SUNDAY March
9 2014
FOCUS 3
Mass distraction TRAVEL 24
Ellis Mill: grain in dust out SPORT 26
Jones races toWorld Cup L o c a l N e w s . L o c a l M at t e r s
INTERACT WITH THE NEWS at N S N E W S .C O M
West Van senior cop moves on Embattled police force losing another of its top brass JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com
Another senior officer at the West Vancouver Police Department has announced he will be leaving the department. Insp. Mike Rattray
will retire from the West Vancouver Police Department March 31. The announcement of Rattray’s retirement comes just two weeks after Chief Constable Peter Lepine announced he will be stepping away from the top
job at the department. Both departures come in the wake of a damning internal report that pointed to serious dissatisfaction by police officers and civilian employees with senior management in the police department. It also comes after some police officers went public with allegations of harassment and a culture that tolerates harassment at
the department. Lepine has said his own departure is not related to either the internal report or the harassment allegations. He also said he investigates all harassment allegations that come to his attention. Neither Lepine nor West Vancouver Mayor Michael Smith, chairman of the police board, had any direct comment on Rattray’s retirement.
Const. Jeff Palmer, spokesman for the department, read a statement from Lepine that said “employees of the West Vancouver police make their own career decisions on an ongoing basis” adding Lepine considers it “inappropriate” to comment on “any individual’s personal career See Mayor page 8
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CREEK DROWNING
Boy, 6, survived prior close call BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com
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The six-year-old boy who drowned inTaylor Creek Thursday afternoon has been identified as Vondrae Martin, a boy who nearly drowned in his grandparents’ pool a year ago and was revived by neighbours. Emergency services headed to Garibaldi Park Thursday afternoon after receiving a 9-1-1 call reporting a missing child, possibly in need of water rescue. A neighbour found him face up in the swollen and fast-flowing creek roughly 30 minutes later. B.C. Ambulance Service airlifted Vondrae to B.C. Children’s Hospital but the boy could not be revived. The news is devastating for Chris Farrell, one of the neighbours who did intense CPR for more than 10 minutes, waiting for paramedics to arrive after the
lifeless boy was found at the bottom of his grandparents’ pool on East 11th Street in North Vancouver last March 31. Saving Vondrae’s life was an especially poignant moment for Farrell. “I lost my son when he was 14 to a skateboard accident, three days after his birthday. It puts a whole life perspective on it,” Farrell said. “I was so grateful that I did save (Vondrae’s) life and on Easter Sunday, which was a miracle.” Farrell struggled to put his emotions to words. “It was sadness but also a bit of anger as well, if that makes any sense — that it happened a second time. I just felt so sad and a bit angry. It’s just a tragedy and it shocks tremendously,” he said. On Nov. 22, the B.C. Ambulance Service bestowed the service’s Vital Link award to Farrell, his See Community page 5
A2 - North Shore News - Sunday, March 9, 2014
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Sunday, March 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A3
FOCUS
a831X B-R*80/\3 F:b] V8WR\) [83*\2 .W1X A\21 B-R*80/\3 68TW*\ 5\+% iM 18 *X\*U [83 )W213-*1\) )3W/\32 -1 1X\ WR1\32\*1W8R 8[ b-3WR\ 93W/\ -R) :-6WT-R8 F8-)% F:b] :8R21% D8S :W*8R W2 2\\R WR 1X\ 6X818 -+8/\ 3WYX1 02WRY - XWYX&68.\3\) 2*86\ 18 8+2\3/\ )3W/\32 06 18 1X3\\ *W1` +T8*U2 -.-`% %3& 2"& 1.*.5 .88 29 3&& 695& 8"9293% ]g_D_E MIKE WAKEFIELD
Police ticket hundreds in month-long distracted driving blitz
Mass distraction ANNE WATSON AND BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com
Four years after B.C. banned drivers from using electronic devices behind the wheel, people are apparently still not getting the message. Police agencies around the province just wrapped a month-long distracted driving enforcement campaign that saw the North Shore’s two forces net almost three times as many offenders as last year’s effort. Officers issued 110 tickets in February compared to 40 during distracted driving month last year. “Those numbers indicate to us that there’s no shortage of people out there and if officers are looking, they’re finding them,” said Const. Jeff Palmer, West Vancouver police spokesman. West Vancouver police
and the North Vancouver RCMP made one final push on Feb. 27 to catch distracted drivers at Capilano Road and Marine Drive in North Vancouver. Four North Vancouver RCMP officers issued a total of 15 violation tickets for distracted driving, including an impaired driver, according to spokesman Cpl. Richard De Jong. “They observed an individual male talking on the phone, pulled him over and observed symptoms of impairment and alcohol,” said De Jong. The driver failed a breathalyzer test and received a 90-day driving prohibition. The departments were out from 10 a.m. to noon, using a number of strategies to catch people in the act, including plainclothes officers and a high-powered scope that allows the viewer to see a
distance of up to three city blocks. De Jong said cellphones are still the number one distraction, whether taking a call or texting, but drivers have also been caught video conferencing. “Anything that your electronic device can do is a distraction and is illegal,” said De Jong. “So whether you’re playing games to speaking on the phone to texting, doing your bank book, whatever, it’s all illegal.” West Vancouver Cpl. Jag Johal said they would do whatever it takes to get people off the phone and ensure the public is safe. “When you’re driving, it might seem silly to you that the police are out there standing on the corner, behind telephone poles, at bus stops, looking for distracted drivers; however, there is a big cost associated to it when you do get into an accident,” he said.
Twice during the month, Johal and his partner ticketed people who had been busted for the same thing just a week or two earlier. One of them reportedly responded with “Oh, not you again!” Palmer said. In another case, the driver admitted he had been given a warning for distracted driving just 45 minutes earlier. “Not only is all the education and awareness not working, but in some cases, people are getting a violation ticket and it isn’t stopping them the next week,” Palmer said. And you aren’t fooling anyone with the phone-inthe-lap technique, Palmer said, which isn’t any safer. The same goes for eating, having a dog in your lap or “personal grooming,” which are all ticketable offences. “It’s just one more way your eyes are being taken off the road,” he said. Only speeding and
impaired driving result in more fatalities on the road but it would take a sociologist to explain why talking on a cellphone doesn’t induce the same moral indignation as seeing someone behind the wheel drunk. “The statistics around injuries and fatalities where distracted driving is linked as a causal factor just continue to be startling and jarring,” said Palmer. “People really need to think carefully about it for their own safety and for the safety of everybody else on the road.” In December last year, a head-on crash on the Lions Gate Bridge led to all three lanes being closed and total gridlock on the North Shore for hours. The driver who caused the crash has since been ticketed for distracted driving. He remains at home recovering from a broken pelvis, heel, arm
and nose. “It seems like an innocuous thing if people are just on their own, (they) think it’s just a phone call or it’s just a text it’s not that serious of an issue and yet it can just go so quickly into an injury or a fatality collision,” he said. The collaboration between the two departments for the distracted driving campaign has been in effect for several years and will continue, said De Jong. However, officers are always on watch throughout the year, De Jong added. “They are constantly monitoring drivers as they are out on patrol and you just never know where or when we will show up,” he said. “Accidents are very costly and sometimes life costing consequence can happen in seconds and it just isn’t worth it.”
A4 - North Shore News - Sunday, March 9, 2014
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Gum disease is an infection in the gum tissues and bone that keep your teeth in place and is one of the leading causes of adult tooth loss. If diagnosed early, it can be treated and reversed. Studies show that 85% of people with persistent bad breath have a dental problem that is to blame. Good oral hygiene is essential in preventing bad breath. If treatment is not received, a more serious and advanced stage of gum disease may follow, leading to tooth loss. Regular dental cleanings and checkups are key factors in preventing this from happening.
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Sunday, March 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A5
5T8.\32 -R) 13W+01\2 -3\ -S-22WRY R\-3 1X\ *3\\U .X\3\ 2W,&`\-3& 8T) B8R)3-\ b-31WR )38.R\) DX032)-`% ]g_D_ MIKE WAKEFIELD
Community coping with loss From page 1 sister-in-law Margaret and Vondrae’s grandmother Jene Johnson at a ceremony at North Vancouver’s ambulance station. There is no word from North Vancouver RCMP or the B.C. Coroners Service on how Vondrae wound up in the water Thursday. “All we can say at this point is this case was reported to us and all those sorts of issues in terms of preventability issues and contributing factors, we look at but it’s way too early to go into any of that yet,” said Barb McLintock, coroner spokeswoman. The province’s Child Protection Services unit is
automatically tasked in cases like this, McLintock added. “They always have that extra layer of oversight for kids,” she said. Meanwhile, the North Vancouver school district is reaching out to the students and staff at Dorothy Lynas elementary where Vondrae was in kindergarten. “It’s individual counselling, small group counselling, classroom counselling around the issue of grief and loss. A lot of it is open communication with the students,” said Brad Baker, the district’s head of the Safe and Caring Schools program. “A lot of it is to help them understand their own emotions.That’s the biggest thing.”
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B8R)3-\ b-31WR W2 6W*103\) .W1X XW2 S81X\3 WR 1XW2 6X818 [38S a8/\S+\3 -1 - ;%:% <S+0T-R*\ *\3\S8R` 3\*8YRW^WRY 1X\ TW[\& 2-/WRY \[[8312 8[ 1X82\ .X8 *-S\ 18 XW2 3\2*0\ -[1\3 X\ R\-3T` )38.R\) WR - 688T WR b-3*X i"!Q% 5fc7 ]g_D_ MIKE WAKEFIELD This is the second time in the last year the small school has had to cope with the death of a student. In May 2013, a Grade 5 student and her father were killed by a falling boulder while they were camping near Whistler. “The atmosphere is obviously a struggle because it’s a huge loss for the school community. Unfortunately, it’s bringing up memories of the loss we had here a year
ago with a student and her father,” Baker said. “Grief is tough for anyone whether you’re an adult or a child, we’re just making sure to support each other, support the staff, too, along with the students,” he said. For parents looking for help dealing with the issue at home, Baker recommends contacting the B.C. Grief Loss Centre and Hollyburn Family Services.
