FILM

i/3Za l:WVa4 /U) >Wa./U)a5 HX/54^/5) 43/5 ZU B$) G"H)'1 F;?< *$+#+ D"#$ #$) :?,?' ?** #+ H")D #'?"A)'1 bldGd HFbbhk9;

The Giver taketh away from reality ■ The Giver. Directed by Phillip Noyce. Starring Jeff Bridges, Meryl Streep, Brenton Thwaites, Odeya Rush. Rating: 6 (out of 10) JULIE CRAWFORD ContributingWriter

Entering the busy young adult film fray is The Giver, based on Lois Lowry’s Newberry award-winning book about a future in which human memory, emotion, seasons — even colour — has been wiped clean in order to maintain order. The novel came out in 1993 and actor Jeff Bridges started mulling over a film adaptation only two years after that, meaning that it has been germinating for the past 18 years or so. Just as well, Lowry noted at this week’s New York premiere: now Meryl Streep and Jeff Bridges are old enough to play key parts. That’ll boost sales from older viewers who didn’t have to read the book as part of their middle-school curriculum. Aussie Brenton Thwaites plays Jonas, recent graduate in a utopian planned community perched high on a plateau. While his friends Fiona (Odeya Rush) and Asher (Cameron Monaghan) are assigned routine jobs in

service of the Community, Jonas is singled out to be the sole Receiver of Memory, the one who stores and maintains all the books, knowledge and memory of life before “the ruin.” The current Receiver of Memory (Bridges) is now by default The Giver, the one who teaches Jonas and advises the Elders, “providing guidance in the present using memories of the past”. It’s a steep and painful learning curve for Jonas, who, like everyone else in the Community, takes daily injections to keep from feeling highs and lows. Thwaites effectively conveys the wonder of discovery: of feeling snow, of hearing music for the first time. (Taylor Swift, in hologram, helps briefly with this.) With all the knowledge transferred from The Giver, Jonas begins to question his surroundings: “If you can’t feel, what’s the point?” He starts asking questions of Mother (Katie Holmes) and Father (Alexander Skarsgard, especially good). He stops taking his meds. He starts to wonder what’s really over the edge in Elsewhere, where the old folks go to die, nudge nudge. Knowledge, of course, is where revolution is born. “You can change things, you can make things better,” encourages The

Giver, dangerous advice in a community that values sameness above all else. But it’s the threat to a kindred spirit — a baby — that spurs Jonas to act quickly. This is where the film loses its way. Scenes of Jonas fleeing are farfetched; the resolution is rushed and unsatisfactory, especially if you’re a fan of the novel. This is where the 96-minute running time could’ve been stretched with a few more scenes to wrap things up. That, and the fact that an extra scene or two might have cut down on the increasingly intrusive voiceover narration. Thematically, The Giver is right on track. The story starts with typical teen angst — worries about an uncertain future, career nerves — and then segues into larger themes of free will, euthanasia, sexual repression, and how much we need to sacrifice for the greater good. “When people have the freedom to choose, they choose wrong every single time,” says The Elder (Streep, convincing in her few scenes).You can’t read today’s headlines of war and strife without at least contemplating Lowry’s point of view, doubtless one of the reasons The Giver has been one of the most frequently banned books since its publication.

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A18 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

FILM Showtimes LANDMARK CINEMAS 6 ESPLANADE 200 West Esplanade, North Vancouver 604-983-2762 Step Up: All In (PG) — FriThur 9:25 p.m. The Hundred-Foot Journey (G) — Fri-Thur 1:10, 4:10, 7, 9:50 p.m. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (PG) — Fri-Thur 1, 3:30, 6:40 p.m. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3D (PG) — FriThur 1:30, 4, 7:05, 9:45 p.m. Let’s Be Cops (14A) — FriThur 1:15, 4:05, 6:50, 9:40

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p.m. Into the Storm (PG) — Fri-Wed 1:20, 3:40, 6:30, 9:15 p.m. If I Stay (PG) — Thur 7, 9:45 p.m. The Giver — Fri-Thur 1:15, 4:05, 6:50, 9:40 p.m. PARK & TILFORD 333 Brooksbank Ave., North Vancouver, 604-985-3911 How To TrainYour Dragon 2 (G) — Fri-Sat 1:10; SunThur 1:40 p.m. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (PG) — Fri-Sat 3:30; Sun-Thur 4 p.m. Dawn of the Planet of the Apes 3D (PG) — Fri-Sat 6:45, 9:35; Sun 6:45, 9:50; Mon-Thur 7, 9:50 p.m. Lucy — Fri-Sat 12:45, 3, 5:15, 7:30, 9:40; Sun-Thur 3, 5:15, 7:30, 9:40 p.m. Guardians of the Galaxy (PG) — Fri-Sat 12:30, 3:25,

6:30; Sun, Thur 5:30; Mon 2:30; Tue-Wed 2:30, 5:30 p.m. Thur 1 p.m. Guardians of the Galaxy 3D (PG) — Fri-Sat 1:30, 4:30, 7:15, 9:15, 9:55; Sun, Tue-Wed 1:30, 4:15, 7:05, 8:30, 10; Mon 1:30, 4:15, 7:05, 10; Thur 1:30, 4:15, 7:05, 8:30 p.m. The Expendables 3 (PG) — Fri-Sun 1, 4, 7, 10; MonThur 1:15, 4:10, 7, 10 p.m. Boyhood (PG) — Fri-Sat 12:40, 4:20, 8; Sun 1, 4:30, 8; Mon-Thur 1:20, 4:50, 8:20 p.m. Frank Miller’s Sin City: A Dame to Kill For 3D (14A) — Thur 10 p.m. Slugterra: Return of the Elementals (G) — Thur 12:55 p.m. Andre Rieu: Live 10th Anniversary 2014 Maastricht Concert — Sun 12:30 p.m. The Shawshank

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Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A19

CALENDAR

MAIN + HASTINGS b\:3:^5/8\4 -e I:44 )aU d33a5 /5a +255aU3We :U 1Za0 /3 HaeV:25 >53 m/WWa5e 3\5:2^\ Ha83% Q% G\a 4:W: a.\Z-Z3Z:U' 7?"< 5 C?%#"<&%' 0ZWW `a/325a / 5a+a83Z:U /U) /53Z43#4 3/WX :U >2^% !P /3 n 8%V% 7:5 V:5a ZU`:5V/3Z:U 1Z4Z3 4aeV:25/53^/WWa5e%+:V% From page 15 YEATS STUDIO & GALLERY 2402 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver.WednesdaySunday, 11 a.m.-6 p.m. 778279-8777 craigyeats.com

Concerts

AMBLESIDE PARK Foot of 13th Street,West Vancouver. Ambleside Live Concert Series: Music from Ed Sheeran with special guest Rudimental Aug. 23 at 7 p.m. Admission: $62.48.Tickets: amblesidelive.com.

Shari Ulrich will perform Saturday, Sept. 13 at 8 p.m. Tickets: $28. CENTENNIAL THEATRE 2300 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. 604-984-4484 centennialtheatre.com One NightWith Elvis: Ultimate Elvis tribute artist Ben Portsmouth will perform Sunday, Sept. 14 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets: $43.

CAPILANO CATES PARK 200-block Dollarton Highway, North Vancouver. Cates Park Concert Series: A free summer concert series with original bands Saturdays from 4 to 7 p.m. until Aug. 23. Info: musart.ca.

CLEVELAND PARK Capilano Road at Prospect Avenue, North Vancouver. Music in the Park: A free summer concert series Sundays from 1 to 3 p.m. Schedule:Aug. 17,WendyWam; and Aug. 24, Lindsay Robertson. Music in the Park Finale: A free summer concert of jazz, folk, blues, rock, gypsy and Celtic swing Monday Sept. 1 from noon to 5 p.m.There will also be art displays and demonstrations.

CAULFEILD COVE HALL 4773 South Piccadilly Rd., West Vancouver. 604-8127411 caulfeildcovehall.ca

DEEP COVE SHAW THEATRE 4360 Gallant Ave., North Vancouver. One Guitar and One

Voice: Roy Forbes will showcase his new live CD which features a few tunes recorded at Deep Cove Shaw Theatre Sept. 12 and 13 at 8 p.m.Admission: $30. Tickets: 604-929-9456 or firstimpressionstheatre.com. EDGEMONT VILLAGE Edgemont Boulevard, North Vancouver. Edgemont Summer Concerts: A free weekly summer concert series Fridays from 7 to 9 p.m. Schedule: Aug. 15,Tiler’s Folly; and Aug. 22,Terminal Station. edgemontvillage.ca

Live in LynnValleyVillage: A free weekly summer concert series Fridays from 7 to 9 p.m. Schedule:Aug. 15, Robyn and Ryleigh; and Aug. 22, Hot Lucy. MOUNT SEYMOUR UNITED CHURCH 1200 Parkgate Ave., North Vancouver. Blueridge International Chamber Music Festival: A series of concerts until Aug. 23 at 7 p.m. (with the exception of Aug. 23 which is at 2 p.m.) Schedule:Aug. 15, Ciel,Air etVents;Aug. 20,A Fine Romance;Aug. 23, FiveYears in the Zoo. Tickets: $20/$10. Festival pass: $50/$30. Reservations: blueridge.chamber@gmail.com or 604-779-6737.

LONSDALE QUAY 123 Carrie Cates Court, North Vancouver. lonsdalequay.com Concert Series Sundays: A free summer concert series Sundays from 1 to 3 p.m. and 3:30-5:30 p.m. on holidays. Schedule:Aug. 17, Bobs and Lolo;Aug. 24, Studio Cloud 30; and Aug. 31,Youth Showcase.

PANORAMA PARK Deep Cove, North Vancouver. Concerts in the Cove: A free weekly summer concert series Fridays from 7 to 9 p.m. Schedule:Aug. 15, Pernell Reichert Band.

LYNN VALLEY VILLAGE Lynn Valley Road and Mountain Highway, North Vancouver.

SHIPBUILDERS’ SQUARE 15 Wallace Mews, North Vancouver.

Summer Sessions: A free weekly summer concert series Fridays from 5 to 10 p.m. until Sept. 27. northshoregreenmarket. com/ Saturday Summer Sessions: A free weekly summer concert series Saturdays from 7 to 10 p.m. Schedule:Aug. 16,Animal AtlasWorld Music and Alma Chevere;Aug. 23,The Tribute — Beatles Tribute Band; and Aug. 30, March Hare. SILK PURSE ARTS CENTRE 1570 Argyle Ave.,West Vancouver. 604-925-7292 silkpurse.ca The JazzWaves Festival will run until Aug. 30 at 7:30 p.m. with a variety of styles including jazz, blues, boggiewoogie, bossa-nova, R&B and more. Schedule:Aug. 16,AmandaWood;Aug. 19, Caroline Markos Quartet; Aug. 23, Kate HammettVaughn;Aug. 28,The Jennifer Scott Trio; and Aug. 30,The Lady Larks.Tickets: $20. Classical Concert Series: Pianist Ross Salvossa will perform fantasy works by Schubert,Turina, Chopin and Stravinsky Thursday,Aug. 21

at 10:30 a.m.Tickets: $20/$15. WEST VANCOUVER COMMUNITY CENTRE 2121 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. Atrium Concert: Daniel Tones and Ed Reifel will lead participants from the 2014 Contemporary Percussion Intensive in a program of works by Canadian and international composers Friday,Aug. 29 at 7:30 p.m. Free.

Clubs and pubs

BEAN AROUND THE WORLD COFFEES/ BEANS ON LONSDALE 1802 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. Live music every Thursday, 8 p.m. 604-985-2326 HUGO’S RESTAURANT 5775 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. 604-281-2111 Open Mic: Every Thursday from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Live Music: Every Saturday evening with jazz on the second and last Saturday of each month. See more page 20

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To reserve your spot on the tour, please call: (604) 904-2800


A20 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

CALENDAR

September 7, 2014

Coho Run

SAVE UP TO $10

Early Registration ends August 31, 2014

Coho Run 14km

This is an incredible 14 km journey from Kitsilano Beach over to Ambleside Beach Park – the birthplace of the North Shore Coho salmon. The 14K distance provides a great challenge for the 10K runner and a fabulous training run for the ½ marathon trainer. Runners must pre-register.

Register Early! Coho Run SOLD OUT in 2013.

