North Shore News June 26 2016

Page 1

FOCUS REMEMBERING QUINN KEAST 4 NEIGHBOURHOODS LYNN VALLEY 11 FEATURE I LOVE THE NORTH SHORE B1 SUNDAY June 26 2016

$1.25

NEWSSTAND PRICE

There’s more online at nsnews.com

WIN A NORTH SHORE ADVENTURE PRIZE PACKAGE: SEE DETAILS ON PAGE B12

Team effort MOSQUITO CREEK MURAL CAPS ESTUARY RESTORATION WORK SEE PAGE 6

LOCAL NEWS LOCAL MATTERS SINCE 1969

Queen Mary elementary students Paria Delavaran-Shiraz and Mylan Drummond help out with the mural overlooking the Spirit Trail. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD

$15 OFF REGULAR-PRICED FOOTWEAR

Valid in-store or online | www.kintec.net 975 Marine Drive| 604-980-5633

Use code: N10197 No actual cash value, cannot be combined with other offers. Expires July 9, 2016.


A2 |

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

| A3

north shore news nsnews.com

Salmon House 2229 FOLKESTONE WAY, WEST VANCOUVER, B.C. RESERVATIONS: 604.926.3212 www.salmonhouse.com

40th ANNIVERSARY 3 COURSE MENU ~ $40 SEAFOOD CHOWDER MANHATTAN STYLE OR

West Coast Oyster Shooter

DENTURE WEARERS! COME IN AND RECEIVE A COMPLIMENTARY CONSULTATION AND DENTURE CARE PACKAGE FREE!

Why Go Far?

HOUSE CAESAR SALAD ALDER GRILLED SEAFOOD PAELLA

Support your local Denturist on the North Shore Brent Der R.D.

SOCKEYE SALMON, HALIBUT, PRAWNS, SCALLOP SMOKED OYSTER, CLAM AND MUSSEL CHORIZO SAUSAGE SERVED WITH GARLIC CROUSTADE

PAVLOVA

FRESH BERRIES & CHANTILLY CREAM

*** Must be seated before 6:00 pm from Monday to Friday. This 3 course menu offer is not valid with Entertainment coupon, in-house discounts or any other promotional offers.

(2016 Summer Menu)

CHECK OUT OUR MONTHLY MENU.

NORTH VANCOUVER DENTURE CLINIC 604-986-8515 231 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver

Visit our website for more details: www.salmonhouse.com

Home and Institutional Care Available

Is your Thyroid to blame? Have you ever wondered why some individuals are able to lose weight with diet and exercise, and other individuals cannot lose weight despite a disciplined program? Are you experiencing thinning hair, loss of lateral third of the eyebrows, mental fogginess and low sex drive? Have you had a good metabolism all of your life, and with menopause noticed weight gain around your midsection? Your thyroid may be to blame. But what if your thyroid tests appear normal?

Dr. Cathryn Coe ND “What can cause low thyroid function? Chronic stress, as well as unbalanced hormone levels,...”

The standard blood test for thyroid function is called TSH, or thyroid stimulating hormone. This is a measure of how hard your thyroid gland is working to produce thyroid hormone. It is possible, however, for the TSH levels to be normal but other markers of thyroid function, such as T3 and T4, to be low. These levels are not commonly investigated unless the TSH level is out of normal range. Knowing these levels ensures proper

management of thyroid functioning. Inflammation can also be present in the thyroid gland, which may not necessarily affect the levels of TSH. If the active thyroid hormone produced is low (T3), then symptoms of low thyroid function will be exacerbated.

Marine Drive Naturopathic Clinic offers Comprehensive Thyroid testing to measure all markers of thyroid function and determine the best treatment options for patients including prescription and natural approaches.

What can cause low thyroid function? Chronic stress, as well as unbalanced hormone levels, can decrease the production of circulating hormone levels. High cortisol levels (stress hormones) can cause high levels of reverse T3, a hormone that binds to thyroid receptors and makes them less efficient. Low levels of the hormone progesterone can cause a decreased production of active thyroid hormone. This hormone typically will decrease with fluctuations in hormone levels leading up to menopause.

Dr. Cathryn Coe has over 10 years of experience helping patients to optimize thyroid function, including helping patients with autoimmune thyroid disorders. Knowing the levels of various thyroid hormones is the best way to determine how well the thyroid is functioning, even if you are already medicated for your thyroid gland. Call today for your appointment 604-929-5772 or book online at www.marinedrivenaturopathic.com

“Get your life back, not your symptoms”™

MARINE DRIVE NATUROPATHIC CLINIC

101–1277 Marine Drive, North Vancouver

604-929-5772

marinedrivenaturopathic.com FULLY WHEELCHAIR ACCESSIBLE


A4 | NEWS

nsnews.com north shore news

sundayfocus

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Hoops build hope 10 years after tragedy

Basketball empire helps Keast family carry on ANDY PREST aprest@nsnews.com

It was emotion in its rawest form, unmistakeable to a gymnasium packed full of teenaged basketball players, fans, officials and friends.

The Handsworth senior girls had just won the 2009 provincial AAA championship and Jamie Keast stood in front of the crowd ready to hand out one of the many awards given on that day. “The Quinn Keast Most Complete Player award goes to, from the Handsworth Royals, Bethan Chalke!” Before she could pick herself up off the floor where she was sitting with her teammates, Chalke was already covered in tears. By the time she reached Jamie, both young women were quivering messes that melted into each other in an embrace that caught every breath in the crowded Capilano Sportsplex. Three years younger than Quinn Keast, Chalke had watched him from afar in the Handsworth gymnasium when she first arrived at high school. Quinn was a hard-working cornerstone on the school’s dominant senior boys basketball team as well as a humble rock star in the hallways. “I was one of those anonymous faces in the gym at high school boys basketball games,” says Chalke. “He certainly didn’t know who I was but I definitely, definitely knew who he was. You can’t look at somebody like that and not be inspired. Still today he inspires me.” Quinn’s life ended in the early hours of June 11, 2006, when he was hit by a transit bus while on his way to an after-grad party in downtown Vancouver. Three years later Bethan Chalke received a simple award named in Quinn’s honour. It remains one of the highlights of her life. “It was just the most wonderful, humbling thing I could possibly think of,” she says. “To be mentioned in the same breath as Quinn

Jamie Keast finds peace on the Q court at North Vancouver’s Queen Mary elementary. The court is one of three built around the Lower Mainland in honour of Jamie’s twin brother Quinn, a beloved high school athlete who was killed in a pedestrian accident 10 years ago this month. PHOTO PAUL MCGRATH was a huge honour.” Chalke was the first female athlete to receive the Most Complete Player Award from the Quinn Keast Foundation. Many more awards have followed, as have numerous other initiatives – scholarships, courts, tournaments – as the memory of a young man has grown into a legacy that has touched thousands. A senseless accident took away a beloved athlete, shook a tight-knit community and decimated a family. Ten years later the loss is still felt every day, but something else is there too. There’s a basketball empire that seemingly grows stronger every day, carrying with it a legion of young boys and girls who are learning what it really means to live life with no regrets.

aaa

Jamie and Quinn Keast were the “attached at the hip” kind of twins, the ones who did everything together, had the same friends, even the same thoughts. When they were young, their parents would put them into separate cribs in their shared North Vancouver bedroom only to find them in the morning mysteriously sleeping side

by side. When they got older they were in separate rooms beside each other but begged their parents to knock a hole in the wall so that they could build a tunnel. When that plan was shot down, they took to slipping notes under each other’s doors, letters to keep each other updated on the happenings on the other side of the wall. Jamie and Quinn stayed together even when it wasn’t convenient, like when Quinn joined a boys soccer club. Jamie was the only girl in the league. The Keast kids didn’t care. They played together as long as they could, and when they couldn’t do that anymore they took their powerful sports engines onto new teams. Quinn was good enough at basketball to make a provincial team. After his Handsworth senior team failed to win a provincial title in 2005, he famously vowed to take 100,000 shots over the summer so that he’d be ready to push the Royals over the top in 2006. And that’s just what he did. Fighting through injuries and playing on a team loaded

with talented players – including towering centre Rob Sacré, who is now a member of the Los Angeles Lakers – Quinn still dominated the provincial championship final, earning player of the game honours after scoring 17 points and grabbing 16 rebounds in an 82-65 win over the Kitsilano Blue Demons in front of 3,000 fans at the PNE Agrodome. Quinn was injured in the semifinals and his teammates were worried he might not be able to even play in the final. “He had a bad fall, wrist was banged up. He went to physio,” remembers Quinn’s best friend Scott Leigh, who also starred on that Royals team. “I go in and he is bandaged up like a mummy. His wrists are covered, he’s got no mobility. I’m looking at Quinn going, ‘Man, we got a game today. Are you feeling OK?’ By the time we get to the game it’s as if it never happened and he has one of the best games of his life. … It’s a classic story of Quinn – no quit, and just absolute determination. No matter what he did he was going to come through.” Jeff McCutcheon, another close friend, watched the game from the stands with

the rest of the howling Handsworth fans. “He was a beast,” he says of Quinn. “We were in Grade 12, like 17 years old, and he had biceps the size of the basketball. He wasn’t the biggest player, he wasn’t the fastest, he wasn’t the quickest but he just had the biggest heart.” Three months later, Quinn was gone. The accident occurred on grad night. The Keasts took a family photo at home in their formal wear and then headed to a ceremony in Coal Harbour. They all danced together, and Quinn told his mother it was the best night of his life. An after-party was being held at a restaurant a few blocks away. Jamie arrived first, but she didn’t want to go in until Quinn showed up. He never did. Both Jamie and her father, Tom, spoke at Quinn’s memorial, held in the same Capilano Sportsplex gymnasium where so many epic basketball stories have been written over the years. Neither, however, can recall much of anything about the service or what was said. “I have a video of it that

I’ve never watched,” says Tom. “I’m not sure I could.” He sang with his choir, and said a few words. Jamie drew a laugh with a story about Quinn asking her for fashion advice about whether or not he should try out a bold new outfit. He respected her opinion enough to ask for it, but not enough to listen to it. “It looked terrible. It was like white on white,” says Jamie. “I was like, ‘No, you cannot do that.’ And then he just wore it anyway.” There wasn’t much laughter after that though. In an instant, Jamie had become an only child – a sensation she’d never known, even in the womb. Extended family members were assigned to Jamie, Tom, and Jan Keast, Quinn’s mother, to make sure that they made it through the following days in one piece. In the years to come, Jan – who says she had an “old-soul relationship” with Quinn – was nearly lost to grief. “My mom was in immense shock,” says Jamie. “Her body was in physical shock.” That summer the three

See Accident page 5


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

NEWS | A5

north shore news nsnews.com

NEWS TSLEIL-WAUTUTH CHALLENGES NEB REPORT 7 ANDY PREST SPOILING MY APPETITE FOR EYE STABBINGS 8 MAILBOX B.C. NEEDS A POVERTY REDUCTION PLAN 9

art in eyewear

SEMI ANNUAL SALE The Keast family – twins Quinn and Jamie, with mother Jan and father Tom – share one last photo together on the night of Grade 12 graduation. PHOTO SUPPLIED

Accident sends close-knit North Van family into shock

UP TO

60%

OFF

all frames & sunglasses (with purchase of prescription lenses.) (Some exceptions apply.)

SALE ENDS JUNE 30, 2016

1685 marine dr., west van 6 0 4 - 9 2 5 - 2 11 0 www.optixeyewear.ca

From page 4 remaining Keasts took a hike on Grouse Mountain where they held each other in a huge hug, committing to each other that they would all get through it together. “I wanted to believe we were going to do it,” says Jamie. “(But) our family was never the same. … I just watched our whole family sort of fall apart.” Jan and Tom divorced five years after Quinn’s death. Both say they dealt with grief and loss in very different ways, and that sent them in different directions. Jan’s grief was compounded by health problems that began before Quinn’s death but grew after it, putting her into the hospital frequently and requiring a string of surgeries. “I struggled a lot after we lost Quinn,” says Jan. “I really couldn’t come to terms with it. … I don’t think Tom thought I would ever survive it. I didn’t either, to be honest.” Jamie often wonders what the family would look like if the accident never happened. “It changed so many dynamics in my life and in my parents’ lives,” she says. “It’s something that I’d never considered or wanted to consider. It changed everything.”

aaa

While the family was immediately shattered by the accident, a powerful force soon began to build the net that would eventually help lift the Keasts back up. It was

www.nikonlenswear.ca

eyewear and contact lenses

RECYCLE MORE AT THE DEPOT

Styrofoam and plastic bags can be recycled, but not in your Blue Box or Cart.

Take these materials to a drop-off depot for recycling. • all materials must be clean and sorted • drop off depots may also accept other items for recycling, but not all depots accept all items, check before you go

Quinn Keast gets set for a free throw in the midst of an epic performance in the 2006 provincial final. PHOTO SUPPLIED Quinn – or rather, the memory of Quinn, who had generated an enormous amount of goodwill in his short time on earth. Coaches, friends, classmates, even opponents – everyone raved about the young man who competed with honour and passion. “All I could think about was making sure that his legacy lived on as long as possible,” says Scott Leigh.

The message quickly spread, and money started coming in. In the first while there wasn’t an official charity, no tax receipts were issued, but donors didn’t care. The amount donated in a very short time period was staggering: more than $100,000. That summer Digby Leigh (Scott’s dad), Leslie Sacré and

See No Regrets page 21

North Shore Bottle Depot 235 Donaghy Avenue 604-985-9348 Lonsdale Bottle Depot 142 3rd Street West 604-980-2111

dnv.org/zero-waste

North Shore Bottle & Return-It Depot 310 Brooksbank Avenue 604-924-3889 North Shore Recycling Depot 29 Riverside Drive

cnv.org/collection

westvancouver.ca/collection


A6 | NEWS

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Students share in inlet restoration work

Mosquito Creek mural caps estuary restoration effort JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com

In the summer of 2007, a punctured pipeline sent 224,000 litres of Kinder Morgan’s heavy synthetic crude into the air like a geyser.

Approximately 78,000 litres of oil seeped into the Burrard Inlet, impacting 17 kilometres of shoreline and costing Kinder Morgan more than $15 million in remediation costs. After pleading guilty to violating the Environmental Management Act, the three companies involved in the accident were fined $450,000 – money that went to the Habitat Conservation Trust Foundation. “It was like a gift,” recalls Ken Ashley, one of the directors of the HCTF. Those funds could’ve gone toward protecting moose habitat or any number of worthwhile initiatives, but Mosquito Creek resident Ashley made the case the HCTF should focus the cash on waterways near the spill. “The thing that’s in most danger in Burrard Inlet is

Queen Mary elementary students show their true colours painting a nature mural overlooking the Spirit Trail. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD estuaries because there’s just little tiny bits of them left,” he says, recalling the case he made to higher-ups at the HCTF. “It took about 10 seconds and the board said: ‘Done.’” Through numerous

collaborations including work with the Tsleil-Waututh and Squamish nations, the City and District of North Vancouver, as well as the Coho Society, that $450,000 stretched into approximately $2 million worth of restoration

Independent Financial Experts for North Vancouver School District Audit Committee Financial Services. The committee will meet at least four times a year, with authority to convene additional meetings, as circumstances require.

The North Vancouver School District #44 invites interested individuals to serve on the School District Audit Committee in the capacity of an independent, financial expert. We are seeking to fill two (2) positions effective September 1, 2016. The Audit Committee will assist the Board of Education in its governance role by providing oversight of the financial reporting process, the audit process, the system of internal controls and compliance with laws and regulations. The Audit Committee is comprised of three Trustees of the Board of Education and two non-Trustee members that are “financial experts” and independent from and external to the organization. The Board Chair will annually appoint the three Trustees committee members. The “financial expert” members may be appointed for two terms of up to three years per term. Ex-Officio, non-voting members of the Audit Committee consist of the Superintendent, Secretary Treasurer & CFO, and Director of

CONNECT WITH US

www.facebook.com/nvsd44 Website: www.sd44.ca Phone: 604.903.3444

Email: info@sd44.com

To be considered for this opportunity you will be an experienced CPA or have financial management or other relevant business experience that will enable you to understand the accounting and auditing standards applicable to the School District. We are unable to consider individuals who are an employee or officer of any BC School District, or have a parent, child or spouse employed by the North Vancouver School District for this position. Qualified candidates are invited to submit their expression of interest with a resume and three references by July 6, 2016 to the attention of: Georgia Allison, Secretary Treasurer & CFO North Vancouver School District #44 Email: gallison@sd44.ca Phone: 604-903-3470.

@nvsd44

work at Seymour River as well as Lynn, Mosquito and Mackay creeks. As joyful Queen Mary elementary fifth-graders in paint-smeared garbage bagsmocks put their personal touches on the Gostick Place mural overlooking the Spirit Trail, Ashley reflects on their handiwork. “Hundreds and hundreds of people (will) see this mural, and it’ll make them start asking questions,” he tells the children. “The whole thing is to raise people’s awareness about estuaries and the problem with how they’ve been degraded.” Dredging stripped a stretch

of Seymour River bare, resulting in a 78 per cent fatality rate for salmon, according to a three-year study authored by the Seymour Salmonid Society. It’s critical those estuaries incorporate a habitat salmon can use to evade predators like seals and birds of prey, according to Ashley. “When you’re a juvenile salmon everybody wants to eat you, when you’re an adult salmon everybody wants to eat you,” he says. The brackish water of the estuary lets salmon acclimatize to saltwater before swimming out to Burard Inlet. The process also imprints fish

Injured and tired of getting the run-around? I can help.

ANNAMARIE KERSOP Personal Injury Law

Harbourside Corporate Centre 407-850 Harbourside Dr, NorthVancouver | 778.383.1937 www.lawyerswest.ca

with the chemical signature of the river, helping them find their way back. In order to offer the trout, coho, chinook and chum salmon a few good hiding spots, the society added more than 80 large debris structures, as well as boulders, and beds of eelgrass. More recently, a $335,000 project at Lynn Creek estuary involved loading 100 logs into the creek’s gravel bars to allow fish to gain a fin-hold in the debris, which was previously too rocky for plants to grow. Workers also replaced invasive species of ivy and holly with grass and clover. It may take several generations to determine the success of the project, according to District of North Vancouver staff. “Today there’s optimism,” says Randall W. Lewis, environmental co-ordinator with the Squamish Nation. “We’re bringing a small pulse back into this area.” Growing up, Lewis heard Squamish elders tell stories about abundance on the inlet and flocks of birds that “blocked out the sun.” As a boy, his grandmother would send him to the shore alongside his 13 brothers and sisters to look for shellfish and crabs exposed by the ebb tide. He says he used to peel a pinching crab from his toe, take it back to his grandmother’s house, and throw it in the pot. “That was lunch,” he recalls. “You can’t do that anymore.” While the hundreds of species might not come back, Lewis says the artificial riparian habitat created by adding stumps and logs could help. “That’s just trying to reflect what Mother Nature naturally used to do,” he explains. Underlining all that stream restoration work are 1,000 drawings created by children that are incorporated into the mural on the back of Northwest Hydraulic Consultants in North Vancouver. “We live on the North Shore, we live in salmon habitat, and if we want to keep salmon on the North Shore, we have to make a huge effort to protect these areas,” says artist Ron den Daas, who coordinated the mural. “That’s what this program’s all about.” The children’s contributions range from broad perspectives of towering trees to intricate inspections of a single leaf. That contrast, “mirrors the complexity of our local ecosystem,” den Daas notes. A black cloud passes overhead and den Daas calls the young painters off the wall as rain pummels the makeshift canopy. Most oblige, but one girl dances in the rain.