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A6 - North Shore News - Sunday, March 9, 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.
Just say non Q
uebec Premier Pauline Marois is hoping to lead the Parti Québécois to a majority government on April 7, and she’s planning to do it the old-fashioned way: by appealing to the fearful and those stuck in the past. She has targeted “overt religious symbols” in her much ballyhooed charter of values, a transparent attempt to court the hearts and minds of the xenophobic. The great writer Anatole France once commented that the law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, beg in the streets, and steal loaves of bread. By the same token, Marois’ charter of values forbids Christians, Muslims and Sikhs alike from wearing hijabs, niqabs, and turbans in the public service. If Marois is successful next month, it will be because of her focus on symbols.
MAILBOX
Her focus on the tangible has been far less successful. Quebec lost 26,000 jobs in February. The province’s unemployment rate now sits at 7.8. Those numbers are a stark contrast to her lead in the polls, which currently sits at 22 points. And more than any other provincial race, Quebec’s election could carry national consequences. After its failure nearly 20 years ago, Quebec separatism is once more in the spotlight. While shifting demographics may not be in the favour of theYes side in another referendum, it is a painful, bruising process for the country as a whole. The rewards sought by those who push for an independent Quebec are mainly symbolic.We urge Quebecers to choose their symbols carefully.
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Parking violations a safety concern for disabled Dear Editor: On an almost daily basis, I experience parking violations on my street — Duchess Avenue,West Vancouver (between 15th and 16th). Firstly, and I am not sure that many of the general public are aware, but the loading zone immediately in front of my building (which has a sign posted) has a limit of 10 minutes. There are no exceptions
— and it also applies to commercial vehicles, even if they put their cones around the vehicle. I am currently disabled (using a walker) and therefore I have to rely on the handicap bus to pick me up. If there is a vehicle in this space, it is impossible and I must somehow make my way to the middle of the road — very dangerous and also causes traffic problems. Secondly,West Vancouver
bylaws state that nonresidents may only park in residential areas up to a maximum of six hours. On my street, people are parking all day and walking down to their places of employment on Marine Drive and other surrounding businesses, thereby constantly blocking parking for residents and visitors to this area. I am in contact with West Vancouver’s bylaw office and engineering
department in order to attempt to have more enforcement for offenders and also limited time parking restrictions for the remainder of the street. With the new Public
Safety Building shortly to commence construction in this area, these parking issues will unfortunately get worse before they get better. Willow Hayden West Vancouver
Lose the LoLo . . . please!
Dear Editor: I am sick and tired of the North Shore News referring to Lower Lonsdale as LoLo.
It’s not even funny, it’s not yuppy, it’s just childish. Carla Karreman North Vancouver
Mayor’s tweets during council debate disappoint Dear Editor: Anyone who has been to the City of North Vancouver council meetings has heard the mayor’s admonition that, “A council meeting is like a court of law, so there will be no clapping, booing,
cheering allowed from the gallery.” It now appears that the mayor’s “court of law” simile does not apply to himself and his team on council. On Monday night, the mayor and Coun. Keating were
CONTACTUS
caught tweeting comments about the proceedings while council was debating. This morning I checked with the Supreme Court, where trials by jury take place, and was told that a judge clearly states that no
electronic communicating devices are to be used while court was in session — not by observers, jurors or court staff. It seems our mayor’s philosophy is do as I say, not do as I do.
So, here is an admonition to Mayor Mussatto — either clean up your side of council meetings or expect some rowdy reactions from the gallery! Joan Peters North Vancouver
YOU SAID IT
“Until they’ve dealt with their liabilities like concrete asbestos pipes . . . I’m not interested in talking to them.” NorthVan City Mayor Darrell Mussatto rejects amalgamation with the district (from a March 5 news story). “We do know he wasn’t aiming at anybody because he didn’t hit anybody.” DNV library services director Jacqueline van Dyk tells of the marksman who fired on the LynnValley branch in 1971 (from a March 2 Focus story). “It does rub against the grain when I walk by the local branch and I see the sign that says Come Talk To Our Friendly Staff.” Dogwood strata chairman Bill MacMillan grouses about HSBC’s move to drop the council as a client (from a March 7 news story).
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Sunday, March 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A7
A little parent-child bonding over barf I’ve discovered a powerful weapon in the fight against the everyday annoyance of childraising, but I fear it may be one too devastating to yield. Last weekend my perpetually rambunctious three-and-a-half-year-old son woke us up in the middle of the night to tell us that there was pizza on his bed. Upon further inspection I realized that it was not actually pizza on his bed but rather ex-pizza, cheesy goodness that had seen the inside of my child but decided to go back the way it came in rather than experience the great slipand-slide out the back side. You will not believe how many layers of blankets, sheets, teddy bears and mattress one pile of pizza puke can soak through in just a few minutes. If I had left it overnight I fear it would have kept on going down and by morning a greasy film would have popped up off the coast of Madagascar. By the way, search the Internet for “Map Tunneling Tool” if you want to kill a fun few minutes finding out exactly where you would end up
Andy Prest
Laugh All YouWant if you dug a hole straight through to the opposite side of the Earth. My son spent the next 12 hours barfing his wholewheat crust guts out, and it was during this time that I made the realization I’m sure many other parents before me have made: The best way to keep a kid from driving you crazy is to keep him sick at all times. Sure, it was a bit sad to watch the little guy suffer like that, but those parenting moments where your child really needs you are the most fulfilling moments in life. “Daddy, can you feel me better?” Aw, come here little buddy. I’ve got a huge hug for you. And no, I
can’t really make you feel better, but I can sure hold you tight while you fight through this. And please try not to barf on my feet. The really great moments came a little later when the puking stopped and the recovery phase began. Now the kid was just happy to be alive and unconvulsed. There was no screaming, no kicking, no opening up daddy’s laptop to email his boss kdhcielbcyqgxb blbxw];l’;\. Instead, there were just lots of snuggles, stories and sleep. Beautiful, quiet sleep. The problem, I suppose, is that it’s a little too effective. When you have a little zombie at the breakfast table quietly moaning while poking at his oatmeal, you begin to long for those days when he was not a zombie but a werewolf devouring his food, howling at his brother and frightening his mother. There were other problems too. Like the problem I felt rumbling in my own stomach two days later as I sat happily at my desk at work. Not long after that I was sitting somewhere else entirely. And not long after that I was kneeling in that same
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spot. And then 12 hours later I was still in that horrible, horrible spot. For me, getting sick is different now that I have kids. In my own recovery phase I can’t just lie on the couch for two days re-watching all five seasons of TheWire. There are too many curious little eyes and ears around. “Daddy, why did Bodie have to blast Wallace? I thought they were fwiends?” Sorry, by the way, if you are still waiting to see The Wire and I just ruined a plot point for you. I guess I could have given you a Spoilew Alewt. It was not just me who got cut down by the
flu shrapnel my son was blasting out. Literally one minute after I finished my first prayer to the porcelain gods, my wife burst into the bathroom holding our one-year-old son who was painting the walls like a can of spray paint filled with chicken stew. Nothing makes a little baby look more grown up than seeing him perched above the bowl, tiny hands grasping at the slippery porcelain, getting rid of everything in his belly. “Rough night, buddy? I hear ya. Hit the milk pretty hard, eh? Never again.” Two days later it was all just a memory that will live on only in our minds and in that big greasy
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spot on our comfy chair. The little baby was back to banging on the table if food didn’t arrive at his mouth promptly every 2.5 seconds. And my older son was back to running around and screaming “booty head” and other ridiculous things he learned on the playground, stopping sporadically to “hug” his baby brother (the same way a boa constrictor hugs a water buffalo). And I’m back doing what I love best — helping my beautiful little family get ready for the day and then scrambling out the door to get to my office just before all hell breaks loose. aprest@nsnews.com
CAPSULE
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VOLUNTEERS WANTED Apply by 4:30 p.m. on March 17, 2014. West Vancouver is committed to seeking the advice of and tapping into the expertise of residents wishing to serve on boards and committees. As community leaders and volunteers, we value your time and have developed a structure to meet your ability to contribute. If you are a West Vancouver resident and would like to volunteer to serve on a board or committee, opportunities are available as follows: VO LU N T E E R O P P O RT U N I T I E S : • Awards Committee • Gleneagles Community Centre Advisory Committee APPLICATION FORMS: Application forms are available in the Legislative Services Department at municipal hall and on westvancouver.ca. Applicants are requested to mail, fax (604-925-7006), or deliver completed applications with a brief personal resume, to the Legislative Services Department at West Vancouver Municipal Hall, 750 17th Street, West Vancouver, BC V7V 3T3, or e-mail to committees@westvancouver.ca. QUERIES: Call Legislative Services at 604-925-7004.
A8 - North Shore News - Sunday, March 9, 2014
Teachers vote in favour of strike action
No immediate school closures, talks to continue next week JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com
Teachers across the province voted overwhelmingly in favour of strike action this week, with 89 per cent of teachers voting yes to a possible strike. B.C. Teachers Federation President Jim Iker and other union representatives said there will be no immediate action taken. “Nobody’s going to
show up for school and see pickets,” said Daniel Storms, president of the North Vancouver Teachers Association, which represents 1,200 members. Teachers have 90 days from the strike vote to start some kind job action. Storms said if progress isn’t made at the bargaining table, initial moves are likely to involve teachers refusing to do administrative work like taking part in staff meetings.
