Westender September 22 2016

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SEPTEMBER 22-28 // 2016

EVERYTHING VANCOUVER

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Mount Pleasant rising • MAIN STREET’S HIDDEN PARK LIFE • • OKTOBERFEST SURVIVAL GUIDE • • TEGAN AND SARA: POP MUSIC WITH A MESSAGE •

NEWS // ISSUES • STYLE // DESIGN • EAT // DRINK • MUSIC // ARTS • FILM // TV • HEALTH // SEX

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2 W September 22 - September 28, 2016

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NEWS // ISSUES

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INSIDE THIS WEEK CIRCULATION 604-742-8676 CIRCULATION@ WESTENDER.COM

RANT//RAVE

email: rantrave@westender.com ALL RANTS ARE THE OPINION OF THE INDIVIDUAL AND DO NOT REFLECT THE OPINIONS OF THE WESTENDER. THE EDITOR RESERVES THE RIGHT TO EDIT FOR CLARITY AND BREVITY, SO PLEASE KEEP IT SHORT AND (BITTER)SWEET.

a danger to themselves, not others. Granville Street, for a few short blocks, is filthy and something to be ashamed of, but the tourists I talk to always mention how clean our streets are compared to most American cities. And a lot of the filth is caused by cigarette smokers using the streets as ashtrays, and these people doing it are not homeless. The homeless pick butts off the street to smoke and are cleaning up the mess left by the wellto-do. In regards to the rainbow that is painted on the street at Davie/Bute, this is a celebration of our pride in being a diverse community accepting of everyone including the above less fortunate folks. In conclusion, as a 30year resident of the West End, I have never felt unsafe nor threatened in my neighbourhood. These less fortunate citizens make me feel grateful for what I have, and in so doing, they are enriching my life a little bit. I have not felt the quality of my life diminished by these people you say are making you upset. –Jennifer

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You’re All Just Jealous of My Jetpack by Tom Gauld

WESTENDER 303 WEST 5TH VANCOUVER, BC, V5Y 1J66J 1T5

PLEASE READ THE FINE PRINT: Offers valid until September 30, 2016. See toyota.ca for complete details. In the event of any discrepancy or inconsistency between Toyota prices, rates and/or other information contained on www.getyourtoyota.ca and that contained on toyota.ca, the latter shall prevail. Errors and omissions excepted. 1. Lease example: 2016 Corolla LE Automatic BURLEC-A MSRP is $21,855 and includes $1,715 freight/PDI and fees leased at 0.99% over 60 months with $1,375 down payment (after application of the $1,000 customer incentive), equals 260 weekly payments of $48 with a total lease obligation of $13,678 (after application of $1,000 customer incentive). Applicable taxes are extra. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.07. 2. $1,000 customer incentives available on 2016 Corolla models and can be combined with advertised lease rate. 3. Lease example: 2016 RAV4 FWD LE Automatic ZFREVT-B with a vehicle price of $28,200 includes $1,885 freight/PDI and fees leased at 1.49% over 60 months with $2,425 down payment (after application of the $1,000 customer incentive), equals 260 weekly payments of $58 with a total lease obligation of $17,486 (after application of $1,000 customer incentive). Applicable taxes are extra. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess km charge is $.10. 4. $1,000 customer incentive can be combined with advertised lease offer on the 2016 RAV4 FWD LE Automatic ZFREVT only. Up to $1,000 incentive for cash customers is available on select other 2016 RAV4 models cannot be combined with advertised lease offer. 5. Lease example: 2016 Tundra 4x4 Double Cab 5.7L Automatic UY5F1T-A with a vehicle price of $41,505 includes $1,885 freight/PDI and fees leased at 1.99% over 60 months with $0 down payment, equals 260 weekly payments of $113 with a total lease obligation of $29,279. Applicable taxes are extra. Lease 60 mos. based on 100,000 km, excess per km charge is $.15. 6. Up to $2,000 incentive for cash customers is available on 2016 Tundra models and cannot be combined with advertised lease offer. 7. Customer incentives on 2016 Corolla models are valid until September 30, 2016. Incentives for cash customers on 2016 Tundra and RAV4 models are valid until September 30, 2016 and 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 incentive offers by September 30, 2016. 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 incentive offers. 8. Weekly lease offers available through Toyota Financial Services (TFS) on approved credit to qualified retail customers on most 60 month leases of new and demonstrator Toyota vehicles. Down payment and first weekly payment due at lease inception and next weekly payment due approximately 7 days later and weekly thereafter throughout the term. 9. Aeroplan miles: Earn up to 5000 Aeroplan miles. Miles offer valid on vehicles purchased/leased, registered and delivered between September 01 and September 30, 2016. Customers must be an Aeroplan Member prior to the completion of the transaction. Offer subject to change without notice. Some conditions apply. See Toyota.ca/aeroplan or your Dealer for details. ®Aeroplan and the Aeroplan logo are registered trademarks of Aimia Canada Inc. Visit your Toyota Dealer or www.getyourtoyota.ca for more details. Some conditions apply; offers are time limited and may change without notice. Dealer may lease/sell for less. Each specific model may not be available at each dealer at all times; factory order or dealer trade may be necessary.

COVER: MATT TROY IS THE ARTISTIC DIRECTOR OF VANCOUVER ART AND LEISURE. DAN TOULGOET PHOTO

Re:“Everything is terrible,” Rant/Rave, Sept. 15, 2016. This rave is in response to Elaine’s rant (Sept. 15). I am a regular beachgoer and have a completely different experience when I visit the beach. The homeless, the binners, the mentally challenged all have the same rights to enjoy the public parks and beaches. Stanley Park is vast and there are so many spots to find a quiet place to sit and enjoy. Binners are a part of the fabric of our community and it is never to their advantage to litter the alleys or streets. They are usually binning to supplement their welfare or old age security cheques. As for the folks begging on the street, most of the time they sit on the sidewalk quietly, not bothering anyone. I always feel grateful that I have never been in this dark place in life. Mentally challenged men and women who are experiencing a psychotic episode are frightening to most of us, but usually – unless provoked – they are more of

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News5 Vancouver Shakedown5 Science Matters5 Nosh6 Fresh Sheet6 The Growler7 By The Bottle8 Your Hood: Mt. Pleasant9 Cover story9 A Good Chick To Know12 What’s On14 Style File16 Reel People17 Music18 Real Estate19 Sex with Mish Way21 Whole Nourishment21 Classifieds22 Horoscopes23

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4 W September 22 - September 28, 2016

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NEWS // ISSUES

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YOUR CITY

Wild Pacific salmon face an upstream battle for survival

CITY SHORTS //

Dan Toulgoet photo

SUNDAY DEADLINE FOR INPUT ON LIQUOR STRATEGY

The City of Vancouver wants feedback on how it should handle hooch. A second round of public consultation was launched earlier this month to examine how the city can “improve experiences around liquor in Vancouver.” Based on public feedback heard earlier this year, the city developed draft recommendations that will shape what will become the Vancouver Liquor Strategy. Those 18 recommendations and potential actions cover topics around when liquor is sold, made or served; size of venues that serve liquor; rules for patios and options for no or low-liquor entertainment. Feedback from the survey, which is open until this Sunday, Sept. 25, will help shape the final recommendations that go to council later this year. The review was initiated last spring, when the city began consulting residents and businesses to update the way the city approaches liquor-related policies.

