SUNDAY August
17 2014
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Second black bear killed in WV Bruin euthanized in BPs after feasting on kitchen garbage
BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com
The Conservation Officer Service has killed a bear in West Vancouver after
it became “extremely habituated,” to surviving in human neighbourhoods — and human homes. Last week, the bear pushed its way through a
screen door on a home near Hollyburn Country Club, grabbed a bag of kitchen garbage and made its way out on its own. “If a bear goes into an occupied residence, essentially, we don’t have a lot of other options with that bear aside from destroying it,” said Sgt. Peter Busink,
conservation officer. The Conservation Officer Service trapped the bear on Wednesday night and returned Thursday to confirm with the homeowner it was the same one that invaded the kitchen. Busink said he had no choice but to shoot the bear.
“I’ve been a (conservation officer) for 10 years — all in locations that are among the highest human/wildlife conflict areas in the province,” he said. “I’ve got a lot of experience with habituated bears in traps and this was among the highest habituated bears I’ve ever seen. I thought, at
one point, it was going to lick my hand.” Busink doesn’t assign any blame to the family whose kitchen garbage was raided because the property was otherwise free of bear attractants. But the bear had clearly learned its bad See Residents page 7
NV man in critical condition after Hwy1 crash BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com
A North Vancouver man is in hospital and police are looking for a suspect and witnesses after a serious motorcycle crash on Highway 1 Thursday. The crash happened around 2 p.m., just before the westbound Lonsdale Avenue exit. According to the RCMP’s Port Mann Highway Patrol division, a pickup truck lost a ladder it was carrying and the driver pulled over and ran out onto the highway to retrieve it. As people were quickly changing lanes and slamming on their brakes to avoid the man and ladder, a 61-year-old motorcyclist lost control and hit the concrete median. The man went over the handlebars and had a hard landing See Police page 7
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A2 - North Shore News - Sunday, August 17, 2014
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Sunday, August 17, 2014 - North Shore News - A3
FOCUS
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New residency program aims to bring more family doctors to the North Shore
ANNE WATSON awatson@nsnews.com
Family doctors are scarce. According to Statistics Canada, in 2013 more than 15 per cent of Canadians or approximately 4.6 million people reported they did not have a regular medical doctor. Dr. Dean Brown, North Shore Director of the UBC Coastal Family Practice Residency, says there is a shortage of family physicians as there’s something of a shortage of physicians across the board. “I guess everyone knows about how hard it is to find a family doc these days,” says Brown. “If you don’t have one already, it can be a bit of a challenge.” UBC Family Medicine Residency is hoping to curb the shortage with a new program on the North Shore called Coastal Family Practice Residency, which aims to entice medical students into family medicine, or general practice. “Family Practice Residency is a two-year program that happens all across B.C. in order to take a young doctor who’s just graduated from medical
Family first
school and turn them into a proper family physician,” says Brown. “They’ve just got their MD degree and do two full years of training to take them to the point of being able to be licensed in the province to actually practise in family medicine.” The program, which has eight residents each year, was started by a group of physicians from the North Shore, Pemberton,Whistler, Squamish, Sunshine Coast and Powell River. Brown says the program is important not only because it addresses the need for family physicians, but also because of the enhanced partnership with some rural coastal-area communities. “The hope is to (firstly), get them additional experience and practice in working in those communities because they’re wonderful primary care learning environments,” says Brown. “Secondly, by practising there they may have a chance and an opportunity to put down roots in those communities and end up working there.” Brown says it could meet the need for more doctors in rural communities, which have an even greater need than urban centres.
The Society of Rural Physicians of Canada reports that towns with a population of less than 10,000 account for around 22 per cent of the nation’s population but are served by approximately 10 per cent of physicians. Canada’s larger rural and regional centres with populations between 10,000 and 100,000 make up almost 16 per cent of the population and have less than 12 per cent of the nation’s physicians. “When the program is fully up and running a little over a year from now, there’ll be 16 residents running around in first and second year,” he says, adding that most of the physicians’ time throughout the two years will be spent on the North Shore as well as a significant portion in the rural communities. “Of that time that they spend in the two years, 50 per cent of it needs to be in a family practice office, so basically one year out of the two years they’ll spend in family doc offices both on the North Shore and in the rural communities,” he says. “The other essentially year of the time they’ll spend mostly around Lions Gate Hospital and on the wards and in the
emergency department and so on, gaining experience in the hospital environment.” Phillip Simpson is a firstyear resident participating in the program. He says he wanted to become a family physician for a number of reasons, including his father. “I was inspired by my dad,” says Simpson. “He was a family doc for 40 years and a big source of inspiration for me.” Simpson was born and grew up in Kamloops and spent almost a decade in Vancouver. He attended Sydney Medical School at the University of Sydney in Australia and is one of four international graduates in the program. “I love medicine itself, I love that you get to develop relationships with people over a course of their lifetime and really get to know them well,” says Simpson. “I like the fact that you get to do a little bit of everything, you get to do delivery, you get to do a bit of emergency, you can do a bit of sports med, you can really tailor your practice to whatever you want.” Simpson says the people he has worked with in medicine have been “some of the most incredibly nice,
outgoing people I’ve had a chance to meet.” “I think it’s just a really good fit for me,” he says. After being interviewed in Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Swift Current and Ontario, Simpson chose the North Shore not only to be back in B.C. but also to be closer to his family and the outdoors. “I love being in the mountains, I love having access to so many outdoorsy pursuits whether it’s skiing, whether it’s going out to Deep Cove, going for a bike ride . . . It’s just a beautiful spot to live,” he says. “The other part is that most family practice programs have a two-month rural rotation but the North Shore program is a bit special in that we get four months rural, which is really great.” Simpson says although the rural rotation can be more stressful because there is less support, other residents he had spoken to emphasized how much they had learned. “It’s a chance to go to these places, which are stunning in the first place, and be able to spend a bit more time there and really get our hands dirty as family docs,” he says. The program is also
meant to entice new doctors to stay long-term in rural communities. Brown says there’s a lot of experience and background that shows if people are trained in certain communities, they end up working there. “These rural communities in particular are terrific learning environments,” says Brown. “By being there for long periods of time — hopefully for four months at least — they will perhaps get interested in situating there in the long term.” The College of Family Physicians of Canada states, “more than 90 per cent of Canadians indicate that a family physician is the first person they would turn to in order to address their medical problems,” and, “on average, one additional family physician per 10,000 people is associated with a 5.3 per cent reduction in mortality.” Brown says it is becoming increasingly clear the health care system is best when someone has a strong GP looking after him or her. “It’s important for the person’s care, it’s important for the right working of the See GP page 8
A4 - North Shore News - Sunday, August 17, 2014
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Sunday, August 17, 2014 - North Shore News - A5
ICBC refunds for overpayment
JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com
A lot of cars in B.C. defy description. Difficulties in distinguishing between vehicles like the Honda Accord LX and the EX — which is the difference between a sedan and a coupe — cost ICBC $38 million this summer. The province’s insurance provider is getting set to send out 309,000 cheques and a few apologies to customers who have been overpaying due to incorrect vehicle descriptions. Refunds range from $1 to $350, with an average of $113, not including interest. Another 132,000 customers will get letters informing them they have been underpaying but will not be asked to pay money back to ICBC. For 30 years, ICBC has used a manual process to register vehicle description, according to media advisor Adam Grossman. “When that system was first put in place it was a very effective system but over the years it’s become, like many of our systems, outdated,” he said. A decade ago there might
have been only two trim levels on any given model; now there are as many as 15 levels, according to Grossman. “For the broker, it’s become increasingly complicated to select the correct vehicle make and model.” Many cars were wrongly classified, causing some customers to pay more for optional insurance. The refunds follow two independent reviews examining 24 million insurance transactions over the last six years.To stop the problem from recurring, ICBC plans to start using a system that will identify a car’s make, model and trim level based on the manufacturer’s vehicle identification number. “The potential for error is taken out of the transaction,” Grossman said. ICBC made room for the refunds in their 2013 budget, according to Grossman. “There won’t be any impact on insurance rates for customers,” he said, explaining that insurance premiums are primarily driven by claims costs. “It’s only the optional side of our business, so only customers’ optional rates are affected,” he said.