“The average parent or student isn’t even going to notice that,” he said. But teachers also raised the possibility of rotating district-by-district strikes later on. “It’s predicated on what’s going on at the table,” said Storms. “We’re hoping we have an agreement and we don’t have to do anything.” Franci Stratton, chairwoman of the North Vancouver Board of Education, said the district remains hopeful that a negotiated settlement will be reached without a strike. So far Education
53-R*W E13-118R' a831X B-R*80/\3 ;8-3) 8[ 7)0*-1W8R Minister Peter Fassbender has said the province is still seeking a 10-year deal — something teachers have rejected. The province has
offered teachers a wage deal that includes a 6.5 per cent increase over the first six years. Teachers have said they are asking for a costof-living increase, plus additional increases to put them on a similar pay scale to what teachers make in other provinces. Starting teachers on the North Shore make about $45,000, while teachers with 10 years’ experience and a master’s degree make anywhere from $74,000 in West Vancouver to $82,000 in North Vancouver. Storms said teachers in Ontario make about $10,000 more than that
and teachers in Alberta make $20,000 more. Rob Millard, president of the West Vancouver Teachers Association, which represents about 550 teachers, said teachers gave up salary increases a decade ago in order to get better working conditions including agreements about class size and composition. But the government later ripped up that part of the agreement, prompting a decade-long court battle. Teachers recently won that case, but the province has appealed. Meanwhile, talks continued at the bargaining table on Friday.
Mayor committed to making a change From page 1
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decisions.” According to a biography posted on the police department website, Rattray began his policing career with the RCMP in 1978. He first began working for the West Vancouver Police Department in 1982. Two weeks ago, at a press conference, Smith hinted he expected to see some changes in the ranks of senior officers, commenting, “The board is prepared to take further personnel actions in a very short time frame.” This week, Smith indicated Rattray’s retirement will likely not be the last change at the West Vancouver Police Department. “I committed myself to making change and I intend to meet my commitment,” he said Thursday. “We’re hoping to have the plan (to
address problems in the department) fully executed very shortly.” Smith said he would be willing to answer questions about how much the municipality is shelling out for any severance packages once all the changes are complete. “We intend to bring our police department budget in on the approved budgeted amount,” he said. According to the 2012 figures — the last figures publicly available on West Vancouver Police Department salaries — officers in senior management at the department are paid between $165,000 and $193,000 per year. Rattray will be the third officer in the senior management team to either leave the West Vancouver Police Department or announce plans to leave in the past year. Insp. Wayne Giesbrecht left the department in March 2013.
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SNOW SELFIE g-`T\\ g8.-3) -R) d`T\ <R)\328R [38S ]831T-R)' _3\% 1-U\ - 2\TK\ 8R 1X\ c`RR :-R`8R E026\R2W8R ;3W)Y\ -2 2R8. I8-12 )8.R [38S 1X\ 2U`% EX-3\ `803 fR21-Y3-S -R) D.W11\3 6W*2 8R 803 6X818 Y-TT\3` -1 R2R\.2%*8S +` 02WRY 1X\ X-2X1-Y ?R2RS8S\R12% ]g_D_ PAUL MCGRATH
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A10 - North Shore News - Sunday, March 9, 2014
Capilano United marks 100 years CHRISTINE LYON clyon@nsnews.com
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In April 1914, divinity student Arthur Douglas Pringle began holding religious services inside a little green schoolhouse in NorthVancouver. His small congregation was the foundation for what would eventually become Capilano United Church, a North Shore institution that is marking its centennial anniversary on April 27 with an open house. “It’s been a very small and simple church for many years,” says Lorraine Bentley, an event organizer and 40year member of the Capilano congregation. “We want to acknowledge that we’ve been part of the North Shore for 100 years and are still proud to be here.” In preparation for the open house, organizers are reaching out to the community for photos, memorabilia and stories that highlight the church’s history — particularly the early decades. Snapshots from weddings, baptisms, picnics or potlucks are all welcome and will be displayed at the open house. “There’s amazing stories of not just the church but the history of North Vancouver tied up in it too,” says Bentley. The church building, as it stands today, was erected
in 1925.The manse came later in 1958 followed by the Christian Education Centre in 1961. When the church was thriving, well over 200 people attended services each week. But, like many churches, numbers have dwindled over the years despite efforts to adapt and attract new faces.Today, on a typical Sunday, there are about 20 people in attendance — most of them over 50 years old. “It’s really sad,” Bentley says. “It’s just become a situation where people aren’t interested anymore in attending formal church services.” She adds, “We’re at a real crossroads right now because we don’t know if we’re going to continue by amalgamating with another congregation or whether or not we’re just really going to have to close the doors.” Despite an uncertain future, a century in the community is cause for celebration. “We’ve been there for 100 years, and we’re still there.” The open house runs from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. An informal church service will take place at 10:30, followed by lunch, tea, coffee and goodies. Everyone is welcome. Capilano United Church is at 2260 Philip Ave., North Vancouver.
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A12 - North Shore News - Sunday, March 9, 2014
BRIGHT LIGHTS
Cuts and Curls for Kitties
by Paul McGrath
g8TT`#2 2-T8R S-R-Y\3 Marcy Mohammadi -R) 8.R\3 Holly Back
7/\R1 83Y-RW^\3 Charis Kalesnikoff .W1X B_dF< *8&[80R)\3 -R) 63\2W)\R1 Karen Duncan Cuts and Curls for Kitties, a fundraising event for VOKRA (Vancouver Orphan Kitten Rescue Association), took place at North Vancouver’s Holly’s Hair Salon and neighbouring 5 Petals Nail Spa Wednesday evening. Supporters of VOKRA treated themselves to new hairstyles courtesy of Holly’s stylists and manicures at 5 Petals. Refreshments were available and prizes were awarded with proceeds from the night supporting VOKRA, a non-profit dedicated to the rescue of cats in the Lower Mainland. The no-kill charity provides more than 100 foster homes throughout the Lower Mainland. vokra.ca
B_dF< *8&[80R)\3 Maria Soroski -R) Lilian Taylor
Valerie McBride' Liz Menning -R) Maureen Parolini
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B_dF< )W3\*1832 Barb Mount Poulsen -R) Shelley Dowson
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Claire Archibald -R) Christina Tarica .W1X O ]\1-T a-WT E6- 21-[[ Alicia Lee -R) Hannah Pham
Please direct requests for event coverage to: emcphee@nsnews.com. For more Bright Lights photos go to: nsnews.com/galleries.
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YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to ACTIVE LIVING
Prolonged sitting risky business
Shaun Karp
Personal Best
Scan with the Layar app to watch a video illustrating how to perform these stretches.
STRESS-BUSTING A local counsellor offers tips to help break negative patterns. page 14 HEALTH NOTES page 20
Office workers have long known what modern exercise science has only recently proved conclusively: sitting all day is hard work! In fact, sitting for most of an eight-hour shift, especially if your seated time is then extended by hours on the couch, can literally take years off your life. It is nearly as dangerous as better-known health risks like poor diet, obesity or even smoking. In our modern world, frequent prolonged sitting is often difficult to avoid, but some of the related health risks are easier to combat than others. One of these is the tendency to develop shortened muscles, poor posture, chronic back pain and constant soreness. The way to avoid these issues, which also often lead to avoidance of daily exercise due to generalized discomfort, is to perform frequent stretches throughout your workday. In addition to intermittent walking breaks, those with sedentary jobs are
a831X EX83\ UWR\2W8T8YW21 aW*8T- D8\.2 6\3[83S2 - X-S213WRY 213\1*X' -1 T\[1' -R) - X-R)*0[[ 213\1*X' -1 3WYX1% DX\2\ -3\ -S8RY 1X\ \,\3*W2\2 1X-1 *-R +\ *8S6T\1\) 1X380YX801 1X\ .83U )-` 18 U\\6 `803 +8)` T882\ -R) S8+WT\% ]g_D_E PAUL MCGRATH recommended to set aside several small blocks of time each day to stretch, which can even be done in your chair if necessary. Most know about traditional chair stretches, like cross-body arm pulls and chair-assisted trunk rotations. Those should still be practised regularly, but here are a few others to add to your routine to help keep your whole body loose
and mobile. Handcuff Stretch Sitting on the front half of your chair, place your hands together behind your back as if wearing handcuffs. Next, sit as straight as you can while pulling your shoulders back and pushing your chest forward. Hold this pose for 20 to 30 seconds.You should feel a stretch throughout your
chest and the front of your shoulders. Hamstring Stretch Sitting on the very front edge of your chair, fully extend one leg with toes pointed to the ceiling. Keeping your back straight and maintaining good posture, move your upper body forward until you feel a stretch in the hamstring of the extended leg.
