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Art showcase set for waterfront Presentation House Gallery moves forward with bold design
BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com
North Vancouver’s worldrenowned Presentation House Gallery took a critical step closer to its new home at the foot of
Lonsdale, where the city has a massive, multimillion dollar facelift planned. Council reviewed the gallery’s plans for the site and charted out the rest of the surrounding plaza
Monday night. Gallery and city staff can now go to work on detailed designs and come back to council with a rezoning application, like any other development project. The main building is projected to be 24,000 square feet on two levels aligned with the west side of the 100-block of
Lonsdale Avenue. That includes 3,500 square feet of retail space, a cafe and bookstore. The extra retail space in the building will allow the gallery to generate enough revenue to help cover the operational costs of running the gallery. “If and when we are lucky enough to be an occupant of that building,
we won’t have to come back to the City of North Vancouver taxpayer for additional operational revenue,” said gallery director Reid Shier. Today, the gallery occupies 6,000 square feet in its aging building at Third Street and Chesterfield Avenue. The new gallery’s architecture threatens
to upstage the artistic photos inside, with an outer facade made of crumpled and unfolded stainless steel, designed to reflect as much light as possible during the low-light months of the year. The main level will have predominantly glass walls, allowing the public See Steel page 3
SD44 in the black JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com
While many school districts are faced with deficits and having to make hard choices to balance their books next year, the North Vancouver School District expects its budget to come in squarely in the black. Preliminary budget figures are projecting a $2.6-million surplus for the 2014/2015 school year based on an overall operating budget of between $139 million and $140 million, said superintendent John Lewis. That’s largely a result of a forecasted $4.9-million surplus that will be left at the end of the current school year. “We’re pleased with the position we’re in,” said Lewis, noting some of that surplus is the result of belttightening in previous years. “It’s careful financial See Summer page 5
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Steel facade reflects light From page 1
at ground-level to see through. To the east of the proposed building is a public plaza and water feature, which can act as a fountain, reflecting pool or dry, open space. The city is putting up the land and $2.5 million of the total $15 million needed for the gallery, which Shier said he was very confident would be covered by gallery fundraising. The building will remain a city asset. While council mostly beamed at the sight of design drawings depicting people using the waterfront and plaza, Coun. Pam Bookham cast a dissenting vote over the gallery’s size, design and location, which has been a treasured place to look out on Burrard Inlet for centuries, she said. “I don’t feel the design of this building — the scale of this building, reflects that public view and for that reason, among others, I won’t support it. I’m concerned about the lack of recognition of the historic nature of the site that this gallery is
LAYNE CHRISTENSEN lchristensen@nsnews.com
D-S*80/\3#2 ]-1V-0 <3*YX1\*12# )\2XZS [83 - S\.' \,6-S)\) ]3\2\S1-1X8S g802\ h-UU\3` -1 1Y\ [881 8[ c8S2)-U\% &*,4 !6,#% /!2" 2"% 1,),5 ,88 29 0!%/ 8"929 #,77%5)% hH<]gf: GE]]cf79 proposed to be on,” she said, adding she remains a supporter of the gallery. While the reflective steel facade wasn’t universally fawned over, the project as a whole won council’s support. “I love the design,” said Mayor Darrell Mussatto. “I like the way staff have done some amazing work. I like
the access to the Spirit Trail — the way they’ve treated the water, the way they’ve treated the public between the Coppersmith Shop and what you’ve done here. It keeps the view corridors open down Lonsdale and I think it would be a great addition in that area.” What the new foot
of Lonsdale design does not include, however, is the Pacific Great Eastern Railway station, which was recently moved from the site to a temporary home on Alder Street. Heritage advocates had been lobbying the city to bring the railway station back to its original location as a nod to its historical
significance on the site; however, only Couns. Don Bell and Pam Bookham were in favour of bringing it back to the Cates deck at a cost of $1.4 million. Instead, staff will report back on possible new uses for the centuryold building on the other side of Lonsdale Quay, in Waterfront Park.
Maison moves ahead in West Van
Sentinel Hill dementia care facility gets council’s support JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com
A seniors care facility will go up, but property values won’t go down. That was council’s decision Monday in offering near unanimous support for a three-storey, 103-bed seniors care facility on Keith Road and Taylor Way. There was a swell of opposition from neighbours who suggested they were subsidizing the project through their plummeting property values. Coun. Mary-Ann Booth said she was “unequivocally convinced” property values wouldn’t tumble as a result of the project, which will occupy five lots currently zoned for single-family housing. Other naysayers questioned the need for the development. While there are vacancies at both Amica and the Westerleigh retirement residence, Maison Senior Living will offer a last
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resort to struggling families, according to Booth. “There is a zero vacancy rate for those requiring enhanced assisted living and dementia care, and a six to nine month waiting list for a comparable facility in North Vancouver,” she said. Coun. Michael Lewis agreed. “Denying the need for this sort of facility, in this case, is a little bit comparable to being a climate change denier,” he said. The project addresses a very specific service that is lacking in West Vancouver, according to Coun.Trish Panz. “We’ve certainly heard from an awful lot of people how this just engulfs families, it consumes them,” she said. Panz said she took courage from a previous council’s decision to rezone the Inglewood Care Centre. “We’re better off as a community because that facility is in our community,” she said.
Booth noted the vague literature accompanying a well-circulated petition calling for the preservation of Sentinel Hill. “Nowhere in the petition or accompanying materials could I find any mention of the name or nature of the facility,” she said. Booth said she phoned a signee who knew little about the project. Because the facility’s residents don’t drive and many caregivers favour mass transit, impact on traffic should be negligible, according to Booth. There is nothing wrong with trying to preserve a cherished neighbourhood, according to Bill Soprovich, who cast the only dissenting vote. “It’s typical of other things that we fought against . . . that one must have the courage to stand up for your conviction about individual family neighbourhoods that this community was based on,” he said. The project is a case of spot-zoning, according to Soprovich, who asked council to bring forth a master plan for the Taylor Way corridor to assuage
the uncertainty faced by the neighbourhood’s homeowners. Coun. Michael Lewis disagreed. “I guess almost every development in West Vancouver is quote unquote ‘spot zoning,’” he said. Council’s duties go beyond protecting property values, according to Coun. Craig Cameron. While noting that almost
all support for the project came from outside the neighbourhood, Cameron decided there was a higher purpose to be served. While Maison Senior Living is a commercial enterprise, it is also a home. “These are the things that these residents need to live in the community, and to live at all, for that matter,”
See Bylaw page 5
The North Shore News is best in the west. The paper received top honours for overall excellence in its circulation class — the largest among community newspapers in the province — at the Ma Murray Community Newspaper Awards. Awards were presented Saturday in Vancouver by the British Columbia &Yukon Community Newspapers Association. The News also took home two golds, one silver and one bronze award. Reporter Jane Seyd claimed gold in the Outdoor Recreation Writing category, for her feature story on Loutet Farm. Judges noted the feature was “beautifully written, almost poetic,” and said it would “certainly inspire many people to better appreciate locally grown food and perhaps take up community gardening.” Photographer Paul McGrath also collected a gold, winning the Spot News Photo Award for his page 1 photograph of a canyon rescue, which judges praised as “tight and dramatic.” Reporter Andy Prest was awarded silver in Sports Writing for his profile of leukemia survivor Brian Lau, which judges called a “superb feature and well written story.” Trixi Agrios and Deborah Foster were recognized with a bronze for Classifieds. Go to our website, nsnews.com, to view the winning entries.
Tot caught up in roadside arrest JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com
Police in North Vancouver arrested two adults for public drunkenness and called in the Ministry of Children and Family Development after the pair was discovered in a car with a three-year-old child Thursday night. An RCMP traffic officer noticed the adult driver and passenger inside a parked car, drinking alcohol in the 100-block of West Third Street at about 10:30 p.m. Thursday night.
The 43-year-old female passenger — the mother of the child — and the 39-year-old male driver, both from Victoria, were highly intoxicated, said Corp. Richard De Jong, spokesman for the North Vancouver RCMP. De Jong said the keys to the car were in the ignition. Even more alarming, he said when the officer spotted the pair, the three-year-old had managed to get out of the car and had been wandering around on the nearby sidewalk, unsupervised. The driver — who
police determined had “care and control” of the vehicle — failed a roadside breathalyzer test and was issued an immediate 90-day driving ban.The car was also impounded. Police determined neither of the adults was sober enough to care for the three-year-old, and called provincial authorities to take custody of the child. “Both adults were arrested for being drunk in a public place and lodged in police cells until sober,” said De Jong.They have since been released.
A4 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 2014
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Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A5
Summer school under scrutiny From page 1
management,” he said. “Everyone contributes to that.” Lewis said the surplus from this year will be used to maintain staff levels next year and pay for increased costs like the approximately $700,000 in provincially negotiated CUPE wage increases, and Hydro rate hikes. The school district has managed to keep a lid on staff costs by not filling some vacancies in management and other non-union positions, said Lewis. Last year, the school district laid off eight union support staff and 13 more casual staff at the North Vancouver Outdoor School
examined in budget deliberations this year is the district’s summer school, which also operates at a loss, partly because of low funding from the province and a historical arrangement to pay summer school teachers under terms of the collective agreement rather than on contract. Summer school for elementary grades is most likely to come under the microscope, said Lewis, because high-school classes generate more revenue through international student fees. Many of the elementary-grade summer school classes are also offered by other agencies in the community, he added. The band and strings program is not being
near Squamish, and turned over management of the site to a private company in a bid to cut down on the $500,000 being lost by the program each year. Lewis said progress has been made on that front — revenues are up and the outdoor school will only lose about $150,000 this year.The school district wants the program to break even by the end of the next school year. Another belt-tightening measure made last year was the move to axe the 25-year-old continuing education program, a noncore offering that provided English language course for adults and cost the school district about $200,000 a year. One area still being
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for management and other non-union staff, which will be a challenge in the future. The rosy financial outlook is not expected to last indefinitely, though. Unless the school district manages to squirrel away more money, increase revenue or cut costs, it is forecasting a potential deficit of just under $1 million by the 2015/2016 school year.
considered for cuts as it is very close to breaking even. Parents pay an annual $425 fee for that program. Lewis said there’s no provision in next year’s budget for increases to teachers’ wages.The school district expects the province to fund any negotiated increases for teachers, he said. He added that isn’t the case for any salary increases
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Parcel Tax Roll Review
Bylaw adoption set for May
The Parcel Tax Roll Review Panel, appointed to consider and deal with complaints against the Parcel Tax Assessment Roll, will meet on Monday, May 5, 2014, at 4:30 pm in the Council Chamber of the Municipal Hall, 355 West Queens Road, North Vancouver, BC.
From page 3
Written notice of the complaint must be given to the municipality AT LEAST 48 HOURS BEFORE the 4:30 pm sitting of the Parcel Tax Roll Review Panel. For further information, please contact the Finance Department at propertytax@dnv.org or 604-990-2488.
he said. Mayor Michael Smith concurred. “We cannot, if we call ourselves a community, be content with shuffling off people as they come to the end of their life and they’re infirm,” he said.
project’s opponents felt the deck was stacked against them from the beginning. “I think these perceptions should concern us as a district and I would like us to do better in the future,” she said. Final adoption is tentatively scheduled for May.
The mayor noted an academic paper that called the lack of dementia care a crisis in the making. Anyone who thinks that crisis will be solved by the federal or provincial government is “dreaming in Technicolor,” according to Smith. Coun. Nora Gambioli noted that many of the
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A6 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 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.