The first survey was launched in April, and 9,000 people took part. Some of the key findings include: x dents agreed that it should be easier to create outdoor patios. spondents agreed that the liquor industry is good for the local economy. dents agreed that bars should be required to meet training and operating standards. dents agreed that Vancouver’s arts, culture and social life relies on liquor to be successful. Vancouver has 1,300 restaurants and 300 venues – bars, clubs and theatres – where liquor is accessible. It’s not all fun and games though, as statistics from Vancouver Coastal Health suggest hospital visits due to alcohol overdose have risen sharply over the last seven years: 75 per cent for men and 50 per cent for women. The online survey is available at Vancouver.ca. –John Kurucz,Vancouver Courier

David Suzuki Science Matters @DavidSuzuki

Salmon have been swimming in Pacific Northwest waters for at least seven million years, as indicated by fossils of large saber-tooth salmon found in the area. During that time, they’ve been a key species in intricate, interconnected coastal ecosystems, bringing nitrogen and other nutrients from the ocean and up streams and rivers to spawning grounds, feeding whales, bears and eagles and fertilizing the magnificent coastal rainforests along the way. For as long as people have lived in the area, salmon have been an important food source and have helped shape cultural identities. But something is happening to Pacific coast salmon. This year, BC’s sockeye salmon run was the lowest in recorded history. Commercial and First Nations fisheries on the world’s biggest sockeye run on BC’s longest river, the Fraser, closed. Fewer than 900,000 sockeye out of a projected 2.2 million returned to the Fraser to spawn. Areas once teeming with salmon are all but empty. Salmon define West Coast communities, especially Indigenous ones. The West Coast is a Pacific salmon

forest. Today, salmon provide food and contribute to sustainable economies built on fishing and ecotourism. West Coast children learn about the salmon life cycle early in their studies. Salmon migrations, stretching up to 3,000 kilometres, are among the world’s most awe-inspiring. After spending adult lives in the ocean, salmon make the arduous trip up rivers against the current, returning to spawn and die where they hatched. Only one out of every thousand salmon manages to survive and return to its freshwater birthplace. So what’s going wrong? Climate change is amplifying a long list of stressors salmon already face. Sockeye salmon are sensitive to temperature changes, so higher ocean and river temperatures can have serious impacts. Even small degrees of warming can kill them. Low river flows from unusually small snowpacks linked to climate change make a tough journey even harder. Oceans absorb the brunt of our climate pollution – more than 90 per cent of emissions-trapped heat since the 1970s. Most warming takes place near the surface, where salmon travel, with the upper 75 metres warming 0.11 C per decade between 1971 and 2010. Although ocean temperatures have always

fluctuated, climate change is lengthening those fluctuations. A giant mass of warmer-than-average water in the Pacific, known as “the blob”, made ocean conditions even warmer, with El Niño adding to increased temperatures. Salmon have less food, and face new predators migrating north to beat the heat. Beyond creating poor environmental conditions for salmon, climate change increases disease risks. Warm conditions have led to sea lice outbreaks in farmed and wild salmon, and a heart and muscle inflammatory disease has been found in at least one farm. Scientists researching salmon movement through areas with farms are find ing wild fish, especially young ones, with elevated parasite levels. Diseases that cause even slight deficiencies in swimming speed or feeding ability could make these marathon swimmers easy prey. Some question whether wild salmon will remain a West Coast food staple. For the first time, the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Seafood Watch program has advised consumers to avoid buying chinook and coho from four South Coast fisheries. Researchers also predict changing conditions will drive important food fish north by up to 18 kilometres a decade.

Disappearing salmon don’t just affect humans but all coastal ecosystems and wildlife. Eighty-two endangered southern resident killer whales depend on chinook salmon to survive. As chinook stocks go down, the likelihood that these whales could become extinct goes up. Although the federal government has committed to implement recommendations from Justice Bruce Cohen’s inquiry into Fraser River sockeye and to follow the Wild Salmon Policy, reversing this dire situation will take widespread concerted and immediate action. A weak provincial climate plan that fails to meet emissions targets and acceptance of new ocean-based fish farm applications won’t help wild salmon. We need to move fish farms out of the water and onto land. Salmon are resilient and have survived ice ages and other challenges over millions of years. They’ve survived having their streams paved over. They’ve survived toxins dumped into their environments. The question is, can they – and the ecosystems that depend on them – survive climate change and fish farms and all the other stressors humans are putting on them? Learn more at DavidSuzuki.org. W

Main Street’s hidden park life Grant Lawrence Vancouver Shakedown @GrantLawrence

Dude: if you just visit Main Street for the shopping, you need to chill out. Did you know that Main Street, from roughly Broadway to 33rd Avenue, has arguably the most parks of any major thoroughfare in our city, all within a few blocks of the Main drag? Neither did I. “The Main Street weekend tourists don’t even know the parks exist,” says Lauren Bercovitch, who writes the popular blog GrownUpParty.com and is a film and television producer. She’s also a wife and mom. “When I first moved to Main Street from the West End four years ago, everyone walking down Main was ‘dude in a band.’ Now it’s ‘dude in a band with a baby.’” It’s when Lauren became a

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parent herself that she discovered the plethora of parks. Speaking of dudes, just east of Main and 7th, you’ll find the famous Dude Chilling Park, a citizen-victory that originally began as a gag, but captured the imagination of the neighbourhood when the City removed the joke sign bearing the name. A petition was created collecting nearly 2,000 signatures, so the City made it official. Formally Guelph Park, Dude Chilling Park became a reality in 2014 (it also made international news, so much so that late night TV comedian Jimmy Kimmel joked, “between Dude Chilling Park and Mayor Rob Ford, I just might have to move to Canada”). A few blocks south on East 15th between Main and Fraser, you’ll find Robson Park (named after Premier John Robson, the same namesake as our most famous downtown street). “Super sketchy.” That’s how a longtime nearby

Blogger Lauren Bercovitch and baby Georgia hang out at Tea Swamp Park near Main and 16th. Grant Lawrence photo homeowner described Robson Park when he bought in the 1990s (he didn’t want his name printed here for fear of the gentrification backlash). “It was pretty much a daily gong show, big mess, needles, but I swear everything changed for the whole neighbourhood when [the

restaurant] Les Faux Bourgeois opened. The bourgeois actually showed up! You can call it gentrification, but the park is finally a good place for kids and families, and really, what are parks for?” Next up, just east of Main and 16th, is the oddly named Tea Swamp Park.There’s

a story.When you visit this park you might notice the surrounding lumpy sidewalks, crooked fences, and leaning houses.That’s because this area really was once a swamp, colonized by beavers before people. It remains a water catchment and one of several ancient peat bogs in East Van. Houses near Tea Swamp Park now have to drive pilings up to 50 feet deep to stabilize their home. In the early days, a special plant grew in the swamp that locals used for tea and medicine, hence the name that has stuck all these years. Lauren Bercovitch’s favourite off-Main green space is Mount Pleasant Park, a few blocks west of Main and 16th. “I love that half the park is people in their 20s and 30s hanging out and drinking or whatever, and the other half is families in the playground. It’s a happily co-existing community.” Lauren and her husband live so close by, they can leave their baby sleeping in their home while hanging

out in the park with their baby monitor cranked. Continuing south, you’ll also find Grimmet Park on East 19th (it’s been there since 1931), Prince Edward (complete with an old-school splash park), Riley and Hillcrest Parks (both revamped as part of the Winter Olympics legacy), and the crown jewel: the sprawling Queen Elizabeth Park at 33rd Avenue on Little Mountain, the highest elevation point in the City of Vancouver, and home to that crazy bird and flora conservatory dome. Thanks to the range of the baby monitor, you’ll mostly find Lauren closer to her home and community in Mount Pleasant. “I’ve made genuine friendships in these parks, where I’ve actually exchanged phone numbers, like in the olden days.” So, dude: next time you’re on Main Street, get your hand-crafted matcha brioche vegan heritage donuts to go, enjoy some park life, and chill the #$%* out! W