Coho Swim Early Registration ends August 31, 2014

SAVE UP TO $25

Coho Swim 1.5km or 3 km

Choose from 1.5 km or 3 km options starting and finishing close to the iconic welcoming pole that marks the entrance to the Capilano watershed. Swimmers must wear wetsuit and pre-register.

Register Early! Coho Swim has limited space.

From page 19

For more info or to register online:

JACK LONSDALE’S PUB 1433 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. Live music every Friday and Saturday at 9 p.m. 604-986-7333

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MIST ULTRA BAR 105-100 Park Royal,West Vancouver. 604-926-2326 DJs spin classic dance music from the ’80s, ’90s and today. QUEENS CROSS PUB 2989 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. queenscross.com AdamWoodall performs acoustic music every Sunday, 7:30-11:30 p.m.

THE RAVEN PUB 1052 Deep Cove Rd., North Vancouver. theravenpub.com AdamWoodall performs acoustic music every Thursday, 7:30-11:30 p.m. RED LION BAR & GRILL 2427 Marine Drive,West Vancouver. 604-926-8838 Open Mic Night: A variety of talent fromWestVancouver and beyond Tuesdays at 8 p.m. Participation welcome. Info: ethosproductions@shaw.ca. Jazz Pianist Randy Doherty will perform every Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 8 to 11 p.m. RUSTY GULL 175 East First St., North Vancouver. Live musicWednesday, Friday and Saturday; Mostly Marley performs every Sunday, 7 p.m. SAILOR HAGAR’S BREW PUB 235 West First St., North Vancouver. Live music every Friday and Saturday, 9 p.m.1 a.m. 604-984-3087

THE STARLIGHT ROOM 170 West 3rd Street, North Vancouver THE VILLAGE TAPHOUSE The Village at Park Royal, West Vancouver. 604-9228882. WAVES COFFEE HOUSE 3050 Mountain Hwy., North Vancouver. The Celtic Medley Song and String Player’s Showcase comes toWaves the first Saturday of every month, 7:30-9:30 p.m. Free.Anyone interested in performing can phone Doug Medley at 604985-5646.

Other events

LYNN VALLEY LIBRARY 1277 Lynn Valley Rd., North Vancouver. 604-9840286 x8144 nvdpl.ca Author Event: North Shore hiking expert NormanWatt will give a talk and show slides

SUMMER FEST 2014

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Sunday, Aug. 17 1pm- 3pm Bobs & Lolo (Kids Entertainers)

This offer is available at our pharmacies in British Columbia only. Offer expires December 31, 2014

*4x Superbucks™ rewards are calculated as 4% of the portion of the prescription that is not paid for or reimbursed by the province of B.C. under PharmaCare, with a maximum value of $99.99 per coupon. Superbucks™ rewards are provided by host supermarket to redeem for merchandise in-store excluding prescriptions, tobacco, alcohol, lottery tickets and any other products which are provincially regulated. Redemption is also excluded at all third party operations (post office, drycleaners, gas bar, etc.). Superbucks™ rewards are issued only for individual customer in-store prescription purchases (excludes healthcare and other facilities). ®/TM Trademarks of Loblaws Inc. All rights reserved. © 2014.

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See more page 32


Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A21

AUSTRIAN

Jagerhof Restaurant

71 Lonsdale Avenue, N. Van. | 604-980-4316 Old World Charm - Featuring Alpine Cuisine from Austria, Germany, Switzerland & South Tirol/Northern Italy with an extensive import beer selection.

FINE DINING $$

BISTRO

Hugos, Artisanal Pizzas and Global Tapas

$$

www.eagleharbour.ca 5775 Marine Drive, W. Van | 604-281-2111 Daily lunch specials & patio. Local live music two evenings a week. Deep dish & thin crust pizzas, fresh original salads, burgers, smoked ribs & chicken, South East Asian specialties & sweet fondues & crepes.

Larson Station West Coast Bistro & Banquets $$$

6190 Marine Drive, W. Van. | 778-279-8874 For 2 or 200! Enjoy sweeping views through the 6th fairway, to the ocean at Gleneagles Clubhouse. LIVE MUSIC Fridays & Saturdays BRUNCH on weekends. Family friendly & casual, with flavours of the West Coast.

SEAFOOD

The Observatory $$$$ www.grousemountain.com Grouse Mtn, 6400 Nancy Greene Way, N. Van. | 604-998-4403 The Salmon House $$$$ www.salmonhouse.com 2229 Folkestone Way, W. Van. | 604-926-3212 Serving spectacular views & fine, indigenous west coast cuisine for over 30 years. Lunch, dinner & Sunday brunch. Live entertainment in Coho Lounge on weekend evenings.

$$$

www.theportlychef.com 1211 Lonsdale Avenue, N. Van. | 604-971-4377 One of North Vancouver’s newest bistros offering local & seasonal ingredients. Check out our musttry signature dish ‘The Drunken Sable’. Our staff welcome you to find out what the buzz is about! Trip Advisor recommended. Air Conditioned.

Chez Michel

$$$

www.chezmichelvancouver.com 1373 Marine Drive (2nd flr), W. Van. | 604-926-4913 For over 34 years, Chez Michel has delighted guests with his Classic French cuisine. Seafood & meat entrees, a superb selection of wines & a decadent dessert list. Superior service with a waterfront view completes an exemplary lunch or dinner experience.

The Cheshire Cheese Restaurant & Bar

Pasparos Greek

$$$

INDIAN $$

2nd Floor Lonsdale Quay Market, N. Van. | 604-987-3322 Excellent seafood & British dishes on the waterfront. Dinner specials: Friday & Saturday- Prime Rib. Sunday - Turkey. Weekends & holidays, our acclaimed Eggs Benny. Open for lunch or dinner, 7 days a week.

Handi Cuisine of India

www.handi-restaurant.com 1579 Bellevue Avenue, W. Van. | 604-925-5262 Reader’s Choice 2006 Winner offering Authentic Indian Cuisine. Open for lunch & dinner, 7 days a week. Weekend buffet, ocean view, free delivery.

$$

Neighbourhood Noodle House

www.neighbourhoodnoodlehouse.com 1352 Lonsdale Avenue, N. Van. | 604-988-9885 We offer the best variety & quality Chinese, Japanese, & Vietnamese cuisine with no MSG or additives at a very affordable price. Family owned & operated for over 18 years. Conveniently located in central Lonsdale.

Chef Hung Taiwanese Noodle

$

$$ www.chefhungnoodle.com 1560 Marine Dive., W. Van. | 778-279-8822 Critically acclaimed worldwide for its delectable beef noodle, Chef Hung has won numerous Championships in Taiwan & now crowned the Best Noodle House in Vancouver! Come see what all the excitement is about.

Montgomery’s Fish & Chips

THAI

Thai PudPong Restaurant $$ www.thaipudpong.com 1474 Marine Drive, W. Van. | 604-921-1069 West Vancouver’s original Thai Restaurant. Serving authentic Thai cuisine. Open Monday-Friday for lunch. 7 days a week for dinner.

$$

Sailor Hagar’s NeighbourhoodPub

$$

www.sailorhagarspub.com 86 Semisch Avenue, N. Van. | 604-984-3087 Spectacular view of Vancouver harbour & city, enjoy great food in a Brew Pub atmosphere. 18 beers on tap including our own 6 craftbrews. Live music, satellite sports, pool table, darts & heated patio.

www.marinasidegrill.com 1653 Columbia Street, N. Van. (Under 2nd Narrows Bridge) | 604-988-0038 Enjoy waterfront dining & extensive menu - eggs benny to burgers, popular brunches to famous prime rib, hot scallop salad, clam chowder, king crab, steaks, seafood style cordon bleu. Party rooms. Ample free parking.

$ $$ $$$ $$$$

$$

Bargain Fare ($5-8) Inexpensive ($9-12) Moderate ($13-15) Fine Dining ($15-25)

Live Music

Sports

Facebook

Happy Hour

Wifi

Wheelchair Accessible

UP UNTIL AUGUST 31, 2014

FREE! PINKBERRY

$$$

The Lobby Restaurant at the Pinnacle Hotel $$$ www.pinnaclepierhotel.com 138 Victory Ship Way, N. Van. | 604-973-8000 Inspired by BC’s natural abundance of fabulous seafood & the freshest of ingredients, dishes are prepared to reflect west coast cuisine. Breakfast, lunch, dinner & late night lounge, 7 days/week. Live music Fridays 8-11pm.

The MarinaSide Grill

The Black Bear Neighbourhood Pub

www.blackbearpub.com 1177 Lynn Valley Road, N. Van | 604-990-8880 Voted your “Favourite Neighbourhood Pub” 17 years running. Our daily commitment provide a fun, safe, friendly eatery with 20-plus draughts. We do great food, not fast food!

Pier 7 restaurant + bar

www.pierseven.ca 25 Wallace Mews, N. Van. | 604-929-7437 Enjoy dining literally ON the waterfront with our inspired West Coast boat-to-table choices & extensive wine list. We’ve got 5 TV’s so you’ll never miss a game. Brunch until 2:30 weekends & holidays.

To appear in this Dining Guide email arawlings@nsnews.com

BUY ONE, GET ONE

$

International Food Court, Lonsdale Quay Market, N. Van. | 604-929-8416 The fastest growing Fish & Chips on the North Shore.

WATERFRONT DINING

PUB CHINESE

$$

WEST COAST

www.pasparos.com 132 West 3rd Street, N. Van. | 604-980-0331 Try our best selling roast lamb & lamb chop dishes. Enjoy a warm & cozy ambiance with consistent good service. We continue to honour the high reputation of Greek hospitality year after year.

BRITISH

www.c-lovers.com Marine Drive @ Pemberton, N. Van. | 604-980-9993 6640 Royal Ave., Horseshoe Bay, W. Van. | 604-913-0994 The best fish & chips on the North Shore!

FRENCH

GREEK

The Portly Chef

C-Lovers Fish & Chips

860 Main Street N Park Royal Village N (604) 922-2923

Offer valid for one Pinkberry yogurt product. Limit one coupon per customer. Offer not valid for the purchase of Sugarpova candies or gift cards. Non-transferable, no cash value and cannot be combined with any other offer. Valid at participating BC Pinkberry Canada stores only. Expiry date: August 31, 2014. All rights reserved.


A22 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

TRAVEL

Sun Peaks keeps going year-round

Resort turns into mountain bike mecca in the summer

supports young athletes in memory of local boarder Bryn Taylor. For dinner, drop by Powder Hounds Restaurant in Fireside Lodge and try the schnitzel, a house favourite. If you’re lucky, you’ll spot Canada’s Female Athlete of the 20th Century Nancy Greene along with her husband and Sun Peaks Mayor Al Raine. Together, they’re Powder Hounds regulars. After dinner, stroll over to Nancy Greene’s Cahilty Lodge to take in this champion alpine skier’s impressive collection of trophies and medals on display in the lobby.

LAYNE CHRISTENSEN lchristensen@nsnews.com

Sun Peaks may have hosted the Canadian Downhill Mountain Bike Championships just last month, but you don’t have to ride like a champion to enjoy its world-class trails. Like other alpine resorts across our province, Sun Peaks has turned its ski slopes into a summer mountain bike mecca with a vast network of trails for all ages and abilities to explore. Here’s what you need to know to get the most out of a summer visit to this resort town in British Columbia’s Thompson-Okanagan region: Ride Sun Peaks bike park boast 610 metres (2,000 feet) of vertical lift-accessed terrain, with 38 trails from easy greens to spine-jarring black diamonds. New to riding or just want to sharpen your skills? Get a guide for the day. Elevation Bike Ski & Board, located

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in the Sun Peaks Grand, has everything you need to hit the bike park for the day. Elevation’s Introduction to the Bike Park package is $119 ($114 for youth, $106 for child), and includes a full-suspension downhill bike, protective gear rental, lift ticket, and two-hour

session with a local coach. Kids’ camps run Sundays, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.The bike park closes Sept. 1. Explore Downhill thrills not your thing? Take the Sunburst chairlift to access new alpine cross-country trails including a scenic pedal through wildflowers to Tod Lake via Altitude and a descent to McGillivray Lake via Big Rock Ride (adult, $23; senior & youth, $19; child, $16). Elevation has hard tails and dualsuspension bikes in its crosscountry fleet and, new this

summer, electric motors for an added uphill boost. Play Not keen on cycling? Play a round of golf on B.C.’s highest 18-hole course (ask about “kids golf free” specials), take a trail ride on horseback ($45 for 30 minutes) or explore the alpine meadows by foot. Sun Peaks boasts one of the most spectacular displays of alpine wildflowers in Canada, easily accessible via the Sunburst chairlift. Pick up a ready-to-go lunch from Café Soleil ($28, adult; $23 under 12, includes lift

ticket) and venture out on a day hike to Tod Lake to view the vibrant blooms of Indian paint brush, tiger lilies, fireweed and lupines. Eat Start your day with a smoothie or wrap from Vertical Café in the Coast Sundance Lodge at the base of the Sundance Chairlift. For a midday break, refuel at Mountain High Pizza on the village stroll. Order The Bryndian (pepperoni, bacon, garlic, olives, mushrooms and mozza) and the pizzeria will make a donation to the Bluebird Day Fund, which

Route 66 a voyage of discovery ■ Travel Route 66 by Jim Hinckley, Voyageur Press, 240 pages, $23.99.