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D
on’t listen to what public health officials and doctors have been warning for years. The Fraser Institute knows better. The venerable think tank has produced a study that finds there is no obesity epidemic in Canada (and even if there is, government shouldn’t attempt to do anything about it.) This, after we only just stopped laughing at their assertion that raising a child only costs $3,000 per year, if you don’t factor in things like housing costs or childcare. Their studies typically start with a conclusion and then cherry pick stats to support it, which is exactly what medical professionals are saying about this latest one. And like all Fraser Institute studies, this one is an inroad for them to espouse policy. In this case, they target
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tax hikes on sugary and fatty foods, food bans, vending machine bans, and (gasp!) menu and food labelling initiatives. Because what’s really hurting the economy right now is a lack of sugar in high school kids’ diets and people having the right to know what’s in the food they buy. The free market being the deity in their monotheistic religion, they often conflate something being profitable, with that same thing being good or right. The Fraser Institute, in its miserly ways, is guilty of being penny wise and pound foolish. Government intervention to encourage healthy living means less strain on the healthcare system — the granddaddy of all taxpayer funded spending. Other than the cockpit of a fighter jet, there isn’t a place more expensive for taxpayers than a hospital bed.
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Building permits doled out ‘too easily’ Dear Editor: We have been residents of the Edgemont Village area for more than 25 years and are writing to register our dismay to the changes in the area. On our street, we presently have three large developments taking place. In each instance, all trees and vegetation
have been removed and excavation is right up to, and sometimes over the property line, causing concern for adjacent structures. During excavation of one property, we have noticed ground water mixed with sand and silt being pumped directly into the grids with very
little regard to filtering and protecting the underlying streams. How often are projects being inspected and do we need a change in bylaws so that municipal engineers, planners and environmentalists have more control in the future developments on the North Shore?
Excavation and demolition permits are handed out too easily in the district. Building plans are also being approved without any consultation with — or consideration of — established homeowners. We need a mayor and council whose loyalty is more with the
residents of the District of North Vancouver than with developers and contractors. We urge all concerned residents who are witnessing these negative changes to let our municipal elected officials know how you feel. Maarten Jansen North Vancouver
Casino not condos at NorthVan’s Harbourside development Dear Editor: Why does the City of North Vancouver not allow casinos to be built? They are constantly whining about money woes for their pet projects. They are also making decisions about density that
go way beyond the OCP to accommodate the shortfalls. Seems like a “no brainer” to me. A casino in the empty lots in the auto mall would make perfect sense. The idea of putting hundreds of residences
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in that location is very simplistic and shows this council has no real vision for our city. I can just hear all the people who move there, crying about the noise and lights as soon as the shipyard starts full production.This
location was never meant for homes.The traffic in that area is already at its limit. We are soon going to be hit with a huge bill for the sewage treatment and with the Harper government in charge in Ottawa, we will be footing that bill ourselves.
The city would receive 10 per cent of the revenue from a casino. Maybe the citizens will wake up before the next municipal election and vote for new blood. Terry Muldoon North Vancouver
Slowing down not such a bad thing Dear Editor: I am what I would have in my youth called an old codger (pre-PC). I might even be a little senile (ask my kids). But there is one thing I don’t understand and that is this unbridled development phase we seem to be tied to. In my youthful days of innocence I used to ask: “How many people can they cram in the North Shore?” The answer, now, seems to be: unlimited. Now I ask: to whose benefit is this? I am afraid I do not find my quality of life improving. Exactly the opposite. Is there a virus causing this frenzy? Is it in the water? Perhaps we have been seduced by mind control. This old codger believes slowing down would not be a bad thing. Terry W. Long North Vancouver
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Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A7
VIEWPOINT
Council exchange goes beyond ‘A’ word “The NorthVancouver Chamber of Commerce would like to express its support of Councillor Heywood’s motion that both North Vancouver municipalities join forces and ask the provincial government for guidance and funding to undertake a restructuring and feasibility study…” So began the courteous letter chamber president Louise Ranger addressed to City of North Vancouver council at its regular meeting on Feb. 24. Copied to the board of directors, the letter made a case for the chamber’s endorsement of Coun. Guy Heywood’s motion and sought a “fact-based analysis” of potential opportunities for “better integrated planning on shared issues such as transportation planning, economic development, funding of non-profit programs and recreational facilities and services.” The letter recognized that although a study might not recommend
Elizabeth James
Just Asking
outright amalgamation, “the North Vancouver community would be in a better position to make that decision based on current and relevant information.” By implication, Heywood and Ranger acknowledged that citizens have a right to discuss how they are governed. Little did they know their efforts to resolve what has been a 50-year debate would raise issues way beyond amalgamation of the two North Vancouver municipalities. Prior to every council meeting, most mayors remind speakers they “may
not speak disrespectfully” of any council or staff member or other presenters. Ranger’s words and content were positive and respectful. Neither she nor the broader community deserved the tone of the email she received from Mayor Darrell Mussatto the following morning. Over the years, whenever the “A” word surfaced within hearing distance, oblivious to the fact that his is only one of seven voices on council, Mussatto has vehemently rejected any suggestion that it even been countenanced, let alone adopted. So unfortunately, in his deep-seated aversion to the idea, Mussatto also lost sight of the fact that all members of council
have a right to participate in the action to be taken on a delegation or letter addressed to them. But none of that background excuses the thinly veiled threat of retaliation against the chamber’s position. Having taken Ranger’s presentation as a personal affront to his own opposition to amalgamation and saying he had “led the charge on Council to ensure that the Chamber receives a tax deferral. . .,” Mussatto’s later comment that he would “certainly have to reassess this relationship if . . . you can say that we actually have one” was disturbing. Equally presumptuous was his other claim that: “if I had not shown the leadership the (Low Level Road) expansion project
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Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A9
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A10 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 2014
LOW LEVEL ROAD WEEKEND ROAD CLOSURE A key goal of the Low Level Road Project is to maximize predictability during construction and minimize disruption for residents, goods movers and the travelling public.
Please note the upcoming weekend road closure in your area: Weekend Full Road Closure on Low Level Road from Kennard Avenue to St. Andrews Avenue in North Vancouver – A planned weekend closure (weather dependent) will take place May 9 – 12 and will be in effect from Friday at 9 p.m. to Monday at 5 a.m. The closures will allow crews to safely place concrete for the new bridge deck. Detour routes will be clearly marked and motorists are advised to exercise caution in the area and to follow the directions of road signs and traffic personnel. Contact information: For more information about the Low Level Road Project, including all current and upcoming construction activities, visit www.porttalk.ca
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Political kiss-and25 make-up not enough From page 7 settled once and for all. The first point is fundamental to the process: no one mayor, no council has the authority to deny citizens their democratic right to raise and discuss matters they believe are important to their community. Indeed, the preamble read before every regular council meeting states: “The Public Input Period provides an opportunity for the public to speak directly to Council . . . and to any topic the speaker feels is of relevance to City Council.” Next, although not covered in the Community Charter, any member of council who denies citizens an opportunity to discuss the pros and cons of amalgamation is de facto in a conflict of interest because they
stand to lose their income should consolidation occur. The legislation also lacks a comprehensive definition of the word “censure” but the spirit of the charter suggests Mussatto was also in conflict when he voted on Coun. Heywood’s subsequent motion that “council dissociate itself ” from the mayor’s Feb. 25 letter to Ranger. I would be remiss if I ended this column without the following addendum: For many years, I benefitted from the chamber’s extended health plan and, in the early 1990s, sat on one of the body’s small committees. More recently, I have been unhappy with the chamber’s approach to several communitychanging issues. Notably, I strongly
disagreed when the chamber announced it supported the HST; when it said it supported certain North Vancouver developments and when it declared its support for the port’s Low Level Road expansion. The basis for that disagreement was that the chamber failed to survey the will of its membership prior to taking those positions. Political kiss-and-make up photo-ops are not enough. We were all diminished by the side-swipe the chamber received after it had followed due process by merely agreeing with a “restructuring” analysis and discussion before the final step is taken. What is needed now from the mayor is a public and sincere apology to everyone concerned. rimco@shaw.ca
Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A11
Ye a rs o f Tri a t h l o n o n t h e N o r t h S h o re ! 25th Anniversary
VICTORIA DAY Monday May 19th, 2014 Ron Andrews RecCentre, North Vancouver
Join us for the 25th Anniversary edition of the North Shore Triathlon! New this year is the Police, Fire, and Rescue Team Challenge event that will raise money for various charities. IN MEMORY OF TIM JONES To Honour the recent passing of North Shore Rescue leader, Tim Jones, this year’s race will be held in his memory.
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A12 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 2014
BRIGHT LIGHTS
Cap U Reflections
by Paul McGrath
G10)\S12 Jeremy Browns' Max Fuenzalida -S) Brendan Walsh
f97< 210)\S1 Sally Burgoyne -S) Y\3 6-XS1XSZ -,32 '7%.,4(%5 Representatives of the Capilano University IDEA (Illustration, Design, Elements and Applications) program held the opening reception for Reflections: Colours of the Coast at Dundarave’s Buckland Southerst Gallery on the night of April 24 with a showing of 30 original paintings by students of the three-year program. The Reflections student-run initiative culminates in a gallery show and the launch of a calendar featuring the student’s work. The show ends today at the gallery, located at 2460 Marine Dr. in West Vancouver. bucklandsoutherst.com capreflections.com
f97< 210)\S12 Cathy Mithmeuangneva -S) Jessica Viaje
f97< 638Z3-T [-*0U1` Pascal Milelli' Carol Aitken -S) John Lau
f97< 210)\S12 Amanda Siegmann -S) Michelle Lim
G10)\S1 Lilian Leung .X1Y T8T Salina
f97< 210)\S1 Sierra Anderson -S) Y\3 6-XS1XSZ $%397,2%
f97< 210)\S12 Tony Yu' Tierne Milne -S) Joshua Seinen
Please direct requests for event coverage to: emcphee@nsnews.com. For more Bright Lights photos go to: nsnews.com/galleries.