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THE LATEST NEWS AND INFORMATION FROM THE CITY OF NORTH VANCOUVER
CityShaping Returns in September
Civic Plaza Alfresco Market
On July 21, 2014, Council considered the Official Community Plan in Bylaw form. The next step is a Public Hearing of the 2014 Official Community Plan Bylaw and Regional Context Statement. This opportunity for public input happens on September 29 at City Hall. As well, written submissions may be sent to the City Clerk at kgraham@cnv.org.
THURSDAYS FROM NOON - 6PM IN CIVIC PLAZA, 14TH STREET & LONSDALE
More information at cnv.org/CityShaping
Calling all Kids! Your Fire Department Challenges You to a Water Fight SEMISCH PARK, AUGUST 22, 6:30PM - 8PM A fire truck, friendly firefighters and a fun water fight... how’s that for the ideal night out with the kids on a hot summer night? Your North Vancouver City Fire Department will be at Semisch Park where the whole family can meet them, see the truck and equipment up close, get safety advice, enjoy activities, and watch out for the fire hose!
Find fresh farm produce, artisan breads, unique gifts and organic meats at the new Civic Plaza Alfresco Market. Stop by for locally made specialty foods, enjoy some live entertainment and grab lunch from a food truck. Details at cnv.org/AlfrescoMarket
Movie Night in the Plaza FRIDAY, AUGUST 22 AT 8:40PM IN CIVIC PLAZA The final Movie Night in the Plaza takes place on Friday, August 22. Join us for a showing of the hit movie Frozen. Come early to check out the Bike Rodeo for kids and electric vehicle demo from Emotive. Grab a blanket or lawn chair and watch a movie under the stars! Details at cnv.org/MovieNightInThePlaza
Have you Been to Saturday Summer Sessions? AUGUST 23, 6-10PM, SHIPBUILDERS’ SQUARE Free live music is happening on the waterfront! This week features award-winning artist Luisa Marshall in her spectacular Tina Turner Tribute show. Don’t miss this fun and energetic tribute to the Queen of Rock & Roll. There’s also a beer garden, food trucks and family activities. Details at cnv.org/SummerSessions
More information at cnv.org/CommunityEvents
141 WEST 14TH STREET / NORTH VANCOUVER / BC / V7M 1H9 / T 604 985 7761 / F 604 985 9417 / INFO@CNV.ORG / CNV.ORG /
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A6 - North Shore News - Sunday, August 17, 2014
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Loss of porpoise T
he time has come for the Vancouver Aquarium to let their mammals go. Facing a rising tide of public sentiment, the Vancouver Park Board recently decided the aquarium could keep their whales and the dolphins, but forbade most breeding. Presumably the cetaceans are now free to explore alternatives to mating, such as moodiness, lethargy and posting comments on Reddit. This is the worst type of compromise. If it’s wrong for a whale to be born in captivity, it’s wrong for a whale to be kept in captivity. And as SeaWorld stockholders can attest, more and more people oppose cetacean incarceration. However, before the Splash Zone runs dry, we should be mindful of what we’re losing. The aquarium is a hub for research,
MAILBOX Save-on shopper grateful for help Dear Editor: On July 11, while shopping at Save-On-Foods Park & Tilford, I slipped on some water and fell heavily. I do not appear particularly helpless, but, I suffer from fibromyalgia, and the combination of pain and acute embarrassment left me temporarily incapacitated. I was ignored by several store employees who stood near by. Fortunately, a fellow shopper immediately came to my aid, and did not leave me until she was sure I could get home on my own. I hope you are reading this, my Samaritan, because, though I did not express it in the confusion of the moment, I want you to know how much your kindness meant to me. Kerry Newman North Vancouver
and every marine maven who clicks through the turnstile to see the fishbowl’s bread and blubber attractions helps fund invaluable investigation. For nearly a year the sea stars off the coast of British Columbia have been wasting away and dying in massive numbers.The Vancouver Aquarium is one of very few scientific bodies trying to solve that mystery. The aquarium monitors depleted stocks, cares for sick and injured mammals and advocates for marine protected areas. During a time when the policies of the federal government are increasingly and aggressively anti-science, we simply cannot afford to lose the aquarium. But lose it we must. Unless the park board reverses their breeding ban, our choice is whether or not to support animal cruelty. We choose not.
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include your name, full address and telephone number. Send your letters via e-mail to: editor@nsnews.com
The North Shore News reserves the right to edit any and/or all letters to the editor based on length, clarity, legality and content.The News also reserves the right to publish any and/or all letters electronically.
Boweners need commuter bus
Dear Editor: TransLink does not care about our Bowen Island community. I asked them the other day what would it specifically take to implement a commuter bus from Bowen Island directly to downtown Vancouver. This has not been answered. Instead, TransLink says they understand Bowen’s unique situation?! It is OK for them to treat Boweners as third rate in their books. They told me even buses on the Horseshoe Bay side
take precedent to follow a schedule that mixes well for Nanaimo and Sunshine Coast residents, rather than Bowen; however, what taxes do these people pay to TransLink? Why are Bowen Islanders getting shafted again? It is bad enough our local transit shuttle bus on the island ends service at 7 p.m. If TransLink can’t provide necessary services to encourage less car usage, no wonder why overloads continue on our B.C. ferries on a daily basis. Andrew Pietrow Bowen Island
Mosque’s token gift appreciated in Norgate Dear Editor: There was a slight jolt felt on Norgate’s 15th Street when the old St. Richard’s Anglican church building was sold to a North Shore Muslim group. Well, the pulpit came down, the mini-minaret went up after some rebuilding and life went on as usual. There was a surprise the other day when a small bag of candy showed up on our doorstep. A little note was addressed to “Dear neighbour,” it
CONTACTUS
said, this was the end of Ramadan, a special month of the Islamic calendar when Muslims are obligated to share their blessings and make contributions to the community, and to share their joy with those around them. The candy was a token gift. Thank you, Masjid Ar-Rahman mosque. It won’t be forgotten. Ian Macdonald North Vancouver
YOU SAID IT
“You actually want a slow death.” Invasive plant manager Jennifer Grenz explains her preference for spraying knotweed with herbicide (from an Aug. 10 news story). “If one of those girls had gone overboard, you probably wouldn’t have seen her again.That current can suck a giant tree under and spit it out.” Boating consultant Grant Drummond discusses the yacht that plowed into a second narrows piling (from an Aug. 13 news story). “The police dog, I think, helped his decision that it was best to surrender without incident.” West Vancouver police spokesman Jeff Palmer discusses a shirtless man allegedly darting in and out of highway traffic (from an Aug. 15 news story).
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Sunday, August 17, 2014 - North Shore News - A7
Aquarium rescues 100th seal pup
STEFANIA SECCIA sseccia@nsnews.com
It’s only halfway through August, but the Vancouver Aquarium’s Marine Mammal Rescue Centre has already admitted its 100th seal pup — and it’s from North Shore waters. On Aug. 6, Steve Davis, boat master for Port Metro Vancouver, with his colleague Mark James spotted the newborn on a derelict float about to be deposited into a debris bag, near Mosquito Creek Marina, according to an aquarium media release. Almost every summer, the rescue centre will see between 100 and 150 seals. The all-time record was 174 in 2005. It’s very common for
newborn seal pups to be left alone while mothers gather food, said Lindsaye Akhurst, manager of the rescue centre, and the two men called ahead to assess if the pup on the float was in need. Davis and James often encounter lone seal pups in their line of work, and this pup looked particularly emaciated. With the help of Talia Smith, a biology graduate with the centre, the seal was safely removed from the waters and transported back for medical treatment. And like the rest admitted to the centre, this pup was given a name: Praseodymium, or Pr for short, which is following the rescue centre’s summer theme of naming rescues
after elements on the periodic table. Pr is a soft, silvery metal. In his new surrounding, Pr is being handfed nutrient-rich formula five times a day in an effort to bring him back to a healthy weight. If all goes well, Pr will be released this fall. He joins Oxygen, another seal pup rescued near Mosquito Creek Marina, at the centre. Oxygen was found on July 15 and her expected rehabilitation period is two months, which is standard for most rescues. The centre is also reminding anyone who comes across a stranded marine mammal to not approach it and keep any pets away from it, and to call the centre at 604-2587325 for assistance.