September 22 - September 28, 2016 W 5


EAT // DRINK

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DINING OUT

From left: Co-owner Jeremy Pigeon bhind the bar at Crowbar; Smoked Sturgeon with sprouted grains, crab apple, barbecued leeks and watercress; The John McClane cocktail. Dan Toulgoet photos

Crowbar gifts the Fraserhood with the perfect neighbourhood hangout Anya Levykh Nosh

@FoodgirlFriday CROWBAR

646 Kingsway 604-336-2769 CrowbarEastVan.com Open nightly, 5pm-12am. Closed all statutory holidays. I used to think of the intersection where Fraser Street, Kingsway and East 15th Avenue all meet as the Bermuda Triangle. For years, the little shops around these busy thoroughfares sat huddled like medieval beggars around a castle’s walls – easy to ignore. Over the last five years, however, things have been looking up. The long-running Lion’s Den (Japanese-Caribbean fusion) and Ba Le (Viet-

namese sandwiches) and popular French bistro Les Faux Bourgeois have been joined by the likes of Los Cuervos and Sal y Limon taquerias, the Twin Peaksthemed Black Lodge and the more recent Savio Volpe. Gluten-free bakeries, artisan coffee shops and solid pizza options have all rounded out the offerings. No longer a commercial graveyard of lost souls, this is now a destination corner with a plethora of options. The one thing missing was a nice place to get a drink and a few snacks. Savio’s focus is on wine and its food is wonderful, but where was the neighbourhood bar? Enter, with much applause, Crowbar. The restaurant takes over the former Mega Ill (and mega stinky) pizza spot. A complete reno has the room clad in

reclaimed wood, with a long bar facing an equally-lengthy high-top banquette. It’s all high-top seating here, in fact, and it’s surprisingly comfortable. The bar is backed with crates re-purposed as shelves, and the result is charmingly rustic without extending into kitsch. The trio behind this new venture has a solid pedigree. Chris Scott and Scott Downey both hail from Wildebeest, while chef Scott Korzack formerly ran the kitchens at Beach Bay and L’Abattoir. The focus is on the cocktails and the snacks, and they are, for the most part, excellent. Drinks are named after characters from movies from the ‘90s. The Mary Swanson ($13), named after the Dumb and Dumber character, is a whip-smart concoction of Hendrick’s gin, elderflower liqueur, fino

Anya Levykh Fresh Sheet

@FoodGirlFriday

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Apply online at www.lmsgroup.ca 6 W September 22 - September 28, 2016

Chef Alex Hon (sous chef at West Restaurant) has won the $10,000 grand prize at the Hawksworth Young Chefs Scholarship Competition. In addition to the cash prize, the winner also receives a stage at an international kitchen of their choice. Congrats to chef Hon! HawksworthScholarship.com Chef Chris Stewart has joined the Hawksworth team as chef de cuisine. Stewart previously worked at Thomas Keller’s French Laundry and Bouchon Bistro in California, as well as Heston Blumenthal’s The Fat Duck in the UK. HawksworthRestaurant.com Urban Tea Merchant has opened a pop-up location on the third floor at Nordstrom Pacific Centre.The space will house a selection of TWG

sherry, orange juice and bitters. The Tyler Durden (yes, the Brad Pitt character from Fight Club) is a neat take on a classic Pisco Sour. Lest you think it’s all about the cocktails, however, take a peek at the small and well-put-together wine list. Locals gems like See Ya Later’s Pinot Noir sit next to value-priced selections from Chapoutier and Concha Y Toro. As for the food, starting with the house bread ($6) is a wise choice. The flour for the bread is milled in-house and it’s very nice, but the plate of runny pork fat mixed with chicken jus that it sits on is revelatory. The slightly-reduced liquid is smoky and salty, and ever-so-sop-worthy. Mushroom toast ($12) is one of those epic menu understatements that delivers much more than the sum of its

parts. Veal jus is poured over chanterelles and then topped with a perfectly deep-fried whole egg that oozes a custardy yolk over the toast. Things on sticks ($4 or $6 each) are mainly lovely. Juicy chunks of veal tongue pastrami, shitakes with black garlic puree, pork shoulder with crab apple butter – all delicious. Less so were the duck sausages with mustard. The too-moist and mealy texture gave the impression of undercooked and overextruded meat. On a later visit, this had been changed to duck balls with a blackberry whey, which sounds more promising. There are some larger plates for those with more appetite. Chicken broth ravioli ($19) was another winner, although the portion seemed disproportionately small. Charred leeks

with sidestripe shrimp, sauce gribiche, puffed barley and bone marrow ($15) is another good choice. These are dishes deep with flavour and texture, and are still good for sharing. Crowbar is attracting a varied crowd. On one night, a multi-generational family party took over the window table, several couples cozied up to the bar, and what was obviously a girls’ night had taken over the back. It’s exactly what the ‘hood needed and if someone can now open up an ice cream shop within walking distance, all bases will be covered. W

teas, as well as accessories and gifts. UrbanTea.com

Sunday supper series at Yew Seafood on Sep. 25 and Oct. 2. Featuring classic bouillabaisse as the main course, along with crusty baguette, the three-course meal also includes a glass of bubbly to start, along with a seasonal salad, and brown sugar warm apple pie with vanilla ice cream for dessert.Tickets $80.YewSeafood.com

Beta5 Chocolates is celebrating their fifth anniversary on Oct. 1 with an in-store birthday party.There will be loot bags for the first 25 customers, complimentary mini cream puffs for 50 starting at 12pm, full-sized birthday party cream puffs for sale, limited edition birthday polygon bars, a birthday-themed ice cream social from 1pm to 5pm, and an in-store contest to win a private tour and tasting for five people.The party will run 10am to 5pm. Beta5. MyShopify.com

La Mezcaleria has launched a new happy hour menu that runs Tuesday to Sunday, 3pm to 6pm. Look for house wine, draft beer and Paloma cocktails, made with El Jimador Reposado, grapefruit soda and lime, for $5 each. Food specials include seasonal seafood ceviche for $6 and the popular cheese fondue in individual serving sizes for $8. LaMezcaleria.ca Celebrate one of the world’s most famous whisky cocktails, the Old Fashioned, at Prohibition every Wednesday, 8:30pm to 12:30am, until Nov. 23. Each week, both traditional and modern interpretations of the classic cocktail will be on special for $10, alongside live bluegrass music and classic American food features such as wings and truffle fries. ProhibitionRHG.com Executive chef Weimar Gomez is holding his first

Provence Marinaside is bringing back its Chef ’s Top Ten menu series starting Sept. 26. Each week, for ten weeks, a different threecourse menu will feature one long-time favourite from executive chef Jean-Franics Quaglia and chef de cuisine Sheldon Maloff, such as rack of lamb or bouillabaisse, along with a new appetizer created by one of the restaurant’s five talented sous chefs. Each $45 menu also includes choice of dessert. The first week features seared Lois Lake steelhead preceded by zucchini tarte. See all menus at ProvenceMarinaside.ca

Food: !!!! Service: !!!! Ambiance: !!!! Value: !!!! Overall: !!!!