Register for Fall Classes Saturday, August 16, 10-2pm Sunday, August 17, 10-2pm

TERRY PETERS tpeters@nsnews.com For more information

www.vanleena.com 604-983-2623 1152 Welch Street | North Vancouver

It has been a long time since it’s been used as the cross-country route it was built for but Route 66 is still a destination highway. From the starting point in Chicago all

the way to its west coast terminus at Santa Monica, America’s Mother road retains its place in history. Route 66 was replaced by the interstate highway system as an east-west connector but what has occurred is a resurgence of interest in what are now secondary routes and fascinating side trips. Jim Hinckley provides a wealth of See Highway page 32

DOWN PAYMENT $4,800 PAYMENT INCLUDES $1,000 DELIVERY CREDIT SECURITY DEPOSIT WAIVED

Stay Located in the heart of the village, the Sun Peaks Grand offers a mix of old-world charm and modern luxury. A Delta resort property until it came under local management in May, Sun Peaks’ signature hotel impresses with a lobby reminiscent of a European hunting lodge, mountainview pool, three outdoor hot tubs, spacious guest rooms with mountain or village views and complementary bike valet. sunpeaksgrand.com Getting there Sun Peaks Resort is the closest resort in the Interior of British Columbia from the Lower Mainland. It’s about a four-hour drive from the North Shore and located 45 minutes northeast of Kamloops. Take the Trans Canada eastbound to Hope, then Highway 5 North, exiting at Tod Mountain Road by Heffley Creek, B.C. For more info, including vacation packages and deals, visit sunpeaksresort.com.


Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A23


A24 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

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salmon & dill, roasted red pepper & spinach, onion Gruyere, asparagus, Asiago 8” tart English Bay, Vancouver Meet the baker in store Saturday August 16th from 11AM - 4PM

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LOOK

Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A25

YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to FASHION & STYLE

Make summer last longer Dear Mattie: How do I hold on to summer? Savouring Summer in Ambleside

SLOW CLOTHES Fibre artists display their textiles on the runway. page 26

Dear Ambleside: Summer trends have a lot of flair this year. Flair adds to an outfit by having a sense of styling. Flair is not necessarily trendy — it can be a personal touch from another season. Summer is a great time to mix and match different pieces. Let’s start with white. White is synonymous with summer. Everything comes in white, so this will be an easy place to start. If you like a bold look, then all your pieces can be white, or you can break it up with patterns and other summer colours. White streamlines an outfit, even if it is casual. White leaves a smart impression, as long as it is clean. Classic white looks include a T-shirt, shorts, a lightweight long-sleeved shirt, sneakers, sunglasses and a hat. A white T-shirt looks great with denim or cargo shorts and sneakers. A patterned top dresses up white shorts with metallic sandals. A white longsleeved shirt acts like an outer layer for a summer dress on a cool evening. Add the white sunglasses and hat to any outfit and you have a summer look. Knit tops with a strappy underlayer are trendy this summer. The look is that of a lightweight coverup, mostly in neutrals and black and white. The knit is large and airy, like a crochet. The shape is slouchy. This look works best as the weather starts to cool in the evenings. It also looks great over a summer dress, enhancing the layered look. Themes that stand out this summer are flowers, butterflies and ruffles that look like petals. You can find these themes in the patterns on tops, bottoms

and dresses.You can also find them in their actual shapes as origami on a purse, trim on a head band, or embellishment on jewelry. The most popular flower this season is the understated daisy. From what I have seen this season, the daisy has been working hard and looking great. A trendy summer piece should be unique to the season. Sunglasses and hair styles are a perfect example of looking like you live by the beach, but aren’t there right now. Most women have many sunglasses to match their different moods and styles. Big and bold colours are very popular, especially patterns like flowers, stripes and colour blocking. Graphite split-colour frames with coloured lenses make a modern statement. To finish off your look, try something different with your hair such as a slicked-back ponytail, a large braid to the side, or even small French braids around your face that look like a hairband. Putting your hair up is a great way to add summer to your hairstyle. The overall trend this season falls into a confident lifestyle vibe. Free and easy is the rhythm for casual trends. Sophisticated and smart rules the office and evening looks. My favourite vibe this summer is the music festival look — a modern hippy. These looks are not challenging; they are as easy as a big, floppy summer hat, white trousers, or a striped beach-sized tote. Each item can be the starting point of your outfit or they can be worn together to create the ultimate fashion statement.

SAMPLE SALE Christine Lingerie, run by West Vancouver designer Christine Morton, is holding a sample sale Aug. 15 and 16 at 821 Powell St. in Vancouver. One-of-a-kind samples and inventory from last year will all be on sale. christinelingerie.com FIRST IN B.C. Free People is opening its first boutique in the province at Park Royal later this month. A grand opening event will take place Aug. 29 from 6-8 p.m.The first 50 guests will receive reusable canvas totes filled with mini succulents and goods from Free People and Tarte Cosmetics. Light refreshments will be served and there will be a photobooth for guests. freepeople.com LIONS GATE QUILTERS GUILD meets the fourth Tuesday of the month at 7:30 p.m. at St. Andrew’s and St. Stephen’s Presbyterian Church, 2641 Chesterfield Ave., North Vancouver. New members welcome. 604-926-7098 or lionsgatequiltersguild.com NORTH SHORE NEEDLE ARTS GUILD meets the second Thursday of the month and offers instruction in embroidery and beading at St. Martin’s Anglican Church hall in North Vancouver. 604-9224032. THRIFTY CHIC The Thrift Shop at Mount Seymour United Church (1200 Parkgate Ave.) is open Thursdays, 11 a.m.8 p.m. Half price sale on selected goods every week. mtseymourunited.com

Adieu, Mattie Mattie is a freelance writer and fashion expert. Reach her on her Facebook page or follow her on Pinterest at Mattie a la Mode.

Fashion File

D\Z3a +W:3\ZU^' -5/Z)a) \/Z5 /U) / 435Z8a) 3:3a ^Z1a :`` / -a/+\e 1Z-a% khhFHGI>Gkdf NORISA ANDERSON

Compiled by Christine Lyon Email clyon@nsnews.com

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A26 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

LOOK

Get the Key to Exclusivity SLOW CLOTHES h:+/W N-5a /53Z434 4\:0+/4a) 3\aZ5 )a4Z^U4 :U 3\a 52U0/e /3 HW:0 <W:3\a4K G\a >53 :` 7/4\Z:U' 0\Z+\ 3::X 8W/+a >2^% Q /3 Da43 E/U+:21a5#4 gZWWaUUZ2V b/5X )25ZU^ 3\a l/5V:Ue >534 7a43Z1/W% dUa&:`&/&XZU) ^/5VaU34' Ya0aW5e /U) /++a44:5Za4 0a5a /W4: /1/ZW/-Wa `:5 825+\/4a% F;?< ">?&) D"#$ #$) :?,?' ?** #+ %)) >+') *$+#+% ('+> #$) )H)<#1 bldGd MIKE WAKEFIELD

Personal Shopper

Pack to school in style VITamIn DaILY.com SUBSCRIBE AT VITAMINDAILY.COM FOR EXCLUSIVE DEALS, CONTEST & GIVEAWAYS FOR LESS THAN $5 PER MONTH

For schoolkids, a backpack is more than just a practical bag to lug around books and lunches, it’s also an accessory worn daily that lets them stand out from the crowd and express their individual style. While few kids are prepared to think about back-toschool necessities in mid-August, those who are in the market for a new carryall may find their match among the recently-released fall 2014 backpack collection at MEC (with a location at 212 Brooksbank Ave., North Vancouver). The packs boast the functionality and ergonomics the outdoor apparel retailer is known for — something parents will appreciate — and come in a range of colours and styles, which picky kids will like. For primary students, the MEC Kinder Book Bag ($32, pictured above right in pink punch/beet red) comes in a selection of bright hues, features a reflective strip for visibility, and has multiple pouches so youngsters can at least attempt to keep their snacks, school supplies and mittens organized. Pre-teens seeking a more subdued look might prefer one of MEC’s classic designs in a neutral shade, such as the Darwin Daypack ($59, pictured at right in dolphin grey), which has a handy laptop sleeve for tech-savvy youth. — Christine Lyon


Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A27

MUSIC

Five Star Motel rooted in friendship Local band proud of their longevity and accessibility

■ Five Star Motel performing at Shipbuilders’ Square Friday, Aug. 22 at 5 p.m. ANNE WATSON awatson@nsnews.com

Ryan Matches would say that the key to his band, Five Star Motel’s longevity is their friendship. “It’s a friends-first scenario,” says Matches. The band, performing at North Shore Green Markets, Shipbuilders’ Square, Aug. 22 at 5 p.m., was formed by childhood friends, Matches, Mike Norris and Ian Powell, and later joined by Paul Reichelt and Craig Wilson. Matches, Norris and Powell grew up together in Deep Cove, playing soccer, attending the same elementary school and eventually graduating high school together in 1984. Matches says he met Reichelt in 1996 at a mutual friend’s house party. “I noticed him sitting in the corner playing his guitar and he played a few of his originals,” says Matches. “When I heard them I thought ‘Oh there’s something magical here, these are really good originals, really catchy and melodic.’ So I basically asked him if he wanted to join my little sort of gathering of high school friends in one of my buddy’s basements and he obliged and he came down.” From then on it remained a little four-piece, says Matches, as they got together every week and worked on original music. The band even recorded the songs “Point of View” and “Chasing the Sun,” that Matches heard Reichelt play at the party. “Paul has turned into a fabulous friend outside of music as well,” says Matches.

7Z1a H3/5 g:3aW ?<5/Z^ DZW4:U' b/2W IaZ+\aW3' )52VVa5 k/U b:0aWW' gZXa f:55Z4 /U) Ie/U g/3+\a4( 8a5`:5V /3 H\Z8-2ZW)a54# H62/5a :U 75Z)/e' >2^% nn /3 R 8%V% bldGd CINDY GOODMAN “And Craig, our newest member who joined us about three-four months ago, was a friend of mine from another cover band that we played in called Truck.” Truck disbanded, Matches says, and Motel thought that if they added a fifth member, it would increase their dynamic. The band’s name, says Matches, was “blatantly ripped off” from Andy Stochansky, a singersongwriter from Ontario. “I wish it was a more glamorous story,” he laughs. “One of his albums he called Five Star Motel and we just thought that was kind of fitting to the content of the songs that we had written.” With multiple songs under their belts, the band has come up with their own unique writing process. “Paul typically brings in a nugget whether it’s a lyric, a passage of words, several lines of lyrics or a guitar riff,” says Matches. “Usually it starts off with something that turns into the chorus of the song and then we kind of write it outwards from the

centre and add verses, add bridges, add beginnings and ends and that sort of thing.” Every song is very much written by committee, he says. “We all have sort of musical points of view and we all throw our input into it and we won’t keep a song if one of us doesn’t like it,” says Matches. “We all have to really get excited about the song in order for it to last.” Their music has evolved over the years as the band has become better players, says Matches, and learned to listen to each other. “I guess the songs have become a little more structured, a little more melodic,” he says. “A lot of our music is harmonydriven, melody-driven, catchy choruses, sort of toe tapping-sing along, it’s very accessible music.” The band has also discovered that their music is accessible across generations. At a recent concert at Shipbuilders’ Square in North Vancouver, one of the audience members, a woman Matches would describe as in her 70s or 80s,

was “grinning ear to ear the whole time.” “She actually made a point of coming up and shaking our hands and saying ‘Oh my goodness you guys, that was the best music I’ve heard in a long time,’” he says. Matches says its nice to know their music is accessible from children dancing in front of the stage at last year’s Shipbuilders’ Square event, to their most recent, newly-acquired fan. “Its kind of interesting how its evolved and that people of all walks of life seem to gravitate to it, they really enjoy it,” he says. The band describes their music as “trailer park rock,” or even southern rock, that often references bluecollar living.Their musical inspirations are the bands they grew up with, what Matches calls “an interesting little dichotomy.” “Paul, the lead singerguitar player, is more of a Stevie Ray Vaughan, southern rock kind of an influenced guy,” says Matches. “And the rest of us are sort of children of the

