WELCOME TO ALL WHO WISH TO LEARN MORE ABOUT WHAT BRITANNIA

& SURROUNDING AREA CAN OFFER TO OUR 55 plus.


Monday, December 29, 2008

Al Mattison lounge new furniture

We have gotten new furniture for our lounge.





CANCELLED FUNCTION

For your information we are advising that the 08 Jan '09 social function has been cancelled due to weather conditions & uncertainty.
Please note that we have a function in Febuary & hope to see you all at this one.
Al Mattison Lounge

Sunday, December 28, 2008

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Happy Holidays in all cultures



Feliz Navidad is a Spanish phrase meaning "Merry Christmas" (literally "Happy Nativity").


Hanukkah is observed for eight nights, starting on the 25th day of Kislev according to the Hebrew calendar, and may occur from late November to late December on the Gregorian calendar
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanukkah

Kwanzaa is a week-long holiday celebrated primarily in the United States[honoring African heritage, marked by participants lighting a kinara (candle holder). It is observed from December 26 to January 1 each year

Monday, December 15, 2008

Walking Club Saturday 13 Dec

Today, I called Flora and Linda, made coffee, and set out some Christmas cookies and tarts ... they both arrived before 11:00 am (this really does work!) and Brian came into the Seniors Centre shortly afterwards ...

As the day was wet and cold, we caught the #20 bus to Broadway and boarded the Skytrain to Columbia Station in New Westminster ... we browsed the few remaining shops in Westminster Quay before setting out on the broad boardwalk that follows the north shore of the north arm of the Fraser River ... from previous blogs you may recall our last visit to this large indoor market ... most of the kiosks have gone out of business since the Riverboat Casino closed last year ... word is that the rest of the shops will close down soon as the entire market area is being renovated for 2010 ...

Along the first section of the boardwalk are hotels and restaurants, some set on pillars over the walkway ... further on are condo buildings 3-6 storeys high, with a few new condo towers located behind ... ground level railway tracks that are still in use parallel the raised skytrain system behind the condo developments ... many signposts of historical interest, too many to mention in this blog, are set up at viewing points along the walkway ... next summer I will take a notebook and record some of the information about this city, the oldest major shipping port on the west coast ... in the meantime, we found one item worth mentioning during this Christmas Season:

A 32-foot tall statue, weighing five tons, built by Sheet Metal Workers International in November 2000 and guaranteed to last more than 100 hundred years ... originally located at the Armory of the New Westminster Regiment on Queens Avenue, it was moved to the Quay on Valentines Day on 2002 ... on that day, a time capsule was buried in the statue to be opened in 2025 ... this statue is The World's Largest Tin Soldier, wearing a Sergeant Major's scarlet tunic, flat round hat and dark blue trousers with wide red stripe down the outside ... the statue was built for the Royal Christmas Festival and dedicated to Simon Fraser Society for Community Living which helps special needs children and adults with disabilities ... it could use a fresh coat of paint which will likely be done during the upgrading next year ...

Next Saturday, we are thinking of going to Gastown to soak up some Christmas atmosphere in Gassy Jack's neighbourhood ... Gassy Jack was a rebel with a cause during the early days of Vancouver ... at that time, a teetotaller (can't remember his name) owned all of the downtown lands ... he would not allow any liquor to be brought or consumed on his property, which ended at the square where Gassy Jack's statue stands ... Jack had just landed a shipload of barrels of liquor ... he bought the piece of land immediately adjacent to the prohibitionist's property and, having no resources of his own to build a saloon, invited idle workers to build a saloon in exchange for as much liquor as they could drink ... the saloon was built in two days and the town was no longer in the control of the Prohibition ... such is the character of Gastown, named after Gassy Jack ... why he was called Gassy Jack is any one's guess ...

Until next week, drive safely and keep the home fires burning.

Contributor Virginia B

Sunday, December 14, 2008

NEW YEAR"S celebration



“ALL THAT GLITTERS”
Dance the night away
AL MATTISON LOUNGE
Thursday 08 Jan’09
6:00pm-9:00pm
Dinner & Entertainment
$10.00pp
Register latest 05 Jan’09

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Walking Club 06 Dec





Today, I arrived at the seniors centre at 10:30, put on a pot of coffee, and filled the dishwasher ... I called Flora and Linda to say coffee's on and they arrived at 10:45 ... hmm, this seems to get them here on time !! Flora's friend Brian joined us and later my daughter Kristl (she is practising to be a senior today) ...