Ancora Waterfront Dining & Patio is celebrating its one-year anniversary on Oct. 5 with a special candlelit Moët et Chandon dinner. The five-course dinner, created by executive chef Ricardo Valverde, will be preceded by a champagne tower reception. Each course will be paired with a different bubble. Tickets $200 per person. Email Info@ AncoraDining.com or call 604-681-1164. AncoraDining.com W

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CRAFT BEER

The Oktoberfest Survival Guide Stephen Smysnuik The Growler

OKTOBERFEST IS HAPPENING

@TheGrowlerBC

I’ve been writing this column for close to two years now, in an effort to grasp and define what makes BC beer culture so special. What I’ve learned boils down to this: People in this province love a good piss-up. And in a way, we’re pretty good at hosting a good piss-up, too. We can hold our booze and the nights rarely devolve into the sort of wreckage one might expect from a frat party in, say, Ohio (which is how I imagine all parties in the US end up). Take a look at any of the craft beer festivals that have cropped up across this province over the past year. But these festivals are skinny runts compared to the beer festival to end all beer festivals: Oktoberfest, which is happening right now in Munich. Oktoberfest is a legendary shit show – one so prominent and mythologized that millions of people descend on Munich every year to take part in the shenanigans. 6.7 million litres of beer were consumed during the 2013 Oktoberfest alone. That’s obviously a lot of beer, and a profound display of stamina for the German people – one that Vancouverites,Victorians, and Everywhere-elsians can’t possibly compete with, if only because the provincial government won’t let us (how many fourounce tasting glasses does it take to serve 6.7 million litres of beer, anyway?). That doesn’t mean we won’t try. There are a few Oktoberfest celebrations happening in and around the Lower Mainland over the next month; attempts (however vain!) to harness the glory of the true German Oktoberfest (see sidebar).

Harvest Haus Vancouver’s largest Oktoberfest celebration is now in its third year, held at Queen Elizabeth Plaza under tents designed to look as authentic as possible: wooden long tables, 130 sanded log stumps for seats, German entertainment, custombuilt bars – no expense will be spared. The event runs Sept. 29-Oct. 9 and tickets are available at HarvestHaus.com.

Just remember, if you’re heading to Harvest Haus or any other Oktoberfest celebration this year, it’s a marathon, not a sprint. File photo But because we haven’t the history nor the ability, really, to drink to excess quite like the Germans can, I feel it’s in everyone’s best interest to provide some tips on how to survive the drunken revelry without losing your wallet, your dignity and/or your whole weekend to a relentless hangover.

EMBRACE THE STEREOTYPE

Why celebrate Oktoberfest if you’re not going to look the part? Basically, this means drinking from a stein and wearing the lederhosen. Seriously, splurge on a pair of lederhosen.Wear them yearround even, because they’re masterfully engineered for marathon drinking. They’re shorts, so you won’t overheat while dancing in a sweaty pit of hundreds of other people.They have suspenders, so they won’t fall down. The fly is designed so you can

relieve yourself without taking them off, and they’re made of leather so when you inevitably spill beer on yourself, it’s easy to clean up.

EAT (SOMEWHAT) RESPONSIBLY

One of the foundations of Oktoberfest is drinking to excess. In order to do so, you need to eat well enough that you won’t become that wasted, feeble loser we all enjoy pointing and laughing at when we encounter them. Fortunately, Oktoberfest comes with its own tradition of good food, including pretzels and mustard, currywurst, bratwurst with sauerkraut, and other stereotypical German staples. But keep in mind – you don’t want to gorge yourself. Yes, it’s rarity to have these specific foods in one place in great supply at the same time, and the desire to cram as much of it in your face as

possible might be strong (depending on what kind of person you are), but a tummy full of cheesy bratwurst and three steins worth of lager won’t help anybody, least of all yourself.

JOIN IN ON THE DANCE

Dancing is another Oktoberfest tradition. It’s fun, it’s a bit silly and, most importantly, its good for the metabolism and will help you to drink longer.

DON’T MENTION THE WAR

This is more useful if you’re actually in Munich. It’s maybe not a great idea to prod a group of drunken Germans about the most shameful part of their history. Nor would I ask about the Bavarian flags that look suspiciously like swastikas painted on the ceiling of the Hofbrauhaus.You will get popped in the jaw.

REMEMBER: IT’S A MARATHON…

…not a sprint. Don’t chug, drink swiftly. There’s a difference.

OR MAYBE JUST DON’T DRINK TOO MUCH?

Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha.

JUST FORGET ABOUT YOUR DIGNITY

We mentioned above that this survival guide is designed so that you wouldn’t lose your dignity, but you know what? You’re clad in beer-soaked lederhosen, dancing to oompah music with greasy schnitzelstained fingers.Your dignity left hours ago. Embrace it. I hope this has been helpful. (8FHI &G?2!# %$6< D6:2$H Mangelsdorf, who has a great enthusiasm for and depth of knowledge about lederhosen. W

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Oktoberfest at Vancouver Alpen Club Vancouver’s longstanding German club throws an annual Oktoberfest celebration, with traditional German food, beer, live music and a DJ. The festivities run Sept. 23-25 and tickets are available at Tickets.VACBC.ca. Stein and Dine Victoria’s Roast Meat and Sandwich Shop joins forces with Victoria Beer Week for its third annual Oktoberfest on Oct. 22 in Market Square. This one will focus on BC craft beer, curated by VBW. Tickets available at SteinAndDine.com. Leavenworth Oktoberfest This three-weekend festival in Washington State’s Cascade Mountains begins Sept. 30. This is the closest thing the Pacific Northwest has to the authentic Munich experience – the whole town is modeled after a Bavarian village, with even the signs of the McDonald’s and 7-11 are cut in the style. It’s weird as hell to visit – except during the festival. Tickets available at LeavenworthOktoberfest.Ticketleap.com.

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Happy birthday to, dare I say it, one of my favourite wines. Chianti Classico, which lays claim to the world’s oldest legally defined wine region, is celebrating 300 years. That’s a pretty significant milestone. On Sept. 24, 1716 the Grand Duke Cosimo III de Medici officially defined the boundaries of Chianti in a select part of the Tuscan hills between Florence and Siena. Over time, it grew well beyond these and eventually a “classic” zone was established referring to original area. Thus the division between Chianti and Chianti Classico was born. This Saturday, it’s the latter which is being feted. Who knows exactly what the wine was like back in Cosimo III’s day. Chianti Classico has evolved and improved over the years. Today it’s based on Sangiovese (minimum 80 per cent) and is one of this noble grape’s finest expressions. Subtle differences depend on which (if any) grapes are blended with Sangiovese as well as where in the Classico zone the wine hails from. The region itself is complex with varying elevations, exposures, soils and microclimates giving a wealth of diversity. Despite variations, you can count on Chianti Classico to be savoury, structured and hunger-inducing. The wines are simply heaven with typical Tuscan dishes like bistecca alla fiorentina, pappardelle in a wild boar ragù, duck sauce with pici (a thicker version of spaghetti), braised rabbit or ribollita soup. Chianti Classico’s birthday coincides brilliantly with the transition to autumn dining.

You know what I’ll be drinking this weekend.

2013 Rocca delle >R9-5 # %1/RLF/ %,RGG/9K $=%OC AFR,* # 'Q3E..C (% ?/IDKH )FKH5G Rocca delle Macìe is owned by the Zingarelli family, tireless and passionate ambassadors of the Chianti Classico region. Their entry level offering is an affordable, go-to staple. With friendly and appealing floral, cherry and dried herb nuances, it is light on its feet and approachable. MUQ8 :/9RGK,/ (HK,/K # %1/RLF/ %,RGG/9K $=%OC AFR,* # 'M4E..C (% ?/IDKH )FKH5G The Ricasoli family boasts a whopping 32 generations of wine making. It was also Baron Bettino Ricasoli who is credited with creating the Chianti recipe in 1872 based on Sangiovese blended with other local grapes. This is a modern interpretation where international varieties Merlot (15 per cent) and Cab Sauv (5 per cent) are used to round Sangiovese out. A plump, generous expression that is still tangy and intriguing with tobacco, tarragon and black cherry notes. MUQM :K99R 7/ >KLF52HKGG/ # %1/RLF/ %,RGG/9K $=%OC AFR,* # 'M.E..C (% ?/IDKH )FKH5G As a counterbalance to the above, the Rocca di Montegrossi

is a more traditional blend with five per cent each Canaiolo and Colorino added to Sangiovese. Fragrant red berry and violet aromas followed by exotic spice and underbrush on the palate. It’s fresh, juicy, graceful and delicious! Well worth seeking out.