SPORTS & HEAD INJURIES
Dr. Audrey Spielmann LGH Diagnostic Radiologist
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See Stretching page 20
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Cross-Arm Back Stretch Sitting normally in your chair, place your right hand palm down on your left knee and your left hand palm down on your right knee. Next, lean slightly forward
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A14 - North Shore News - Sunday, March 9, 2014
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Beat stress by finding balance and fun Counsellor offers tips to help break negative patterns
term solution while exacerbating a long-term problem. “Sometimes we work hard and we go home and maybe we have a beer or we have two beers and watch TV and we feel that we’re handling the stress well where in actuality all we are (doing) is coping with a situation but we’re not really growing inside,” says Pugh. Bad stress can create a shutdown in our body either physically or emotionally, she adds, and we tend to produce excess adrenalin during periods of constant stress. “Our body is always releasing chemicals and hormones that are based upon fight or flight,” she says. “We get exhausted, we deplete ourselves, and then of course if it becomes chronic then we get into a depletion on a physical level in terms of heart or stomach.” That physical imbalance
JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com
Stress: It happens when we’re overwhelmed, under the weather, on the clock, in a rut, low on energy, or high on caffeine. North Shore counsellor Beverley Pugh says many people are constantly feeling preoccupied and failing to take care of themselves — both of which can be indicators of high stress. Coping with those feelings of unease is sometimes simpler than you would think, says Pugh. “People are not having enough fun. Most people are just working or have their heads down one way or another,” she explains. “We need to be fed through the lighter emotions.” However, certain coping methods may provide a short-
a831X EX83\ *80R2\TT83 ;\/\3T\` ]0YX 2-`2 6\86T\ .80T) +\ 2X8*U\) W[ 1X\` 2-. 1X\ -S80R1 8[ 1WS\ 1X\` 26\R) 8R .833` -2 86682\) 18 [\\TWRY Y3-1\[0T 83 2\\WRY .X-1#2 3\-TT` Y88) WR 1X\ S8S\R1% EX\ 3\*8SS\R)2 K/\ U\` -3\-2 8[ \/-T0-1W8R .X\R W1 *8S\2 18 +3\-UWRY R\Y-1W/\ 6-11\3R2 8[ 213\22% ]g_D_ CINDY GOODMAN is often indicative of an unbalanced lifestyle, according to Pugh. “In good stress management we want to have high active coping
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“We simply try to do too much,” she says. “We tend to go into judging ourselves in terms of whether we are good enough, what we’re doing is good enough, so that produces a lot of worry.” When it comes to breaking a pattern of stress, Pugh recommends evaluating five key areas: lifestyle, physical health, emotions, philosophy and mentality. “Where are your thoughts most of the time? Are your thoughts in the negative arena most of the time, the worrying arena?” Some people would probably be shocked if they saw the amount of time they spend on worry as opposed to feeling grateful or seeing what’s really good in the moment, says Pugh. She recommends examining the food you eat and the exercise you get, and she suggests seeking balance in your lifestyle. When it comes to emotional needs, she suggests starting with two questions: “Am I laughing? Is my emotional body being fed or am I spending a lot of time being angry?” The philosophical area can seem more nebulous, but Pugh advises devoting yourself to whatever you feel is important. “If it’s religion, if it’s spirituality, if it’s nature, just make sure that you give it focus so that you have some kind of philosophical anchor in your life,” she says. “A lot is possible. People just have to be available for it to happen and be prepared to make some kind of action commitment.”
Need Short Term Counselling? The Canadian Mental Health Association, North & West Vancouver Branch is offering short-term, low-cost, confidential, one-to-one support to adults living on the North Shore. Counselling is provided by students in our MA Internship Program. This service provides 8 individual counselling sessions with a cost of $25 per session. Participants are self-referred, please call to find out if this service is appropriate for your situation. For information and registration contact Meagan at 604-987-6959 ext. 228. We gratefully acknowledge the support of the City of North Vancouver and the District of North Vancouver through their Community Grants Program as well as financial assistance from the Province of British Columbia.
Sunday, March 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A15
1 0 2 - 1 2 4 W . F I R S T S T. N O R T H V A N C O U V E R , B C , V 7 M 3 N 3 P h : 6 0 4 9 8 7 4 4 8 8 F x : 6 0 4 9 8 7 8 2 7 2 i n f o @ n v c h a m b e r. c a w w w . n v c h a m b e r. c a
A Diverse Mix of Business
Meeting the challenges to grow and prosper in North Vancouver. Louise Ranger
The North Vancouver Chamber of Commerce is once again hosting the North Shore Business Tradeshow at the Pinnacle Hotel on March 12th. We invite you to come out and visit our exhibitors in this unique format where a variety of businesses and community groups will be in one location, for one day only. Also, join us for three free one hour business seminars with our industry experts. The Chamber is a local memberbased business association that provides a wide range of services and benefits to help
our members develop strong networks, promote their business, get informed, save on business expenses, collectively advocate and to foster economic development. Our priority at the Chamber is to help your business to grow and prosper by providing ways to build connections through our more than 40 networking events and seminars held each year, and by offering relevant support, information and tools. If you are not already a member, we invite you learn more about our events, programs and services on our website at www.nvchamber.ca.
North Vancouver is fortunate to have such a diverse and abundant mix of small, medium and large enterprises. Our waterfront industry ships Canada’s commodities to countries worldwide. Shipbuilding is back and bringing with it a need for specialized marine trades and services. These companies spend millions of dollars every year with North Vancouver companies contributing greatly to our local economy and creating jobs that provide opportunities for employees to live and work in our community. A strong economy also helps to support our
non-profit theatres, art galleries and social services. North Vancouver’s tourist attractions are some of the most popular in British Columbia and our film studios bring international attention producing some of the most watched movies and TV shows. We have an amazing local university specializing in Business and the Arts that attracts local and international students, and a growing textile manufacturing and outdoor adventure sector, just to name a few. Our diverse mix of small business, retail and services add to the vibrancy of our communities.
We invite you to join us at the North Shore Business Tradeshow at the Pinnacle Hotel on March 12th and meet some of our great local businesses and community groups all in one location. Following the trade show we will also host a fabulous networking reception. We hope to see you there. Louise Ranger President North Vancouver Chamber of Commerce
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R1345135
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1343730
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V1353980
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$54,800
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R1341179
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$35,800
C250 Coupe
Magnetite Black
B1344733
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2013 DEMO MODEL
EXT. COLOUR
STOCK #
MSRP
DEMO SALE PRICE
2013 DEMO MODEL
EXT. COLOUR
STOCK #
MSRP
DEMO SALE PRICE
C300 4MATIC Sedan
Palladium Silver
V1342980
$48,704
$38,900
E300 4MATIC Sedan
Diamond Silver
R1364895
$72,233
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C300 4MATIC Sedan
Obsidian Black
V1359049
$49,144
$38,800
E300 4MATIC Sedan
Obsidian Black
V1343813
$68,574
$52,800
C300 4MATIC Sedan
Palladium Silver
E1357335
$51,223
$41,800
E300 4MATIC Sedan
Palladium Silver
V1360324
$68,511
$52,800
C300 4MATIC Sedan
Magnetite Black
V1367905
$57,229
$44,600
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Obsidian Black
V1356259
$77,311
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2013 DEMO MODEL
EXT. COLOUR
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MSRP
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Nocturnal Black
R1368088
$42,079
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1343729
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604-331-BENZ (2369)
| northvancouver.mercedes-benz.ca
© 2014 Mercedes-Benz Canada Inc. Finance offers available only through Mercedes-Benz Financial Services on approved credit, for a limited time. Total price of listed vehicles includes Freight/PDI of $2,295(B-Class/C-Class/GLK-Class)/$2,395 (E-Class,MClass), Dealer Admin Fee of $595, A/C Levy of $100, PPSA up to $45.48 and a $25 fee covering EHF tires, filters and batteries. Additional options, fees, and taxes are extra. Vehicle license, insurance, and registration are extra. Dealer may sell for less. Offer may change without notice and cannot be combined with any other offers. *Three (3) month payment waivers are only valid on the 2013 B/C/GLK/E/M-Class demo models for vehicles delivered between March 1 to March 16, 2014. First, second, and third month payment waivers are capped at $600/$650/$750/$1,050/$1,050 per month for a maximum of 3 months. Valid only for finance programs on approved credit only through Mercedes-Benz Financial Services. See your Mercedes-Benz Vancouver Retail Dealer or book a test-drive at Mercedes-Benz customer care centre at 604-331-BENZ(2369). Offer valid between March 1 to March 16, 2014.
A16 - North Shore News - Sunday, March 9, 2014
Sunday, March 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A17
1 0 2 - 1 2 4 W . F I R S T S T. N O R T H V A N C O U V E R , B C , V 7 M 3 N 3
Ph: 604 987 4488
Fx: 604 987 8272
i n f o @ n v c h a m b e r. c a
w w w . n v c h a m b e r. c a
North Shore Business Tradeshow Wednesday, March 12, 2014 • 12-5:30PM • Pinnacle Hotel • FREE ADMISSION
BUSINESS SEMINARS FREE ADMISSION
12:00pm: Use Social Media to Aquire Customers and Win Business presented by Julio Viskovich Julio
1:30pm: Getting Customers to Shop Your Entire Retail Space presented by Natalie Tan Natalie
3:00pm: What's Your Business Worth? presented by Paul Savage Paul
Space is limited so please go to www.nvchamber.ca to register or call 604-987-4488.
1
Grouse Mountain Resorts 2 Pinnacle at the Pier 3 North Shore Neighbourhood House 4 North Shore Business Club 5 Unity Clothing 6 Maro Computer Solution 7 Toner Parts 8 Build-Pros Construction 9 Korna Natural Pet Supplies 10 & 12 Neptune Terminals 11 North Shore Outlook 13 14 Continuing Education & Executive Education Capilano University 15 North Shore ConneXions Society 16 Kids & Company 17 Lonsdale Quay Market 18 19 Margitta’s Flower Boutique 20 Paul Davis Systems of Greater Vancouver
21 The Great Canadian Landscaping Company 22 Mills Office Productivity 23 Sun Life Financial 24 Sky Spirit Studio 25 Port Metro Vancouver 26 Louis Gervais Fine Foods & Catering 27 Compunet Infotech 28 Hastings Racecourse 29 30 RollCo 31 North Shore Disability Resource Centre 32 Active Life Physiotherapy 33 London Eye Centre 34 As You Like It Media 35 Business Development Bank of Canada 36 Canadian In-home Care 37 Vancouver Canadians 38 Hollyburn Eye Clinic 39 Versapay 40 Cruiseabout Lonsdale 41 Ellison Travel & Tours 42 Excellent Cleaning Services
43 Investors Group 44 First Data 45 Friends of the NV Museum & Archives Society 46 Cheakamus Centre 47 North Vancouver Community Policing City Office 48 The Co-operators 49 Walking Animal Toys 50 Mercedes-Benz North Shore 51 Mercedes-Benz North Shore 52 Mercedes-Benz North Shore 53 Connected Woman Association 54 Zazou Salon & Spa 55 Canlan Ice Sports North Shore 56 Pacific Business Brokers 57 North Shore News 58 North Vancouver Chamber of Commerce 59 BlueShore Financial 60 Creative Display
57
EVENT SPONSORS
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Introducing Exec Ed at Cap U. Neptune Terminals (Community Contribution), Anthony Beyrouti, Venue Kings Ticket Brokers Inc. (Young Entrepreneur), Xanatos Marine Ltd. (Innovation), North Shore Sports Medicine (Service Excellence), BA Blacktop (Best Business), Ken Armstrong, Sussex Insurance Agency Inc. (Business Person of the Year
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A18 - North Shore News - Sunday, March 9, 2014
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1446485A
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2010 GLK350
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2011 GLK350
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2012 GLK350
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2013 E550 Cab.