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

NEWS | A7

north shore news nsnews.com

Tsleil-Waututh launches second challenge of pipeline proposal

• WILLS, TRUSTS, ESTATE PLANNING, POWERS OF ATTORNEY

Lynn Valley Law

Legal action takes aim at NEB report

• PROBATE OF WILLS & ESTATES • REAL ESTATE, PROPERTY & CONTRACT DISPUTES • SEPARATION & DIVORCE

Lynn Valley Centre • 604-985-8000

BRENT RICHTER brichter@nsnews.com

The Tsleil-Waututh Nation has filed another legal challenge in a bid to halt Kinder Morgan’s Trans Mountain pipeline to Burrard Inlet.

www.westvanfootclinic.com

The North Vancouver First Nation launched a second legal action this week against the National Energy Board, the federal government and Trans Mountain, arguing the conditional approval granted by the NEB in May was faulty and illegal. It’s the third new lawsuit Trans Mountain has been slapped with in the last two weeks, with other suits filed by the City of Vancouver and Squamish Nation. Leaders of the three governments travelled to Ottawa together in early June to lobby federal ministers against the project. The latest suit asks the federal court of appeal to quash the NEB’s final report and

Ingrown toe nails

Mortons Neuroma or bursitis

Corns, calluses and warts

Plantar fasciitis and heel spurs

Medical and Surgical Treatment of the Foot

• Custom Molded ODthotics for Pain • PDivEte Foot SuDgeDy • PlEntED FEsciitis & Heel PEin • MoDton’s NeuDomE PEin • IngDown Toe NEils, PlEntEDs WEDts • FEbulous MedicEl PedicuDes

Bunions and hammertoes

High arched feet

Flat or low arched feet

DD. Shenin MohEmed, PODIaTrIST Specialized Foot Doctor & Surgeon

604-913-FOOT (3668)

1873 Marine Drive, West Vancouver

Tsleil-Waututh Nation elder Leonard George attends the sacred fire at Cates Park/Whey-ahWichen. The nation held the ceremony in opposition to tanker traffic. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD recommendations because, among other reasons, it did not take into account marine shipping risks or consider the Tsleil-Waututh Nation’s own assessment, which concluded the project would be an

Get Fit, Get Outside, Have Fun with Deep Cove Outdoors -

NEB process. If the court rules in their favour, it may send the entire project and approval process back to the drawing board, something Rueben

unacceptable risk. Tsleil-Waututh Nation is still awaiting a ruling on a suit it filed in 2014 arguing the Crown acted unconstitutionally by not consulting with the nation while setting up the

See Court page 15

your #1 choice for paddlesports this summer

,**!/"3*"4.,""21+/"$ # )0-+%&'+((0( 352 Lynn Ave., North Vancouver ! BEHIND CANADIAN TIRE

GET MORE RUSH PER HOUR. ALL-NEW 2016 RX 350 LEASE APR

1.9

LEASE PAYMENT

%* $

39 MONTHS

579

*

DOWN PAYMENT $6,910*

ALL-NEW 2016 IS 200t

STANDARD PACKAGE

DELIVERY CREDIT

$

1,000

PAYMENT INCLUDES $1,000^ DELIVERY CREDIT.

^

LEASE APR

0.9

LEASE PAYMENT

%* $

39 MONTHS

379

*

DOWN PAYMENT $5,280*

2016 NX 200t

STANDARD PACKAGE

DELIVERY CREDIT

$

3,000

^

PAYMENT INCLUDES $3,000^ DELIVERY CREDIT.

Luxury package shown~

LEASE APR

1.9

%* $

39 MONTHS

STANDARD PACKAGE

LEASE PAYMENT

479

DELIVERY CREDIT

*

$

DOWN PAYMENT $5,360 *

1,000

^

PAYMENT INCLUDES $1,000^ DELIVERY CREDIT.

Executive package shown~

F SPORT Series 1 shown~

Offers end June 30th. Northshore Auto Mall 845 Automall Drive, North Vancouver, BC

604-982-0033

www.jimpattisonlexus.com D01130

~2016 RX 350 Luxury Package/2016 IS 200t F SPORT Series 1/2016 NX 200t Executive Package shown: $64,519/$46,018/$56,519. ^$1,000/$1,000/$3,000 Delivery Credit is available on the purchase/lease of new 2016 Lexus NX 200t sfx ‘A’ only/2016 RX 350 sfx ‘A’ only/2016 IS 200t models only, and will be deducted from the negotiated purchase/lease price after taxes. Limited time offer is subject to change or cancellation without notice. *Lease offers provided through Lexus Financial Services, on approved credit. *Representative lease example based on a 2016 RX 350 sfx ‘A’ on a 39 month term at an annual rate of 1.9% and MSRP of $56,919. Monthly payment is $579 with $6,910 down payment or equivalent trade in, $0 security deposit and first monthly payment due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $29,503. 65,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.20/km for excess kilometres. *Representative lease example based on a 2016 IS 200t sfx ‘A’ on a 39 month term at an annual rate of 0.9% and MSRP of $42,018. Monthly payment is $379 with $5,280 down payment or equivalent trade in, $0 security deposit and first monthly payment due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $20,070. 65,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.20/km for excess kilometres. *Representative lease example based on a 2016 NX 200t sfx ‘A’ on a 39 month term at an annual rate of 1.9% and MSRP of $44,719. Monthly payment is $479 with $5,360 down payment or equivalent trade in, $0 security deposit and first monthly payment due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $24,060. 65,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.20/ km for excess kilometres. MSRPs include freight and PDI ($2,045), Dealer fees (up to $395), AC charge ($100), Tire charge ($25), and filters. License, insurance, registration (if applicable), and taxes are extra. Fees may vary by Dealer. Lexus Dealers are free to set their own prices. Limited time offers only apply to retail customers at participating Lexus Dealers. Dealer order/trade may be required. Offers are subject to change or cancellation without notice. Offers expire at month’s end unless extended or revised. See your Lexus Dealer for complete details.


A8 | NEWS

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

NORTH SHORE NEWS 100-126 EAST 15TH STREET NORTH VANCOUVER B.C . V7L 2P9 N SNEWS.COM

Next gen thinking

C

redit is due to federal and provincial governments this week after reaching a long-needed agreement on pension reform. Predictably, there have been critics since the plan for an expanded Canada Pension Plan was announced. But this change is a win for the next generation – the young people who have seen their quality of life eroded from that of their parents. In a previous era, more working people had benefits like inflation-indexed definedbenefit pensions provided through their employers. But the baby boomers were likely the last generation to enjoy such benefits in substantial numbers. Times have changed. These days, pension plans in the private sector often rely on voluntary contributions to savings plans and provide no guarantee of a decent income in

retirement. About 60 per cent of Canadians don’t have a company retirement plan and the numbers among the young are even higher. Some critics argue Canadians shouldn’t be forced to save for their own retirement. But we would argue that indeed they do. Finding extra cash to sock away is a near impossible feat for many, considering the flatlining of wages compared to the rising cost of living in a place like the Lower Mainland. Expanding the CPP trades minimal pain today for a much larger benefit down the road. Contrast that with the prospect of the state having to prop up vast numbers of middle class workers who didn’t save enough in another 30 years. It’s not often politicians manage to think beyond the next election cycle. Kudos to them this time for being able to do just that.

Spoiling my appetite for eye stabbings Spoiler alert! If you do not want to know the exact number of eye stabbings in the television show Game of Thrones, stop reading now. Because it is quite a shocking amount of eye stabbings.

Other than that, I hope to write something here that everyone can enjoy even if they are still planning to watch the hit show at a future date and don’t want to have main plot lines spoiled for them. I wish other news outlets provided the same courtesy. I am one of the many who is catching up with Game of Thrones but not quite ready to watch the latest episodes. I’ve learned the simple tricks to avoid spoilers. You can’t go on Twitter during the airing of an episode or in the following hours. You must be ready to bolt the workplace lunchroom at a moment’s notice. Instead

CONTACTUS

Laugh All You Want Andy Prest of attending parties, you probably should just chain yourself up in a dungeon. I’ve taken what I thought were all the proper precautions but I still couldn’t avoid spoilers. Earlier this week I went on a popular “sports and culture” website looking for witty and irreverent coverage of the NBA finals. You know the stuff: the Internet hipster hot take describing how an

obscure track that was cut from Aerosmith’s 2004 effort Honkin’ on Bobo perfectly explains the way Lebron James finally unleashed his full force as a low-post rim protector. That old story. Instead I happened upon a huge spoiler from the latest episode of Game of Thrones. Now this wasn’t just a teaser or half spoil – this was a major plot line, verifying that major characters were still alive (never a given with this show) and describing exactly what those characters did. And this wasn’t buried inside a story or through a click – it was the headline of the top story. The headline! Of the top story! I’ll share the headline with you here with the spoiler details omitted: “XXXX and XXXX finally XXXX. Now what’s next?” I suppose they think it’s cool because they’ve put the

question “now what’s next” at the end of the headline. What were some other top headlines from past reviews on this website (spoiler alert): ! Thelma and Louise: “Thelma and Louise drive off a cliff. Now what’s next?” ! Star Wars: “Darth Vader is Luke’s father. Now what’s next?” ! The Bible: “Jesus comes back to life. Now what’s next?” That’s journalism these days. Really now, if I ever meet any of these “media” jerks, I’ll grab my dagger so fast... Truth be told, if I had been caught up on Game of Thrones I would have clicked the hell out of that headline. But I’m not caught up, and it sucks to have things spoiled. I got into the series really late and am watching one or two episodes every night before I go to bed. It’s always exciting to discover what final image

will be branded on my brain just before bedtime. Will it be (spoiler alerts) burning a child at the stake? Dagger in the eye? Incest? Sword in the eye? An army of the dead? Thumb in the eye? That spoiler headline tells me that how we consume media may be changing in this instant world we live in. Television shows are becoming like major live sporting events – you need to watch them as they happen or risk learning the outcome before you get to take in the spectacle. That raises a question: Where does the onus lie? Is it with the laggard, who prevents up-to-date folks from talking about the latest awesome eye-stabbing just because they can’t be bothered to spend 50 straight hours watching Stab-o-vision? Or is it with the informed, who should have the decency

NORTH SHORE NEWS 100-126 EAST 15th STREET NORTH VANCOUVER B.C. V7L 2P9

nsnews.com

Peter Kvarnstrom

Vicki Magnison

Layne Christensen

Trixi Agrios

Christine Gowe

Michelle Starr

Russ Blake

PUBLISHER

DIRECTOR, SALES & MARKETING

EDITOR

DIRECTOR, CLASSIFIED & REAL ESTATE

REAL ESTATE

DISTRIBUTION MANAGER

FIELD OPERATIONS MANAGER

Direct 604-998-3523 publisher@nsnews.com

Direct 604-998-3520 vmagnison@nsnews.com

Direct 604-998-3542 lchristensen@nsnews.com

Direct 604-998-1201 tagrios@van.net

Direct 604-998-3580 cgowe@nsnews.com

Direct 604-986-1337 mastarr@nsnews.com

Direct 604-369-2465 rblake@nsnews.com

North Shore News, founded in 1969 as an independent suburban newspaper and qualified under Schedule 111, Paragraph 111 of the Excise Tax Act, is published each Wednesday, Friday and Sunday by North Shore News a division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership and distributed to every door on the North Shore. Canada Post Canadian Publications Mail Sales Product Agreement No. 40010186. Mailing rates available on request. Entire contents © 2016 North Shore News a division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership. All rights reserved. Average circulation for Wednesday, Friday and Sunday is 61,759. The North Shore News, a division of LMP Publication Limited Partnership respects your privacy. We collect, use and disclose your personal information in accordance with our Privacy Statement which is available at www.nsnews.com. North Shore News is a member of the National Newsmedia Council, which is an independent organization established to deal with acceptable journalistic practices and ethical behaviour. If you have concerns about editorial content, please email editor@nsnews.com or call the newsroom at 604-985-2131. If you are not satisfied with the response and wish to file a formal complaint, visit the web site at mediacouncil.ca or call toll-free 1-844-877-1163 for additional information.

to check with everyone in the room before launching into a conspiracy theory about the fascinating bit of incest they just watched? There’s probably room for improvement on both sides. The season finale is today. I’ve been watching at an eyepopping pace, but haven’t quite caught up all the way. Spoilers, no doubt, will be everywhere in the next few days. If you need me, you’ll find me in the dungeon. Just watch out for the dragons. Sorry! Sorry! I should have warned you I was going to say the word “dragons.” Although if you haven’t gotten to the dragon part of the show yet, you’re way behind and have no legit grievance with me. I certainly won’t stand for you keeping me strapped to this giant wooden X thingy. And put down that dagger! aprest@nsnews.com

ADMINISTRATION/RECEPTION 604-985-2131 ADVERTISING 604-998-3510 display@nsnews.com REAL ESTATE ADVERTISING 604-998-3580 realestate@nsnews.com CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 604-630-3300 classifieds@van.net DISTRIBUTION INQUIRIES 604-986-1337 distribution@nsnews.com NEWSROOM 604-985-2131 editor@nsnews.com PHOTOGRAPHY 604-985-2131 photo@nsnews.com

violent — kicking


NEWS | A9

north shore news nsnews.com

If we want to solve our problems, fight poverty first

A public hearing will be held regarding the proposed bylaw amendments listed below, to allow for the redevelopment of 6995 Nelson Avenue with: six buildings of three to 12 storeys; 159 residential units; commercial space; underground parking; and public spaces and sidewalks. A public meeting will be held concurrently regarding proposed Development Permit No. 15-037.

WHEN: Monday, July 4, 2016, 6 p.m. public hearing WHERE: Council Chamber, 750 17th Street, West Vancouver PROPOSED SITE PLAN

MAP 89 66 ON

NE

LS

NUE

WOLS ELEY STREET

SUBJECT LANDS

6697

669

664 5

opportunities – it is also tied to managing the inequitable distribution of wealth. This is most commonly managed through progressive taxation – something B.C. fails at compared to other provinces. According to a study done by Andrew MacLeod of The Tyee (who subsequently published a book on the topic), B.C. has the highest level of inequality in after-tax wealth of any province in Canada, second only to Alberta. We will need to carefully consider a variety of strategies to ensure efficacy and manage unintended consequences, but one thing is clear: The resolution of the poverty crisis in this province is absolutely necessary if we want to be able to move forward together in building a stronger province. B.C. is long overdue for a poverty reduction plan.

5

There are substantial social and economic costs we pay as a collective when we don’t address poverty with urgency: Increased crime rates and violence, strain on the medical system from higher rates of povertyrelated health and mental issues, loss of productivity and income tax revenue, suppression of the economy, the establishment of a deeper cycle of poverty and a loss of our humanity – to name only a few. It’s not just the intangible costs either: Real dollars are being spent by private individuals who feel the moral imperative to bail out the province through donations to charities who are struggling to keep afloat amidst the ever increasing need for their services. Use of food banks, for instance, is up 30 per cent since 2008. Resolving poverty is not only about a stronger economy and more job

PUBLIC HEARING FOR 6995 NELSON AVENUE known as the Sewell’s Landing Development

668

Dear Editor: When using the Market Basket Measure, it is estimated that one in five children, and over 16 per cent of the general population in B.C., live in poverty. Despite this we remain the only province in Canada without a poverty reduction plan. Our welfare system is a lemon. With rates frozen since 2007 and an individual person on welfare expected to live off of $610/month, it’s no wonder that few people are able to pull themselves out of extreme poverty once they find themselves there. The working poor hardly fare better. There are few opportunities for improving your situation when you’re working multiple jobs to keep food on the table for your children. Going back to school or spending time searching for a higher paying job all involve sacrificing time needed to earn wages.

NOTICE

NE

5

VE NA

LSO BA

66 66 50/ 52

MAILBOX

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR must include your name, full address and telephone number. Send your letters via e-mail to: editor@nsnews. com. The North Shore News reserves the right to edit any and/or all letters based on length, clarity, legality and content. The News also reserves the right to publish any and/or all letters electronically.

637. 639.

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

YS

6 64490/ 92 6 4

TR

NU

EE

E

T

88

PROPOSED COMPREHENSIVE DEVELOPMENT

Bowinn Ma North Vancouver

Changes to teaching styles only hurt our students

Dear Editor: Re: Curriculum Changes: ‘New’ Isn’t Always Better, June 19 Other Voices. I am 65 and I first returned to continuing education in 1983 and onwards to 2003 and managed to achieve very high marks in whatever courses I was taking. I didn’t need to upgrade any courses, because there was very little change from when I graduated to then, I wouldn’t have been able to do so if my early education hadn’t given me the skills to go beyond my expectations. I think this shows that education 55 years ago was excellent and given the fact there were very few changes made from grades 1 to 12 shows that what the teacher

says is true. I have a young grand niece and it breaks my heart to see her struggle with subjects such as math and science where the method has changed dramatically and I fear for her if she wishes to continue her education beyond Grade 12. I have seen changes to methods and topics compared to when her mother did her 12-year stretch in the school system. The methods from one generation to another have changed so much and seeing the difference of managing to get a high grade average has diminished through the ages. It is such a complex subject, that I don’t think anyone in this century is going to know how to get back to basic reading, writing and

arithmetic. I have seen too many university students not know how to do math in their heads, to write instead of print or be able to solve a problem using common sense, which isn’t taught as a subject. I want to say to parents, don’t be satisfied with just sending your children to school. Reach further than what is provided and increase your child’s knowledge over and above what is taught to them, whether it be with tutoring, attending a learning centre or enroll them in educational programs through the summer because they only get one chance with public education while they are five to 18 years of age. Sharan Green New Westminster

QUOTES OF THE WEEK: You can’t keep selling shares in the Ponzi scheme.” — West Vancouver Coun. Craig Cameron asks the province to cool down B.C.’s red hot real estate market (from a June 19 news story).

Excessive exposure to hardcore pornography, rap music and violent sexist computer games.” — Judge Joanne Challenger describes the psychological makeup of an assailant convicted of soccerkicking a stranger in the head. He was sentenced to 18 months in prison (from a June 22 news story).

Multimillionaires versus millionaires.” — Carisbrooke resident Glen Robitaille sums up neighbourhood conflict over the possible subdivision of the historic Thomson House lot on East Windsor Road (from a June 24 news story).

PROPOSED OFFICIAL COMMUNITY PLAN BYLAW 4360, 2004, AMENDMENT BYLAW 4897, 2016 would enable the rezoning of the subject lands for the proposed residential and commercial buildings and place the lands within the Sewell’s Landing Development Permit Area. PROPOSED ZONING BYLAW 4662, 2010, AMENDMENT BYLAW 4898, 2016 would rezone the subject lands to CD54: Sewell’s Landing, which will regulate the use of the land based on the proposed development. PROPOSED PHASED DEVELOPMENT AGREEMENT AUTHORIZATION BYLAW 4899, 2016 would secure the associated community benefit; the agreement would set out the framework between the District and the applicant in terms of receipt of the voluntary community amenity contribution payment. PROPOSED DEVELOPMENT PERMIT would control the form and character of the development of the subject lands including the public spaces surrounding and within the site and sustainability initiatives. PROPOSED DEVELOPMENT PACKAGE covenants are proposed to secure the master development, public access and works and services for the project. COUNCIL WELCOMES YOUR INPUT: All persons who believe their interest in property is affected by the proposed bylaw amendments and development permit will be given an opportunity to be heard at the public hearing. Prior to the hearing written submissions may be: emailed to mayorandcouncil@westvancouver.ca; mailed to Council at Municipal Hall, 750 17th Street, West Vancouver BC V7V 3T3; or delivered to Legislative Services at Municipal Hall; and must be received no later than 3 p.m. on July 4, 2016 to ensure their availability to Council for the hearing. Persons relying on electronic submissions do so at their own risk of technical issues affecting receipt. Written submissions will be included in the public hearing information package for Council’s consideration. After the public hearing has closed no further submissions can be considered by Council. MORE INFORMATION: The proposed bylaw amendments, development permit and other documents Council may consider in deciding whether to adopt the proposed bylaw amendments may be inspected at westvancouver.ca and at Municipal Hall, from June 16 to July 4, 2016, Monday to Friday (except statutory holidays), 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Copies may also be inspected at the Memorial Library and at the public hearing and concurrent public meeting. QUESTIONS? Lisa Berg, Senior Community Planner sewells@westvancouver.ca | 604-925-7055


A10 | COMMUNITY

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

BRIGHTLIGHTS! by Paul McGrath Mayors’ Golf Tournament The ninth annual North Shore Mayors’ Golf Tournament took place at the links at the Seymour Golf and Country Club on May 27. The sold-out event was a fundraiser in support of the North Shore Community Foundation and the West Vancouver Community Foundation. This year, more than $190,000 was raised with the first $50,000 going to this year’s designated charity, the North Shore Schizophrenia Society, assisting them in their work in the community in mental health issues and education. Golfers took part in a mass putting contest before taking off at noon in a shotgun start, dispersing themselves around the 18 holes of the scenic course with the three civic leaders stationed at various greens. Lunch and dinner were provided along with a live auction in the evening.