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Residents encouraged to remove bear attractants From page 1
habits with the assistance of people, he said. This is the second time this year conservation officers have been tasked with killing a bear in West Vancouver. Officers shot a bear in Glenmore in June after it ripped a garage door off its hinges and invaded
a home to get access to the freezer. To stem the number of bears killed, Busink said the public needs to report bears before they become habituated and take responsibility for the bear’s safety themselves. “Theoretically, if everyone properly secured their attractants at all times,
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More than just keeping their own homes free of garbage, fallen fruit, bird seed and other attractants, residents must be willing to contact the network if their neighbours need “educational support,” Miller said. The bear society can be reached at 604-990-BEAR (2327).
on the road, said Cpl. Garth Domm, Port Mann Highway Patrol spokesman. “He is in very critical condition right now,” Domm said on Friday morning. “He was unconscious on scene.” Police are now trying to find the driver of the pickup truck who left the scene. “A number of persons would have witnessed this. We have multiple witnesses but nobody obtained the licence plate of the pickup truck,” Domm said. Police describe the vehicle as a light-coloured pickup truck with a “bubble type” canopy. Investigators are also looking for the owner of a green Subaru who drove over the ladder, just before the collision, Domm said. The accident nearly closed off the highway as emergency crews allowed only a single lane of traffic to sneak by on the shoulder. Anyone who may have seen the crash is asked to call the Port Mann Highway Patrol detachment at 604-5269744.
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The incident is puzzling for the North Shore Black Bear Society, said Christine Miller, society president. “West Vancouver has very good enforceable bylaws and we work closely with the bylaw department and they do followup on attractant issues so you really wonder how this bear got to that point,” she said.
From page 1
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A8 - North Shore News - Sunday, August 17, 2014
GP is vital in rural communities From page 3
system because when there isn’t a good family physician, things get fragmented and lost,” he says, adding that it also adds to costs. “There are reasons from both a personal, patient point of
view and a system point of view and then those reasons are even more so perhaps in rural communities where it’s really critical that that central person be there to make everything work and make everything happen.” In rural communities,
says Brown, so much depends on the GP. “There aren’t specialists and hospitalists and others to default to if there isn’t a GP there,” he says. A good family doctor, says Brown, has to have a combination of things.
“You have to have a lot of medical knowledge and skill in the complete range of health care and that’s one of the things that makes it challenging but also really interesting,” he says. Another part of the skill set is the ability to be a
collaborator and team player, says Brown, and see things through the patient’s eyes. “The person may have quite a range of needs and as a family physician you need to be able to understand what all of those things are and who your partners are in all kinds of different areas of health care,” he says. Demographics could be TELUS STORES
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contributing to the shortage of physicians, says Brown, as physicians along with other health professionals are generally older and retiring. The Canadian Medical Association reported in 2014 that more than 38,000 physicians practise family medicine or general practice. Of those, more than 41 per cent are age 55 or older. “The demographics tell us that a large percentage of health professionals are going to retire in the next 10 years — not only physicians but others — so that’s part of it,” he says. “Another part is that it’s tough work; being a GP is not easy because again you do have to understand everything and there’s an expectation that you will be around and available for people, and a lot of doctors just find that a really hard task to meet up to.” In some ways, being in a specialty can be a little easier, explains Brown, in the sense that there may be a lot of technical, challenging information but your task is clearer. “It’s a little more narrow in scope and a little easier to get a handle on,” he says. “The third thing is money frankly, that the specialties pay more and general practice pays less.” Brown says although it is changing worldwide, including in Canada, there remains a big difference between the earnings of a specialist and a GP. “If you’re coming through medical school and you have a six-figure debt, the inclination would be to go towards a specialty perhaps and have a chance to pay that off more easily,” he says. Medical students these days have to decide what they are going to do by third or fourth year, says Brown, so they can slant themselves towards their specialty, whether it’s cardiology, urology or family practice. “They need to start thinking about that early in their medical school, which is not always the best time,” he says. “They haven’t had a chance to sample everything yet but already by third or fourth year they’re starting to choose their electives and frame themselves into the kind of doc they think they want to be.” But Brown says interests have changed and more graduates are looking to become family physicians. “The kind of interest in family practice bottomed out somewhere around 2003 and since then the interest has been rising steadily in the number of docs who want to take up family practice,” he says. “People are realizing it’s challenging and it’s fascinating.” See Interest page 9
Sunday, August 17, 2014 - North Shore News - A9
Interest in family medicine on the rise From page 8 There has also been an increased awareness at the system level, says Brown, that family practice needs to be supported. “There’s more money being put towards it,” he says. “More effort is going into it in the curriculum at the medical school.” Unemployment among specialists upon graduation has also fuelled the rise in interest, adds Brown. “There’s about a 20 per cent unemployment rate among young specialists graduating from their specialty programs because, frankly, all the positions in the big cities are full,” he says. “Specialists often feel that they can’t practise in smaller communities; it’s tough for them to practise there as well, so there’s a lot of unemployment among young specialists now.” Simpson, already in the midst of the program’s first year, says the biggest challenge so far has been the scope of family practice. “It’s a bit of a blessing but also a bit of a challenge that you can’t narrow down your focus as much as you’d like to because you have to know a little bit about everything,” he says. “Staying on top of that volume of material can be daunting and staying up to date with that many areas is going to be challenging.” The internet is also proving to be interesting — and challenging — says Simpson. “Patients with the internet these days are
then I’ll decide from there,” he says. “Long term, I definitely want to open my own practice.” Simpson says for the first few years, new family physicians will often fill in for other doctors on vacation, thereby avoiding having to commit financially to a practice right away. “It gives you a chance to get exposure to different practices, different cities, different patients and really just kind of see where you want to be and see what kind of medicine you want to practise,” says Simpson. “Often after two or three years people will eventually find a place they want to settle down and then maybe think about joining an existing practice or starting their own.” Brown says UBC is committed to what they call “a distributed approach to training,” which is taking training out of central hospitals, including Vancouver General Hospital and St. Paul’s, and into community hospitals. “Getting the training out into community hospitals and into communities is a big thrust for the faculty of medicine these days because I think it’s recognized that getting out into the real world and in different environments really provides better learning and a better impression about the care,” says Brown. “So it’s actually a conscious approach that UBC is taking to post-grad training.”
so much more educated about their illnesses than they used to be,” he says. “So being able to work with them, understand, manage their information sources and their knowledge against our own, but also be open to learning from them too.” Simpson says being a family physician is a lot less patriarchal then it used to be, where patients knew little and doctors had to explain everything. “It’s exciting because you get to learn a lot from them and it’s nice to have patients that are educated,” he says. “But it can be challenging if they’re not getting good information.” The new HOpe Centre will also be an asset to the residency program, says Simpson, as will Lions Gate Hospital’s reputation. “People I’ve talked to in health care in Vancouver who worked at Lions Gate said it’s got some of the most incredible, nice physicians,” he says. “Lions Gate for me is a perfect size; it’s not huge and crazy busy but it’s big enough that you see enough to really get a great education. So for me it’s just, everything was just tick, tick, tick — it was a perfect balance of all those things for me.” Being an international graduate, Simpson is obligated after graduation to do a two-year return service in a small community. “I’ll probably work in a small community for two years, probably just in someone else’s clinic and
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A10 - North Shore News - Sunday, August 17, 2014
BRIGHT LIGHTS
by Paul McGrath
Darwin Construction Charity Golf
Bruce Russell
Dave Eddy <P6 Richard George
1<)aWP 2.P'%)"8%W.P5' ,)]'W6]P% Oliver Webbe <P6 20E <P6 \."P6]) David Webbe Darwin Construction’s 15th Annual Charity Golf Tournament took place July 25 at Seymour Golf and Country Club with 80 golfers taking part under hot sunny afternoon skies. Participants followed up their day on the links with a cocktail reception, dinner and a silent and live auction with all proceeds benefitting the Make-A-Wish Foundation, which helps grant wishes for children with life threatening medical conditions. Darwin’s annual golf tournaments have raised more than $350,000 for the charity in the past nine years.