’80s and we grew up with U2 and REM and Echo and the Bunnymen and these sort of obscure new wave type bands that have their own evolution.” It’s an amalgamation of everyone’s influences, he says, that gives Motel their sound. Motel’s members each hold a day job; Matches as a surveyor, Norris as a wood worker, Powell as a schoolteacher, Reichelt as a house painter and Wilson as an electrician. “Its sort of like the Sesame Street song ‘These are the People inYour Neighbourhood,’ because we’re all sort of blue collar tradesmen,” says Matches. “We all have these very blue collar jobs but we’ve all made time in our schedules to get together to rehearse at least once a week.” The band typically rehearses on Tuesdays at NAL Sound in North Vancouver. “Sometimes if the spot doesn’t have an opening we’ll go to Craig’s house and have an impromptu practice and work on our harmonies

and our vocals and that sort of thing,” says Matches. “It’s all rooted in friendship, we always have a really good time when we get together and I think that’s why we’ve managed to last this long.” The band has been rehearsing at NAL since 1996, says Matches, and has seen hundreds of bands come and go. “I think we’re probably the mainstay, which for bands is interesting, its kind of like dog years and human years, its just bands don’t usually seem to have a long life span unless of course they’re the Rolling Stones or those types of exceptions,” he says. “But as far as local bands, you don’t see many names out there that were around when we started jamming at the studio, so we’re kind of proud of our longevity.” The band has had numerous highlights in their already lengthy career, including in 2005 when they played the Roxy. “They had booked us for a country showcase on the Sunday afternoon,” says Matches. “I think unbeknownst to them it was the Grey Cup weekend in Vancouver.” Motel was just about to start their set as the final whistle blew and Granville Street was “flooded with drunken football revelers,” says Matches. “We played a set in front of a jam-packed Roxy, which, if anyone knows live music in Vancouver, the Roxy is one of the best stages and best sound systems to play,” he says. “We just felt really fortunate that we were able to do that, first of all, but also really, really well received. People were high five-ing us after and saying ‘encore, encore.’” It was a bit shocking, says Matches. “It was also very life affirming for us that if we keep our nose to the grindstone we can produce some pretty good music and people would actually warm up to us.”

19 is TUESDAY, AUGUeST Next HOMESTAND STARTSVS.thchic ago cubs affiliate bois hawks TUESDAY, AUGUST 19 Superstar Appearance by Shawn Green and Card Giveaway First 1,000 Fans Gates Open at 6pm. First Pitch 7:05

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See Band page 32


A28 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

MUSIC

Squamish featured diverse line-up From page 13

Tragically Hip, Matthew Good and Queens of the Stone Age, among other well-known bands with huge followings. If I had to sum up this year’s musical lineup in one word, it would be diverse.The only thing the three headlining acts — Bruno Mars, Arcade Fire and Eminem — have in common is they’ve all won Grammy awards. And all three thoroughly rocked the stage and their crowds of tens of thousands. Bruno Mars was the first headliner up on the main Tantalus stage Friday night, and was a huge draw for the crowd as thousands of people pushed through to the front underneath two long lines of floating, lit balloons reaching up to the sky, periodically moved around by a man named Moonshine. But when Arcade Fire took the stage with some

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of the crowd was barely held back by the barricades on Saturday night.The Quebec-based band opened with tracks off their latest

CONSTRUCTION WORK 100 BLOCK OF WEST 1ST STREET When: August 18, 2014 to August 29, 2014 Times: Monday to Friday, 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. To meet the demand for electricity and improved reliability, BC Hydro will be repairing an underground duct bank along the south-side of the 100 block of West 1st Street. Construction is scheduled to begin on Monday, August 18, 2014, and is expected to be

album, Reflektor, but continued to step back in time using their best hits — in my humble opinion – from Funeral, The Suburbs and even Neon Bible. The first handful of songs were supercharged and high energy before switching gears after “Month of May,” and Arcade Fire wisely followed it up with slower tracks — but all had fans singing along.This is one of those rare bands that sound better live than digitally mastered. The next big headliner on the stage who drew the largest crowd on the last day was “Bad Guy” Eminem. Despite the rough and tumble attitude one would expect from the crowd, the excitement to see an artist who hasn’t performed in B.C. for more than 10 years

kept things focused and charged on the main stage — leaving the crowd in high spirits. When the back of the giant stage released the black curtain that was up for the whole festival, it revealed a large tape deck boom box projected to the back, which would also be lit up with different backgrounds — from a gothic cathedral to a courthouse with a Roman-architecture façade. Marshall Mathers played a wide array of his greatest hits, and engaged the crowd during them — although addressing them as Vancouver.Tokyo Police Club made the same mistake, but who could blame them? I have to say the most impressive moment of all three headliners was when

Eminem actually rapped his high-velocity track, “Rap God.”The other highlight from his set was when half of his hip-hop duo, “Bad Meets Evil,” Royce da 5’9” took the stage to perform alongside Eminem. But all the acts hit the right notes, from up-andcomers like the local band The Oceanographers, to the longtime fan favourite Arctic Monkeys – another key performance — to, my personal favourite,The Roots. Not enough can be said about The Roots, other than they absolutely took down the Stawamus stage with their crushing performance. Squamish fest organizers were aiming to attract attendees from as many genres as they could — and they succeeded.

completed by Friday, August 29, 2014. During this period: • •

the south sidewalk will be closed from the intersection of West 1st Street and Chesterfield to just before the John Braithwaite Community Centre; three parking spaces to the west of the Time building driveway will be unavailable;

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No planned power outages will occur as a result of this work. BC Hydro recognizes that construction projects may be an inconvenience, and we will do our best to mitigate the impacts. We appreciate your patience and understanding If you have any questions or would like more information about this project, please contact BC Hydro at 1 866 647 3334 or stakeholderengagement@bchydro.com.

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MUSIC

Festival builds on community spirit

Blueridge chamber music series celebrates democratic art form ■ The Blueridge International Chamber Music Festival, remaining concerts on Aug. 15 (Ciel,Air etVents) at 7 p.m., Aug. 20 (A Fine Romance) at 7 p.m. and Aug. 23 (FiveYears in the Zoo) at 2 p.m., all at Mount Seymour United Church, 1200 Parkgate Ave., North Vancouver. Tickets: $20/$10.Visit www.blueridgechamber. org for the complete program. CHRISTINE LYON clyon@nsnews.com

What started out as an excuse for a few friends to play classical music together has grown into an established festival that draws a roster of accomplished musicians to NorthVancouver every summer. This month, Mount Seymour United Church is again playing host to the Blueridge International Chamber Music Festival, which is celebrating its fifth birthday. “It started out as a very personal project and it’s kind of taken on a life of its own,” says artistic director Dorothea Hayley, who lends her soprano voice to the concert series. “The whole point of chamber music is really that people get together and enjoy playing it,” she explains. “It’s more a recent idea that you think about the pleasure of the audience.” The festival was cofounded by Hayley, who grew up in the Blueridge neighbourhood, and Colombian pianist Alejandro Ochoa.This year’s lineup of local and international artists include Hayley and Ochoa, along with Ariel Barnes (cello), Jennie Press (violin), Paolo Bortolussi (flute), MarcusTakizawa (viola), Jeremy Chaulk (piano), Martin Karlicek (piano), Krista Martynes (clarinet), Mark Beaty (double bass) andTimothyVan Cleave (percussion). As in previous years, the organizers aim to offer audiences a range of classical music. “We have always tried to have a mixture between the great staples of the chamber music repertoire that people love to hear over and over

again, as well as pieces that people might not know, or might not have heard, but that we feel really strongly deserve to also be in the cannon.” A couple of those great staples will be performed at the festival finale on Aug. 23 (which will also serve as a fifth birthday celebration — complete with cake). The musicians will play Schubert’s Trout Quintet, “which is a piece that everybody knows” and SaintSaens’ Carnival of the Animals “which will be performed with some humorous poetry in between the movements and also there will be a visual component, so that’s a great concert for kids to go to,” Hayley says. “That would be a great first classical concert for anyone.” She is also eager to introduce concert-goers to some more obscure works, two of which will be presented at the Aug. 20 show. “We have an amazing piece by Martinu for violin and viola that I had never heard before this year — it’s called Three Madrigals,” she says. Another lesser-known gem set for the same evening is Shostakovich’s Seven

=W2a5Z)^a kU3a5U/3Z:U/W <\/V-a5 g24Z+ 7a43Z1/W +:&`:2U)a54 >WaY/U)5: d+\:/ /U) ;:5:3\a/ l/eWae \/1a 85:^5/VVa) / 0Z)a 5/U^a :` +W/44Z+/W V24Z+ /3 g:2U3 HaeV:25 FUZ3a) <\25+\ 3\Z4 0aaX% bldGd PAUL MCGRATH relationships that draw Hayley to chamber music. “It’s this intimate connection. It’s a really democratic kind of art,” she explains of the genre. Rather

“It started out as a very personal project

and it’s kind of taken on a life of its own.”

— Artistic director Dorothea Hayley Romances for a soprano and piano trio “which is a rare combination, but really beautiful and moving.” Coinciding with the concert series is the festival’s two-week intensive workshop for musicians aged eight to 18, which runs Aug. 11 to 22, during which time students tackle solo and chamber music under professional instruction. “For kids, often musicmaking can be a little bit of a lonely process, especially for pianists — you spend a lot of time practising,” Hayley says. “We wanted to have an opportunity for kids from quite a young age to get to know what we think is the real joy of music, which is being able to communicate musically with your peers.” It’s those peer-to-peer

than one person leading the small group, everyone works together, whether they are long-time collaborators or practical strangers. “Somehow, over the course of a few rehearsals — usually very few rehearsals — you sort of throw ideas around musically and come up with something that is unique to the group.” That intimacy and spirit of spontaneity come across to the audience, Hayley says, creating an atmosphere well suited to the quiet, treeshrouded venue of Mount Seymour United Church. “It’s a very relaxed setting, people don’t need to dress up.We have a relaxed pre-concert talk before each concert,” she says. “It’s just a really pleasant summer experience.”

Help send the Little Mountain Challenger baseball team to the World Series in Williamsport! This special team of Little League baseball players and their volunteer buddies have been invited to play in the Little League World Series in Williamsport, Pennsylvania on Aug.23. A crowdfunding campaign has been set up on FundAid.ca to help pay their transportation costs. Cheer on the Challenger team, and the Little Mountain Baseball team, as they represent Vancouver and Canada!

Go to FundAid.ca and search for Send the Challengers to Williamsport!


A32 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

CALENDAR From page 20 about his recently updated edition of Off the Beaten Path which features 39 routes through the North Shore’s wildernessWednesday,Aug. 20, 7-8:30 p.m. Registration required.

nvcl.ca Movie Nights in the Plaza: The library will host free screenings of popular family movies on Fridays starting at sunset in front of the library. Schedule:Aug. 22, 8:24, Frozen. Popcorn and beverages will be available for purchase.

NORTHVANCOUVER CITY LIBRARY 120West 14th St., North Vancouver. 604-998-3450

PRESENTATION HOUSETHEATRE 333 Chesterfield Ave., North Vancouver. 604-990-3474

phtheatre.org Oil Sands Karaoke: A documentary about life in an oil patch from the perspective of singers in a karaoke competition by local filmmaker Charles Wilkinson Friday,Aug. 15 at 8 p.m.Admission by cash donation to support Dogwood Initiatives’s Let BCVote campaign for a referendum on oil tankers and pipelines. RSVP: oilsandskaraoke. eventbrite.ca.