We caught the #20 bus to Robson and Seymour Streets and walked to Georgia and Howe past the Georgia Hotel which was not open because of construction of a residential tower ... at the Hornby Street corner, I pointed out the HSBC pendulum gallery behind glass walls ... the pendulum was not swinging today, but a brass plaque indicated that it was designed by Alan Storey of Summerland BC ... the pendulum is 90 feet long, suspended from the glass ceiling to about 10 feet above the ground floor ... hydraulically controlleld, it swings 20 feet distance barely contacting a similar pillar mounted on the floor ...

The Four Seasons Hotel displayed Christmas trees on two levels ... this year is the 25th anniversary of the christmas tree charity drive and many organizations and corporations decorated trees with their own themes: the Recycling Depot's tree was covered in empty pop cans; another tree was mounted in a bathtub with rubber boots on the feet and rubber ducks of various sizes on the tree; one tree was covered in multi-colored blossoms, another in autumn leaves with gold, orange and red ornaments; several trees featured toys as the main theme; Children's Hospital tree was hung with photos of babies who received medical care at the hospital; BC Hydro's tree included tiny knitted sweaters hanging on clothes lines with wooden clothes pegs; the architectural theme of one tree included pencils and drafting stencils, the tree skirt consisting of architect's floor plans ... many other trees were beautifully simple in color themes such as blue and silver or purple and gold with ribbons and balls, or handmade ornaments made of recycled materials by young children ...

Next we visited the Vancouver Hotel with uniform sized trees lining the full length of the lobby, covered in multi-colored LED lights ... the Hyatt Hotel had displays of gingerbread houses, towns, Vancouver schools, several depictions of the Eiffel Tower, a Paris city street, Whoville [from the movie "The Grinch Who Stole Christmas"]; a map of Canada with plasticine characters and ornaments depicting the different regions of the country - a skier for BC, a giant snowball for Labrador ... one of the smaller displays was a two-storey dining room complete with tiny dishes filled with miniature food items, imprints of gingerbread men were on the walls and the roof tiles were thin chocolate bakers discs ... the largest display was 15 feet high and 20 feet long: the front of a life-size gingerbread house with deep overhanging eaves behind a white picket fence ... some of the ingredients used to build this 'giant' gingerbread house were 1400 eggs, 30 kg of icing sugar, 16 kg of pastry flour, 4 kg of molasses as well as several kilograms of a few secret items to add flavour ...

From the Hyatt, we walked through a light rain to the Pan Pacific Hotel only to find the ground floor lobby empty ... an attendant told us no display was set up this year due to construction of the new 2010 Conference Centre beside Canada Place ... we caught the skytrain at Burrard Station to return to the Drive ...

Contributor Virginia B

Photos by Laurette V

Saturday, November 29, 2008

29 Nov. Walk


Today Linda, Flora, and her friend Brian, walked to Broadway Station and rode the Skytrain to Patterson Station ... across the street is Central Park where they walked almost 8 kilometers along one of the many pathways ... apparently, this park has trails totalling 30-40 kilometres and contains two lakes, a forest of large Douglas Fir, Hemlock and Poplar trees, and hundreds of ducks ... more than a dozen grey and black squirrels surrounded them as Linda tossed biscotti chunks and Flora fed them granola bars ... one bold squirrel ran up Brian's leg and was promptly told to beat it ... on their walk, they noticed large holes in the ground but saw no signs of any furry critters coming or going ... could the holes have led to the lair of foxes or the den of badgers? Who knows? At one point, they came across a tree covered with chickadees, small black and grey birds that are common here during the Autumn and Winter months ...

Central Park includes a play area with a plaque that reads "Variety Park Playground dedicated to the memory of Diana, Princess of Wales 1961-1997, in commemoration of her love of children" with a relief design of a bouquet of flowers ... Brian's inner child erupted when he found a miniature mechanical digging machine to play with ...

At the perimeter of Central Park is Swangard Stadium, the home of the Vancouver Whitecaps soccer team as well as other sporting events including Olympic and World Cup qualifying matches ... a baseball diamond, lawn bowling green, pitch-and-putt golf course, outdoor swimming pool, horseshoe pitch, fitness circuit, and picnic sites are also located in this grand park ... one hardy group of people were having lunch at a picnic table over which they had mounted a canopy to keep out the rain ... the park was named in honour of the wife of Vancouver's second Mayor, David Oppenheimer ... apparently, she was from New York City's Central Park area ...