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Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A13
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to HOME & GARDEN
Rhodo society offers rare types Upcoming sale to showcase exotic varieties
WINE GUIDE
Columnist Barb Lunter seeks an expert’s advice. page 14
WEST COAST MODERNISM
Writer KevinVallely discusses the continuing evolution of local architecture. page 16
GREEN GUIDE page 18
According to some people, green is the colour of human will, red is the colour of passion, yellow is the colour of friendship and white is the colour of purity. Trying to find one group of plants that represents all of those ideas and feelings is difficult, but if there is one it would be rhododendrons. Unlike many other shrubs, rhodos come in many sizes, shapes and colours, and they are beautiful and easy to grow. If you visit a local garden centre there is always a reasonable selection of rhodos. Most of them are the more common species and hybrids found in local gardens. The nursery supply system is based on what wholesale nurseries can grow efficiently and what is thought to be the most popular sellers. There is nothing wrong with those selections — they are good for any garden — but for people with a more discerning taste, the quest to find rhodos that are more exotic or unusual always leads to sources that are a little farther afield. Fortunately, there is one local group of rhodo experts who regularly offer rhodos for sale. Theirs
STUDY SKILLS
M AT H
S AT / AC T P R E P
WRITING
Todd Major
Dig Deep
are rare, more exotic and considerably more beautiful and colourful than their commercial supply cousins’. The Vancouver Rhododendron Society has a long history in our region of promoting the value and virtue of rhodos for coastal gardens. As a former member, director and newsletter editor, I can honestly say their members have extensive access to unusual sources of plant material supply and they grow some of the most beautiful rhodos in British Columbia. Fortunately for rhodo lovers like me, once each year the society holds an annual plant sale that is open to the public offering a rare opportunity to purchase some cool rhodos. Before I tell you where and when the society sale is being held this year, let’s talk about some of the many uses See Few page 15
READING
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A14 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 2014
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SUPPORTING THE NORTH SHORE HOSPICE SOCIETY IS AS EASY AS SHOPPING OR DINING AT YOUR FAVOURITE PLACES. Partial proceeds from sales at participating locations will be donated to the North Shore Hospice Society.The following businesses are proud to be participating:
• Baracos+Brand, 1411 Bellevue Ave, West Van • The Black Bear Pub, 1177 Lynn Valley Road, North Van • Chez Michel, 1373 Marine Dr, (2nd floor), West Van • Café Crema, 1495 Bellevue Ave, West Van • Denny’s, 2050 Marine Dr, North Van • Dina’s Hair Vogue, 1351 Marine Dr, West Van • Dr. Rodney Shainbom, Dentistry-on-Bellevue, 1507 Bellevue Ave, West Van • Hatz Hair Studio, 207-1433 Lonsdale Ave, North Van • JJ Bean Coffee, 333 Brooksbank Ave, North Van • Neighbours Choice Farm Market, 1476 Marine Dr, West Van
• Pemberton Station Pub, 135 Pemberton Ave, North Van • Prelude, 1441 Bellevue Ave, West Van • Red Horses Gallery, 2460 Marine Dr, West Van • Redfish Kids, 1512 Marine Dr, West Van • Self Care Home Health Products, 1340 Pemberton Ave, North Van • Stittgen Fine Jewelry, 1457 Bellevue Ave, West Van • Temper Chocolate Pastry, 2409 Marine Dr, West Van • The Bakehouse, 1050 Queens Ave, North Van • Thomas Haas Chocolates and Patisserie,128-998 Harbourside Dr, North Van • Tomahawk Barbecue, 1550 Philip Ave, North Van
Barb Lunter
Home Ideas
I’m not embarrassed to say that I enjoy a nice glass of wine with dinner when we decide to go out for the evening to a favorite restaurant. But many times I find the wine list quite overwhelming. Do we order a glass or a bottle? Which wine is best with the chosen entrees? These are just a few of the questions we all ask ourselves when we dine out. Of course there are many people out there who are quite knowledgeable about wine. But for those of us who may require a little assistance, here are a few helpful tips from North Shore resident and wine enthusiast, Charlie Cleghorn of Bimini’s Liquor Store in Kitsilano. Probably one of the first questions we ask ourselves is do we prefer red or white? Most often it really is a question of personal taste. If you’re unsure, you may like to ask your server or wine steward to provide a suggestion based on your menu selection. On the question of bottle
f1#2 \-2` 18 +\ 8/\3.Y\UT\) +` \,1\S2X/\ .XS\ UX212 .Y\S )XSXSZ 801% :8U0TSX21 ;-3+ c0S1\3 280ZY1 -S \,6\31#2 86XSX8S -S) 2Y-3\2 Y\3 LS)XSZ2 18 Y\U6 T-V\ 1Y\ 638*\22 U\22 213\22[0U% ]g_F_ MIKE WAKEFIELD versus glass, Cleghorn feels that ordering by the bottle is often a good economical choice if you and your party can agree on a selection. However, ordering by the glass offers more flexibility to those at the table in terms of preferences and also allows the party to enjoy a pairing with each course, as one may prefer in a food- and
wine-pairing scenario. Just be prepared to pay more for the glass of wine as many restaurants have a considerable mark up on their wines by the glass as compared to bottles. There is also the concern that the glass of wine may not be as fresh as one that comes from an unopened See Seek page 15
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TEL: 604-273-8777
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Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A15
HOME
Few plants offer rhododendron’s versatility
for rhodos in the garden. For coastal B.C. gardens, few other plants offer the dependability and versatility that rhodos do. Most rhodos with an average leaf size can be grown in full sun; however, the general rule is largerleaved rhodos need more shade and smaller-leaved rhodos need more sun. A leaf is essentially a solar collector and therefore when you plant a large-leaved rhodo species in full sun it can burn in our climate due to overexposure. As well, some of the larger-leaved rhodos need some protection from winter temperatures, which is why those species are planted under the shade of large conifers, like cedar, or under deciduous trees, like oak. Small-leaved rhodos are adapted to more sun than their largeleaved cousins and tolerate
increased exposure to wind and winter temperatures, which is why you can plant small-leaved rhodo species in full sun. Contrary to all of the overdone and incorrect information about growing rhodos, they are one of the easiest plants to grow in the garden. Just plant them high, keep them mulched year-round and avoid chemically fertilizing them. Rhododendrons are arguably one of the best plants to use when trying to build the main body of a garden’s design. Most rhodos are evergreen and therefore provide yearround interest and stability to the garden’s design. The colour burst rhodos display in April and May is unparalleled in the plant world and with colours like white, red, purple, pink, fuchsia and yellow, there is one to suit any taste. The mature height of any given rhodo must
be carefully understood when designing with them to avoid the unnecessary and damaging pruning practises that often accompany poorly placed rhodos. Think of layers in the garden when designing with rhodos by using them to fill in the transitional height level between small shrubs or perennials and the taller height of trees. The creation of layers in the garden is one of the most dynamic and widely used design techniques applied by good landscape designers. Beyond those design issues, the beauty and exotic look of rhodo leaf type, size and shape is one of the primary reasons that designers and gardeners use rhodos in the garden. My favourite rhodo leaf type would have to be those leaves that have indumentum, which is a downy, hairy or fuzzy growth that naturally
Seek an expert’s opinion From page 14 bottle. However, these days many restaurants are employing a new dispensing technology that keeps the wine fresh for longer periods of time and there is less worry of spoiling. This new technology has also allowed many restaurants to offer a broader selection of wines by the glass. As far as ordering an expensive bottle of wine over a relatively inexpensive choice, Cleghorn states that the expensive wine often has a place in a celebratory dinner or special occasion.
Yet many restaurants are incentivized to move volume and the mediumto lower-priced wines may often be a better value. At the lowest end of the range are the house wines and they are often selected to give the restaurant its greatest profit margin. What this means is that without any brand association, the restaurant can still charge a reasonable amount for what they rate as being relatively lower quality wine. In the end, Cleghorn feels that sticking to the name brands is usually a safe bet.
20
th Happy Birthday Fly!
There are many other guidelines and rules you can follow when ordering wine in a restaurant. If this is something you would like to learn more about contact Charlie at Bimini’s Liquor Store, 2018 West Fourth Ave.,Vancouver or the helpful staff at the Dundarave Wine Cellar, 2448 Marine Drive,West Vancouver.
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Todd Major is a journeyman horticulturist, garden designer and builder, teacher and organic advocate. For advice contact him at stmajor@ shaw.ca.
PRICES IN EFFECT APRIL 25th MAY 15th
– ENTER TO WIN -
$20
about the sale or the society, visit rhodovanbc.org.
OFF
Barb Lunter is a freelance writer with a passion for home decor, entertaining and floral design. Contact Barb at barb@lunter.ca or follow her on her blog at lunter.ca.
FLY DAYS…MAY
Society annual plant sale at Park & Tilford Gardens, 333 Brooksbank Ave., North Vancouver on Saturday, May 3, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Experts will be on hand to answer questions. For more information
occurs on many species. Often associated with the Asian rhodos species, indumentum adds considerable beauty and interest to the garden. To find some rare and unusual rhodos, visit the Vancouver Rhododendron
TAYLOR
From page 13
OLD LOCATION
GIFT W/ PURCHASE
A16 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 2014
HOME
West Coast modernist style endures Regular readers of my column are likely aware of my interest in the West Coast modernist movement and its evolution. For me,West Coast modernism is a stylistic expression of where we live and is as architecturally valid now as it was 70 years ago when it began. I studied architecture in the late-1980s at McGill University in Montreal and from the get-go was exposed to a stylistic direction that drew heavily upon the architecture of antiquity. I was academically trapped in the so-called post modernist era where proponents made direct reference to the classical architecture of the past, incorporating classical elements and forms in what
Kevin Vallely
Building by Design
could be best described as caricature rather than a formal rethinking.The style never inspired me and I found the work of its major practitioners, architects like Michael Graves and Robert Venturi, to be visually awkward and fundamentally lacking poignancy. Fortunately for
our architectural landscape (in my opinion anyway) post modernism went the way of its references and moved quickly into antiquity. As a young designer, it was a strange time for me. I knew instinctively what didn’t work for me, stylistically, but hadn’t yet found what did. Real inspiration came when I moved out to the West Coast and experienced first-hand the modern masterpieces that have defined the West Coast modern movement. The Vancouver School, composed of pioneers such as Arthur Erickson, Ned Pratt, B.C. Binning, Fred Hollingsworth and Ron Thom, defined a movement that drew upon the stylistic See Local page 18
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Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A17
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www.affordablequalityroofing.com
A18 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 2014
HOME
GARDEN N
Local style continues to evolve
Dig in to these Garden Fresh Specials!
BUY ONE GET ONE
From page 16
Entrée choices include:
FREE
Sweet Chili Chicken Rice Bowl Santa Fe Chicken Salad • Southwest Quesadilla Teriyaki Chicken Burger
Buy One, Get One FREE!
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Present this voucher and when you buy one entrée from our “Garden Fresh” feature menu, you’ll receive a second entrée of equal or lesser value for FREE.*
Present this voucher and when you buy one entrée from our “Garden Fresh” feature menu, you’ll receive a second entrée of equal or lesser value for FREE.*
*Offer valid with the purchase of any two beverages and cannot be combined with any other promotional offer. Coupon valid on our “Garden Fresh” feature menu at participating locations. Expires June 8, 2014 (excluding May 11, 2014) No cash value. One coupon per customer per visit. Present coupon when ordering.
*Offer valid with the purchase of any two beverages and cannot be combined with any other promotional offer. Coupon valid on our “Garden Fresh” feature menu at participating locations. Expires June 8, 2014 (excluding May 11, 2014) No cash value. One coupon per customer per visit. Present coupon when ordering.
/ThePantryRestaurants @ThePantryOnline
www.thepantry.ca
700 Old Lillooet Rd, North Van
604-985-4477
2. Cloudy days Provide big windows to bring in as much light as possible.
influences of modernism while making distinctive regional adaptations to better meet the needs of the West Coast’s unique environment. In the 1949 Design for Living exhibition presented at the Vancouver Art Gallery, architect Ned Pratt cited the five essential elements that should dictate the form of a West Coast modern home. I’m fascinated by the five points as they are in many ways as valid today as they were more than 60 years ago when Pratt articulated them.
4. Exterior The exterior of a home should be clad in locally sourced wood and should maintain its natural beauty and remain unpainted.
1. Rainfall The West Coast has lots of it so big overhangs are a must.
5. Plan A house should be laid out on an open plan with high ceilings and a minimal
Green Guide
comments received from the first open house, the City of North Vancouver has created a concept design for the path that will run along Jones Avenue from Keith Road to West 21st Street. cnv.org/ greennecklacemahonpark
GREEN NECKLACE AT MAHON PARK A second open house for this proposed multiuse path will take place Wednesday, April 30, 5-8 p.m. at Carson Graham secondary, 2145 Jones Ave., North Vancouver. Based on
3.Views Make a connection to the outside world. Direct the interior views to the important things outside like the mountains, ocean and forest.
