Vancouver Courier August 12 2013

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FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

Vol. 104 No. 56 • Established 1908

Gastown Grand Prix 25

WEEKEND EDITION

THE VOICE OF VANCOUVER NEIGHBOURHOODS

NEWS: Tao of Chow 7/ OPINION: Vision’s epic fail 10

Mayorwon’t voteonPt.Grey bikelanes MIKE HOWELL Staff writer

M

photo Jason Lang

TANGLED UP IN PLASTIC: Photographer Michael J.P. Hall examines our disposable culture and waste

plastic in his exhibit “Entanglement” at Science World. See story page 22. Scan page with Layar for a video.

Summer patio takes off in Gastown STANDALONE PATIO FIRST OF ITS KIND IN VANCOUVER CHERYL ROSSI Staff writer

V

ancouver’s first standalone patio opened in front of Rainier Provisions liquor-licensed coffee shop and deli on Carrall Street at West Cordova two weeks ago. With its lime green, squash yellow, plum, peach and tomato-hued wooden pickets, the 30-seat patio is a fresh sight on a sometimes-gritty street. Sean Heather of the Heather Hospitality Group says the city and the provincial liquor board wouldn’t previously

license patios that weren’t set apart from a restaurant, but the presence of a fire hydrant or manhole cover could thwart plans for an immediately adjacent patio. “It’s a pilot project and if it works, then it will open up opportunities for other people around the city to put patios,” Heather said. “In this weather, if you don’t have a patio, you’re not getting a lot of people sitting inside.” The city will assess how well the standalone patio has worked at the end of the summer and when its licence comes up for renewal in a year. See TRIAL on page 4

ayor Gregor Robertson will not vote this month on whether the city should proceed with cycling and pedestrian upgrades along the Cornwall-Point Grey corridor. That’s because Robertson recently purchased a home in Kitsilano within a block of York Street and wants to erase any doubt that he could be in a conflict over the upgrades. “In recent weeks, the mayor apprised senior staff, including the city solicitor, of this property transaction and they were requested to provide advice and a legal opinion on any possible conflict that the mayor might be in with regard to future decisions of council related to the Point Grey-Cornwall bike corridor,” said a statement issued by the mayor’s office Wednesday. “The city solicitor has informed the mayor that there is no legal conflict with voting on matters related to the Point Grey-Cornwall bike and pedestrian safety upgrades at this time. However, out of an abundance of caution, the mayor informed the city solicitor he will be recusing himself from voting on the upcoming ... project. The city solicitor will review the final staff report on the project and provide any further advice to the mayor on this matter as required.” The mayor’s office issued the statement after a blogger posted information and a link to a realty company’s site that revealed Robertson’s house, near 25th and Oak, was for sale. The statement said the mayor is selling his house, which is listed for $1.9 million, because his family is downsizing now that his children have graduated from high school. Council is expected to vote later this month on cycling and pedestrian upgrades for the Point Grey-Cornwall corridor. Documents on the city’s website show potential upgrades running from the Burrard Bridge to Jericho Beach and include a combination of separated bike lanes, wider sidewalks, street closures and removal of on-street parking spots. The city hasn’t set a date for the vote, although it is anticipated for the week of July 22. The plan has been divisive and included heated public meetings and street protests. One group, which includes former city councillor Peter Ladner, favours a city-designed option that would mean significant upgrades for cyclists and pedestrians along Point Grey Road. Other residents have called for the vote to be delayed. mhowell@vancourier.com


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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

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FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

IN THIS ISSUE

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NEWS

According to one reader, Alexandra Park in the West End should shed its obscure royal moniker and be renamed in honour of Joe Fortes.

CLASS NOTES: STANDING UP BY CHERYL ROSSI Two graduates from alternative school programs are preparing for post-secondary education thanks to the help of non-profit STAND.

12TH & CAMBIE: CHOW DOWN BY MIKE HOWELL Our scribe’s favourite former city councillor resurfaces taking a sledgehammer to the downtown viaducts.

OPINION TOWERING INFERNO BY ALLEN GARR The city’s huge misstep in proposing towers for Commercial Drive and Broadway is a disaster in the making for Vision Vancouver.

DINING PERU PLEASE BY TIM PAWSEY Chicha restaurant brings the tastes and colours of Peruvian cuisine to Mount Pleasant.

SPORTS HAYLEY WICKENHEISER Q&A BY MEGAN STEWART

15

In advance of her Vancouver speech, the Canadian hockey great talks about defeat, depression and the emotional benefits of exercise.

HOME & GARDEN

SEE MORE WITH LAYAR Additional content in this issue available through the Layar app includes: P01: PLASTIC FILM Courier videographer Jason Lang examines photographer Michael J.P. Hall’s Science World show on the horrors of plastic trash.

P19: ENTERTAINMENT: PICKS OF THE WEEK Video clips of events and artists who’ll be performing in Vancouver in the upcoming week.

P25: GASTOWN GRAND PRIX IN PICTURES, VIDEO Pictures and video by Dan Toulgoet of the amazingly fast Gastown Grand Prix bicycle race.

Download the free Layar app to your iPhone, iPad or Android smartphone or tablet. The Vancouver Courier, 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 vancourier. com. For all delivery problems, please call 604-942-3081. To contact the Courier’s main office, call 604-7381411.

Antique Road Show Tuesday, July 23rd, 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm Explore the past of your most treasured belongings with appraisal services from Langmann Galleries and Love’s Auctions. Learn all about the history and value of your possessions.

Planning for the Future Thursday, July 25th, 11:00 am – 12:00 pm Join us at our community as Jeannie Kwan from Dignity Memorial discusses pre-arrangements for cemetery and funeral services. Come speak with the expert and get all your questions and concerns answered.

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

FROM FRONT PAGE

Trialpatiocouldexpandtofivemore

Scott Edwards, manager of street activities for the city, noted the city chose an establishment with a restaurant primary licence for the trial. He says the province is agreeable to four of five such patios proceeding this year and he has told business improvement associations about the opportunity. But what makes a separate patio work at Rainier Provisions’ site isn’t necessarily common across the city. Carrall Street was previously reconstructed with wider sidewalk bulges. A bike lane flanks the sidewalk so that motor vehicle traffic isn’t within arm’s reach. Rainier Provisions has no history of liquorrelated infractions and Heather has agreed to have an employee on the patio at all times. “We’re fortunate that we have a hand-held ordering system on iPod minis and we also have a hand-held credit card processing system,” Heather said. “It’s a little onerous in that if I had the patio beside the

photo Dan Toulgoet

Restaurateur Sean Heather enjoys a pint on the patio of Rainier Provisions new street patio at Carrall and Cordova. building, which would be eight feet from where it is, I wouldn’t have to do that. And the truth of the matter

is in the afternoons when you have five people on the patio you still have a staff member standing on it.”

The veteran restaurateur hopes his trial will help others. “We’re not a fledgling startup business

so you have some disposable revenue, if you like, so if we can do something that’ll help our brothers

and sisters and maybe be acknowledged that somebody did that, then that’s worth it to us.” According to Heather, architects and designers in the area have praised the patio but those who participate in the weekly Binners Market on Carrall resent that it encroaches on their space. Michael Green Architecture, an award-winning Vancouver-based firm that champions the use of timber, even advocating for wooden skyscrapers, designed the patio so that it can be quickly uprooted. “Any patio in Vancouver has to be able to be dismantled within 24 hours,” Heather said. “For example if [the city rents] out a street to a movie and the movie doesn’t want a patio on it, the city’s not going to lose the revenue because you won’t move the patio.” The patio at Rainier Provisions is open from 11:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. on weekdays, later on weekends. crossi@vancourier.com twitter.com/Cheryl_Rossi

NPA blames MetroVan mayors for transit inaction VISION’S MEGGS SAYS PREMIER SCUTTLED HARD-WON AGREEMENT MIKE HOWELL Staff writer

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n NPA city councillor has accused local mayors of “inaction” on developing funding mechanisms for transit upgrades and suggested that is the reason the provincial government wants a referendum to gauge support for transit projects. George Affleck made the accusation Tuesday at a council meeting during a debate about the referendum that is expected to be held when Metro Vancouver residents vote in their respective 2014 civic elections. His comments were directed at the mayors’ council on regional transportation that has attempted for several years to work out a definitive and sustainable way with the provincial government to fund transit improvements. “The inaction by the mayors’ council and the inaction by TransLink over the last several years on how to fund the priorities in this region has frustrated not only the citizens

of this region but obviously the province, as well,” said Affleck, adding the mayors’ council’s rejection of the referendum creates another political battle with the provincial government. “The reason the referendum was created was because of inaction in this region.” Affleck’s comments were quickly refuted by Vision Coun. Geoff Meggs, who said the mayors would “go absolutely bonkers” if they heard somebody say they had been inactive on the transit file. Meggs pointed out the mayors’ council previously reached consensus with former transportation minister Blair Lekstrom on imposing a vehicle registration fee to generate money for transit, only to be rejected by Premier Christy Clark. “Months of hard work and negotiation and mediation went down the drain,” Meggs said. “So, I don’t want to be political but I do want to be factual. This has been an extremely difficult process by a mayors’ group which has no legislative or financial support or ad-

ministrative ability to do much.” Mayor Gregor Robertson, who belongs to the mayors’ council, said he and his fellow mayors also requested the provincial government use a portion of carbon tax revenue to fund transit. Robertson acknowledged the increase in gas tax to trigger the construction of the Evergreen SkyTrain line from Coquitlam to Vancouver. But, he said, a referendum is the wrong way to go to adopt sustainable funding mechanisms for transit. He believes municipalities would likely be pitted against each other over who should get transit improvements. “This referendum means an 18-month delay to any action on transit investment in Metro Vancouver,” said Robertson, noting the mayors signed an agreement three years ago with the provincial government to find funding sources to fund transit. “We have seen almost no action in those three years.” The debate over the referendum arose after Affleck introduced a motion to have the

Vision Vancouver politicians who also serve as Metro Vancouver directors urge the Metro Vancouver board to report back on various issues, including the potential economic, social and environmental ramifications of referendum results in Metro Vancouver. The ruling Vision Vancouver party, along with Green Party Coun. Adriane Carr, instead supported Meggs’ motion to endorse the mayors’ council’s rejection of the referendum. Meggs’s motion also asks Metro Vancouver’s transportation committee to clarify options available to municipalities “to ensure voters have a true opportunity to make their wishes known in the event no agreement is possible with the province on the wording, administration or funding of a referendum.” “It doesn’t change the fact,” Affleck said, “that the premier continues to state that she’s absolutely committed to pushing forward with this referendum.” mhowell@vancourier.com twitter.com/Howellings


news

Pinnacle student ready to Ace It in September

Alan Lee was kicked out of school for smoking marijuana and drinking on school grounds. He was also charged with robbery. Now as a graduate of Pinnacle, an alternative program of the Vancouver School Board and the Ministry of Children and Family Development, Lee has received a grant of $2,200 from the STAND Foundation to complete an automotive service technician course. Lee says if it weren’t for the financial assistance, he couldn’t afford school in September. “I’m from a single-parent family,” he said. The grant money will cover an Ace It automotive course at Britannia secondary and pay for tools, boots and textbooks. He will receive credits from Vancouver Community College for the first level of trade training. “I think the first time you do it it’s free but I got kicked out,” he said. Lee’s ultimate goal is to complete B.C. Institute of Technology’s aerospace program and become a commercial pilot. “I used to be in air cadets,” the 17-year-old said. “One time I got to co-pilot this glider and I

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thought it was pretty cool.” Lee lived and studied in Delta before he attended Pinnacle. “Pinnacle is right above my probation office,” he said. “And my probation officer said I should go there.” Lee felt cared for by Pinnacle’s teacher and youth and family worker who helped him find a job and a volunteer position coaching basketball. Grant applicants to STAND, short for Steps Towards a New Direction, don’t need top grades. They need to be referred by a teacher or counsellor, outline the challenges they’ve faced, their educational and career goals and the money they will need to complete their first year of post-secondary training. Rachel Steel, a recent graduate of the Spectrum alternative program, had planned to take a year off school to work and save money for college until she learned she will receive a $2,900 grant from STAND. With two older siblings in college, Steel said her single mother would have a difficult time helping her. The grant will cover her first year tuition and feesatLangaraCollegewhereshewantstostudy psychology and sociology. “I know, actually, two of the other recipients… and I know that it’s just changed their lives completely,” Steel said. “The two girls I know who got it before would have probably never gone back to school.” crossi@vancourier.com

FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

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FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

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12TH & CAMBIE with Mike Howell

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s regular readers will know, I’ve written more than a few inches of copy over the years about former Vision Vancouver city councillor George Chow. And, as I’ve stated previously, it wasn’t done out of any allegiance to him or his party. But how can a civic affairs scribe like me, who knows an enigmatic character when he sees one, avoid not letting you in on Chow’s world of wonder. Once again, some background: The guy is a K-car lover who enjoys showing reporters photographs of him doing roof repairs, knows an interesting urinal when he sees one (and supplied this scribe with a photograph), uses his excess water from his bath to flush his toilet, revealed he would walk on hot coals in Chinatown for a fundraiser (not sure if he did), is able to recite poetry from his childhood (“A pen and a man. A man and a pen. This is a pen. This is a man”), has a life-sized photograph of himself and claims he was named after King George. See what I mean. Journalism gold … well, maybe not journalism and maybe not gold … but city hall can’t all be about rezonings, bike lanes and community plans. Last time I spoke to Chow he was running for a provincial seat with the NDP

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Former city councillor George Chow says the viaducts have outlived their usefulness. He’s seen here pretending to take a sledgehammer to the structures. Or is he? in Vancouver-Langara. “Chow for change” was his slogan. It didn’t work. He lost. So what’s he up to now? Well, if my eyes don’t deceive me, a photograph I recently obtained shows Chow armed with a sledgehammer. Maybe a new workout regime? Not sure, but he’s swinging the hammer at what looks like a concrete wall. Wait a sec…that wall looks familiar. Actually, it’s not a wall, at all. It’s the side of one of the…viaducts? What the… GEORGE CHOW IS TAKING DOWN THE VIADUCTS! GEORGE CHOW IS TAKING DOWN THE VIADUCTS! Yes, you read it here first, Chow has already single-handedly started to demolish the hulking structures — even though city council has yet to give the green light to take down the freeway leftovers from the 1970s. This deserved an explanation from the man himself. “It was just to show my opinion on what should happen to [the viaducts],” said Chow,

noting the photograph ended up in the Sing Tao newspaper. So you’re not demolishing the viaducts? “No, no,” he said, chuckling through the phone line, “but I would say the viaducts have outlived their usefulness.” Chow might have good reason to take the suckers down. Turns out, when Chow arrived in Vancouver in 1965, he stayed at a single-room-occupancy hotel at Union and Main streets. That hotel, which was above a London Drugs, had to be knocked down to make way for the viaducts. “We lived there for a number of years until the building was expropriated to make way for the socalled freeway,” he recalled. Interesting, George, and thanks for the explanation. Note: I was about to hang up when the topic went from viaducts to urinals. Chow said he recently took a photograph of a urinal that he described as an “engineering marvel.” I’m expecting it in my inbox any day now. Oh boy, oh George. mhowell@vancourier.com

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PUBLIC NOTICE

RECALL AND INITIATIVE ACT

This notice is published pursuant to section 4 of the Recall and Initiative Act. Approval in principle has been granted on an application for an initiative petition. The petition will be issued to proponent Dana Larsen on Monday, September 9, 2013 and signature sheets must be submitted to the Chief Electoral Officer by Monday, December 9, 2013. The Title of the Initiative is: An initiative to amend the Police Act. Summary of Initiative: The initiative draft Bill entitled, “Sensible Policing Act” proposes to amend the Police Act to no longer use provincial police resources on the enforcement of current laws in relation to simple possession and use of cannabis by adults. The draft law would prohibit the use of provincial police resources for this purpose, would require police to report in detail to the Minister of Justice any actual use of resources for this purpose and why it was necessary, and require the Minister to publish that report. The Bill also proposes that the province would call upon the Federal Government to repeal the federal prohibition on cannabis, or give British Columbia an exemption, such that British Columbia is able to tax and regulate cannabis similar to the regulation of alcohol and tobacco. As well it proposes that British Columbia shall establish a Provincial Commission to study the means and requirements necessary for the province to establish a legal and regulated model for the production and use of cannabis by adults. Last, the Bill would make nonlawful possession and use of cannabis by minors an offence similar to possession and use of alcohol.

