Showing posts with label vancouver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vancouver. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Winter in Vancouver (reprise)


From the archives: Winter in Vancouver

Judging from the television coverage, you'd think it was the end of the world. The blanched faces of concerned reporters looking skyward, live in horror. Big puffy clumps of snowflakes descending and splatting triumphantly on the upturned noses of the hardened and possibly frozen journalists.

And then came the pictures: Line-ups in stores to get one of the last shovels and remaining bags of salt. Summer tires spinning in a futile attempt to push 2000 kilos of Truck-A-Saurus up a two per cent grade. Piles of white hell building up on the ground, at least a centimeter thick.

And then came the reporters again: Delivering the worst news ever for the people of B.C.’s Lower Mainland: More snow. And in case we didn't hear, a big red banner flashed SNOW WARNING! Gather the children! Load up the wagons! Let's get outta Dodge!

Welcome to the end of the world. Welcome to winter in Vancouver.

This makes no sense. This is a city where, on a recent morning commute on the bus, I counted more snowboards than briefcases. This is a city where limos sport ski racks. This is the city that is hosting the Winter Olympic Games, for heaven's sake.

Now, before I get slammed for my thoughts, a little background: I have lived in Vancouver for more than a decade. And before that I have lived through brutal winters in Halifax, Winnipeg and Thunder Bay. I am not new at this winter thing.

But, it appears, much of the Lower Mainland is.

Not that snow is a stranger to Vancouver. From practically anywhere in the city you can gaze north and see it for much of the year. But that snow is in the mountains. And while it is handy - only 20 minutes away - it is also non-threatening. Like a polar bear in a zoo, we can gawk at it, but we are safe in the knowledge that it won't come rumbling down the hill to spill our vanilla soy lattes.

I call it "winter on demand." You want snow? Just drive north - and before your sushi gets warm you can be chucking snowballs towards the golf courses thousands of feet below.

In fairness, there are several things that make Vancouver a poor candidate for a winter city: no snow tires, few plows, and no 100 km/h gusts across the prairie. In fact, no prairie!

Luckily, it rarely snows here. And it rarely freezes. These are two meteorological factors of which I was completely unaware of when I moved here in 1997.

ME: It's January, where is the snow?
Vancouverite: Snow? Up there!
ME: No, in the city?
Vancouverite: Bumpkin! Fancy a Mochachino?

This year was different. Boy, was it different. It began in December. Big blobs of snow begin to fall. And then they began to accumulate.

Then it turned cold.

So in the space of a week, we’ve experienced the full Canadian climate. Before the snow fell it was warm enough to golf. And with only some trees devoid of leaves, it even looked like fall. Then came winter.

And while there is still a lot of snow on the ground, I swear that there are cherry blossoms on a tree across the street.

But back to the television coverage. During the "WINTER OF DOOM" the media was in a lather. And that became a frenzy. Every newscast filled their first segment with “storm team” coverage. Five stories or more - and charts, graphs and experts.

Every story had a reporter reporting live out in the snow: The awful, terrible, dangerous, hideous, beautiful snow. One station had a reporter actually driving in the snowy rush hour live on camera. I actually thought that was pretty cool and was secretly hoping for a 360.

Every weather presenter was calm and collected, presenting the facts slowly, so as not to throw the entire population into a panic. But despite their relaxed demeanor, you could tell that inside they were screaming, "Oh my God! It's going to be -4. We're all going to DIE!!!! " I think they even shied away from showing the "Double Doppler" images for fear of possible riots and/or to prevent the hoarding of survival essentials like green tea ice cream.

I giggled.

It is so easy to make fun of the terror a bit of snow brings to the population of Vancouver. Especially having satellite delivered television. I can flip from the stories of the white menace locally to places experiencing real winter like Winnipeg.

I stand in awe of a reporter standing out in a bitter Manitoba wind telling the audience that in the current conditions exposed skin will freeze in less than a, ho hum, minute. And the reporter is wearing neither a toque nor mitts. That's guts.

But there may be hope. There has been snow on the ground for longer than I remember. If I gaze out my window to the park across the street, I can see snowmen, toboggans, dogs in coats and kids having a blast. There are smiles aplenty. And for a moment, Vancouver is just like the rest of Canada in the winter.

Except it's going to rain tonight and I'm going kayaking tomorrow.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Goodbye Moo...

Moo: Good Dog

One of my former housemates from Vancouver has passed.  She took care of the burglars and the big mean kitties -- all in exchange for walkies, crunchies and love. 

Goodbye Misty Moo... 

.

Friday, September 10, 2010

from the "vangroovy" dept

Home Sweet Home (one of 'em)

I should write a love song about being torn between two coasts. Left and right. East and west. Atlantic and Pacific.

How is it that I came to be so attracted to two cities so far from each other? Halifax and Vancouver. Talk about an expensive long distance relationship.