SHORELINE CLEANUP Sunday, May 4, 2-4 p.m. at Cates Park, 200 Dollarton
use of partitions. The Vancouver School may be long retired but a West Coast style remains strong.Today’s West Coast contemporary designers embrace many of the tenets of Pratt’s ideas while exploring more environmentally responsible solutions to the age-old problems. It’s an inspiring time and I look forward to seeing how our West Coast style evolves, building upon the foundation laid by the modern masters of The Vancouver School. KevinVallely is a residential designer in NorthVancouver. vallely.ca
Hwy., North Vancouver. shorelinecleanup.ca LYNNMOUTH PARK REHABILITATION PROJECT Help restore the park’s native plant population by planting native species and removing invasive plants Sunday, May See more page 19
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Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A19
HOME Green Guide 4, 10 a.m.-12 p.m. at East Fifth and Brooksbank Ave, North Vancouver. evergreen. ca/whats-on/event-details/9643
West 18th Street and Jones Avenue, North Vancouver. Learn about local ecology, engage in data collection, observe local environmental change and monitor water quality in Wagg Creek. drawlyk@evergreen.ca Compiled by Debbie Caldwell
UNCOVER YOUR CREEKS on Monday, May 5, 3:15-4:30 p.m. at the entrance to Mahon Park,
Email information for your non-profit, by donation or nominal fee event to listings@ nsnews.com.
From page 18
Kitchen Cabinet Savings from People who know Scan this ad with & visit our photo gallery
KITCHENCABINETS, BATHROOM VANITIES &COUNTERTOPS SUPER SALE C\21 D-S*80/\3 ESX1\) :Y03*Y#2 b-)\U`S\ b-*d\S^X\ -S) GY\XU- ;-,1\3 )X26U-` 28T\ 8[ 1Y\ X1\T2 1Y-1 .XUU +\ 06 [83 2-U\ -1 1Y\ *Y03*Y#2 G06\3 G63XSZ 5U\- b-3V\1' G-103)-`' b-` R [38T MJR" -%T% 18 iJR" 6%T% -1 1Y\ *Y03*Y' U8*-1\) -1 i"Oi 7240XT-U1 </\% 7,-T6U\2 8[ .-3\2 XS*U0)\ Y-3).-3\' 18`2 -S) VX1*Y\S X1\T2% ]g_F_ MIKE WAKEFIELD
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Attention Mitsubishi Owners
Bring Your Mitsubishi to North Van Mitsubishi, The ONLY Authorized Mitsubishi Warranty and Service Centre On The North Shore and Receive a
FREE OIL CHANGE And other exciting offers! Proof of residency and ownership required.
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North Shore residents only § S-AWC standard on Outlander GT. $2,000 in rebates available on the purchase of any new 2014 Mitsubishi Outlander model to current owners and eligible others. Loyalty rebate applies to vehicles purchased and delivered between April 1, 2014 - March 31, 2015. Other conditions apply. See dealer for details. * Best backed claim does not cover Lancer Evolution, Lancer Ralliart or i-MiEV. ® MITSUBISHI MOTORS, BEST BACKED CARS IN THE WORLD are trade-marks of Mitsubishi Motors North America, Inc. and are used under license. ** Whichever comes first. Regular maintenance not included. See dealer or mitsubishi-motors.ca for warranty terms, restrictions and details. Not all customers will qualify.
WWW.NORTHVANMITSUBISHI.CA
NORTH VANCOUVER MITSUBISHI
604-983-2088 1695 Marine Dr, North Vancouver
“What is the future of education? What is the role of creativity and entrepreneurship in schools? What defines a high-quality education?” Join us to hear internationally known scholar, author, and speaker Yong Zhao.
Dr. Yong Zhao is an important voice in education; he asks hard questions and presents innovative
education models for your consideration. Dr. Zhao will be a keynote speaker at the Google Apps for Education
(GAFE) Summit May 3–4, and has generously offered to hold this free community lecture on Friday May 2nd.
This event is free to all members of the community.
Mulgrave School 2330 Cypress Bowl Lane, West Vancouver, BC, V7S 3H9
For more information visit www.mulgrave.com or call 604.922.3223
A20 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 2014
(" * ! + # ' )%$&
Sunday, May 11
A letter to mom
]g_F_ CINDY GOOD
I just read a tweet from @NorthShoreNews that asked about fantastic mothers. I immediately decided to e-mail you because I think my mother is unrivaled aled in her awesomeness. My mom was married at 18, had her first child (me) at age 19, and at age 21 she moved to Vancouver from Tehran, Iran, with her young and new family. mily. Not speaking a word of English, she quickly picked up the language and lingo go by watching Sesame Street with me (we’re best buds). Since our move to Canada in 1988, my mother’s main priority has been making sure that her family is safe, well fed, happy, and without a single unfulfilled want or need. She sacrificed her whole life for us, and you can see how much she cherishes that decision every time you look her in the eyes. She devoted her 20s, 30s and now 40s to her children. I moved out on my own a couple of years ago, but my brother (who is 20 years old) is still living at home under the watchful eyes of my parents. After 28 years of beingg a mother (to a pain in the butt kid: me), she is still happy to wake up at 5 a.m. to make sure my brother isn’t late for work. Her life’s work has been her family, and aside from the occasional Sepy Bazzazi, indulgence in shopping, travel with my dad, or her personal care (which his brother she deserves), she has devoted her every moment to us; every breath, every thought. It was really annoying to have such an “overbearing” (as I Soroush and would have called her then) mother when I was a teenager, but now I’m their mother 28 and I know the difference between saying you love someone and really Sherry Matin loving someone with everything you are. I understand that all of her actions were for my own good and were totally selfless. My parents fled a war zone in Tehran in 1988 to come to a better place so their kids could have better opportunities.They have come so far, impacted so many lives, created so many happy and positive memories, and pulled themselves up beyond what they had probably even imagined for themselves: From flat broke living in a hotel room on Robson Street to running two successful businesses on the North Shore, living in a beautiful home in Deep Cove, and providing my brother and I with everything we have ever needed (and everything we never needed too). That’s why I am proud and honoured to write you this letter.Without the mother I had
MAN
Hi there,
growing up and I still continue to have today, I wouldn’t be half the man I am now. I realize that many years later. Love you mamma. Thanks for the opportunity to share, Sepy Bazzazi This letter was sent in by Sepy Bazzazi after he read a call-out for submissions on the North Shore News Twitter feed. We kept it a secret from his mom, until now.
Friday, May 2nd 12:00-4 pm Volunteer at the NS Lookout Shelter Receive volunteer hours and give back to the community! Contact Miranda, Sukh, or Dominique at 604-988-7105 to join in.
Friday, May 2nd 7-10 pm Youth vs. City of North Vancouver Firefighters game at John Braithwaite Community Centre. Call Sam at 604-868-7065 to pre-register your team or show up before 7pm. FREE, Prizes and Pizza!
Saturday, May 3rd CityFEST - Free youth Festival and all ages Skateboard Comp and Longboard Race (register at 9 am)
www.facebook.com/NorthVancouverCityFest
www.bcyouthweek.com Financial assistance provided by the Province of BC
Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A21
(" * ! + # ' )%$&
North Van mom remembers the early years Rosalind Duane rduane@nsnews.com Dads were generally not allowed in the delivery room when Joyce Mulligan’s daughter Kelly was born. But Joyce’s husband Terry insisted on being in the room to watch the birth of his first child. Unfortunately for Terry, he walked into the wrong room and ended up at the delivery of another child. “There I was wondering where he was,” recalls Joyce with a laugh. She explains that back then everyone in the room wore surgical masks and Terry wasn’t let close enough to see much so he didn’t realize he was in the wrong room. Fortunately, he did eventually make it to the right room in time to watch his own daughter being born.
Joyce and Terry later had two more kids, Ryan and Erin, with no deliveryroom mix-ups. A young mother, Joyce says she was ready to have kids and felt prepared to be a mom. “It was really easy. I wasn’t a worrisome mom at all.” But she admits she had some help: “Parenting is pretty easy when your kids are good and mine were good.” Born in Winnipeg, Joyce moved to Vancouver when she was 19 and met Terry not long after her arrival. She was working at a telephone company for about a month when she sat next to Terry on the bus one morning. He was also heading to work. “We ended up sitting side by side and said hello,” says Joyce. About a week later, the couple ran into each other
again at a local restaurant. “We said hello again and he asked me for my phone number and three years later we got married.” The couple settled in North Vancouver and kids soon followed. When asked if she always wanted to be a mom, Joyce answers quickly: “Oh yes, oh yes, definitely.” Joyce says her parenting style was very much like her own mother’s. “She was a terrific mom, we got along great,” she says. “And I think that’s the way my kids and I are. We get along great.” The best piece of parenting advice she got from her mom: “Love your kids like crazy. Just love them like crazy and let them know it.” Although Joyce says she and her husband didn’t face any real hardships
Tips to put together a family potluck This Mother’s Day, consider a family potluck to celebrate the special mom in your life. The following are some tips: Organize Participants: Divide the meal by categories so guests will have a balance of appetizers, entrees, sides and desserts from which to choose. Cooks needn’t commit to a specific recipe but it’s helpful to know up-front that a well-rounded meal is in the making. Agree on Advance Prep: All dishes should be cooked prior to
arrival so only a quick re-heating is required. Everything should also hit your doorstep ready for presentation to avoid last-minute searches for serving bowls and platters. Choose easy recipes: Save the exotic for another time.Traditional potluck dishes like casseroles, chili, soup, bread, and cakes are always popular and easy to make. Dress up the table: Pull out a special fabric tablecloth to help spruce up the table, and add some cloth napkins and some candles. — Metro Creative
as a young couple, her husband’s job took him out of town on business often and that was sometimes difficult for the whole family. In addition, the family moved a lot for Terry’s job and lived in a variety of locations including South Africa. Joyce says the moves were sometimes difficult for the kids, but she believes they now appreciate their experiences meeting different people in different parts of the world. When her youngest daughter was just three months old, the family was transferred to Quebec and drove across the country to get there, exploring along the way. “We really had a lot of fun doing that,” says Joyce. All three kids are now adults with children of their own, and Joyce says she loves being a grandmother. “They’re just a delight,” says Joyce of her three grandchildren.
e8`*\ b0UUXZ-S 3-X2\) 1Y3\\ VX)2 8S 1Y\ a831Y GY83\ .X1Y Y\3 Y02+-S) F\33`% ]g_F_ CINDY GOODMAN “I’ve enjoyed being a mom and I really enjoy being a grandma.” She says her two daughters are great moms and adds with a laugh: “Trust me, I’d interfere if they weren’t.” Joyce says she really enjoys when the family gets together as they likely will to celebrate Mother’s Day.
When asked what the best part of being a mom has been, Joyce pauses to think, sorting through her long mental list. “I guess the best part about being a mom is that you have them to take care of and mold, and try to see that they follow the right path. They don’t always, but you do your best.”
Festival of Plays Monday, May 5 to Saturday, May 10 Show times 8 pm
Six days of theatre at its best! Monday, May 5 ............... Remember Me and Give Me A Reason .................. Seycove Theatre Tuesday, May 6 .............. A Little Grimley Evening .......... SMP Dramatic Society Wednesday, May 7 ......... God of Carnage ....................... North Van Community Players Thursday, May 8............. Eat Your Heart Out .................. Deep Cove Stage Society Friday, May 9 .................. The Glass Menagerie .............. Between Shifts Theatre Saturday, May 10............ Athena’s Self-Defence for Girls-To-Be ................ ..... Shidokan Productions plus presentation of Awards
$20 nightly or $108 for the week Call Now. 604-990-3474 or www.phtheatre.org Each nightly performance includes a professional public adjudication by David Mackay. Buy a Weekly Pass and be entitled to vote on the People’s Choice Awards, together with discounts and gift vouchers from sponsors.
Afternoon Tea – with a Twist. Join us for our Mother’s Day Tea at Revera – Hollyburn House.