Initiative Advertising: Individuals or organizations who sponsor initiative advertising, other than the proponent and registered opponents, must register with the Chief Electoral Officer before they conduct or publish initiative advertising. Registration applications are available from Elections BC. Who May Sign the Petition: Registered voters as of Monday, September 9, 2013 may sign the initiative petition. Individuals may only sign the petition once, and must sign the petition sheet for the electoral district in which they are registered at the time of signing. Signed petitions are available for public inspection. For More Information: The initiative application and draft Bill are available for public inspection on the Elections BC website and at the Elections BC office at the address below. Location: Suite 100 – 1112 Fort Street, Victoria, B.C Mailing Address: PO Box 9275 Stn Prov Govt, Victoria, BC V8W 9J6 Phone: Toll-free: Fax: Email: Website:

250-387-5305 1-800-661-8683 250-387-3578 electionsbc@elections.bc.ca elections.bc.ca

Opponent Registration: Individuals or organizations who intend to incur expenses as opponents must apply for registration with the Chief Electoral Officer by Monday, August 12, 2013. Registration applications for opponents are available from Elections BC.

elections.bc.ca / 1 - 8 0 0 - 6 6 1 - 8 6 8 3

vancourier.com

…get caught in our web

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he City of Vancouver will seek a court injunction against the owners of a Granville Street singleroom-occupancy hotel to have them comply with 105 violations related to safety and maintenance. City council gave city staff the green light Wednesday to seek the injunction in B.C. Supreme Court because the owners don’t have a plan to clean up the Clifton Hotel at 1125 Granville St. The hotel, which has 73 rooms, is listed as the secondworst building on the city’s rental property database. Violations included melted electrical devices, no running water for six days, the lack of fire walls between floors and walls, inoperable washrooms, cracked and bulging walls and a faulty structural beam. Zohreh Fazi-Mashhadi, Abolghasem Abdollahi and Yahya Nickpour are the principal directors of the company that owns the hotel. Recent efforts by staff to work with Abdollahi and Nickpour to bring the hotel into compliance have been unsuccessful, said the report, adding that the business relationship between the two men fizzled. “Although these violations are serious, staff feel the building should not be evacuated at this time,” the report said. “In the event the owners choose to vacate the building instead of performing the repairs, staff will be available to assist tenants for relocation.” Before council voted to proceed with the injunction, Abdollahi told council he was “doing my best” to address the violations and wanted two months reprieve. In addressing council, resident Shawn Thorpe described the hotel as “a shithole” crawling with bedbugs, mice and cockroaches. He invited council to visit the hotel. mhowell@vancourier.com twitter.com/Howellings

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FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

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news Should aWest End park be renamed Joe Fortes Park? RESIDENT WANTS ALEXANDRA PARK NAMED AFTER FAMOUS LIFEGUARD

CENTRAL PARK with Sandra Thomas

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West End reader wants to see Alexandra Park, located across the street from English Bay, renamed Joe Fortes Park. Lyn Guy emailed to say she’s been watching with interest as nearby Morton Park undergoes extensive renovations to better accommodate the sculpture installation Amaze-ing Laughter. And while Guy is pleased about that work, she says it also highlights the neglect Alexandra Park is suffering. In 1911, the park was named af-

ter the long-deceased Queen Alexandra, the consort of Britain’s King Edward VII. “…I am pleased as punch that an almost invisible patch of land has made it this far as a visible icon for Vancouver,” Guy wrote in part. “Now, if we could just push to change the under-used Alexandra Park (named for a lesser queen?) with the bandshell in its drab, old-man-in-a-brown-raincoat look…” Guy says the park and its aging bandstand, built in 1914, are used largely by the homeless and she believes that with creative landscaping, the tiny green space could once again become a popular family destination. Fortes, who died in 1922, moved to Vancouver in the 1890s and eventually moved to a cottage on English Bay, where he’s credited with teaching thousands of children to swim and saving dozens of swimmers from drowning. “I’ve been choked ever

COMMUNICATION BREAKDOWN

since the city allowed Fortes’ cottage to be demolished when it could have been rolled across and onto the park and made into a museum or information centre,” wrote Guy of the beach-front cabin where the lifeguard lived out his days. “[Renaming the park] would make up for such a lost chance.”

In Wednesday’s Courier I wrote that the park board ended the contract of the mediator who was helping most of the city’s community centre associations negotiate a contract with the park board.

Apparently that was news to NPA park board commissioners John Coupar and Melissa De Genova. Coupar told me he had no idea Terry Harris had been removed as mediator until he read it in the Courier. Kate Perkins, who’s been acting as lead on the negotiations on behalf of the as-

sociations, told me she was also surprised by the move. Perkins says the associations had no problems with the way Harris was handling the mediation. Perkins added the associations will now work with the park board to find a new facilitator. sthomas@vancourier.com twitter.com/sthomas10

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

THE VANCOUVER COURIER

1574 West Sixth Ave., Vancouver, BC V6J 1R2 604-738-1411 Twitter: @vancouriernews vancourier.com

MLA’s tower criticisms reveal political fragility forVision

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n Tuesday morning, Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson told CBC Radio that the whole uproar over the Grandview-Woodland community plan was simply a matter of a “misunderstanding.” There is still plenty of time for citizen input, said our bicycling mayor, clearly backpedalling given that the official email from the city dated July 5 declared the “deadline for input is August 2.” But overlook that point for the moment. That “misunderstanding” explanation doesn’t nearly come close to the truth of what actually happened to cause the incredible lack of trust and sense of betrayal harboured by the local residents who have been among the staunchest of Robertson’s supporters. Nor does it begin to touch on the potential for disaster Robertson and his Vision majority face regarding this and three other community plans now in the works. Some of that became apparent on Monday night. It began with this: in all of the months and through the many meetings by city staff with Grandview-area residents there was discussion and even agreement about the need for increased density, but there was never any discussion let alone any mention of towers particularly at Commercial and Broadway and along Hastings. Yet, sure enough when the “emerging directions” plan was released by the city, there they were — much to the shock and horror of the residents. But back to Monday: While Vision Coun. Geoff Meggs mopped his brow owing to the warmth of the night, some 200 people streamed in to pack the second floor meeting room, perch on window sills, squat down on the floor or spill out onto the balcony of the Eastside Family Place at Napier and Commercial. It was a meeting of the Grandview-Woodland Community Council. There was only one item on the agenda: the community plan. There to answer questions was area planner Andrew Pask along with two other city staffers. Noticeably missing was Brian Jackson, the city’s general manager of planning and development. I mention this because, given past practices of the planning department going back to Ray Spaxman then Larry Beasley and even Brent Toderian, whenever there was a contentious issue around planning and development, the head of planning stepped in to take the heat. That was particularly the case when the head of planning was responsible for that issue as was the case with the 11th hour addition of towers to the Grandview-Woodland community plan. The mayor was also absent. But then he prefers more mellow settings where he can kiss babies, kick soccer balls or cut ribbons to open urban orchards. Not that the mayor’s office (i.e. his chief of staff Mike Magee) was without eyes and ears in the room. Attending with Meggs was Vision Coun. Andrea Reimer, who is the liaison for the neighbourhood, champion of the community engagement committee and a former Grandview Woodland resident. As well — notably — another resident, Vision co-chair and frequent party spokesperson who regularly appears on CBC Radio, Maria Dobrinskaya, was there. What they saw and heard was remarkably eloquent, informed, passionate and intimate. It demonstrated unanimity of opposition that ranged from activist Garth Mullins to the executive director of the Hastings North Business Improvement Association, Patricia Barnes. But nothing rocked the house nor exposed the political fragility of what Vision had at stake here more than the withering comments of local NDP MLA Shane Simpson. While he doesn’t usually poke his nose into local politics or impute any malicious intent on the part of his brothers and sisters in Vision, he was clearly annoyed. “Sometimes,” he began, “the planning process goes sideways.” And then went on to say: “Across the community nobody is telling me this plan meets their needs.”Andfinally:“Thisplanisfundamentallyflawedandmaybefatallyflawed. Go back to the drawing board and engage the people.” All of which brought many in the crowd to their feet with applause. For his part, planner Pask, left to defend a decision he most likely didn’t make, said the most controversial part of the plan, the towers at Broadway and Commercial, “is off the table.” Then he added: “We got part right and part wrong – a big part wrong.” And about that there is no misunderstanding. agarr@vancourier.com.

ALLEN GARR

WEB POLL NATION

Hasthecitygonetoofarinproposing highrises for neighbourhoods like Grandview-Woodland? Go to www.vancourier.com to vote

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FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

WE WANT YOUR OPINION

Hate it or love it? We want to know... really, we do!

Reach us by email: editor@vancourier.com

Pop culture illluminates, infuriates lunch mates

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orget religion or politics. If you’re interested in a knock-down, dragout argument, try pop culture instead. Express your affection for some boundary-breaking filmmaker or lip-synching wunderkind, and someone is bound to energetically express their disbelief. We love to build up our idols almost as much as we like to smash them down. Some years back, I wrote an article for this paper about Rolling Stone guitarist Keith Richards, speculating that the survival skills of the “Rock n’ Roll Cockroach” might extend to thermonuclear war. This resulted in a lecture at a party from an inebriated reader about my “uneducated” satire. I just nodded and shrugged, and minutes later the soused Stones fan fell to the floor and wiped out a potted plant. As punctuation to an argument, Keef couldn’t have played it better himself. Pop culture can infuriate as much as illuminate. During lunch hour gatherings with friends, sometimes the discussion veers into film. One lunch companion, a retired Jungian therapist, can take apart any given movie and explain its working parts with the expertise of a Swiss watchmaker. I have learned a few things from him about blockbuster and B-movies, but occasionally our opinions diverge. The table recently got into a dynamic disagreement about Quentin Tarantino’s Oscar-winning film Django Unchained. The Jung-at-heart guy and another friend thought it a rollicking farce. I thought it was a hollow effort in hipster cool: a ’60s spaghetti western crossed with ’70s blaxploitation. Another friend agreed with me. The argument didn’t quite descend into a food fight, but I was struck that it’s not politics or religion so much as pop culture that amplifies our ego-fueled opinions. “Eye of the beholder” becomes “I of the beholder.” Luckily we were all sitting around eating. There’s a theory that eating in close quarters encouraged civil behaviour in human evolution. The serotonin uptick tended to work against fight or flight reactions, and our ancestors began to dine in groups partly as a bonding mechanism that inhibited aggressive behaviour. (Besides, if you went ape on a fellow hominid with your piehole full of mastodon, there’d be no one around with the wits to perform the Heimlich maneuver.) But I’m wandering away from my main point, as I sometimes do when I’ve got little to say and a lot of space to say it. So here it is: arguments over the merits of film, music, and the arts are subjective differences that can’t be settled through a Wikipedia search — though I know a few people with the habit of pulling out their smartphones like geek gunslingers at the slightest whiff of factual disagreement. Needless to say — but I’ll say it anyway — the Internet has become our all-purpose, portable brain for both fact-checking and flaming. All bets are off in the online world when it comes to polite discourse. The subverbal, face-to-face social cues that humans have evolved over thousands of millennia have shrunk to the bandwidth of misspelled text messages, making it more likely that disagreements go nuclear quickly. A B-list actress disses a megastar singer and it’s all over the Twitterverse in minutes, with the arthritic print media playing catch-up to inflate the most inane exchanges into tabloid headlines. In fact, old-fashioned, face-to face interaction seems to be going the way of cursive script and quilting bees. Great numbers of us lurch around with our noses in our smartphones, tweeting, texting and Instagramming with the twitchy compulsiveness of the Walking Dead. (Did opposable thumbs evolve for this?) Actual phone calls now place a distant third to social networking and instant messaging. Several years ago, I witnessed a woman on Venables go ballistic on a cellphone with her partner or boyfriend. She stopped and began screaming a volley of expletives, with her phone held at arm’s length — presumably so she’d be heard clearly at the other end. You just don’t come across that kind of considerate behaviour anymore. All I say is thank God (or the Indefinable Whatever) that most of our digital devices are small and have rounded corners. For some folks, they’d represent lethal force if they ever met up in the real world. And for those who still do, there’s always breakfast, lunch or dinner — the hairless monkey’s trick for negotiating conversational minefields with good grub. www.geoffolson.com

GEOFF OLSON

GODZILLA FILMING CAUSES GIANT INCONVENIENCES

To the editor: Re: “Godzilla invades East Fraserlands,” July 3. The filming of the Godzilla movie created another problem besides nightime helicopter buzzing of residential communities. For weeks this spring, this production was filming at the Highview Lookout on the Cypress Bowl Road. They had a permit allowing three-minute road closures alternating with openings. Personal experience and reports from others indicate they were commonly exceeding the permitted limits. Remarkably, riding bicycles up the Cypress Bowl Road has become more popular than hiking in the park. Weekends are seeing hundreds of people ride up daily. These closures caused many cyclists, and people driving up to go hiking, to turn around and go back down rather than wait. Most cyclists doing this demanding climb are on timed runs approaching their physical limits. A random stop such as this is very disruptive. Now, many justify this on the basis of the economic benefit of the movie industry. This enthusiasm overlooks a few serious questions. One is whether subsidizing entertainment that many would view as trash is a sensible use of our taxes. Similarly, the money patrons spend to see such movies could be considered waste rather than economic gain. Certainly waking families in the middle of the night and obstructing low-impact recreationists on the single road to a provincial park cannot not be justified by the questionable benefits of Godzilla movies.

Steve Grant, Vancouver

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Letters may be edited by the Courier for reasons of legality, taste, brevity and clarity. Letters must be include the writer’s full name (no initials), home address, and telephone number (neither of which will be published), so authorship may be verified. Send to: 1574 West Sixth Ave., Vancouver V6J 1R2 or email editor@vancourier.com

CYCLISTS UNSAFE ON ARTERIAL ROADS; USE SWELL BIKE LANES INSTEAD

To the editor: Re: “Bike lanes remain divisive, according to recent poll,” July 5. Is the City of Vancouver really serious about ensuring the safety of people riding bikes? For example, the city’s web page about cycling safety tips and regulations says “Check out Bike Sense, a comprehensive BC guide to operating a bike in traffic,” without even providing a clickable link. Despite the fact there are bike lanes and routes criss-crossing the city, many riders persist in using very busy streets like Knight, Main, Granville, and so forth, where there are vehicles like huge container trucks driving day and night. But usually only within a few blocks of these streets are others designated as bike-only, which have swell user-activated signals where they cross every major road! Maybe it’s time for the city to label large roads as “no bikes,” just like there are “no trucks” allowed on smaller residential streets.

Mike Quigley, Vancouver

PARK BOARD NEEDS TO CONSULT MORE ON ONECARD ROLLOUT To the editor: Re: “Roll-out of Vancouver Park Board ‘s OneCard ‘illthought out,’” June 14. My understanding of the June 10 park board press release is that the rollout in July is for rinks, pools, and fitness centres only. The remaining community centre programs will come under the One Card in September, provided the com-

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munity association boards vote in favour. However, since Core Services are yet to be defined, I am not sure how they will decide which programs will come under the OneCard in less than three months’ time, nor am I convinced this is adequate time for public consultation. In this regard, Dave Pasin’s concerns about vagueness and deadlines are certainly justified. Dropping the membership requirement to access programs and facilities at community centres won’t result in a complete loss of association membership because some people will want to influence the programming and facilities available to them. This will undoubtedly cause the practice of stacking boards by interest groups with an agenda to become even more prevalent. Anita Romaniuk, Former COPE park commissioner

PT. GREY ROAD UPGRADES WILL BENEFIT EVERYONE To the editor: Re: “Bike lanes remain divisive, according to recent poll,” July 5 Approving upgrades to Point Grey Road benefits kids, seniors, pedestrians, cyclists and the entire community. This road is a residential street with a speed limit of 30-kilometres per hour, which is exclusively ignored by the 13,000 daily drivers using the street as a thoroughfare. Calming traffic along this street will minimally affect drivers who can take the route of Macdonald then Fourth or Broadway, both of which are under capacity. Most importantly, the health and safety of our citizens is at stake in this project.

Kyle Zheng, Vancouver

SOCIAL MEDIA COURIER STORY: “Cities urged to use development fees to fund transit,” July 10. UDI Pacific Region @udibc: What are Vancouver’s funding priorities? More community centres or a subway to UBC? COURIER POLL: “Would you agree to ‘road pricing’ (eg tolls on roads, vehicle access to downtown) if the revenue collected helped fund better transit?” July 5. 604commuter @604commuter: Road pricing is already happening — through gas tax. KUDOS & KVETCHES: “We’re number one… again!” July 5 Gina Kay Landis @ginakayRE: “Booya” is a celebratory term. Why are you cheering about an area with #poverty? #BritishColumbia

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community A12

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

EVENT OR COMMUNITY NEWS WE SHOULD KNOW ABOUT? 604-738-1411 | sthomas@vancourier.com

Culinarydelightsaplenty atKhatsahlanofest COMMUNITY CALENDAR with Sandra Thomas

KITSILANO According to food writer Cassandra Anderton, creator of the Good Life Vancouver blog, the Khatsahlano! festival taking place this Saturday, July 13, is not only a celebration of music and art but also one of culinary delights. Anderton proved her point this past Tuesday afternoon during a media preview of what festival-goers can expect from this year’s food offerings. In support of the festival the city is allowing restaurants along 10 blocks of West Fourth Avenue to expand to include outdoor spaces such as sidewalks. The street cuisine will be so extensive and varied one section has been dubbed the Food Truck Circus. My advice is to arrive early and with an empty stomach. Most restaurants are offering specials and some have created dishes for the festival day only. The new kid on the block, August Jack, scheduled to open today (July 12), has created a special tasting plate of eight tapas, while another recent addition to the ‘hood, Tractor Foods, will introduce the public to its makeyour-own salads, soups and stews concept. Top Chef alumnus Trevor Bird of Fable Kitchen has reintroduced his popular chickpea fritters and added a home-made gazpacho soup topped with crumbled bacon. Among other restaurants offering food and drink specials this Saturday are Bimini Pub, Bibo Pizza, Romers Burger Bar, Las Margaritas, Terra Breads and Trattoria, where the first heat of a meatball eating competition starts at 1 p.m. For more information, visit goodlifevancouver.com where Anderton has been writing daily updates on the Khatsahlano! festival food scene.