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Mount Pleasant rising

Fresh blood pumps new life intoVancouver’s coolest neighbourhood ROBERT MANGELSDORF @robmangelsdorf

If there’s one constant in Mount Pleasant, it’s change. The past decade has seen one of Vancouver’s oldest working-class neighbourhoods undergo a remarkable transformation. Gone are the porno theatres, street prostitution and vacant storefronts. In their place; breweries, restaurants and organic bakeries. Kingsway, Broadway and Main are sprouting with shiny new condos reaching for the sky as new businesses and residents move in every day. There’s even a new community centre and library. Earlier this year, global commercial real estate juggernaut Cushman & Wakefield named Main Street one of the top 15 coolest streets in North America. And with developer Rize Alliance’s controversial 21-storey condo tower set to open next year, hundreds of newcomers to the neighbourhood will soon call Mount Pleasant home. As the direction of Mount Pleasant continues to be shaped by those who live and work there, we spoke to some of the neighbourhood’s newest additions about where their new home is headed.

MAURICIO LOZANO, FACULTY BREWING CO.

Mauricio Lozano didn’t choose Vancouver;Vancouver chose him.

Vancouver Art and Leisure artistic director Matt Troy. Dan Toulgoet photo The 31-year-old was born and raised in the historic city of Puebla, Mexico, his father a 14th-generation Poblano and his mother a ninth-generation Quebecer.That Canadian connection came in handy when he was looking for a post-graduate placement. “I wanted to do a masters degree in food manufacturing and Alicia [Medina], my wife, wanted to do a masters degree in architecture,” explains Lozano. “So we thought we’d have to do long distance, because not a lot of schools do both. So we were looking all over the place…and the funny thing is, we both got accepted to UBC and we both got

scholarships.” When Lozano and Medina arrived in 2008, he admits he didn’t know anything about Vancouver. “I had no idea it even had a beach,” he says. “We were supposed to just be here for two years. But we liked it, so we stayed!” When it came time to realize his life’s dream of opening a brewery, the avid homebrewer and former Molson Coors employee says it was his wife who pushed for their Mount Pleasant location. “Alicia was the main driver for the location,” says Lozano. “She’s an architect… and for [her] thesis for her masters in

advanced studies in architecture, she actually picked this area… so she did her study around here.” The neighbourhood has a ton of creative potential, he says, thanks to the fact that it’s mixed use and bike friendly. “The next cool part is coming,” says Lozano. “And it wasn’t planned that way.Yaletown was planned that way; [the City of Vancouver] turned the industrial [zoned land] into commercial. But here it’s organically happening.” Since opening for business earlier this summer, Faculty Brewing Co. has already had a positive impact on the neighbourhood.

“At night, [Ontario and 3rd] is not the nicest corner, let’s put it this way,” says Lozano. “In the morning, it’s a cash corner, there’s a lot of guys drinking in the street and everything, there’s graffiti, there’s car break-ins. Just the fact that I’m open ‘til 11, I have a lot of people on the street… And more people means more eyes on the street and that means more safety and more community, and suddenly this area isn’t as bad.” Neighbouring businesses are also benefitting from Faculty setting up shop. Argo Café next door recently decided to extend its hours until 10pm on Thursdays and Fridays to help feed the hungry craft beer crowd. Lozano is even sourcing some of the hops he uses from backyard growers in Mount Pleasant in exchange for beer. “You want everyone to flourish with you,” he says. “Everyone is holding hands. So we support each other.” Despite there being no shortage of craft beer options in the neighbourhood, Lozano sees the many breweries of Mount Pleasant as complementing each other, instead of competing with each other.

MATT TROY, VANCOUVER ART AND LEISURE

As an artist and a Vancouver resident, Matt Troy saw very few opportunities

for himself and his peers to pursue their passion. As one of the founders of Vancouver Art and Leisure, he hopes he can offer artists the chance to create, and earn a living from their efforts. “We don’t think art should be a hobby, we think art should be a profession,” he says. “When there are no opportunities to succeed financially, the art form stops recreating itself.” Vancouver Art and Leisure, which moved into the old VIVO Media Arts Centre space on Main and East 4th close to two years ago, is a multi-use artist run space providing support for Vancouver’s creative class.The organization puts on three licensed events per month (the maximum legally allowed), which help fund the myriad of other activities VAL supports, including art shows, video game conferences, dance competitions, rap battles, popup stores, LGBTQ events, a painting studio, eight on-site artist studios with 24/7 access, and a soon-to-be-open vinyl record library. “We’re 100 per cent selffunded, we haven’t taken any grant money and were supported only by the strength of our members,” says Troy. “We provide an opportunity for artists that is not based on rank, discipline or intent.

Continued on next page

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Above: Kathy Schleyer is co-owner of Fable Diner at Broadway and Main. Robert Mangelsdorf photo On right: Mauricio Lozano of Faculty Brewing Co. fell in love with Mount Pleasant after moving to Vancouver from Puebla, Mexico. Dan Toulgoet photo

Continued from page 9 We provide a social context for a space where people can express themselves politically, artistically and sexually, and express their gender.” “These types of places are rapidly disappearing in Mount Pleasant, so we’re happy that we can provide this,” says Troy. “We have an excellent landlord who’s really supportive. But the same reasons we moved in will be the same reasons we move out.” Within five years, the block VAL is located on will likely be redeveloped, he says, and the organization will have to find a new home. It’s all part of the unfortunate life-cycle for many artists and arts organizations,Troy notes. Artists are typically attracted to economically depressed neighbourhoods where affordable rents allow them to create. In doing so, they transform their neighbourhood, making it desirable, and inevitably price themselves out in the process. In the meantime,Troy is working with Vancouver city council to adopt more progressive arts policies that protect artist spaces and allows local artists to create; something he says brings value to the city. “When you give people a chance to live their dreams, that’s how you create a great city.”

KATHY SCHLEYER, FABLE DINER

It was little more than a year ago when Kathy Schleyer got the phone call that would launch her and husband Ron MacGillivray’s dream of opening a diner into reality. Schleyer and MacGillivray are the team behind the wildly successful Fable in Kitsilano, along with partner and chef Trevor Bird. “Even before Fable began, my husband Ron, always wanted to open a diner,” says Schleyer. So it was fortuitous when the owners of the iconic 104-year-old Lee Building at Main and Broadway contacted them about the possibility of opening up at one of the busiest intersections in the city in the former Reno Diner space. “They wanted to see this space evolve into something more than just a greasy spoon, per se,” says Schleyer, who first moved to Mount Pleasant 20 years ago when she relocated to Vancouver from Calgary. “This being an iconic diner location just played into that so well.” Fable Diner opened in July, and has quickly found a place in the hearts and stomachs of local residents. Minutes after the doors open on a recent Monday morning, the lowslung booths are quickly filled and the room bustles with conversation and life. “This location is just incredible,” says Schleyer. “This is the centre of the city. It’s not downtown, this is it, the new

centre of the city. So to be part of that is exciting.” While Fable Diner doesn’t offer the $3.99 breakfasts it predecessor did, the menu does include low-cost items to appeal to the working class residents of the neighbourhood. According to the City of Vancouver, more than 21 per cent of Mount Pleasant residents live in low-income households, slightly higher than the city average. “The hard thing is finding that thing that makes the community happy at the same time as doing what you have to do to keep you business alive,” says Schleyer. “Profit margins have to be met, otherwise we have to close the doors.” With the Rize Alliance tower (now dubbed “The Independent”) soon to open across the street, Schleyer says she hopes the changes it will bring are positive ones. “I think for us it will be great. Obviously having all of those residential people closer to you helps your business immensely,” she says. “But I think the area will change quite a bit, and I think it will be a tough change. People are feeling pushed out who’ve been here for so long and are used to a certain lifestyle. So I definitely see that resistance continuing. “[Vancouver] will change, it’s inevitable, and its been happening long before we showed up,” she says. “But it needs to be positive within that change.” W