At the Skytrain Station, as they reached the top of the escalator, they spotted no less than six Skytrain Police and several Skytrain Attendants who were checking for tickets ... passengers coming off the train were being checked as well as the people boarding ... Flora suddenly realized she didn't have her bus pass which she normally carries ... she had changed coats this morning and forgot to transfer the pass ... she stepped off the up escalator and, as the police approached her, Brian deftly stepped in to show his ticket which gave Flora a chance to about-face onto the down escalator where she purchased a ticket from the dispensing machine at ground-level ... when she rejoined Linda and Brian, they had a good laugh at her close call ... the thing is, Flora usually brings extra tickets for anyone in the group who doesn't have bus fare ...

So ended an interesting adventure ... Brian enjoyed himself so much, he said he'd be back for more walks ...

Contributor Virginia

January '09 Walking Club Info

We recommend you register for the walk & come in to meet with others prior to our walk if possible. Registration is free. These walks are open to 55+ like minded people, male or female.

Our walks are moderate & at an average pace.

Each walk will be arranged by either Laurette or Virginia. At times we will have maps with us if needed.

They will be departing from either the Library or the AL Mattison lounge depending on the day at 1030AM!

All participants must have proper change or bus tickets as we will be venturing to different locations in the city. Visiting different neighborhoods, art walks, Coal Harbour, West end etc…… We want to shake it up & not be bored. In other words exercise with a bit of fun. Mid week walk will stay within 1 zone bus fare while Saturdays will be more zones at same fare.

We strongly suggest that you wear proper walking shoes & take along bottled water. We do intend on taking breaks & you may want to pack light snacks. If possible stop for coffee break in a neighborhood café. We are trying to make this affordable but at the same time fun & social.

If any participants have any suggestions or ideas for walks let us know .
“It will be a change of scenery and adds variety to our walking”

Walking update for 22 Nov walk

This was the weekend of the East Cultural Crawl, an annual event that showcases over 300 local artists and artisans who open their studios to the public for viewing and to market their craft ...

The walking group, consisting of Linda, Flora, Aideen and Virginia stayed close to The Drive ... we visited five studios during the course of the afternoon, the largest one being "Murgatroid" at Napier and Vernon ... this is a three-storey building with a maze of hallways and cross-hallways on all levels ... the studios contained paintings, pottery, jewellery, metal sculptures, art cards, clothing and textiles ...

The most striking art form on display were perfect replicas of the human head and body, complete in every detail including skin pores, skin pigment, moles, creases, eyelashes, fingernails, finger prints and body hair, created by a young man and woman who had extensive training and experience in special effects for movies and television ... every pore was hand imprinted ... every mark and coloration of the skin was put on using a fine hair paint brush ... every brow hair and eyelash was implanted by hand ... the materials used were various: one partial head was done in bronze powder mixed with a bonding agent; another was done in fine fibreglass; a third was rubber surface with fibreglass mesh backing ... the mold for these heads was taken from the artist himself ... the models of heads sold for tens of thousands of dollars and took months to complete ...

The most amazing model was a scaled-down figure of a young man, about three feet tall, with a full head of hair, anatomically correct in every detail, ... at any second, he looked like he could take a breath and blink his eyes, he was so lifelike ... the artists use calipers to calculate the size of each model so the human figures are perfectly proportion whether scaled down or enlarged ... the largest piece was a 600-lb life-sized clay model of a Samurai in the crouched pose of a wrestler facing his opponent and was the foundation from which a final statue would be made ... this would take many months to complete, bringing a price of hundreds of thousands of dollars ...

Another studio contained costumes, drawings and photographs of police riot-squad uniforms, created by a designer trained in clothing design ... these costumes were commissioned by production companies for action movies, theatre and videos ...

By mid-afternoon, we were ready to call it a day and went our separate ways.

Contributor Virginia B

Friday, November 28, 2008

Tree Trimming 04 Dec update

There is a change of time for this function. Please contact Anne Jackson at the Al Mattison Lounge for information on time & activities..

Monday, November 24, 2008

Hollow Tree & Irene







Picture of Irene Fitzgerald at the Hollow Tree when she was 16 years old (she's on the right). Irene is the lady who runs the knitting group every thursday & teaches & helps new people.

http://savethehollowtree.com/

THE TOP TEN REASONS TO SAVE THE HOLLOW TREE
10. The Hollow Tree is an amazing and unique example of a giant red cedar almost 20 feet (6m) across and 1,000 years old.
9. Red cedar with its innumerable uses was the foundation, with salmon, of First Nations culture here for perhaps 10,000 years. It was revered as the "tree of life."
8. The First influx of immigrants to Vancouver came to cut down some of the biggest trees in Canada. We need at least one example remaining on display to testify to the interesting origins of Vancouver.
7. The Hollow Tree has been one of Vancouver's primary tourist attractions since the city of Vancouver was founded in the 1880s, and it is still an important tourist destination today.
6. The Hollow Tree is in relatively good condition, and it is a relatively simple task to unobtrusively return it to its original vertical position, safe and sound.