CHAMPLAIN HEIGHTS The Champlain Heights community is rallying around neighbours who lost their homes and possessions in a terrible fire last Sunday. The fundraiser takes place at the Village Pub,

7725 Champlain Crescent., from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. with a 50/50 draw and the weekly Lions Club meat draw from 5 to 7 p.m. Enjoy live music from 7:30 to 11:30 p.m. Tickets are $20 (cash) at the door and include a beer and burger. Proceeds will help neighbours when they need it the most.

JERICHO

Tickets are still available for the “After-Party” barbecue taking place at the Royal Vancouver Yacht Club following the Easter Seals Charity Regatta taking place this Saturday, July 13. Following the regatta, the public is invited to drop by the adjacent Hastings Miller Park at 3 p.m. for a waterfront barbecue, beer garden, silent auction and the summer sounds of Tropical Heat. There will also be lots for the kids to do. After Party tickets are $15 and available by calling 604873-1865 or at eastersealsregatta. ca. Scan page with Layar for website information.

OLYMPIC VILLAGE

Creekside Community Centre and the Bone & Bowl pet supply store are hosting a free community event this Saturday, July 13, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. on the Village Plaza in the Olympic Village. Pet-a-Palooza will offer numerous information kiosks and opportunities to learn pet first aid and holistic care. Pets will also have the chance to take part in a talent show. An SPCA adoption centre will also be on site.

WEST POINT GREY

The Brock House Society is hosting its annual Summer Fair this Saturday, July 13, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Look for handcrafted items, original oil paintings, home baking, gifts, games, a silent auction and White Elephant sale among others. Also for sale will be signed copies of the recently published book Thorley Park to Brock House, which chronicles the first hundred years of Brock House — from family home to heritage landmark. Shoppers can enjoy a cold beverage in the garden pub and enjoy entertainment by the Brock House Big Band and the Vancouver Morris Men Dancers, so seriously what’s not to love. sthomas@vancourier.com twitter.com/sthomas10

photo Dan Toulgoet

Food and craft beer are a major component of Chris Hall’s August Jack, a new pub that is scheduled to open July 12 on Fourth Avenue and which is taking part in the annual Khatsahlano Festival on Saturday, July 13.


FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

community correspondent

3 DAYS ONLY JULY 12 -14

Country lane turns 10 Contributing writer

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two and a half-page report titled “Country Lanes Demonstration Project” from Engineering Services to city council, dated July 9, 2002, is buried on the website archive known as former.vancouver.ca. It is a “former” public policy conceived by a group of enthusiastic city staffers who saw the potential in Vancouver’s otherwise overlooked back alleys. But with so many laneway homes being built today, will the Country Lane program that has lately languished win new fans at city hall? Most of us know what typical back lanes look like — that is where we park our cars, store our garbage receptacles or stumble upon old TV sets and soiled mattresses. In contrast, the Country Lane is an inviting public space that combines tough plastic grids and “structural” permeable soil that allows grass to grow. Two concrete strips running down the lane bear the weight of vehicles, while the remaining space is both durable and green. Despite receiving international recognition, the Country Lanes never caught on as a citymaking initiative. Their detractors within city hall were quick to point out the expense of the demonstration project — $225,000 for three lanes — ignoring in that new initiatives often cost more at the outset. It is rumoured that engineering department senior management of the day vehemently rejected the new lane surfacing concept in favour of tried and true asphalt paving. When a city garbage hauler used his truck tires to rut the newly planted grass during the Country Lane’s early days, it all but confirmed that rumour. Approved during the final months of the NPA political dynasty, Country Lanes never again

found a political champion in the administrations that followed. Over time they fell off the radar of city planners. A decade later, fans are as passionate as ever about Country Lanes. Over the noon hour on July 14, folks who were instrumental in the creation of the first Country Lane behind 700block East 27th Avenue will gather to celebrate the 10th anniversary of a unique public space. A community block party — the latest of several that have been held there over the decade — will be a chance to demonstrate the success of the demonstration project. The lane was originally pitched as a way to reduce the burden on storm sewer systems by providing natural filtration for rain water. In addition, the summertime heat caused by the offgassing of asphalt is replaced instead by cooler, landscaped surroundings. It has also lived up to expectations as a community space, where drivers usually slow down to navigate the tire tracks. To the delight of organizers, former mayor Philip Owen — whose council approved the lane — has promised to stop by. Attendees will include Sharole Tylor and Jeannie Kamins, whose neighbourhood activism garnered the attention of Sandy James, the retired city greenways planner who spearheaded the lanes project. Tylor and James are quick to credit the creativity and leadership of city staffers Dave Desrochers, Wally Konowalchuk and David Yurkovich for the success of the project. Invitations are out to others at the city including the current council and staff to see the Country Lane how it was meant to be — as a great gatheringplaceforpeople.Organizershopethat an old idea will one day become new again. Mike Klassen (@MikeKlassen) is B.C. director for the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, and a proud member of Vancouver’s Mountain View neighbourhood.

One hour, once per week. It’s all your lawn needs. Don’t forget lawn sprinkling regulations are in effect until September 30. Sprinkling is permitted for: [ OIBcSc]dFB`BC UCC`B__B_\ GbcCUET fBCcB_CUET jU^]`CUE A`bd : V o Ud [ mCCSc]dFB`BC UCC`B__B_\ h]B_CUET h@]`_CUET j]cCUE A`bd : V o Ud If you water your lawn outside of the permitted days and hours for your address, you may be subject to a fine. Nmk GmkO LnNmkGYhLmn\ IUcDb]IB`RDUQHU^B` l@bcB ;S=S=

PBIBebadBc^ lB`d?^ XbU`C\ K]eE =9 The Development Permit Board and Advisory Panel will meet: GbcCUET K]eE =9 U^ ; ad gUcDb]IB` W?^E MUeeT :9; fB_^ =<^@ YIBc]B First floor, Town Hall Meeting Room to consider the following development permit application: 78> lUD?iD Xb]eBIU`C\ To extend the time-limited approval of the Casino-Class 2 use in Building C at the Plaza of Nations until December 31, 2016 and to extend the time-limited use of the 138 parking spaces in Building B to coincide with that date. Please contact City Hall Security (1st floor) if your vehicle may be parked at City Hall for more than two hours. hm jlOYJ mn Yn LhOG\ 8>:S67;S7:8o b` eb`cUR@U`IBEZIUcDb]IB`RDU

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POWER LINE TREE PRUNING AND HAZARD TREE REMOVALS VANCOUVER Time: 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. When: July 4, 2013 to September 30, 2013 Trees are a significant cause of power interruptions. Contact between trees and power lines can also create a severe danger. Over the next few months we will be pruning and removing trees in the V5Z and V5S Postal Code area of Vancouver. Trees are pruned using the best arboriculture (tree care) practices. Skilled workers employed by BC Hydro are trained in both electrical safety and tree care. Only correct and proper techniques are used to eliminate any safety hazards. For more information about this work, please call Ernie Turra at 604 528 3297. For more information on our vegetation management practices, please visit bchydro.com/trees.

3920

MIKE KLASSEN

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THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

lifestyles

JULY 2013

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f all the exciting events taking place in our city this summer, one that is a special, can’t-miss experience is the annual BARD-B-Q Fireworks line-up. Heather Kennedy, director of marketing for Bard on the Beach Shakespeare Festival says, “We combine a sit-down dinner served in a gorgeous park setting with a popular Shakespearean play, and top it off with an exclusive view of the Celebration of Lights Fireworks.” The meal takes place during the intermission of Twelfth Night or Measure for Measure on each of the Fireworks nights (July 27, 31 and Aug. 3). Performances begin at 6 pm to allow for an earlier-than-usual finish, just in time to move out to a private viewing area for dessert and a breathtaking view of the light-filled skies, according to Kennedy. Founding Media Partner

“Needless to say, we’ve got the recipe for three one-of-a-kind nights at Bard on

Photo by: David Blue

the Beach,!” says Kennedy. The theatre festival will serve up a full-on barbecued salmon feast (BC Wild, of course), and the dinner is created by Emelle’s, Bard’s longtime catering partner. “Patrons can also pre-order picnics on other performance dates, pick up at the site and dine outdoors before the show,” says Kennedy. Bard patron Melanie just posted on Facebook: “Definitely an annual tradition. Summer wouldn’t be summer without Bard and fireworks!” Don’t miss out. Reserved seating is $99 (all-inclusive, wine/beer extra); details and tickets at bardonthebeach.org or phone 604-739-0559.


FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

home garden

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SCAN FOR IDEAS WITH LAYAR

JULY 2013

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ith the later summer, we’re still seeing many beautiful blooms in people’s gardens. As well (and particularly if you have a deck, patio or are in a small space like a condo and have just a balcony for your greenery,) planter pots that show off your foliage to the max are crucial. Here are a few pot and container ideas from various neighbourhood garden experts, to house your beautiful blooms and greens now through fall:

Small, bright, inexpensive and whimsical, these IKEA plant pots (ikea.ca) are great for a table or ledge. Arrange them in colour schemes, and fill with herbs or small florals. Alternate use: serve up side salad to guests!

SOUTHLANDS NURSERY on Balaclava St. is an oasis of charm and well-sought out finds. The Vietri line of planters from Italy evoke old-world, and while not inexpensive, work as true art pieces; southlandsnursery.com.

West Side fave DAVID HUNTER GARDEN CENTER (2560 W. Broadway) carries terra cotta (shown), ceramic, plastic, cedar, and aggregate pots and planters in a variety of colours, shapes and sizes to fit your style.

For container gardening in outdoor spaces we can think outside of the box – take milk crates, or metal washtubs (shown by ORLING AND WU) and make plant groupings with artsy flair. Repurposing has a whole new look!

Hartley Rosen and the team at FIGARO’S GARDEN on Victoria Drive (figarosgarden.ca) can show you how to implement a combo of bird baths, pots and assorted fresh foliage into a wild, or serene, garden mecca.

At ART KNAPP’S PLANTLAND (artknapps.ca) on Hornby, planters can be mixed with architectural rock supplies to make for a stepped effect. Once in place, the upkeep is minimal. Ask the AK experts for advice!

l B.C. Beautifu CONTEST

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9 4 2 $ m o r f s d e B n e e Qu

HOW TO ENTER:

Send us your fab travel photos from around British Columbia (original landscape or people shots; in jpeg format, max. 1 MB.) We’ll pick 4 winning entrants to be showcased on the cover of our B.C. Day feature on Aug. 2. If selected, you’ll also receive a full-page PDF of your ‘cover’ plus 2 passes to a Vancouver Canadians game! Send submissions to contest@vancourier.com with your name and daytime number.

Deadline to enter: Friday, July 26.

4502 Main St, Vancouver BC

(Main Street and 29th Ave.)

• Since 2003•

604.677. 2337


A16

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

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t’s summer! Time for sun, sand, and sailin’. Yard sailing, that is. Hunting and gathering seems to be in our blood; we can’t spot a sale without dropping everything to stop in. In fact, some of our most-beloved treasures were picked up at yard sales all over North America. Now it’s our turn to haul out the lawn signs and set up the refreshment stand. In our ongoing effort to support the Richmond Schoolyard Society, we’re hosting a garden-themed yard sale – a garden shed sale, if you will.

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Swing by our studio to check out the treasures donated by our friends, clients, and colleagues, including gardening books, hand and power tools, outdoor furniture, lawn toys, and decorative accessories. You never know: perhaps you’ll find just what you need to create an outdoor living space you love. Proceeds from the sale help the Richmond Schoolyard Society teach children about gardening and where their food comes from. We don’t generally try to toot our own horns, but Aloe Designs is very proud of this ongoing initiative, and we hope you can ‘dig it’ too!

WHAT: It’s a Yard Sale! GOODS: Garden Antiques/ Outdoor Furniture/ Containers/ Tools and Garden Equipment WHEN: Saturday, July 13, 10:00 am to 2:00 pm WHERE: The Aloe Designs Studio: 1443 East Pender Street Taking place rain or shine! No early birds, please. Check our blog for more info. (We can tell you this, however: there will most definitely be lemonade.) Caitlin Black in a local landscaping professional whose business, Aloe Designs, provides cutting edge services to Vancouver homeowners; aloedesigns.com.

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indow coverings come in every style and price range imaginable. Find out what is what for summer blind usage, with these cheat notes from Home Depot: SOLA ES control heat and limit the sun’s excessive glare, but at the same time, preserve your view of the outdoors. Solar shades are an innovative alternative to traditional roller shades, helping filter ultraviolet rays, but allowing natural light. Solar shades make any room a more comfortable environment, and are also available as sliding panels for larger doors and windows. PLEATED SHADES are economical and a good mix of fashion and function. Basic pleated shades are made of a single layer of folded paper (or fabric) that filter light and provide privacy when drawn closed. Pleated shades are available in many configurations, including styles for round and arched windows. Pleated shades made from 100% polyester are also suitable for rooms with high humidity, such as kitchens and bathrooms.

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ROLLER SHADES, a classic traditional window treatment, come in a wide array of fabric and styles, from translucent fabrics, to opaque polyesters. Roller shades come with a variety of hem and trim options, and can simply be pulled by hand to adjust light and privacy levels. They are an economical window covering that complements any décor, and require minimal maintenance. There is a new way to darken your bedroom for sleep, and then enjoy gently filtered natural light plus a view when you want to relax during the day. New Silhouette A Deux WINDOW SHADINGS, (shown above,) deliver translucency and room-darkening all in one product. This Hunter Douglas premium shading softens and diffuses incoming light with its sheer facings and fabric vanes, and a patented room-darkening roller shade.

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A17

Ledingham Design Consultants is closing. This is your last chance to acquire a memento of Robert Ledingham’s interior design career with an object from his travels

Items from his collection include: Murano glass / Asian porcelains, antiques and kimonos custom furniture / selected artworks / architectural hardware books / bolt ends of luxury fabrics and leathers / lampshades

More information is available online at hunterdouglas.ca, or visit one of our local blinds and draperies retailers.

flyer in today’s paper...

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A18

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

TOUCH WOOD Sculpture Exhibition

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ith a major resurgence on runways and in design, gold accents have made a grand return to home interiors. Gold can add a sense of warmth and style to your space regardless of your overall decorating style. With some simple updates, you can add the perfect Midas touch to brighten your space.

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• THROW PILLOWS – Add some flair to your living room by adding throw pillows with gold accents. This inexpensive option provides comfort and style. It can also breathe new life into a seemingly dull sofa. If you’re DIY savvy, consider embellishing existing pillows with gold fringe around the edges. • WALL DECALS – Modern wall decals are cost-efficient and easy to apply and can be changed with the season. Why not try a fun pin stripe or a quatrefoil print in a small space such as the powder room for an extra touch of pizazz? • DOOR KNOBS – Bronze-toned pulls on kitchen or sideboard cabinets can refresh and add life to previously dull cabinets whether they are dark or light, and can be the perfect accent for your décor theme.

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• KITCHEN UTENSILS – Looking to spruce up the table décor at your next dinner party? Consider goldtoned dining utensils, which will pair beautifully with your china regardless of its shape and pattern and the reflection from a candlelit table will be magical. • METALLIC PAINT – A dramatic new trend in paints, feel free to ‘bronze’ your home with this finish. It doesn’t take much to make a statement and the look will remain timeless. Consider painting dishes, legs of accent tables, picture frames or accent objects. • KITCHEN FAUCET – Looking to refresh your kitchen space on a budget? Consider swapping out your kitchen faucet. This pinnacle item within the kitchen truly sets the tone for the space, so why not consider a faucet with a gold-toned hue? Delta Faucet’s line-up, for example, features stylish models in a Champagne Bronze finish that add flair and function to the kitchen space. Incorporating just a few of these suggestions can add warmth and instant glamour to your space. Advice courtesy www.newscanada.com.

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FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

A19

GOT ARTS? 604-738-1411 | arts@vancourier.com

2

1

3

4

OUR

PICKS JULY 12- 16

For video and web content, scan page with

1 2 3 4

Vancouver’s dynamic blues-stomping duo THE PACK A.D. headline the music portion of the KHATSAHLANO MUSIC AND ART FESTIVAL. The 10-block street party takes over Kitsilano’s West Fourth Avenue between Burrard and MacDonald, July 13, 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., with 12 stages, more than 50 performers and bands, local artisans, art exhibits and a few aging hippies experiencing acid flashbacks of days gone by in Kitsilano. For more info and a schedule of events, go to khatsahlano.com. Vancouver puts out welcome mat for Calgary burlesque stars RAVEN VIRGINIA and Miyuki Divine as they shimmy and shake their way across the Electric Owl stage as part of the BLUE MORRIS’S ROCK AND ROLL BURLESQUE show, July 12, 8:30 p.m. The sophisticated evening of burlesque and live old rock and roll accompaniment also includes the talents of such creatively named performers as Bruce Wang, Connie Cahoots, Isadora Belle and Ruthe Ordare. Tickets at rockandrollbq.bpt.me. More info at bluemorris.com. Comedian TIM HEIDECKER of Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! fame teams up with cringe comic Neil Hamburger and special guest Clownvis for an evening of uncomfortable silences, groans and confused laughter at the Biltmore, July 13, 7:30 p.m. Sadly this one is sold out. Details at biltmorecabaret.com. For more than 10 years California indie rockers ROGUE WAVE have flown under the radar with their finely crafted pop songs. Hear what all the fuss, or lack thereof, is about when the band plays the Biltmore, July 16, in support of their latest album, Nightingale Floors. Seattle’s Hey Marseilles opens. Tickets at Red Cat and Zulu Records or online at ticketweb.ca.