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2014 GLK350
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2011 C350W 4Matic
M602063
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$35,900
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2010 GL350 BlueTec
R1467936A
Iridium Silver
$55,800
$53,300
2013 SLK250
V641285
Obsidian Black
$54,800
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2012 CLS550 4Matic
M636201
Diamond White
$69,900
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2011 GL350 BlueTec
M650815
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$58,800
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2011 SLK300
M553778
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$40,800
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2013 CLS550 4Matic
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2013 SLK350
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2014 CLS550 4Matic
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2011 ML350
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2011 SL550R
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2012 CL550 4Matic
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2011 ML550
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2013 SL550R
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2012 E350 Coupe
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$46,800
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2011 ML350 BlueTec
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2011 C63 AMG
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Black
$53,300
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2011 E550 Coupe
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$44,800
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2013 ML350 BlueTec
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Pearl Beige
$64,800
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2012 C63 AMG Coupe
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2013 C63 AMG
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2013 E350 4Matic Coupe
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2011 R350
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N156853
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2014 E350 4Matic Coupe
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FIT&HEALTHY BoostYour Mental Sunday, March 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A19 Advertisement
REWARD YOURSELF TODAY Register in an adult Taekwondo Program at Northshore Taekwondo
And Physical Health
If you’re like a lot of people, you spend a good part of your time exploring ways to improve and maintain your health. North Shore Taekwondo has been gaining a reputation as a centre of excellence for people 14 years of age and older looking to get and stay healthy.“We promote physical well being by focusing on cardio conditioning, flexibility, and muscle strength though our martial arts training,” says Master Tony Kook.“We also place a heavy emphasis on good mental and inner health through the practice of self defense. We discuss how, even as adults, we can put into practice the ideals of focus, confidence, setting and achieving goals, and indomitable spirit.” With a selection of classes in the morning and at night, there’s a chance for people of all levels of ability to fit it in to their schedule. “Our morning classes have a higher percentage of parents and older adults and our evening classes have a good mix of young and older adults. Since all classes have multiple instructors on the floor, every student is given the required attention
for a safe and fun workout. We offer adult programs for all levels of skill. We encourage the participation of women, men, and grandparents because everyone can benefit from the training of martial arts.”
Once considered the realm of ‘tough guys’, the benefits of martial arts training are becoming an important facet of mainstream health and fitness. What you will find is a program that focuses on your body and your mind. “Our classes emphasize the positive attributes of out students, helping them gain self-esteem and achieve higher goals. Our Black Belt Martial Arts School emphasizes discipline and the value of persisting until goals are reached. We believe in following high standards of values to bring out the good and increase the quality of life. We train both the mind and body to achieve great health. Regular training in our Adults program will result in stress reduction, improved health, and sharp focus.”
Once considered the realm of‘tough guys’, the benefits of martial arts training are becoming an important facet of mainstream health and fitness.
You know that their school has been examined and accredited.
“North Shore Taekwondo is one of the very few schools on the North Shore that is an accredited martial arts “Martial arts training is for school with Sport B.C. and everyone. Our students train for a variety of reasons: Sport Canada. We also have other locations in West some train to lose weight, Vancouver and Coquitlam reduce stress, learn self and are winners of the B.C. defense, gain flexibility, Master’s Cup for the past improve their confidence and discipline, while others three years for the best train simply to have fun and performing Taekwondo enjoy themselves. Whatever school in British Columbia.” your reason, North Shore If you’re looking for a way Taekwondo offers fun, safe, to boost your physical and and professional martial arts mental health, give them instruction for adults of all a call at 604-986-5558 or ages and skill levels.” visit them online at www. Another benefit of training at north Shore Taekwondo is their depth of certification.
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We offer adult programs for all levels of skill. We encourage the participation of women, men, children, parents and grandparents, because every one can benefit from the study of Martial Arts. Get fit, learn self defense and have fun!
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A20 - North Shore News - Sunday, March 9, 2014
LIVE Health Notes 2014 WALK IN HER SHOES CAMPAIGN RUN4ACAUSE’s Sarah Jamieson, in partnership with CARE Canada, invites residents to join her in celebrating International Women’s Day by participating in a 103kilometre relay, divided into eight legs, ranging from 10 to 12 kilometres, March 9. Participants are encouraged to fundraise for CARE. Registration: 604-789-0203, sarah@fittotrain.com. NORTH SHORE SPORT AWARDS CEREMONY A celebration of sport achievement at all levels will take place Tuesday, March
15, 1:30-3:30 p.m. at John Braithwaite Community Centre, 145 West First St., North Vancouver. $20. 604-740-0898.
11, 7:30 p.m. at Park Royal North. northvanrec.com/sportawards MASTER SHA’S SOUL HEALING GROUP Learn to self heal and heal others through simple but powerful techniques March 12 and 26, 7 p.m. at the Silk Purse Arts Centre, 1570 Argyle Ave.,West Vancouver and March 18, 7 p.m. at West Vancouver United Church, 2062 Esquimalt Ave. By donation. 604-928-7781 SPORTS AND HEAD INJURY — WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW A free seminar presented by the Lions Gate Hospital Foundation Wednesday, March 12, 7-8:30 p.m. in The Community Room
<1 T\[1' a831X EX83\ _T`S6W-R d-1X` d3\WR\3 .WTT +\ -S8RY 1X\ 6-31W*W6-R12 WR DX032)-`#2 B<EE :06 -1 h3802\ b80R1-WR% ]g_D_ EC]]cf79 <1 3WYX1' cW8R2 h-1\ g826W1-T#2 93% <0)3\` E6W\TS-RR .WTT 26\-U -+801 268312 -R) X\-) WRV03W\2' A\)R\2)-` WR c`RR B-TT\`% ]g_D_ CINDY GOODMAN at Lynn Valley Village, Lynn Valley Road and Mountain Highway, North Vancouver. Speakers include Lions Gate’s Dr. Audrey Spielmann and trauma nurse
clinician Lori Baker. 604-984-3791 VASS CUP Vancouver Adaptive Snow Sports is inviting companies and
individuals to form teams to participate in the annual VASS Cup,Thursday, March 13, 8 a.m.-2 p.m. at Grouse Mountain.Teams of three able-bodied skiers/ boarders are matched with a person with a disability to race on a slalom course with the most consistent team winning.This is a fun event and VASS’ major fundraising activity of the year. Expected guests include Olympians Steve Podborski, Diane Clement and Kathy Kreiner. vasscup.ca SPIRITUAL SOLUTIONS FOR EVERYDAY LIVING A workshop on accessing intuition to find solutions to problems and living a more joyful life Saturday, March
SNOWSHOE GRIND CHALLENGE Saturday, March 15 at 10 a.m. at Grouse Mountain. Suitable for participants of all ages and fitness abilities. Prizes for the top male and female finishers along with the first place winners in each age category. grousemountain.com CLIMB THE WALL — THE STAIRCLIMB FOR CLEAN AIR Join the B.C. Lung Association’s 48-storey stairclimb Sunday, March 16, 8:30 a.m. at Sheraton Vancouver Wall Centre, 1088 Burrard St., Vancouver. Registration is $25 and each participant must fundraise a minimum of $125. Funds raised will support lung health research, education and advocacy. 604-731-5864 stairclimb@ bclung.ca stairclimb.ca SHRED FOR THE CURE A ladies night in support of the B.C. Cancer Foundation at Mount Seymour every Monday night, 5-10 p.m. until March 31. mountseymour.com/events Compiled by Debbie Caldwell Email listings@nsnews.com
Stretching breaks are an antidote for sedentary life
From page 13
MAD HATTER’S TEA PARTY EX\WT- A\W3' ;\/\3T` ;WYY2 -R) E-3-X :X-6S-R WR/W1\ *8SS0RW1` S\S+\32 OO( 18 DX\ E0SSW1 2\RW832 638Y3-S#2 -RR0-T b-) g-11\3#2 D\- ]-31`' DX032)-`' b-3*X !Q' [38S R88R 18 i 6%S% -1 DX\ E0SSW1' !"JO :X03*XWTT :3\2% WR a831X B-R*80/\3% DX\ \/\R1 .WTT [\-103\ \R1\31-WRS\R1 -R) 63W^\2 [83 S821 WS-YWR-1W/\ X-12% DW*U\12H >O% ]g_D_ PAUL MCGRATH
and arch your back like a cat while also creating gentle outward pressure on your hands with your legs. Hold this pose for 20 to 30 seconds.You should feel this stretch throughout your shoulders, trapezii and upper back. Avoiding the dangers
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of a sedentary lifestyle requires taking consistent counteractive measures. Stretching breaks are a small part of this that can also prevent you from losing the ability to remain active when opportunities arise. Shaun Karp is a certified personal trainer. 604-420-7800 karpfitness.com
SENIORS
NV writer finds her way
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Sunday, March 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A21
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Memory Lane
Call today for a FREE consultation on all your options! <01X83 :T-0)W- :83R.-TT' .X8 X-2 60+TW2X\) 1X3\\ +88U2 2WR*\ i""J' .WTT 8[[\3 WR2WYX1 WR18 T8*-T X\38 -1 -R 06*8SWRY A\21 B-R*80/\3 gW2183W*-T E8*W\1` \/\R1% ]g_D_ CINDY GOODMAN not dead yet,” he would remind her.When cancer removed Lang from this life in 1998, the time had come to celebrate a true renaissance character in the context of his home city and province. A poem by Lang inspired the book’s title. “Curt was
always out there at the edge of everything,” says Claudia, “and of course, we’re living on the edge of the continent.” Lang was a painter, musician and writer, a boat builder and log salvager along the Ambleside, Bowen Island and Sunshine Coast
shorelines, and a high-tech developer and entrepreneur. Blessed equally with the gifts of creativity and friendship, Lang’s connections ran deep in Vancouver’s avant-garde community of the time. “Curt was always at See Author page 22
Open House Saturday, March 15th, 2014 - 1:00 pm to 4:00 pm Enjoy a retirement lifestyle that reflects everything you’ve worked for. We invite you to look into the care-free, all-inclusive retirement community of Amica at West Vancouver Offering the amenities, services and accommodations of a 5-star hotel plus the privacy, security and the freedom to do whatever your heart desires. Luxury IS affordable, at Amica at West Vancouver. Come see for yourself!