5. In a new book "Sammy Squirrel and Rodney Raccoon: A Stanley Park Tale," the Hollow Tree appears as "Old Hollow Hall," a community hall in Stanley Park for the animals in the story.

4. At the BC-Canada Pavilion at the 2008 Beijing Olympics a replica of the Hollow Tree made from a huge old cedar stump from Stanley Park was used to promote BC and Canada to the world.

3. The Vancouver 2010 Olympic Committee is currently featuring the Hollow Tree in its promotional material for the Olympic mascots, including an animated video where two of the mascots are shown meeting for the first time at the Hollow Tree.


2. A team of top professionals in tree safety and heritage management is leading the movement to maintain the Hollow Tree as a national heritage landmark.
... and one final reason to save Stanley Park's world famous Hollow Tree:

1. Everyone who knows the Hollow Tree loves the Hollow Tree, and the Olympic tourists who come to Vancouver in 2010 should be able to find it and love it too!

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Xmas Hamper!!!

Britannia Seniors are collecting
"non perishable goods"
at all December 'Special Events', Meetings, and Clubs to make up a "Hamper" for the Food Bank.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Al Mattison Lunches

This is the last month November) for Lunches
Will resume mid January ‘09
################
Mondays with Annie
(nutritionist)
Menu to be posted
Will Resume 12 Jan 09
************************
Thursdays with Laurette
Hearty Soup & Bread
Will resume 15 Jan 09
*************************
Cost $3.50
Includes choice of tea or coffee

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Walking club 15 Nov update

I arrived at the Centre at 10:45 ... while I waited for my fellow walkers, I made a fresh pot of coffee, cleaned the boiling kettle and the stove ... at 11:15 I called Linda and coaxed her out of her lazy pajamas to join Flora and I for a walk along Commercial Drive to check out the wall murals ...

As a volunteer at the Commercial Woodlands Policing Centre, I was given a book prepared by the City of Vancouver, which contained color photos of some of the wall murals painted by graffiti artists of "Restart", a program sponsored by the City, the Police Department and local business associations to encourage street artists to create scenic murals instead of tagging walls and vehicles ... since the inception of the program's "Spread the Paint" campaign in 2002, graffiti vandalism has dropped by 85 percent and, by 2005 (when the booklet was published), 150 wall murals had been painted ... the City will be publishing a second edition covering paintings done from 2006 to 2010...

When Linda arrived at noon, she told us she had just passed a lane way between Parker and Napier where a group of some twenty young people wearing gas masks were spray painting sections of an outlined wall mural of wildlife including cameos of a tiger, a lion and a panda on a background of mountains, rivers and valleys ... two city police were recording the event (video)... on the end wall was an iconic Haida water bear being painted by a young friend of Flora's ... Flora is First Nations, a court worker and advocate for aboriginal youth gone astray of the law ... she helps the young people with the legal process, referring them to appropriate social agencies as needed ... her picture was taken spray painting a patch of the icon ...

Our walk continued down the Drive where Linda, who is Italian, met several of her countrymen ... one of them, Carmello, a trim looking slight man with sleek hair and long tailored black coat was wearing large gold custom made rings on every finger ... he kindly agreed to have his photo taken with Linda in front of a mural at 4Th Avenue ... we ended up at JJBean cafe for a hot drink before continuing on our way down the Drive, across Broadway to East 11Th where I parted company and walked home ... Linda and Flora did some local shopping before going back to their respective residences ...

All in all, it was a very satisfying, relaxing day, more a stroll than an earnest walk ... but we enjoyed ourselves, got some fresh air, met some new people ... and that's all that matters.

Contributor Virginia

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Social Evening 13 Nov "Remembering"

Remembering
This evening we had our once a month social evening. We had a guest speaker who was from the Alzheimer Resource centre. She was a great speak, informative & had a good sense of humour, which helped. This being a subject that needs to be heard & have people aware of things, health for body & mind. www.alzheimerbc.org
The evening started out with dinner first & then the speaker. Afterwards we had draws for gifts & played bingo. What a bunch of gamblers we have lol. ;)
6pm to 9pm. Nice gathering of friends & get out of the house.





















Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Pics from Monday 10th High School

Capt Trevor Greene



The Seniors at lunch prior to the show








2 goodlooking men that if we were younger would have given them a run for their money, LOL














Monday, November 10, 2008

Lest we Forget

Today in the high school auditorium there was a concert, speeches, special guest & videos. It was so beautiful done & well presented by the students.
There was a choir with great songs & 1 solo that was superb. The band was great group of young students & the youngest was the trumpet player under 13.
The video was a PowerPoint of pics of 98 fallen Canadians in Afghanistan while the choir sang A Hard Rains Gonna Fall (Bob Dylan). Another PowerPoint they did was the school teachers holding an enlarge pic of a member of their family who fought in past wars, whether the 1st, 2Nd or Korean war. It was touching.
Capt Trevor Greene gave a short speech, he is now a quadriplegic. (March 2006)http://www.missingpeople.net/trevor_greene.htm
Let me tell you this was an emotional ceremony.
Prior to this we were all taken to lunch in the staff room. This is a yearly event & my first time. Of course I am the youngest 55+.
I have a nephew over there not in the military but with a private company. Another nephew who is graduating this month will be gong over there soon.
Pics were taken & will be posted when I get them.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Best Foot Forward Walking Group news

Canoe Launch & Celebration Feast

At noon today, a gathering of First Nation tribes and interested palefaces met at Crab Park on Burrard Inlet at the north end of Main Street ...the occasion was the launching of a yellow cedar canoe carved by nine young people from Britannia Community under the direction of carver Mervyn Child of the Kwakiutl people ... the cedar was donated by Vancouver Parks Board following cleanup of Stanley Park from the devastating winter storms of 2006-07 ... the canoe took several months to complete and was stained a rust red with symbols painted on the seats ... oars were carved from the same cedar tree and painted with similar symbols in the style of the Coast Salish tribe ... two more cedar trees donated by the Parks Board will be rendered into a totem pole and a second canoe ... the completed pole will stand in Britannia Community Centre.

Among the crowd at the beach were two city policemen whom I approached for details about the gathering ... my request was overheard by Debra Martel, District Principal for Aboriginal Education ... she told me that the event was jointly sponsored by the Parks Board, Vancouver Police Department, Aboriginal Friendship House, Britannia Secondary School and Britannia Community Centre as part of The Community Carving Experience.

First came welcome speeches by the Chiefs of the Salish, Squamish, Musqueam and Kwakiutl people ... a young woman with raven hair spoke eloquently of the lost aboriginal women of the Downtown Eastside who had either disappeared or been murdered ... this young woman came from Fort St. James representing the Carrier Sekani tribe ... in their welcoming speeches, the Chiefs dedicated the canoe to the young people who created it and in memory of the young women who had disappeared ... next were short speeches by four chosen witnesses, including Mervyn Child (the carver) and Constable Rick Lavallee, Liaison Officer with the Diversity & Aboriginal Section of the Vancouver Police Department ...

The dedication ceremony, conducted on Coast Salish land, opened with drumming and singing while the carvers circled the canoe four times, brushing its surfaces with small cedar branches ... the canoe was blessed by the Salish Chief and named "Perfect Storm" ... it was then pushed into the bay by the carvers who climbed aboard with Mervyn Child and rowed out and back a hundred yards from shore ...

The ceremony continues this afternoon at the Aboriginal Friendship Centre on Hastings Street near Commercial Drive for dance, drums, songs and refreshments until 7:00 pm, followed by an evening of music, improv and slapstick comedy, gymnastics, martial arts, and performances such as hip hop, powwow, capoerira and break dancing, by an all-star lineup of musicians and singers.

Flora and I were joined by a Winnipeg visitor, Rosemary, who enjoyed the occasion ... her son is interested in First Nations culture and her daughter collects aboriginal art, so now she has something to share with them on her return to Winnipeg at the end of November.

In keeping with Remembrance Day, next Saturday's walk may focus on visiting a memorial site dedicated to the thousands of young men and women who served in the two great wars and the Korean war and to those who continue to serve in the Afghanistan war.

Contributor Virginia B.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Sunday, November 2, 2008

"BEST FOOT FORWARD"

Today Linda called in sick ... I met Flora at Britannia Seniors Centre and we relaxed with a cup of coffee waiting for anyone else who might decide to join us ... as no-one showed up by noon, we left ...

We chose to walk down the Drive toward Broadway where Flora bought a bus pass at the drugstore ... we headed east to Victoria Drive and crossed over to North Grandview Highway which follows the Millennium Skytrain route ...