Call to RSVP by May 5th!
Thursday, May 8th, 3pm – 4 pm Spend an afternoon of leisure with us! Stop by for Mother – Daughter tea accompanied by live musical entertainment at our Mother’s Day Tea and enjoy the company of new friends.
Hollyburn House 2095 Marine Dr West Vancouver
604-922-7616
reveraliving.com
Personal tours also available. Working together to overcome ageism. Visit AgeIsMore.com
14179 04.14
Presentation House Theatre 333 Chesterfield Avenue, North Vancouver
A22 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 2014
PARENTING
Giving kids choice elicits co-operation “Put on your sweater before you go outside.” “I hate this sweater, it scratches me.” “Put on the sweater!” “No.” Mom then grabs her angry pre-schooler and manages to get the sweater on her. Of course, as soon as Mom lets go, our feisty four-year-old is pulling it off. There has to be a better way. “It’s chilly outside, do you want to wear this sweater or the jacket?” “I hate the sweater, it scratches me. I’ll wear the jacket.” “Great, just put it on and let’s go.” Offering kids choices is a positive way to elicit their co-operation.They feel they have some control in their lives and your need to have them dressed warmly is also met. Also when we offer a choice, the response “no” just isn’t on the table. When you say put this on or else, then a refusal is possible.When you offer a choice, then it’s one or the
other. This is one of the most effective skills a parent can develop but is also fraught with problems and misunderstandings. Here are the basics: Never offer a child a choice when health or safety are at risk. “You can cross the street with me or figure it out on your own.” Obviously impossible.When dealing with issues of health, safety or the law, you are the parent and you make the decisions. No discussion. Once a choice has been offered, allow only a reasonable length of time for the child to decide. We all know that children
Kids Stuff
refreshments provided. westvanlibrary.ca
BOOKTOPIA OPENING RECEPTION will include the announcement of the winner of the Member of Parliament Writing Award by MP John Weston and a celebration of the artists featured in the Library’s Youth Art Display Friday, May 2, 4-5 p.m. at West Vancouver Memorial Library, 1950 Marine Dr. Everyone welcome,
BOOKTOPIA GOES TO THE MOVIES All are invited to watch this heartwarming page-to-stage Mary Poppins adaptation of Saving Mr. Banks Saturday, May 3, 2 p.m. at West Vancouver Memorial Library, 1950 Marine Dr. Drop in, space limited. westvanlibrary.ca
Kathy Lynn
Parenting Today
MOVIES AT THE LIBRARY A screening
can procrastinate for an incredibly long time. So it’s a simple, “It’s time to leave. Either you decide whether to have an apple or orange for a snack or I will decide for you.” Polite, respectful and clear. Don’t offer a child a choice that will seriously inconvenience other people. “You can sleep wherever you want.” Unless you are prepared to turn any part of your home into a bedroom, offer instead the choice of red pyjamas or yellow pyjamas. Language is everything. “If you don’t eat your dinner you can’t have anything until morning and then you’ll be hungry,” is a threat and lecture all in one.Try to avoid using the word “if” because it connotes a threat and can easily develop into a power struggle. Instead offer a real choice and allow the child to figure out the consequences. “You have a choice, you can either eat your dinner or you can wait until the next meal.” Or, “You have a choice, you can eat your dinner now or
you can have it for bedtime snack.” By using this option the child is still waiting until the next regular eating time and is eating the nutritionally sound meal rather than a less healthy snack option. Rarely offer an open choice. “What do you want for dinner?” She is likely to choose something that is simply not appropriate but you are stuck with it. So offer between two choices or how the meal will be cooked. But keep it simple and offer few choices. Never offer a choice that is an empty threat.There are times when you must become involved with the decisions your children make. In other words, there are times when misbehavior is not one of the choices and you must be prepared to remove the child from the situation. For example, when you are visiting friends your child needs to understand that appropriate behavior is a pre-requisite to staying and playing.The choice is, “You can change your behavior and stay or we
of Nut Job will take place Friday, May 2, 1-2:30 p.m. at Lynn Valley library, 1277 Lynn Valley Rd., North Vancouver. Registration required. 604-984-0286 x8141
CITYFEST 2014 celebrates its 11th annual event as part of national Youth Week. North Shore’s largest youth festival includes the first sanctioned longboard race and the largest amateur skate competition in Vancouver, Saturday, May 3 from noon to 4 p.m., Lonsdale Skate Park, 2300 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver.
POST-IT BLITZ Teens are invited to put their creativity down on Postit notes and cover the wall of Room 14 with art Friday, May 2, 5-6 p.m. at West Vancouver Memorial Library, 1950 Marine Dr. westvanlibrary.ca
Compiled by Debbie Caldwell Email listings@nsnews.com.
21st Annual Paradise Valley
SUMMER SCHOOL of VISUAL ART July 6 - 11: ages 8-12 drawing, painting, printmaking & mixed media Artist in residence David Wilson July 13 - 18: ages 13-18 drawing, painting, printmaking & sculpture Artists in residence Greg Murdock & George Rammell Outdoor studio adventures for young artists with teams of experienced art teachers and Canada’s finest artists plus guest artists visits and daily recreation activities • • •
all in the beautiful 460 acre setting of the Cheakamus Centre situated near Squamish, B.C. partial scholarships and bursaries six days and five nights $695 inclusive
Register Now:
www.gordonsmithgallery.ca phone: 604.903.3798
NEW!
can go home.” Don’t make this statement unless you are prepared to leave.You may have a responsibility to leave a good party in order to help your child learn how to handle social situations in the future. Choices need to be offered within the context of house rules, safety and health.There are some choices children cannot make and some that they can.The trick is to
recognize the difference, maintain our responsibility as parents and allow our children choices in all appropriate situations. Kathy Lynn is a professional speaker and author ofVive la Différence, Who’s In Charge Anyway? and But Nobody Told Me I’d Ever Have to Leave Home. If you want to read more, sign up for her informational newsletter at parentingtoday.ca.
BOTTLE DRIVE g-S)2.831Y 2\*8S)-3` T02X* 638Z3-T 210)\S12 G-UU` :-31.3XZY1 -S) b\Z-S F0*V\3 .XUU +\ Z-1Y\3XSZ 3\[0S)-+U\ +\\3' 686' .XS\ -S) W0X*\ *-S2 -S) +811U\2 )03XSZ 1Y\ 638Z3-T#2 -SS0-U +811U\ )3X/\ [0S)3-X2\3 8S G-103)-`' b-` R [38T K -%T% 18 i 6%T% XS 1Y\ g-S)2.831Y *-1*YT\S1 -3\-% H\2X)\S12 -3\ -2V\) 18 U\-/\ 1Y\X3 3\[0S)-+U\2 XS - U8*-1X8S 8S 1Y\X3 6386\31` 1Y-1#2 /X2X+U\ [38T 1Y\ 213\\1' +01 S81 -1 1Y\ *03+' +` MJR" -%T% ]g_F_ PAUL MCGRATH
Immunization Drop-in Clinics Now Available!
WHO: 4 months -19 years
WHO: School aged (4-19 years)
DATE: Friday, May 16, 2014 only
DATE: Wednesdays, May 7 to June 25, 2014
TIMES: 9:30-3:30pm
TIMES: 2:00-4:00pm
LOCATION: West Community Health Centre #160-2121 Marine Drive West Vancouver
LOCATION: Central Community Health Centre 132 W Esplanade, 6th floor North Vancouver
Please bring a copy of your records. To book an appointment at one of our other clinics or to speak to a Public Health Nurse, please call 604-983-6700 or visit www.immunizebc.ca.
STAY TUNED FOR MORE DROP-IN CLINICS THIS SUMMER
Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A23
TIME TRAVELLER b02X* LUU2 1Y\ -X3 XS 1YX2 !KQ"2 6Y818 8[ <XU\\S GT`1Y#2 T02X* *U-22% e8XS 1Y\ a831Y D-S*80/\3 b02\0T -S) <3*YX/\2 8S 53X)-`' b-` K' 18 *\U\+3-1\ U8*-U -S) :-S-)X-S YX2183` -1 1Y\ G\- 18 GV` H\ZX8S-U g\3X1-Z\ 5-X3 -1 c`SS D-UU\` DXUU-Z\ ]U-^-% G\\ T83\ 1Y-S P" 638W\*12 *3\-1\) +` 210)\S12 [38T -*3822 1Y\ a831Y GY83\ XS Z3-)\2 Q 18 !" -S) \SW8` -S \/\SXSZ 8[ UX/\ T02X*' Y\3X1-Z\ )X26U-`2 -S) [-TXU` [0S -*1X/X1X\2% :\U\+3-1X8S2 VX*V 8[[ -1 O 6%T% .X1Y 1Y\ c`SS D-UU\` ;U-*V ;\-3 ;-S)% 583 T83\ XS[8 *8S1-*1 S/T-%*- 83 *-UU O"Q&KK"&RN""% ]g_F_ :_EHF7GB _5 Fg7 a_HFg D<a:_ED7H bEG7Eb <a9 <H:gfD7G
Enjoy your patio all summer long AWNINGS
Shade your patio when you need to - designed for year round use Heritage Shade and Shutter Inc. offers a wide range of high quality products with exceptional customer service. “Members of the Better Business Bureau”
Community Bulletin Board
DELBROOK DIALOGUE — WILDLY SUCCESSFUL COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT The Delbrook Community Association present their inaugural panel discussion featuring several renowned experts in the field of community engagement on Wednesday, April 30, 6:30 p.m. at North Vancouver District Hall, 355 West Queens Rd. Admission by donation.
CALL FOR MEMBERS Those interested in helping to improve the structure and effectiveness of the current North Vancouver Policing Committee are asked to write to REF: NVCPC, 6-667 West Third St., North Vancouver,V7M 1H1 by May 28. 604-9863025.
VOTE WITH YOUR WALLET — BUY LOCAL Learn how to support local businesses and communities plus reduce carbon emissions by purchasing B.C. made products Wednesday, April 30, 6:30-9 p.m. at the Café for Contemporary Art, 140 East Esplanade, North Vancouver. $10 which includes snacks. purchaselocal.eventbrite.ca
At Heritage Shade and Shutter Inc. we provide solutions.
We’ve Got You Covered www.heritagess.com
604.987.1577
See more page 29
BLACKCOMB IS BACK, BABY! (WELL, ACTUALLY IT NEVER LEFT)
SKI OR RIDE FROM
49
$
** PER
DAY
on BLACKCOMB MOUNTAIN SENIOR & YOUTH $42, CHILD $26 KIDS 6 & UNDER SKI FREE source: Whistler Museum
FLASH YOUR PASS AND PAY JUST $49. N Show your pass from ANY ski resort and pay just $49 N Whistler Blackcomb Season Pass & EDGE Cardholders: Bring a friend for $49* N Winter 2013.14 EDGE Cardholders: Direct-to-Lift access for just $49
WINTER 2013.14 SEASON PASSHOLDERS† 50% OFF FOOD MIDWEEK Save 50% off food, Monday to Friday at the Rendezvous Lodge. Excludes alcohol and pre-packaged food.
NO PASS? NO PROBLEM.
†Excludes Spring & Tot Passholders.
N Purchase tickets online 3 days in advance for just $60 (Senior & Youth $51, Child $30) N Ticket Window Rate: $66 (Senior & Youth $56, Child $33) These promotional offers cannot be combined with any other offers. Outstanding 2013.14 EDGE Card days will be applied prior to the discounted rate taking effect. All rates are quoted in CDN funds and subject to applicable taxes. All lift ticket products are non-refundable, non-transferable and valid for the season in which they are purchased. *The Bring a Friend offer is limited to a maximum of 4 friends per day. Pass or EDGE Cardholder must be present. **Other restrictions may apply, please visit online for complete details.