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Main Street’s Antique Row Jennifer Scott A Good Chick to Know

@Jennifer_AGCTK

Main Street keeps Vancouver’s story alive with it’s infamous Antique Row; from Chinatown to Queen Elizabeth Park, the Main Street corridor has long been home to the best vintage shops our city has to offer.Whether you’re after century-old heirlooms or iconic mid-century modern finds, Main is the go-to stop for antique aficionados.

SPACE LAB

THE UNIQUE ANTIQUE

1853 Main The Unique Antique is the current stop at the Main and East 3rd corner previously occupied by three other vintage spots; since claiming it’s stake on the block, the Unique Antique has made a name for itself by offering an eclectic assortment of vintage anomalies to satiate the inquisitive mind.

THE SELLUTION QUALITY CONSIGNMENT

1009 Kingsway Since 1985, The Sellu-

Model: Nikita Graham

230 East Pender Space-Lab.Tumblr.com Since it’s inception as an anonymous little shop at Main and East 3rd for curious treasure-hunters in the know, Space Lab has been a must-see for locals and visitors alike. Now settling comfortably into is grown-up new digs in Chinatown, the shop has grown to include a specialty coffee shop, Aubade

Coffee, alongside one of the top barbershops in town, Bootleg Barbers. Owner, Clint Moroz, has taken his knack for finding unique one-offs and industrial finds and turning them into sought after décor pieces into a full fledged fabrication and design studio within the shop as well. From salvaged goods to custom creations, Space Lab is my first stop when hunting down specialty finds.

Top: Sean Novakowski shows off the many antique tools at Space Lab. Bottom: Vintage picture frames for sale at Sellution. Dan Toulgoet photos tion has been a cornerstone in the Vancouver antique scene. Specializing in larger furnishings, décor items and artwork, Sellution has a strong hold on the consignment and second-hand market. Recently relocating to its new Kingsway home

Definitely not your typical jewellery store!

after a massive rent hike at it’s former Main and 16th mainstay, the shop is thriving in the fresh new spot, with it’s loyal following happily in tow.

Continued on next page

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Lindsey Shepek of Refind Home Furnishings shows off the Main Street antique shop’s many amazing vases. Dan Toulgoet photo

Continued from page 12 ALEXANDER LAMB ANTIQUES

3271 Main If you’re on the hunt for an experience of oddities, Alexander Lamb is the spot for you. With a collector’s take on minimalist décor up front and an unexpected museum (literally, called Exotic World Museum) in the rear, this unassuming little shop is the best-known hidden gem in the city. Offering visitors a bizarre collection of unusual finds – bugs, carvings and global treasures – this is a definite yes on the Main Street Antique Row.

A BAKER’S DOZEN

3520 Main, Facebook.com/ BakersDozenAntiques Heather Baker has created perhaps the most well known stop for antiques in Vancouver. From vintage toys to jewellery to artwork,

A Baker’s Dozen never fails to showcase the most diverse selection of hard to find antiques. With two rooms and a private viewing area, this shop caters to collectors and the curious alike.

Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. –Leonardo da Vinci

REFIND HOME FURNISHINGS

4609 Main ReFindHomeFurnishings.com ReFind is a multi-award winning vintage shop with as much personality as it has style. Owner Bart Taylor injects his charm into every element of the business, resulting in as many smiles as sales. ReFind offers consignment mid-century modern furnishings, retro décor and kitsch and a wide selection of original new and vintage artwork. From lighting to barware to everything fun in-between, ReFind is Main Street’s most charismatic antique experience. W

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1190 Victoria Drive • 604-336-1803 • viateverepizzeria.com

Sellution’s Kaili Zevenbergen at the antique shop’s new location on Kingsway. Dan Toulgoet photo

There is more online

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WHAT’S ON Th/22

Fr/23

Sa/24

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Mo/26

MUSIC

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MUSIC

MUSIC

COSMIC GARAGE An all-out authentic garage/psych music night featuring performances from Highland Eyeway, the Intelligence Service, Thee Magic Circle and DJ Cobrah. 8pm at Biltmore Cabaret. Cover is $10.

CYRIL HAHN Swiss DJ/producer now based in Vancouver plays a late show at Bodyroll with resident DJs Rook Milo, Juelz and Landyn. 10:30pm at Biltmore Cabaret. Tickets $15 at TicketFly.com

TROMBONE SHORTY New Orleans style jazz-funk trombonist performs with his band, Orleans Avenue. 7pm at Chan Shun Concert Hall. Tickets $62+ at UBC.ca

TA-KU Australian electronic musician and producer on tour in support of his latest EP release (m)edian with special guests Wafia and Masego. 8pm at Vogue Theatre. Tickets $25 at Red Cat, Beat Street and TicketFly.com

THANK YOU SCIENTIST Progrock from the Montclair, New Jersey, rockers with special guests Within Rust and Elysian Sun. 7pm at The Cobalt. Tickets $22 at Red Cat and TicketFly.com CASTLE Headliners play with a triple bill of heavy metal rockers out of San Francisco featuring Mendozza, M16 and Skull Vultures. 8pm at Funky Winker Beans. Cover is $15.

COMEDY KEVIN FOXX From Toronto’s smash success radio show The Kevin Foxx Show, headlining comedian who has shared the stage with Robin Williams, Jerry Seinfeld and Chris Rock performs with opening sets from Devon Alexander and Brad Dorion. 8:30pm at The Comedy Mix. Tickets $15 at TheComedyMix.com

THEATRE/DANCE HUNGER GAMES – CATCHING FIRE: THE MUSICAL In this hilarious pop culture parody sequel to last year’s smash hit Hunger Games: The Musical, Katniss Everdeen continues to defy the Capitol, play with Peeta’s heart and belt out songs in the style of Miley Cyrus. 8pm at Studio 1398. Tickets at BrownPaperTickets. com. Runs until Oct. 1.

CHEAP & FUN THE FINAL FRONTIER The Gentlemen Hecklers are back and ready to get spacey as they present Star Trek V: The Final Frontier with their signature live commentary that will leave you in stitches, making even bad movies, the best. 7pm at HR MacMillan Space Centre. Tickets $13 at EventBrite.ca

JIM BYRNES Canadian blues icon celebrates his birthday with special guests Vancouver based gospel trio the Sojourners. 7:30pm at Rickshaw Theatre. Tickets $15 at Red Cat, Zulu, Highlife and TicketFly.com

COMEDY COLIN MOCHRIE Experience improv legend Mochrie up close and personal as he returns to the Vancouver TheatreSports League stage for two days of laughpacked shows. 7:30pm & 9:30pm at The Improv Centre. SOLD OUT.

THEATRE/DANCE DIGITAL FOLK A video game, costume party, music and dance performance and installation crafts an irreverent and interactive environment full of virtual and physical community exploring the ways we gather to play music, dance and tell stories in the wake of video game culture and technology. 7pm at SFU Goldcorp Centre for the Arts. Tickets at SFU. ca. Runs until Sept. 25.