A20

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

DENTURES Guaranteed Comfortable Fit! arts&entertainment Kerrisdale Denture Clinic

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Do you have an inactive account at Vancity? Please act before Wednesday, July 31, 2013. At their meeting on Thursday, August 1, 2013, the Vancity Board of Directors will approve a resolution to close all accounts that have been dormant for 10 years or more. This means that if the last time you accessed your account at Vancity was prior to December 31, 2002, it will be closed. In accordance with the Unclaimed Property Act, account balances of $100 or more will be transferred to the BC Unclaimed Property Society; account balances of under $100 will be transferred to a general holding account at Vancity.

There’s been a lot of fuss made about Mayor Gregor Robertson selling his Douglas Park digs for a cool $1.95 million and moving west to Kitsilano. Some have pointed out the staggering price tag further illustrates how Vancouver’s real estate market is way out of whack. Others are trying to make a meal out of the fact that Robertson is moving into supposedly hostile territory due to the current dust up over proposed bike lanes, while the Courier’s Mike Howell astutely points out that the more pertinent story is that Robertson, to avoid any conflict of interest, has recused himself from voting on whether the city should proceed with cycling and pedestrian upgrades along the Cornwall-Point Grey corridor. For the ruggedly handsome and unconventionally attractive city hall watchers at K&K, the real story is not house prices or bike lanes but how this change in neighbourhoods will transform our earthy, green-minded, chia-eating mayor into a Kitsilano “dude” — if not a fullfledged “bro.” We’ve lost track of the number of friends, loved ones and co-workers who’ve been struck down in the prime of their somewhat cool lives by the urge to chillax and kick it Kits style. Here’s what we can expect when the mayor moves. Warning, it’s not pretty. • Stage 1: Robertson will quietly replace his bike helmet with an array of distressed baseball caps. At first, it’ll go unnoticed. A green Fidel Castro-style army cap is only fitting for a left-ofcentre politician, right? But then it’ll be a fake gas station attendant hat with old school logo from Pennzoil Motor Oil or Quaker State. Then it’ll be a denim cap inexplicably adorned with a faded and tattered number 7. And before you know it, Robertson’s gone full-on Kits, wearing a replica vintage Canucks baseball hat. And you know what that leads to — wraparound sunglasses perched atop the brim of said hat, which he’ll never take off, not even in council chambers. Not cool, bro. Not cool.

• Stage 2: Biking less and less because he doesn’t want to take off his distressed Canucks lid, Robertson will seek other forms of fitness. Namely beach volleyball. His shirtless torso arching mid-spike, silhouetted by the sinking sun on Kits Beach. The dusting of beach sand coating his ripped abs like the salted rim of a margarita glass. The smell of Hawaiian Tropics and Mike’s Hard Lemonade. The constant high-fiving. He’ll be so far gone the only bike he’ll ride again will be a stationary one at Ron Zalko or the tricked-out downhill mountain bike he takes to Whistler on weekends. • Stage 3: After tweaking his treasure trail muscle in a particularly wicked beach volleyball game with members of the soul-funk band It’s All Good, Robertson will change up his exercise routine and discover the cult-like regimen known as Crossfit. In a few short months, Robertson will get beefy. His puka shell necklace will barely fit around his bulging neck. He’ll start wearing tank tops and other sleeveless shirts, if he even wears shirts at all. At council meetings he’ll show off his newfound strength by bench-pressing Heather Deal and Raymond Louie before challenging Penny Ballem to an arm wrestle. Which he’ll lose. But that will only inspire him to train harder and get even more ripped. • Stage 4: Tired from too many workouts, his head throbbing from the tightness of his ever-present distressed baseball cap and the sound of the ocean lapping against the shore, Robertson will seek solace in music. Having pawned his tuba to pay for his downhill mountain bike and a down payment on a sweet Jeep YJ, the mayor will finally hit rock bottom and purchase a beat-up acoustic guitar in a sketchy back alley deal behind Fabutan. After a first few strums, he’ll be hooked. First it’ll be some laid-back Jack Johnson tunes, then Bob Marley, and finally he’ll check into “Hotel California,” the cool wind in his hair, the warm smell of colitas rising up through the air. “It’s such a lovely place,” Gregor will croon between sips of Corona, not realizing that, as the song says, he can check out any time, but he can never leave. twitter.com/KudosKvetches

We’d prefer you keep your money. If you think you may have an account at Vancity that you have not accessed in over 10 years, please visit any Vancity community branch by Wednesday, July 31, 2013. You’ll need to bring two pieces of government-issued identification and any proof of account ownership that you may have.

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Members that are affected have the right to attend the Board of Directors meeting to speak on this matter. If you plan to attend, please call the Member Services Centre by 4 pm, Wednesday, July 31, 2013. The discussion will be held on Thursday, August 1, 2013 at 12 pm at Vancity Centre, 183 Terminal Avenue, in Vancouver (Main Street SkyTrain station). For more information please visit vancity.com/InactiveAccounts or call the Member Services Centre. Member Services Centre Monday to Saturday 8 am to 8 pm Sunday 10 am to 5:30 pm 604.648.5197 Toll-free: 1.866.648.5197

Make Good Money (TM) is a trademark of Vancouver City Savings Credit Union.

VISIT CINEPLEX.COM FOR TICKETS AND SHOWTIMES

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Cineplex Entertainment LP or used under license.


arts&entertainment Chicha dishes out all shades of Peruvian fare

THE HIRED BELLY

with Tim Pawsey

C

an a restaurant’s appeal be directly proportionate to the time spent on the menu in blissful indecision? Such is the case at newly unwrapped Chicha, where our party of four sat transfixed, wondering out loud if maybe we should order one of everything. Part of the lure is the novelty of Peruvian cuisine, for the most part new to Vancouver — though not to Chicha co-owner Shelome Bouvette (Lolita’s South of the Border Cantina), who swears it’s much more than just the “Next Big Thing.” When we asked about how her passion for all things Peruviancameabout,Bouvette’s face breaks into a broad grin as she recalled her voyage of discovery to Mistura. Lima’s annual festival attracts not only culinary luminati from around the world (such as Ferran Adrià and Hester Blumenthal) but an audience of close to half a million people over its 10 days. Bouvette’s plan to introduce Vancouverites to Peru’s unique fare is well manifest at this compact but not cramped, laid-back

photo Tim Pawsey

Chicha’s colourful causa dish includes Cangrejo (piquant crab salad with avocado, mango and aji amarillo), Atün (albacore tuna with whipped cilantro potato, passion fruit ponzu and wasabi cream and Verduras (lima beans and black mint over purple beetroot puréed potato). For more photos, scan page using the Layar app. and friendly, TV-free spot on Broadway near Main, which was bathed in early evening sunlight the night we visited. Our well-travelled group was awestruck as we explored causa: brightly coloured combinations that transported the humble potato (and us) to new heights. Friendly dissent broke out (always a good sign) as to which was the favourite. It’s a toss-up between Cangrejo, piquant crab salad and avocado with mango and aji amarillo ($12) and Atün, fresh Albacore tuna perched on top of an unlikely vibrant green tower of whipped cilantro potato that plays exquisitely off passion fruit ponzu and wasabi cream ( $11). Also not to be discounted:

the Verduras ($9), with lima beans and black mint over purple beetroot puréed potato. Whichever way, we were hooked on a symphony of riotous taste and colour, the ingredients fresh and flavours simply conceived yet at the same time ingeniously clever. It’s that artful point of difference and the little ambushes that set these plates apart, such as butternut squash stew with tacu tacu de locro (cripsy lima beans and rice cakes, topped with a fried quail’s egg, $12), or classic “cebiche” of chilled cod with

corn on the cob, cilantro and sweet potato. ($12). An artfully piled quinoa salad with red onion, mango and avocado arrives with a zesty cilantro jalapeño and haucatay dressing, $10. (The haucatay herb, sometimes compared to a cross between mint and coriander, is indigenous to Peru.) Again, it’s the combinations and contrasts that make this dish one of the best vegetarian plates of the year. One more standout: tender Yarrow Meadows duck confit, served on a coriander and dark beer rice that imparts a gently roasted flavour. At $17, it’s at the higher end of the list but worth every penny. Desserts are a “must try,” too, particularly the sweet potato pumpkin doughnuts with piced honey that, again, adds another dimension. Go for a platter, you’ll need it, although you might also fall for the flourless molten chocolate cake or the cheesecake. There’s plenty more. But you owe it to yourself to make your own discovery. Settle down with a pisco sour (one of the best between here and Lima, so you might need more than one). It works wonders for indecision. info@hirebelly.com

FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

FROM

$29!

A21

MORE SHOWS ADDED! NOW TO MUSIC AND LYRICS BY ROBERT LOPEZ AND JEFF MARX. BOOK BY JEFF WHITTY

AUGUST 17

“It’s a winner… you’re in for one of the summer’s biggest treats” —Kathleen Oliver, The Georgia Straight PHOTOS BY EMILY COOPER

PLAYING AT

Under the Tents • Vanier Park

Tickets: 604-739-0559 or bardonthebeach.org

Studio Stage

ENTER TO WIN

2 tickets to a BARD ON THE BEACH PERFORMANCE Mail or drop off your entry to: the Vancouver Courier, 1574 W. 6th Ave. Vancouver, BC V6J 1R2 Or email your entry to: contest@vancourier.com (Subject line: BARD). Include your name & phone number for a chance to WIN! Name: Phone #: Contest Deadline: Thurs. July 18 by noon. Winners will be contacted by phone.

VA N C O U V E R

Folk

Music

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CHICHA

136 East Broadway Ph. 604-620-3693 chicharestaurant.ca Kathleen Edwards • The Cat Empire • Steve Earle

FEATURING OVER 60 GLOBAL ARTISTS INCLUDING The Waterboys • Hannah Georgas • Hazmat Modine Delhi 2 Dublin • DeVotchKa • Loudon Wainwright III Danny Michel with the Garifuna Collective • Kobo Town FIFTH AVENUE CINEMAS

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1181 Seymour St., 604-683-FILM MUSEUM HOURS: Fri, Sun, Tues, Thurs 6:30 Sat, Wed 8:35 GREENWICH VILLAGE: MUSIC THAT DEFINED A GENERATION: Fri, Tues, Thurs 8:30 Sat, Mon, Wed 6:45 Sun 4:45, 8:30 THE HISTORY OF FUTURE FOLK: Fri-Sat 10:30 LOKI: ARNALDO BAPTISTA: Mon 8:45

www.festivalcinemas.ca CINEPLEX PARK THEATRE 3440 Cambie St., 604-709-3456 DESPICABLE ME 2: Fri, Mon-Thurs 4:40 Sat-Sun 2:15 DESPICABLE ME 2 3D: Fri, Mon-Thurs 7:00, 9:15; Sat-Sun 4:40, 7:00, 9:15

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Specks • The Wooden Sky

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JUST ONE WEEK TO GO! TICKETS 604.602.9798 • WWW.THEFESTIVAL.BC.CA

JULY 12 -18


EW22

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

arts&entertainment

Photographer focuses on plastic in Entanglement SCIENCE WORLD EXHIBIT CHALLENGES VIEWERS TO QUESTION THEIR RELATIONSHIP TO PLASTIC TRASH

CHERYL ROSSI Staff writer

M

ichael J.P. Hall photographed so much grimy plastic over the last five years that his film colleagues could predict the subject of his next shot. “It was just a love/hate relationship with 2 0 1 2

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He and multidisciplinary performer and designer Nita Bowerman picked up plastic rubbish from the Vancouver Transfer Station and the sides of highways and Bowerman fashioned the refuse into elaborate costumes for Hall’s shoots. “She was experimenting and finding what worked and eventually we found the esthetic,” he said. “It kind of had that feather-like quality.” Hall secured the interest of Science World and then raised the bulk of the money for the project through an Indiegogo.com campaign that was sponsored and executed within 21 days. He donated 10 per cent of what he’d raised to Surfrider Foundation Vancouver and the Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup. “So it’s not just some guy making some project in his garage,” Hall said. “All of a sudden it’s a community of people working together. It’s a lot of people’s project now.” An environmental art auction raised additional funds and a dance party spread awareness about Hall’s focus and demonstrated that a little pre-planning can prevent the creation of unnecessary waste. “It was a bring your own cup thing,” Hall said. “We had compostable cups that you could buy and reuse… We did a waste audit on that whole fundraiser and produced, actually, just one plastic bottle.” At least two of Bowerman’s costumes will also be displayed in the airy atrium near the entrance to Science World. “I’m hoping a lot of kids will see it and ideas will pop into their brains,” the 34-year-old Hall said. Entanglement opens July 16 at 6:30 p.m. with a free showing. Spots can be reserved on Eventbrite.com. crossi@vancourier.com twitter.com/Cheryl_Rossi

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plastic,” the commercial photographer and set decorator said. Hall likes the way plastic sheeting catches the light. But he is disgusted at the amount of related waste the can be found on the streets, in landfills, on film sets and construction sites. Now Hall has fashioned fantastical photographs for a series called Entanglement, which will be displayed at Telus World of Science from July 16 to Sept. 2, and which he hopes will get viewers questioning their relationship with plastic trash. “I feel like art that is harsh and combative doesn’t penetrate people,” Hall said. “You look at Edward Burtynsky’s work, which is images of disasters and terrible environments, basically, but they’re so beautiful and so you want to look at them. You’re invited in and you’re softened by the experience of seeing them and that, to me, was important with this.” But he also hopes viewers will feel an emotional response to Entanglement’s images, which include a couple and a baby snuggled in a nest of plastic trash. Hall conceived an ethnographic-style photo series that would appear to document a culture of proud people, say a hundred years from now, who have never seen new plastic, stumble upon its remnants and begin to covet it as something special in their lives. He says when he described his conceit to others in a hyperbolic manner, some pointed out that future is not far removed from where we are now. “And then it made sense to me that it’s a comment on where we’re at now, not a comment necessarily on where we’re going,” Hall said. “You look at the way people treat their iPhones, or their new water bottles and their new yoga mats, we covet this stuff.”

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Photographer Michael J.P. Hall’s new exhibit Entanglement features images of discarded plastic.


FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

FRED

A23

EMAIL: yvrflee@hotmail.com TWITTER: @FredAboutTown

UNLEESHED

JACKED UP: Eva Markvoort spent her life with Cystic Fibrosis (CF), a genetic disease currently without a cure. Her friends Duncan Gillespie, Andrew Dalik and Graham Dalik organized Lawn Summer Nights event —which Markvoort was able to take part in the inaugural year — as a tribute to the 25-year-old’s vibrant energy and determination to raise awareness of CF. Markvoort passed away in 2010, but her legacy lives on with the annual Lawn Bowling benefit, which has spanned to Toronto, Victoria, Ottawa and London, ON. Forty stylish teams gathered at Granville Park Lawn Bowling Club for the fifth running. Since its inception, Lawn Summer Nights, sponsored by KPMG, has raised over $250,000. LATIN FIESTA: Members of Vancouver’s Latin American community gathered at the Roundhouse for the Inspirational Latin Awards, part of Latin America Week and Carnaval del Sol activities. Laura Cuñer (business); Mario Pochat (arts), Julien Phipps, Evelyn Cervera and Silvia Ortega (sport) and Trevor Hirsche (altruist, non-Latino Roots) were feted for their outstanding achievements and contributions in shaping B.C.’s economy and cultural development. HEAT IS ON: Vikram Vij fronted a culinary tour of South Asian Cuisine to kick off the third annual Indian Summer Festival. Festival founders Sirish Rao and Laura Byspalko greeted partygoers to Dr. Sun-Yat Sen Classical Chinese Garden to kick off the Indian cross-cultural celebration that combines food, music and thought leaders.

Inhouse sake specialist Miki Ellis served up sake spritzers at the newly reopened and relocated Miku Restaurant in the former Aqua Riva Granville Street space.

Lawn Summer Nights co-founder Duncan Gillespie has seen his CF fundraiser expand to four other cities across Canada (Toronto, Victoria, Ottawa and London).

West restaurant wine director Owen Knowlton released Owen, BC VQA Cabernet Franc, produced by B.C.’s Okanagan Crush Pad.

Sirish Rao and his wife, Laura Byspalko, created the cross-cultural Indian Summer Festival, a 10-day celebration of food, music and ideas.