SILK PURSE ARTS CENTRE 1570 Argyle Ave.,West Vancouver. 604-925-7292 silkpurse.ca Songs and Stories: Composer Michael Conway Baker will share show biz, film and concert music stories past and present the thirdWednesday of every month, 10:30-11:30 a.m.Admission by donation. WESTVANCOUVER

MEMORIAL LIBRARY 1950 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver. 604-925-7400 westvanlibrary.ca Monday Night Movies: Dirty Rotten Scoundrels will play Aug. 18 and My House in Umbria Aug. 25, 6:30-8:30 p.m. — compiled by Debbie Caldwell. Email information for your North Shore event to listings@nsnews.com.

Band planning to work on new tunes

From page 27

The band also played their CD release party at the Avalon Pub in North Vancouver in 1999, as well as the Avalon’s final night of business years later before it was torn down.They performed at a corporate event in the Richmond Olympic Oval before the Olympics. “I don’t think it was even open to the public at that point,” says Matches. “I think we might have been one of the first bands to ever play in that building as people were skating around us, it was pretty interesting.”

Matches says they have played in “all the other seedy bars around town,” including the Piccadilly Pub, Marine Club and Media Club, to name a few, that have their own little highlights. After honouring their next few commitments, the band plans to work on some original songs and try their hand at writing as a fivesome, says Matches, as they haven’t had a chance since Wilson joined. “Everyone has something swirling around in their head at any given moment,” he says. “We basically sit in the room and

play parts for each other… its basically like Tetris, you just sort of put the building blocks in place or the line of lyrics in place and see what it turns into.” Over the years the band has tried to incorporate a keyboard or Hammondstyle organ type of sound into their music. “We’ve bought and sold a whole bunch of keyboards over the years, “ says Matches. “I play keyboard a little bit and so does Mike, but when it comes to playing sort of a church organ sound, it’s a very distinct technique and it’s a bit difficult.”

Recently though, Reichelt received a special pedal for his guitar, says Matches. “It’s a keyboard pedal, it’s basically an effect that he can plug his guitar in and then play chords on his guitar and it sounds like a church organ,” he says. “We’re not sure where it’s going to lead us to. Now that we have Craig as another guitar player, Paul can sort of relax with his guitar parts and noodle around a bit and see if he can fuse a bit of this sort of church keyboard sound. So we’re excited about that.” Matches says there

have definitely been peaks and valleys, good times and bad, but the band is a support net for each other, “it’s a real brotherhood.” “We sort of do it as much for ourselves as for everybody else too, so its great therapy just to put the guitar on at least once a week and get together in the same room and have a few beers with your friends,” he says. “And the byproduct is decent music and a couple laughs and there’s nothing better than that.” Five Star Motel’s songs are free for download at fivestarmotel.ca.

Highway still full of kicks From page 22 information on the many stops along the way. From the giant Gemini Man at the Launching Pad Drive-In, located in Wilmington, Illinois to the famous Wigwam Motel in Holbrook, Arizona, Route 66 is lined with quirky roadside attractions. The road is fragmented now with detours and various connecting roads necessary to attempt to follow the original route but that doesn’t take away from the experience. Like the best kind of road trip, traveling Route 66 is a voyage of discovery and Hinckley has provided a fascinating guidebook to help you get the most out of the trip. With detailed driving instructions, historical descriptions and fascinating anecdotes, this is a book that should be examined before a trip that intersects with any portion of this highway to ensure you don’t miss out on any of the unique attractions.

VANCOUVER / NORTH SHORE / BURNABY / RICH RICHMOND / DELTA / SURREY / WHITE ROCK / NEW WEST MINSTER / COQUITLAM / MAPLE RIDGE / LANGLEY / VANCOUVER NORTH SHORE / BURNABY / RICHMOND INTHEKNOW—ONTHEGO! / DELTA / SURREY / WHITE ROCK / NEW WESTMIN STER / COQUITLAM / MAPLE RIDGE / LANGLEY / VAN COUVER / NORTH SHORE / BURNABY / RICHMOND / DELTA / SURREY / WHITE ROCK / NEW WESTMINSTER / COQUITLAM / MAPLE RIDGE / LANGLEY / VANCOU VER NORTH SHORE / BURNABY / RICHMOND / DELTA / SURREY / WHITE ROCK / NEW WESTMINSTER / CO QUITLAM / MAPLE RIDGE / LANGLEY

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A38 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE

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Porsche unleashes a tiger

With the Macan, Porsche has expanded its range into a whole new class of vehicle. The Macan is the first Porsche compact SUV — and this is a significant entry and launch point. Porsche is not afraid of the comments by critics claiming that the Macan is not a “true” Porsche. Porsche believes, given some time, those doubters will recognize that the Macan is a true representation of its brand’s

David Chao

Behind the Wheel 60 years of experience building the 911, Boxster,

Cayenne and Panamera. In fact, from my own perspective, the Macan — and especially the Macan Turbo version — have more of the Porsche DNA than any other non-sports coupes Porsche has ever produced. Macan means “tiger” in Indonesian — Porsche feels it embodies the spirit of a tiger through its speed, power, elegance and agility. Porsche hopes the Macan will appeal to a larger number of people

and welcome a whole new set of customers to the brand. To start, the Macan will be available in two models, the Macan S and the Macan Turbo.

Design Porsche chief designer Michael Mauer admits to feeling a lot of pressure while designing the Macan, “since we are doing so many cars that don’t have any predecessor, it is a little bit more challenging because you are always

basically inventing the car.” The philosophy for the Macan was to make sure it was the sportiest in the compact SUV segment. Porsche first focused on the proportions of the Macan, to ensure it retains Porsche branding while providing a muscular, agile look. As a result, it is low and wide and has an aggressive stance that is perhaps the best combination of Porsche

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TODAY’S DRIVE

Slow. Slow and slightly noisy. Slow and slightly noisy and incredibly boxy with so-so handling. Or, in other words: perfect. Just as there is a school of thought that has resulted in a V-6 Toyota Camry that can put the boots to many sports cars, there is also a philosophy that claims the opposite. “What’s the hurry?” it asks, trundling vast distances with the speed of a snail, and likewise carrying its home on its back. This is the world of the Westfalia, that humble sliding-doored Volkswagen equipped with not much in the horsepower department but delivering oh-so-much driving pleasure. They are surprisingly expensive, they can be found everywhere, and they’re probably part of your childhood. My folks had one. It was brown, with the white pop-up roof, and I can smell the upholstery and see the triple-LED gauges on the tiny fridge even now. My mother, who isn’t a car person at all, misses that Vanagon so much you would think it was a treasured family pet that ran away from home. I remember slamming my hand in the sliding door — yeowch! — but more than that, I remember how thrilling it was to be sleeping high up in a pop-up tent, watching for shooting stars with my brother. Lest this nostalgic reminiscence starts getting too treacly and risks turning into an episode of TheWonderYears, let it be known that even as a kid I knew it was pretty slow. There were parts of the Duffy Lake Road where the entire family was silently willing the thing up the steep parts. However, it had just enough gumption to get where you were going, and once you were there, it was a home away from home. It wasn’t quite big enough to provide a luxury camping experience, but for families who liked to play outside anyway, the Westfalia was simply perfect. The roots of this sort of car are more than a half-century old, starting in the 1950s in

Germany, when a oneoff camperized box was built for a British officer stationed in post-war partitioned Germany. The Brits ran the VW factory for a while, eventually turning control back to the local council, and in the meantime, thousands of boxy little VW vans were produced to ferry people and their things around the rebuilding country. Situated in RhedaWiedenbruck, in the Westphalia area of Germany, the Westfalia factory has produced all sorts of camperized vehicles over the years. Now owned by MercedesBenz, they do conversions on Ford and Fiat vans as well. The Westfalia company started out as a coachbuilder making, well, coaches. They built heavy wagons in the nineteenth century, transiting to custom work later on. When the VW Type-2 (better known as the Microbus) came along, it was a perfect match. These first Westfalias were very popular with both German families and foreign servicemen, and many were subsequently imported to North America. With an established supply of used versions on hand, they soon became a fixture of the laid-back hippie movement and surfing culture, and were a staple of the music festival. In 1979, along came the Vanagon, a less cheerful shape but one that would become its own icon. While the early VW Microbus has become less of a nomad as it ages, due to rising prices and the age of the fleet, the

See Journey page 44

Check out some of the reasons why Nissan is

º

Westfalia fans drive as fast as they want to THE FASTEST GROWING BRAND IN CANADA Over the last 12 months in the non-luxury segment.

MY NISSAN

Brendan McAleer

Grinding Gears

CHOOSE FROM

$

750

BONUS CASH

$

134 ≠

FINANCING

APR FOR UP TO 84 MONTHS

±

0% AT

SEMI-MONTHLY

PLUS UP TO

OR

1

STANDARD FEATURES INCLUDE: • BETTER FUEL ECONOMY (HWY) THAN ESCAPE, RAV4 AND CR-VX • AVAILABLE INTUITIVE ALL-WHEEL DRIVE • HIGHEST RESALE VALUE

$

4

SMALL SUV

PAYMENTS OR ON US

SEMI-MONTHLY 2

ADDED SECURITY PLAN

NO CHARGE 3

VALUE UP TO $1,850

On top of select lease and finance offers*

2014 NISSAN PATHFINDER $

LEASE FROM

192 AT

SEMI-MONTHLY≠

• 5.6L DOHC V8 ENGINE WITH 317-HP & 385 LB-FT TORQUE • UP TO 9,500 LBS TOWING CAPABILITY • STANDARD FACTORY APPLIED SPRAY-ON BEDLINER

2.9% FREIGHT AND APR PDE INCLUDED

PER MONTH FOR 60 MONTHS

• BEST-IN-CLASS FUEL ECONOMY • BEST-IN-CLASS INTERIOR PASSENGER VOLUME • 2014 PATHFINDER HYBRID NOW AVAILABLE ∞

HURRY, OFFERS END SEPTEMBER 2

ND

FIND YOUR ADVANTAGE AT CHOOSENISSAN.CA OR YOUR LOCAL RETAILER

NORTH VANCOUVER NISSAN 819 Automall Drive, North Vancouver, BC Tel: (604) 985-9311 ●