CHEAP & FUN THE CULTCH’S 8TH ANNUAL FREE COMMUNITY SQUARE DANCE Come one, come all as The Cultch invites you to a family-friendly dance featuring caller Paul Silveria, who teaches moves on the spot, with live music from the New Short Mountain Deadbeats. 7pm-10pm at Vancouver East Cultural Centre. Admission by donation.

EVENTS VANCOUVER FLIPOUT PINBALL EXPO Close to 150 playable old school arcade classics as well as the latest cutting edge technology gathered together for the first time. Watch the pros or compete in the amateur tournaments and win cash prizes. Holiday Inn Downtown (1110 Howe). Runs until Sept. 25. Tickets from $20, or $50 for a weekend pass at VancouverFlipOut.com.

MILLENCOLIN Swedish skate punk band tour behind their latest release True Brew with special guests Such Gold. 8pm at Venue. Tickets $20 at VenueLive.ca

Petunia & The Vipers, Sept. 24

MUSIC

COMEDY

ECHO & THE BUNNYMEN English rock band from Liverpool return to Vancouver with special guest Ester Drang. 7pm at Commodore Ballroom. Tickets $39.50 at Ticketmaster.ca

COLIN MOCHRIE Experience improv legend Mochrie up close and personal as he returns to the Vancouver TheatreSports League stage for two days of laughpacked shows. At Vogue Theatre. Tickets at VTSL.com

NAO R&B singer from London jumps across the pond to appear in support of her debut release For All We Know with special guest Kweku Collins. 7pm at Biltmore Cabaret. Tickets $18 at Red Cat, Zulu and TicketWeb.ca PETUNIA & THE VIPERS Western swing-rockabilly-punk-country band from Vancouver play the final leg of their tour in support of their latest release Dead Bird On The Highway with special guests the Crow Quill and Night Owls. 8pm at Rickshaw Theatre. Tickets $20 at Red Cat, Highlife, Neptoon, Zulu and TicketFly.com THE DIRTY NIL Hamilton, Ontario, three-piece hard rockers play an early show with special guests Dead Soft and Needs. 7pm at The Cobalt. Tickets $12 at TicketFly.com CHRIST AIR The new voice for true skate rock hits the stage with special guests the Fifth Circle, Sundran and Dark Originn. 9:30pm at Funky Winker Beans. Cover is $10. THE RITE OF SPRING Vancouver Symphony Orchestra opens their season with a bang, welcoming back pianist Alexander Gavrylyuk to perform a program of Morlock, Tvhaikovsky and Stravinsky. 8pm at Orpheum Theatre. Tickets at VancouverSymphony.ca

JOE MACHI Headlining comedian with appearances on Last Comic Standing and winner of the 2013 New York Comedy Festival’s Funniest Comedian Competition takes the stage with an opening set from Darryl Orr. 7pm and 9:30pm at Yuk Yuk’s. Tickets $20 at YukYuks.com

THEATRE/DANCE THE MERRY WIVES OF WINDSOR It’s 1968 in Windsor, Ontario, and English ex-pat Sir John Falstaff is hunting for a solution to his financial trouble. When he unknowingly attempts to seduce two wealthy housewives who happen to be best friends, these merry wives set him up for some hilariously sweet revenge. 2pm and 7:30pm at Vanier Park. Tickets at BardOnTheBeach. org. Final performance. THE BEAUX’ STRATAGEM George Farquhar’s glorious Restoration comedy follows two charming bachelors, broke and looking to marry for money who encounter a variety of obstacles before love presents itself, and the beaux meet their match. 8pm at Jericho Arts Centre. Tickets at JerichoArtsCentre.com. Runs until Sept. 25.

SUNDAY SOUL BRUNCH A brunch buffet of Southern classics with a live performance from Robert Wilson and the Blackbird P.A. 10:30am at The Emerald. Tickets $36 at PiTheatre.com ST. PAUL & THE BROKEN BONES Six-piece soul band out of Birmingham, Alabama, appear in support of their sophomore album Sea of Noise with special guests Seratones. 8pm at Commodore Ballroom. Tickets $30 at Ticketmaster.ca MUSIC AT THE MUSEUM Sing-along sea shanties with the Lazy Jacks followed by an old time fiddle jam session with Doug the Fiddler and friends with light refreshments and all proceeds to benefit the museum and its artefact collection. 1pm-4pm at Old Hastings Mill Store Museum (1575 Alma). Admission by donation.

COMEDY THE SUNDAY SERVICE The award-winning improv comedy troupe brings their high energy commitment to comedy with a little slapstick shtick, carrying the audience through a kaleidoscopic trip where scenes barrel into tangents and stories smash together creating comedy gold. 9pm at Fox Cabaret. Tickets $7 at the door.

JACK GARRATT British singersongwriter and multi-instrumentalist appears in support of his debut studio album, Phase, with special guest Brasstracks. 7pm at Commodore Ballroom. Tickets $25 at Ticketmaster.ca OVERFLOW The first edition of an innovative new concert series showcases musicians versed in the art of chip music, making original tunes using obsolete videogame/computer sound hardware featuring Norrin_Rad, meckz, Fastbom and bryface. 7:30pm at Fox Cabaret. Tickets $15 at EventBrite.ca

COMEDY QUEER PROV Don’t let the queer deter you – you don’t have to identify to get it! This not-for-profit society dedicated to creating a queer community that creates, supports, enjoys and teaches improv theatre unites every week on Mondays, to set yourself up for a gay ol’ week. 8pm at XY (1216 Bute). MONDAY NIGHT COMEDY Vancouver’s best working comedians converge weekly to showcase their talents for the most fun you can have on a Monday in Kitsilano, this week’s headliner is Efthimios Nasiopoulos. 9pm at Yagger’s Kitsilano. Cover is $5.

Trombone Shorty, Sept. 24

THE GLASS MENAGERIE A Canadian production of the Tennessee Williams’ classic revealing the story of family members whose lives form a triangle of quiet desperation, each in an individual version of hell while simultaneously seeking escape from each other. 8pm at PAL Theatre. Tickets at GlassMenagerie. ca. Runs until Sept. 25.

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NEWS // ISSUES • STYLE // DESIGN • EAT // DRINK • MUSIC // ARTS • FILM // TV • HEALTH // SEX

Who’s the best of the brunch? VVote ffor your favourite f i brunch b h spot andd more in i our 2016 Best of the City Dining Awards poll.

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ARTS // CULTURE

September 29 to October 14 Discover viff.org

WHAT’S ON Tu/27 Allah-Las, Sept. 27

MUSIC

MUSIC

PREOCCUPATIONS The Canadian post-punk rockers (formerly known as Viet Cong) hit the road in support of their self-titled release. 8pm at Rickshaw Theatre. Tickets $20 at Red Cat, Zulu and TicketWeb.ca

PHONIX FUNK TRAIN A soul train revival with old school funk, R&B and Motown from the Vancouver band complete with three-piece horn section and two soulful lead vocalists. 10:30pm at Backstage Lounge. Tickets $7 at ThePhonix.ca

NICK WATERHOUSE California jazz and R&B singer-songwriter and musician returns to Vancouver in support of his forthcoming third studio album Never Twice. 7pm at The Cobalt. Tickets $18 at Red Cat, Zulu and TicketWeb.ca

MUSIC ANIMAL COLLECTIVE Psychpop revivalists from Baltimore, Maryland, appear in support of their latest release, Painting With, with special guest Eric Copeland of Black Dice. 7pm at Vogue Theatre. Tickets $40 at TicketFly.com ALLAH-LAS LA rockers come north to play tunes from their latest release, Calico Review, with special guests Dopey’s Robe and DJ Keith McCafferty. 8pm at Biltmore Cabaret. Tickets $20 at Red Cat, Zulu and TicketWeb.ca SONIC ELDER Six musicians over 60 take to the stage at this legendary venue for an on-stage documentary featuring performances from artists that invented youth culture featuring Buff Allen, William Butler, Rob Kosaka, Joni Moore, Bill Sample and Harry Walker. 7pm at Penthouse (1019 Seymour). Tickets $28 at BrownPaperTickets.com. Runs until Oct. 2. THE TWITCH Six-piece rock band from Vancouver perform live with special guests Carcas. 8pm at The Roxy.