Entrepreneur Francisco Javier Barajas and Latincouver executive director Paola Murillo hosted the Latin community’s best and brightest at the Inspirational Latin Awards.

All You Need is Lawn members Evan Allegretto, Dini Lusney and Evan Hall were among the stylish teams that came out in support of Lawn Summer Nights Cystic Fibrosis benefit.

U.S. Consul General Anne Callaghan welcomed guests, including her visiting mom, Jo Kervick, to celebrate her 87th birthday, at a Fourth of July party.

Portland’s Erick Lichte, Chor Leone’s incoming choir director, sang both anthems at the U.S. Consul General’s July Fourth party. Lichte and his wife, Ashley, move to the city this fall.


A24

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

GOT SPORTS? 604-738-1411 | sportsandrec@vancourier.com

Beatthebluesthe Wickenheiserway

SPORT SHORTS

HOCKEY STAR TO SPEAK AT UBC RUN FOR WOMEN EVENT MEGAN STEWART Staff writer

photo VCBFL

A young batter keeps his eye on the ball during a Vancouver Canadians Baseball Foundation League practice at Nat Bailey Stadium. Scan this page with the Layar app for more photos.

CANADIANS OPEN DOOR TO KIDS Nat Bailey Stadium, home of the Vancouver Canadians, is opening its doors to 300 boys and girls this summer. Playing under the banner of the Vancouver Canadians Baseball Foundation League (VCBFL) players aged six to 10 will receive free equipment, meals and transportation in order to learn a sport they might otherwise not be able to connect with. The VCBFL was founded last summer by the Vancouver Canadians Baseball Foundation and the Boys & Girls Club of South Coast B.C. The league is designed for families who cannot afford to put their children through organized sports. Each of the 300 players are given a glove, batting helmet and ball bag, hot dogs at the stadium after the game, and transportation to and from Nat Bailey if necessary. The program lasts for seven weeks, from July 9 to Labour Day, and includes six games for each of the 13 teams. The schedule was selected because it coincides with both summer vacation and a rash of away games for the Vancouver Canadians, which leaves Nat Bailey Stadium empty for more than half of the seven weeks. “These are kids who wouldn’t otherwise get a chance to play organized baseball,” VCBF chairman Jake Kerr said. “A lot of them don’t even understand that there are three bases when they first show up. We want them to learn how to play baseball and team sports and build confidence. It’s something nice for them to do in the summer and an opportunity to do something they normally wouldn’t get a chance to do.” Coaching roles are filled completely by volunteers, who include people connected to the Vancouver Canadians, employees of equipment suppliers and fans. Kerr also referred to the volunteers as mentors, and said that the league aims to teach players sportsmanship and “the kind of life values you hope kids would pick up.” — Drew McLachlan

A

fter the close of the 1998 Olympics, Canada’s national hockey team captain Hayley Wickenheiser suffered an emotional low. The runner-up letdown of a silver medal at the Nagano Games will never leave her. “To the day I die, I will never forget standing at the blue line during the medal ceremony,” she wrote in her 2010 memoir, Gold Medal Diary. “I was completely crushed.” One in four women will experience depression in her lifetime. Five per cent will live with depression for more than a year while less than two per cent will be depressed for a month or more at a time. Women are three times more likely than men to suffer from depression. Wickenheiser was never diagnosed with clinical depression, but her mood fell to new depths. She had a way of coping. “No matter how bad things are, I always feel better after a workout,” said Wickenheiser, who won gold at three consecutive Winter Olympics following Nagano. Exercise that raises your heart rate for at least 25 minutes is proven to effect brain chemistry as well as antidepressants and talk therapy. Research also shows running increases levels of serotonin, a mood-elevating hormone. On July 13, Wickenheiser will be in Vancouver for the second annual Run for Women, a Canadian race series for girls and women that benefits women’s mental health programs through the B.C. Women’s Hospital Foundation. The five- and 10-kilometre courses begin after Wickenheiser speaks to the crowd at 8 a.m. at UBC’s Thunderbird Stadium. There is also a one-km course for girls. Visit runforwomen.ca for more info. Wickenheiser, 34, who has been cleaning up her hometown of Calgary

submitted photo

Hayley Wickenheiser, Canada’s national women’s hockey team captain, will speak at the Run for Women, July 13 at UBC. Scan this page with the Layar app for a link to the event website. following the floods, spoke to the Courier last week from the Okanagan after finishing a national team training camp in Penticton. For the complete interview, visit vancourier.com/sports Question: Do you include running in your own exercise regime? Answer: I do running, biking, all sorts of stuff — usually track work, mostly interval work. We don’t do a lot of long distances with hockey. It’s mostly sprints. Q: How have you been helping clean up after the flood in Calgary? A: A big group of friends helped organize a clean-up crew and we have gone to seven or eight homes and completely gutted them and helped people get rid of the debris. The magnitude, it was indiscriminatory. Rich, poor... It didn’t mater. The amount of water in some homes is six feet up the wall. The stories the locals would tell was of a tsunami-like wave coming through the neighbourhood. Q: Have you personally dealt with depression or been close to teammates who have? A: For sure. I don’t know if I’d say clinical depression, but I can tell you, after losing the Olympics in ‘98, I went through a bit of an Olympic depression for about a year. It’s a huge letdown when you want something so bad and it doesn’t happen. We need to find ways to cope. For me, I always feel bet-

ter after a workout. Q: How do you feel after you work out? A: Clarity, more energized. Better about myself that I’ve been productive and done something that’s good for my own health. Q: How do you motivate yourself when you don’t feel like exercising? A: I always think about everybody else that’s working out when I’m not! The day that I am not doing something or skip a workout, someone else is doing it. I always want to think about it like that and also I have a desire to be the best athlete I can be. If you’re dedicating yourself everyday to try to get a little bit better or to work on your fitness or different parts of your athleticism or career to improve over time, it really adds up. It doesn’t all have to be done in one day. Q: You’re an Olympian — what about the rest of us? What would you tell us to stay motivated when we don’t feel like lacing up the sneakers? A: I think it’s exactly the same philosophy. Sometimes it really is about getting up, putting your shoes on and getting out the door. Even if you start and say, “I’m going to walk 10 minutes around the block,” it might turn into 20 or 30 and you might surprise yourself. I think that’s really a key factor: sometimes the hardest thing is just to get started. mstewart@vancourier.com twitter.com/MHStewart


FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

A25

sports&recreation

photos Dan Toulgoet

CORNER GASTOWN: The Gastown Grand Prix turned 40 this year and shows no sign of slowing down. The July 10 bike race, hosted for the second time by local tech company

Global Relay, lived up to its name this year by offering the largest purse of any North American criterium with $45,000 in prize money. Last year’s champion, San Diego-based rider Ken Hanson (above, right), won the men’s division after a tight sprint to the finish line with a time of 1:17:47.60 over 50 laps of the 1.2-kilometre circuit course. Leah Kirchmann of Winnipeg won the women’s title with a time of 0:52:40.40 over 30 laps of the same circuit, which loops west on Water Street, back down the hairpin turn onto Cordova and around past the Gassy Jack statue on Carrall. Scan this page with the Layar app or visit vancourier.com to see more photos and video from the race.

Join a festival of bike fun withVelopalooza WHEEL WORLD with Kay Cahill

I

t’s summer, and that means all kinds of fun for Vancouver cyclists. Daily commutes under sunny skies, perfect weather for long weekend road rides, the refreshing cool of the forest trails in Stanley Park and Pacific Spirit Park in the heat of the day. It also means that the summer’s festival of bike fun is almost upon us: Velopalooza! So what is Velopalooza? It’s a communitydriven celebration of biking that was originally inspired by Portland’s Pedalpalooza. The goal is simple: promote fun bike rides

and events in Vancouver and its surrounds. A quick look back at past Velopaloozas is ample demonstration of how the cycling community has taken this concept to heart. The first two years of the festival offered events that included food-themed rides, costume rides, kid-friendly rides, historic tours, and even a chicken coop route. This year’s festival runs from July 27th to August 11th. So what’s on the calendar for 2013? Well, it’s looking pretty rocking at this point even though not all events are listed yet. On the 27th and the 28th, there’s the opportunity to join the wonderful Slow Food Cycle Tours in the Fraser Valley. On Aug. 1, you can sign up for a City Lights at Night Ride. If you have sufficient energy, the next day there’s a Bike Art Crafternoon (the Space Babe edition, no less) and a Bike Art Night ride in the evening.

On Aug. 3, there’s my personal favourite: a 19 and over brewery tour (just be careful how much you imbibe before getting back on the bike). For those looking for a little more of a leg stretch the Vancouver Bicycle Club (whom I highly recommend as a friendly and welcoming cycling group), invites newcomers on their Sunday Leisure Ride the following day. Through the following week there’s a gelato-tasting ride, a ride that celebrates moving stuff (and kids) on cargo bikes, trikes and trailers, and a variety of local rides. Not tempted by any of the above events? You’re also invited to submit your own rides at velopalooza.ca. Your ride can feature anything you’re passionate about: food, green spaces, local history, costumes or even raising awareness for a particular cause. All you need to do is come up with an idea, figure out where you’re starting, what route you’re going to take and how long it

will take to ride, and then post to the Velopalooza calendar. If you’ve never led a ride before, it’s actually easier than you might think. The most important things are to be welcoming, as flexible as you need to be, and willing to keep an eye on your group to ensure that no one gets left behind. I’ve been kicking around some ideas for rides that might be fun to add to the calendar. At the moment I’m leaning toward combining my love of bikes and libraries, and planning a tour of Vancouver Public Library branches by bike. What do you think? What themes would you like to see that aren’t already on the calendar? Send suggestions my way, or better yet, plan your own ride to celebrate cycling with fellow bikers this summer. Kay Cahill is a cyclist and librarian who believes bikes are for life, not just for commuting. Contact her at kay@sidecut.ca.

S U M M E R‘S Read the Courier for the latest “hot” topics to keep your family in the know!

COMING UP FOR JULY:

WED 3 FRI 5 WED 10 FRI 12 WED 17 FRI 19 WED 24 FRI 26 FRI 26

IN FULL SWING

HEALTHWISE takes you to the EPIC fair and to sleep without a care YOUR FAMILY explains how pets can be affected by loud fireworks SENIORS learn about the benefits of active aging, and connecting HOME & GARDEN shows plants can go to pot with an elegant flair HEALTHWISE opens up about healing gardens / taking long walks YOUR FAMILY see the value of science (and fun) for young minds SENIORS can visit their local neighborhood house - see what’s up HOME & GARDEN demonstrates how to freshen up the front porch CITY LIFE explores thrifty activity options to do the rest of summer

To advertise in these features, call your rep. at 604.738.1411


A26

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

A RI SK VE A RS BO I D UT E VI O U LL R AS

Riverside Living in Vancouver

Introducing Shoreline by Polygon – a rare collection of waterfront residences at Vancouver’s River District. Situated along the sunny banks of the Fraser River, this sophisticated community is just minutes from Metrotown, Richmond and downtown Vancouver. Everything you need is here and more is coming, including new parks, restaurants and an impressive town centre. Discover riverside living at Shoreline today.

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FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

A27

INTERESTED IN ADVERTISING IN TODAY’S HOMES? Contact Linda Garner:

604-738-1411 | lgarner@vancourier.com

Omicron acquires architecture firm GRANT + SINCLAIR ARCHITECTS FOUNDED 30 YEARS AGO EMMA CRAWFORD biv.com

C

onstruction and architecture company Omicron Canada Inc. has acquired Vancouver’s Grant + Sinclair Architects Ltd. for an undisclosed amount.

Grant + Sinclair was founded over 30 years ago by Paul Grant and Douglas Sinclair. The architecture firm has worked on a number of projects with an emphasis on sustainable designs incorporating natural ventilation and day lighting. “This is extremely exciting for all of us at Omicron as we continue to enhance our profile as an architectural leader in Western Canada, and we look forward to offering our growing capabilities to our clients throughout B.C. and Alberta,” said Omicron CEO Bill Tucker. “Paul [Grant] and Doug [Sinclair] bring with them an impressive body of work and a wealth of architectural ex-

HIGH-END HOME MARKET HEALTHY

The high-end residential real estate market in Vancouver is entering the second half of 2013 with “positive momentum,” according to new Sotheby’s International Realty Canada data. The city saw 1,239 sales of high-end properties — defined as homes listed at over $1 million — in the first half of this year. This is a 57 per cent increase over the second

This is extremely “ exciting for all of us

at Omicron as we continue to enhance our profile. — CEO Bill Tucker

pertise with special emphasis on education, institutional and custom residential commissions. “Of equal importance to us, however,

half of 2012, but a six per cent decline from the first six months of 2012. The biggest increase was seen in sales of homes with list prices over $2 million. Sales of residential properties between $2 million and $4 million increased by 78 per cent, and home sales over $4 million went up by almost 70 per cent. High-end home sales by type from January to June of

Marketing and Sales by Colliers International Residential Marketing. E.&O.E.

is that our values and standards of excellence are also strongly aligned.” Omicron is one of the largest integrated development services, design and construction firms in Western Canada, employing nearly 200 people. Grant added that the transition is expected to be seamless. “We have considerable experience working on institutional projects — on schools in particular — and we see many opportunities for our clients who will benefit from working with us at Omicron,” Grant said. ecrawford@biv.com twitter.com/EmmaCrawfordBIV

this year were: • condominiums: 131 units sold — an increase of 26 per cent over the second half of 2012; • attached homes: 102 units — an increase of 36 per cent; and •single family homes: 528 units — an increase of 56 per cent. — Emma Crawford


A28

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

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last month, more than 13 per cent less than the 5,617 new listings of June 2012. Both last month’s sales and listings are well below the 10-year average in June — sales are down more than 22 per cent and listings are down more than 11 per cent. Overall, there are 17,289 Greater Vancouver properties listed for sale on the MLS — a six per cent decrease from June 2012. The benchmark price for all residential properties, according to the MLS Home Price Index, is $601,900. skolenko@biv.com twitter.com/SeanKolenko

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Next Friday the Vancouver Courier continues ourembark series Vancouver Special– On January 18th the Vancouver Courier will upon an ambitious year-long journey through twenty-seven neighbourhoods Vancouver Special—an ambitious year-long journey through that make up the city of neighbourhoods Vancouver. We willthat report on the character the changing face forty-eight make up the city ofand Vancouver. ofOver eachtwelve neighbourhood, what report makes it and how it is responding to the months we’ll onunique the character and the changing challenges of being part of our rapidly changing city. Next Friday we visit face of each, what makes them unique and how they are responding the End, to advertise in part this special section call 604-738-1411. to West the challenges of being of a rapidly changing city.


FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

S W IE 3TH V E 1 R P ULY R J O F AY, S D N E UR P O AT S

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FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

A31


A32

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

Your Community

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Book your ad ONLINE:

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LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICES All advertising published in this newspaper is accepted on the premise that the merchandise and services offered are accurately described and willingly sold to buyers at the advertised prices. Advertisers are aware of these conditions. Advertising that does not conform to these standards or that is deceptive or misleading, is never knowingly accepted. If any reader encounters non-compliance with these standards we ask that you inform the Publisher of this newspaper and The Advertising Standards Council of B.C. OMISSION AND ERROR: The publishers do not guarantee the insertion of a particular advertisement on a specified date, or at all, although every effort will be made to meet the wishes of the advertisers. Further, the publishers do not accept liability for any loss or damage caused by an error or inaccuracy in the printing of an advertisement beyond the amount paid for the space actually occupied by the portion of the advertisement in which the error occurred. Any corrections or changes will be made in the next available issue. The Vancouver Courier will be responsible for only one incorrect insertion with liability limited to that portion of the advertisement affected by the error. Request for adjustments or corrections on charges must be made within 30 days of the ad’s expiration.

For best results please check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Refunds made only after 7 business days notice!

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS Notice is Hereby Given that Creditors and others, having claims against the Estate of Lenami Dafne Godinez Avila, also known as Lenami Godinez Avila and Lenami Godinez, formerly of 311 − 1555 Graveley St., Vancouver, BC, V5L 3A5, are hereby notified that particulars of their claims should be sent to the Administrator, David Barrie, of the same ad− dress, on or before August 16, 2013, after which date the estate’s assets will be distributed, having regard only to the claims that have been received.