A brief stop at the Chinese Buddhist temple on Victoria and Broadway where we rang the gate button ... a lady came to say the temple was closed for lunch so we decided to return another time ... visitors must book an appointment to tour the temple ... behind the circular wrought iron gate and up three wide steps, the entrance to the temple is perfectly symmetrical ... a tall sculpture like an oversize incense burner stands in the centre, surrounded by two steeply curved stairways to an upper landing ... behind the sculpture are bonsai shrubs and flowers ... the atmosphere is serene and stately in spite of heavy traffic just 10 feet away.

The Grandview walkway (Central Valley Parkway, route for cyclists as well http://vancouver.ca/ENGSVCS/streets/greenways/city/central.htm) meanders along the north side of the skytrain canyon and is bordered by well groomed lawns, shrubs, maple, birch, fir, spruce and cedar trees ... ferns grace the gardens between the shrubs ... the leaves have disappeared from the wild rose bushes, but the bright red rose hip berries still cling to the branches.

In Vancouver, the Central Valley Greenway is being developed in several phases, with the first phase complete on Grandview Highway North between Commercial Drive and Slocan Street. This phase of the greenway opened in 2001 and includes several innovations and public amenities including: bike streets which are closed to vehicle traffic, improved lighting, native habitat restoration, recycled materials, drinking fountains, a butterfly garden, a bocce court, seating areas and public art.

At the intersections along Grandview are a variety of seating structures covered in bright multi-colored tiles: the Victoria Drive structure is a three-level stepping platform; at Lakewood is a large low circular bench; at Nanaimo Street, a park-type bench completely tiled from the back down to the feet ... just west of Nanaimo is a large rough-hewn stone seating area resembling an ancient druid circle within which lie long thick slabs stacked on top of and perpendicular to each other ... the top slabs are connected by steel plates with a three-inch opening between them ... in that narrow space, an inscription reads that this sculpture was a Translink Project 2000 and a SOFA CUNAIT Project 2002 involving several community groups ... two of the lower slabs have bowl-shaped hollows for catching rain (perhaps as drinking water for dogs) ... the designer of this very interesting piece was D.S. Fushtey and the granite slabs were brought from (-- can't remember the name --) Inlet up the BC coast.

Beyond Nanaimo Street, the gardens gave way to simple lawns as the area opened up near the Rona Centre at Renfrew Skytrain station ... we made a pit stop at Rona and munched on free popcorn as we admired the Christmas decorations.

As our feet were tired and our stomachs empty, we rode the skytrain back to Broadway Station ... the #20 bus pulled in at that moment and we climbed on board where we met a retired former coworker of Flora's who is interested in joining our Saturday morning walks ... after a light bag lunch at Britannia Centre, Flora joined other seniors for card games and I joined the computer to make this log entry.

PLEASE TAKE NOTE

Our walking group now has a name, selected at last Thursday's potluck luncheon ... we are now called

"BEST FOOT FORWARD, Britannia Seniors 55+ Walking Group" ... starting in January the group will meet every TUESDAY and SATURDAY at 10:30 am (please note new time) and we look forward to having more people join us for either or both of these days.

Contributor Virginia B

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Walking Club updates


This Saturday was a little different than our usual walks ... because only Flora, Linda and I have been showing up for the walks, we decided to do something we all enjoy: shopping! We love to shop and browse and Main Street is a great place for this... from Britannia Centre we walked to Broadway (2 km), caught the 99 B-Line to Main, transferred to the Main Street bus and rode up the long grade to 17 Avenue as Linda's little legs have difficulty navigating slopes ...

The weather started out overcast, cool and breezy, but by the time we got off the bus the sun was breaking through the clouds ... soon the sky cleared and we basked in the sun's embrace ...

Along Main Street we walked south from E 17Th to E 29Th and discovered at least a dozen second hand furniture/antique shops ... Linda bought a wardrobe which she is having delivered ... Flora found enough pieces at several shops to complete her Halloween costume ... I was thinking about lunch most of the way so my focus was mostly on cafes, restaurants and food stores ... we found an unusual cafe that was cafeteria style with a 'build-your-own' meal menu ... Flora enjoyed her lamb wrap and I endured my lentil burger (it was a bit mushy) ... Linda had no appetite so she ordered coffee ...

We kept losing each other as one would drop back and surreptitiously slip into a tiny doorway, reappear minutes later wondering where the others were ... we devised a plan that worked: when Flora entered a shop, she would tell Linda if I wasn't nearby ... Linda would wait for Flora and keep an eye on my whereabouts ... once Flora emerged, she and Linda would find me in another shop ... we switched around so everybody took a turn as lookout which worked out well ...