Rarely available – Beautifully appointed Two Bedroom and 2000 sq. ft. Grande Suite. See them this weekend! Come for a tour then sit back and enjoy music and refreshments.
Amica at West Vancouver • A Wellness & Vitality™ Residence 659 Clyde Avenue, West Vancouver, BC V7T 1C8 • 604.921.9181 • Luxury Independent Rental Retirement Living • All Inclusive • Full Service Fine Dining • Wellness & Vitality™ Programs • Amica VITALIS™ Assisted Living Suites & Services Canadian Owned
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Introducing Exec Ed at Cap U. Individual courses. Custom solutions.
capilanou.ca/execed
14-0258
Claudia Cornwall is on hiatus. With three books researched, written and published since 2009, the North Vancouver writer is restoring her creative spirit. Claudia continues to teach online courses on writing family memoirs, and on ethical and legal issues for writers. She also gives talks about her work. On Wednesday, March 19, Claudia will speak about her book, At theWorld’s Edge, Curt Lang’sVancouver, 1937– 1998, for West Vancouver Historical Society’s Local Heroes speakers series. Over the years, Claudia’s requests to write about her friend were declined. “I’m
A22 - North Shore News - Sunday, March 9, 2014
SENIORS Seniors Calendar
THE AIR CANADA PIONAIRS CLUB of West and North Vancouver will hold its next meeting, hosted
by Barbara Pike,Wednesday, March 12, at 10 a.m. at West Vancouver Seniors’ Activity Centre.
Moving made easier Helping you get to where you want to go. FORTRESS 1700DT SERIES
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1401 St. Georges Ave., North Vancouver 604-985-1481 • www.daviesrx.com
R e n t • S a l e S • S e Rv i c e • S i n c e 1973
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LADIES GOLF GROUP Ladies 55+ are invited to join a group that plays Wednesdays at 9 a.m. from
From page 21 the top of his form in all disciplines,” she continues. “Each of them opened and illustrated a different part of British Columbia culture and history.” Claudia interviewed Lang’s family and his fellow participants in this vibrant period of Vancouver’s history, including North Vancouver poet Jamie Reid, writer Peter Trower, artist Fred Douglas and Don MacLeod, who established Vancouver landmark MacLeod’s Books at 350 West Pender St., on the site of a bookstore owned by Lang, which he called The Radiant Tree. In 2001, due to a resounding lack of interest among publishers, the Lang manuscript was consigned to a desk drawer and Claudia
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turned to other projects. One was a commission to write about artist and teacher Jack Hardman for the Unheralded Artists of B.C. series from Mother Tongue Press. In 2010, Mona Fertig, Mother Tongue’s publisher, said she would publish Lang’s story. Claudia laughs, “This almost never happens in publishing!” Although conscious of time constraints — the manuscript had to be completed by summer 2011 for publication in the fall — she seized the opportunity to cast fresh eyes on the material and rewrote most of the book from the perspective achieved by the passage of time. Claudia is the child of Walter and Lore Maria Wiener, who made their way to Shanghai with the Jewish diaspora resulting from the rise of Nazism. Interned by the Japanese until the city was liberated in 1945, the family was among the Europeans ousted by the Communists in 1949. They left Shanghai on the converted troopship General Gordon (Claudia’s husband’s name) on Sept. 25 (the date of their daughter Talia’s birth in 1987), arriving in San Francisco on Oct. 16 (the date of their son Tom’s birth in 1985). Settling in Vancouver, they established the Lore Maria Wiener fashion design business in Kerrisdale, which continued until Claudia’s mother turned 90 in 2010. Claudia and Gordon
Cornwall, high school sweethearts, married in 1971 and achieved post-graduate degrees in philosophy. Gordon went into computers, eventually partnering with Curt Lang, and Claudia worked in the family’s fashion business. In 1985, after the Cornwalls moved to Canyon Heights in North Vancouver, Claudia became a writer, one who finds her subjects close to home. An article on North Vancouver’s Bill Cameron, developer of a communications device for disabled people, which ultimately led to the Neil Squire Society, was the first of many medically themed pieces by Claudia published by Reader’s Digest magazine. Her parents’ story inspired Claudia’s first book. Letter fromVienna: A Daughter Uncovers Her Family’s Jewish Past, received the 1996 B.C. Book Prize for Non-Fiction. In 2013, Claudia returned to the medical field with Catching Cancer, expanding the intriguing premise of microbial causes of cancer she had explored in an article for Reader’s Digest. West Vancouver Historical Society presents Claudia Cornwall on Curt Lang and his city at 7 p.m., Wednesday, March 19 at the West Vancouver Seniors’ Activity Centre. Laura Anderson works with and for seniors on the North Shore. 778-279-2275 lander1@shaw.ca
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Sunday, March 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A23
TASTE
Brunch pits pairings against each other
Tim Pawsey
Notable Potables A funny thing happened on the way to Vintners Brunch. The Hired Belly found himself sequestered in the back with three others, far away from the crowd enjoying the party. They were drinking and dining, and we were tasting and spitting. That was fine by me. Vintner’s Brunch (the near-final highlight of the Vancouver International Wine Festival) has evolved into one of the more interesting food and wine pairing competitions around. I’ve been lucky to be on the judging panel for a few years now, and it’s rewarding to see the ever increasing sophistication of the plates presented. And presented they are, arriving at the borderline
indigestible rate of one every eight minutes, for almost two hours. We don’t know which chef created the dish, only its principal ingredients and name of the wine with which it’s served. We sip, spit, taste and score, with most points allocated for the food and wine match itself. And sip, spit, taste, and score again. At the end of the day the dishes fall into three groups. The slam dunks: where the marriage or contrast of the overall dish with the wine is truly apparent and sometimes ethereal (the tastes on the plate take the wine to the next level). The good matches: These are plates that are often delicious and wines that work well, though are not exceptional pairings, perhaps with an ingredient that throws things off a bit. And last, and somewhat least, tastes and wines that for whatever reason just don’t work (although these are increasingly rare). This year’s winners were (First) Joe Fortes Seafood & Chop House, executive chef Wayne Sych; (Second) Bella Gelateria, maestro James Coleridge; (Third) Vancouver Convention Centre, executive chef Blair
Rasmussen and chef Marc Massicotte. My hunch is that Joe Fortes executive chef Wayne Synch has plenty of experience working with value-driven drops, such as Nautilus Estate Twin Islands Sauvignon Blanc 2013 ($17, 89 points). It was the perfect, clean and crisp match for his subtly, jalapeno-heated and citrus-toned scallop ceviche that’s not far removed from the prawn ceviche on the regular menu. Gelato master James Coleridge scored with a superb porty trio of Port Gelato, Port cassis mousse, and Stilton cheesecake with raspberry cassis sauce, matched with the affordable non-vintage, cassis and plum-packed Fonseca Bin 27 Reserve Port (BCLS $24.99, 90 points). Marc Massicotte’s (wine) poached egg meurette, braised lamb leg and hedgehog mushroom saute, with VCC honey, smoked Sakura pork belly crostini nicely showed off the value priced, easydrinking, smoky-spicy Jaja de Jau, Chatea de Jau Syrah 2012 ($14-$16, 89 points). I liked that none of these wines were particularly fancy (or pricey), yet the
chefs made each one of them look great. And that, in the end, is what it’s all about. An unheralded reality of the Vancouver International Wine Festival is the huge impact it has had on our dining scene. As the annual extravaganza has moved to embrace food, as well as wine, so too have our chefs and the dining public at large. Belly’s Best of the Fest Recommending top tastes from the wine festival can be a challenge, as some wines tend to disappear almost as fast as they arrive. However, you shouldn’t have a problem finding: Romain Duvernay Vacqueyras 2011. It is a serious southern Rhone blend of Grenache (65 per cent) with Syrah (20 per cent) and Mouvedre (15 per cent)that yields loads of smokey black fruit with earthy undertones and plush, smooth tannins, and great length.You get the picture. Think something red and roasted or barbecued (BCLS $28.99, 91 points).
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Tim Pawsey writes about wine for numerous publications and online as the Hired Belly at hiredbelly.com. Contact: info@hiredbelly.com.