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS ASBESTOS CLEANSE NEEDED. Research is needed to find a way to cleanse asbestos fibres from the inner human body-This would prevent Asbestos related diseases. SENIOR’S TRANSPORT - Lady full size car will take you to shop & appts! Marie 604-328-1711

FOUND LOST KEYS REWARD house & car keys with 2 remotes Monday aft 2:45 PM 1300 Blk West 4th. 604-566-3207

LOST LOST Red Wallet on Fri July 5th, approx 11am, East Blvd/41st, will identify, 604266-8664

PSYCHICS TRUE PSYCHICS For Answers, CALL NOW 24/7 Toll FREE 1-877-342-3032 Mobile: #4486 www.truepsychics.ca

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place ads online @

classifieds. vancourier.com OBITUARIES

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS

Re: The Estate Of WILLIAM CHARLES THORBURN, Deceased NOTICE is hereby given that Creditors and others having claims against the Estate of William Charles Thorburn, late of 5926 Earles Street, Vancouver, BC, who died on October 26, 2012 are hereby required to send them to the undersigned Executor c/o 700 - 401 West Georgia Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6B 5A1, on or before August 24, 2013 after which date the Executor will distribute the said Estate among the parties entitled thereto, having regard to the claims of which he has notice. David William Thorburn Executor

By:Richards Buell Sutton LLP

Attention: Patrick (Rick) Montens

TRUTH IN ''EMPLOYMENT'' ADVERTISING Glacier Media Group makes every effort to ensure you are responding to a reputable and legitimate job opportunity. If you suspect that an ad to which you have responded is misleading, here are some hints to remember. Legitimate employers do not ask for money as part of the application process; do not send money; do not give any credit card information; or call a 900 number in order to respond to an employment ad. Job opportunity ads are salary based and do not require an investment. If you have responded to an ad which you believe to be misleading please call the Better Business Bureau at 604-682-2711, Monday to Friday, 9am - 3pm or email inquiries@bbbvan.org and they will investigate.

Email: classifieds@van.net

To: Sandra Raquel Santana also known as Sandra Raquel Allison TAKE NOTICE THAT on May 10, 2013 an order was Made for service on you of a notice of family claim issued from the Vancouver Registry of the Supreme Court of British Columbia in family law case number E131398 by way of this advertisement. In the family law case, the claimant claims the following relief against you: divorce. You must file a response to family claim within 21 number of days after the date of the publication of this notice failing which further proceedings may be taken against you without notice to you. You may obtain a copy of the notice of family claim and the order for service by advertisement from the Vancouver Registry at 800 Smithe St., Vancouver, British Columbia.

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UBC Dentistry is screening patients 10 years of age and older who require #$$ &!('*) +,)).%-$"

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(Full orthodontic treatment cost: $4200)

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For information, visit www.dentistry.ubc.ca Graduate Orthodontics Program

or email gradorthoclinic@dentistry.ubc.ca

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LEGAL NOTICE OF INTENT

RE: LIQUOR CONTROL AND LICENSING ACT

PATRON PARTICIPATING ENTERTAINMENT FOR FOOD PRIMARY LICENCE

An application has been received by the Liquor Control and Licensing Branch, from Pink Pearl Restaurant (Vancouver) Ltd., operating the Pink Pearl Chinese Seafood Restaurant, located at 1132 Hastings St. E, to allow for patron participating entertainment ending at 12:00 midnight daily. Residents and owners of businesses located within a 1/2 mile (0.8km) radius of the proposed site may comment on this proposal by

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THE GENERAL MANAGER C/O Case Manager LIQUOR CONTROL AND LICENSING BRANCH PO BOX 9292 Victoria, BC V8W 9J8 OR

2) By email:

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To arrange a screening appointment: Call between 8:30 am – 4 pm (Monday to Friday) 604-822-4991

1) Writing to:

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Michael John Allison #201-7337 MacPherson Avenue,Burnaby, BC V5J 0A9

SPROTTSHAW.COM

EDUCATION

EMPLOYMENT

LEGAL/PUBLIC NOTICES

COMMUNITY SUPPORT WORKER

Phone Hours: Mon to Fri 8 am to 5 pm Office Hours: 9 am to 5 pm

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lclb.lclb@gov.bc.ca

To ensure the consideration of your views, your comments, name and address must be received on or before August 5th, 2013. Please note that your comments may be made available to the applicant or local government officials where disclosure is necessary to administer the licensing process.

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FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

EMPLOYMENT

PETS

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GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

EXPERIENCED FLOOD TECH Job Requirements: − Must be willing to do on−call work − A valid BC Driver’s License − Experience in the restoration industry We offer competitive wages and benefits! For inquiries please send an email with resume. jobs@walshrestoration.ca walshrestoration.ca

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BUSINESS SERVICES

REAL ESTATE

LOANS

APARTMENT/CONDOS FOR SALE &//4 (=E) "64=5. %89 = @/)A:?/.

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INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES , .I$H3 \H)13#I1HF BIH)841D$ :VV#I3E)13'

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PERSONALS

###(3*+)3/%*(,)GERMAN SHEPHERD X Lab pups, 8wks old, 1st shots, $300 each, 604-657-2072

"0%1 !/%,1*+ 2$/%*& . 4)'*

MARKETPLACE APPLIANCES WHITE ELECTRIC Stove, self clean, very good cond almost new $300. 604-322-1377

GOLDEN RETRIEVER pups CKC reg, vet a, ch parents, health tested. (604)794-3786 PLEASE HELP! Foster & Adoptive homes urgently need for homeless dogs. 604-535-2188

BUSINESS SERVICES CATERING

BURIAL PLOTS Cementry Plot in Ocean View, can take 1 coffin or 2 urns, $9K obo,604-465-9572

WANTED

BUYING ANTIQUES & VINTAGE COLLECTIBLES, WW1 / WW2 ITEMS Sterling flat− ware, estate jewelry , old signs .. etc .. $ Cash Paid $ CALL: 604-401-3553 Old Books Wanted also: Photos Postcards, Letters, Paintings.no text books, encyclopedia. I pay cash. 604737-0530

GARAGE SALE

Empty your Garage Fill Your Wallet

M A K E I T A S U CC E S S ! Call 604-630-3300

PHOENIX MASSAGE CTR. Now Open - New High Qlty

International Girls Always Fresh! Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Punjabi,Thai,Caucasian Great Massage Now Hiring. 10am-Midnight every day.

TUTORING SERVICES ´ Computer Lessons ´ For Beginners & Revision Email, Internet, Digital Photo $30/hour OR $199 for 8 hrs ´ Call Sol 604-266-2414´

Amber Lodge

FOOD SERVICE CONTRACT Native Education College requires catering company to run a quality concession in a K3 kitchen. Retain all food sales. We provide facility, maintenance and event catering opportunity. Ask for details. Proposals due July 20. info@necvancouver.org necvancouver.org

2263 Kingsway at Nanaimo St.Van 604.294.8038 .

604-731-2714

You Want It We’ve Got It Find What You’re Looking for in the Classifieds.

2137 East 11th

SMALL PEACEFUL FARM set up for horses right beside South Langley riding trail. Bright & comfortable older 2 bd home, f/p, barn, riding rings, pastures. $849,900. 604-323-4788. PropertyGuys.com id 76788

PROPERTY FOR SALE

WATER VIEW LOT - PRICED BELOW ASSESSED VALUE! Walk to all lower Gibsons has to offer! Call Shauna or visit www.shaunagold.com for details. (604) 218−2077. $180,000

RECREATIONAL PROPERTY

HOUSES FOR SALE

GALIANO EXECUTIVE Home & Cabin on priv beach, completely furn’d, many extras, ready to move in. Reduced to $849,000! Global Force Realty. 604-802-8711 www.yourlinktorealestate.ca

HATZIC LAKE 1hr drive from Vanc. 2 vacant lots, 1 lakefront $65K/both 604-240-5400 uSELLaHOME.com id5588

classifieds.vancourier.com

.946;12 785: 7>?$3@>(& /$+( -=?)

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$!,) /%(- "!*+ .+)&'*+)# !$&* +#%($* )%,-($$"' /-1! -! &.',"--)#

SUN JUL 21 10-3

Croation Cultural Center 3250 Commercial Drive 604-980-3159 Adm: $5

HUGE GARAGE SALE Sunday 10-3 pm Over 30 vendors. All money raised goes to families who have children with cancer. Household items, clothes, plants & lots more!! Vancouver Community College (VCC) parking lot, 1100 block Great Northern Way (6th Avenue) 2 blocks west of Clark Drive. Come out and support the BC Childhood Cancer Parent’s Association. www.bcccpa.org

One Call Does It All

604-630-3300

APARTMENTS/ CONDOS FOR RENT KERRISDALE, 1 BR $1000, Now/Aug 1, h/w flrs, updated, incl heat & h/w, 1 yr lease, ref’s, np/ns, 778-772-7011

1 BR well kept quiet bldg, cls to downtown Kerrisdale, $1000 incls hw/heat, ns, np, ref’s req’d, min 1 yr lease, avail Now,604-218-8208

SUITES FOR RENT 1br+den, glvl ste, Victoria & Prestwick Dr, ns/np, $850mo w/hdro Aug 1 604-325-7991 2 BDRM new bsmt ste, ldry, incl, utils incl, Boundary & 22nd. near transit, Avail immed $1,100 ns, small dog ok 604-433-7153 3 BR bsmt, kitch, bath, $1200 incl util/cbl/net, ns/np, no drinkg or drugs, coin wd. Call 604-879-4325

HOUSES FOR RENT 2 BR large, new home, Victoria / 62nd, no pets, n/s, $1200. Avail now, Call Sam 778-551-2487

HAZTIC LAKE Swans Point. 1hr/Vanc. incl. lot & 5th wheel, ski/fish $134,500 604-209-8650 uSELLaHOME.com id5491

Need help with your Home Renovation?

CULTUS LK gardener’s dream 1160sf 2br 1.5ba rancher, a/c 55+ $63K. 604-858-9301. uSELLaHOME.com id5400 GUILDFORD 199SF 3br, 2ba w/bment suite on huge 8640 sf lot, $489,000 604-613-1553 uSellaHome.com id5608

Find it in the Classifieds!

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1 BR’s - Kerrisdale, great location! Close to shops, transit & schools. $1010-$1165 Available Now. 604-677-3205 www.lougheedproperties.com

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on Deluxe 20th Century Junque!

RENTALS

DUPLEXES FOR SALE

LANGLEY reno’d sxs duplex +1/2 ac. lot, rental inc. $2,300 $489,900 604-807-6565 uSELLaHOME.com id4513

175 tables of Bargains

MOVING SALE

Furniture, appls, bdrm ste’s & assorted tools, etc.

97'< 3*1.> =687! @ !"32 -44808, 28:0 6 00?= &*59 31.> +'31 '<( -*<.

KC$5&<<1$-B@ H3&CBL1<2< HCBI121$-B@ H&63-14?&< G-!&B2B!@& KC161-J

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STEVESTON VERY lg 1284 sf 2br 2ba top floor condo, mtn views $455k 604-275-7986 uSELLaHOME.com id5376

21ST CENTURY FLEA MARKET

VANCOUVER

Sat/Sun July 13, & 14 10-4

APARTMENTS / CONDOS-FOR SALE

HEALTH & BEAUTY

9><;:99;9>=>

SRY/WHITE ROCK partial ocean view, 920sf. 2b, den, 2ba quiet condo, kids, pets ok. $309,000 778-294-2275 uSELLaHOME.com id5575

**RELIEVE ROAD RAGE** 604-739-3998 GENTLEMEN! Attractive, discreet European lady is available for company. 604-451-0175

HOUSES FOR SALE

Oak & West 14th 1 BR’s ( Now & Aug 1) 2BR’s (Aug 1) Well maintained building close to all amenities and VGH. Some pets ok.

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EDUCATION

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ABBY TOP flr 762sf 1 br condo, in-ste, laundry, 45+, Mt. Baker view. $85,000 778-822-7387 uSELLaHOME.com id5553

6[SMS0SMAASS 9 1)7#%8#@$IHFF"8M8#C CATS & KITTENS FOR ADOPTION ! 604-724-7652

GARAGE SALES

ABBY 2BR 963sf condo. top fl, in-suite laundry. +55 building $121,500 604-309-3947 uSELLaHOME.com id4513

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LANGARA GARDENS

#101 - 621 W. 57th Ave, Van

Spacious 1, 2 & 3 BR Rental Apartments & Townhouses. Heat, hot water & lrg storage locker included. Many units have in-suite l a u n d r y a n d l r g patios/balconies with gorgeous views. Tasteful gardens, swimming pools, hot tub, gym, laundry, gated parking, plus shops & services. Near Oakridge Centre, Canada Line stations, Langara College, Churchill High School & more. Sorry no pets.

www.langaragardens.com

Call 604-327-1178

info@langaragardens.com Managed by Dodwell Strata Management Ltd.

3BR/1.5BA $1,550 Upstrs;nr Fraser & 49;Immed NS/ NP;50%util 604−322−6356

FARMS/ ACREAGES

LANGLEY BUILD your view home, secluded 5 acre ppty. $630,000 604-825-3966 uSELLaHOME.com id4513

HOMESTAY HOST FAMILY wanted. Please contact us at 604-688-1811 or email: globalstudyedu@gmail.com

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PLACE YOUR GARAGE SALE ADS 24/7 Place your ad online

classifieds.vancourier.com


THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

CALL THE EXPERTS

HOME SERVICES

RENOVATIONS & CUSTOM HOMES Renovations & Custom Homes www.rjrrenovator.com www.rjrconstruction.ca

604.254.1760

CONCRETE

FENCING

CONCRETE SPECIALIST Sidewalk, Driveway, Patio Exposed Aggregate, Remove & Replacing Reasonable Rates. 35 yrs experience For free est. Call Mario

604-253-0049

604-716-8528

APPLIANCE REPAIRS

CARPENTRY

VAN APPLIANCE SERVICES Repair home appl. Low rate guar. Permit/Lic. Tom 604323-8063 "&%!( #$'$

#(&%" 8 #($*'#" ;9,; "+:>-+<455= "076 !:<7

3.,)2/1.

A & Wes Tile top European quality Tile install custom bath-kitch 604-657-0343 AandWesTile.com

classifieds.vancourier.com

APPLIANCE REPAIRS

ACCURATE APPLIANCE REPAIR IN-HOME SERVICE BY LOCAL COMPANY

We repair all national brands of appliances and refrigerators CERTIFIED REFRIGERATION

201-2250 Triumph St., Van.

CERAMIC TILING STONE & TILE SETTING, embellished tile decorating. Call Steve 604-888-1285

CERAMIC TILING

604-255-0043

DEMOLITION

Excavating - Drain Tile Old garage, carport, house, pool, repair main water line, break concrete & removal. Licensed - Insured - WCB

HOME SERVICES

GAS & ELECTRIC

CLEANING CLEANING SERVICE. Reas rates, specializing in homes. Guar work. Refs. 604-715-4706 ENVIRO MAID - Insured and Bonded. Residential. Exc refs. Free est. $25/hr.604-685-1344 enviromaid.net WHITE ROSE Window Cleaning Inside& out. Gutters cleared & cleaned too! 604-274-0285

CONCRETE A 1 Retaining Walls, Foundation, Stairs, Driveway, Patio, Sidewalk. Any concrete work. Est 1977. Basile 604-617-5813 A Concrete Specialist sidewalks, bsmts, paving stones, patios. Santino 778-892-5559 L & L CONCRETE, All types: Stamped, Repairs, Pressure washing, sealing 778-882-0098

FLOORING

HENRY’S

HARDWOOD FLOOR SERVICES

DEMOLITION

Place your ad online: classifieds.nsnews.com

KB METAL PRODUCTS LTD. Fence & Gates : Chain Link & Aluminum Ornamental. ´Free Ests: 604-619-8434

Sanding & Refinishing Installation Quality Workmanship Free Estimates Fully Licensed & Insured

604-771-8885

ANYTHING IN WOOD Hardwood floors, installs, refinishing. Non-toxic finishes. 604-782-8275 CELTIC Hardwood Floors Install & Refinish Qlty work. Reas Rates. 604-293-0057

DRAINAGE RNC DRAINAGE

~Augering~Water & Sewer line repair & replacement ~Sumps~Drain Tile~Concrete Work~Foundation~Excavation ~Retaining Walls~Site restored Call Ron 778-227-7316 or 604-568-3791

Golden Hardwood & Laminate & Tiles. Prof install, refinishing, sanding & repairs. 778-858-7263

Craig Can’t Do That. Why? 7A=@?CE 9C66CA@ You know the sellers and so do we. No scams. No concerns. XVM OPWQ TIJNSRJTRK 0FG36 .=)CA@ You know your community and you can trust the folks you know.

$69 1=)@ )F= 3 DA>(? 3(E F(6>(C 3E >( 5 *3A8C? =(?>6 @F6E+/

Craig can’t do that!

* if you reduce the cost of your item by 10% each month. Private party only.

You get what you need – guaranteed! Book today! 7A=@?CE 2C(EFA@- 0FG36 .=)CA@

Book online now!