North Shore Community Foundation president Mike Boehm, treasurer Aaron Kuizik and past-president Dave Alsop

City of North Vancouver Mayor Darrell Mussatto, District of North Vancouver Mayor Richard Walton and former District of West Vancouver Mayor Mark Sager

West Vancouver foundation director Dave Mason and volunteer Malcolm Darroch

Bowen Island Golf Club’s Bruce Russell and Browns’ Derek Archer

Richardson’s Kyle Ross and Kris Johnson

North Shore Schizophrenia Society executive director Nancy Ford and WV foundation director Richard Van Liempt

Schizophrenia society’s Kathryn Seel with WV RBC’s Brian Williams and Capilano foundation executive director Delaina Bell, director Suspension Bridge’s Sue Kafka Mark Ballard and board chairwoman Nancy Farran

Please direct requests for event coverage to: emcphee@nsnews.com. For more Bright Lights photos, go to: nsnews.com/community/bright-lights

THREE TIME WINNER OF THE AUTOCHEX PREMIER ACHIEVER AWARD FOR EXTRAORDINARY CUSTOMER SATISFACTION

GOVERNMENT LICENSED INSPECTION STATION S-2584

Service Ltd. Since 1959

COLLISION REPAIR & AUTO SERVICE CENTRE C All Collision Insurance Company’s Lifetime Guaranteed Repairs ■ New Car Warranty Approved Services 174-176 Pemberton Ave. 604.985.7455 ■

w w w. t a y l o r m o t i v e . c o m

KE YOUR One Stop ALL MA

CELEBRATING 57 YEARS OF QUALITY WORKMANSHIP & TRUSTWORTHY SERVICE


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

| A11

north shore news nsnews.com

neighbourhoods

Lynn Valley

Argyle grad starts horse-powered farm Veggie pickups will take place biweekly in Lynn Valley CHRISTINE LYON clyon@nsnews.com

Naomi Martz is a farmer without a tractor.

In fact, she doesn’t use any power equipment on her 10-acre Pemberton farm, other than a pickup truck for running errands off site. Instead, the 24-year-old relies on the power of two Belgian draft horses, Tom and Judy, who do everything from tilling the vegetable beds to taking loads of compost out to the field (and producing their own compost while they’re at it). “The horses are kind of where it’s at, or else I do things by hand,” says Martz, a Lynn Valley native who started leasing Four Beat Farm in April and lives in a small house on the property. In this day and age, it may seem old-fashioned to use horse-drawn machinery, but the method falls in line with her farming philosophy. “I was really interested in ways that you can use animals in your systems and looking at renewable sources of energy,” she says. “I like

Tom and Judy, a pair of Belgian draft horses, help Naomi Martz work the land at Four Beat Farm near Pemberton. that I don’t have to put gasoline in (the horses) and that I can get hay and grain from my neighbours.” For her first season, Martz is putting two acres into vegetable

production and managing the remainder of the land in pasture and cover crops to increase soil fertility for the future. Starting this summer, she’ll be sharing her

PHOTO SUPPLIED CAITLIN BEAUDIN

harvest with North Vancouver residents. Four Beat Farm is running a community-supported agriculture program with bi-weekly vegetable pickups in Lynn Valley from July

28 to Dec. 1. Martz thinks of CSA programs as “crop insurance.” Under the

See CSA page 12

“HAVE A SAFE AND FUN LONG WEEKEND!”

Canada Day

JEFF DONOHOE Considering a move? Talk to Jeff about his PROVEN MARKETING STRATEGY or for a free market evaluation Call Jeff Donohoe @ 604.340.8588

#101-2609 Westview Dr., North Vancouver, BC V7N 4M2 w w w. j e ff d o n o h o e . c o m 604.340.8588 j e ff @ j e ff d o n o h o e .c o m

DIAMOND MASTER MEDALLION MEMBER

Crest Realty - Jeff Donohoe PREC


A12 | NEIGHBOURHOODS

DARYL

PHARMACIST

Patients often ask us whether they can stop taking certain drugs. The answer is not without your doctor’s consent. However, some drugs should not be stopped “cold turkey” but be tapered off. These include anti- anxiety drugs, antidepressants, sleeping medications and many others. We can help you understand the importance of tapering but certainly talk to your doctor first. We welcome your questions about medications. With our education in the use and effect of drugs, we can advise you on all of your concerns.

Pharmacy

1401 St. Georges Ave. NORTH VANCOUVER

604-985-1481 www.daviesrx.com SINCE 1973

nsnews.com north shore news SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

CSA members share in the risk and reward From page 11 business model, households support the farm financially for an entire season, with memberships paid in two instalments of $375 – the first upon signing up, the second in mid-October. In return, members get a share of the harvest designed to provide seasonal vegetables for two to four people until the end of the year. “The basic idea is that your community of eaters is supporting your farm,” Martz explains, noting the CSA model is based on a notion of shared risk and reward. “By investing in the farm, you’re taking on the risk that maybe certain crops aren’t going to do as well, but then your farmer is able to farm to the best of their abilities with the knowledge that you’re going to support them through it.” Four Beat Farm is planting more than 35 different types of vegetables to ensure diversity and abundance. While the Pemberton Valley is known as a potato-growing area, Martz says the climate is suitable for many other crops. CSA members can hope to expect household staples, like salads, carrots and onions, on a regular basis. August pickups will likely include heat-loving crops, such as tomatoes, cucumbers, sweet corn, chard and beans. And later pickups will feature fall favourites such as beets, brussels sprouts, parsnips,

TRUCKLOAD ent

Ev e

THE THE

HOTTEST FLOORING STYLES HAVE ARRIVED

SALE ON NOW!

cabbages, leeks and potatoes. The acreage Martz is stewarding was previously leased by an organic farmer. She too follows organic practices and is in the process of applying to get organic certification from the Bio-Dynamic Agricultural Society of B.C. “Most of my go-to methods of farming already stem from that stream of thought,” she says. A 2009 graduate of Argyle secondary, Martz went to university on the East Coast for environmental studies and economics. Wanting to spend the summer outside, she decided to work on a farm. She loved it and started seeking out experience on certified organic farms and farms that run CSA programs. “There’s a lot of really amazing people farming that are happy to share what they know and you can learn from their experiences.” As for the name of her new venture, Four Beat Farm, it comes from the four-beat gait of a horse’s walk: “clip-clop, clip-clop.” Currently, Tom and Judy are tending to just a small portion of the available land, but Martz is confident they’re capable of working on a larger scale in the future. “It’s nice to ease into it slowly for our first season,” she says. To sign up for the CSA program for the 2016 harvest season visit fourbeatfarm.ca.

COMMUNITY SPIRIT The annual Lynn Valley Day celebration took place under soggy skies on June 18. A parade kicked off the festivities, making its way along Lynn Valley Road and ending at Lynn Valley Park where neighbours enjoyed food vendors, live entertainment and kids’ activities. For more photos, visit nsnews.com/photo-galleries. PHOTOS PAUL MCGRATH

VISIT OUR LARGE,

NEWLY RENOVATED SHOWROOM Over 4,000 sq ft of inspiring ideas including laminate, hardwood, area rugs, carpets (indoor & outdoor) roll ends & more!

LAMINATE & HARD WOOD

AREA RUGS

CARPET & ROLLENDS

VINYL & TILE

No payment, no interest plans available OAC - See store for details

Cyrus Stafford, Maureen Smallwood, Angeline Johnson and Brad Johnson

Brand Name Flooring. Low Prices. Always in Stock.

1570 Main St | 604.985.4200 North Vancouver

ENDOFTHEROLL.COM


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

NEIGHBOURHOODS | A13

north shore news nsnews.com

North Shore builder wins Energy Star award CHRISTINE LYON clyon@nsnews.com

In the Poet’s Corner cul-de-sac of Lynn Valley, North Shore-based builder Shakespeare Homes and Renovations is constructing an energy-efficient house that’s earned national recognition.

Fittingly named “Poetry,” the home, which happens to be located on Shakespeare Avenue, comprises a main house and laneway house both designed to meet Energy Star qualifications. The designation is given to new homes that are 20 per cent more energy efficient than homes built to the local building code and Shakespeare president Mark Cooper says, “We are

already beyond the minimum requirements.” The Poetry project, as well as Shakespeare’s overall commitment to sustainable housing and community involvement, earned the company the 2016 Canadian Energy Star Builder Recruit of the Year Award. Cooper was in Winnipeg last month to accept the award from Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr. According to Natural Resources Canada, Energy Star awards recognize organizations that offer consumers the most energy-efficient products and technology available on the market. Shakespeare was the only builder to receive the award this year. With some 6,000 square feet of living space, the Poetry

home and coach house use unique construction, powerful insulation and a variety of heat-recovery and energysaving features. Highlights include insulated concrete forms, space and water heat provided by a combined highefficiency gas-fired system, and four solar panels that can provide enough power to get an electric car around town year round. Over the past year, North Vancouver high school students in the Trades Discovery program have been making regular site visits to learn more about the project. When the Poetry home is finished in September, Cooper says he and his family may move in and allow prospective clients to tour the space.

Mark Cooper, president of Shakespeare Homes, gives some Argyle secondary students a tour of his company’s new energy-efficient house in Lynn Valley. PHOTO MIKE WAKEFIELD

WHAT’SGOINGON STORY-FILLED WALKS The North Shore Museum and Archives offers free, drop-in story-filled walks Wednesdays and Thursdays, July 7-Aug. 25, 1:30 and 3 p.m. at Lynn Canyon Park, 3663 Park Rd., North Vancouver. Explore the history of outdoor adventures with Mountaineer Pals Max and Molly. Meet across from the Lynn Canyon Cafe. 604-9903700 ext. 8008 nvma.ca

TREETOP TAILS Children ages two and older, drop in with your parent or caregiver on July 15, Aug. 5 and 19 for seasonal stories about nature 11-11:30 a.m. at the Lynn Canyon Ecology Centre. Suggested drop-in fee is $2. lynncanyonecologycentre.ca IMAGINE AND EXPLORECREEPY CRAWLY CRITTERS Love bugs? Learn more about the tiny recyclers, miniature

North Shor ore’s largest selection of roof boxes! hunters and little pollinators that call Lynn Canyon Park home Saturday, July 9 and Saturday, Aug. 6 from 10 a.m. to noon. For children three to eight. $8.25. HARMONICA GROUP Drop in to a new seniors group that plays pops to classics every Tuesday at 1 p.m. at Mollie Nye House, 940 Lynn Valley Rd. $4/$2. 604-988-8679.

North Vancouver’s Annual

CANADA DAY 2016

Free to Enjoy!

Waterfront Park, July 1st 12:00-4:00 PM

- Live music - Artisan craft market PROUDLY SUPPORTED BY

visit northvancouvercanadaday.com

Hosted By

- Family activities - Famous food trucks


A14 | NEWS

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

SEMI ANNUAL City OK’s wine shop for Onni tower at 13th and Lonsdale CUSTOMER Area pubs feel

APPRECIATION DAY Thursday, June 29 10AM to 7PM

squeeze of looser liquor laws JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com

Liberty is coming to Central Lonsdale.

• IN STORE SPECIALS • FREE DRAW • OPEN LATE

BRING YOUR FRIENDS! EDGEMONT VILLAGE

3065 EDGEMONT BLVD, NORTH VANCOUVER 604.986.4893

Get Fit, Get Outside, Have Fun with Deep Cove Outdoors your #1 choice for paddlesports this summer

604.987.2202 deepcoveoutdoors.com 352 Lynn Ave. North Vancouver

BEHIND CANADIAN TIRE

The City of North Vancouver voted 5-2 to allow Liberty Wine Merchants to move their bottles of Burgundy and Bordeaux into 1308 Lonsdale Ave. with an entrance on 13th Street. The move should enliven 13th Street, according to Coun. Don Bell, who supported the project when it was debated in May. The shop shouldn’t be allowed to pop its cork within one kilometre of Jack Lonsdale’s pub and liquor store, according to Coun. Rod Clark, who joined Coun. Pam Bookham in opposition. The one-kilometre rule “has served us well,” according to Clark, who said he opposed allowing competing liquor outlets within a “stone’s throw.” The new wine shop will appeal to connoisseurs and collectors, according

Deluxe Clean & Detail

Liberty Wine Merchants will open in Onni’s CentreView

development at 13th Street and Lonsdale Avenue, set for completion in spring 2018. IMAGE SUPPLIED Liberty Wine’s Park & Tilford location prospered despite being within 150 feet of Rusty Gull’s liquor store, said Simpson. Because of its unique role as one of 11 wine-only shops in B.C., the new store would have “minimal impact” on Jack Lonsdale’s, according to city staff.

to Liberty Wine Merchants owner Robert Simpson. Simpson likened the difference between Jack Lonsdale’s and Liberty Wine to the gulf between Ikea and an antique store. “They’re both in the home furnishing business but they provide very different services,” he said.

Pacific Honda O

N

D

A

D

E

A

L

E

R

I

N

F

O

99

$

95 +taxes

Carter GM Has Your Body Shop & Service Needs Covered Accidents Happen. And when they do, we’re here to help.

We understand what you have been through, and want to make the repair process as trouble free as possible. We accept all ICBC and private insurance claims and will help guide you through the claim process. Our ICBC Certified technicians repair all makes and models of vehicles. Our state of the art facility and equipment will put your vehicle back to factory and governmental safety standards quickly and efficiently for the safety of you and your family.

BUICK BUICK

GMC TR U CCK TSR U C K S CHEVY TRUCKS GM CHEVY TRUCKS

604-987-5231

www.carternorthshore.com

A

T

Everyday driving puts stress on your vehicle. A properly adjusted wheel alignment ensures directional stability as your vehicle travels. This also ensures dependable control, increased safety and extends the life of your tires.

15OFF

$ Regular Price $98.88

OP CODE: 35HONSWHEEL2016

COmpreheNSiVe iNSpeCtiON

COOliNg SyStem SerViCe

Get ready for summer driving by making sure that there are no surprises ahead with a Comprehensive Summer Inspection. Includes an oil and filter change (5W20 oil), as well as a test drive and a multi-point inspection.

Minimize the risk of mechanical breakdown and poor cooling while maximizing the life of your engine by helping Lubricate and lower the acidity in the system as well as raising the boiling point to prevent overheating.

88

$

plus materials and taxes Regular Price $108.88

Northshore Auto Mall, 800 Automall Dr. North Vancouver

M

WHEEL AligNmeNt SpeCiAl

• Wash Vehicle • Clean Interior Paneling • Vacuum Upholstery • Wash Engine Bay • Clean Wheels and Tires and Apply Tire Shine

Only

R

VPsPT www.XacPficQonda.ca foU AddPTPonaZ SavPnRs!

Includes:

Northshore

The move was opposed by Sailor Hagar’s Brew Pub owner Brian Riedlinger. “We depend on our liquor store to keep our pub in business,” he said, explaining that B.C. pubs are increasingly being squeezed by “restaurants that act like bars.” The 1,500-square-foot store would likely stay open until 8 p.m. on weekdays and as late as 10 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, Simpson said. When the wine shop’s 28-year tenancy at Park & Tilford was wrapping up in 2015, Liberty Wine Merchants explored a move to 1667 Lonsdale Ave. but was rebuffed by council. The new shop will be permitted to serve half a glass of vino to quench the thirst and curiosity of patrons interested in an exotic bottle, following the province’s decision to change the rules on sample sizes Thursday. Wine shops and liquor stores can now give customers one 75-millilitre sample of wine, 175 mL of beer, or 20 mL of spirits per day. Small tasting fees may be charged at the proprietor’s discretion.

88

10OFF

$ Regular Price $113.88

OP CODE: 35HOSUMMER2016

OP CODE: 35HONSCOOL2016

Book OnZPnS aT www.XacPficQonda.ca

Pacific Honda O

N

D

A

D

E

A

L

E

R

I

N

F

O

R

M

A

T

816 AuToYaZZ DUPvS, NoUTQ VancouvSU • www.XacPficQonda.ca • 604-984-0331 *Not valid with any other, discount or voucher. Prices are plus tax, disposal fee, enviro levy where applicable. Additional charges if alternate oil is required. Offer to specific models. See dealer for details. Some conditional costs may apply if additional labour or parts are required. All coupons must be presented at time of appointment reception.


_Y` ] [^ad ] cX\_ ] bcYZ

Take a peak at some of our local perks and passions.


B2 |

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

ADVERTISEMENT

LOCAL FAMILY INVESTS $30 MILLION IN RENTAL HOUSING North Vancouver-based Darwin Construction has given Phibbs Exchange a new identity with the construction of Lynn Creek Apartments. As the first purpose-built rental project in the District of North Vancouver since 1979, Lynn Creek Apartments accounts for nearly 9% of the District’s total rental inventory. “We are facing an affordability crisis on the North Shore, that’s why we need to start providing housing options

for young professionals and families who want to stay in this area,” explains Darwin President Oliver Webbe. Darwin Construction is 100% family owned and is one of the largest private land owners on the North Shore. “We have constructed more than 25 affordable housing projects across BC, and our goal is to begin construction on our first affordable rental housing project in North Vancouver by the end of next year.”


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

| B3

north shore news nsnews.com

What makes the North Shore such a desirable place to live, work and play? Ask around and you’ll likely get a variety of answers from the many who feel blessed to call our North Shore communities home. Local amenities are bountiful: waterfront walkways; galleries; lush, forested parks; fantastic recreational centres; restaurants serving cuisines from around the world; a vibrant retail economy featuring unique and interesting boutique shops; mountains and ocean; and an array of exciting festivals and events. This third annual I Love the North Shore feature showcases a sample of those places, elements, and events that make this area so special, including a public art display in the trails, favourite picnic spots and tips, festival listings, top things to do, North Shore books, and the 125th anniversary of one of our three municipalities. And don’t miss the bi-annual “A-Z Ways to Buy Local on the North Shore” section as well. Enjoy the read! Peter Kvarnstrom Publisher - North Shore News

PHOTO EUAN FORRESTER

PUBLIC ART TRACKS TRAIL WORK JEREMY SHEPHERD jshepherd@nsnews.com

The existence of Sasquatch may be unlikely, evidence supporting Ogopogo is dubious, but we finally have a confirmation on fairies. Trail fairies, anyway. Nestled alongside Mount Seymour’s newest mountain biking trails is a public art project chronicling the creation of Penny Lane and Good Sir Martin. Many galleries cover their walls with nature portraits,

but Euan Forrester is the rare photographer to festoon the backcountry with art. For nine months, Forrester followed trail builders Martin Newman and Penny Deck as they forged an alternative path to the steep, gravelly trail of Old Buck, which is “not really all that pleasant to ride,” Forrester notes. “They wanted to build something that was a little less steep, more meandering, more natural,” he says. See Project on page 4

30 years of changing lives

If you are considering laser vision correction we encourage you to talk to us. London Eye Centre was the first clinic in BC dedicated to these procedures. With a proven track record of 30 years, our surgical team has been recognized as one of the most experienced in the world. We specialize in the most advanced techniques that provide the best possible vision. Call 604.526.2020 to book your free consultation today.

604.526.2020 | lasereye.com New Westminster and North Vancouver


B4 |

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Project takes on a life of its own From page 3

The duo looked for a place to put their trail, taking into account the steepness of the terrain and the drainage. After clearing their line of soil, leaves, and branches, they’d fill in the holes with rocks and top it off with clay-like dirt. “They’d work all day,” Forrester says. “They worked way harder than I did.” Forrester tended to join them on weekends and the odd evening, looking for captivating moments through the lens of his camera. “I think for a lot of people their experience is that trails just appear out of nowhere. They’re not really connected with the process of how they’re made,” he says. “I wanted to give people some insight into what that process is.” Forrester started snapping shots of the trail builders simply because it seemed intriguing from a photographer’s perspective, but one night over beers, the idea grew. A notion about putting markers on the trail to record building progress put Forrester in mind of the photographer Zoe Strauss, who famously displayed photos under a Philadelphia overpass. “I just blurted out, ‘Oh, and I can add photos,’ he recalls. From there, the project took on “a life of its own.” He laminated 20 photographs, first adjusting prints for the dim light of the forest, and hung them from trees using rope and cedar slats. The process has been highly educational, according to Forrester, who says he understands a lot about building trails. “I’m useless at actually doing the work,” he says, laughing. “But I know what’s supposed to be done.” But while a novice might pick up a few tips from the exhibit, Forrester says he was trying to capture the range

“I think for a lot of people their experience is that trails just appear out of nowhere. They’re not really connected with the process of how they’re made.” of emotions Newman and Deck went through. While trail riders could be heard letting out whoops of jubilation around them, the experience of building the trail was largely solitary, according to Forrester. “The interesting part of what I got to see from being with them day in and day out right from the beginning, was the emotional side of it, and I wanted that to come through.”

He also wanted to put a friendly face on mountain biking. “It’s really friendly out there. … But unfortunately, really, really infrequently, there’s a bad incident that happens,” he says. “I wanted to give people something positive to talk about.” The pictures are scheduled to come down in September.

WATERFRONT DINING Open 7 Days a Week

Boat Rentals, Sea Safari eco-tours and Guided Fishing Charters!

BREAKF BREAKFAST, LUNCH & DINNER

MarinaSide Grill

At Lynnwood Marina under Irronworkers Memorial Bridge

604.988.0038 www.marina www.marinasidegrill.com FREE PARKING

Harbour Seal at the Seal Colony

6409 Bay Street, Horseshoe Bay, West Vancouver Ph: 604.921.3474 Web: www.sewellsmarina.com


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

| B5

north shore news nsnews.com

I the North Shore – the best place to live, work & play.

MLA NORTHVANCOUVER-LONSDALE

604-981-0033 • @naomiyamamoto naomi.yamamoto.mla@leg.bc.ca

Are you a student? Need a summer job?