One of the most impressive shops was the Spirit Bear Gallery http://www.houseofthespiritbear.com/ which had many beautiful acrylic paintings with First Nations themes rendered in bright, clean primary colors and strong lines ... the owner had installed a mahogany wood bar on which was displayed hand made silver jewellery and other artifacts ... artwork leaned against the bar ... two huge white eagle statues stood in the far corner waiting to be painted with designs copied from two of the paintings ... the statues will be put on display throughout the City of Vancouver during tourist season ... they will then be auctioned to private collectors and businesses to raise money for charity ... two years ago, it was large whales and, last year, spirit bears were the auctioned statues ...

In the centre of the gallery was a coffee table made entirely of heavy carved glass ... a clear oval top rested on two curved supports of frosted glass ... a magnificent piece ... the owner plans to incorporate the table with upholstered chairs and other tables to create a relaxing coffee lounge in the gallery ...

A suggestion has now been made that we create a second walking group during the weekday for seniors who cannot join the Saturday group ... Anne Jackson, our Seniors Coordinator, has asked that we let her know within a week so that the information can be included in the next Community Centre Program publication ... ANYONE INTERESTED is asked to contact Anne ...

Until next time, may the wind blow at your back, the sun shine on your face, and the road lie smooth before you ...

Contributor Virginia

Monday, October 27, 2008

Notice for 10 Nov!!!

Anne Jackson (programmer) has received this invitation & if any one is interested to please let her know no later than Thursday 06 Nov. Luncheon will be cancelled on this date for seniors to attend this special presentation.


New Volunteer Annie

This is Annie who is the new volunteer for Monday lunches & nutrition workshops.
She is a student studying nutrition & diets. That will be her field, Nutritionist. She comes in on Mondays only for limited time preparing meals as well having the seniors join her in making the meal to have quality food, less fat, salt etc... & leaves them a sheet of info. We wish her well.

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Saturday 18th Oct. walk

This week's instalment:

Word had been out for a week that a van and driver were available to take seniors from Britannia Centre to UBC Saturday October 18 ... Linda, Flora and I were the only ones to show up so we decided to attend the annual Apple Festival at the UBC Botanical Gardens ... our driver, Darren, newly arrived from Toronto, provided a map and we helped navigate as he was not yet familiar with traffic conditions in Vancouver. http://www.ubcbotanicalgarden.org/events/applefest.php

We arrived at West Mall Parkade and, as we did not know the exact location of the botanical gardens, we followed the shuttle bus to the festival site ... the sun was peeking through the clouds and followed us into the already packed entrance way where huge hotplates were browning rows of hamburgers and hot dogs for the hungry hoards ... our first destination was the upper garden where the apple tasting was being held because I wanted to be sure to get a piece of deep delicious apple pie (my sole purpose in going there!).

Linda opted for an espresso from Turks coffee truck ... Turks operates one the the best coffee bars on Commercial Drive across the street from Grandview Park ... Flora went in search of dried apples and found what she was looking for ... in the meantime, I met up with my two daughters, Diana and Kristl, and their friend Michelle who were also here for the apple tasting ... between the coffee truck and apple pie tent was one selling candied apples and other apple treats for Halloween ... a separate tent carried colorful replicas of labels of all the major apple producers in BC ... I recognized a couple of them from my own childhood living on a farm in southern Alberta ... my uncles would drive to BC every Fall to bring back a truckload of fruit for making pies, preserves, jams, jellies and my favorites, apple and pear butter.

The major festival attraction was a large tent with a long line-up of tasters under a canopy at the entrance ... tables of paper plates containing wedges of 80 varieties of apples grown in BC were being eagerly picked up by the people who paid $3 for the opportunity of tasting homegrown apples ... another shorter line-up of tasters at a smaller tent were grading apple samples on a scale of most favourite to least favourite ... the purpose of grading the apples was for the Government of Canada to determine future markets for apple growers.

A special feature of the festival was a dance performance by the Tiddly Cove Morris dancers and musicians ... information about this interesting group http://www.tiddleycovemorris.org/

We left the festival when the sun was out in full ... it had been a perfect day for an outdoor festival ... we drove the girls to their destination and continued on to Queen Elizabeth Park on Little Mountain at 33rd Avenue and Cambie Street ... the entire city, the mountains and Burrard Inlet were bathed in the warmth of the afternoon sun... Darren was delighted with the views and took several pictures with his phone camera, commenting that he could hardly wait for his friends to come to Vancouver so he could take them to this beautiful park.