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LAWN & GARDEN

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Repairs & Staining Installation Free Estimates

www.centuryhardwood.com

GLASS/MIRRORS "&%!( #$'$

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VINCE’S MAGIC Drywalling & textured ceiling repairs. Complete drywall & taping. 604-307-2295

Wayne The Drywaller

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A LIC’D.ELECTRICIAN #30582 Rewiring & Reno, Appliance/Plumbing. Rotor Rooter Hydro Pressure Jetting Service, 778-998-9026 or 604-255-9026 Free Est/24/7 A. LIC. ELECTRICIAN #19807 Semi-retired wants small jobs only. 604-689-1747, pgr 604686-2319 ALL YOUR electrical & reno needs. Lic’d electrician #37940. Insured, bonded & WCB. Free est Reasonable rates 604-842-5276 LIC. ELECTRICIAN bf#37309 Commercial & residential renos & small jobs. 778-322-0934 Your Electrician $29 service call. insured. Lic# 89402. Fast same day service guar’d. We love small jobs. 604-568-1899

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# 1 BACKHOES, BOBCATS, EXCAVATORS & DUMP TRUCKS Drainage, Paving, landscaping, stump / rock / cement / oil tank & demos, dirt removal, paver stones, Jackhammer, Water / sewer line / sumps. Slinger avail. 24 hrs. Call 341-4446 or 254-6865 Concrete driveway, drainage, sidewlk, pavers, excavation, retaining walls, landscape, backhoe & bobcat services 604-833-2103 EXCAVATING - DRAIN TILE Demolitions. Fully insured WCB 604-716-8528

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Lic & Ins

1 to 3 movers from $40 PROF MOVING SINCE 2006

Local & long distance piano Packing loading containers

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Century Hardwood Floors 604-376-7224

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MASONRY

small repairs welcome. Insured, WCB, Licensed. 604-318-4390

MASONRY and REPAIRS

lStone Walls lBricks lChimneys lSlate lFireplaces lPavers lLandscaping lConcrete George l 778-998-3689

aaronrconstruction.com

MOVING HANDYMAN reno, kitchen, bath, plumbing, countertop, flooring, painting, etc. Mic, 604-725-3127

LANDSCAPING

BOBCAT Services - Leveling Grading, Dump Trailer, Topsoil, Gravel, fill removal. 604-356-2546

PAINTING/ WALLPAPER

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STORMWORKS OIL Tank Removal. Certified, Insured, Reas. Rates. A+BBB. 604-724-3670

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Painting & yard clean-up. 24/7 days. Call 604-565-6110

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$0++ 9):5 &38-%1(8 30% OFF all painting. Goodwood Painting Services. 20 yrs exp. 604-723-1643 Dusko Painting, Int/Ext. Com /Res. Drywall repair. Free est. 604-417-5917, 604-258-7300

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FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

HOME SERVICES PAINTING/ WALLPAPER

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Call Ken 604-716-7468 POWER WASHING GUTTER & WINDOW CLEANING Prompt Professional Service 30 years experience

Simon 604-230-0627

RENOS & HOME IMPROVEMENT

+$ #$' &$$ ")%.. - ,(*!

PAUL’S PAINTING • Painting • All wood, stucco & drywall repairs

778-865-0370

FAIRWAY PAINTING is fully insured, with free est, 20 yrs. Call for specials 604-729-1234

POINT GREY PAINTING

Int/Ext - Quality Guaranteed WCB Free Est Insured

Summer Promo 25% off until Aug.31st !

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RONALDO PAINTING (1981) Master Painter, WCB, Insured, Free estimate. 778-881-6478 ´STAFFORD & SON´ Interior/Exterior. Top quality work. Reas. rates. BBB, 604-221-4900

PATIOS

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ASPHALT PAVING

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Call 604-618-2949

METRO BLACKTOP CO. LTD Custom work for Driveways & new lane Aprons. Repairs/resurfacing. Gino 604-657-9936

PLUMBING

ROOFING

RUBBISH REMOVAL

COLLECTIBLES & CLASSIC CARS

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AMBLESIDE ROOFING All types - Reroofs & Repairs Insured/WCB 778-288-8357

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A-1 CABINETS, suites, granite, bathrms, c-top, tiles, flooring, paint, blinds. Bob 604-366-7042

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Canam Roofing 778-881-1417 Res. roofing, new, re-roofing & repairs. Peace of mind warranty. www.canamroofing.ca ´MCNABB ROOFING´ ALL TYPES OF ROOFING 40 yrs exp. Call 604-839-7881 MCR Mastercraft Roofing Right the 1st time! Repairs, reroof-ing, garage, decks. Hart 322-5517

PGP ROOFING

All types Res/Comm Quality Guaranteed! WCB Free Est Insured Summer Promo 25% off until Aug 31st!

604-725-0908

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1967 mustangs originals convert, GTA & coupe, retired $30 to 40K damonaghan@gmail.com

1998 BMW Convertible 328i Auto 162,000kms Black $7800 MJ Auto Wholesale.com Dealer #30332 604 466 6007

DOMESTIC CARS

2002 VW Jetta ‘GLS’ local 4cyl & 5sp S/roof; 109Kms! 1 yr Warr, clean, local; NO Accid, $7,450. Lease or Buy? Auto Depot NV 604-727-3111 D# 10578

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2006 CHEV COBALT LT, White. 69k, alloys, power group, $5995. Downtown,nissan.ca 604-1 (604)257-8900

EASTSIDE RUBBISH REMOVAL Best Rate. 12 years Straight! Friendly & cheap. 604-266-4444 WESTSIDE RUBBISH REMOVAL Household Junk Specialist! Friendly & cheap. 604-266-4444

2008 CHEV Aveo 4cyl Auto 64,000kms Silver $6200 MJ Auto Wholesale .com Dealer #30332 604 466 6007

2000 Volvo S70 sedan! Spotless $3880. 5 import cars $5000. w/warr d10578 AUTO DEPOT 604-727-3111

2003 PASSAT Wagon ‘GLS’ 4-cyl 5-spd, local VW Serviced! $6880. 1yr Warr, lthr & roof rack! D10578 604-7273111 Auto Depot

2001 SUBARU AWD Outback LTD Wagon, lthr, dual sunroofs; alloys; 1yr Warr, $7850. Lux/#10578. 604-727-3111 Auto Depot, NVan.

2004 Mazda 3 GT manual, 173,000 km, $7,900. D#303332

2001 VW Golf 2 door 4cyl manual Silver $4800 MJ Auto Wholesale.com Dealer #30332 604 466 6007

2006 MINI COOPER, grey, 58k, loaded, $16,988.. Downtown,nissan.ca 604-1 (604)257-8900

MJAutowholesale.com 604-466-6007

bradsjunkremoval.com l95% Recycle Rate lNo Landfills EVER

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2008 FORD Edge Limited AWD local; V6; 50kms 1yr Warr incl $20,888 Pano-roof; lux Lease/Buy? #10578 Auto Depot 604-727-3111 1397 Welch NVan

.

BULLDOG DISPOSAL CO Home & Yard Clean Ups Residential/Commercial No Job Too Small Free Estimates - 7 Days/Wk

Call Tony 604-834-2597 www.bulldogdisposal.ca

2008 Pontiac G5 coupe 4cyl Auto 114,000kms White $7300 MJ Auto Wholesale.com Dealer #30332 604 466 6007

2002 Ford Mustang Convertible 6cyl Auto Silver $4900 MJ Auto Wholesale.com Dealer #30332 604 466 6007

2006 SMART “DIESEL” auto 74MPG or 3.8L per 100kms! $6950. with 1-yr warr incl! Sale D10578 604-727-3111 Auto Depot, NVan.

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GARAGE SALE

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MOTORCYCLES

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2002 Hyundai Santa Fe 4cyl man 131,000km, brown $5200 D #30332 MJ Auto Wholesale.com 604 466 6007

HOT SPOT FOR SALE

2006 Honda SilverWing 600cc auto, intown OR Hi-way. ABS & elec start! $5555 D10578 AUTO DEPOT 604-727-3111

2007 Toyota Yaris sedan 4cyl & 5sp front wheel & Qlty $5880 w/Warr Local NO Accid D10578

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wInterior /Exterior wNew Construction/ Renovations/Additons, Drywall wPlumbing Electrical wFoundations /Framing wFlooring wLic. & Insured wFree Estimates. Call 604-220-7422

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2011 LEXUS IS350c V6 NAVI, cnvrtbl lease/Buy? $43,500 Bal 6yr 110km. Warr D10578 AutoDepot 604-727-3111

ADS cont. on next page

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A36

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

&5)7/5)7

AUTOMOTIVE SPORTS UTILITIES & 4X4S

SPORTS UTILITIES & 4X4S

TRUCKS & VANS

SCRAP CAR REMOVAL

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1990 FORD F-150 Short-box 4x4 manual; New wheels & tires; Canopy 1-yr Warr incl ! $3880. A/Cared! #10578 Auto Depot 604-727-3111

2006 DODGE Caravan Cargo, 70k, shelves, ladder rack, $9900 Downtown,nissan.ca 604-1 (604)257-8900

2009 TOYOTA VENZA AWD JBL & NAVI pkg! Spotless in/out! Lease or Buy? Sale $22,888. Trade-up & D10578 604-727-3111 Auto Depot

AUTO FINANCING

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>8 /5 '"55 $35:1%

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TRUCKS & VANS

BOATS Aluminum Boat wanted 10, 12 or 14 ft, with or without motor or trailer. Will pay $. 604-319-5720

2002 Rav4 AWD 4cyl Auto 135,000kms Silver $8800 MJ Auto Wholesale.com Dealer #30332 604 466 6007

RVS/CAMPERS/ TRAILERS

1993 VW Euro Camper Van “Weekender” raised roof, auto, alloys, 1yr warr Sale $8750. D10578 NVan Auto Depot 604-727-3111

2005 FORD Escape XLT 4x4 V6; 1-yr warr, auto, 5-pass; Sale $6450. Safe/reliable! 604-727-3111 Auto Depot D#10578 2006 Dodge Durango (SUV), 4x4, leather, s/r, DVD, V8, 161K, no acc. $7800. 604-888-9799

*?? 0;+D!?;E D:!?3>; 7F >$H !4=.G;+;:ED0; I$GG$:<H $:> E$5;<H D:E.;!<D4: ID<+ &'(' G;.4G<@ $DG !4:>D<D4:D:-@ .4I;G -G43.@ $3<4=$<D!@ $:<D?4!B "G$B;E@ !G3DE; !4:<G4?@ $=A5= E<;G;4@ <D?< E<;;GD:-@ !> .?$H;G@ 6,6% /!H?,

1979 FORD M/H, 23 ft, cozy, bunk beds, fully equipped, low k’s, $4,450. 778-737-3890 2001 YUKON “XL” 7-pass 4x4, small V8, Tow & Go! lthr 1-owner! $5450. inc 1Yr Warr All options! Auto Depot, 604727-3111

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2009 Ford Escape XLT 4cyl & 5sp Front Wheel Drive! $11,888. Lo-kms! D10578 NVan AUTO DEPOT 604-727-3111

(#!= '13:""/-7 <)*)&1)9 '*0"$ A) C5C8 ?A2 ,4 +A)B60% BAB*- ;*1$ #>4%,,4 D #!. '13:""/-7 <)*)&1)9 '*0"$ A) C5C8 ?A2 ,4 +A)B60% BAB*- ;*1$ #>>%@>45

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2002 F-150 Ford Super Cab 4x4 “XTR”, 1 yr warr, $6,880 #10578 604-727-3111 Auto Depot, 1397 Welch NVan.

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K.I.S.S.

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2011 PATHFINDER AWD

2007 ACURA MDX

2006 MERCEDES BENZ ML 350

2012 CHYSLER 200 LIMITED

2012 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN

60,000kms, One Owner, MCL Car, Supercharged! Stk#846 7 Pass, 56,000kms. Stk#357

Local, Fully Loaded, Navi, Rear DVD! Stk#313

2013 FORD ESCAPE ALL WHEEL Loaded, Leather, Roof, Navi, Black on Black. Stk#404

Sundays 12- 5

Local, Black on Black, Loaded with Navi. Stk#371

Stow n’ Go SXT, Loaded, Entertainment System, Mags, Power Seat. Stk#433

2011 ALTIMA COUPE

Leather, Loaded, 25,000kms, Black on Black. Stk#123

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2013 TOYOTA SIENNA


dashboard

FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

A37

INTERESTED IN ADVERTISING IN DASHBOARD? Contact Janis Dalgleish:

604-738-1411 | jdalgleish@vancourier.com

LexusflexesmuscleswithnextgenLS TOYOTA’S LUXURY BRAND REMAINS AN INDUSTRY STANDARD BEARER

I

n 1989, Toyota decided to enter the luxury car market in a significant way. They did so by creating the Lexus brand that became the standard by which all other luxury brands were measured. Their first model introduced was the LS and this class-leading full-size sedan has continued being the range’s flagship ever since. I still remember driving one of the first Lexus LS to hit the market. I was shocked at how well the car performed against some of the established models in the market place. The car was so quiet and refined that it felt like it was riding on air. Lexus has always been respected for building luxurious, safe and reliable cars. However, they were sometimes criticized for being too conservative. Recently, their new models such as the blazing LFA supercar and sharp-looking GS and IS models have changed peoples’ opinion somewhat. Lexus never forgot about the car that started its brand, though. All along the way, the LS maintained its technological innovation and unsurpassed luxury. However, when held up against the established market leaders from Europe, Mercedes, BMW, Audi, and Jaguar, the Lexus flagship lacked a performance element. Well, for 2013, that will end with the introduction of the new F Sport model.

DAVID CHAO

submitted photos

Standard equipment on the Lexus LS includes a 16-way power adjustable driver seat with auto slide-away and 12-way power adjustable front passenger seat and dual-zone automatic climate control and park assist.

Driving the new LS is also not a major departure from years past. Engine and road noise continue to be almost imperceptible. However, the revised air suspension system is a noticeable improvement as it delivers a class leading smooth ride while remaining easily manoeuvrable. The Drive Mode Select feature allows the driver to further tailor the feel of their ride with Eco, Normal, Comfort, Sport and Sport S+ driving modes. Each selection alters the characteristics of the powertrain, suspension and steering. The new F Sport option is the version enthusiasts are most interested in. It boasts a lower, sport tuned air suspension, larger Brembo brakes and 19-inch forged alloy wheels. These additions are impressive upgrades. Under hard driving, body roll is nearly eliminated but the dampers are still smooth over most road imperfections. The steering is the sharper, though feedback is still not as responsive as some of its rivals. The LS refuses to lose any of its composure under any circumstance, reminding you it’s able to balance the performance with luxury. Generally speaking, even the F Sport is still very much tuned for refinement and comfort vs performance but the overall feel is greatly improved over the regular model. See LEXUS on page 38

headlamps project the sophistication at its heart. High-intensity discharge lights are standard but those seeking for something special can opt for an all-LED setup. The Lexuslogo taillamps are especially eye catching and definitely reinforce the confidentance-inspired appearance. The visual changes are nice, but the most exciting news is the introduction of a performance edition. Available in rear-wheel and all-wheel drive, the F Sport does not receive any more horsepower upgrades but it does get more aggressive styling and unique suspension setup options. The results are startling as the F Sport can appear downright sinister.

DESIGN

PERFORMANCE

2013 marks possibly the biggest refresh this model line has ever seen. Half of the car’s six thousand parts have been reengineered. The basic size and weight remain the same as the outgoing model. The most obvious change is the front fascia. Lexus’ new spindle-shaped grill gives the LS a bold new look. Other refinements include chrome accents, a lower front bumper and a bulge running up the centre of the hood. The chrome accents along the side lead to a sculpted rear-end which continues Lexus’ dramatic new image. If the eyes are the windows to the soul, the LS’s new

The area that sees the least significant changes in the refresh is the engine compartment. Lexus’ naturally aspirated direct-injected 4.6-litre eight-cylinder engine powers the majority of the line, except for the hybrid. The rear-wheel-drive models receive six more horsepower, up to 386-hp and 367 ft-lbs of torque and the allwheel-drive gets 359-hp with 367 ft-lbs of torque. The only alternative is a hybrid powertrain which mates a 5.0-litre V8 to two electric motors using a CVT transmission. These combine to create 438-hp and 385 ft-lbs of torque.

ENDS JULY 31ST

2013 CANADIAN UTILITY VEHICLE OF THE YEAR

145 1.99

$

WITH

OWN IT FOR

BI-WEEKLY

%†

$

FINANCING FOR 96 MONTHS

INCLUDES

500

27,759 SELLING PRICE:

$

IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTSΩ

0

SANTA FE 2.4L FWD AUTO. $500 PRICE ADJUSTMENTΩ, DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

NO MONEY DOWN

WELL EQUIPPED:

• AIR CONDITIONING • 7 AIRBAGS • SIRIUS XM™ RADIO WITH BLUETOOTH® HANDS FREE PHONE SYSTEM • VEHICLE STABILITY MANAGEMENT W/ ESC & TRACTION CONTROL SYSTEM

Limited model shown

2013

SANTA FE 2.4L FWD

0 KM 00 KM!

• HEATED FRONT SEATS • FOG LIGHTS • ACTIVE ECO SYSTEM

FINANCING FOR UP TO

96

OWN IT FOR

BI-WEEKLY

WITH

%†

$

FINANCING FOR 96 MONTHS

INCLUDES

1,250

IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTSΩ

10,000

$

MONTHS

99 0

$

OR

GET UP TO

ON SELECT MODELS

SELLING PRICE:

"

TUCSON L 5-SPEED MANUAL. $1,250 PRICE ADJUSTMENTΩ, DELIVERY & DESTINATION INCLUDED.

NO MONEY DOWN

WELL EQUIPPED:

• AIR CONDITIONING • EZ LANE CHANGE ASSIST • DOWNHILL BRAKE CONTROL AND HILLSTART ASSIST • REAR SPOILER • iPOD®/USB/MP3 AUXILIARY INPUT JACKS • POWER WINDOWS & DOOR LOCKS

HWY: 6.7L/100 KM CITY: 10.1L/100 KM!

nt

w

Do ow

n

NOW OPEN

IN PRICE ADJUSTMENTS Ω

20,509

$

• POWER HEATED OUTSIDE MIRRORS • TRIP COMPUTER • FRONT ACTIVE HEADRESTS • REAR WIPER & WASHER Limited model shown

2013

E 12th Ave

Ki ay

w

s ng

Vancouver’s only Hyundai dealer!