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BEER BEARER b-31WR 7+-)W' 8.R\3 8[ h3\\R c\-[ ;3\.WRY :8%' )W26T-`2 2-S6T\2 8[ 1X\ *8S6-R`#2 [803 +\\32 )03WRY W12 Y3-R) 86\RWRY 5\+% !P -R) !O -1 c8R2)-T\ G0-`% DX\ 1.8&)-` *8SS0RW1` \/\R1 [\-103\) TW/\ S02W*' [88) [38S S-3U\1 /\R)832 -R) [3\\ +\\3 2-S6T\2% ]g_D_ MIKE WAKEFIELD
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A24 - North Shore News - Sunday, March 9, 2014
TRAVEL Series focuses on Latin America The Ferry Building Gallery is hosting three new shows by Peter Langer, inThe UltimateTraveller series, with presentations scheduled in March on the Andes and Mexico. — Impressions of Argentina:Wednesday, March 12 at 7 p.m. — Impressions of Bolivia: Wednesday, March 19 at 7 p.m. — Impressions of Oaxaca Wednesday, March 26 at 7 p.m. The shows will be taking place at the Ferry Building Gallery, 1414 Argyle Ave. in West Vancouver. Admission $15.To register call 604-925-7290. For more information visit theultimatetraveller.com.
E-R18 98SWRY8 )\ h0^S-R *X03*X' _-,-*-' b\,W*8% < [0TT 3\2183-1W8R 8[ 1X\ !N1X *\R103` *8S6T\, .-2 *8S6T\1\) WR !JJJ -R) 1X\ 388S2 1X-1 [83S\3T` *8R21W101\) 1X\ S8R-21\3` R8. X802\ 1X\ :0T103-T :\R13\ 8[ _-,-*-' .XW*X .-2 [80R)\) .W1X 1X\ X\T6 8[ _-,-*-R&+83R -31W21 53-R*W2*8 D8T\)8% ]g_D_ PETER LANGER
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LINCOLN, England— It is difficult to imagine a place whose main attractions are more conveniently laid out than those of slightly sleepy Lincoln. The town, founded by the Romans as a resort for retired legionaries nearly two thousand years ago, later became a major ecclesiastical, military and commercial centre. Its magnificent, airy cathedral and squat, hulking castle face each other across a square of ancient housing which would itself be worth coming to see in its own right. But Lincoln has much else to offer that’s neither so grand nor full of portent
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as cathedral and castle, and all within a few minutes’ walk. One of the best of these more domestic and approachable pleasures is a visit to the sturdy black cone of Ellis Mill. Unexpectedly tucked away amidst terraced housing behind the castle, the windmill once stood with eight others in open countryside along the edge of an escarpment in order to catch the best of the moving air. Built in 1798 and recently refurbished with parts scavenged from other, partly dismantled windmills across the county, it’s once again fully functional.When there’s enough wind the creaking sails mounted on its onion-shaped white cap turn eagerly into it and rotate ponderously, but majestically. “We don’t really want the sails to spin any faster than around about 12 revolutions a minute,” says Ellis Mill volunteer miller Barry Brook, “because everything is geared to that speed.Twelve revs a minute is 120 at the stone, and it’s an abrasive process, so the flours get warm. If you go too fast they get hot and spoilt.” Climbing the conical interior hand-over-hand up ladder-like stairs, Brook points out the different loading chutes for the grain on the top floor, which feed it by gravity to a choice of
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two sets of 43-centimetrethick millstones on the middle floor. He explains the skill needed to adjust the distance between the grinding stones and to calculate the right angle of the shutters within the whirring sails, controlling the wind’s effect on them and thus the overall speed of the process. Grooves on the inner surfaces of the millstones act as scissor blades, cutting and grinding the grain to a powder, which filters out
of the grooves on the lower, stationary millstone. “Grain in, dust out. It’s an instant process,” says Brook with some satisfaction, standing amidst the rumble and creak of the ancient machinery, whose wooden and metal cogs exude mixed odours of metallic oil and earthy wheat. The windmills were victims of the same 19thcentury industrialization that eventually built Britain’s metropolises, funnelled trade elsewhere and turned Lincoln into a backwater. Giant, steamdriven mills with sequences of steel rollers produced a pure-white flour that the windmills, even by introducing a harder, more finely grooved millstone from France and a sieving process to remove the bran, could not match. But bags of Ellis Mill’s tiny production of far more nutritious whole-wheat flour are now back on sale to visitors, weather permitting, and it’s hard to think of a more satisfying souvenir. If you go: For more information on Ellis Mill visit the Lincolnshire County Council webpage about it at lincolnshire.gov.uk/section. asp?docId=46233. For information on travel in England go to the Visit Britain website at visitbritain.com.
Sunday, March 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A25
See the world through the eyes of your dog When it comes to canine senses, most of the attention goes to the nose. Dogs’ incredible ability to detect the most minute amount of odour is absolutely incomprehensible to us humans. A dog can detect a teaspoon of sugar diluted in a million gallons of water — that is the size of two Olympic swimming pools! They are sniffing machines, which is probably why their eyesight gets so little attention and they are mislabeled as either colour-blind or only able to see in black and white. Well, both labels are dead wrong. Dogs do see in colour, but their vision is different than ours. An eye is able to detect colour due to the number of cones. Cones are the photoreceptors responsible for the perception of details and colour. Humans have three kinds of cones which are sensitive to red, blue or green wavelengths. Dogs have only two kinds, which are sensitive to the colours blue and greenish-yellow. This means that dogs see a colour most vividly when it is in the range of blue or green. To get a better understanding of this and how this relates to human vision, anything that we perceive as yellow, red or orange doesn’t look the same to dogs. Those colours are more pastel, less vivid than they are to
Joan Klucha
Canine Connection us. The red is not viewed as another colour — as is the case with colour blindness — but rather as a weird pastel shade of red. The reason dogs perceive colour as they do has to do with their wolf cousins and their ancestors. Being carnivores, they did not need to perceive bright colours like herbivores or omnivores need to. Animals, including humans, that ate a plantbased diet needed to be able to find food and most plants are brightly coloured. Hence our ability to detect bright colours and shapes. Dogs or wolves ate meat. Most of their prey had a coat that offered natural camouflage, or blended into their environment easily. So it was redundant for a wolf to be able to see the bright red of a pepper when it ate the meat of an earthcoloured deer. What was important was for them to be able to see the camouflaged deer moving. The ability to
detect movement is due to photoreceptors called rods. This is where dogs excel in eyesight over humans. Dogs have as many as three times more rods than humans, some breeds even more. In humans these rods are clustered in our peripheral vision, giving us the ability to detect movement best from the corners of our eyes. Dogs’ rods are much more dense than those of humans, which gives them the ability to see a fly whizzing by and snap at it with astounding acuity. But what is even more amazing is what is called “flicker-fusion” rate. This is the number of snapshots the eye takes of the world per second. We assume we see the world as a seamless stream of information, but what is actually happening is our eyes are taking a series of still pictures — 60 per second — of our surroundings, creating a moving picture within our heads. Dogs have a higher flicker-fusion rate. Their eyes take 70 or 80 snapshots per second. They literally see the world faster than we do! This is also the reason why most dogs pay no interest in (non-digital) TV. TV shows are really a sequence of still pictures sent rapidly to trick our eyes into seeing a continuous stream of information. But that’s not fast enough for dogs. When they watch non-digital
TV, they see the individual image as well as the black gaps between each image as it passes across the screen at 60 images per second. This slow-moving picture show, plus a lack of scent from the image, makes it uninteresting to most dogs. Digital TV eliminates the flicker-fusion problem and dogs may start watching TV with you. If they could talk they might have an opinion on the Luongo trade too! But where this fast flicker rate shines is when a dog is trying to catch something we have thrown. They see the tennis ball at its new location a fraction of a second before we do. Wrap your head around that one! Dogs may “see” the world through their nose, but their eyesight is just as amazing. Dogs are so cool! Joan Klucha has been working with dogs for more than 15 years in obedience, tracking and behavioural rehabilitation. Contact her through her website k9kinship.com.
WATER WASTE e8XR A\++ 6-22\2 -R W38R 38) 06 8R18 1X\ K2XWRY )8*U -1 FW*\ c-U\% A\++ -R) [\TT8. 2*0+)W/\3 g\R3` A-RY 60TT\) S83\ 1X-R LO 680R)2 8[ Y-3+-Y\ [38S 1X\ I883 8[ 1X\ [3\2X.-1\3 T-U\ WR 1X\ c8.\3 E\`S803 :8R2\3/-1W8R F\2\3/\ )03WRY - 3\*\R1 *T\-R06 \[[831% DX\ 1.8 )W/\32 [80R) S-R` +811T\2' *-R2 -R) \/\R - *806T\ 8[ K2XWRY 38)2% ]g_D_ MIKE WAKEFIELD
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A26 - North Shore News - Sunday, March 9, 2014
FIFA U-17 WOMEN’S WORLD CUP NorthVancouver’s Rachel Jones and Team Canada open against Germany March 15 and then play North Korea March 18 and Ghana March 27.The championship finals are scheduled for April 4 in San Jose, Costa Rica.