Brigham Jagger <P6 Wes McMillan
Simon Davie <P6 Wes Thomson
Brian Williams@ Michael Yuen <P6 Mike Perley
Michael Tufts <P6 Stathis Tsogas
Robyn Bresler@ Jennifer Franker <P6 Emily Raynor
Please direct requests for event coverage to: emcphee@nsnews.com. For more Bright Lights photos go to: nsnews.com/galleries.
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Sunday, August 17, 2014 - North Shore News - A11
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to ACTIVE LIVING
Sharing in the Properties New society set to bring community close to home
ANNE WATSON awatson@nsnews.com
Building community connections is an important goal for Sandra-Lynn Shortall. The Properties Family Hub Society, the brainchild of Shortall, is a program aimed at bringing together families and seniors in the British Properties. “It’s an opportunity for people in the Properties to gather in this community space, which we are embedding (with) a variety of programs that are intergenerational in nature,” says Shortall, district principal of early learning for the West Vancouver School District. The hub offers programs ranging from adult English language classes, fitness classes and a women’s support group, to kids yoga, youth group and a preschool, all of which Shortall says they aim to launch by the end of September. “There’s essentially something for everyone,” she says. “Whether they’re in the toddler years, preschool
1]<PP< MWR6]) <P6 *<P6)<?IBPP *Y.)%<RR []% )]<6B \.) %Y] R<"P8Y .\ %Y] C).,])%W]' /<QWRB M": *.8W]%B@ < ,).[)<Q <WQ]6 <% ,).cW6WP[ < 'Y<)]6 ',<8] %. :)WP[ ,].,R] %.[]%Y]) WP %Y] 3)W%W'Y C).,])%W]'> CME(E CINDY GOODMAN years, school age years, adult years or the senior stage of life.” After a decade of ongoing research and data collection, Shortall says they learned there were opportunities to build a “connectedness,” particularly for families with young children and seniors. “We’ve been learning
that there are pockets within our community of neighbourhoods and families that simply don’t have easy access to opportunities to really fuel their family’s learning,” says Shortall. “We’ve got a lot of people living, for example, in the Properties who geographically are not
necessarily connected due to the layout.” Other than the three schools located in the Properties there is no community space, she says. “There’s no space for families or people to connect at all, they have to travel across the highway, come down to the community
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FIT&HEALTHY A12 - North Shore News - Sunday, August 17, 2014
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Sunday, August 17, 2014 - North Shore News - A13
LIVE Health Notes YOGA AT LOUTET FARM A casual, fun class for all skill levels will take place Tuesdays, 6:30-7:30 p.m. until Aug. 26 (rain or shine) at East 14th Street and Rufus Avenue, North Vancouver. Admission by a suggested donation of $10 which will support the Edible Garden Project’s programs. OUTDOOR YOGA Free flow-inspired practices Thursdays, 6:30-7:30 p.m. until Aug. 28 in Waterfront Plaza outside the Lonsdale Quay Market, 123 Carrie Cates Court, North Vancouver. Participants must bring their own yoga mat. lonsdalequay.com BRIDGES A new support group for people living with a mental health condition meets every second Thursday, 2-3:30 p.m. at the Canadian Mental Health Association, 211-260 West Esplanade Ave., North Vancouver. Group meetings focus on recovery, wellness and self-help strategies in a safe, friendly environment. 604-987-6959 MOUNTAIN EQUIPMENT CO-OP BIG WILD CHALLENGE A four/six-kilometre trail run followed by riverside yoga Sunday, Aug. 17, 9 a.m. at Capilano River Regional Park, North Vancouver. Funds raised will help the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society to protect wilderness in B.C. bigwildchallenge.org HEALTH WORKSHOP
Dr. Ahmad Ghahary, a clinical pharmacist, will talk about bone health Saturday, Aug. 23, 2:30-4 p.m. at Parkgate library, 3675 Banff Court, North Vancouver. Learn about bone function, composition, the bone cycle, osteoporosis, goals of therapy, non-drug measures and use of medications. Registration required. 604-929-3727 INTERNATIONAL DRUG FREE ATHLETICS B.C. CLASSIC: A natural bodybuilding, physique, figure and fitness model championship Saturday, Aug. 23, 5 p.m. at Centennial Theatre, 2300 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver. $51. 604-9844484 centennialtheatre.com RUN CLINIC Mountain Equipment Co-op will host a 10-week clinic to train to run five/10-kilometres Tuesdays, Aug. 26-Oct. 28, 6:30 p.m. at 212 Brooksbank Ave., North Vancouver. $40 which includes a MEC race entry. events.mec.ca Compiled by Debbie Caldwell Email information for your non-profit, by donation or nominal fee event to listings@ nsnews.com.
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A14 - North Shore News - Sunday, August 17, 2014
LIVE
Program teaches ‘love where you live’
From page 11
strongly that they needed to create a space for families, adults and children to gather within their own community. “So this is our first attempt at that.” The hub’s located in a portable on Chartwell elementary’s grounds that, Shortall says, was formerly rented out as a private preschool. “Our school board of trustees graciously has given us this space,” she says. “They’ve given us this portable with utilities included, rent included, the whole works for us to build
this for the community and to serve the children and families.” The programs run from around 9 a.m. to about 9 p.m. Monday through Friday, and are all low cost or free. “We’ve got a high standard for sure in terms of what’s going to be offered and who’s going to be instructing and teaching,” says Shortall. “So I feel very confident saying that this is going to be a high quality society and family hub that when people do come to programs, they’ll walk away feeling satisfied and excited.” PFHS is unique in
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nature, she says, because of the shared partnership they have created between seven different agencies, which started with the Child and Family Hub established at the West Vancouver Community Centre. The partnering agencies include Hollyburn Family Services, the West Vancouver Community Centre and the District of West Vancouver, as well as the West Vancouver Memorial Library, Vancouver Coastal Health, North Shore Community Resources and North Shore Neighbourhood House. “We brought all of these community partners together and we’ve created the space where we’re fueling programming and energy in and drawing from all of our respective clientele,” she says. “So everything that’s happening in this hub is generated by all of these partners.” PFHS also has a partnership with the North Shore Multicultural Society. “We’ve got a really beautiful multicultural mix
that’s happening in the community,” says Shortall. “North Shore Multicultural Society particularly is a key one because we need to reach out to these families as they acculturate to the community.” The multicultural society’s services and goals in this project are really important as well, says Shortall, as they provide translation and cultural supports. “That’s another intricate part of this that I think makes it a bit different than anything that we’ve done in West Vancouver,” she says. Deanna Hilder, an early learning facilitator at Eagle Harbour StrongStart Centre, will be teaching at the PFHS preschool. She says the preschool, which will operate three afternoons a week, is one of several programs that are trying to create a place for families to connect and the preschool “just seems like an obvious part of that.” “(It’s) for families to be able to connect through a preschool,” says Hilder.