Blackcomb Mountain is open until May 26, 2014
1.866.218.9689 whistlerblackcomb.com/$49
/
/
A24 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 2014
everybody gets our lowest price. every day. ®
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Valid May 2 - May 4, 2014
FRIDAY
2
3
MAY
Assorted varieties. 4 Litre. Plus deposit and/or enviro levy where applicable.
SUNDAY
SATURDAY
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T-Bone Steak
Raspberries
Or Bone in Strip Loin. Mix and Match. LIMIT THREE.
6
Product of U.S.A. 170 g.
99
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lb 15.41/kg
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Signature CAFE Soup Assorted varieties. 625 mL.
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ea.
Wonder Bread
Delissio Rising Crust Frozen Pizza Assorted varieties. 519 to 888 g.
4
2$ FOR
Assorted varieties. 570 g.
ea.
$
BUY 4 EARN 50
99
off
with coupon
Limit of one coupon per transaction. Offer valid in all BC, Alberta, Manitoba and Saskatchewan Safeway Stores. Coupon must be presented at time of purchase and cannot be combined with any other coupon offer. Limit of one coupon per purchase. Void if reproduced and where prohibited by law. Coupon cannot be doubled or redeemed for cash. Cashiers: Ensure all applicable items are scanned as well as the coupon. Discount will automatically come off once all purchase requirements are met, coupon is scanned and “total” key is pressed.
MAY
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Lucerne Milk
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6 Stem. With baby’s breath and greenery. LIMIT FIVE. While supplies last.
LIMIT FOUR - Combined varieties.
celebrate
MOTHER’S DAY IS SUNDAY, MAY 11
Mother’s Day Cupcakes
Mother’s Day
Vanilla or Chocolate. Package of 6.
Items valid Friday, May 2 - Thursday, May 8
3
99
Field Tulips 5 Stem.
2
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CUSTOMER APPRECIATION DAY IS TUESDAY, MAY 6
SAVINGS* COUPON
SAMPLE ONLY. SAVINGS REWARD AVAILABLE IN-STORE WITH QUALIFYING GROCERY PURCHASE. SAVINGS REWARD CAN BE REDEEMED MAY 9 - MAY
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*Make ANY Safeway grocery purchase from May 6 - 8, 2014 and automatically get a $10 off Savings Coupon. $10 off Savings Coupon valid on a minimum $75 grocery purchase made on May 9 thru May 15, 2014. Other conditions may apply. See Customer Service for complete details.
Phalaenopsis Orchids
3 Inch. In a glass cube.
19
99
Prices effective at all British Columbia Safeway stores Friday, May 2 through Sunday, May 4, 2014 only. We reserve the right to limit sales to retail quantities. Some items may not be available at all stores. All items while stocks last. Actual items may vary slightly from illustrations. Some illustrations are serving suggestions only. Advertised prices do not include GST. ®™ Trademarks of AIR MILES International Trading B.V. Used under license by LoyaltyOne, Co. and Safeway. On BUY ONE GET ONE FREE items, both items must be purchased. Lowest priced item is then free. Online and in-store prices, discounts, and offers may differ.
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TASTE
Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A25
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE to EXCEPTIONAL CUISINE
Parisian pastries pleasing Chris Dagenais
The Dish
ROMANCING THE STOVE Angela Shellard presents recipes for grilled cheese. page 26
Breakfast in bed. The concept positively brims with trite and saccharine images of lazy Sundays, cosy pyjamas, and some bumbling but wellmeaning spouse or child assembling a tray of goodies in the kitchen to be lugged up the stairs and presented to a gently awakening, warmly grateful recipient. We’ve all seen the TV commercial. In reality, I find the whole affair objectionable. If there is time for a leisurely breakfast in the morning, then there is time for more sleep. I prefer the latter. Also, the meal service itself is awkward and impractical, with shifting pillows, an unstable eating surface, and an unnecessarily high risk of coffee spillage. And don’t even get me started on the crumb factor; returning to bed in the evening to discover that one’s bed sheets have the texture of a coarse gravel road is irksome. However, there are times in life when one must put one’s own eccentricities aside and think of others. Such a time is nearly upon us as Mother’s Day looms. As it happens, my wife, the lovely and incomparable DJ, mother of our two children, rather fancies the whole breakfast in bed ordeal. Accordingly, I have spent some time sourcing a few
choice morsels with which to populate a Sunday morning tray. Mother’s Day research afforded me the excuse to finally check out the classic Viennoiserie of the recently opened Faubourg Paris, the elegant and lively pastry shop in the burgeoning new wing of Park Royal South. The shop is a fragrant and colourful bastion of Parisian confection, stocked with golden brown baguettes and croissants, twisty sticks of chocolately brioche, a bright spectrum of airy macarons, cakes, and the sort of labour-intensive, frustratingly dainty pastries you are unlikely to ever attempt to make at home (at least not more than once). After a healthy sampling of many of these delights, three emerged as top-tier candidates for Mother’s Day offerings. My favourite was the Bordeaux canele, a ridged, three-bite cake originally hailing from one of France’s most celebrated wine regions. If you have not tried a canele before, please make it a priority to do so; life is too short to miss out on these things and Faubourg does an excellent rendition. The cake resembles a crepe in texture, light and springy, with a caramelized, mahogany exterior and rumscented, custard-like interior. If this sounds like a far cry from suitable breakfast food, rest assured, the canele is actually not terribly sweet and pairs brilliantly with a strong morning coffee. Also of note from Faubourg is their pistachio croissant, a rectangular and perfectly flaky (read: likely to leave crumbs in bed) riff on the traditional breakfast item, filled with pistachio cream and topped with crumbled nuts. As a sweet gift idea, Faubourg’s macarons,
<S -22831T\S1 8[ 6-213X\2 X2 -**8T6-SX\) +` - *06 8[ 1\- -1 5-0+803Z ]-3X2' - S\. 6-213` 2Y86 XS ]-3V H8`-U G801Y% ]g_F_ MIKE WAKEFIELD sold in boxes of nine, are likely to garner kudos for the thoughtful giver.The shop’s signature macaron is outrageously delicious, made with aromatic passion fruit that lends a welcome dose of tartness. Other winning macaron flavours include lemon, which tastes
of English lemon curd, and salted butter caramel, a firm reminder of just how good this de rigueur combination of flavours can be when created by experts. For an almost unforgivably decadent, oncea-year addition to breakfast in bed, I propose a visit to
another West Van gem, C.C. Violin Patisserie on Marine Drive and 15th Street, where intricate gateaux that would be equally at home in an art gallery are created daily. The Triple Caramel gateau, a beautiful little See Artisanal page 27
Enjoy the Pastas at Mangia E Bevi? We sell many of our homemade sauces in our Market. At Caffe Al Mercato find all the ingredients you need for an Italian feast at home, including many of the housemade sauces and soups served at Mangia E Bevi. While shopping enjoy an Italian-inspired coffee, fresh baked muffins, scones, cakes and cookies and homemade gelato.
Caffe Al Mercato is the younger, more casual sibling of Mangia E Bevi Restaurant – the home of the finest classic Italian dining in West Vancouver. Both restaurant and caffe reflect the passions of owners Antonio Sauro, Rob Parrott and Doug Grisdale.
CAFFE & SPECIALTY ITALIAN GROCERIES IN WEST VANCOUVER 2215 MARINE DRIVE WEST VANCOUVER | 604 922 4334 | 7AM – 7PM SEVEN DAYS A WEEK
A26 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 2014
BEST BUY - CORRECTION NOTICE
NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE BEST BUY APRIL 25 CORPORATE FLYER In the April 25 flyer, page 1, the Asus TF701T Transformer Pad Tablet (Web Code: 10275831) was advertised with an incorrect feature. Please be advised that this tablet DOES NOT come with a keyboard dock, as previously advertised. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.
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Angela Shellard
Romancing the Stove
3 & under
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Grilled cheese gets makeover
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Child $599 Toddler $299 4-10 yrs
TASTE
Question: What’s the best after-school snack, dorm meal, or “I’m too tired to cook” recipe? Answer: Grilled cheese. A grilled cheese sandwich dipped into steamy tomato soup is nothing short of perfection, but I’m not thinking of two slices of puffy white bread with a sheet of plastic process cheese inside. Think of brie, pepper Jack, Cambazola or sharp white cheddar cuddling up to prosciutto, salami, or smoked turkey. Cradle them between marble rye, brioche, soda bread or a rustic multigrain, and try interesting condiments like aioli, curry mayonnaise or tapenade. The easiest way to cook a grilled cheese is in a hot skillet. I like to use my countertop grill so the finished product is more like a panino, but if your grilled cheese of choice contains lots of oozing ingredients the skillet is a better option. You can place another empty skillet on top of the sandwich while it’s cooking to approximate the weight of a panini press without squishing out the goodies inside. Press down lightly but firmly with your hand on the assembled sandwiches before placing them in the pan (and before buttering the bread) to help them
to Cook?
Celebrate Mothers Day with a gift from Posh!
Posh Pantry has what you’re looking some quality time with you. for, even if it’s just inspiration... ( and some new amazing recipes too of course! )
Take a class together and give her what she really wants...
hold together. Taco Grilled Cheese 2 slices of bread (a cheese bread would be a great choice) 1 Tbsp soft butter ½ cup grated sharp cheddar or Monterey Jack cheese, or a combination ½ cup taco-seasoned ground beef 2 Tbsp salsa 1 roma tomato, diced 1 Tbsp sour cream ¼ avocado, cut into thin slices Heat a skillet over medium heat. Butter one side of each slice of bread. Place it in the skillet and then layer toppings as follows: half the cheese, the ground beef, salsa, tomato, sour cream, avocado, then the other half of the cheese. Top with the other slice of bread, buttered side up. Grill until golden brown on both sides and the cheese has melted, about two to four minutes per side. Serve with
additional salsa and/or sour cream for dipping. Makes one sandwich. Grilled Cheese with Gouda, Roasted Mushrooms & Onions 4 oz mushrooms, sliced Half a medium onion, thinly sliced 1 Tbsp olive oil Salt and freshly ground pepper 2 Tbsp butter 2 slices of bread (a hearty multigrain or a sourdough French would work well) ½ cup shredded Gouda cheese (you could substitute Edam or Fontina) Preheat oven to 400° F. Place the mushrooms and onion on a baking sheet. Drizzle the olive oil over top and toss to coat vegetables. Sprinkle with salt and pepper to taste. Bake for about 20 minutes or until roasted to your liking. Melt the butter in a skillet over medium heat. While the butter is melting assemble the
Beautiful Table Settings Upcoming Classes Gorgeous Linens
to Cook?