WE CAN HELP! We offer FREE placement services for North Shore students! ONE STOP CAREER SHOP 980 W 1st Street, Unit 109 North Vancouver BC Cobie Damsel Tel 604.988.3766 ext. 222 cdamsel@ywcavan.org

Don’t miss our STUDENT HIRING FAIR! Tuesday, June 28 from 2 to 5 pm!

Photographer Euan Forrester chronicles trail builders in a public art project called “Trail Fairies”. PHOTOS EUAN FORRESTER

Free yoga, fitness classes, concerts, dance lessons & performances all summer long!

LONSDALEQUAY.COM 604.985.2191 LONSDALEQUAY.COM #quay2summer

ywcajobseeker.org

Located in North Vancouver within steps of the Seabus Terminal and the Lonsdale Quay Market, the Pinnacle Hotel at the Pier has stunning views of Vancouver's downtown core.

PINNACLEPIERHOTEL.COM • 604.986.7437 NORTH VANCOUVER


B6 |

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

PICNIC PLACES

No longer just for teddy bears, picnics are a popular way for people to spend time with friends and loved ones while eating outside. Whether you’ve created a five-course spread of fine dining or just grabbed a coffee and a muffin to go, pull up a blanket, a flat rock, a picnic table or just a patch of grass and enjoy the scenery, the snacks and the company.

cnv.org/FunCityFestival

SATURDAY, AUGUST 13 SUNDAY, AUGUST 14

NORTH VANCOUVER DISTRICT

NORTH VANCOUVER CITY

Cates Park: Waterfront location, playground, picnic shelter, concession, lifeguards during the summer, washrooms, wheelchair accessible.

Waterfront Park: Playground, washrooms, wheelchair access.

Panorama Park/Deep Cove Park: Waterfront location, playground, picnic area, changeroom, washrooms, lifeguards in the summer, wheelchair accessible.

WEST VANCOUVER Ambleside Park: Shoreline walk (1.2-kilometre), concession, outdoor shower, picnic tables, picnic shelter, barbecues, public washrooms with change rooms, playground, water park, duck pond, sports field. Caulfeild Park: Rustic washrooms, waterfront walk, rocky shore, sandy beach, swimming, no lifeguards. Cypress Falls Park: Rushing waterfalls, 300-year-old trees, playground, sports field, tennis courts. Dundarave Park: Beach area, playground, wading pool, picnic area, washrooms, starting place of the Centennial Seawalk.

PICNIC TIPS

Burrard Dry Dock Pier and Promenade: Waterfront location, 700-foot pier, floating dock, wheelchair access. Civic Plaza: Wheelchair access. Located in the city centre. Close to the library. Benches available for sitting on.

Horseshoe Bay Park: Washrooms, playground, spray park, picnic tables, pier, next to the Horseshoe Bay Ferry Terminal. Lighthouse Park: Trails, washrooms, a functioning lighthouse. John Lawson Park: Food trucks from May to September, washrooms, information kiosk, drinking fountain, two charcoal barbecues, picnic tables (some sheltered), swimming, splash park, playground. Whytecliff Park: Playground, barbecues, concession, picnic tables, washrooms, scuba diving, tennis, swimming, walking and hiking. SOURCES: NORTHVANREC.COM, CNV.ORG, WESTVANCOUVER.CA

from President’s Choice chef Andrea Buckett

The art of assembly When making purchasing decisions, make it easy on yourself! Whenever possible, purchase quality pre-made products such as hummus, dips, and spreads. One of my favourite recipes is the BBQ Lamb on Beet Hummus Flatbread. This is a feast that is easy to prepare, yet memorable. Breath new life into summer classics Take your standard potato salad and instead of tossing with plain old mayo, toss with a fresh Pico de Gallo mild salsa, shredded cheese, black olives and cilantro. Switch up your standard burgers for salmon burgers topped with tzatziki, feta and iceberg lettuce or dress up your burger with some sriracha mayo or ketchup, Texas caviar or flavourful chutneys. Bevvies and Iced Treats Always have a large cooler or bucket full of ice and an assortment of lemonade, sparkling beverages and water. Try freezing your mix into ice cubes and use them to chill your cocktails. Make your signature cocktail into a Popsicle treat for adults.


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

| B7

north shore news nsnews.com

Proudly carrying local designers – Serves: 6 Prep time: 15 minutes Cook time: 35 minutes Difficulty Level: Intermediate

christine silk, sympli, neto, french laundry & myka jewelry

This is a savoury potato salad studded with sausages and fennel that can be served as the main course, as a barbecue side dish or on a picnic.

GRILLED SAUSAGE AND POTATO SALAD 1 bag (680 g) red mini potatoes 3 Tbsp (45 mL) extra virgin olive oil 1 small bulb fennel (or half large bulb) 1 red onion, peeled 1/2 Tsp (2 mL) freshly ground black pepper 4 packages of sausages of your choice 2 Tbsp (25 mL) drained capers, roughly chopped 1 Tbsp (15 mL) cider vinegar 2 Tbsp (25 mL) chopped fresh parsley Place potatoes in small saucepan; cover with water. Bring to a low boil over medium-high heat. Cover and boil 12 to 15 minutes or until tender but firm; drain well. Toss with 1 Tbsp (15 mL) of the olive oil in large bowl; set aside. Preheat barbecue to medium heat. Halve fennel bulb from top to bottom leaving root intact. Slice into thin wedges about 3/4-inch (2 cm) thick; place in another

large bowl. Cut onion following same method as fennel, leaving root intact to keep layers together while grilling. Add to bowl with fennel; toss with 1 Tbsp (15 mL) of the olive oil and the pepper. Transfer to grill basket. Grill fennel and onion 20 minutes, stirring occasionally, or until tender with grill marks. Meanwhile, grill sausages 7 to 8 minutes, turning frequently, or until heated through, and place oiled potatoes directly on grill or in grill basket 7 to 8 minutes or until golden. Whisk together capers, vinegar and remaining 1 tbsp (15 mL) oil in large bowl. Add fennel, onions and potatoes as they come off the grill. Slice grilled sausages on an angle into halfinch (1 cm) thick slices. Add to fennel mixture with parsley; toss gently to combine. Transfer to serving bowl; serve hot or at room temperature. Source: President’s Choice

Serves: 10 Prep time: 20 minutes Difficulty Level: Intermediate

This appetizer flatbread recipe features red beet hummus and crumbled lamb for a fresh and stylish treat that’s easy to serve at any summer gathering.

Family Owned & Operated for over 30 years!

1403 bellevue ave west vancouver 604 926 2222

on bellevue

1411 bellevue ave west vancouver 604 926 2232

VISIT WEST VANCOUVER enjoy nature & culture

galleries, performing arts, events & festivals

BBQ LAMB ON BEET HUMMUS FLATBREAD 1/2 lb (250 g) lean ground lamb 2 cloves garlic, minced 2 Tbsp (25 mL) grated onion 1 tsp (5 mL) toasted cumin seeds, crushed in mortar and pestle 3/4 tsp (4 mL) ground coriander 3/4 tsp (4 mL) paprika 1/2 tsp (2 mL) each salt and freshly ground black pepper 1 Tbsp (15 mL) extra virgin olive oil 3 Tbsp (45 mL) each chopped fresh parsley and mint 1 pkg (220 g) appetizer flatbreads 1 pkg (280 g) PC Beet Hummus Chickpea Dip and Spread 2/3 cup (150 mL) crumbled goat’s milk chevre soft unripened cheese Lemon wedges

Preheat barbecue to medium heat; grease grill. Combine lamb, garlic, onion, cumin, coriander, paprika, salt, pepper and oil. Using hands, gently mix until just combined. Form into three four-inch (10 cm) patties; let stand 20 minutes. Grill patties 6 to 8 minutes, turning halfway, or until cooked through. Transfer to plate; crumble into small pieces using two forks. Sprinkle with parsley and mint; set aside. Grill flatbreads 30 to 60 seconds per side or until golden with grill marks; transfer to cutting board. Divide hummus between flatbreads; spread evenly to cover. Top with lamb and cheese. Garnish with freshly ground black pepper and a drizzle of olive oil, if desired. Cut each flatbread into five pieces; squeeze lemon over top. Serve immediately.

TIP: You can substitute soft unripened goat’s milk cheese and crumble it yourself.

ferrybuildinggallery.com westvancouvermuseum.ca kaymeekcentre.com silkpurse.ca

visit westvancouver.ca


B8 |

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

10 GREAT THINGS TO DO THIS SUMMER ON THE NORTH SHORE

With an abundance of worthy outdoor attractions, it may be hard to decide what to do and where to go. We have compiled ten great ideas for you – try them and you will be rewarded with breathtaking scenery and good fun as you enjoy some true ‘North Shore’ experiences.

QUARRY ROCK: One of the best hikes in the Lower Mainland is the rolling 45-minute climb to Quarry Rock Lookout in Deep Cove. Named after Granite Quarries Ltd., which operated from 1908 to 1924 on the waterfront below the lookout, the rocky outcrop offers unbeatable views of the village of Deep Cove and east up Indian Arm. Located along the Baden Powell trail, you’ll find the access to the trail half a block north from the intersection of Gallant Avenue and Panorama Drive.

CATES PARK: Looking for a great place to picnic? Try Cates Park on the way to Deep Cove. Located on the waterfront, it has two children’s playgrounds and a nice strolling gravel pathway.

LOWER SEYMOUR CONSERVATION RESERVE: A favourite spot of locals, the Lower Seymour Conservation Reserve provides hikers, cyclists and inline skaters with 50 kilometres (31 miles) of paved roads and trails. Cool in summer — thanks to impressive stands of Cedar, Hemlock, Fir and Spruce trees — the reserve is a great spot for wildlife viewing; and for fishing. The little ones can throw a line into Rice Lake and try to catch a small trout. If under 16, they won’t need a licence. Find it at the end of Lillooet Road in North Vancouver. Lookout from Quarry Rock. PHOTO THINKSTOCK

Lower Seymour Conservation Reserve PHOTO PAUL MCGRATH

LYNN CANYON PARK: The 250-hectare Lynn Canyon Park is another gem: a lush temperate rainforest with plenty to interest the entire family. Hike scenic trails; visit the Lynn Canyon Ecology Centre for informative displays about the forest’s plants and animals; venture across the narrow, swaying Lynn Canyon Suspension Bridge; and stop in at the Lynn Canyon Café for a snack or meal. Access the park from Peters Road in North Vancouver. BURRARD DRY DOCK PIER: In the mood for a little more hustle and bustle? Get an upclose look at the action in the busy Port of Vancouver from the 700-foot-long Burrard Dry Dock Pier at the foot of Lonsdale Avenue. Built in 2005, the pier represents the first time in 100 years that the public has had access to this portion of the See more on page 9

Flight. Prepare For Lift Off. Birds of Prey = Ziplines = Skyride Surf Adventure = Paraglide = Heli-tours = Peak Chair = Owl Sessions


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

| B9

north shore news nsnews.com

From page 8

city’s waterfront, and is a wonderful tribute to the community’s shipbuilding history. If you’re hungry, bring along a snack from nearby Lonsdale Quay; or head there after and shop for fresh fruit, local seafood, baked goods, flowers, crafts and more.

HARBOURSIDE PARK: If you’re in the mood for something sweet, visit the worldfamous shop of chocolatier Thomas Haas, located at 998 Harbourside Dr. in North Vancouver. As well as handmade chocolates, this jewelry box of a shop sells pastries and cakes, excellent espresso and tasty sandwiches. Get your purchases to go and head to nearby Harbourside Park and watch ships cruise by.

CAPILANO SALMON HATCHERY:

Lighthouse Park. PHOTO THINKSTOCK

Observe one of the great life-cycle stories in nature at the Capilano Salmon Hatchery, a federal government hatchery in North Vancouver. Witness the life and death cycle, from juvenile Pacific salmon in the ponds to returning adult salmon leaping up fish ladders to spawn. The hatchery is open yearround, but late August through to November provides the best opportunities to view the returning adults; 4500 Capilano Park Rd., North Vancouver.

AMBLESIDE PARK: Looking for some doggone fun? You can’t beat the threehectare off-leash dog area at Ambleside Park in West Vancouver. Canines and their human friends can run on grass and trails, swim at the beach, and visit with other furry friends. A doggie-bag dispenser is located at the eastern end of the dog area and a water bowl is located beside the paved walk.

WEST VANCOUVER COMMUNITY CENTRE: The new West Vancouver Community Centre and neighbouring Aquatic Centre is a great spot to spend a rainy day. Try a program in the new gymnasium, Arts Studio or Dance Studio; challenge the climbing wall or go for a swim in the 3,750-square-foot leisure pool complete with giant waterslide.

LIGHTHOUSE PARK: If you’re craving a walk in the woods, Lighthouse Park is the spot. A perfect place to explore heavily treed trails, this 75-hectare virgin temperate rainforest is home to some of the largest Douglas Firs in Vancouver, and rewards walkers with a gorgeous view of the ocean at the end of the trail where you can also watch the working lighthouse. Located off Marine Drive (at Beacon Lane) West Vancouver near Horseshoe Bay.

Lynn Canyon Suspension Bridge. PHOTO PAUL MCGRATH

Ambleside Dog Park. PHOTO PAUL MCGRATH

FWmiQy VWQRU BUgiXs HUrU • IXVoor swimmiXg pooQ • RUsSWRrWXS, QoRXgU & pRb • FiSXUss cUXSrU, jWcRzzi & sWRXW • SpW & wUQQXUss cUXSrU • ChiQVrUX 12 WXV RXVUr sSWy WXV UWS frUU * • CompQimUXSWry pWrkiXg WXV iXSUrXUS *restrictions apply

604-985-3111 hiXorShvWXcoRvUr.com 700 Old lIllOOet ROad, nORtH VanCOuVeR

PROVIDING QUALITY FARM LIFE EXPERIENCES SINCE 1975

Repair & Service Record Cleaning

NEW Turntables • Project • Rega • Audio - Technica

MAPLEWOOD FARM

Vintage Turntables & Records

The Turntable Shop Hear the music

Located only 15 mins from downtown Vancouver, this 5 acre farm educates while entertains kids aged 0-110! Meet all who live in the barns, find out what Petunia & Peggy the potbelly pigs love to eat, cuddle with the bunnies, play with the goat kids & their moms, feed the ducks & geese and watch a Jersey cow milking demonstration daily at 1:15 pm. Custom Pony rides are available seasonally.

405 Seymour River Place, North Vancouver JUST OFF OLD DOLLARTON RD.

WE BUY & TRADE TURNTABLES #103-175 East 3rd Street, North Vancouver • theturntableshop.com • 604-971-1950

604-929-5610 • www.maplewoodfarm.bc.ca OPERATED BY THE PARKS DEPT. OF THE DISTRICT OF NORTH VANCOUVER


B10 |

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

FOOD, FUN AND FESTIVALS CHRISTINE LYON clyon@nsnews.com

No longer limited to the humble hot dog, the selection of street food offerings in the Lower Mainland has blown up in recent years. Roving food trucks now serve up a medley of creative cuisine and restaurant-quality meals that can be devoured standing up, sitting down or on the run. With summer heating up, mobile food vendors are out in full force. Here are just a few spots where North Shore foodies can find tasty outdoor eats. SHIPYARDS NIGHT MARKET Friday nights, 5-10 p.m. until Sept. 30 at Shipbuilders’ Square, North Vancouver. Every Friday evening throughout the summer, North Vancouver’s historic Shipbuilders’ Square comes alive with musical entertainment, vendors and plenty of hungry visitors. Each week, market-goers will find at least 35 food trucks parked along the “hot food alley” serving up Southern-style barbecue, Italian paninis, pan-Asian cuisine, artisan ice cream and a whole lot more. The market also includes a beer garden pouring local craft beer from Bridge Brewing, Deep Cove Brewers, Central City, Whistler Brewing Company, Black Kettle Brewing Company, and ciders from Lonetree and Hopping Mad Cider, plus organic Betty’s Vodka Iced Tea. northshoregreenmarkets.com

PHOTOS PAUL MCGRATH

See more on page 11

MAGNIFICENT MEDITERRANEAN DEALS!

I

Neptune Terminals is proud to be part of the North Shore neighborhood. Thanks to all the dedicated community organizations that partner with us to make this a great place to live and work.

f you’ve been reading these lately you’ve probably noticed a lot of emphasis from me on the Med. Quite honestly, deDAVE FRINTON mand has been down, so prices have come way down – and now Co-Founder really is the time for bargain hunters to take advantage! The first & President, trip, my wife and family are hosting. Departing on August 19th, CruisePlus your 14 night vacation (2 nights hotel and 12 night cruise) on the gorgeous ms Eurodam for a balcony stateroom, an onboard credit, roundtrip Vancouver air and all taxes is great value at $3699 CAD pp – remember this is prime summer holiday time. 3rd/4th person sharing get the cruise fare free. This sailing (out of Venice) ports mainly in Greece and Turkey. The Sept 27 package with similar itinerary (but out of Rome) is an amazing $3199 CAD pp aboard the brand new ms Koningsdam, and then our Oct 9th sailing on the new ship does Italy, Spain and more for $3649 CAD pp. Both of these are also 14 night packages with similar inclusions. Ask about extending your trip either pre or post or consider doing some back to back cruises which adds up to the best value. The following 16 night transatlantic sailing can also be added or booked on its own.

CruisePlus.ca www.neptuneterminals.com

Toll free: 1-800-854-9664

*New bookings only. Fares are per person in the currency noted, based on double occupancy, are capacity controlled, subject to availability at the time of booking and may be withdrawn without notice. Optional supplier charges may apply and are not included. Amenities, if offered, are based on double occupancy. Ships’ registry: Netherlands. CruisePlus Management Ltd. Consumer Protection BC License #: 3325-0.


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

| B11

north shore news nsnews.com

ENJOY A GLASS OF OYSTER BAY O WITH $1 OYSTERS

From page 10

SUMMER SESSIONS

July 2-Aug. 27 at Shipbuilders’ Square, North Vancouver. This is a free concert series Saturday evenings, 7 p.m.-10 p.m. Bring a chair, dance the night away, visit the artisan booths and enjoy the beverage garden and food trucks. cnv.org/summersessions

Monda to Friday 4 - 6pm Monday

91 Lonsdale Avenue, N. Van. 778-340-3449 @fishworkslolo

PHOTO PAUL MCGRATH

ARTISAN FARMERS MARKETS

Ambleside Farmers Market, Bellevue Avenue between 15th and 16th streets, West Vancouver, every Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. until Oct. 30. Lonsdale Quay Farmers Market, East Plaza at 123 Carrie Cates Ct., North Vancouver, every Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. until Oct. 29. The Artisan Farmers Market Society runs two markets on the North Shore that focus on locally grown, farm-fresh organic and conventional produce in addition to a variety of B.C. arts and crafts. A number of prepared food vendors also set up at the markets each weekend, so shoppers can take a break from perusing fruits and vegetables and enjoy a hot lunch or a sweet treat. All summer, a rotating assortment of food trucks will be serving up a variety of food including authentic Malaysian cuisine, Korean tacos, and French crêpes. artisanmarkets.ca Mike Ross mans Gesubdheit Bakery Ltd. at the Ambleside Farmers Market. FILE PHOTO CINDY GOODMAN

See more on page 12

Calling All Superheroes! Join us for our first “Kids Fun” Saturday of the Summer Saturday, July 2nd • Wear your favourite superhero costume (optional) • Listen to cool interactive heroic stories • Use your super powers to make a mask • Enjoy cake and fly home with a balloon

www.shoplynnvalley.com LYNN VALLEY ROAD & MOUNTAIN HWY

10.30-11.30 a.m. Join the fun every Saturday from 10.30 under the tent at Centre Court winners • shoppers drug mart • save-on-Foods • black bear pub • plus over 40 stores


B12 |

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

ADVENTURE QUEST WIN AN $800 NORTH SHORE ADVENTURE PRIZE PACK!

Beginning Sunday, July 3 look for 10 weekly Adventure Quest clues in the Sunday edition of the North Shore News. Upon finding all the answers, including the final question published on Sunday, September 4, email your answers to contest@nsnews.com or enter online at www.nsnews.com/contests. Online entry open September 4–11, 2016. Email entries must be received by Sunday, September 11, 2016. The winning entry with all the correct answers will receive a North Shore Adventure pack valued at over $800!

www.sewellsmarina.com

PHOTOS PAUL MCGRATH

HARMONY ARTS FESTIVAL

Argyle Avenue from 14th to 17th streets, West Vancouver, July 27-Aug. 7 The North Shore’s annual seaside festival of music, performance, cinema, arts and food is celebrating its 26th anniversary this summer. On the culinary front, a variety of restaurants and vendors will be dishing out scrumptious eats every day. The Re/Max Waterfront Lounge will be serving food created by Caffe Al Mercato, while the Beachside Patio will feature food from the Dirty Apron Cooking School and Delicatessen. Meanwhile, Best of the West, the festival’s signature culinary celebration of B.C. food and wine, is set for Aug. 3. harmonyarts.ca

One entry per person. Prize has no cash value & must be accepted as awarded.