“And an offering for children so they can participate in an early learning program that’s in their community, in the local school providing sort of a natural transition into kindergarten and the early years of elementary school.” It’s equally important for children as well as for families to develop a connectedness, says Hilder, within the community, meeting new people and being able to actively participate. Shortall says it will be interesting in a year’s time to reflect back on what programs worked and what didn’t. “Our vision is certainly not one year sink or swim, we’re looking long term and knowing that it takes a few years for many societies to kind of really grow and flourish,” she says. “But we’re very hopeful that this is going to take off quickly because it’s one of a kind and it’s unique to that particular neighbourhood.” The hub is also open to residents across the North Shore. Other programs within West Vancouver, says Shortall, including
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the popular Hollyburn StrongStart Centre, have had to turn families away due to lack of space. “That certainly has been one that’s been sitting on my soul a lot is the fact that we have to turn families away from programs because we don’t have enough, and that speaks volumes to what we need to do as community service providers and as educators,” she says. “If we know there’s a need out there then we have to be responsive, so we’re hoping that this will be responsive to some of that need and that we’ll have more offerings for families within our community by having this Properties Family Hub in operation.” Shortall is excited about the hub and is hoping people take part in the programs. “Our theme for the Properties Family Hub is ‘connect, care, love where you live’ and that is the essence of where we want to go with this and how we want to grow it,” she says. For more information on Properties Family Hub Society, visit sd45.bc.ca/pfhs/ index.htm.
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604.985.7455
w w w. t a y l o r m o t i v e . c o m
KE A M L L A p o t S e n O R U O Y CELEBRATING 55 YEARS OF QUALITY WORKMANSHIP & TRUSTWORTHY SERVICE
PREMIER ACHIEVER AWARD FOR EXTRAORDINARY CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
Sunday, August 17, 2014 - North Shore News - A15
SENIORS
Photographer always in right place Railbird: A horseracing enthusiast, especially one who watches races at the outer rail of the track. Railbird is Ralph Bower’s nickname, or as the veteran photographer might say, it’s his moniker. There’s an aura of the old time newshound about Ralph that is also present in his photographs. In Ralph’s era, news photographs told a story. To get that story, he had
Laura Anderson
Memory Lane
to be in the right place at the right time. It isn’t easy,
but Ralph made it look that way, perhaps especially in his racing photographs. Ralph has provided some of his most memorable turf photographs to support the Hastings Jockeys Benevolent Fund. Portraits of riders, trainers, celebrity horses like the B.C.-bred champion George Royal, and human celebrities too, are on display at the new Ralph Bower Horse Racing Photo Gallery at Hastings Racecourse. The gallery
is open on race days, admission is free, the PNE is in full swing next door and all proceeds from sales of prints go directly to the fund. The man who created this visual record of the sport of kings lives just across the inlet. One block in North Vancouver’s Queensbury area has always been home for Ralph. He’s had the same neighbours for all of his 80 See Love page 16
+]%W)]6 #<P8."c]) *"P ,Y.%.[)<,Y]) +<R,Y 3.a]) %<S]' YW' %")P ,.'WP[ aW%Y .P] .\ YW' \<c.")W%] Y.)'])<8WP[ ,Y.%.[)<,Y' <"%.[)<,Y]6 :B R][]P6<)B U.8S]B' I<\O% CWP8<B@ K.YPPB I.P[6]P <P6 !WRRW] *Y.]Q<S])> (+-3 .!1# 1#' 0-*-4 -77 84 /!2!1 323'.2,+85 18 2'' 2'6'+1!83 8& )8.'4"2 7#818$4-7#2. CME(E MIKE WAKEFIELD
Seniors Calendar LINE DANCING will be available Tuesdays, 1011 a.m., during August at Mollie Nye House, 940 Lynn Valley Rd., North Vancouver. All levels welcome. Drop-in fee: non-members $4/ members $2. 604-987-5820 mollienyehouse.com MEMORIES AND MORE A 10-week social recreation program designed for those with early to mid stages of dementia (along with a family member or friend) Wednesday, Sept. 24-Nov. 26, 1:30-3:30 p.m. at North Shore Community Resources, 201-935 Marine Dr., North Vancouver. Learn ideas to help with memory loss and connect with others in a similar situation. 604982-3320 karyn.davies@nscr. bc.ca CHINESE SENIORS OUTREACH GROUP A free program to learn and connect with the community and make new friends. Languages: Mandarin,
Cantonese and English.The group meets Wednesdays, 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. at Silver Harbour Centre, 144 East 22nd St., North Vancouver. 604-982-8333 CIRCLE OF FRIENDSHIP For women 50+ offering companionship, discussions, guest speakers, caring, sharing and more, Saturdays, 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. at West Vancouver Seniors’ Activity Centre, 695 21st St. Drop-in fee: $2 for members/$3 for nonmembers. 604-925-7280 westvancouver.ca/seniors COFFEE TALK Mondays, 11 a.m.-noon at West Vancouver Seniors’ Activity Centre, 695 21st St. Free. 604-925-7280 westvancouver. ca/seniors COMMUNITY KITCHEN LUNCH Mondays and Wednesdays, 11:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. at Parkgate Community Centre, 3625 Banff Court, North Vancouver. $6 for non-members/$5 for members. 604-983-6350 myparkgate.com Compiled by Debbie Caldwell
Give yourself the gift of healthy aging If you want an active and healthy independent living experience, where you don’t just live, you thrive, then PARC Retirement Living is the place for you. Our new Independent Living+ program offers a holistic approach to Healthy Aging through it’s four pillars: nutrition, fitness, brain fitness and Wellness Nurses. Join us for lunch with Cedar Springs’ Wellness Nurse, Carolyn Tinglin, to find out more about her role in making healthy aging your gift to yourself.
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A16 - North Shore News - Sunday, August 17, 2014
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CME(E *&CCIL01 RALPH BOWER
Love kindles over game of ‘croquet’ From page 15 years and he married his high school sweetheart. Joan Clark met Ralph for the first time in elementary school and again in high school. That first time, “he offered to show me how to play croquet,” Joan remembers. “Years and years later, I found out he made it up. He didn’t know how to play croquet.” “I knew enough,” her husband chips in. From the Bower family home he hopscotched to the next house over where he and Joan raised their own family. Forty years later, the couple hopscotched again to a home they designed together. Their five grandchildren make it four generations of Bowers to
live on the north side of Burrard Inlet. “I had a path from my house through the bush right down to the water,” Ralph recalls, “until the war time houses zoomed in everywhere.” He and pals Barry and Buddy Bird — “we were the three main sailors,” Ralph explains — stashed their flatbottom rowboat and a set of paddles in the bush at the water’s edge. Climbing aboard their hand-built craft along with Ralph’s canine sidekick Pudge, a husky mix with a sporty patch over his eye, they would voyage across the inlet, a journey that took one hour going and four to return. When he wasn’t roaming around with his See Camera page 17
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Sunday, August 17, 2014 - North Shore News - A17
SENIORS
Camera captures the moment
From page 16
pals, Ralph was earning cash to pay for the first of his many cars. Summer jobs at North Vancouver gas stations taught him how to get on with people. “In those days, you’d meet the public, pump gas, get the windows, do it right.” Joan concurs. “He does have a nice way about him when he’s asking people to do things for his photographs.” Working on the North Vancouver high school newspaper, the Nova High News, snagged Ralph and pals Arv Olson and Johnny Walls summer jobs at the Vancouver Sun. Arv and Ralph worked as copyboys until a decision came down from on high: one was to be a writer and the other a photographer. Ralph wanted to be the writer. “No,” came the answer. “We’ve chosen. He’s the writer.You’re going into the dark room.” Arv went on to a distinguished career as a sports writer and author. Ralph picked up a camera and has rarely been without one ever since.
Is This You Or Someone You Know? “I’m worried about Mom.”
3.a]) a<' .P '8]P] %. 6.8"Q]P% %Y] 8.RR<,'] .\ %Y] *]8.P6 G<)).a' 3)W6[]> CME(E *&CCIL01 RALPH BOWER He doesn’t have a favourite photograph. “That’s like choosing a person in your family you love best,” he says. “I always liked working with children and animals — you never knew what they were going to do.” From a squirrel on skis to the tragedy of a collapsed bridge, from sports hero Harry Jerome to national hero Terry Fox, from Karen Magnussen to Phil Esposito, a pair of stars on skates, the moment
Ralph’s camera captures is always the right moment. Though he downplays his photographic expertise, “some were fuzzy and some weren’t,” North Vancouver’s own Ralph Bower admits, “my era was the best of times. It gave me the nice little special pictures and all these little happinesses that I had.” Laura Anderson works with and for seniors on the North Shore. 778-279-2275 lander1@shaw.ca
“I have difficulty managing in my home on my own.” “We’re all stressed by Dad’s illness.”