Does your Mom
;3X\ X2 -S -U1\3S-1X/\ 18 *Y\))-3 [83 Z3XUU\) *Y\\2\ 2-S).X*Y\2% ]g_F_ CINDY GOODMAN
• Saturday May 3 All about Pies! Chef Ginette • Thursday May 8 Sushi PARTICIPATION. Chef Cindy Low • Monday May 12 Kids Cook! After School Mexican Feast for ages 8-12 • Tuesday May 13 French Bistro with Chef Glenys Morgan • Thursday May 15 Patio Party Appetizers with Chef Ira • Wednesday May 28 Szechuan Flavours with Chef Cindy Low • Saturday May 31 Sugar Cookie Decorating with Chef Ginette
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sandwich: on one slice of bread layer half the cheese, the roasted vegetables, then the remaining cheese. Top with the other slice of bread. Place the sandwich into the melted butter for just a second, then flip it over. Cook that side for about two minutes or until browned to your preference, then flip it over and cook the other side until browned and cheese is melted. Makes one sandwich. Grilled Ham, Onion & Tomato One thin slice from a large red onion 1 Tbsp white vinegar 1 Tbsp mayonnaise mixed with 1 tsp Dijon mustard 2 slices rye or marble rye bread 1 slice provolone cheese 2 thin slices of ripe tomato 2 thin slices Black Forest ham ¼ cup shredded sharp cheddar See Italian page 27
Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A27
WE’VE
TASTE
Italian style uses Fontina From page 26 2 Tbsp soft butter Separate the onion slice into rings and place in a small bowl. Pour the vinegar over top and let sit at room temperature for about 10 minutes (the vinegar mellows the onion flavour). Drain and blot onion dry with a paper towel before assembling sandwich. To assemble the sandwich, spread the mayonnaise-mustard mixture on one side of each slice of bread. On one bread slice, layer the provolone, tomato, ham, marinated onion slices and shredded cheddar. Top with the
other slice of bread. Spread butter on the top of the sandwich. Place it in a hot skillet (over medium heat) buttered side down. Butter the piece of bread that’s now on top. Grill until golden brown on the bottom, then flip over and grill the other side until brown and cheeses have melted (place an empty skillet on top of this sandwich while the second side is cooking to weigh it down and help the cheese melt). Makes one sandwich. Grilled Cheese Italiano 2 slices crusty Italian bread ½ cup shredded Fontina cheese
2 large fresh basil leaves 6-8 thin slices Italian salami (slices should be about 1½-inches in diameter; if salami is larger use just enough slices to cover bread) ¼ cup sliced roasted red peppers ½ cup warm marinara sauce for dipping (optional) In a non-stick skillet over medium-high heat, cook the salami until crisp, about 30 seconds on each side. Drain salami on paper towels. On one slice of bread, layer the ingredients as follows: half the cheese, basil, the crisped salami, sliced red pepper, and then the other half of the cheese. Top
Angela Shellard has done informal catering for various functions. Contact: ashellard@hotmail.ca.
0% 84
Artisanal coffee recommended From page 25
bronze dome of caramel mousse surrounding a caramelized peach in a caramel shell, forced my eyes to roll back into my head involuntarily, perhaps in search of the right words to describe this treasure. Their chocolate truffle cake, a deep and dense, multi-layered number, is no slouch either and is one of the few items that prompt me to reach for a cold glass of milk, a rarity in my adult life. C.C.Violin’s more traditional baked goods include an outstanding
cinnamon raisin brioche, a lighter (but equally sticky and satisfying) take on a cinnamon bun. I would also recommend a quick stop at Jimmy’s Fruit Bar at Lonsdale Quay for an assemble-ityourself box of ready-cut, fresh fruit, including exotic items like dragon fruit, lychee and pomegranate, to add some colour and welcome nutrition to Mom’s breakfast. Finally, you’d do well to consider stopping by Moja Coffee, down on Rupert Street and Harbour Avenue, for a bag of expertly
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roasted, single origin java to accompany breakfast. Moja already has a growing following of die-hard loyalists and may well be on its way to becoming the North Shore’s top independent purveyor of artisanal coffee. Keep your eye on this place. Bon appetit to all the moms out there. Faubourg Paris is located at 792 Main St., Park Royal South. Faubourg.com
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Chris Dagenais served as a manager for several restaurants downtown and on the North Shore. Contact: hungryontheshore@gmail.com.
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with the second slice of bread. Butter the top of that slice and place butterside down in a skillet heated over medium heat; grill until golden brown. Butter the slice of bread that’s on top, then flip sandwich over and grill the second side until golden and cheese has melted. Serve with marinara sauce alongside for dipping, if desired. This recipe makes one sandwich.
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thing for Eve e m r yone! So Lonsdale Quay Farmers’ Market
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GROW IT – MAKE IT – BAKE IT MARKET!
EVERY SATURDAY, May 3 – Oct. 25 Lonsdale Quay Market, 10 am to 3 pm Acting Mayor Don Bell will open the Market May 3rd @ 10 am.
Ambleside Farmers’ Market
**New location 1500 block of Bellevue** EVERY SUNDAY, May 4 – Oct. 26 10 am to 3 pm Mayor Michael Smith will open the Market May 5th @10 am
For information call 604.628.8226 or 604.318.0487 10am to 5pm • www.artisanmarkets.ca
• Conventional & Organic Farmers • Prepared Food Vendors • Crafters • Live Music • Reading Area & Book Exchange • Children’s Play Area
A28 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 2014
DEVELOPER INFORMATION SESSION #2 725 Marine Drive (Revised Rezoning Application)
CELEBRATIONS
Darwin Properties Ltd. invites interested members of the public to attend a second Open House to view the revised development plans and provide input; Date: Time: Location of meeting:
Thursday May 8th, 2014 6:30 â&#x20AC;&#x201C; 8:30 pm (short presentation at 7:00 pm) North Shore Kia 725 Marine Drive, North Vancouver
Peter M. Katsuno
In conjunction with the related application by Dick Irwin Group to construct a new car sales and service centre at 843-855 West 1st Street, Darwin Properties Ltd. has applied to construct a new mixed-use building at 725 Marine Drive. The applicant has made a number of changes to the proposed development at 725 Marine including a reduction in height and density. We invite you to attend the second open house on May 8th to view and respond to these changes.
Applicant Contact Brad Howard Darwin Properties Ltd. T: 604-929-7944 brad@darwin.ca
City of North Vancouver Contact Helen Besharat Besharat Friars Architects T: 604-662-8544 hbesharat@besharatfriars.com
Christopher Wilkinson, Planner Community Development Department T: 604-990-4206 cwilkinson@cnv.org
Peter M. Katsuno .-2 +83S 8S <63XU !N' !K!Q% g\ Y-2 UX/\) XS C\21 D-S*80/\3 [83 i" `\-32' -S) *\U\+3-1\) YX2 !""1Y +X31Y)-` .X1Y [-TXU` -S) [3X\S)2% gX2 .X[\ b-3X\ 3\*\S1U` *\U\+3-1\) Y\3 K"1Y +X31Y)-` -S) YX2 [-1Y\3 UX/\) 18 +\ !"K `\-32 8U)%
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This is not a Public Hearing. Council will receive a report from staff on issues raised at the meeting and will formally consider the proposal at a later date.
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Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A29
local vendors, children’s activities, contests, wine tastings and tours aboard a 32-foot fishing boat. On-site barbecued halibut burgers and drinks available with a $5 donation with proceeds going towards Lions Gate Hospital Foundation. freshstmarket.com KIDS TOY AND CLOTHING SALE The Lynn Valley Community Association will hold a sale of gently used toys, clothes, equipment and baby accessories May 3, 2:30-4:30 and May 4, 2-4 p.m. at Lynn Valley Community Centre, 3590 Mountain Hwy., North Vancouver. Different vendors each day. $2. lvcatoysale@shaw.ca
ART SHOW <31X21 b\Z F38` X2 2Y8.XSZ Y\3 *8U803[0U -S) LZ03-1X/\ 6-XS1XSZ2 XS 8XU -S) -*3`UX* 8S *-S/-2' .YXU\ [\UU8. -31X21 G/X1U-S- h\3-2`T*Y0V&b0U`V X2 )X26U-`XSZ Y\3 ZU-22 +\-)2 S\\)U\.83V 6X*103\2 -1 H8S <S)3\.2 :8TT0SX1` H\*3\-1X8S :\S13\ 0S1XU e0S\ M -2 6-31 8[ 1Y\ G021\S-S*\ -S) 1Y\ C83U) FY380ZY hU-22 ;\-)2 \,YX+X1% ]g_F_ CINDY GOODMAN
Community Bulletin Board From page 23
to follow Thursday, May 1, 12 p.m. at Delbrook Recreation Centre, 600 W. Queens, North Vancouver. Bag lunch, refreshments supplies.
NORTH SHORE SAFETY COUNCIL MEETING A representative from North Shore Emergency Management Office will be on hand to present on the Rapid Alert program, with a discussion
MULGRAVE PRESENTS COMMUNITY SPEAKER SERIES Yong Zhao, a leading voice in education, will speak on the implications of globalization and technology on education Friday, May 2, 7 p.m. at
are invited to the celebration along with the congregation. TRANSPORTATION VISIONS for North Vancouver, future, present and past. Join Dave Perfitt for an informative 2.5 km walk to discuss a proposed greenway overpass between Lynn Valley and Lonsdale Town Centres on Sunday, May 4, 1 p.m. Meet at Loutet Park, E. 17th and Rufus. janeswalk.org/canada/ vancouver/transportationvisions-north-vancouverfuture-present-and-past/
ONE-ON-ONE COMPUTER ASSISTANCE Get 30 minutes of personalized help with the Internet, email, word processing, social media or an e-reader Tuesday, May 13, 2:30-4 p.m. at Parkgate library, 3675 Banff Court, North Vancouver. Registration required. 604-929-3727 x8168 nvdpl.ca Compiled by Debbie Caldwell Email information for your event to listings@nsnews.com.
PUB NIGHT RNB Dance will hold a fundraiser for a new floor, props and studio improvements Saturday, May 3, 6:30 p.m. at Seymour’s Pub, 720 Old Lillooet Rd., North Vancouver. 50/50 draw, silent auction, games and more. $25 which includes a $15 food and drink voucher. 604-980-3030 rnbdance.ca
Mulgrave’s Linda Hamer Theatre, 2330 Cypress Bowl Lane,West Vancouver. mulgrave.com
SUPER SPRING FLEA MARKET Antiques, clothing, estate goods, jewelry, books, hardware, toys, electrical, kitchenware and more will be for sale Saturday, May 3, 8:30 a.m.2:30 p.m. at West Vancouver United Church, 2062 Esquimalt Ave.
HALIBUT FESTIVAL Fresh St. Market will host its second annual festival Saturday, May 3, 11 a.m.3 p.m. at 1650 Marine Dr.,West Vancouver.The community is invited to celebrate the season’s biggest catch, halibut, with food demonstrations from
MOUNT SEYMOUR UNITED CHURCH will celebrate its 25th anniversary in the Seymour area on May 4 with a special service at 10 a.m. followed by a celebratory lunch at 1200 Parkgate Ave., North Vancouver. Past ministers, staff and founding volunteers
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A30 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 2014
KUDOS
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SPORT
Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A31
YOUR NORTH SHORE GUIDE
to THE GAMES PEOPLE PLAY
:8UUXSZ.88) 30Z+` *8-*Y H8Z\3 g-1*Y 1-UV2 1-*1X*2 .X1Y 28T\ 8[ YX2 6U-`\32 )03XSZ - 3\*\S1 c8.\3 b-XSU-S) << U\-Z0\ T-1*Y06% :8UUXSZ.88) .XUU 1-V\ 8S H8*V3X)Z\ XS 1Y\ -SS0-U g-1*Y GYX\U) Z-T\ 53X)-`' - Z-T\ S-T\) -[1\3 1Y\ U8SZ1XT\ *8-*Y .Y8 X2 3\1X3XSZ -1 1Y\ \S) 8[ 1Y\ `\-3% ]g_F_ CINDY GOODMAN
One more plan to Hatch Collingwood rugby coach gets set for final game that bears his name
SCHEDULE CHANGE
The Argyle vs. Handsworth senior boys rugby game that was listed for Thursday, May 1 in the last edition of the North Shore News has been moved toWednesday, April 30. Kickoff will be today at 4 p.m. at Handsworth secondary.