On our way back to Commercial Drive, Flora spotted an old yellow pickup truck full of Chilliwack corn in the driveway of a modest house ... this is the best corn on the cob you can get in BC. Darren dropped me off at my place and returned to Britannia Centre.

This was one of the best outings we have enjoyed this summer and fall ... next Saturday, weather permitting, we will take the bus to Main Street for lunch and a shop-til-we-drop afternoon.

Contributor Virginia

Friday, October 17, 2008

Protection Summary

The following is a summary of a pamphlet issued by the Ministry of Attorney General of BC as part of their program of "Working Together to Prevent Crime". This pamphlet is designed specifically for senior citizens and includes con games, mail fraud schemes ,and provides other crime prevention tips.

For your protection, do not rush into any deal involving your money or property.
Be wary of something-for-nothing or get-rich-quick schemes.
Never sign contracts until your lawyer or banker has read them.
Never turn over large sums of cash, no matter how promising the offer.
Check the credentials of sales people and public officials.
Immediately report all suspicious offers to police they can act before swindlers leave town.
Arrange for incoming funds to be deposited directly into your bank account.

Other tips include safeguarding your home, your car and yourself when walking on the street.

Copies of the "Protection for Seniors Citizens" pamphlet are available at the Community Policing Centre on the Drive (between East3rd and 4Th Avenues) or at Britannia Seniors Centre in the near future.
Contributor Virginia B.
Volunteer Community Policing Centre

Protection Phamphlet for Seniors











Thursday, October 16, 2008

Walking club update for 10 Oct


Well, we finally got to go to Queen Elizabeth Park - Flora, Linda and I. We thought it would be a simple matter of catching the #20 Victoria Drive bus up to 33rd Avenue then walking to the park which, according to the map, looked like it might take a half hour. An hour later we arrived at Fraser Street, with Knight Street, Main Street and Cambie yet to come. So, being resourceful, we caught the #19 bus on Fraser, got off at Broadway and Cambie and transferred to the Cambie bus. It was nearly 1:00 o'clock. At 33rd, we walked up the rise to the park - about two hours from the time we left Britannia Centre!

PLEASE NOTE: if you plan a walk in QE Park, do not take the route we took! Much quicker to catch the #20 Victoria bus to Broadway and Commercial, transfer to the 99 B-Line heading west, get off at Cambie and take the Cambie bus to 33rd.

At the park, Flora took photos of us in front of the two remaining statues. If you recall, the third one was stolen, then recovered, but not yet replaced, leaving one statue with an empty outstretched arm. That was an invitation to fill the empty space; several visitors to the park were also taking photos with the statues. The view of the city was stunning in the hazy sunlight of the warm autumn day. Trees that once blocked the view had been removed, leaving a natural lookout of downtown Vancouver, the North Shore Mountains and North Vancouver, Burrard Inlet and East Vancouver.

While Flora and Linda made a pit stop at the local facilities provided, I noticed an old iron clock on a tall pedestal. The plates attached provided details of its origins: the clock was made by International Clocks in Vancouver; dedicated in April 1965 by the Lions Club of Chinatown to commemorate the twinning of Vancouver Chinatown with the Lions Club of Kowloon (Hong Kong) and to promote fellowship between the two cities and its citizens.

Our return walk was east out of the park to Main Street where we caught the bus to Broadway for the 99 B-Line back to the Drive.
I counted the number of buses we needed on the trip: six altogether. As we travelled down Main Street to Broadway, we decided that one Saturday would be spent browsing and taking lunch along a popular stretch of Main from 33rd north to 21st - a vibrant, upbeat area of sidewalk cafes and tiny shops, from cultural eateries to antique and clothing stores, sports shops and mini markets - something for every taste and interest.

Next Saturday, October 18, the Britannia van is taking seniors to UBC;the ultimate destination is a surprise. Adventure awaits! See you then!

Virginia

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Thanksgiving Dinner Social

We had our Senior Centre Thanksgiving dinner & had a great time. Turkey dinner with the trimmings & pumpkin pie! Everyone enjoyed & seconds as well. Good selection of music, a bit of dancing, door prizes & finished with Bingo.
The first pic is of Anne J. (coordinator of the centre) & her friend Kevin (great guy). Really handy in the kitchen helping serve. Then the Bingo Callers Laurette & Vera. We have never really done this & had a hoot as you can see. Great laughs by all. Great friends getting together.