Platinum model shown▲

2014 ALL-NEW NISSAN ROGUE

WORRY FREE LEASE FROM

2.99% FREIGHT AND APR PDE INCLUDED

PER MONTH FOR 60 MONTHS

^

SL AWD Premium model shown with Accessory Roof Rail Crossbars▲

2014 NISSAN TITAN

IN CASH DISCOUNTS

6,000

Crew Cab SL model shown▲

*Offer available to all qualified retail customers who lease or finance (and take delivery) of a new 2014 Versa Note/Sentra/Altima/Rogue/Pathfinder/Titan models on approved credit, through Nissan Canada Finance from a participating Nissan retailer in Canada between Aug.1-Sept. 2, 2014. Not available for cash purchase buyers. 1$750 Bonus Cash applicable to customers who lease or finance any new 2014 Versa Note/Sentra/Altima/Rogue/Pathfinder/Titan models through Nissan Canada Finance on approved credit on units in stock. The $750 additional Cash Bonus consists of $750 NCF cash and will be deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes. Offer available for qualified customers only. Offer available from Aug.1-Sept. 2, 2014 inclusively. Offer not available for cash purchase buyers. Conditions apply. Qualifying customers must be approved to lease or finance through Nissan Canada Finance. 2First four (4) semi-monthly lease payments and first four (4) bi-weekly finance payments of a new 2014 Versa Note/Sentra/Altima/Rogue/Pathfinder/Titan (including all taxes) will be waived, up to a maximum of $750/$750/$900/$900/$1,200/$1,200 for the 2 months or 4 semi-monthly payments. Consumer is responsible for any and all amounts in excess of $750/$750/$900/$900/$900/$1,200/$1,200 (inclusive of taxes). After four (4) semi-monthly payments, consumer will be required to make all remaining regularly scheduled payments over the remaining term of the contract. This offer is applicable to NCF contracts only. This offer cannot be combined with any other offer. 3No charge extended warranty is valid for up to 60 months or 100,000 km (whichever occurs first) from the warranty start date and zero (0) kilometers. Some conditions/limitations apply. The no charge extended warranty is the Nissan Added Security Plan (“ASP”) and is administered by Nissan Canada Extended Services Inc. (“NCESI”). In all provinces NCESI is the obligor. NCESI offers a Gold and Platinum level of coverage. This offer includes the Gold level of coverage, be sure to see your local Dealer to identify the difference in coverage from a Gold to the Platinum level. Retail value of added security plan based on MSRP $1,715/$1,440/$1,655/ $1,850 for a new 2014 Pathfinder/(2014 Rogue S/SV FWD, CVT transmission, (Y6RG14 AA00/Y6SG14 AA00/Y6SG14 NV00)/2014 Rogue AWD models)/2014 Titan models. Dealers are free to set individual prices. ††CASH DISCOUNT: †Get $6,000/$4,000 stackable cash discount on the purchase of a 2014 KC, SV 4X4 SWB (3KCG74 AA00)/any new 2014 Titan (except 2014 Titan KC, SV 4X4 SWB (3KCG74 AA00). The cash discount is based on stackable trading dollars when registered and delivered between Aug.1-Sept. 2, 2014 with sub-vented finance rates only. The cash discount, will be deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes. This offer cannot be combined with any other offer. Conditions apply. ±Representative finance offer based on new 2014 Titan KC SV 4X4 SWB (3KCG74 AA00). Selling Price is $37,742 financed at 0% APR equals 182 bi-weekly payments of $207 for an 84-month term. $0 down payment required. Cost of borrowing is $0 for a total obligation of $37,742. This offer cannot be combined with any other offer. Conditions apply. ≠Representative semi-monthly lease offer based on new 2014 Rogue S FWD (Y6RG14 AA00), CVT transmission/2014 Pathfinder S 4X2 (5XRG14 AA00), CVT transmission. 2.99%/2.9% lease APR for a 60/60 month term equals 120/120 semi-monthly payments of $134/$192 with $0/$0 down payment, and $0/$0 security deposit. First semi-monthly payment, down payment and $0 security deposit are due at lease inception. Prices include freight and fees. Lease based on a maximum of 20,000 km/year with excess charged at $0.10/km. Total lease obligation is $16,042/$23,019. $500/$500 NCF Lease Cash included in advertised price, applicable only on 2014 Rogue S FWD (Y6RG14 AA00), CVT transmission/2014 Pathfinder Platinum 4x4 (5XEG14 AA00), CVT Transmission through subvented lease through Nissan Canada Finance. ▲Models shown $34,928/$43,858/$53,723 Selling price for a new 2014 Rogue SL AWD Premium model (Y6DG14 BK00), CVT transmission/2014 Pathfinder Platnium 4x4 (5XEG14 AA00), CVT Transmission/2014 Titan Crew Cab SL (3CFG74 AA00). ±≠▲Freight and PDE charges ($1,630/$1,560/$1,610), certain fees, manufacturer’s rebate and dealer participation where applicable are included. License, registration, air-conditioning levy ($100) where applicable, insurance and applicable taxes are extra. Finance and lease offers are available on approved credit through Nissan Canada Finance for a limited time, may change without notice and cannot be combined with any other offers except stackable trading dollars. Retailers are free to set individual prices. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Vehicles and accessories are for illustration purposes only. Offers, prices and features subject to change without notice. Offers valid between Aug.1-Sept. 2, 2014. #Offer is administered by Nissan Canada Extended Services Inc. (NCESI) and applies to new 2014 Nissan Rogue models (each, an “Eligible Model”) leased and registered through Nissan Canada Finance Services Inc., on approved credit, between Aug.1-Sept. 2, 2014 from an authorized Nissan retailer in Canada. Offer recipient will be entitled to receive a maximum of six (6) service visits (each, a “Service Visit”) for the Eligible Vehicle – where each Service Visit consists of one (1) oil change (using conventional 5W30 motor oil) and one (1) tire rotation service (each, an “Eligible Service”). All Eligible Services will be conducted in strict accordance with the Oil Change and Tire Rotation Plan outline in the Agreement Booklet for the Eligible Vehicle. The service period (“Service Period”) will commence on the lease transaction date (“Transaction Date”) and will expire on the earlier of: (i) the date on which the maximum number of Service Visits has been reached; (ii) 36 months from the Transaction Date; or (ii) when the Eligible Vehicle has reached 48,000 kilometers. All Eligible Services must be completed during the Service Period, otherwise they will be forfeited. The Offer may be upgraded to use premium oil at the recipient’s expense. The Eligible Services are not designed to meet all requirements and specifications necessary to maintain the Eligible Vehicle. To see the complete list of maintenance necessary, please refer to the Service Maintenance Guide. Any additional services required are not covered by the Offer and are the sole responsibility and cost of the recipient. Offer may not be redeemed for cash and may not be combined with certain offers NCESI reserves the right to amend or terminate this offer, in whole or in part, at any time without prior notice. Additional conditions and limitations apply. Ask your retailer for details. °Nissan is the fastest growing brand in the non-luxury segment based on comparison of 12-month retail sales from July 2013 to June 2014 of all Canadian automotive brands and 12-month averages sales growth. ^Based on 2014 Canadian Residual Value Award in Subcompact Car segment. ALG is the industry benchmark for residual values and depreciation data, www.alg.com. XAll information compiled from third-party sources including manufacturer websites. Not responsible for errors in data on third party websites. 12/17/2013. ∞Ward’s Large Cross/Utility segment. MY14 Pathfinder vs. 2013 Large Cross/Utility Class. 2014 Pathfinder S 2WD with CVT transmission fuel consumption estimate is 10.5L/100 KM CITY | 7.7L/100 KM HWY | 9.3L/100 KM combined. Actual mileage will vary with driving conditions. Use for comparison purposes only. Based on 2012 EnerGuide Fuel Consumption Guide ratings published by Natural Resources Canada. Government of Canada test methods used. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on powertrain, driving habits and other factors. 2014 Pathfinder Platinum model shown. ●Ward’s Large Cross/Utility Market Segmentation. MY14 Pathfinder vs. 2014 Large Cross/Utility Class. iPod® is a registered trademark of Apple Inc. All rights reserved. iPod® not included. Offers subject to change, continuation or cancellation without notice. Offers have no cash alternative value. See your participating Nissan retailer for complete details. ©1998-2014 Nissan Canada Inc. and Nissan Financial Services Inc. a division of Nissan Canada Inc.

Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A41


A42 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

TODAY’S DRIVE

Macan claims to be first sports car SUV From page 38 sleekness and SUV toughness. They also made sure that the Macan carried over familiar design elements from its other products, such as the sloping roofline of the 911. The tail of the Macan is especially interesting; the tail lamps have a threedimensional character and the whole rear end is very

PLEASE READ THE FINE PRINT: \Offers valid until September 2, 2014. See toyota.ca for complete details on all cash back offers. In the event of any discrepancy or inconsistency between Toyota prices, rates and/or other information contained on toyotabc.ca and that contained on toyota.ca, the latter shall prevail. Errors and omissions excepted. 2014 RAV4 Base FWD LE Automatic ZFREVT-A MSRP is $25,685 and includes $1,815 freight and pre-delivery inspection, tire levy, battery levy and air conditioning federal excise tax. *Lease example: 2.9% Lease APR for 60 months on approved credit. Semi-Monthly payment is $123 with $2850 down payment. Total Lease obligation is $17,610. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.10. **Finance example: 0.9% finance for 60 months, upon credit approval, available on 2014 RAV4 FWD LE Automatic ZFREVT-A. Applicable taxes are extra. ***Up to $1500 Non-Stackable Cash Back available on select 2014 RAV4 models. No cash back available on 2014 RAV4 Base FWD LE Automatic. 2014 Corolla CE 6M Manual BURCEM-A MSRP is $17,540 and includes $1,545 freight and pre-delivery inspection, tire levy, and battery levy. †Lease example: 2014 Corolla CE 6M with a vehicle price of $16,840 (includes $700 Toyota Canada Lease Assist, which is deducted from the negotiated selling price after taxes, and $1,545 freight/PDI) leased at 0.9% over 60 months with $0 down payment equals 120 semi-monthly payments of $85 with a total lease obligation of $10,900. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.07. ††Finance example: 0.9% finance for 60 months, upon credit approval, available on 2014 Corolla CE 6M Manual BURCEM-A. Applicable taxes are extra. 2014 Camry Sedan LE Automatic BF1FLT-C MSRP is $25,495 and includes $1,745 freight and pre-delivery inspection, tire levy, battery levy and air conditioning federal excise tax. ‡Lease example: 0.9% Lease APR for 60 months on approved credit. Semi-Monthly payment is $114 with $2,850 down payment. Total Lease obligation is $16,530. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.10. ‡‡Finance example: 0.9% finance for 84 months, upon credit approval, available on 2014 Camry Sedan LE. Applicable taxes are extra. ‡‡‡Up to $2700 Non-Stackable Cash Back available on select 2014 Camry models. $2000 non-stackable cash back available on the 2014 Camry Sedan LE Automatic BF1FLT-C. Applicable taxes are extra. Down payment, first semi-monthly payment and security deposit plus GST and PST on first payment and full down payment are due at lease inception. A security deposit is not required on approval of credit. Non-stackable Cash Back offers may not be combined with Toyota Financial Services (TFS) lease or finance rates. If you would like to lease or finance at standard TFS rates (not the above special rates), then you may be able to take advantage of Cash Customer Incentives. Vehicle must be purchased, registered and delivered by September 2, 2014. Cash incentives include taxes and are applied after taxes have been charged on the full amount of the negotiated price. See toyota.ca for complete details on all cash back offers. †††Semi-monthly lease offer available through Toyota Financial Services on approved credit to qualified retail customers on most 24, 36, 48 and 60 month leases of new and demonstrator Toyota vehicles. First semi-monthly payment due at lease inception and next monthly payment due approximately 15 days later and semi-monthly thereafter throughout the term. Toyota Financial Services will waive the final payment. Semi-monthly lease offer can be combined with most other offers excluding the First Payment Free and Encore offers. First Payment Free offer is valid for eligible TFS Lease Renewal customers only. Toyota semi-monthly lease program based on 24 payments per year, on a 60-month lease, equals 120 payments, with the final 120th payment waived by Toyota Financial Services. Competitive bi-weekly lease programs based on 26 payments per year, on a 60-month lease, equals 130 payments. Not open to employees of Toyota Canada, Toyota Financial Services or TMMC/TMMC Vehicle Purchase Plan. Some conditions apply. See your Toyota dealer for complete details. Visit your Toyota BC Dealer or www.toyotabc.ca for more details. Some conditions apply; offers are time limited and may change without notice. Dealer may lease/sell for less.

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Follow us at:

OUR FACTORY EVENT IS ON OVERTIME. ENDS SEPT 2

LIMITED MODEL SHOWN

RAV4 FWD LE $25,685 MSRP includes F+PDI

LEASE FROM *

FINANCE FROM **

OR UP TO ***

semi-monthly/60 mos.

60 mos.

CASHBACK

123 0.9% $1,500

$

SE MODEL SHOWN

CAMRY

SEDAN LE $25,495 MSRP includes F+PDI

0

FINANCE FROM ‡‡

semi-monthly/60 mos.

84 mos.

OR UP TO ‡‡‡

114 0.9% 2,700

$

$

LEASE FROM ‡

SPORT MODEL SHOWN

$

CASHBACK

COROLLA CE 6M $17,540 MSRP includes F+PDI

*

Environment There’s no denying the cabin of the Macan is a pure Porsche. It carries on the interior concept started on the Panamera. The cabin is beautiful, materials are robust, fit and finish are exemplary, See Rear-seat page 43

0.9%

semi-monthly/60 mos.

D OWN PAYMENT

Performance To effectively make the claim of being the first “sports car” in the SUV segment, the Macan needs to offer proper sporting potential. Both available engines certainly provide that character, and its suspension screams out “drive me” loud and clear. The Macan S comes equipped with a 3.0-litre twin turbo V-6 delivering 340 horsepower. This enables it to accelerate to 100 kilometres per hour in just 5.4 seconds, or 5.2 seconds with the optional Sport Chrono package. The Macan Turbo is the most powerful compact SUV on the market. It is also the first Porsche vehicle to use a 3.6-litre twin turbo V-6. This produces 400 h.p. and rockets to 100 km/h in just 4.8 seconds, or 4.6 seconds in Sport Chrono trim. The standard sevenspeed PDK transmission is excellent.Whether it’s in auto mode, or you’re changing gears using the steering wheel mounted paddles, shifts are quick and smooth. It probably goes without saying, but the Porsche Macan is not the best compact SUV in terms of off-road capabilities. To be fair, it is more than capable for most buyers who may buy this vehicle. Regardless of the road conditions, the steering is sharp, precise, and it has just the right amount of road feel — something

other automakers have not been able to replicate when the foundation utilizes electric-powered steering. This means the Macan is genuinely fun to drive and toss around. In fact, the Macan delivers a surprising level of performance well beyond what I’ve experienced with, say, the Audi SQ5 or BMW X3 (we will see how it fares against the X4). The Macan is terrific on the highway as well with a smooth, highly refined ride that masks its true potential. It is definitely designed to be driven on long journeys along the autobahns — I should know since I was driving the Macan in Germany during my evaluation periods. The Macan is easily manoeuvrable around the city, thanks to its tight turning radius allowing you to traverse around busy traffic and small parking spaces. The optional air suspension system allows the Macan to be comfortable and adaptable at the same time. In Comfort mode, the Macan handles bumps nicely, but at the push of a button, the suspension stiffens and it becomes sporty again. This also gives you the ability to raise and lower the ride height.