The songwriting is for another day. Today I'll focus on my current visit to the left coast. I've been here in Vancouver for a week now and I've been having a blast: Enjoying a social life, getting out and doing stuff, visiting old haunts.

Hanging with former VTV/CTV colleagues at the Irish Heather.

I've written before about my rekindled love affair with this city, and that hasn't changed. In fact, my love has grown -- especially as I now have something to compare it to (10 months in Edmonton). Talk about night and day.

It's far from perfect, but it's a damn nice place to hang out in. And maybe move back to, one day. Or, in the evil plan in my head: Live in the tropics from November to May. Live in Vancouver from June through August. And then Halifax for September and October. Wouldn't that be grand? Better put that on the white board.

I've still got a few places left to see and a few people left to visit. And then it's back to the Prairies. Getting stuff sorted in Calgary. Visiting Southwestern Saskatchewan for another photo safari. And even more, before heading down south on Sept 25.

It seems like there's lots of time between now and then. But the window is closing. And I better get my arse in gear...

Cheers!

Sunday, July 25, 2010

from the "a long tramp" dept:

Are we there yet?

For no particular reason, here are the stats from my epic Edmonton-Vancouver drive on July 24, 2010 (all times in Mountain):

6:14 am - Downtown Edmonton 0 km
8:06 am - Edson, Alberta 200 km
9:00 am - Hinton, Alberta 286 km
9:21 am - Jasper (East Gate), Alberta 316 km
10:12 am - BC/Alberta border 393 km
10:56 am - Highway 5 / Highway 16 interchange 471 km
2:07 pm - Kamloops, BC (East) 792 km
3:25 pm - Merritt, BC 900 km
4:24 pm - Hope, BC 1021 km
4:59 pm - Chilliwack, BC 1076 km
5:14 pm - Abbotsford, BC 1104 km (brutal traffic on Hwy 1)
6:10 pm - Port Mann Bridge 1144 km
6:15 pm - Burnaby, BC 1152 km
6:22 pm - Vancouver 1163 km
6:25 pm - Second Narrows Bridge 1166 km
6:37 pm - West Vancouver (Fulton & 15th) 1181 km

Total time: 12:23
Total length - 1181
Average speed: 95.3701 km/h or 59.2602 mph

If not for the horrible traffic between Abbotsford and Burnaby, I could have shaved at least half an hour off my time. Still... a pretty good average.

Cheers!

Friday, July 23, 2010

from the "and so it begins" dept.

I'm moving. Slowly. And honestly, I'm not sure where I'm moving to.

I do know this: I'm driving a car full of crap from Edmonton to Vancouver. Or, more precisely, to my storage unit in Surrey.

Why? Because I'm not staying in Edmonton. That much is certain.

When I will leave for good and where I will go to is all up in the air. It could be: Australia, Belize, Nova Scotia, Guatemala, Mexico or Vancouver Island. Or none of these. Fate will likely decide. Or I'll have to actually choose.

But the Edmonton "adventure" is wrapping up. Soon, I'll have very little in the way of stuff here. The remaining bits -- chairs, cutlery, my George Foreman grill -- they're all headed to Calgary. Or the Sally Ann. Or the dump.

I'll save my parting shots for after I leave permanently. I wouldn't want to be run out of town just yet.

Next stop: Vancouver!

Cheers!

Saturday, June 05, 2010

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Saturday, April 17, 2010

April 17, 2010


April 17, 2010
Originally uploaded by borderfilms (Doug).

Interesting things if you look hard enough. Cuppa Joe Coffee. Kits. Vancouver, BC.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

from the "peeling back the curtain" dept.


If you know anything about Vancouver, you just had to know that the stories of the city's dark side would start appearing in the global media. I don't mean the idiot "hate everything" protesters. I mean the drugs, the poverty and the violence. It's true. Vancouver is amazing on the surface, but struggles with some very serious social problems.

This morning I watched a report on BBC World about Vancouver's dark side.

As Vancouver prepares to host the Winter Olympics, the city continues to struggle with a vicious drugs war. Dozens have been killed in escalating turf battles that have spread far beyond the city limits. But it is a war that has its roots even further away, in Mexico.

The rest of the story is HERE. What do you think?

Monday, February 08, 2010

from the "Vancouver 2010 Olympics Openings" dept.

Russian broadcaster RTR is carrying the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games games back in the motherland. Unlike the BBC, which went with cool graphics for their Olympic promotional bits, these promos feature very different versions of Queen's We Are The Champions. Enjoy:







Cheers!

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

from the "how others see you" dept.


As the Winter Olympics are coming to the city I refer to as home (Vancouver) and I currently work in broadcast marketing and promotion, I'm interested in seeing Olympic graphics and openings from different world broadcasters. Today: The BBC. I love it!