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

| B13

north shore news nsnews.com

You’re invited - To ’Not Attend’

PHOTO PAUL MCGRATH

CARIBBEAN DAYS FESTIVAL

July 23 and 24 at Waterfront Park, North Vancouver. The Trinidad and Tobago Cultural Society of B.C. presents the Caribbean Days Festival every summer, drawing thousands of party-goers to North Vancouver’s Waterfront Park for a weekend of celebration. The festival grounds split into two areas, the north side of Waterfront Park housing a food concession and beer garden where visitors can try spicy Caribbean food, like jerk chicken, plus a variety of international fare. caribbeandays.ca

The Experience...Redefined

Now that it’s summer and many of us are making plans and changing regular commitments, Harvest Project faces a challenge in sustaining our programs that help hundreds of families. With our ‘virtual’ fundraiser, there’s no dressing up, large dinner or calendar obligation. You’re welcome to enjoy the season - while taking time to make a donation to help our work through the summer. Please share a cash gift now Thank you! You can donate online at: harvestproject.org

123 Carrie Cates Court, North Vancouver • (604) 986-6111 • 1 (800) 836-6111 sales@lonsdalequayhotel.com • www.lonsdalequayhotel.com

"Extending a Hand Up, Not a Hand Out" FALL REGISTRATION ON NOW Classes for 2016-2017 include:

• Royal Academy of Dance Ballet • Jazz • Lyrical • Contemporary • Hip Hop • Tap • Capoeira • Broadway Bound • Break Dancing • Acro Classes from pre-school to adult. Competitive and non-competitive classes. Located near Ron Andrews Rec Centre

Seymour Dance VOTED BEST DANCE STUDIO ON THE NORTH SHORE

Voted Top 3 of North Shore News 2011-2016

808 Lytton Street, North Vancouver www.seymourdance.com 604.929.6060

For more information or to register visit www.seymourdance.com

Serving those challenged by family breakdown, illness, job loss and poverty Providing client-care coaching + counsel, grocery + clothing support, emergency drop-in help, Clothes For Change thrift shop Impacting the community: Breaking the poverty cycle and restoring people to participation in work, school and a healthier family life

Thank you for your support! Serving the North Shore since 1993 1073 Roosevelt Cr., North Vancouver 604-983-9488 • harvestproject.org


B14 |

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

DNV CELEBRATES 125 YEARS ROSALIND DUANE rduane@nsnews.com

“History is a story. People love stories, they learn from stories.” District of North Vancouver Mayor Richard Walton is a bit of a history buff. It’s not surprising, then, when you discover he is a former high school history teacher. It’s also not surprising that he was interested in celebrating the district’s 125th anniversary this year. A few years ago Walton noted that the anniversary would share a close link with Canada’s 150th anniversary, which takes place next year, and thought it was a good opportunity for a year-long celebration of the district’s unique history. “I think an understanding of history and a sense of where any one of us may fit in today in the continuum of many years is something that builds a sense of belonging,” he says.

SUNDAY SALE up to

60

%

OFF EVERYTHING

GOLD AND ALL NATIVE ART 30% OFF

DIAMOND Saturday Oct 26JEWELLERY & Sunday Oct 27

• TOOLS • VIDEO GAMES • CAMERAS • WATCHES • ELECTRONICS • MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS Native Indian Art

50% OFF

North Shore Pawn Shop

604-990-8214 North Shore Pawn Shop 140-B Lonsdale Avenue 604-990-8214 North Vancouver 140-B Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver www.northshorepawnshop.ca www.northshorepawnshop.ca BUY, SELL, LOAN ON USED GOODS

Canada’s Finest Artists

For a lot of people history is something they are introduced to in school then largely forget about, suggests Walton, but knowing where a community came from is important when considering where it’s going. “Our community was really mud flats that were bordering the north side of Burrard Inlet,” starts Walton as he leads into a detailed discussion that traces the early days of the district. He talks about Moodyville (where the Neptune Terminals are today), and how what was essentially just some tidal flats grew into the largest port in Canada. In fact, he notes, the City of North Vancouver and the district together do more volume of goods than any other port in Canada. But it wasn’t all a positive influence back in the beginning. Walton weaves through a short recap of the origins of the area before European settlement in which First Nations lived for many centuries until they were largely pushed out and into several reserves by the industry activity. Local First Nations were forced into four fairly small reserves along the waterfront while the rest of the waterfront developed, he notes. Heavy industry also created heavy waterfront pollution in the early years. The area’s mountain heritage was also “logged mercilessly down to nothing,” says Walton. “There’s virtually no old growth left anymore.” A lot of what grew back are not very healthy ecosystems, and are mostly second-growth. “If you look at our history here it always ties in with sort of a negative activity,” says Walton. “We celebrate what we have but we don’t realize that it was a lot better before we came.” He agrees with the suggestion that it’s important to remember the past so the same mistakes aren’t made in the future. “The first European impact on the North Shore was mostly negative,” he notes, but there has been a lot of positive since. Walton talks about the value of understanding and listening to First Nations talk about protecting green spaces. “They talk about how short our tenure is, they understand clearly how short our tenure is, how we were given these lands to use only for a short period of time, they understand sustainability far better than anyone in our community does,” he says. “They live it and breathe it, it’s in their prayers and their recognitions.” Sustainability is a key component of the district’s future, and is part of the district’s official community plan. “I think

The North Shore’s jewel of Alpine Europe. Our new expanded menu showcases the delicious regional specialities one finds in Germany, Austria,Switzerland and South Tyrol. Live music nights (come see our 125 year old piano, old guitar jazz and traditional accordion and guitar music).

Dankeschön, darling, Dankeschön Wednesday to Saturday 12:00 to 5:00pm

Christopher, Kassandra and the Jägerhof staff

2121 Lonsdale Avenue North Vancouver For tours & public programs call 604-998-8563 Admission by Donation Children & Students Free

www.gordonsmithgallery.ca

PROUD RECIPIENT OF GOLDEN PLATE AWARDS, READERS CHOICE AWARDS, AND VOTED ONE OF THE TOP RESTAURANTS ON TRIPADVISOR.

Call for a reservation: 604-980-4316

71 Lonsdale Ave, North Vancouver

Deep Cove. PHOTOS CINDY GOODMAN

that we’re on a long, positive path to try to set right many of the things that the first probably hundred years anyway man did wrong,” says Walton. Development in various forms will likely continue in the district’s future and there will be more traffic, more economic activity, he admits. “But I think that we’re better at doing that now.” Walton moved with his family to the North Shore from Wales when he was six, which was just about 60 years ago, and has lived in West Vancouver, Lynn Valley, Delbrook, and Upper Capilano. In all those years he has never lived more than a block or two away from green space or creek beds. And that was a conscious decision. “It’s just a part of so many of us who have spent our lives here. It’s just in our blood,” he says of spending time in the North Shore’s natural environment. “It’s a very special place.” For more info about the district’s anniversary celebrations visit dnv.org/celebrating-125-years.

ART PARTY!

* * FREE ADMISSION * * ORIGINAL ART: $100 $200 $300 until July 16, 2016! 4360 Gallant Ave Deep Cove North Vancouver, BC V7G 1L2

awesome local art... for a great cause!

info@seymourartgallery.com | www.seymourartgallery.com 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. | 7 days a week, except holidays | 604.924.1378

with thanks to:


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

| B15

north shore news nsnews.com

NORTH SHORE READS Want to learn more about the beautiful North Shore?

The Ambitious City highlights how the thriving, multicultural City of North Vancouver grew rapidly in only 100 years. It starts with the migration of the Squamish people to Burrard Inlet, and covers the settlement of Moodyville in the 1800s up to the city’s incorporation in 1907. Published in honour of the city’s 2007 centennial, The Ambitious City is an engaging collection of first-person accounts, archival photos and illustrations.

Compiled with the help of Deep Cove Heritage Society, Echoes Across Seymour provides a comprehensive insight into the history and character of each of Seymour’s 19 neighbourhoods. Wonderful poems and charming archival photos help to showcase the Seymour area as a vibrant and modern community striving to find the right balance between development and nature.

Check out these great reads available from local retailers and get to know your community better.

AVAILABLE AT INDIGO BOOKS & MUSIC (ONLINE ONLY); 32BOOKS (PRE-ORDER)

AVAILABLE AT INDIGO BOOKS & MUSIC (IN-STORE AND ONLINE); 32BOOKS (PRE-ORDER)

THE AMBITIOUS CITY: A HISTORY OF THE CITY OF NORTH VANCOUVER

Warren Sommer

(2007, HARBOUR PUBLISHING, HARDCOVER)

NORTH VANCOUVER’S LONSDALE NEIGHBOURHOOD

WHERE MOUNTAINS MEET THE SEA

Shervin Shahriari

Daniel Francis

(2016, HARPER PUBLISHING, HARDCOVER)

Hot off the press, Where Mountains Meet the Sea: An Illustrated History of the District of North Vancouver commemorates the District of North Vancouver’s 125th anniversary of its incorporation as a municipality. Separated into three major parts, this book is a comprehensive collection of biographies, eyewitness memories, artifacts courtesy of the North Vancouver Museum and Archives, historic photographs, maps and charts. AVAILABLE AT 32BOOKS AND INDIGO BOOKS & MUSIC (PRE-ORDER ONLINE; NOT IN-STORE YET)

(2009, ARCADIA PUBLISHING, TRADE PAPERBACK)

ECHOES ACROSS SEYMOUR: A HISTORY OF NORTH VANCOUVER’S EASTERN COMMUNITIES Janet Pavlik, Eileen Smith, Desmond Smith (2012, HARBOUR PUBLISHING, HARDCOVER)

OFF THE BEATEN PATH: A HIKING GUIDE TO VANCOUVER’S NORTH SHORE Norman D. Watt

(2014, HARBOUR PUBLISHING, TRADE PAPERBACK)

Lonsdale Avenue, running from the waters of Burrard Inlet to the mountains of the Coast Range, has long been the community’s de facto main street. Its history dates back to 1903, when a large parcel of land was purchased by Alfred St. George Hamersley, and was called the Town of Lonsdale and then later called North Vancouver. Lonsdale Avenue became the spine along which the community developed. Rare vintage photographs help to illustrate the Lonsdale community’s fascinating history.

A comprehensive collection of North Shore hiking trails, Off the Beaten Path brings you detailed information on 39 routes winding across the North Shore, plus two in the Pemberton area. An invaluable resource for dog walkers, casual hikers and hardcore outdoor enthusiasts alike! Besides information on elevation gain and approximate hiking times, many entries also include historical information on points of interest such as old homesteads and logging camps.

AVAILABLE AT INDIGO BOOKS & MUSIC (IN-STORE AND ONLINE); 32BOOKS (PRE-ORDER)

AVAILABLE AT INDIGO BOOKS & MUSIC (IN-STORE AND ONLINE); 32BOOKS (PRE-ORDER)

NOW OPEN

Celebrating 30 years of service on the North Shore!

• Free ice with every purchase • Seniors discount 10% • Pick 6 and save • PRIZES!! Enter in the store to win! BRING IN THIS COUPON AND RECIEVE

10% OFF

All regularly priced items- limit one coupon per purchase Offer expires July 31, 2016

All day, every day 9am-11pm 100-2180 Dollarton Highway, North Vancouver, BC Phone – 604-914-2004; Fax – 604-914-2015

Our North Shore roots run deep. Lakes, Whyte LLP opened our doors on June 1, 1986, and we have been standing up for the North Shore ever since. We look forward to many more years of service to our community. 200 – 879 Marine Drive North Vancouver

604.984.3646

w w w. l a k e s w h y t e . c o m


B16 |

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

THANK YOU FOR RAISING

PRESENTED BY

EXCLUSIVE HOLE SPONSORS

Myanmar Burma Schools North Shore Medical Imaging Bill Reidl Boston Pizza

$537,491

Thank you to all the sponsors, players, donors and volunteers who contributed to the 20th Annual Lions Gate Hospital Foundation Golf Classic. Proceeds from this year’s tournament will help build The Carlile Centre - BC’s first-ever dedicated inpatient youth concurrent disorders unit. The new unit will provide specialized care for youth aged 13 to 18 years facing both mental health and substance use challenges. SPONSORS golf course $1 million shoot out first hole dinner

CO-SPONSORED HOLES Alan & Barb Holton Chris MacDougall CMW Insurance Services Deloitte Graham and Gayle Cooke Foundation Grosvenor Americas Ken and Junko Shinozaki Matcon Mawer Investment Pacific Honda Peake & Richmond Ltd - Insurance Specialists & Chubb Insurance West Fraser Timber

NET

pin flag

Capilano Golf & Country Club TD Bank Picton Mahoney Burgundy Asset Management The Beedie Development Group

pace of play

Carol & Mark Hannah

live auction

Raymond James

cart equipment auction refreshment cart registration participant gift putting green putting contest team prizes lunch reception dinner wine silent auction program balloon raffle print graphic design

HOLE SPONSORS

Legacy Senior Living North Shore Medical Imaging Vertex Dominion Lending Viking by Alliance Mercantile Fred & Linda Yada Eric Christiansen Realty Neptune Terminals Ltd. Walton Management BlueShore Financial David Strang Leith Wheeler J.T. Insurance Services (Canada), Inc. James & Sheri Clay Loren Nancke & Company Contact Printing TORA! Creative Strategies

THANK YOU ALSO TO ALL OUR 19TH HOLE SPONSORS

A&W Food Services of Canada Inc. Anthem Properties AON Risk Solutions Canadian Tire Canadian Western Trust Canoe Financial Capilano Suspension Bridge Park Carter GM Chevron Canada Limited Deans Knight Capital Management Ltd Gabrielle & Richard Loren Guenther Bakeries Canada ULC Gustavson Wylie Architects Inc. IA Clarington Jamie Switzer Jedco Energy Servies Corp. Korn/Ferry International KPMG Langlois Brown Loren Nancke & Company Mercury Launch & Tug Ltd. Mike Kennedy Morrey Auto Mr. Lube Odlum Brown Ortho West Medical Pacific Arbour Park Shore BMW Peake & Richmond Ltd. - Insurance Specialists Peter & Joanne Brown Foundation Robertson Floors Ltd. Rogers Food Ltd. Strongman Group Stryker TD Commercial Banking TELUS Thunderbird Marine Corp.

SO FAR WE HAVE RAISED $4.7 MILLION TOWARDS THE $5 MILLION REQUIRED TO BUILD THE NEW UNIT. PLEASE HELP US REACH OUR GOAL. EVERY GIFT OF EVERY SIZE COUNTS. DONATE NOW. OUR YOUTH ARE COUNTING ON US.

lghfoundation.com 604.984.5785


| B17

north shore news nsnews.com

A big part of what makes the North Shore one of the best places in the world to live is the diverse selection of small businesses throughout North and West Vancouver.

In the following pages, you will find 26 ways to support small businesses located in your community.

NO

RE

AN E

O TH

Residents from Horseshoe Bay to Deep Cove have no reason to leave their beautiful community to shop elsewhere… everything they could possibly need or want can be found here on the North Shore. The best part? Shopping locally means an immediate boost to our economy which keeps the North Shore a vibrant and thriving community.

Y S A TO W Z

O

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

RT H S H

Show your #NorthShoreLove and shop local!

A BOOK YOUR APPOINTMENT TODAY AND GET HEALTHY FOR LIFE.

2014

2015

Award Winning Health Care

AV I TA

Health & Massage Therapy

Healthy for Life! Avita Health & Massage is a team of top medical practitioners offering the following services: i Physiotherapy i Registered Massage Therapy i Chiropractic i Acupuncture i Counselling i Dietitian Counselling

B B

eyond Beige Interior Design is a multiaward winning, North Vancouver firm. Our expertise lies in creating original, liveable, quality residences. Whether you’re building new or renovating, our established relationships with trusted trades and suppliers, allows us to provide you with an end result of the highest quality.

KEY THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT US: i One-on-one physiotherapy i Modern chiropractic care including ART, rocktaping i Direct billing for many extended health plans i Convenient extended hours i 20 Registered Massage Therapists

#407-1200 Lonsdale Ave, North Vancouver 604.980.4491 www.avitahealth.ca

Contact us to set up a consultation today. Hours: Monday - Friday 9am - 5pm

Beyond Beige Interior Design 1121 15th Street West 604.876.3800 info@beyondbeige.com www.beyondbeige.com


B18 |

C

nsnews.com north shore news

A TO Z WAYS TO BUY LOCAL ON THE NORTH SHORE

Your living room is where you get comfortable

A

t Couch Potato, our passion is your creation of a comfortable, stylish and homey atmosphere. Choose your Canadian made upholstery, from the smallest apartment sofa to the largest Sectional, or sofa bed, in your style, your colour and your comfort. As well you can choose from Ready-to-Go upholstery and occasional tables. We promise a quality product and assistance with your needs in mind, that’s why Couch Potato is “The store that Friends tell Friends about.”

D

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Keep Cool this Summer with ice cold air

Did you know Air conditioning systems should be serviced every 4 years to keep you cool and to help prevent wear and leaks?

JOANNE, RITA AND SHIRLEY

Great Price on A/C for Summer 2016!

$

10999

(plus taxes & fees)

AIR CONDITIONING SERVICE Call Ian, Peter & Ryan today for “Ice Cold Air”

1405 Pemberton Avenue North Vancouver 604.988.8271 www.couchpotatosofas.com

20 YEARS

Big Enough to Know, Small Enough to Care!

110 Fell Avenue, North Vancouver

THE STORE THAT FRIENDS TELL FRIENDS ABOUT

E Hours: Monday - Friday 8:30am - 5:00pm

#101-315 West 1st Street North Vancouver 604.983.2470 www.ettravel.com

Ellison Travel & Tours opened in 1980 and now employs more than 80 full and part time travel professionals in 5 locations: Exeter, Goderich, Toronto and Ottawa, ON and North Vancouver, BC. Today, the family-run company covers a broad swath of the travel market including vacation and corporate travel, and specializes in customized tours for adult and student groups. Marcie Ellison-Outerbridge manages her team in the North Vancouver location offering vacation travel, tours for women and corporate travel in addition to their group travel services. Ellison Travel also offers online bookings. Visit their website at www.ettravel.com for all your travel needs.

604.988.2239 www.derosaauto.ca

2016 TOP THREE

F

Forerunners is a store built on community and passion. We pride ourselves not only on our service, but also on our dedication to educating, motivating and inspiring fellow runners. We are runners ourselves, and we take great joy in building and fostering the running community on the North Shore. Our goal is to provide runners, walkers, and fitness enthusiasts of all levels with the specialized support they need to fulfil their

fitness goals. From first-time 5K runners to world-class athletes, we can get you set up to hit the ground running. Looking for a new pair of kicks to get you out on the trails or up the Grouse Grind? Come in and meet owners Ken Greenaway and Jerry Ziak and the rest of the knowledgeable staff at Forerunners in North Vancouver.

980 Marine Drive, North Vancouver (next to Everything Wine and across from Indigo Books)

s t pts wwwt { {y {zt

~ { {y {z vu


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

GH

| B19

north shore news nsnews.com

A TO Z WAYS TO BUY LOCAL ON THE NORTH SHORE

Hear at Home Mobile Hearing Clinic LTD

We provide quality services including lawn maintenance, garden care, turf installations, irrigation, landscape lighting, fence & deck installations, retaining walls, paving stone installations, outdoor kitchens, outdoor living rooms, landscape design and more!

is dedicated to providing high quality service and hearing products by qualified Registered Hearing Instrument Practitioners. Our service is unique in bringing professional hearing help services right to your door.

T

he Great Canadian Landscaping Company is a local company that has proudly been serving the North Shore for over 16 years! We service residential, commercial and strata properties. We do it all – from design to installation and maintenance, we have got you covered. For small and big jobs, be sure to give us a call! Call today for more information or to book a free on-site consultation.

604.924.5296 www.gclc.ca

We believe that by visiting individuals in their own environments we are able to make an assessment of individuals and their “real life listening needs”. We can then provide them with the best hearing advice that suits their lifestyle and budget. We will perform a number of easy tests using state of the art equipment that shows us how you hear. At the end of the hearing assessment we will explain the results and discuss options which are best for you.

We are North Shore’s mobile hearing clinic since 2009. We come to you!

MOBILE HEARING CLINIC

149-1233 Lynn Valley Road, North Vancouver 778.340.1101 www.hearathome.com

IJ

What is integraty?