“I need help while I recover.”
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A18 - North Shore News - Sunday, August 17, 2014
THANK YOU!
WORK
Your support has made such a difference.
21st Annual SEYMOUR GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB CHARITY INVITATIONAL GOLF TOURNAMENT July 24, 2014 On behalf of the Seymour Golf & Country Club’s Charity Tournament Committee, we would like to thank the sponsors, donors, volunteers and participants who supported our 21st Annual Charity Invitational Golf Tournament. You helped us raise $45,000.00! All funds raised this year go directly to the Companioning Community Care program operated by Family Services of the North Shore.
GOLD SPONSORS
THIRD STREET DENTAL DR. GAIL LANDSBERGER
SILVER SPONSORS
Rowena’s Inn on the River
CHRIS EYNON
RIVERHOUSE MANAGEMENT
Jim & Lynda Morley
BRONZE SPONSORS
Brant Taylor, Senior Financial Planner Assante Financial Management Ltd.
North Shore Branches
98 Corporate Resources Group
Jan Marston and Timberwest Forest Corp
HOLE-IN-ONE SPONSORS
Buccaneer Management
#<P8."c]) CWR] 1)WcWP[ I%6> Y<' )]8]Wc]6 <P WP6"'%)B <a<)6 \.) W%' a.)S .P %Y] *]<3"' :])%YWP[ '%)"8%")]' <P6 Q<WP%]P<P8] \<8WRW%B WP G.)%Y #<P8."c])> CME(E *&CCIL01
Construction projects receive silver awards Two North Vancouver construction projects have received recognition from the Vancouver Regional Construction Association. The organization recently announced the silver award winners for its 26th Annual Awards of Excellence. Among the recipients are Vancouver Pile Driving Ltd., which earned a silver award in the General Contractor Up To $15 Million category for its work on the SeaBus berthing structures and maintenance facility
rehabilitation. Houle Electric Ltd. has received silver recognition in the Electrical Contractor Up To $2 Million category for its work on the Cargill dust mitigation program. The VRCA selects three silver award winners in most categories for their use of “innovative techniques, new materials or exceptional project management,” a press release states. One silver winner from each category will be chosen as the gold award winner during a gala dinner on Oct. 16 at the
Vancouver Convention Centre. In this year’s competition, there were 149 total entrants and 31 projects considered. Over the 26 years the competition has been in place, the value of the projects has grown, and the total value of projects considered in this year’s competition represented $1.5 billion of construction throughout B.C. Tickets for the awards gala went on sale last week and are available at vrca. bc.ca/awards. — Christine Lyon
Sunday, August 17, 2014 - North Shore News - A19
TASTE
Concrete fermenters do a fine job Tim Pawsey
Notable Potables I know some dynamos in the wine business. But few compare to the indefatigable Christine Coletta, who never ceases to amaze with what she undertakes.This week we spent a few hours together as she updated me on the latest happenings at her Haywire Winery in Summerland, also the home of Okanagan Crush Pad and Bartier Brothers. If Coletta’s name sounds familiar, as executive director of the B.C.Wine Institute (and one of the key players in founding VQA) in the 1990s she was a driving force in the industry. She later forged a successful wine-driven marketing and PR company before buying a vineyard site in 2007 and opening her own winery in 2010. Haywire’s far-reaching industry connections are already paying off. Its team (which includes former senior liquor board portfolio manager David Scholefield) is working with consultants Alberto Antonini and Pedro Parra, who are engaged in regions around the world. Their most innovative move to date has been to switch from stainless steel and barrel to concrete
fermenters, mainly at Antonini’s behest. At the time there was much ballyhoo and not a few cynics who dismissed the concrete fermenters as somewhat gimmicky. However, a few years into the program, the results are beginning to show and quite dramatically at that. Supporters like concrete for its neutral state and tendency to preserve the wine’s real character without it being masked by oak. Being porous, the concrete allows the wine to breathe just as if it were in oak but without any flavour being imparted.The spherical shape of the tanks also makes for a gentler fermentation process, they suggest. Haywire was so convinced they went out and purchased another six 4,500-litre fermenters, making Haywire the biggest “concrete” winery in Canada. Oh, and they’ve also embarked on an amphora program, with initial trials already under way. On this trip I was lucky enough to be able to taste some comparisons between 2013, where concrete was used almost exclusively, and 2012 and earlier, when it was used only partially.The results are pretty interesting. The wines that have spent time only in concrete (in particular Chardonnay) seem to present more assertive aromas, more broadly textured mouthfeel, and overall less angular, more integrated wines. While Haywire went to work implementing Antonini and Parra’s suggestions to make the most of their
home-estate terroir, they also purchased nearby 312-acre Garnet Valley Ranch. It’s a stunning tract of land that Parra’s surveying suggests could yield up to 60 acres of prime vineyards. The highest elevation vineyard site in the valley (600-680 metres), it’s virgin land and organically farmed with a gentle south-facing slope.The plan is to leave the site in as natural a state as possible with wildlife corridors already in place
and a man-made pond attracting plentiful birdlife. Here’s a few Haywire drops (with varying degrees of concrete influence) worth hunting down: Haywire Baby Pink Bub Rosé The winery’s sparkling wines have quickly become popular, and this wine is just one reason why.This cheerful, cherry, strawberry and apple-toned bubble (50/50 Chardonnay/Pinot Noir) is a refreshing summer
sipper or flexible food partner in a handy halfbottle size (375 millilitres), 90 points. Haywire Pinot NoirWhite Label 2012 (Secrest, Oliver) Bright cherry notes up front, followed by a medium-bodied palate with good structure and earthy undertones, wrapped in easy tannins (89 points, $2). Haywire Canyonview Pinot Noir 2011 One of just 12 wines
awarded in this year’s B.C. Lieutenant Governor’s Awards, from low yield, with judicious use of used French oak, dark cherry notes with some mineral hints, well-structured but very approachable (91 points, $35 from the winery (haywirewinery.com).
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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2Y)W'%WP] 2.R]%%<@ .\ M<BaW)] !WP])B@ '%<P6' :B %Y] 8.Q,<PB5' P]a 8.P8)]%] \])Q]P%])'> CME(E TIM PAWSEY
__________________________________________________________________________ Abbottsford, Aldergrove, Burnaby, Coquitlam, Delta, Fort Langley, Ladner, Langley, Maple Ridge, Mission, New Westminster, North Vancouver, Pitt Meadows, Port Coquitlam, Port Moody, Richmond, South Surrey, Surrey, Tsawwassen, Vancouver, West Vancouver, White Rock, Whistler
A20 - North Shore News - Sunday, August 17, 2014
PETS FOR ADOPTION PETS
Kittens
Gambler
Female kittens ready to find their forever 11 mo. old N. M. Setter/Pointer X. An exuberant homes. All spayed, 13 weeks old. Call or drop puppy who loves everyone. Will need obedience by the shelter to learn more! training, fenced yard and exercise. DNV ANIMAL SHELTER DORIS ORR
Sam
Friendly, quiet N. M. Weimaraner, 9 yrs old. He loves hikes and the beach. Gets along with other dogs, probably not cats. DOGWOOD
Maybelle
2 yr. old , 80 lb. family girl who enjoys playing and going for walks. She likes people and adapts well to new circumstances, children and dogs.
DOGWOOD
Dani
Lucky
Affectionate S. F. Lab/Dane X, 5 yrs old, 83 lb. who loves people but not cats. Is anxious with some dogs so has been unlucky in finding right home.