FINANCE FROM ††

LEASE FROM †

85

$

clean but powerful. While the Macan shares the same platform as the Audi Q5, it feels and looks like a completely different vehicle.

60 mos.

†††

FREE FIRST OR LAST PAYMENT

. Monthly or Semi-Monthly payment options . Standard or Low Kilometre Lease . No Security Deposit

JIM PATTISON TOYOTA DOWNTOWN 1290 Burrard Street (604) 682-8881 30692

JIM PATTISON TOYOTA NORTH SHORE 849 Auto Mall Drive (604) 985-0591

GRANVILLE TOYOTA VANCOUVER 8265 Fraser Street (604) 263-2711 6978

18732

LANGLEY TOYOTATOWN LANGLEY 20622 Langley Bypass (604) 530-3156

JIM PATTISON TOYOTA SURREY 15389 Guildford Drive (604) 495-4100 6701

9497

Learn why we're better than bi-weekly at: ToyotaBC.ca

OPENROAD TOYOTA RICHMOND Richmond Auto Mall (604) 273-3766

OPENROAD TOYOTA PORT MOODY 3166 St. John’s Street (604) 461-3656 7826

SEMI-MONTHLY SAVES YOU UP TO 11 PAYMENTS!

7825

DESTINATION TOYOTA BURNABY 4278 Lougheed Highway (604) 571-4350 9374

PEACE ARCH TOYOTA SOUTH SURREY 3174 King George Highway (604) 531-2916 30377

To y o t a B C . c a

SUNRISE TOYOTA ABBOTSFORD Fraser Valley Auto Mall (604) 857-2657 5736

REGENCY TOYOTA VANCOUVER 401 Kingsway (604) 879-8411 8507

WEST COAST TOYOTA PITT MEADOWS 19950 Lougheed Highway (866) 910-9543 7662

VALLEY TOYOTA CHILLIWACK 8750 Young Road (604) 792-1167 8176

SQUAMISH TOYOTA SQUAMISH 39150 Queens Way (604) 567-8888 31003

WESTMINSTER TOYOTA NEW WESTMINSTER 210 - 12th Street (604) 520-3333 8531

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Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A43

TODAY’S DRIVE

Rear-seat headroom a tad tight for taller passengers From page 42 and even though modern Porsches use a bewildering number of buttons on the console, everything is within easy reach while driving. And while the Macan feels like a sports car on the move, you get many useful features not found in a typical sports car — for example, a usable rear seat. Unlike some other compact SUVs, the Macan’s rear wheel arches are not too

intrusive, allowing for easy entry and exit. Once inside, rear passengers have plenty of legroom, and headroom is adequate. However, models with the panoramic sunroof will have a little less rear headroom, making it tight for people taller than six feet. Even though it shares a platform with the Audi Q5, its sloping roof means the Macan has slightly less total rear cargo space. But the rear seats are split 40/20/40

and lay flat when folded to help with larger items. Features The Macan S has a starting price of $54,300 and the Turbo starts at $82,200. These are actually

very competitive prices for this segment. Standard equipment includes two-zone climate control, heated front seats, heated steering wheel, heated exterior mirrors, an auto start stop system with

coasting functions, power tailgate, Bluetooth, and HomeLink. Additional features, available as options or on higher trims, include ventilated front seats, heated rear seats, front

and rear ParkAssist with colour rearview camera, automatically dimming mirrors, panoramic roof, a lane departure warning system and much more. See Macan page 44

LAUNCH INTO SUMMER EVENT

REAR 60/40 SPLIT FOLD-DOWN SEAT

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198

$

*

BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT

2.9

%*

$5,150 DOWN PAYMENT

2,000

$

OR

36-MONTH LEASE

CASH PURCHASE CREDIT ON NEW 2015 RDX MODELS SEQUENTIAL SPORTSHIFT® PADDLE SHIFTERS

LAUNCH INTO SUMMER EVENT D\/3 3\a I/U^a I:1a5 91:62a W/+X4 ZU 8a5`:5V/U+a Z3 V/Xa4 28 `:5 ZU 1Z42/W /88a/W /U) :``&5:/) +/8/-ZWZ3e%

2014 MODEL CLEAR-OUT

298 0.9

$

*

BI-WEEKLY PAYMENT

BEST NEW SUV (OVER $60,000)

f: HFE +/U V/3+\ 3\a g/+/U#4 8a5`:5V/U+a -23 3\a +W/44e /U) 0aWW&V/)a =gD CT WZXaWe +:Va4 3\a +W:4a43% BUY ONE, GET ONE

FREE!

PINKBERRY

%

*

36-MONTH LEASE

2014 LUXURY MIDSIZE UTILITY OF THE YEAR

UP TO

$6,740 DOWN PAYMENT

OR

6,250

$

ACURA NAVIGATION SYSTEM

CASH PURCHASE CREDIT ON SELECT 2014 MDX MODELS

THE 2014 MDX RECEIVED AN OVERALL 5-STAR SAFETY RATING FROM THE NATIONAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMINISTRATION (NHTSA). Government 5-Star Safety Ratings are part of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s (NHTSA’S) New Car Assessment Program (www.safercar.gov).

LUXURIOUS LEATHER-TRIMMED INTERIOR

WE ALWAYS BUY PRE-OWNED CARS

UP UNTIL AUGUST 31, 2014

860 Main Street N Park Royal Village N (604) 922-2923 Offer valid for one Pinkberry yogurt product. Limit one coupon per customer. Offer not valid for the purchase of Sugarpova candies or gift cards. Non transferable, no cash value and cannot be combined with any other offer. Valid at participating BC Pinkberry Canada stores only. Expiry date: August 31, 2014. All rights reserved.

Suggested selling price is $43,385/$56,685 on a new 2015 Acura RDX (Model TB4H3FJN)/ MDX Navi (Model YD4H4EKN) including $1,995 freight and PDI. License, insurance, registration, options, applicable fees, duties and taxes (including PST/GST) are extra. *Limited time lease offer based on a new 2015 Acura RDX (Model TB4H3FJN)/ MDX Navi (Model YD4H4EKN) available through Acura Financial Services, on approved credit. 2.9%/0.9%* lease rate for 36/36 months. Bi-weekly payment is $198/$298 (includes $1,995 freight and PDI) with $5,150/$6,740 down payment. 16,000 km allowance/year; charge of $0.15/km for excess kilometres. Total lease obligation is $20,594/$29,984. Offer includes Federal Air Conditioner Fee ($100), Tire Duty ($25) and PPSA ($21.50). License, insurance, registration, options, applicable fees, duties and taxes (including PST/GST) are extra. †$2,000 cash purchase credit available on all new 2015 Acura RDX models/ †$2,750 // $5,250 // $6,250 cash purchase credit available on select new 2014 Acura MDX models (YD4H4EKN) // (YD4H6EKN // (YD4H8EKN) and will be deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes. Cash purchase credit cannot be combined with lease, finance or other offers. Some terms/conditions apply. Models shown for illustration purposes only. Offers end September 2, 2014 but are subject to change or cancellation without notice and are only valid for BC residents at BC Acura retailers. Retailer may sell/lease for less. Retailer order/trade may be necessary. While quantities last. See your BC Acura retailer for details.


A44 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

TODAY’S DRIVE

Macan races to the front of SUV pack

From page 43

Thumbs up The Macan offers usable versatility while providing best-in-class driving character. Thumbs down The total cost of the vehicle can quickly add up with options. Not much else on this amazing vehicle!

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The bottom line The Porsche Macan

7,500 GET UP TO

$

AMOUNT AVAILABLE ON THE 2014 SONATA HEV LIMITED W/ TECH

CLEAROUT PRICING ENDS SEPTEMBER 2

ND

$ 2014 Accent “Highest Ranked Small Car in Initial Quality in the U.S.∆”

GLS model shown♦

2014

ELANTRA GT 5DR L

SELLING PRICE:

9,364

2014

ACCENT 4DR L

DESTINATION & DELIVERY FEES:

1,595

$

$

WELL EQUIPPED:

HWY: 5.3L/100 KM CITY: 7.5L/100 KM▼

ALL-IN PRICING

10,959

SELLING PRICE:

13,264

DESTINATION & DELIVERY FEES:

1,595

$

WELL EQUIPPED:

$

ALL-IN PRICING

14,859

AIR CONDITIONING • AM/FM/SIRIUSXM™/CD/MP3 6 SPEAKER AUDIO SYSTEM W/AUX/USB JACKS • ELECTRONIC STABILITY CONTROL • STABILITY MANAGEMENT

HWY: 5.8L/100 KM CITY: 8.5L/100 KM▼

SE w/Tech model shown♦

2014

TUCSON GL FWD

$

SELLING PRICE:

18,099

DESTINATION & DELIVERY FEES:

1,760

$

$

WELL EQUIPPED:

ALL-IN PRICING

19,859

BLUETOOTH® HANDS-FREE PHONE SYSTEM • ELECTRONIC STABILITY CONTROL • HEATED FRONT SEATS • REMOTE KEYLESS ENTRY WITH ALARM

HWY: 7.2L/100 KM CITY: 10.0L/100 KM▼

Limited model shown♦

2014

SANTA FE

SPORT 2.4L FWD

$

HWY: 7.3L/100 KM CITY: 10.2L/100 KM▼

SELLING PRICE:

23,064

DESTINATION & DELIVERY FEES:

1,795

$

WELL EQUIPPED:

$

ALL-IN PRICING

24,859

HEATED FRONT SEATS • AM/FM/SIRIUSXM™/CD/MP3 6 SPEAKER AUDIO SYSTEM W/AUX/USB JACKS • BLUETOOTH® HANDS-FREE PHONE SYSTEM • STABILITY MANAGEMENT

Limited model shown♦

5-year/100,000 km Comprehensive Limited Warranty†† 5-year/100,000 km Powertrain Warranty 5-year/100,000 km Emission Warranty

HyundaiCanada.com

®The Hyundai names, logos, product names, feature names, images and slogans are trademarks owned by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. ‡Cash price of $10,959/$14,859/$19,859/$24,859 available on all remaining new in stock 2014 Accent L 6-speed Manual/Elantra GT L 6-speed Manual/Tucson 2.0L GL FWD Manual/Santa Fe 2.4L FWD models. Prices include Delivery and Destination charges of $1,595/$1,595/$1,760/$1,795.Prices exclude registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, license fees, applicable taxes and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. Delivery and Destination charge includes freight, P.D.E. and a full tank of gas. ΩPrice adjustments are calculated against the vehicle’s starting price. Price adjustments of up to $4,185/$5,185/$3,400/$3,735/$7,500 available on in stock 2014 Accent 4-Door L Manual/2014 Elantra GT L 6-Speed Manual/2014 Tucson 2.0L GL Manual/2014 Santa Fe Sport 2.4L FWD/2014 Sonata Hybrid Limited with Technology. Price adjustments applied before taxes. Offer cannot be combined or used in conjunction with any other available offers. Offer is non-transferable and cannot be assigned. No vehicle trade-in required. ♦Prices of models shown: 2014 Accent 4 Door GLS/2014 Elantra GT SE w/Tech/2014 Tucson 2.4L Limited AWD/2014 Santa Fe Sport 2.0T Limited AWD are $20,394/$28,394/$35,359/$40,894. Prices include Delivery and Destination charges of $1,595/$1,595/$1,760/$1,795. Prices exclude registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, license fees, applicable taxes and dealer admin. fees of up to $499. Fees may vary by dealer. ▼Fuel consumption for new 2014 Accent 4-Door L (HWY 5.3L/100KM; City 7.5L/100KM); 2014 Elantra GT L Manual (HWY 5.8L/100KM; City 8.5L/100KM); 2014 Tucson 2.0L GL FWD Manual (HWY 7.2L/100KM; City 10.0L/100KM); 2014 Santa Fe 2.4L FWD (HWY 7.3L/100KM; City 10.2L/100KM) are based on Manufacturer Testing. Actual fuel efficiency may vary based on driving conditions and the addition of certain vehicle accessories. Fuel economy figures are used for comparison purposes only. ∆ The Hyundai Accent received the lowest number of problems per 100 vehicles among small cars in the proprietary J.D. Power 2014 Initial Quality StudySM (IQS). Study based on responses from 86,118 new-vehicle owners, measuring 239 models and measures opinions after 90 days of ownership. Propriety study results are based on experiences and perceptions of owners surveyed in February-May 2014. Your experiences may vary. Visit jdpower.com. †‡♦ΩOffers available for a limited time and subject to change or cancellation without notice. Dealer may sell for less. Inventory is limited, dealer order may be required. Visit www.hyundaicanada.com or see dealer for complete details. The SiriusXMTM name is a registered trademark of SiriusXM Satellite Radio Inc. All other trademarks and trade names are those of their respective owners. ††Hyundai’s Comprehensive Limited Warranty coverage covers most vehicle components against defects in workmanship under normal use and maintenance conditions.