ANDY PREST aprest@nsnews.com
Roger Hatch had a little inside information when he went looking for a job at Collingwood School in West Vancouver 29 years ago. A high-level rugby player, Hatch was applying to Collingwood one year after the school opened and had heard through the grapevine that the man doing the hiring, founding headmaster David Mackenzie, was himself a former international rugby player. Hatch hatched a plan. “I happened to be wearing my BC Rugby tie into the interview,” Hatch recalled when contacted by the North Shore News last week. “I got hired on the spot.” He’s been there ever since. One of his first
big tasks was whipping together a rugby team out of thin air. For a persuasive guy like Hatch, it was a snap. “I was uber-enthusiastic and that kind of rubbed off on a few boys and a few more boys and a few more boys and we started going.” Five years later David Speirs joined on as a co-coach and they’ve stayed that way pretty much since then. What followed was many seasons of dominance in AA rugby, interrupted only by the introduction of a fierce new rival, West Vancouver’s Rockridge secondary. Rockridge started as a middle school in 1996 but became a full secondary school in the early 2000s and, with hot shot coach Tim Murdy at the helm, their rugby team was a threat almost instantly.
Sensing something special was brewing, the coaches from both sides decided to make the first meeting between the two teams each season into an event, a grudge match that would continue through the decades. What Hatch didn’t know was that Speirs and Murdy, both great friends from years spent coaching and playing together, conspired behind his back to name the game after him to honour all he had done for the sport at Collingwood and as a coach and player with the Capilano Rugby Club. Thus was born the Hatch Shield. “I was really honoured, particularly because it was two of my best friends who did it,” said Hatch. On Friday Hatch, still a co-coach of the school’s senior boys rugby team,
will be on the sidelines for his final Hatch Shield. He’s retiring from teaching and coaching after this school year. He’s seen some great rugby played by elite teams over the years — Collingwood and Rockridge combined to win the provincial AA title nine times during a 10-year stretch from 1998 to 2007. The rivalry is still as strong as ever — the two teams met in last year’s provincial final with Collingwood taking the win. “The rivalry is amazing,” said Hatch. “The kids from both schools will get together on the weekends and they’re friends. But when they get out on the field they’re not friends anymore. And then when the game is over, it’s over. They’re friends again.” Winning the Hatch Shield is all about winning bragging rights the next time the kids all get together to hang out. That’s fitting considering that, according to Speirs,
the best talker of the whole bunch might be Mr. Hatch himself. “He’s not just a great tactical coach, but he’s always joking around with the guys,” said Speirs. “He’s always having fun with them. The banter and the insults — it’s a twoway street that goes nonstop. The guys love being around him. He’s very quick on his feet — he tells the same jokes over and over again but he’s very quick when it comes to banter with the kids. He’ll get in some shots, and if they come back he’s pretty quick with the reply. The guys, they just love him.” A favourite running gag is Hatch’s call to action during training sessions. The division of coaching duties has always been that Hatch works with the big, beefy forwards while Speirs coaches the smaller, quicker backs. “Backs over there, the men here with me,” or some variation of the See Coach page 32
A32 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 2014
SPORT
Coach stays young keeping up with kids From page 31 phrase, is often Hatch’s call. “He’s a forward through and through,” said Speirs with a laugh. “He knows that his guys have to do the work to make my guys look good.” Hatch’s role with the team, however, and in the school in general, goes way beyond being the chief barb thrower. “My favourite thing, and the most impressive thing, about him is that he’s as passionate now as he was 24 years ago when I started coaching with him,” said Speirs. “He just loves being with the guys and he just loves rugby and he wants to get the guys out. If somebody is unsure, he’s going to try to convince him to play. He goes out to the rugby field every day with a big smile on his face because he loves it so much.” Speirs admitted that it will be very tough to find anyone who can come close to filling Hatch’s shoes once he retires, although he did so in real Hatch-like fashion. “We would never tell him that, but yes — we will
definitely miss him.” The school will hold a Rugbyman’s Roast for Roger June 14 and Speirs is expecting a big turnout of former players and students. All those kids, some now pushing past 40, are the reason that Hatch hung around for nearly three decades. “I just love being around the kids and being able to find the different button that makes them tick,” he said. “Whether it’s an arm around the shoulder or a kick in the backside or sharing a little tear, I like finding the little button that makes kids tick.” Crafting those kids into a smoothly running rugby team is another story altogether. “It’s a sport that has 15 guys on the field — 30 if you count both teams — so developing that continuity is not an easy task,” said Hatch. “It’s great to be able to mould a team into something that has a little bit of precision.” Hatch will be hoping for precision when his Cavaliers take on the Ravens this Friday in his
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final Hatch Shield as a coach. Losing the game that bears his name really stings. “It never feels good to lose any time, but when you lose the Hatch Shield game that’s probably the epitome of the lowest that I would get coming off of the field,” he said. On the flip side, there’s nothing much better than grabbing hold of that Hatch trophy. “It’s a little bit embarrassing and humbling, but very, very gratifying,” he said with a laugh. “I’d like to say it’s not more important than any other game but I’d probably be lying. I’m as competitive as anybody. . . . It doesn’t matter what it is. I’m a guy that played first division rugby until I was in my mid-40s and just would never quit. It means a lot, it would be huge.” ••• This year’s Hatch Shield game is scheduled for Friday, May 1 starting at 4 p.m. at Rockridge secondary. The game will likely determine who finishes first in regular season play in the Lower Mainland AA league.
West Van 4th at rugby sevens provincials WestVancouver secondary led the way with a fourthplace finish as four North Shore teams battled in the BC Rugby boys high school provincial sevens championships played Saturday and Sunday at
Esplanade NORTH VANCOUVER Tickets and Showtimes www.landmarkcinemas.com
:8UUXSZ.88)#2 7UX-2 73Z-2 13X\2 18 2Y-V\ U882\ )03XSZ - c8.\3 b-XSU-S) << T-1*Y06 -Z-XS21 b*H8+\312 <63XU ii% :8UUXSZ.88) .8S QQ&!i -S) .XUU 1-V\ 8S H8*V3X)Z\ XS 1Y\ -SS0-U g-1*Y GYX\U) Z30)Z\ T-1*Y 53X)-`+ ]g_F_ CINDY GOODMAN
the University of British Columbia. West Van made the Cup semifinals but a 50-0 loss to St. George’s in the semifinals and a 33-12 defeat at the hands of Robert Bateman dropped
them out of the medals. Argyle was next with a sixth-place finish, losing 22-5 to Cowichan in the Plate (fifth place) final. Handsworth dropped to 10th after a 20-5 loss to Lord Tweedsmuir in the
Bowl (ninth place) final while Carson Graham was the only North Shore squad to win their last game, topping Elgin Park 24-0 in the Shield (13th place) final. — Andy Prest
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Wednesday, April 30, 2014 - North Shore News - A33
SPORT
Burnaby bests Cap in playoff semifinal The Capilano Rugby Club’s elite men’s team lost their semifinal matchup against their over-the-bridge rivals from Burnaby Lake Rugby Club Saturday, bringing an end to their 2013-14 campaign. The Caps, ranked fourth heading into the playoffs, still hold the distinction as the only team to knock off No. 1-seeded Burnaby Lake this season — they beat them back in November — but couldn’t muster a repeat performance Saturday at the Burnaby Lake Sports Complex, losing 30-17. Burnaby jumped out to a 15-0 lead on tries from Cole McQueen and Admir Cejvanovic and a penalty from Geoff Ryan, before Capilano rallied back to make it 18-12 at halftime. Substitute Matt Alexander scored for Burnaby in the second half and Cejvanovic added his second of the day to push the lead to 30-12. Capilano again fought back with a fantastic try from Gareth Dyer on a long kickoff return making the score 30-17, but that’s how it would end up. The same two teams met two weeks earlier at Capilano’s Klahanie Park with Burnaby claiming a 2519 victory. On the other side of the playoffs, second-seeded James Bay topped Castaway Wanderers 16-13 in a tight, all-Island battle to set up a rematch of the 2013 premier league final. James Bay beat Burnaby 18-10 to claim the Rounsefell Cup last year. Burnaby has never won the provincial premier title.They’ll get their next shot at claiming the Cup on Saturday, May 10 at Klahanie Park, 4 p.m. kickoff. ••• Capilano is still alive in men’s first division action. The No. 2-ranked Caps will host the third-seeded UVic Norsemen in a playoff semifinal this Saturday starting at 2:45 p.m. at Klahanie.The first division final is scheduled for May 10 at 2 p.m., also at Klahanie. On the women’s side fourth-seeded Capilano will travel to Victoria to take on the No. 1-ranked Velox Valkyries at Velox RFC in an Adidas Women’s Premiership semifinal matchup Saturday starting at 1 p.m. In men’s third division action Capilano’s Tier A team won their quarterfinal
Velox Valhallians Saturday at Klahanie, kickoff at 1 p.m. — Andy Prest
away with a quarterfinal win Saturday, topping the Brit Lions 36-3.They’ll host the
at Klahanie. At the third division,Tier B level, Capilano also came
semifinals.The Caps will host Kelowna this Saturday starting at 11:30 a.m.
matchup against Scribes RFC Saturday 42-3 to advance to the provincial
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A38 - North Shore News - Wednesday, April 30, 2014
WEDNESDAY April
30 2014
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Art showcase set for waterfront Presentation House Gallery moves forward with bold design
BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com
North Vancouver’s worldrenowned Presentation House Gallery took a critical step closer to its new home at the foot of
SD44 in the black JANE SEYD jseyd@nsnews.com
Lonsdale, where the city has a massive, multimillion dollar facelift planned. Council reviewed the gallery’s plans for the site and charted out the rest of the surrounding plaza
BIKES UP TO ! F F O % 5 7
While many school districts are faced with deficits and having to make hard choices to balance their books next year, the North Vancouver School District expects its budget to come in squarely in the black. Preliminary budget figures are projecting a $2.6-million surplus for the 2014/2015 school year based on an overall operating budget of between $139 million and $140 million, said superintendent John Lewis. That’s largely a result of a forecasted $4.9-million surplus that will be left at the end of the current school year. “We’re pleased with the position we’re in,” said Lewis, noting some of that surplus is the result of belttightening in previous years. “It’s careful financial
Monday night. Gallery and city staff can now go to work on detailed designs and come back to council with a rezoning application, like any other development project. The main building is projected to be 24,000 square feet on two levels aligned with the west side of the 100-block of
Lonsdale Avenue. That includes 3,500 square feet of retail space, a cafe and bookstore. The extra retail space in the building will allow the gallery to generate enough revenue to help cover the operational costs of running the gallery. “If and when we are lucky enough to be an occupant of that building,
we won’t have to come back to the City of North Vancouver taxpayer for additional operational revenue,” said gallery director Reid Shier. Today, the gallery occupies 6,000 square feet in its aging building at Third Street and Chesterfield Avenue. The new gallery’s architecture threatens
to upstage the artistic photos inside, with an outer facade made of crumpled and unfolded stainless steel, designed to reflect as much light as possible during the low-light months of the year. The main level will have predominantly glass walls, allowing the public
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’13 Team Carbon 9.3
SAVE
30%
SAVE
95
$
stries, u d n I e On lothing C i o g u &S
! F F O % 0 UP TO 4 Serfas & hoes S o n a Shim ! F F O % 0 UP TO 7
Sombrio
30%
You almost missed it again. Scan this.
661 Riot Knee & Elbow Armour
19 95
$
Axiom Discovery Gel Gloves
P. (604) 986.5534 | johnhenrybikes.com
$
9 99
Axiom Expandair HV
9 99
$
| #100-400 Brooksbank Ave. North Vancouver, BC
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