Friendly, 9 yr. old N. M. Vizsla. Loves exercise. He gets along well with other dogs and possibly cats.
DOGWOOD
DOGWOOD
Evay
Malty
Sweet little tabby who loves playing with her siblings, purring & cuddling. Recommend adopting with a sibling.
Sweet, shy Malty will kiss your face & fall asleep on your lap purring and cuddling. OK with older kids & other cats.
VOKRA
Shaemis
Quiet, sweet tuxedo cat who loves to play with his rambunctious brother SETH who SHAEMIS should be adopted with. Neither of them is shy.
VOKRA
VOKRA
Maggie
Young pup who is full of kisses and has no shortage of energy; rambunctious and in need of an experienced guardian with lots of time to help her learn some manners and help her manage her anxiety.
WEST VAN SPCA
Sugar and Spice
…and everything nice! This amazing pair has been waiting for their forever home for over 100 days. Spice (Black) is mellow, laid back and affectionate while Sugar (Calico) is spunkier, playful and really quite kitten like.
WEST VAN SPCA
• ANIMAL ADVOCATES SOCIETY www.animaladvocates.com • BOWEN ISLAND SHELTER bylawofficer@shaw.ca 604-328-5499 • CROSS OuR pAWS RESCuE www.crossourpawsrescue.com 778-885-1867 • DACHSHuND & SMALL DOg RESCuE 604-944-6907 • DISTRICT ANIMAL SHELTER www.dnv.paws.petfinder.org 604-990-3711 • DOgWOOD SpORTINg DOg RESCuE lichen-t@shaw.ca 604-926-1842 • DORIS ORR D.O.N.A.T.E. 604-987-9015 • FRIENDS OF THE ANIMALS info@fota.ca / www.fota.ca 604-541-3627 • FuR & FEATHERS RESCuE 604-719-7848
•
gREYHAVEN EXOTIC BIRD SANCTuARY www.greyhaven.bc.ca 604-878-7212 • pACIFIC ANIMAL FOuNDATION www.pacificanimal.org 604-986-8124 • RABBIT ADVOCACY gROup OF BC www.rabbitadvocacy.com 604-924-3192 • SNAppS www.snappsociety.org 778-384-3226 • VANCOuVER kITTEN RESCuE www.voVra.ca 604-731.2913 • VANCOuVER SHAR pEI RESCuE vsYr@shaw.ca vancouversharpeirescue.com • WEST VAN SpCA www.sYca.bc.ca/westvancoWver 604-922-4622 • WESTCOAST REpTILE SOCIETY www.wspcr.com 604-980-1929
Greet an unfamiliar dog with peaceful gestures “You know, your dogs are a reflection of you, down to the T.” That was a close friend talking. He was commenting on how my dogs interact with people and how they allow people into their personal space, or not. It is true, all three of my dogs are indeed a reflection of my different personas. Raider, my border collie cross, for example, is pretty easygoing. He thinks everyone is friendly but knows not everyone is a friend. He is reluctant to allow anyone to touch him without a sniff of the hand first. Zumi, my German shepherd, on the other hand, will look anyone square in the eye, sizing them up as friend or foe, daring them to touch her. It’s as if she is saying, “I am very good natured once you get past my gruff exterior. If you have the courage to touch me we may be friends, but if you lack the courage, don’t waste my time.” Piper, my German shorthaired, is just indifferent. He will approach with his tail wagging exhibiting body language that invites touching, but you can’t touch him. And he doesn’t care. He ducks away just at the last second if you try to reach out and touch him. He is saying, “Yes, I’m friendly, but I don’t care if you are, you are not part of my pack.” These behaviours tend to throw people off when
Joan Klucha
Canine Connection they meet my dogs as most people seem to think that all dogs love to be touched by anyone. This is just not the case. It doesn’t mean the dogs are anti-social or fearful of humans (although in some cases it might), it simply means they don’t want to be touched. You see, dogs are a lot like humans. Like most people, we have a wall of personal space around us that we don’t like people invading, especially strangers.We invite others into our space with body language that reflects our willingness to engage or not.We would never consider invading another person’s space without invitation, but we do it to dogs all the time and if/when they act in a way that we do not deem as acceptable, we think there is something wrong with the dog. As dog owners or simply dog lovers without dogs, we can’t take it personally but instead should recognize and respect that dogs have a greeting ritual that they share with other dogs and
Ambleside Animal Hospital
they expect us to follow the same rules! There are times when a dog does have a fear response when it comes to greeting a new person. The behaviour will resemble a dog not wanting to be touched, but also with a bit of an agitated or anxious energy. It seems restless and weary. This type of dog needs to build a new neural pathway in its brain that allows it to view people as non-threatening. When greeting a friendly yet unfamiliar dog, the best course of action is to simply ignore the dog but stay in the area. This gives the dog a chance to size you up, since you are not trying to invade their space. That simple act of indifference from you can make all the difference to the dog you are wishing to say hello to. More often than not, that dog will turn towards you and invite a greeting. It may even come up to you and ask for attention in a very calm yet friendly way. Having a treat readily available is a great icebreaker and if you
position your hand with the treat just below the dog’s nose (whether the dog is sitting or standing), it is a far more peaceful gesture than holding it way above the dog’s head and expecting it to reach up. When you try to pet the dog, gently rub under its chin and along the sides of its cheeks instead of on top of its head. Again, this is a peaceful gesture that instills calm and acceptance as dogs typically sniff noses and cheeks and avoid the top of each other’s heads or shoulders when the greeting is peaceful. Dogs who are fearful or mistrusting of humans need to be greeted and interacted with in a different fashion, which I will discuss next week. Until then, if you want to give a strange dog some attention, reconsider your actions and follow a non-threatening and peaceful approach. Joan has been working with dogs for more than 15 years in obedience, tracking and behavioural rehabilitation. Contact her at k9kinship.com
Paws for a Cause walk set for Sept. 7 The Scotiabank & BC SPCA Paws for a Cause walk (benefitting the SPCA Vancouver, Burnaby, and West Vancouver branches) will be held at Lumberman’s Arch in Stanley Park, Vancouver on Sunday, Sept. 7 from 10 a.m. with the walk starting at noon. The event will feature entertainment and
activities, including agility demonstations, a bowllicking contest, community vendors, a barbecue and fundraising prizes. This year, participants in 32 communities throughout the province will walk to raise funds to help animals in need across B.C. To register or donate, visit spca.bc.ca/walk.
is now open Saturdays and Sundays 9am-5pm Take 10,000 steps a day for the month of September to improve your health and raise funds to support people with cerebral palsy!
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September 3—September 30, 2014
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604-922-4157
Register: www.steptember.ca Visit: www.bccerebralpalsy.com
SPORT
Sunday, August 17, 2014 - North Shore News - A21
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to THE GAMES PEOPLE PLAY
(]<Q 2<P<6<5' H<P6B H<)8Y<S 8Y<)[]' <% < 6]\]P6]) aYWR] 4P6)]< 3")S ,).cW6]' '",,.)% WP < )]8]P% +"[:B !.)R6 2", [<Q]> (Y] %a. ',]]6B '%<)' <P6 \]RR.a 2<,WR<P. +"[:B 2R": Q]Q:]) MWR<)B I]W%Y aWRR :<%%R] WP %Y] !.)R6 2", OP<R %.6<B <[<WP'% 0P[R<P6> CME(E *&CCIL01 IAN MUIR/RUGBY CANADA
World Cup wonders
Three Capilano members aiming for Canadian rugby history ANDY PREST aprest@nsnews.com
Scan this page with the Layar app or visit nsnews.com to see the scintilating try that put Canada into the final of theWomen’s RugbyWorld Cup.
