Category Archives: Vancouver

VanRamblings Takes Leave of Home While Renovations Continue

As work continues on the renovation of VanRamblings’ Co-op condominium apartment — drywalling, tiling and grouting in the bathroom (no use of the ‘facilities’ today, oh me oh my), as replacement panels are affixed to the ceiling (they have to be ‘built’ first), and ‘boxes’ are constructed to house ‘the new piping‘ installed throughout the apartment (after which said boxes are puttied up ready for sanding later this week), with all the concomitant banging, drilling, and covering of almost the entirety of the contents of our home in plastic — we have taken our leave of Chez VanRamblings these late sunny August days to explore our Kitsilano neighbourhood.
Upon our arrival home from our journeys each day, on the recommendation of the inimitable J. B. Shayne (that’s him on the left, and a svelte VanRamblings on the right), we have set about to download new lustrous music. Today, we ‘acquired’ The Books’ new CD, The Way Out. Thus far, in the initial couple of listens, we are intrigued with this trippy art / folktronica collage. At MetaCritic, with a Metascore of 81 / 100, The Books’ latest emerges as one of the most critically acclaimed albums of the year.
This early week has brought beautiful west coast weather, the mean temperature 75° Fahrenheit or 24° Celsius, with a perfect cooling breeze taking the sting out of the midday sun (of course, we’ve been wearing our new Neutrogena sunscreen — having ‘lost’ our Vichy sunscreen at the Halifax Stanfield Airport last Wednesday — and our new Frenchy’s cap).
Tonight we’re off to dinner with a friend, to return later in the evening, when we’ll attempt to make sense of the clutter in our beleaguered apartment, and do our best to at least begin the process of bringing order to the chaos that has ensued as a consequence of the ongoing re-piping of our the entire Co-op building in which we live. Have to say, though, that Cambridge Plumbing are doing a superb job, and keeping ‘the mess’ to a minimum (it’s just that we like to kvetch … but, really, it’s not that bad).

A Walk Along Vancouver’s Spanish Banks

As a youth growing up on Vancouver’s eastside, VanRamblings’ parents told us that the area known as Spanish Banks ‘belonged’ only to the people of the west side, and that we would not be welcome to ‘use’ their park, nor frequent their part of town. For the entirety of our youth, our only palpable knowledge of Spanish Banks came through the photos we saw of this pristine waterfront, either in photos in the daily newspaper, or on TV.
In the late 60s, when we met the woman who would be our spouse, she —
as an habitué of Vancouver’s west side (where a favourite aunt, uncle and cousins of hers lived) — pooh-poohed the nostrum of VanRamblings’ parents; thus we became infrequent visitors to the patch of waterfront on Vancouver’s west side, even as VanRamblings’ ‘parents voice’ continued to remonstrate our discomfort level was somewhat alleviated, but not entirely.
In the 1980s, when we moved to the west side (long story that, the details of which we’ll save for another time), we managed to overcome our undue prejudices, and by 1988 a walk along Spanish Banks and through the trails of UBC became a daily feature of our lives, as it remains to this very day.
The video published on VanRamblings on this Saturday takes in a walk, yesterday, along Spanish Banks, from Locarno Beach along and through to Tower Beach, in an area just east of the University of British Columbia.
Although Vancouver’s absolutely lovely and bewitching Spanish Banks is not the Annapolis Valley’s Annapolis River (about which we’ve written frequently in recent days, as part of our vacation travelogue), tranquil and calming, VanRamblings believes there is much to recommend about our favourite stretch of beach within the city of Vancouver (our favourite stretch of beach in British Columbia may be found along Long Beach, or Chesterman Beach, near Tofino, about which we’ll write another time).
Please enjoy today’s video presentation, and if you live or are visiting Vancouver may we recommend a stroll along Spanish Banks (after all, the beach is yours), one of the true natural wonders of Canada’s west coast.

UBC’s Great Farm Trek ’09, 3:30 p.m. Today. Save the UBC Farm.

The UBC Farm has been an integral part of UBC since the Point Grey campus was founded in 1922. The UBC Farm is 24 hectares and is located on UBC Vancouver’s south campus. It is the last working farm in Vancouver and an irreplaceable resource for our future that once gone, is gone forever. The farm provides a unique centre for innovative teaching and research about sustainable food systems, food security and health.
The UBC farm serves as an important educational resource to members of the academic and non academic community, including a wide variety of aboriginal groups, school children and others. In addition, the UBC Farm is a complex ecosystem and home to many species such as coyotes, frogs, eagles, owls, snakes and over 70 species of birds.
Why is the UBC Farm in crisis?
UBC may use the farm land for other purposes. Students and community members have worked very hard in the past year to preserve the farm. UBC has acknowledged that the farm needs to be considered in their planning process; however, we still need the University to commit to: keeping the farm at its current size and location, providing stable funding, and including key users in determining the farm’s future
HOW YOU CAN HELP save UBC Farm
Come to the Great Farm Trek ’09 today, Tuesday, April 7th. The Trek will gather at the Student Union Building at 3:30 p.m. and trekkers will walk to the UBC Farm for a celebration with food and music, and a ceremonial planting. Free parking is available at UBC Farm anytime. A free bus shuttle, originating at the SUB, will take participants to and from the Trek, which will be in progress between 3 p.m & 6 p.m. We’ll see you at the rally today!
Sponsored by UBC Alma Mater Society, and the Friends of the UBC Farm.

Grand March for Housing – 12 noon, Saturday, April 4, 2009


GRAND MARCH FOR HOUSING


The Citywide Housing Coalition’s march to end homelessness, build social housing, and raise the minimum wage takes place this weekend.
Muster stations are located at Thornton Park (due west of the bus depot / train station), Hastings and Main streets, and Peace Flame Park (at the south end of the Burrard Street bridge). Marchers will walk peacefully (but noisily, we hope) from the march starting points to the Vancouver Art Gallery, meeting in front of the Art Gallery, on Georgia Street, at 1:30 p.m.
Given the failure of the federal government to step up to the plate and build affordable housing for Canadians – when many across Canada are experiencing a housing crisis – is unconscionable. We need a renewed, affordable, well-funded and effective co-operative housing programme, as well as the construction of special needs housing (for women, and for single parent families, for the homeless). Housing is an issue which affects us all.
Let’s make this a march for change, for a renewed commitment to social agency, and to programmes benefitting the most vulnerable in our society. Let’s march to encourage government to bring in programmes to protect renters, and construct social housing for the homeless and for families in Vancouver, throughout British Columbia, and across our great country!