Jennifer Abbott BC Licensed Hearing Aid Practitioner

Some need to go to great lengths to keep cool… your car doesn’t.

book your Call us today to checkup. C A d n a t n la o co engine

Our endless pursuit of excellence – every day, for every customer.

AU TOMOTIV E

823 West 3rd Street, North Vancouver 604.984.3551 | www.integratirenorthvancouver.com

999 West 1st Street North Vancouver 604.924.5330 johnnysauto@telus.net 2015

We care about your safety on the road. i LICENSED TECHNICIANS i GOVERNMENT APPROVED INSPECTION FACILITY


B20 |

nsnews.com north shore news

L

A TO Z WAYS TO BUY LOCAL ON THE NORTH SHORE

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Our Upper LEVEL service will impress you

K

U

We set a new record with our recent donation of over half a million dollars to BC Children’s Hospital Foundation! We couldn’t have done it without your support!

pper Level Plumbing is a North Vancouver based company and we’ve been proudly servicing the North Shore and Lower Mainland for over four years. We offer complete plumbing services including drain cleaning, camera scoping, new construction, renovations, gas work and light commercial.

At Upper Level Plumbing we strive in giving our clients the highest quality of workmanship from friendly, knowledgeable staff. We take pride in going the extra mile for our clients and making your customer experience a positive one. We look forward to providing upper level service to all of our clients while taking care of your plumbing and gas needs.

Kirmac (and you) cares for Kids!

183 Pemberton Avenue, North Vancouver www.kirmac.com | northvan@kirmac.com | 604.998.2650 Hours: Monday - Friday 8:00am - 5:30pm

Sam Adamson is a butcher with chef’s background. He has excellent advice on how to cook cuts of meat and dishes and can recommend and help you get the most out of lesser known cuts. He has a background in a variety of cuisines such as Thai, Asian, Mexican, French and more. Focusing on locally sourced organic, antibiotic and hormone free meats, they also sell a variety of local and imported cheeses, charcuterie, crackers and antipasto. All marinades are made in house as well as house-made sausages, cold cuts and cooked items for your convenience.

M

s t qtp q

y}} { x } y t

N

At Niki Design & Glass Studio Inc. we specialize in the most comprehensive range of commercial and residential architectural glass services. Niki Glass has been located in the heart of North Shore for over 37 years. Our experienced team excels at handling the most challenging architectural glass fabrication and installation . Our glasswork is customized based on our clients’ choice of texture, color, thickness, size for a wide variety of applications. We are not your regular glass company. We are visionary artists in the field of glass and mirror, a pioneer in the textured glass industry.

Bringing Your Ideas to Life ... The manufacturer of architectural textured design

Parkgate Village 112-1151 Mt. Seymour Road North Vancouver 604.770.0188 meatbutcher.ca facebook.com/meatbutcher1/

Showroom: 123 West 3rdStreet 604.987.8882 nikiglass.ca

Contact us at 604.987.8882 for more information.


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

OP

| B21

north shore news nsnews.com

A TO Z WAYS TO BUY LOCAL ON THE NORTH SHORE

Quality Eyewear at prices you will love.

C

omplete selection of Designer Eyewear. Sunglasses, prescription sunglasses and contact lenses.

In store sight testing, contact lens fitting and eyewear repair. DaVinci Optical carries the most popular brands of eyewear. Come in and browse the many famous names in contact lenses, sunglasses and eyewear.

40% OFF Prescription Eyeglasses Prescription Sunglasses (Frame & Lenses)

OR

BUY 1 GET 1 FREE

second item must be of equal or lesser value IN STORE EYE EXAM BY INDEPENDENT OPTOMETRIST

1456 Lonsdale Avenue 604 985 5367 | www.davincioptical.ca

Q

Personal injury claims? We can help. Free consultation. Pettit and Company, Trial Lawyers We have moved to the Westview Shopping Center 301-2609 Westview Drive North Vancouver 604.998.0901 www.pettitandco.com

R

*Services provided through law corporation.

after

Yes...we’re that good! Hate root canals and wish they didn’t take so long? At Quick Dental North Shore, we guarantee your root canal will be done in 15 minutes!

At renovateme! design & construction, we are a North Shore based, family owned and operated company where style and practicality meets courteous and knowledgeable service and quality and durable materials to create time sensitive, budget friendly and fuss free home improvement experiences of the finest order. Please call with any questions or to arrange a consultation, or visit us at our newly “renovated” website.

before

Our team is enthusiastic to provide a fully integrated service from design to completion.

i design i build i decorate i stage i residential i commercial

QUICK DENTAL - NORTH SHORE -

To book an appointment please call 604.998.3510

604.761.2421 www.renovateme.ca


B22 |

S

nsnews.com north shore news

A TO Z WAYS TO BUY LOCAL ON THE NORTH SHORE

Can’t find what you’re looking for…again? Shelf Genie can help. We are the premier provider of glide-out shelving solutions here on the North Shore. Our Glide-Out shelf line offers a multitude of cabinet space saving options for all areas of your home. No more pulling everything out to find what you’re looking for – we can create a customized solution for you!

T

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

T

before

“I love my new gliding shelves! Shelf Genie has created a more organized and easier life for me.”

after

Diane Y – Burnaby BC

he Dye Lot has you covered whether you’re looking for a flattering haircut or great colour. The 2016 winner of the North Shore News Readers Choice Award for best salon features talented stylists who offer hair care services for men and women in a friendly atmosphere. The Dye Lot now offers a full wig, hairpiece and extensions service for clients seeking hairpieces for both fashion and hair loss. To book an appointment please call 778.340.3332

Defining Contemporary Sustainable Beauty

Call Caroline Vincent today for your FREE consultation: 778-899-0141 shelfgenie.com/british-columbia

U

V

Each adventure depends on your dog’s age and fitness level. Outings vary between the North Shore’s many off-leash and dog walker friendly parks, beaches, and mountains. Our four-legged friends get t d qt pi xrvpm wm dv~o Treatment as they enjoy the following services:

Everything from A-Z

W

! pvlr j y{n ! p|k m j y{n ! u w|vp j y{n ! uy rvk pn ! d i p CELEBRATING 15 YEARS Call Urban Dog today – vpm} u}vp sn kvlp|m v~ j y{|w~ vxr wi n|w | wn wnlp evw c|pnm f|

63 + 65 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver thedyelot.com

Sheena Trenholm 604.716.9160 urbandognorthshore.com

e are a one-stop shop for all you informed, health-minded folks here on the North Shore. We have everything you’re looking for in health supplements, sports nutrition, body care, health food and now we even have a delicious organic smoothie bar!

Receive a delicious FREE WHOLE FOOD SMOOTHIE with a minimum $50 purchase

1637 Lonsdale Avenue North Vancouver 604.985.1185 857 Hornby Street Vancouver 604.428.8824 www.victoriashealth.com 20 YEARS

2015

2016

FREE customer parking at the back


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

| B23

north shore news nsnews.com

A TO Z WAYS TO BUY LOCAL ON THE NORTH SHORE

SUMMER CAMPS:

July 11 - 15: 9am - 12:30pm Ages 6 - 14 Creative Encounters Beach Art with Lynn Colpitts

- Nexus (Young Adults) - every Thursday evening - TGIF (Youth group) - every Friday evening - TGIF Bible Study - Sunday morning after church

X

WEDNESDAY JUNE 15 2016

Earn up to $3000/month Host Families Needed

Contact us today 604.688.7942 groups@languagecanada.com www.eurocentrescanam.com

12

C

TASTE 23

NORTHSHO

RENEWS

LOCAL NEWS .

LOCAL MATTER

LOWER LONSD ALE

Maru Korea n Bistro

Lower Lonsdal e restaurant features popular favourites

S . SINCE 1969

Early morning blaze leaves eight people homeless

INTERACT WITH

THE NEWS

AT

NSNEW S.COM

JEREMY SHEPHER jshepherd@nsnews.coD m

Firefighters saved North Vancouve eight r residents after a blaze swept through a Lower duplex shortly Lonsdale a.m. Sunday before 2 morning

. “In two minutes, your life has changed,” said duplex’s residents, one of the sional photograp profesher Peter Langer. Langer was fast asleep when he heard a neighbour yelling: “Fire! Fire! Get The fire continued out!” to spread as the artist grabbed his cellphone, laptop and camera gear. In a series of 9-1-1 calls, neighbours reported and smoke billowing flames from the second storey East Third Street of an duplex, according to District of North Vancouver assistant fire chief

See Duplex

page 7

SAILOR’S DELIGH T

sailor is taking

DEVELOPMEN T: LOWER

West Vancouve part in the thrilling r’s Nikola Girke is gearing up new Nacra 17 for her class, her third different eventfourth trip to the Olympic Games this summer since her Olympic debut. See story in Rio. page 29. PHOTO The experienced

LONSDALE

Museum su

JEREMY SHEPHER jshepherd@nsnews. D com

pporters ra

After 30 years of looking past, North Vancouver’s for a new place to hang have found Museum and the a compelling new home – but they’ll Archives may business have to make Council is considerin case before they can move in. a g a 12-storey, tower perched 117-unit

on residential and Carrie Cates a commercial podium at West Esplanade Court. The which could site includes be given to the city, potentiall16,155 square feet Council sent y for the museum. despite several the project to public hearing councillors Monday expressing reservations over the iv

er Awa

for Fatal Distraction

#237

Y

not be a host family?

BRIGHT LIGHTS

Gala by the

Capilano element ary hosts spring fundraiser at Pinnacle Hotel LIVING 25

Dexter Texter

MIKE WAKEFIELD

lly for Site

City considers OCP exemption Polygon’s 12-sto for rey tower propo sal

lack of a business plan. There should be no further requests for costs to the funds, city or any The city providedaccording to Coun. Craig Keating. $100,000 for several studies, the museum including a to undertake plan was not business plan. complete in That business time much to the chagrin of Coun. for Monday’s council meeting, “The taxpayer Rod Clark. should have the right to know that they’re

Bad Driver Award #237: Fatal Distrac tion

8

not giving away millions to away,” Clark a developer said. who’s going to walk Council voted against putting Shop earlier the museum this year, which in the Pipe able location. Clark called “(Site 8) won’t a much more much more suitdifficult to find. be nearly as attractive , it’ll be numbers, that And I have to see those business case, business A few rows before I can of the council support it.” museum supporter chamber were occupied by s clad in blue advocate for T-shirts who a new were there Serving as city home for the museum. to council’s represent ative to the museum

See Site page

4

Bad drivers like you. So watch Dexter bring us good drivers out for texters like yourself)! And when you do (and don’t be one remember BC’s need collision repair, favourite, Craftsman Collision. ®™ Trademark of AIR MILES International Trading B.V.

450 Mathers Avenue West Vancouver 604.922.0911 westvanbaptist.com

NEWSSTAND PRICE

Gerry’s Garde

July 18 - 22: 12:30pm - 4:30pm Sontrek Discover - Life-Giving Water July 25 - 29: 9am - 12:30pm Ages 7 - 16 Water Colour Encounters Fine Art Painting with Lynn Colpitts

$1.25

n Gerry MacPhe space in Loutetrson transforms Park

d

The North Shore News has a strong personal and professional investment in the community. For our readers, we provide provocative and informative reporting through our team of experienced and award-winning journalists. For local businesses, we offer print and digital marketing products which can target their customers and raise awareness of their business – all the while helping to build a strong and vibrant local economy.

r

July 18 - 22: 9am - 12:30pm FTK - Deep Sea Discovery

- Sunday Morning Worship at 10am - MaNNa Kids Church at 10am - Magma Kids Church and Sunday School at 10am For Bible Study Groups, see www.westvanbaptist.com

Providing eXcellent coverage of your community since 1969.

Ba d Dr

W

Our everyday calendar:

Used under licence by LoyaltyOne,

Inc. and Craftsman Collision

Ltd.

2 North Van

locations: 810

W. 1st St. and

1315 Cotton

Rd.

nsnews.com 604-998-3510

Z L

ocated on the shores of Stave Lake in Mission, BC, Zajac Ranch for Children provides summer camps for children and young adults with chronic, life-threatening or debilitating conditions. These experiences give participants the opportunity to explore the great outdoors while developing greater social and environmental awareness, increased self-confidence and positive growth in attitudes towards physical activity. Each summer, Zajac Ranch welcomes hundreds of children aged 7-17 with a wide variety of medical conditions.

“My son is quadriplegic. He loves physical activity but is very limited. Zajac Ranch offers activities that have been adapted so that he can participate. He waits the year to be ‘free’ to do things everyone else gets to do. Zajac Ranch is a happiness builder.” - Parent of Elliot, Zajac Ranch Camper

300–2006 West 10th Avenue Vancouver 604.739.0444 info@zajac.com | zajacranch.com


B24 |

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Fresh Air.

Summer Fairs.

Not a Care.

Good times reign on the mountainside of Vancouver. No matter whether you want to get out and play in our fresh air, summer fairs or just plain unplug, we have something for every taste and budget. Bring the whole family and head to our famous attractions like Grouse Mountain, Capilano Suspension Bridge or a Sewell’s Sea Safari. Or why not take a walk on the wild side at Lynn Canyon Park or the Lower Seymour Conservation Reserve where you can cycle, roller blade, hike or fish. Whatever appeals, be sure to come and stay on the mountainside of Vancouver and discover our good nature. To plan your getaway, go to: www.vancouversnorthshore.com


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

NEWS | A15

north shore news nsnews.com

Court case claims NEB decision ‘unlawful’ From page 7 George, manager with the Tsleil-Waututh’s Sacred Trust Initiative, is confident of. “At first we were suing them because they didn’t consult at all and now this court case is about the flaws that (the process) did have,” he said. With the price of clean energy falling, pipelines will soon be obsolete, he added. “It doesn’t serve us Canadians. We take all the risk,” George said. “We’re stepping ahead as First Nations saying ‘No, we don’t want it.’” Despite likely being eligible for royalty payments or benefits, the nation has instead opted to go to great expense to stop any pipeline expansion, George said. “This is really important. This is super important. Money would help my people out of poverty. Money would, but we can’t put an expense on what we’ve been living in harmony with for thousands of years – our lands and our waters,” he said.

“We’re not a rich nation by any means but we spend our resources in stopping this because we know what it means to us. I believe Canadians would make the same choice when they know the true facts of what’s going on.” Ali Hounsell, spokeswoman for Trans Mountain, issued a statement in response. “We understand these groups have filed applications with the Federal Court of Appeal. We are currently reviewing the applications and will be responding more fully through the court process,” it read.

SHIP SHAPE Drum major Marina Matsuura takes part in the Royal Canadian Sea Cadet Corps ceremonial review June 12 at North Van’s JP Fell Armoury. After a military-style parade and awards, cadets showcased their skills for family and friends under the review of Lt.-Cmdr. Martin Packer, commanding officer of HMCS Quadra. Visit nsnews.com for a photo gallery. PHOTO CINDY GOODMAN

Get Fit, Get Outside, Have Fun with Deep Cove Outdoors your #1 choice for paddlesports this summer 352 Lynn Ave. North Vancouver

BEHIND CANADIAN TIRE

GREAT CANADIAN STAGE 4:30–5:45 p.m. Winsome Kind 6:00–6:50 p.m. West Vancouver Youth Band 6:50–7 p.m. singing of O Canada 7–8:30 p.m. SideOne 9–10 p.m. SideOne 10:30 p.m. FIREWORKS! Additional Blue Bus service will be provided after the event.

westvancouver.ca/canadaday

Complete Automotive Repairs

Service of All Makes & Models Specializing in service of all Jeep & Chrysler models. Specializing in Jeep & Chrysler MANUFACTURERS SCHEDULED MAINTENANCE SERVICES

604.987.2202 deepcoveoutdoors.com

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS ON THE

IMPEX AUTO

1166A West 14th Street • 604-985-6237 (off Pemberton Ave., entrance at rear)

JOHN LAWSON PARK FRIDAY, JULY 1 Dress up in our national colours and join us at John Lawson Park. Bring your own picnic or enjoy something from our barbecue while watching live entertainment!

FIREWORKS

There will be two simultaneous fireworks shows, one off the shores of West Vancouver and one in the water between Canada Place and North Vancouver. The 20-minute spectacular display is viewable from a variety of locations in West Vancouver, including the Seawalk between Dundarave and Ambleside, as well as in Stanley Park and Point Grey. This pyro-musical starts at 10:30 p.m. and will be simulcast on Rock 101.

CANADA DAY CONTRIBUTORS MEDIA SPONSOR

SUPPORTER

FIREWORKS PRESENTER

PRODUCED BY


A16 | HEALTH & WELLNESS HEALTH NOTES MEDICATION MANAGEMENT Fehmina Lalani provides free information on managing your meds Monday, June 27, 6:30-7:30 p.m. at the North Vancouver City Library, 120 West 14th St., North Vancouver. northshorehealthmatters.com BRAIN INJURY SUPPORT GROUP The North Shore Brain Injury Support Group meets Tuesday, June 28, 7 p.m. at Evergreen House/ Lions Gate Hospital, North Vancouver. braininjury.ca

MEDITATION IN THE GALLERY Drop in and learn meditation techniques June 28, 6-7 p.m. and July 5, 12:301:30 p.m. at Seymour Art Gallery, 4360 Gallant Ave., North Vancouver. Free. No experience required. 604-924-1378 seymourartgallery.com PROSTATE CANCER’S North Shore support and information group will meet Tuesday, June 28, 7 p.m. at the auditorium at Lions Gate Hospital, 231 East 15th St., North Vancouver. Larry Mroz from the B.C. Centre for Palliative Care will give a presentation on advance care planning for men, their partners or families.

nsnews.com north shore news SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016 YOGA THURSDAYS Free outdoor (weather permitting) yoga classes on the waterfront Thursdays until Aug. 25, 6:30-7:30 p.m. at South Plaza outside the Lonsdale Quay Market, 123 Carrie Cates Court, North Vancouver. Participants must bring their own yoga mat and a towel. lonsdalequay.com LIVING DIVINE RELATIONSHIPS Join soul teachers and healers Cynthia Hamilton and Sara Baker for an evening of wisdom and practices to help to open the heart to heal and transform all the relationships in life Thursday, June 30, 6-9 p.m. at West Vancouver United Church, 2062 Esquimalt Ave.

$10 for seniors and $5 for students. 604-928-7781 FEEL GOOD FRIDAYS Participate in lunchtime workouts (weather permitting) hosted by Steve Nash Fitness World Fridays, July 1-Sept. 2 from noon to 1 p.m. at Lonsdale Quay, 123 Carrie Cates Court, North Vancouver. GRIND10 From July 1 to 15 take on the challenge of completing 10 Grinds in 15 days for a chance to win prizes as well as raise funds for the Grind for Kids program in support of B.C. Children’s Hospital Foundation. Registration: $5. grousemountain.com LONDON DRUGS OFFERS

SKIN CHECK CLINIC One in three worldwide cancers are skin related therefore London Drugs, 2032 Lonsdale Ave., North Vancouver, is offering a free mole and skin check clinic Saturday, July 2, 2-7 p.m. londondrugs.com WALK AND TALK Take a break and release stress by walking on the first and third

Tuesday of each month July 5, 19, Aug. 2 and 16, 1:30-3 p.m. Gather at John Lawson Park, West Vancouver. Presented by North Shore Community Resources. Compiled by Debbie Caldwell Email upcoming event information to listings@nsnews.com.

NORTH SHORE CANADA DAY PARADE Organized by the Celebrate North Shore Society

Friday, July 1 • 10am start 17th St.

13th St.

Post Parade OPEN HOUSE Royal Canadian Legion - 123 West 15th Street

Drop into the Legion to celebrate Canada Day with a barbecue and entertainment; children welcome until 3:30 p.m. Partial proceeds from the barbecue will go to the Fort McMurray fire fund.

www.canadadaynorthshore.org North Shore Canada Day Parade Sponsors

Grand Blvd.

Come and see the many colourful & exciting parade entries. All parade entries must be registered.

The Parade Route Lonsdale

7:30am - 10:00am Located at 13th & Grand Blvd.

Jones

Pancake Breakfast

EMPOWERMENT CAMPS Participants in last year’s North Shore Women’s Centre Girls’ Empowerment Camp enjoy a canoe ride. The centre is offering two sessions this summer, the first, July 11-15, is open to girls entering grades 9 and 10, and the second, July 18-22, is for those entering grades 10 and 11. Participants are invited to come and talk about dating and friendships, social media and bullying, and self-esteem and body image. Activities will include journalling, art and drama, and outdoor activities. The camp is free of charge and lunches and snacks are included. Register by contacting the centre at 604-984-6009 or visit northshorewomen.ca. PHOTO SUPPLIED

Wetmore Motors Experience Matters Providing The Same Great Service Since 1946

SERVICING ALL MAKES AND MODELS

Specializing in VW and Audi Wee are no longer in the business of selling vehic vehicles, but continue to provide outstanding auto service as we always have, at a reasonable price. Open: Monday thru Friday 8:30 am to 5:30 pm

Wetmore Motors (2003) Ltd.