It’s one of the most electrifying rugby plays you’ll ever see, and it put Canada’s national team into the championship final of theWomen’s Rugby World Cup. It’s also got North Shore fingerprints all over it. Leading their semifinal against the host team 11-6 early in the second half Wednesday at Stade Jean Bouin in Paris, the Canadians were in a tight spot, facing a French scrum in the shadow of their own goalposts.The Canadian front eight, including Carson Graham grad and Capilano Rugby Club member Hilary Leith at tighthead prop, blasted back their French counterparts on contact, stealing the scrum in decisive fashion. Canada’s Elissa Alarie scooped up the ball and scooted to her right before dishing off to Andrea Burk, another Carson Graham grad and Capilano member, who deftly passed again
in one swift motion to a charging Mandy Marchak, the third member of the Capilano Rugby Club playing in the biggest game in the history of Canadian women’s rugby. Marchak ran straight at a tackler, drawing her to the inside before shooting a pass outside to Magali Harvery who then lit a trail of fire on an amazing 80-metre run, juking a tackler with a wicked head fake at midfield before sprinting the rest of the field and diving into the corner for an incredible try. Harvey topped it all off by kicking the convert from an extremely tight angle to give the Canadians an 18-6 lead. Those two points on the convert would prove crucial as France battled back with two late tries.The French, however, missed their converts and Canada held on for a historic 18-16 win to send them to their firstever World Cup final. Watching it all unfold at home on the North Shore was Brad Baker, the longtime girls’ rugby coach at Carson Graham.
“I’ve been involved in rugby now for 20 years and it’s one of the best tries I’ve ever seen, men or women,” said Baker. “Mandy and Andrea kind of exploited the channels which opened up the wide one for Magali. It was pretty cool to see.” Baker was on pins and needles as he watched the game, not just as a rugby fanatic but as a nervous coach — he helped kickstart the careers of both Burk and Leith. He coached them both as Carson Graham teammates — Burk graduated in 2000 and Leith in 2001.The Carson Graham girls’ rugby team is a dominant force in the province, recently winning seven championships in a row, but the two grads who are on the cusp of a World Cup win never actually took home a B.C. high school title. “We just hadn’t cracked the seal yet,” said Baker with a laugh. “Our program didn’t start until 1996 so they were just in the beginning stages. . . .The championship run started
after them, which is kind of interesting. Nothing against them or anything — it’s just weird.” Even though they didn’t take home titles, Baker said both players seemed destined for big things. Burk was a speedy back-row player who ran hard with the ball and tackled hard without it. Baker remembers taking her to a tryout for the B.C. U19 team, her first crack at making a rep squad. “She was extremely nervous,” he said. “She was the only Carson kid going to that tryout. I remember she was really nervous but she lit it up a little bit. She was fit back then, as she is now. . . .The coaches knew right away that they had a very physical and fast rugby player.” Leith was a dual-sport star at the school, winning provincial titles on the wrestling mat. She took that powerful approach with her onto the rugby field, said Baker. “You’d get the ball in her hands and she’d kind of run over girls constantly. Good
tackler, ran the ball hard.” Marchak grew up in Winnipeg but moved to the North Shore to join the Capilano Rugby Club to improve her game by training year-round alongside elite players like Leith and Burk. In recent years all three players have committed fully to a training program that has seen them sequestered for long stretches of time at the national training facility in Victoria. “All three girls have put a lot of time in to get where they are,” said Baker. “Their full time job over the past three or four years has been rugby.They’ve put everything on the back burner to achieve a goal of hopefully winning a World Cup and they’re 80 minutes away from doing that.That’s pretty cool.” Canada will take on England in the World Cup final Sunday starting at 9:30 a.m. PDT.The two teams met in pool play last Saturday, battling to a See Canada page 22
A22 - North Shore News - Sunday, August 17, 2014
SPORT
B.C. teams rock rugby national finals
ANDY PREST aprest@nsnews.com
British Columbia’s provincial rugby teams ran over the competition with several North Shore players leading the charge at the National Festival age-grade Canadian championships held last week in Calgary. Players from North and West Vancouver were all over the field at the U16 boys tournament as eight locals suited up to help British Columbia win gold. Riley Burns, Elias Ergas, Flynn Heyes, Sam Hughes, Tyler Nylander, Nick Pearce, Christoper Stangl and David Wensley all took part as the U16s went undefeated in the tournament, securing the title with a 26-0 win over the host Albertans in the championship game Sunday. Nylander scored a second-half try in the final to help push B.C. to the top. The provincial U17 boys team also had a powerful North Shore presence as seven local players helped
the team win gold while playing against older competition in the U18 Tier 2 championships. Jackson Claridge, Liam Doll, Nick Frost, Tyrone Karius, Joe Sourisseau, Chase Taylor-Robins and Tamar Tucker-Harrison were all on the Team B.C. roster for the tournament with Claridge serving as team captain. The U17s faced Quebec’s U18 team in the final and fell behind 7-0 just 10 seconds into the game, but took control the rest of the way en route to a 35-10 win. Tucker-Harrison and Doll both recorded tries in the final. Liam Mahon was the sole North Shore representative on the men’s U18 provincial team as they fought their way to gold in the U18 Tier 1 championships. The tier included only two teams, B.C. and Ontario, and the West Coast squad won all three meetings during the tournament, outscoring their opponent 160-59. Ontario pushed back in the final match but the B.C. squad held on to win
38-24. B.C. also took home first place in the women’s U18 championships with no North Shore players on the roster. One other North Shore link hit the podium at the festival as Zoe DeFaveri helped the provincial girls U16 team take silver. The U16s lost to Ontario 31-7 in the championship final. North Shore players Jake Lan and Ryan Hanley also took part in the tournament, suiting up for the U16 boys B.C. No. 2 team that finished fourth. Curry Hitchborn, a longtime Capilano Rugby Club member and head coach of this year’s U17 boys provincial team, said this was one of the province’s best ever showings at the National Festival. “To win gold at four of five finals and have the North Shore help aid in that is a monumental success for rugby in general,” he told the North Shore News. “It speaks very well to the level of commitment to rugby as well as the competition of
IW<Q 1.RR _)W[Y%A .\ %Y] 3>2> &9X ,).cWP8W<R %]<Q %)<8S' 6.aP < -"]:]8 ,R<B]) 6")WP[ %Y] &9V :.B' (W]) 7 P<%W.P<R OP<R R<'% a]]S]P6 WP 2<R[<)B> CME(E *&CCIL01 KARL HARRISON that level. . . . The best will always shine out.” Hitchborn pointed to a few factors that have helped the North Shore produce so many talented young players. “The bonus is that
they have all been playing with and then against one another for years either at the club or at their high schools,” he said. “The dedicated teacher volunteers and community coaches that put their time
VANCOUVER / NORTH SHORE / BURNABY / RICH RICHMOND / DELTA / SURREY / WHITE ROCK / NEW WEST MINSTER / COQUITLAM / MAPLE RIDGE / LANGLEYFrom / page 21 VANCOUVER NORTH SHORE / BURNABY / RICHMOND 13-13 tie. Capilano Rugby / DELTA / SURREY / WHITE ROCK / NEW WESTMIN Club will be abuzz Sunday STER / COQUITLAM / MAPLE RIDGE / LANGLEY / VAN morning with teammates, COUVER / NORTH SHORE / BURNABY / RICHMONDfriends / and fans hoping to see three of their own — all DELTA / SURREY / WHITE ROCK / NEW WESTMINSTER expected to be in the starting / COQUITLAM / MAPLE RIDGE / LANGLEY / VANCOU lineup — make Canadian VER NORTH SHORE / BURNABY / RICHMOND / DELTA / SURREY / WHITE ROCK / NEW WESTMINSTER / CO QUITLAM / MAPLE RIDGE / LANGLEY
history. “It’s not very often you’ll have three club members playing for a World Cup final, men or women,” said Baker before dropping back into his coach persona for a few motivational words. “This will not come
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into these athletes helped mold them. . . . Our local club has gone above and beyond what is expected of anybody to accommodate all these athletes and provide constant opportunity to excel.”
Canada vs. England in final
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around every day,” he said. “This might be their only shot.Take advantage of it. . . .Win or lose, we’re going to be proud of the girls. But obviously we want them to win, bring the World Cup trophy back to the North Shore.”
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