PJHL PLAYOFFS Richmond vs. NVWolf Pack Game 4,Wednesday, March 12, 7 p.m. Harry Jerome Arena
Scan this page with the Layar app to see video highlights of Team Canada at the CONCACAF U-17Women’s Championships
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE
to THE GAMES PEOPLE PLAY
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Jones races to World Cup Superstar teen’s career started with mom reading Soccer for Dummies ANDY PREST aprest@nsnews.com
Young North Vancouver soccer star Rachel Jones learned a lot from her mom, Karen, her first coach in the sport. Strangely, how to play soccer well was not one of those things. “When she was six years old they needed a coach for the peewee team,” says Karen. “I just volunteered, I didn’t know how to play soccer. I started reading all these books and I just became a motivational coach. I kept her involved and she fell in love with it.” She wasn’t learning soccer from a superstar but Rachel says she loved it nonetheless. In fact, as the coach’s talented daughter, she became somewhat of an assistant coach. “She read, like, Soccer for Dummies and was coaching the team and I was like her demo person,” says Rachel, now a 17-year-old Grade
11 student at Sutherland secondary. “She knew I was a good player but she made me work for it. It was awesome having her there beside me.” Rachel eventually moved on — “When she got to be about Grade 6, people who knew how to play soccer took over,” says Karen — and now everyone who sees her knows she’s a good player. On Saturday, March 15, Jones will hit the field as one of the star players for Team Canada at the FIFA U-17 Women’s World Cup. They’ll be in tough right off the bat against Germany, the fourth-place team from the last tournament held in 2012. The match will be one more high point in a soccer career that is really taking off. Jones, born and raised in North Vancouver, first fell in love with the game when she was four years old and her mother let her tag along with her six-year-old brother who was taking part in a
soccer program. “He had a camp and my mom just dropped me off at his camp,” says Rachel. “I just joined in.” A couple of years later mom and daughter were teaming up for a North Shore Girls squad and, by age 10 or 11, Rachel’s natural athleticism had earned her spots on local gold and metro teams. Rachel, in fact, could have been a track and field star — she set a few North Shore records in the middle distances before opting to focus her attention on soccer. In 2012 the Vancouver Whitecaps FC Girls Elite team added her on as an underage player and her game continued to blossom under the guidance of North Vancouver-based coach Jesse Symons. “That’s been huge,” says Rachel. “(Jesse) has had such an impact on my life.The way he coaches, it makes me want to work hard.This program has
been huge, it’s stepped up my game so much.” Her play stood out so much that the national team came calling, bringing her in for several youth camps. Last summer she made her debut in a national team jersey, again playing above her age group for the national U-20 team in a friendly against Norway. “It was so cool,” Rachel says of pulling on a jersey with the Maple Leaf on it. “It was crazy. I always imagined playing for Canada but it never really hit me that I was playing. It was an amazing experience.” Things got even more serious last October in Jamaica when Rachel joined the national U-17 team at the CONCACAF championships looking for one of two World Cup berths available at the tournament.The girls knew they were in tough with only two spots available and elite teams like the United States and Mexico to contend with. Canada, in fact, lost to the U.S. in round robin play but still made the playoffs and earned their ticket to the World Cup with a 5-0
semifinal thrashing of the host Jamaicans. “It was amazing,” says Rachel. “The first goal we were so pumped and then they just kept coming.We were like, we got this. It was awesome.” The U.S. team, meanwhile, lost a shootout against Mexico in the other semifinal and failed to qualify for the World Cup. Mexico then went on to beat Canada in another shootout in the final, but both teams walked away with the big tickets. Rachel, playing a speedy attacking and defending style from her outside fullback position, was named to the tournament’s all-star team. Now she’s in Costa Rica and ready to take on the world. “It’s crazy. I never thought it would actually be happening,” she says. “I remember going to CONCACAF thinking, ‘Oh yeah, this is CONCACAF, this is big.’” This, she knows, is so much bigger. “Just thinking about it — we’re going to the World Cup — it’s huge.”
Sunday, March 9, 2014 - North Shore News - A27
SPORT
North Shore stars shine at B.C. Winter Games Several North Shore athletes claimed medals at the 2014 B.C. Winter Games held in February in Mission, helping the Vancouver-Squamish zone to second spot in the medal standings. The North Shore medal winners, according to results listed at bcgames. org, were as follows: Gold ■ Basketball – Special Olympic, mixed team: Joshua Moon, Nick Richardson, Zachary Klein, Sangeon Yoo, Erol Gunenc, Tyrone Liebenberg, Pierce Burns, John Paydar, Emma Clark, all from North Vancouver. ■ Cross-country skiing, individual start juvenile girls: Anna Goodwin, North Vancouver ■ Cross-country skiing, individual sprint midget girls: Maxine Forder, West Vancouver ■ Archery, 2-day aggregate girls recurve: Emma Hughes, North Vancouver ■ Archery, match play girls recurve: Shaelin Bishop, North Vancouver ■ Freestyle skiing, slopestyle youth male: Lucas Pelletier, North Vancouver ■ Diving, 1-m boys B group: Nicholas Nepomuceno, North
Vancouver ■ Diving, 3-m boys B group: Nicholas Nepomuceno, North Vancouver ■ Diving, 1-m girls C group: Alison Komlos, West Vancouver ■ Diving, 3-m girls C group: Alison Komlos, West Vancouver ■ Badminton, mixed team: Boris Zhu and Jun Wang, West Vancouver ■ Karate, team kata girls: Alexandra Chan and Sarah Gillies, West Vancouver ■ Judo, under 66 kg men: Daniel Pyk, West Vancouver ■ Alpine skiing, giant slalom female: Ella Renzoni, West Vancouver ■ Alpine skiing, slalom female: Ella Renzoni, West Vancouver Silver ■ Curling, men’s team: Cullen Quek, Max Langlais and coach Liz Goldenberg, all from North Vancouver. ■ Gymnastics, female team: Charlotte Power, Bailee Nadin,Yoanna Nikolova and Melissa Mann, all from North Vancouver. ■ Cross-country skiing, mixed 4x2-km relay: Anna Goodwin and Jenna Sim, North Vancouver. ■ Cross-country skiing,
individual sprint juvenile girls: Jenna Sim, North Vancouver ■ Cross-country skiing, interval start sit-ski male LW 10-12: Sam Piercey, North Vancouver ■ Alpine skiing, slalompara male, silver: Mark Robertson, North Vancouver ■ Archery, match play girls recurve: Emma Hughes, North Vancouver ■ Diving, 1-m girls B group: Kaelyn Burgess, North Vancouver ■ Badminton, mixed doubles: Boris Zhu, West Vancouver Bronze ■ Judo, under 66 kg men: Ari Stan, North Vancouver. Cross-country skiing, individual start juvenile girls: Jenna Sim, North Vancouver ■ Cross-country skiing, individual start midget girls: Maxine Forder, West Vancouver ■ Speed skating, 400-m Race 2 Boys U14: Boston Mah, North Vancouver ■ Diving, 1-m girls C group: Maggie Osieja, North Vancouver ■ Diving, 3-m girls C group: Maggie Osieja, North Vancouver ■ Karate, kata girls advanced: Alexandra Chan, West Vancouver
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West Van boys, Windsor girls win basketball provincial titles The West Vancouver secondary junior boys and Windsor juvenile girls showed that the future of North Shore hoops is bright after taking home provincial titles in their respective divisions last weekend. The West Vancouver Highlanders claimed the trophy at the Telus Junior Boys Basketball Championships held Feb. 25-March 1 at the Langley Events Centre, cementing the title with a 53-50 win over Surrey’s Panorama Ridge in the final.
The Highlanders went a perfect 5-0 in the tournament, including a 49-44 win over Tamanawis, another Surrey school, in the semifinals.West Vancouver’s Ryan Fonseca was named the tournament MVP while teammate Nick Broady earned a first team all-star spot. At the Basketball BC Grade 9 (juvenile) Girls Provincial Championships the third-ranked Windsor Dukes claimed the title with a 32-27 upset over top-ranked KLO middle school from Kelowna in the
championship final played March 1 at Richmond’s H.J. Cambie secondary. Madison Legault earned MVP honours while her Windsor teammates Paige Lehto and Devon Wood earned tournament all-star honours. North Vancouver’s Seycove finished in seventh place at the tournament while Argyle was ninth, with Seycove’s Ashley Bradshaw earning an all-star spot and Argyle’s MaxineYee getting the nod as an honourable mention all-star. — Andy Prest
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SEASPAN’S NEW CRANE NEEDS A NAME One of the biggest cranes in Canada has arrived at Seaspan in North Vancouver and we need YOUR HELP naming it! Our new crane will move giant, heavy pieces around the yard, and help Seaspan build future ships for the Royal Canadian Navy and Canadian Coast Guard.
Once built, the NEW CRANE will be the HEIGHT of almost
the WIDTH of more than
Can you help? help? and the same
WEIGHT as
63 HIPPOS HIPPOS 17 GIRAFFES GIRAFFES
43 ELEPHANTS ELEPHANTS
CONTEST DETAILS: Entries must be no longer than two words AND accompanied by a brief description or explanation of the name. Each student is allowed one entry. WHO CAN ENTER: All North Vancouver School District students from Grades 4 - 7. TIMING: Contest begins March 3, 2014 at 8 am and ends Friday, March 14, 2014 at 4:30 pm. GRAND PRIZE: The winner will receive an iPad Air, presented at an official naming ceremony at Seaspan, in front of classmates and family members. The winning name will be permanently displayed on the crane.
HOW TO ENTER: Email your form to: communications@seaspan.com OR mail directly to “Communications” at 10 Pemberton Avenue, North Vancouver, BC V7P 2R1. Deadline for contest submissions is March 14, 2014. You can also download the official entry form by going to our website at: www.seaspan.com, located under the News & Media tab. ENTRY FORM - Please Print PICTURED BELOW: Once built, Vancouver Shipyard’s new 300-tonne Gantry Crane will be the largest permanent operating crane in Canada.
Student Name (first and last): ______________________________________________________________ Student Signature: * ______________________________________ Phone: ________________________ School Name: ___________________________________________ Grade: ________________________ Home address: _________________________________________________________________________ Email address: __________________________________________ Date: _________________________ ENTRY NAME - 2 words max: ______________________________________________________________ Entry Description: _______________________________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________ Parent Name: __________________________________ Signature: * _____________________________ * I hereby agree to abide by the Contest Rules and Regulations. CONTEST RULES: For full contest rules and regulations go to our website at www.seaspan.com and click on the News & Media tab.