1397 Welch Street, North Vancouver

604.985.0168


FIT&HEALTHY SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

| A17

north shore news nsnews.com

Advertisement

Ideal Protein and Bellevue Pharmacy: The Perfect Match

At Bellevue Pharmacy we are always striving to improve the health and wellness of our community. We fill many prescriptions where weight loss would help reduce or even eliminate the need for some medications.

about Ideal Protein through a good friend and saw how fantastic she looked, something told me this was my time to work on getting myself back, and that I would attempt to lose all my weight I had gained.

The Ideal Protein Weight Loss Method is a medically derived and medically supervised program. Our dieters come in once a week for measurements, body composition analysis and coaching.

“Not only did I get my energy back but I also got my health and confidence back.“

We are very happy to have a coach who has had great success on the program. Here is her story: “I started this journey five years ago, after the birth of my children and after many attempts to do it on my own, I decided it was time I needed to make a change for me. I heard

Ideal Protein has changed my life completely. I have tried several diets in the past and this one has been the most successful and easiest by far. Not only did I get my energy back but I also got my health and confidence back. I lost a total of

53 pounds in six months, and I feel amazing!!! I feel so strongly about this weight loss program and was given the opportunity to become a Certified Ideal Protein Coach. I am so blessed to have been given the opportunity to share my success and now help dieters have the same success as me.” Our Bellevue Pharmacy team specializes in the naturopathic arm of medicine where we consult our patients on an integrative approach to their health. We strongly believe that in order to treat a condition, we must take into account the whole person (body, mind, and spirit), including all aspects of lifestyle. Our approach emphasizes a therapeutic relationship between both conventional and alternative treatment.

The consultations focus on correcting nutritional and cellular level deficiencies; which are root causes for many chronic conditions conditions. Our pharmacists create protocols for a wide range cr of conditions including adrenal exhaustion, chronic fatigue, and hormone imbalances. We ecommend pharmaceutical recommend grade supplements and carry an g impressive range of products to impr meet your needs.

Before

After

Want to lose between 20-30lbs before summer?

Iff you find yourself wanting to explore a holistic and collaborative explor approach to your health, please appr visit us at 1405 Bellevue Avenue in West Vancouver or call 604-281-3784, W and give yourself a chance to get proactive and see the change.

20 YEARS

2016

is a medically recognized easily tolerated treatment. To book your consultation please call or click online appointments at Snoredentist.ca

$100

103–130 130 Pemberton embert A Ave. North Vancouver

604.971.5652 | www.elevatehealth.ca

• PERSONAL ONE ON ONE COACH • MEDICALLY SUPERVISED PROGRAM

AVAILAbLE At bELLEVUE PHARMACY WITH THIS AD RECEIVE 15% oFF ON SUPPLEMENTS OR Free 20 Min. CONSULTATION

1405 bellevue avenue • west vancouver tel: 604-281-3784 (drug) • bellevuepharmacy.ca

DO YOU HAVE

OSTEOARTHRITIS?

The OASIS program can help you take control of your osteoarthritis. The OASIS program offers you: Individual Assessments: Book an appointment at our North Shore clinic; doctor referral required. FREE Education Classes: Learn more about managing your osteoarthritis; no referral required.

WORKING TOGETHER FOR HEALTHY JOINTS To find out more, go to www.oasis.vch.ca or call our North Shore OASIS Clinic at Lions Gate Hospital 604-904-6177.

PHYSIOTHERAPY+CLINICAL PILATES = RESULTS

We are the gold standard in physiotherapy

Call or email us for an appointment 604.982.0366 • www.trimetricsphysio.com 307–850 Harbourside Drive, North Vancouver

Is Snoring Disrupting Your Life? Oral Appliance Therapy

Join by July 31st & get a Free heart rate monitor worth

IDEAL PROTEIN WEIGHT LOSS CLINIC

Hormone Rollercoaster? Restore Hormone Balance with Dr.Sara Kinnon Dr. Sara Kinnon, ND is available for a consultation, full hormone testing, and an evidence-based treatment plan.

Sleep Better Live Better 212-700 MARINE DRIVE, NORTH VANCOUVER

Snoredentist.ca • 604.987.5337

• Naturopathic Medicine • Far Infrared Sauna • Registered Massage Therapy • Traditional Chinese Medicine & Acupuncture

Bellevue Natural Health Clinic 1467 Bellevue Ave,West Vancouver, BC (604)-913-2262 • www.bnhc.ca


A18 | SENIORS

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Seniors Quiz

Test your knowledge of issues of aging Quiz time!

For this year’s edition of the Seniors Quiz, our seventh for those keeping track, all questions are sourced from one of the reports done by the B.C. Office of the Seniors Advocate. Is seven your lucky number? We are about to find out but first let’s keep the legal beagles in the crowd happy: a senior is a British Columbia resident aged 65 or older and while this information is believed to be correct I have been known to get a few of the answers to my own quiz wrong. With that out of the way let’s begin. Question 1: How many seniors call B.C. home? a) 500,000 b) 750,000

urban areas? a) 13 per cent b) 33 per cent c) 53 per cent d) 63 per cent

Question 3: How many British Columbians live in residential care? a)12,000 b) 27,000 c) 59,0000 d)100,000

Older And Wiser Tom Carney c) 820,000 d) 1 million Fact: The number of seniors in B.C. is projected to grow to 1.35 million, or 24 per cent, by 2031. Question 2: What percentage of seniors live in

Question 4: What percentage of seniors aged 85 and over has no diagnosis of dementia? a) 20 per cent b) 40 per cent c) 60 per cent d) 80 per cent Fact: At any one time approximately 50,000 British Columbians are living with a

diagnosis of Alzheimer’s or other dementias.

seniors aged 85 and over in B.C. is approximately 115,000.

c) 85 per cent d) 100 per cent

Question 5: What percentage of seniors own their own home? a) 50 per cent b) 60 per cent c) 70 per cent d) 80 per cent

Question 8: What percentage of seniors in residential care facilities is taking nine or more medications? a) 21 per cent b) 31 per cent c) 41 per cent d) 51 per cent

Question 11: What percentage of B.C. seniors are employed? a) 1 per cent b) 11 per cent c) 31 per cent d) 51 per cent

Question 6: What percentage of seniors live alone? a) 16 per cent b) 26 per cent c) 36 per cent d) 46 per cent Question 7: What percentage of seniors in B.C. are 85 or older? a) 4 per cent b) 8 per cent c) 12 per cent d) 14 per cent Fact: the total number of

Question 9: What is the median income of seniors in B.C.? a) $24,600 b) $44,600 c) $66,600 d) $88,600 Question 10: What percentage of higher income seniors has access to an extended benefits plan? a) 45 per cent b) 65 per cent

Question 12: What percentage of seniors on home support have an unpaid caregiver? a) 27 per cent b) 57 per cent c) 77 per cent d) 97 per cent Question 13: What percentage of seniors receive assistance payments for their Medical Services Plan (MSP)?

Jim Pattison Lexus Northshore Presents

LEXUS REFLECTI

604-925-1341

www.progas.ca

HEATING • AIR CONDITIONING • GAS FITTING

EXECUTIVE PACKAGE

SINCE 1994

CAR $180, SUV $215

PRESIDENT PACKAGE

Don’t Wait - Beat the Heat

CAR $275, SUV $315

Call us today for a Free Air Conditioning Estimate

Ask about the detail details. Price subject to a vehicle walkaround

• Air Conditioning • Professional Air Duct Cleaning • Furnace • Boiler • Fireplace • Pool Heaters • Patio Heaters • Hot Water Heaters

This Offer is Available to All Vehicle Brands and Models COME IN AND SEE THE NEW MODEL LINE-UP

Kam Filsoofi, OWNER

Pro Gas North Shore

1859 Welch Street, North Vancouver

“I have difficulty managing in my home on my own.”

NS

PREMIUM DETAILING PACKAGES

SUMMER IS COMING!

SERVICE AND INSTALLATION

See Quiz page 19

NX

FROM $42,150

IS

FROM $39,450

ES

FROM $41,600

RX 350 FROM

$54,350

JIM PATTISON LEXUS  NORTHSHORE

“Your Family Lexus Store”

845 Automall Dr., Northshore Auto Mall North Vancouver

604-982-0033 www.jplexus.com

BC’s #1 Automotive Retailer

Is This You Or Someone You Know?

SHYLO Brings The Care To Your Home. We want you to be able to live in your home for as long as you wish. Shylo Home Support Care can help you with: 3 meal preparation, laundry & housekeeping 3 medication management 3 personal care (washing and dressing) 3 Alzheimer and dementia support 3 home safety and security

For a FREE IN-HOME ASSESSMENT call

604-985-6881

Check us out online: www.ShyloNursing.ca www.VancouverSeniorHealth.BlogSpot.com


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

SENIORS | A19

north shore news nsnews.com

Quiz aims to exercise your brain

From page 18

Retired dancing queen seeks passionate helper for tasks around the house.

a) 12 per cent b) 32 per cent c) 52 per cent d) 72 per cent Question 14: What percentage of seniors have a regular general practitioner? a) 32 per cent b) 52 per cent c) 72 per cent d) 92 per cent

Each Home Instead Senior Care® office is independently owned and operated. © 2016 Home Instead, Inc.

Bonus question: According to the 2011 Census, what percentage of B.C. seniors cannot hold a conversation in English? a) 5.77 per cent b) 7.66 per cent c) 10.66 per cent d) 12.66 per cent We’re done. Time to tally your score. Answers: 1.c 2.d 3.b 4.d 5.d 6.a 7.d 8.d 9.a 10.b 11.b 12.d 13.b 14.d 15.a Bonus question b. Remember, the idea here isn’t to get a perfect score, it’s to exercise your brain and learn something new. Hope you enjoyed it. Tom Carney is the former executive director of the Lionsview Seniors’ Planning Society. Ideas for future columns are welcome. tomcarney@telus.net

Question 15: In 2014, what percentage of seniors evaluated through the Driver Medical Exam Report (DMER), were referred to DriveAble for cognitive assessment? a) less than 3 per cent b) less than 5 per cent c) less than 25 per cent d) less than 50 per cent

Become a CAREGiver NOW HIRING - 604.925.1570 SM

www.HomeInstead.com/3022/home-care-jobs 301 – 2232 Marine Drive West Vancouver BC V7V 1K4

SENIORS CALENDAR ELDER LAW CLINIC Older adults who cannot otherwise afford legal services can get free legal information, advice and representation the fourth Tuesday of every month, 2-4 p.m. at North Shore Community Services in Capilano Mall, 201-935 Marine Dr., North Vancouver. The first hour is for booked appointments and the second is a drop-in service. 604-688-1927 x258 Email upcoming event information to listings@nsnews.com.

Can’t find what you’re looking for...again?

Call Caroline Vincent today for your FREE consultation.

778.899.0141

shelfgenie.com/british-columbia

Look better, feel great, eat better with precision

DENTURES We care about your smile M.R. Shooshtari DENTURIST NORTH SHORE DENTURE CLINIC

229, 1433 Lonsdale Ave. North Vancouver. Since 1990 New Location! 604-990-4877

First-Class Independent Living and Assisted Living. Residents enjoy a premium all-inclusive lifestyle with convenient on-site amenities and services right at home. We offer three options: • Independent Living • Assisted Living

• Respite Stay

Choose to relax or join in activities! Professional care and support is available if needed 24/7. SPACIOUS SUITES AVAILABLE

Call (604) 921-9181 to book your tour and complimentary lunch.

First-Class Retirement Living • www.amica.ca

Amica at West Vancouver 659 Clyde Avenue, West Vancouver, BC 604.921.9181


A20 | LIVING

nsnews.com north shore news SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

PET PAUSE

Colony Mattress Gallery

HUMAN’S NAME: Tiffany Akins PET: Milka, a Poodle-Yorkie cross, who is approximately eight years old. PET TALE: Milka is a rescue dog with Type 1 diabetes, so she gets insulin shots twice a day and is on a vegetable diet. She likes to be carried and, because of her breed mix, Akins calls her a “Porkie.”

SALE ON NOW

COLONY

604.985.8738 colonywarehouse.com

Major Appliance & Mattress

WAREHOUSE

COLLISION & RUST REPAIR

If you would like to appear in Pet Pause with your pet, please send information to clyon@nsnews.com. Be sure to include the name, breed and age of your pet as well as your phone number.

1525 Welch Street, N. Vancouver T/F 604-983-2118

Fine European Crafsmanship

PHOTO CINDY GOODMAN

Edward Staron

COMMUNITYBULLETINBOARD

edwardstaron@shawbiz.ca

Email information for your North Shore event to listings@nsnews.com.

NOBLE HEARING CLINIC

FINANCIAL LITERACY: IDENTITY THEFT AND FRAUD PREVENTION Vancity presents a seminar teaching the public how to safeguard personal information Monday, June 27, 1:30-2:30 p.m. at North Vancouver City Library, 120 West 14th St. nvcl.ca

High Quality Products & Service

Independent professional advice by a Doctor of Audiology

Dr. R. Ghanbari Doctor of Audiology

• Complete Hearing Evaluation • Digital Hearing Aids-All brands • Hearing Aid Repair and Batteries • Hearing Loss Prevention • Tinnitus Evaluation & Management • Specialty Earmolds • Service to your doorstep

Call us now for a FREE consultation: 604-281-1475

www.noblehearinginstitute.com

a

AUTHORS IN OUR COMMUNITY Joan Haggerty reads from her new novel The Dancehall Years Wednesday, June 29, 7-8:30 p.m. at West Vancouver Memorial Library, 1950 Marine Dr. 604-925-7400 westvanlibrary.ca

approach to oral health preventative dental hygiene services

natural and environmentally friendly products

deep cleanings, laser therapy

in-chair teeth whitening

evening & weekend appointments available

access to a dentist

THE ENDANGERED SPECIES TRADE: A BILLION DOLLAR INDUSTRY Biologist David Cook will examine what the future holds for species such as big cats, eight species of bear,

108 West 2nd St., North Vancouver 778 338 3414 • www.toothwhisperer.ca

three species of rhino and two species of elephant in light of an expanding trade in animal parts Wednesday, June 29, 7-8:30 p.m. at Parkgate library, 3675 Banff Court, North Vancouver. Registration required. 604-9293727 x8166. CLOVERLEY NEIGHBOURHOOD TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT PLAN WORKSHOP The City of North Vancouver will share the resident feedback it has received thus far and the current observed traffic volumes and speeds in the neighbourhood Tuesday, July 5, 6-8 p.m. at North Shore Neighbourhood House, 225 East Second St., North Vancouver. They will also explore and discuss a variety of possible mitigation measures and their effectiveness and

impacts on local residents and commuters. Info: cnv.org/ cloverley. RSVP by June 30. 604982-3981 eng@cnv.org CANADA DAY CELEBRATION The Celebrate North Shore Society hosts a pancake breakfast Friday, July 1, 7:30-10, a.m. at 13th Street and Grand Boulevard, North Vancouver. A parade will follow going along 13th Street, up Lonsdale Avenue to 17th Street and ending at Mahon Park. A post-parade open house with a barbecue and entertainment will take place at the Royal Canadian Legion, 123 West 15th St. canadadaynorthshore.org CANADA DAY CELEBRATION A free, family event featuring live multicultural performers, crafts, games, activities for all ages plus some of Vancouver’s best food

trucks Friday, July 1, noon-4 p.m. at Waterfront Park, 200-block West Esplanade, North Vancouver. northvancanadaday. com CANADA DAY RED AND WHITE PICNIC Dress up in national colours and celebrate Friday, July 1, 4:30-10:30 p.m. at John Lawson Park, West Vancouver. Bring your own picnic or purchase food from vendors. Live entertainment starts at 4:30 p.m. with two firework shows at 10:30 p.m. westvancouver.ca/canadaday SHIPBUILDERS’ SQUARE CAR SHOW The fourth annual special interest vehicle show featuring hot rods and custom cars drives into North Vancouver Sunday, July 3, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. at the foot of Lonsdale Avenue.

PETS FOR ADOPTION Full service veterinary hospital offering specialty & general pet care Sean

Biscuit

Dwight

Anastasia

A very large dog who needs and experienced owner who can spend lots of time with him. He needs a home where he is the only dog, and there are no cats or children.

A two year old female rabbit who is extremely friendly with people. Like all rabbits, she would do best with a companion animal.

A senior cat with a lust for life. He is very friendly and loves to be around people. When his hair grows back it will be long and he will need regular grooming.

Anastasia is very laid back. She likes relaxing, purring, getting attention & sitting by the window. She is waiting for her very own person to love.

DNV ANIMAL SHELTER

DNV ANIMAL SHELTER

DNV ANIMAL SHELTER

VOKRA

Cramer

Tia

Jewels

Popeye

An adorable, gentle cat - a big baby who likes cuddling Looking for an affectionate mature person or couple who will put Tia at A cuddly, affectionate, 8-year-old, 8.5lb, spayed female terrier/ A quiet, sweet-natured 10-year-old 15lb neutered male and playing. Not being courageous he would be better the centre of their universe. She is an old soul who has had her share of chihuahua. This intelligent little girl has experienced a lifetime “chorgi” (chihuahua/corgi). Popeye is a happy, friendly in a small home with few people and no little kids. pain & needs somebody with love & patience. No kids, dogs or other cats. of neglect and is looking for a special family to call her own. dog who just wants somebody to love him!

VOKRA • A VOICE4PAWS CANINE RESCUE SOCIETY gr8k9s62@shaw.ca

VOKRA • DISTRICT ANIMAL SHELTER 604-990-3711

• ANIMAL ADVOCATES SOCIETY

• DOgWOOD SPORTINg DOg RESCUE

www.animaladvocates.com

lichen-t@shaw.ca • 604-926-1842

• BOWEN ISLAND SHELTER bylawofficer@shaw.ca • 604-328-5499 • CROSS OUR PAWS RESCUE www.crossourpawsrescue.com • DACHSHUND & SMALL DOg RESCUE 604-944-6907

• DORIS ORR D.O.N.A.T.E. 604-987-9015 • FRIENDS OF THE ANIMALS info@fota.ca • 604-541-3627

• FUR & FEATHERS RESCUE 604-719-7848

THE JOURNEY HOME • gREYHAVEN EXOTIC BIRD SANCTUARY www.^reyhaven.bc.ca • 604-878-7212 • THE JOURNEY HOME DOg RESCUE thejourneyhomedo^rescue.ca • 778-371-5174 • THE ONE DOg RESCUE theonedo^rescue@shaw.ca • 778-918-0395 • PACIFIC ANIMAL FOUNDATION www.pacificanimal.or^ • 604-986-8124 • RABBIT ADVOCACY gROUP OF BC www.rabbitadvocacy.com • 604-862-1843

THE JOURNEY HOME • SNAPPS www.snappsociety.or^ • 778-384-3226 • VANCOUVER kITTEN RESCUE www.vo]ra.ca • 604-731.2913 • VANCOUVER SHAR PEI RESCUE vspr@shaw.ca / vancouversharpeirescue.com • WEST VAN SPCA www.spca.bc.ca/westvancouver • 604-922-4622 • WESTCOAST REPTILE SOCIETY www.wspcr.com • 604-980-1929

WE’VE MOVED! expiry June 30/16

908 West 16th, North Vancouver

604-988-7272 atlasanimalhospital.com


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

SPORTS | A21

north shore news nsnews.com

No Regrets mantra becomes a way of life From page 5

Blair Shier, three family friends who were all deeply involved with Handsworth basketball, established, along with the family, the Quinn Keast Foundation. Scholarships are the backbone of the foundation – thousands of dollars every year given to players at local, regional and provincial tournaments, athletes chosen not just for being the most talented but also the hardestworking, the most coachable, the best teammate. There have been numerous events as well, starting just six months after Quinn’s death with a pair of exhibition high school basketball games held at Capilano University. More than 1,500 fans and friends attended the games, raising more than $10,000 for the foundation. An army of shooters young and old mobilized across several locations to attempt, in one day, to shoot the famous 100,000 shots Quinn had vowed to shoot. They shot 169,000, and on the same day collected more than 1,000 pairs of shoes that were shipped to South Africa. Memorials were built, including full, high-quality outdoor basketball courts placed at three elementary schools and emblazoned with a giant Q. Wristbands, murals, a stained glass window – tributes continued to pop up across North Vancouver and beyond. It was all very touching for the family, although Jamie admits that the constant reminders got to be overwhelming at times.