"

%

TUCSON L

HWY: 7.7L/100 KM CITY: 10.4L/100 KM!

445 Kingsway near 12th Ave in Vancouver call 604-292-8188

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The Hyundai names, logos, product names, feature names, images and slogans are trademarks owned by Hyundai Auto Canada Corp. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. †Finance offers available O.A.C. from Hyundai Financial Services based on a new 2013 Tucson L 5-Speed Manual/ Santa Fe 2.4L FWD Auto with an annual finance rate of 0%/1.99% for 96 months. Bi-weekly payments are $99/$145. No down payment required. Cost of Borrowing is $0/$2,291. Finance offers include Delivery and Destination of $1,760/$1,760. Registration, insurance, PPSA, fees, levies, charges, license fees and all applicable taxes are excluded. Delivery and destination charge includes freight, P.D.E., dealer admin fees and a full tank of gas. Fuel consumption for 2013 Tucson L 5-Speed Manual (HWY 7.7L/100KM; City 10.4L/100KM)/ Santa Fe 2.4L FWD Auto (HWY 6.7L/100KM, City 10.1L/100KM) are based on Energuide. Actual fuel efficiency may vary based on driving conditions and the addition of certain vehicle accessories. Fuel economy figures are used for comparison purposes only. Price of models shown: 2013 Tucson Limited AWD/ Santa Fe 2.0T Limited AWD is $34,109/$40,259. ˜Price adjustments are calculated against the vehicle’s starting price. Price adjustments of up to $1,250/$500 available on 2013 Tucson L 5-Speed Manual/Santa Fe 2.4L FWD Auto. Price adjustments applied before taxes. Offer cannot be combined or used in conjunction with any other available offers. Offer is non-transferable and cannot be assigned. No vehicle trade-in required. †˜ Offers available for a limited time, and subject to change or cancellation without notice. See dealer for complete details. Dealer may sell for less. Inventory is limited, dealer order may be required. ††Hyundai’s Comprehensive Limited Warranty coverage covers most vehicle components against defects in workmanship under normal use and maintenance conditions. TM

D#31042

SALES EVENT

CELEBRATE WITH US. Vehicles packed with features at the price you want.


A38

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

dashboard

Lexus LS basic starting price is nearly $83,000 Continued from page 37

ENVIRONMENT

PLEASE READ THE FINE PRINT: Offers valid until July 31, 2013. See toyota.ca for complete details on all cash back offers. In the event of any discrepancy or inconsistency between Toyota prices, rates and/or other information contained on toyotabc.ca and that contained on toyota.ca, the latter shall prevail. Errors and omissions excepted. 2013 Corolla CE Automatic BU42EP-B MSRP is $19,635 and includes $1,645 freight and pre-delivery inspection, tire levy, battery levy and air conditioning federal excise tax. *Finance example: 0% finance for 84 months, upon credit approval, available on 2013 Corolla. Bi-Weekly payment is $99 with $1850 down payment. Applicable taxes are extra. **Lease example: 0% Lease APR for 60 months on approved credit. Monthly payment is $169 with $2,300 down payment. Total Lease obligation is $12,440. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.07. Applicable taxes are extra. Down payment, first monthly payment and security deposit plus GST and PST on first payment and full down payment are due at lease inception. A security deposit is not required on approval of credit. ***Up to $2,500 Non-stackable Cash Back available on select 2013 Corolla models. Cash back on Corolla CE is $2,000. 2013 RAV4 FWD LE Automatic ZFREVT-B MSRP is $26,605 and includes $1,815 freight and pre-delivery inspection, tire levy, battery levy and air conditioning federal excise tax. †Finance example: 4.3% finance for 72 months, upon credit approval, available on 2013 RAV4. Bi-Weekly payment is $179 with $2300 down payment. Applicable taxes are extra. ††Lease example: 4.5% Lease APR for 60 months on approved credit. Monthly payment is $288 with $1,800 down payment. Total Lease obligation is $19,080. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.10. Applicable taxes are extra. Down payment, first monthly payment and security deposit plus GST and PST on first payment and full down payment are due at lease inception. A security deposit is not required on approval of credit. 2013 Tacoma Access Cab 4x4 V6 Automatic UU4ENA-B MSRP is $32,440 and includes $1,815 freight and pre-delivery inspection, tire levy, battery levy and air conditioning federal excise tax. ‡Finance example: 2.9% finance for 72 months, upon credit approval, available on 2013 Tacoma. Bi-Weekly payment is $199 with $4500 down payment. Applicable taxes are extra. ‡‡Lease example: 4.9% Lease APR for 60 months on approved credit. Monthly payment is $329 with $4,350 down payment. Total Lease obligation is $24,090. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.10. Applicable taxes are extra. Down payment, first monthly payment and security deposit plus GST and PST on first payment and full down payment are due at lease inception. A security deposit is not required on approval of credit. ‡‡‡Up to $1,000 Non-stackable Cash Back available on select 2013 Corolla models. Cash back on Tacoma 4x4 Access Cab is $1,000. Non-stackable Cash Back offers may not be combined with Toyota Financial Services (TFS) lease or finance rates. If you would like to lease or finance at standard TFS rates (not the above special rates), then you may be able to take advantage of Cash Customer Incentives. Vehicle must be purchased, registered and delivered by July 31, 2013. Cash incentives include taxes and are applied after taxes have been charged on the full amount of the negotiated price.See toyota.ca for complete details on all cash back offers. Visit your Toyota BC Dealer or www.toyotabc.ca for more details. Some conditions apply; offers are time limited and may change without notice. Dealer may lease/sell for less.

Sitting in the 16-way power adjustable driver seat, the spaciousness is noticeable as there is plenty of room for your head, arms and feet. Every surface you touch is either soft leather or smooth veneered wood. Customers have their choice of premium leather upholsteries and five wood treatments. This creates an environment that is outstanding in the luxury sedan market. Those eyeing the new

F Sport will receive black leather seats and steering wheel and aluminium accents. The large Optitron analog tachometer and speedometer are clear and easy-to-read, but that’s not the most noticeable improvement. The previous model’s touch screen navigation has been replaced with a 12.3-inch multimedia display unit. It’s set higher and deeper in the dash making it easier to read and is controlled with the Lexus Remote Touch haptic joystick.

FEATURES

Also, Lexus’ signature analog clock is now equipped with a GPS-based time correction. This is a pretty neat feature, even though it’s likely one that won’t be used all that often. Lexus didn’t ignore those who spend time in the back seat. They will be comforted by the Ottoman Seating Package with Shiatsu massage and a ceiling-mounted, nine-inch screen with Bluray DVD player. With the redesigned LS, Lexus continues to offer unsurpassed occupant comfort in this price range.

The starting price for the LS 460 is $82,950. The range topping LS 600h L starts at $131,200. The lineup includes all-wheel-drive and long-wheelbase options as well as the F Sport package. Standard equipment includes a 16-way power adjustable driver seat with auto slide-away and 12-way power adjustable front passenger seat, dual-zone automatic climate control, NavTraffic, NavWeather, fuel prices, sports and stocks from SiriusXM Radio, enhanced

Bluetooth technology, 12.3inch split-screen multimedia center-console display, USB iPod connectivity, backup camera, brake assist, electronic brakeforce distribution, smart stop technology, and park assist. Additional features, available as options or on higher trims include right-rear power recliner with ottoman and multifunction Shiatsu massage, four-zone climate concierge, pre-collision warning system with all-speed dynamic radar cruise control, blind spot monitor with rear cross-

traffic alert, and LED headlamps. Fuel efficiency numbers for all the rear-wheel-drive models with the 4.6-litre V8 are 12.9L/100km city, 8.2L/100km highway for 10.8L/100km combined. The all-wheel-drive models with the same engine get 13.5L/100km city, 8.7L/100km highway and 11.5L/100km combined. The hybrid model, which is also AWD, sees 10.6L/100km city, 9.1L/100km highway and 9.9L/100km combined. david.chao@leansensei.com

Corolla S with moonroof shown

submitted photo

Lexus seats feature built-in Shiatsu massagers.

It ’s lik e dr iving a C or olla for

$

7 a day OWN IT FROM*

99

$

corolla ce 2013

LEASE IT FROM**

169

$

OR

bi-weekly / 84 mos. at 0%

GET UP TO***

OR

2,500

$

CASHBACK

per mo. / 60 mos. at 0%

2013 OWN IT FROM †

179

$

RAV4

LEASE IT FROM ††

288

$

OR

LE model shown

per mo. / 60 mos. at 4.5%

bi-weekly / 72 mos. at 4.3%

DOWNLOAD The Vancouver Courier news app

2013 OWN IT FROM ‡

199

$

OR

bi-weekly / 72 mos. at 2.9%

LEASE IT FROM ‡‡

329

$

GET UP TO ‡‡‡

30692

4x4 D-Cab shown

discover the lasting value of Toyota’s all-around affordability

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THE VOICE OF VANCOUVER NEIGHBOURHOODS STRAIGHT TO YOUR PHONE

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

The Voice of Vancouver Neighbourhoods

www.vancourier.com


FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013 THE VANCOUVER COURIER

CUSTOMER APPRECIATION BBQ!

DS N E ST R E Y 31 F OF JUL

kia.ca

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**

SAT & SUN 11am -3pm

FREE car wash and BBQ to show our appreciation to the people of Vancouver for making us

A39

FINANCING

84 UP TO

MONTHS

THE NEW 2014s ARE HERE

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%

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Offer(s) available on select new 2014 models through participating dealers to qualified customers who take delivery by July 31, 2013. Dealers may sell or lease for less. Some conditions apply. See dealer for complete details. All offers are subject to change without notice. Vehicles shown may include optional accessories and upgrades available at extra cost. All pricing includes delivery and destination fees up to $1,665, other fees and certain levies (including tire levies) and $100 A/C charge (where applicable) and excludes licensing, registration, insurance, other taxes and variable dealer administration fees (up to $699). Other dealer charges may be required at the time of purchase. Other lease and financing options also available. **0% purchase financing is available on select new 2014 Kia models O.A.C. Terms vary by model and trim, see dealer for complete details. !Bi-weekly finance payment O.A.C. for new 2014 Forte LX MT (FO541E)/2014 Rondo LX MT (RN551E) based on a selling price of $17,502/$23,482 is $96/$129 with an APR of 0% for 84/84 months, with a remaining balance of $0/$0. Bi-weekly finance payment O.A.C. for new 2014 Sorento 2.4L LX AT FWD (SR75BE) based on a selling price of $28,482 is $156 with an APR of 0% for 60 months, amortized over an 84-month period. Estimated remaining principal balance of $8,138 plus applicable taxes due at end of 60-month period. Retailer may sell for less. See dealer for full details. ‡$2,500/$1,250/$1,750 cash savings on the cash purchase of an eligible new 2014 Sorento 2.4L LX AT FWD (SR75BE)/2014 Forte LX MT (FO541E)/2014 Rondo LX MT (RN551E) from a participating dealer between July 3-31, 2013, is deducted from the selling price before taxes and cannot be combined with special lease and finance offers. Some conditions apply. !Model shown Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price for 2014 Sorento 3.3L EX AT AWD (SR75HE)/2014 Forte SX AT (FO748E)/2014 Rondo EX Luxury (RN756E) is $34,195/$26,195/$32,195. !Highway/city fuel consumption is based on the 2014 Sorento LX 2.4L GDI 4-cyl (A/T)/2014 Forte 1.8L MPI 4-cyl (M/T)/2014 Rondo 2.0L GDI 4-cyl (M/T). These updated estimates are based on the Government of Canada’s approved criteria and testing methods. Refer to the EnerGuide Fuel Consumption Guide. Your actual fuel consumption will vary based on driving habits and other factors. °The Bluetooth® wordmark and logo are registered trademarks and are owned by Bluetooth SIG, Inc. Information in this advertisement is believed to be accurate at the time of printing. For more information on our 5-year warranty coverage, visit kia.ca or call us at 1-877-542-2886. Kia is a trademark of Kia Motors Corporation.

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A40

THE VANCOUVER COURIER FRIDAY, JULY 12, 2013

WEEKLY SPECIALS 100% BC Owned and Operated Prices Effective July 11 to July 17, 2013.

We reserve the right to limit quantities. We reserve the right to correct printing errors.

Grocery Department St. Dalfour Gourmet Fruit Spreads

4.29

32%

Salt Spring Organic Fair Trade Coffee assorted varieties

from

SAVE

27%

31%

SAVE

40%

36%

Coeur de Lion Mini Brie Cheese

assorted varieties

SAVE

40%

3.99

4.99

product of USA

Bakery Department

6.99

12 pack product of China

from

4L • product of Canada

Rise Organic Kombucha Beverages

WOW!

340-430g product of Canada

Dr. Praeger's Frozen Veggie Burgers, Veggie Pancakes and Fish Sticks assorted varieties

SAVE

PRICING

11.99

750ml

Rice Bakery WOW!

3/6.99

PRICING

from 2/6.00

355ml +deposit +eco fee • product of Canada

Bulk Department Diced Apricots bags or bins

20% off regular retail price

Health Care Department Botanica Fermented Botanicals

WOW!

PRICING

16.49

250ml

55.49

WOW!

PRICING

60 vegi-caps

Manitoba Harvest Hemp Hearts/Seeds

2.00 off

regular retail price 625g

7.29

227g

Manitoba Harvest Hemp Hearts pack a powerful punch of protein and omegas in a small package.

907g • product of USA

WOW!

Choices Markets’ Wellness Library

PRICING

Let Choices be your partner in wellness with our series of healthy living guides. Available at any Choices location for $11.95 plus applicable taxes. 2010 - 2013 Awards. Your loyalty has helped Choices achieve these awards. Thank you!

product of Canada

AOR Curcumin Active

retail price 6 pack

Lundberg Nutra-Farmed Rice

49.98

10lb box

Botanica Fermented Botanicals are prepared using a controlled fermentation that provides the naturally occurring phytocompounds in these herbs in their bioavailable form.

1.00 off regular

assorted varieties

assorted varieties

WOW!

PRICING

3.49

regular or mini

Sourdough Rice Bread

product of Italy

Organic Blueberries from Farmhouse Lifestyle Pitt Meadows, B.C.

530g • reg 4.79

Spelt Coconut or Oatmeal Carrot Walnut Muffins

31%

Berio Extra Virgin Olive Oil

assorted varieties

Organic Whole Wheat Bread

33% 5.99

product of Canada

5 pack • reg 9.99

PRICING

267-472ml

SAVE

1 dozen

7.99

WOW!

1.98lb/ 4.37kg

WOW!

PRICING

retail price

Julie’s Frozen Coconut Novelties

assorted varieties

Island Farms Ice Cream

4.99

from

product of Canada

B.C. Grown

1.00 off regular

from 2.59

Rocky Mountain Frozen Pizzas

Silk'n Soft Bamboo Bathroom Tissue

SAVE

assorted varieties

250-296ml product of Japan

23%

453g product of USA

Maple Hill Farms Organic Free Range Large Eggs

PRICING

4.98

1 dry pint package

product of Canada

Tartine Savoury Tarts and Flatbreads

SAVE

2.99

23%

Deli Department

assorted varieties

3.99

SAVE

750ml

Kikkoman Sauces

Bob's Red Mill Flaxseed Meal

WOW!

Organic Broccoli

7.99lb/ 17.61

+deposit +eco fee product of Italy

36%

750g product of Canada

20%

4.49

SAVE

light or 2%

SAVE

product of Canada

Italian Volcano Organic Lemonade or Limeade

400g product of Canada

Dairyland Cottage Cheese

10.99lb/ 24.23kg

150g

Paradise Valley Pork Back Ribs

10.99

from

Organic Hand Picked Raspberries from Olera Farm Abbotsford, B.C.

value pack

2.19

SAVE

225ml product of France

Produce Department

Wild Sockeye Salmon Fillets

assorted varieties

assorted varieties

SAVE

Meat Department

Hardbite Gluten Free Potato Chips

Look for our

WOW! PRICING

Find us on Facebook: facebook.com/ChoicesMarkets Best Organic Produce

Best Grocery Store

Follow us on Twitter: twitter.com/ChoicesMarkets

2010-2012

www.choicesmarkets.com Kitsilano

Cambie

Kerrisdale

Yaletown

Rice Bakery

South Surrey

2627 W. 16th Ave. Vancouver 604.736.0009

3493 Cambie St. Vancouver 604.875.0099

1888 W. 57th Ave. Vancouver 604.263.4600

1202 Richards St. Vancouver 604.633.2392

2595 W. 16th Ave. Vancouver 604.736.0301

3248 King George Blvd. South Surrey 604.541.3902

Choices at the Crest

8683 10th Ave. Burnaby 604.522.0936

Kelowna

Floral Shop

1937 Harvey Ave. Kelowna 250.862.4864

2615 W. 16th Vancouver 603-736-7522


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