visual appeal and off-road capability, check out the Evoque. What it lacks in terms of performance it makes up with trendy design and fashionable features. The Evoque is available in standard five-door trim, starting at $47,695, and a coupe version starting at $53,295. BMW X3 No SUV can match the Macan’s sporting credentials, but the X3 is the best of the rest. Like all BMWs, the X3’s interior is classy and well made. The BMW X3 has a starting price of $42,800. The soon-to-arrive X4 is a closer rival to the Macan editor@automotivepress.com

The journey is the destination From page 41

1.6L GASOLINE DIRECT INJECTION ENGINE • POWER DOOR LOCKS • VEHICLE STABILITY MANAGEMENT

$

Competitors Audi Q5 As mentioned, the Q5 is the Macan’s more economical twin. While it offers similar utility, it simply can’t match the Macan in performance. The SQ5, however, offers superb overall performance, though not quite at the Macan level. Pricing for the Q5 starts at $40,900, with the SQ5, the closest rival to the Macan, starting at $57,000. Range Rover Evoque If you are looking for something with a bit more

IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTSΩ

OUTSTANDING VALUE!

is the highest performing premium small SUV you can buy at this point in time.

Vanagon-based Westfalias are incredibly long-legged, and can be seen roaming along the Trans-Canada, or anywhere from Alaska to the Baja. Like the air-cooled Porsche, the Westfalia exists in a land where depreciation and cost seem to have no basis in reality. These are quarter-centuryold VWs, most with less than a hundred horsepower out back, but they fetch astronomical prices. If you want to buy a fully restored one from some place like GoWesty, you’ll be paying up to $90,000! The thing is, that’s not entirely crazy. If spending tens of thousands of dollars on a track toy that’ll see use no more than two weekends a month isn’t nutty, then buying a rolling house that you can park pretty much anywhere makes sense too. Most of the converted vans pack more power with either VW or Subaru engine swaps, and the all-wheeldrive Syncro variant can be turned into a genuine off-road beast. Plus there’s just something so appealing about the restless spirit

of a Westfalia, that sense that you could hit the side-roads and just drive until dark, going wherever the road takes you. If the automobile represents freedom, then this must be the ultimate distillation of that spirit: the ability to take your bed and kitchen with you. The characters you find along the way all seem to be part of one big happy family, always stopping to chat or help a stranded Westy out. There’s a network of specialist shops right across the Pacific Northwest, and you’d hardly ever find yourself stranded, assuming you do enough preventative maintenance. In a vehicle that’s a mobile camping site, it’s not the destination, but the journey. Sure, they’re slow, but when you’re already where you want to be, what’s the rush? Brendan McAleer is a freelance writer and automotive enthusiast. If you have a suggestion for a column, or would be interested in having your car club featured, please contact him at mcaleeronwheels@gmail. com. Follow Brendan on Twitter: @brendan_mcaleer.


vehicle registrations through October 2013 for large diesel pickups under 14,000 lb GVW. ¥Longevity based on IHS Automotive: Polk Canadian Vehicles In Operation data as of July 1, 2013, for model years 1994-2013 for all large pickups sold and available in Canada over the last 20 years. ≤Based on 3500/350 pickups. When properly equipped. TMThe SiriusXM logo is a registered trademark of SiriusXM Satellite Radio Inc.

ratings. Government of Canada test methods used. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on driving habits and other factors. 10.2 L/100 km (28 MPG) city and 7.1 L/100 km (40 MPG) highway on Ram 1500 4x2 model with 3.0L EcoDiesel V6 and 8-speed automatic. Ask your dealer for EnerGuide information. ••With as low as 7.1 L/100 km (40 MPG) highway. ±Best-selling based on IHS Automotive: Polk Canadian new

Edward Island. Dealer order/trade may be necessary. Example: 2014 Ram 1500 Quad Cab SXT 4x4 with a Purchase Price of $26,888 leased at 4.99% over 60 months with $0 down payment, equals 130 bi-weekly payments of $135. Down payment of $0 and applicable taxes, $475 WS registration fee and first bi-weekly payment are due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $18,425. Taxes, licence, registration, insurance, dealer charges and excess wear and tear not included. 18,000 kilometre allowance: charge of $.18 per excess kilometre. Some conditions apply. Security deposit may be required. See your dealer for complete details. §Starting from prices for vehicles shown include Consumer Cash Discounts and do not include upgrades (e.g. paint). Upgrades available for additional cost. ≠Based on 2014 EnerGuide highway fuel consumption

Skilled Trade certification. Some conditions apply. See your dealer for complete details. ♦4.99% lease financing of up to 60 months available on approved credit through WS Leasing Ltd. (a wholly owned subsidiary of Westminster Savings Credit Union) to qualified customers on applicable new select models at participating dealers in British Columbia, Ontario, New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia and Prince

deducted from the negotiated price after taxes. Eligible customers include current owners/lessees of a Dodge or Ram pickup truck or any other manufacturer’s pickup truck. The vehicle must have been owned/leased by the eligible customer and registered in their name on or before July 2, 2014. Proof of ownership/lease agreement will be required. Additional eligible customers include licensed tradesmen and those working towards

Wise customers read the fine print: *, », ♦, § The Trade In Trade Up Summer Clearance Event offers are limited time offers which apply to retail deliveries of selected new and unused models purchased from participating dealers on or after July 2, 2014. Offers subject to change and may be extended without notice. All pricing includes freight ($1,695) and excludes licence, insurance, registration, any dealer administration fees, other dealer charges and other applicable fees and taxes. Dealer trade may be necessary. Dealer may sell for less. *Consumer Cash Discounts are deducted from the negotiated price before taxes. »$1,500 Ram Truck Loyalty/Conquest Bonus Cash is available to qualified customers on the retail purchase/lease of any 2013 Ram 2500/3500 models (excluding Cab & Chassis models) and 2014 Ram 1500 (excludes Reg Cab models) and is

Friday, August 15, 2014 - North Shore News - A45

TRADE N 40 TRADE P up to

fuel-efficient truck EVER

$

2014 RAM 1500 ST

PURCHASE PRICE INCLUDES $7,000 CONSUMER CASH* AND FREIGHT.

great offers on A 2014 ram heavy duty

19,888 $

OR STEP UP TO THE 2014 RAM 1500 QUAD CAB SXT 4X4

$

PURCHASE PRICE INCLUDES $8,500 CONSUMER CASH,* $1,500 LOYALTY/CONQUEST BONUS CASH » AND FREIGHT.

26,888

135 4.99

BI-WEEKLY◆

mpg hwy ≠

SUMMER CLEAR ANCE EVENT VENTT

2014 ram 1500

Starting from price for 2014 Ram 1500 Laramie Limited Quad Cab w/ EcoDiesel shown: $ 56,745.§

trade up to b.c. s most ••

LEASE FOR

@

%

FOR 60 MONTHS WITH $0 DOWN

CANADA S BEST SELLING, LONGEST-LASTING DIESEL PICKUP ±

¥

BEST-IN-CLASs B towing

5,300 LB

m than the closest competitor ≤ more

NOW AVAILABLE

®

RAMTRUCKOFFERS.CA


A46 - North Shore News - Friday, August 15, 2014

Save BIG on our 2014s before they’re gone for good. Model: Accord Touring CR3F9EKN

Model: Pilot Touring YF4H9EKN

Starting from MSRP $25,685** includes freight and PDI

* UP TO CASH PURCHASE INCENTIVE ON SELECT 2014 MODELS

Starting from MSRP $36,685** includes freight and PDI

$3,000

CASH PURCHASE INCENTIVE ON EVERY 2014 MODEL

5 000

2014 ACCORD

$ ,

*

2014 PILOT

Model: CR-V Touring RM4H9EKNS

Model: Civic Si FB6E5EKV

Starting from MSRP $27,685** includes freight and PDI

Starting from MSRP $19,990** includes freight and PDI

* UP TO CASH C ASH PURCHASE PU INCENTIVE ON SELECT 2014 MODELS

CASH PURCHASE CHASE INCENTI INCENTIVE ON SELECT 2014 MODELS

3 000

$ ,

2 000

$ ,

2014 CR-V

*

2014 CIVIC

0.99% ON EVERY NEW 2014 HONDA. LEASE OR FINANCE

$ 5 , 000 OR

#

CASH PURCHASE INCENTIVE ON SELECT 2014 MODELS

UP TO

*

Savings you’ll flip over bchonda.com

Take the Honda test drive. It costs nothing. It proves everything.

816 Automall Drive, North Vancouver 604-984-0331

www.pacifichonda.ca

*$2,000/Upto$3,000/Upto$3,000/$5,000Hondacashpurchaseincentiveisavailableselect2014Civicmodels(2DLX,2DEX,2DEX-LNAVI,2DSi,4DLX,4DEX,4DTouringand4DSi),selectCR-Vmodels(LX2WD,EX,EX-L,Touring),select2014Accordmodels(LX,Sport,EX-L,Touring)andevery2014Pilotmodel.Hondacashpurchaseincentivewillbedeductedfromthenegotiatedpriceaftertaxesandcannotbecombinedwithspecial lease or finance offers. #Limited time lease offer based on select new 2014 Honda models through Honda Canada Finance Inc. O.A.C. Lease example based on a new 2014 Civic 4D DX 5MT model FB2E2EEX and a 48 month lease term available only through Honda Canada Finance Inc. O.A.C.: 0.99% lease APR for 48 months O.A.C. Bi-weekly payment, including freight and PDI, is $97.85. Down payment of $0.00, first bi-weekly payment, environmental fees and $0 security deposit due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $10,176.40. Taxes, license, insurance and registration are extra. 96,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.12/km for excess kilometres.†Limited time 0.99% finance offer based on select new 2014 Honda models only through Honda Canada Finance Inc. O.A.C. Finance example based on a new 2014 Civic 4D DX 5MT model FB2E2EEX and a 48 month finance term available only through Honda Canada Finance Inc. O.A.C.: $17,185 at 0.99% per annum equals $366.90 monthly for 48 months. Freight and PDI of $1,495 included. Cost of borrowing is $351.05, for a total obligation of $17,611.20. Down payment of $0.00, first monthly payment, environmental fees and $0 security deposit due at finance inception. Taxes are extra. Finance on approved credit for qualified customers only.**MSRP is $19,990/$27,685/$25,685/$36,685basedonanew2014Civic4DDX5MTFB2E4EEX/CR-VLX2WDDXRM3H3EES/Accord4DL4LX6MTCR2E3EE/PilotLX2WDYF3H2EEincluding$1,495/$1,695/$1,695/$1,695freightandPDI.*/**Pricesand/orpaymentsshowndonotincludePPSAlienregistrationandlienregisteringagent'sfees,whicharedueattimeofdelivery.Dealermaysellforless.Dealertrademayberequired.Forallofferslevies (air conditioning tax of $100 and tire/battery tax of $25), license, insurance, applicabletaxes and registration are extra. Offersvalidfrom August 7th through September 2nd, 2014 at participating Honda retailers. Offers validonly for British Columbia residentsat BC Honda Dealerslocations. Offerssubject to change or cancellation without notice. Terms and conditions apply. Visit www.bchonda.com or see your BC Honda retailer for full details.


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