Quinn Keast wasn’t the fastest or biggest player but coaches say no one ever out-worked him. FILE PHOTO PAUL MCGRATH “For me there were times when I wanted to take a step back. It was like, ‘Oh this is a lot,’” she says. “It was a very public situation. That was super hard because I couldn’t go anywhere without having questions, or someone coming up to me. That was one of the hardest things for me – I just wanted to go somewhere and have my own identity and not just be Quinn’s sister. As much as that’s what I’m most proud of in my life, I needed to form my own identity outside of that if I was going to continue on in a healthy environment.”

Jamie has done that now. She’s on the board of the Quinn Keast Foundation and still heavily involved in its operations, but just this month she graduated from the University of the Fraser Valley with a teaching degree. She’s already grabbed a position as a substitute teacher in Langley and would love to come back to North Vancouver as a fulltime teacher. In the last few years the foundation has pivoted away from Quinn the man and started focusing on his message.

In popular culture the term “no regrets” has become somewhat of a cliché, another YOLO call to justify thrill seeking. But for Quinn Keast it was a very real, thoughtful, tangible mantra. He kept a diary the last years of his life, and before his Grade 12 year vowed to live life to the fullest, work hard at everything he did and love lots. If you do everything in your power to prepare yourself for life’s challenges – and make sure those around you know they are loved – then you will have no regrets, not matter what the outcome. Those who loved Quinn, and were loved by him, have taken up his call. On the 10th anniversary of his death more than 60 family and friends gathered for a barbecue at John Lawson Park, all still drawn together by bonds forged by Quinn. It was a chilly evening so there were a lot of sweaters and long pants – not shorts and tank tops – so it wasn’t readily apparent that a good number of those in attendance had the words “No Regrets” tattooed somewhere on their bodies. “It’s how I live my life and will continue to live my life every day,” says Scott Leigh. “I feel lucky that I was able to actually appreciate the

CRAFT BEER

message that Quinn was trying to deliver.” Bethan Chalke says that it’s rare for a day to go by without her thinking about Quinn. As she recalls the night she won an award named after Quinn, she’s wearing her own No Regrets wrist band. “It gives me goosebumps!” she says. “(No Regrets) has got such a warm meaning for me and I think for a lot of people that knew Quinn. It really makes you stop and think. You don’t think, Oh, No Regrets, that old saying. You stop and you think, No, hold on. I’ve got to do this now! I don’t know if I have a tomorrow. It’s definitely really powerful for me.” If you searched a baby name registry for the North Shore, you’d likely find a bump in the use of the name Quinn in recent years. A basketball coach, an NBA player, a baseball coach, even the police officer who had never met the Keasts until he showed up on their doorstep to tell them that their son was gone – these are a few of the people who now have children named Quinn, or some similar sounding variation. “He made an impact,” says Larry Donohoe, a staple on the North Shore sports scene who coached Quinn on the U16 provincial basketball

BOUTIQUE WINE

team. Donohoe has handed out many Quinn Keast awards over the years, and his voice always catches when he begins to read the short bio telling the young players who Quinn was and what the award means. “He stood for something and he worked hard,” he says. “When you coach, there’s kids that you remember. I don’t remember Quinn because he died. I remember him because he was such a great kid and I thoroughly enjoyed coaching him. You really felt like you had an impact with him.” As he spoke, Donohoe was wearing a jacket emblazoned with the words No Regrets. For 21 years he was the director of the North Shore Invitational Tournament, a high-profile annual high school event. Last year it was renamed the No Regrets Basketball Tournament, with the Keast family and foundation throwing their full weight behind the event. The switch was a no-brainer, says Donohoe, and after just one year it’s evident it’s breathed new life into the tournament. “It now stands for more,” he says. “It’s a work in progress, the No Regrets, but it’s turning into something special.”

See Foundation page 22

DJ GOODSPIN

Our specialty pharmacy has the knowledge and expertise to customize your medicine.

Hormone therapy designed specifically for your body. Working with your practitioner to solve unique medical problems. SATURDAY

2:30PM-5:00PM

LONSDALE QUAY, NORTH VANCOUVER

ADMISSION ADMISSION INCLUDES ALL

SINCE 1968

604.985.8241 ■ northmountpharmacy.ca 101-145 East 13th Street, North Vancouver NEAR ICBC DRIVERS SERVICES

Compounding is the Art and Science of Creating Personalized Medications

NSBWF

FOR MORE INFO

CRAFT BEER & WINE SAMPLES

OR TO BUY TICKETS VISIT: www.hostevents.ca

@NSBWFEST

NSBWF

ATTENDEES MUST BE OVER 19 YEARS OF AGE AND PLEASE PLAN A SAFE RIDE HOME


A22 | SPORTS

nsnews.com north shore news SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Foundation work gives strength to family

From page 21

That’s what the Keast family wants to hear. “It’s the philosophy that’s

going to carry on with us, not so much the mourning of a person,” says Tom. “Even though it’s my son.”

aaa

Indian Arm

LUNCHEON CRUISE Enjoy Harbour Cruises’ 4 hour cruise into the spectacular Indian Arm, a 30km body of calm waters nestled in the magnificent coastal mountains. While onboard enjoy a delicious catered lunch, panoramic vistas, coastal mountains, hosts of wildlife, the pristine Silver Falls… and much more. GVRD SPECIAL – July 3rd, 9th, 11th & 18th

In North Vancouver’s Victoria Park there is a little sculpture tucked away in a quiet area. Named Enduring Love, the piece is the “creative outcome of a collaborative community art process inviting bereaved parents to express the love felt for children, lost from our sight but not from our hearts.” It’s a calm, comforting, moving piece of work, but there’s no mistaking one distinctive feature – a hole right in the middle of it. The Keast family is one of the many that knows what that hole feels like. “I remember people saying it’s going to get easier,” says Jamie. “It doesn’t. Ever. … I think when I’m a parent one day I’ll understand more of what it’s like to be a parent and just face the fear of

having a child that might not be around forever. We all want to think that we’re invincible and that’s not going to happen. … Our family knows that that’s not the case.” The hole will never be filled, but the Keasts have found new joy in the foundation and the way that it is supported by the community. “It was a saviour for me,” says Jamie of the work she did with the foundation. “It was sort of for me a light at the end of a tunnel that I didn’t know I was ever going to get to. … I think being able to spread his message, or joy, or love of the game – being able to do that, as opposed to doing nothing, helped me and I know it helped my parents. It was definitely a saving grace in a time that was terrible.” Tom marvels at the number of people who have

(must mention this ad to receive this special)

Only $58.00 + gst per person

HARBOUR

CRUISES

604.688.7246 | www.boatcruises.com Space is limited. Reservations are required. Harbour Cruises Marina - between the Westin Bayshore & Stanley Park.

at Queensbury Elementary School 2020 Moody Ave, North Vancouver

EXTENDED PRE-SCHOOL HOURS!

5 DAYS A WEEK! 9 AM TO 1 PM • Daycare • Preschool • Before & After School Care

TO REGISTER Call Lori: 604-880-0397

www.RainforestLearningCentre.ca

Like many others on the North Shore, Jamie Keast wears her brother’s mantra on her skin. picked up Quinn’s cause in some small or large way – thousands of them. “The community and the people in it have been fantastic for our family,” he says. “I can’t say enough about that. It’s selfless. It’s not that they’re doing it for any personal gain or anything else. I think that they believe that Quinn was a good kid and a kid that stood for something.” Jan was just out of hospital on the night of the 10th anniversary and wasn’t able to make it to the barbecue. She still had a spiritual moment, however, sitting in the garden outside the recovery house she was staying at on the Sunshine Coast. Just as dusk was approaching she felt a presence, and turned to see a massive buck sitting on a

nearby rock. It was a sign, she says, a message from Quinn. “I’m ready now to carry on and to start back up my life,” she says. “Ten years is a long time. It just blows my mind that it’s been 10 years. It feels like yesterday. I grieved a lot and I’m willing to let it go. I feel like it’s time to start again.” A huge part of that healing process has been watching the foundation grow. “It gives me great pleasure to watch this, and start a new group of kids that are willing to do those things that took the extra work,” she says. “I think Quinn left a nice, lasting legacy for our community.” She often drives by the memorial courts and sees young children playing. They never would have met Quinn, but some day they’ll learn why there’s a Q in the middle of the basketball court where they first picked up a ball and shot it through a hoop. “It means a lot,” she says. “It means that his message carried on through the years. He was not the best at everything he did – I would never blow him up to that – but he had a sensitivity to him that made people really connect to him. … He played well, and I don’t mean expertly. He was a fair guy.”





A26 |

nsnews.com north shore news

TIMEOUT!

Solutions can be found in next Sunday's issue. CLUES ACROSS 1. Systems, doctrines, theories 5. Belle’s friend Chip was one 11. NBA MVP 14. Preeminent 15. __ and the Beast 18. Round, flattish cap 19. Bright 21. Unpleasant person 23. Passes through a wheel’s center 24. The New York __ 28. Military alliance 29. He prosecutes the accused 30. Noble act 32. Handyman’s tool 33. Austrian river 35. An accountant certified by the state 36. Dad (slang) 39. Women 41. Type of blood 42. Ambush 44. Measuring instrument 46. Protein-rich liquids 47. Socially conservative person (Australian) 49. Girl 52. Small Spanish dishes 56. Mexican plant

CROSSWORD

CRYPTO FUN DETERMINE THE CODE TO REVEAL THE ANSWER

B. C. D.

20

22

1

17

19

4

16

23

17

10

22

6

9

22

2

5

17

23

Clue: Condition of preventing injury Clue: Prevent danger Clue: Suffering harm

26

17

8

58. 60. 62. 63.

About thigh Absorptive Diner Ethnic group of Laos

CLUES DOWN 1. International radio band 2. Thrust 3. Measures insignificance 4. Appears on Roman currency 5. Does not drink 6. Midway between northeast and east 7. Actinium 8. A Chicago ballplayer 9. Compound 10. Former British pol Derek 12. Color properties 13. Chinese magnolia 16. American state 17. Conference of Allied leaders 20. Cats “say” this 22. Didymium 25. He conducts physicals 26. European Economic Community 27. Individually 29. Begetter 31. Press against lightly 34. Licensed for Wall

Street 36. Posttraumatic stress disorder 37. Mountain nymph (Greek) 38. Italian city 40 South Dakota 43. Rank in the Ottoman Empire 45. In the year of the Lord (abbr.) 48. Explorer Vasco da __

50. 51. 53. 54. 55. 57. 58. 59. 61.

Besides Bart’s sister They hold plants Song Rescue Small island Coniferous tree Albanian currency Of I

Crossword puzzle answers use American spelling

LAST SUNDAY'S CROSSWORD SOLUTION:

YOUR WEEKLY HOROSCOPE WEEK OF JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2016

Solve the code to discover words related to safety. Each number corresponds to a letter. (Hint: 17 = e)

A.

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

ARIES

19

18

7

2

16

SCORPIO

OCT 24 – NOV 22 Scorpio, sometimes you have to take a challenging route even though you desire the easier path. The hard work will be worth it in the end, as you will see shortly.

GEMINI

MAY 22 – JUN 21 Face tough issues head on, Gemini. No matter the obstacle, you are fully capable of overcoming it. If necessary, ask for some clarification so you can better focus on the tasks at hand.

SAGITTARIUS NOV 23 – DEC 21 Helping others is a big part of who you are, Sagittarius. Every effort you put forth will come back to you in time. Enjoy all the moments you have with others.

CANCER

JUN 22 – JUL 22 Cancer, take some time out of your schedule for a fun day trip or another spontaneous activity that enables you to escape the daily grind and unwind for a little while.

CAPRICORN DEC 22 – JAN 20 It’s difficult to fully explain just how busy you are, Capricorn. Start trimming your to-do list so you can maintain your energy and actively involve those around you.

LEO

JUL 23 – AUG 23 You may need to lend some special skills to a situation this week, Leo. When someone calls on you for help, accept the challenge with dignity and pride.

AQUARIUS

JAN 21 – FEB 18 It’s time to try a few new things, Aquarius. Try a hobby or activity that is out of your comfort zone. You may be surprised at how much this new hobby interests you.

VIRGO

AUG 24 – SEPT 22 Virgo, make delegation a priority over the next several days. Spread the workload around to lessen some of your burden and to encourage others to contribute.

PISCES

FEB 19 – MAR 20 There’s only so long you can put off financial concerns before they become a big problem, Pisces. Start addressing things today.

Rearrange the letters to spell something pertaining to safety.

TRETCOP LAST SUNDAY’S ANSWER: RENNET

A CONTEST REWARDING OUR SHARP-EYED READERS

$100 GIFT CARD TO BROWNS SOCIALHOUSE Spot it and you could be enjoying a delicious meal at Browns Socialhouse – two locations to choose from!

One entry per email address.

SEPT 23 – OCT 23 Libra, your mind is set on a new opportunity, but you do not yet have the finances to make it happen. See if you can find an investor or another way to fund the project.

APR 21 – MAY 21 Taurus, professional issues may be stressful, but try to maintain a positive attitude and the issues will soon be resolved. Rely on a trusted colleague to help.

LAST SUNDAY’S ANSWERS: A. cheese B. pasture C. organic D. yogurt

Enter to win by identifying the page number and issue date in an email that should include your name and daytime number to contest@nsnews.com (Subject line “Joker”) by July 3, 2016.

LIBRA

TAURUS

Clue: Making things easier

WORD SCRAMBLE

MAR 21 – APR 20 Aries, it may not be possible to get away for an extended vacation just now, but perhaps a few days away will offer the brief respite you need to get energized.


SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

| A27

north shore news nsnews.com

CARTER GM NORTHSHORE

20% OFF MSRP SAVE UP TO $17,949 - 22 VEHICLES TO CHOOSE FROM

HURRY THIS OFFER EXPIRES JUNE 30/16 - NO EXTENSIONS! 2016 CHEVY CRUZE LIMITED 1.8 Litre 4 Cyl Engine, Power Windows, Power Locks, Air Condition, 6 Speed Automatic & Much More.

2016 CHEVY EQUINOX

All Wheel Drive, 2.4 Litre 4 Cyl Engine, Rear Camera, Air Condition, Bluetooth, Power Windows, Power Locks & Much More.

BRAND NEW

BRAND NEW

BRAND NEW

CARTER NORTHSHORE PRICE MSRP $21,925 20% Disc. $5,000

CARTER NORTHSHORE PRICE MSRP $31,320 20% Disc. $5,924

2016 BUICK ENCLAVE CXL

2016 BUICK REGAL PREMIUM 1

STK# Q07740

$16,925

All Wheel Drive, 8 Passenger Seating, Heated Leather Seats, Navigation System, Power Sunroof, Trailering Pkg, 19” Chrome Wheels, Lots of Options.

STK# 202880

$25,396

Leather Interior, Heated Seats, Remote Start, Rear Camera, 2.0 Litre Turbo, Navigation, Air Condition, Very Well Equipped Vehicle.

BRAND NEW

BRAND NEW

CARTER NORTHSHORE PRICE MSRP $38,490 20% Disc. $7,491

2016 CHEVY TRAX 1LT

2016 GMC SIERRA 2500 4X4 CREW CAB

$47,621

All Wheel Drive, 1.8 Litre 4 Cyl Turbo Charged Engine, Power Windows, Power Locks, Remote Start, Rear Camera, Air Condition & Much More.

STK# U408750

$30,999

6.0 Litre Flex Fuel V8 Engine, Bluetooth, Rear Vision Camera, H.D. Trailer Pkg, Convenience Pkg & Much More.

BRAND NEW

DEMO

CARTER NORTHSHORE PRICE MSRP $29,875 20% Disc. $7,195 STK# TX34970

$22,680

$29,999

2016 CHEVY SONIC

5 Door, 6 Speed Automatic, Air Condition, Bluetooth & Much More.

CARTER NORTHSHORE PRICE MSRP $19,745 20% Disc. $3,747

STK# SC47460

$15,998

2016 GMC SIERRA 1500 4X4 DOUBLE CAB KODIAK EDITION

SLE Package, 5.3 Litre V8 Engine, Power Seat, Trailering Pkg, 20” Aluminum Wheels, Navigation, Leather, Heated Seats & Much More.

BRAND NEW

CARTER NORTHSHORE PRICE MSRP $57,040 20% Disc. $11,374 STK# 8G25940

$45,666

CARTER NORTHSHORE PRICE MSRP $54,490 20% Disc. $10,619 STK# 8G15840

$43,871

604-987-5231

*All prices net of all rebates plus taxes and documentation fee of $598. Vehicles not exactly as shown.

chevrolet • Buick • GMc • cadillac DL# 10743

CARTER NORTHSHORE PRICE MSRP $37,075 20% Disc. $7,076 STK# R61380

BRAND NEW

CARTER NORTHSHORE PRICE MSRP $59,270 20% Disc. $11,649 STK# BV32360

2016 CHEVY TRAVERSE

8 Passenger Seating, Rear Camera, Air Condition, Power Seat, Power Windows, Power Locks, Bluetooth & much More.

Northshore

Northshore Auto Mall, 800 Automall Dr. North Van www.carternorthshore.com


A28 |

nsnews.com north shore news

SUNDAY, JUNE 26, 2016

Honda

bchonda.com

JULY 23, 27 & 30

. r a e g p o t o t n i g n Flyi e Sound, Sarah Austin How

LEASE FOR

2016 CIVIC LX

57

$

*

APR $0 DOWN @ 2.99 PAYMENT %

#

Weekly on a 60 month term with 260 payments. MSRP $20,650** includes freight and PDI.

Civic LX is loaded with features like: • Apple CarPlay™ & Android Auto™£¥ • Multi-angle rearview camera£ with dynamic guidelines • HandsFreeLink™-bilingual Bluetooth® wireless mobile interface£¥ • Heated front seats

2016 CR-V LX

72

$

LEASE FOR

*

@

1.99% APR# $0 DOWN PAYMENT‡

2016 FIT DX

LEASE FOR

Weekly on a 60 month term with 260 payments. MSRP $28,015** includes freight and PDI.

44

$

*

APR $0 DOWN @ 2.99 PAYMENT %

#

Deals this good will be gone fast. Visit your nearest BC Honda Dealer today.

500

PLUS $ GET A

BONUS ON ALL 2016 CR-V MODELS Take the Honda test drive. It costs nothing. It proves everything.

Weekly on a 60 month term with 260 payments. MSRP $16,385** includes freight and PDI.

CELEBRATING

816 Automall Drive, North Vancouver 604-984-0331

www.pacifichonda.ca

40 YEARS IN B US IN E SS

†$500 Honda Lease and Finance Bonus applies to retail customer lease or finance agreements through Honda Finance Services ("HFS") for new 2016 CR-V models. Lease and finance dollars will be deducted from the negotiated price after taxes. *Limited time weekly lease offer and all other offers are from Honda Canada Finance Inc., on approved credit. #The weekly lease offer applies to a new 2016 Civic 4D LX 6MT FC2E5GE/CR-V LX 2WD RM3H3GE1/FIT DX 6MT GK5G3GE for a 60-month period, for a total of 260 payments of $56.96/$71.96/$43.96 leased at 2.99%/1.99%/2.99% APR based on applying $294.80/$338.80/$448.80 “lease dollars” (which are deducted from the negotiated selling price after taxes). ‡Down payment of $0.00, first weekly payment and $0 security deposit due at lease inception. Total lease obligation is $14,809.60/$18,709.60/$11,429.60. Taxes, license, insurance and registration are extra. 120,000 kilometre allowance; charge of $0.12/km for excess kilometres. **MSRP is $20,650/$28,015/$16,385 including freight and PDI of $1,595/$1,725/$1,595. */#/**Prices and/or payments shown do not include a PPSA lien registration fee of $30.31 and lien registering agent's fee of $5.25, tire/battery tax of $25, or air conditioning charge (where applicable) of $100, all of which are due at time of delivery. Additional charges for waste disposal fees, environmental fees and handling charges (all of which may vary by dealer and/or vehicle) may apply. Offers valid from June 1st through 30th, 2016 at participating Honda retailers. Dealer may sell/lease for less. Dealer trade may be necessary on certain vehicles. Offers valid only for British Columbia residents at BC Honda Dealers locations. Offers subject to change or cancellation without notice. Terms and conditions apply. Visit www.bchonda.com or see your Honda retailer for full details. £None of the features we describe are intended to replace the driver's responsibility to exercise due care while driving. Drivers should not use handheld devices or operate certain vehicle features unless it is safe and legal to do so. Some features have technological limitations. For additional feature information, limitations and restrictions, please visit www.honda.ca/disclaimers and refer to the vehicle's Owner's Manual. ¥Only compatible with certain devices and operating systems. Cellular data and/or voice charges may apply, including roaming charges and/or other amounts charged by your wireless carrier. Apple CarPlay™ and Siri are trademarks of Apple Inc. For Apple CarPlay™ data use and privacy policy, see Terms and Privacy policy for Apple CarPlay™ or contact Apple Inc. at www.apple.com.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.