THEATRE/DANCE BASKERVILLE: A SHERLOCK HOLMES MYSTERY Five actors play 40 different characters in this fast-paced farcical adventure, a zany whodunit with Holmes and Watson on the case snuffing out the culprit based on the Arthur Conan Doyle classic. 7:30pm at Stanley Industrial Alliance Stage. Tickets at ArtsClub.com

Th/29

We/28

LINDSEY STIRLING American violinist and dancer performs a range of genres spanning classical, pop and rock, all the way to electronic dance music. 7pm at Orpheum Theatre. Tickets $32.50+ at LiveNation.com

THE BRAINS Montreal’s punkfuelled psychobilly trio tour behind Out In The Dark with special guests Kman and the 45s and Obscene Being. 9pm at Wise Hall. Tickets $15 at Red Cat, Highlife, Wise Hall Lounge and BPT.me or $20 at the door. KT TUNSTALL Scottish singersongwriter and musician plays tunes from her sixth album, Kin, with special guest Wilding. 7pm at Commodore Ballroom. Tickets $29.50 at Ticketmaster.ca

GODDAMN MILLENNIALS II An evening of stand-up comedy for the kids, those born in the ‘80s and ‘90s anyway, hosted and curated by Victoria Banner. 8pm at Biltmore Cabaret. Tickets $10 at Red Cat and TicketFly.com

DAVID LIEBE HART Musician, actor, street performer and painter takes the stage with special guests Baboon Torture Division, Viktor Barkar and noCore. 8pm at Rickshaw Theatre. Tickets $13 at TicketFly.com

THEATRE/DANCE

THEATRE/DANCE

ART GORE AND CORDOVA Karin Konoval explores her experiences as a watchful eye over the corner of Gore and Cordova in this exhibition of paintings derived from photographs she shot in the rehearsal room of the Firehall, from a bird’s eye view. At Firehall Arts Centre until Oct. 28.

HELEN & EDGAR A story of Savannah told by celebrated raconteur Edgar Oliver is a mesmerizing, hilarious, and heartbreaking tale of Oliver and his sister Helen’s strange childhood in the south, and their mother’s struggle with madness. 8pm at York Theatre. Tickets at TheCultch.com. Runs until Oct. 8. THE FLICK A sideways look into the lives of young people navigating their place in the world, set in a run-down movie theatre where three underpaid ushers are willing to do anything to keep the beloved and endangered local landmark running. 7:30pm at Granville Island Stage. Tickets at ArtsClub.com. Runs until Oct. 29.

Rant? Rave? We want to hear about it.

Email rantrave @westender.com

Westender.com

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TWIN PEAKS Chicago garage rockers play tunes from Down In Heaven with special guests White Reaper and Modern Vices. 8pm at Biltmore Cabaret. Tickets $13 at TicketFly.com

PEACHES The gender bending Canadian electronic musician is back to play tunes from Rub, her sixth studio album. 8pm at Commodore Ballroom. Tickets $28.50 at Ticketmaster.ca Comedy

STRANGER TO HARD WORK BY CATHY JONES Canadian cultural icon, comedienne and one of the funniest women on television returns to the stage in her third onewoman show sharing her unique perspective on topics as varied as food, money, and the troublesome people in her life in a thought provoking look at what she’s learned in life so far. 8pm at Firehall Arts Centre. Tickets at FirehallArtsCentre.ca. Runs until Oct. 8.

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Schedule subject to change, visit viff.org for updates.

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People have always been a bit sniffy about Vancouver Fashion Week, which is now in the middle of its 27th season. It’s perhaps a natural consequence of this being a city that’s not known for its extraordinary style (NewYork or Paris, we ain’t) and whose residents reference its “no-fun” reputation with baffling pride. However, the cancellation of Toronto Fashion Week has presented us with an opportunity to shine. We’re small, friendly and supportive of emerging talent, and this year’s event attracted fantastic designers both local and international. Here’s a look at some of the brands that will be coming down the catwalk this week.

VESTIGE STORY

Founded by Aileen Lee in 2015, this Vancouver brand makes beautiful, simple pieces that are easy to wear, but still have fashion edge. The self-taught designer was always interested in fashion. “I’ve been drawing, doodling and painting ever since I can remember,” she says. “I created my first clothing collection when I was five years old, with crayons and card stock for paper dolls I made myself.” Her favourite designers are Phoebe Philo of Celine, and Paris-based couturier,Yi Qing Yin. “I like the former

for her impeccable, minimal taste and execution, and the latter for her imaginative, otherworldly designs and craftsmanship,” says Lee. Her Spring/Summer ‘17 range is called the Landscape Collection and is inspired by the “basic yet poetic elements” found in landscape art. Her target woman is the mindful creative – someone who, she says, “digs deep, someone who appreciates beauty, as well as quality, sustainability and craftsmanship.” What does she think of the way women dress here? “Vancouver dressing is casual and very fitness-focused,” she says. “My out-of-town peers call us ‘Lululemon Land.’ I hope to add a different perspective to the way people dress here. Our city is starting to see the establishment of a few talented independent designer labels, and I support the direction we are headed.” Vestige Story is sold at Woo To SeeYou (Yaletown), Much & Little (Main Street) and Oliver & Lilly’s (South Granville).

THE LABEL.

We’re becoming increasingly aware of environmental and ethical issues in the fashion industry, thanks to movies like Vancouver production River Blue. One area we’re looking at is not wasting fabric – which is exactly what THE LABEL., a one-yearold brand from Canberra, Australia, specialises in. “I work with minimal and zero-waste design but with

an edge,” explains designer Emma O’Rourke. “Minimalwaste techniques involve using all or most of the fabric to reduce waste to landfill. This process is extremely complex and can mean many pattern pieces.” While production is complicated, O’Rourke’s aesthetic is refined and simple. Her Spring/Summer 2017 collection is called >< (greater than, less than). “It’s about the greater picture, less noise,” she says “I think the thing I am most excited about is to showcase some great new innovations in fabric. I have incorporated some amazing fabrics, some natural, some made from recycled plastic bottles. Ethical and sustainable clothing has a new look!” ( @A- 531-5, 'F272! =$2 available directly from the web!FH2/@A-531-5,76<,=E

SONG RYOO

We’ve always had a soft spot for Korean and Japanese fashion designers – avantgarde, experimental and intellectual, they push fashion in new directions and make us think differently about how we dress. Seoul-born, New York-based Song Ryoo is our latest discovery. Her mother’s interior design background was her biggest influence. “I lived in a geometrical and minimal living space full of Scandinavian design elements.

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16 W September 22 - September 28, 2016

Westender.com


ARTS // CULTURE

@WESTENDERVAN

FILM & TV

Here comes VIFF+ At 35,Vancouver’s biggest film fest aims to be even bigger Sabrina Furminger Reel People @Sabrinarmf

In many ways, the 35th Vancouver International Film Festival (VIFF) is strikingly different from its previous editions. It’s got a brand new logo featuring bold and boxy letters that would look great emblazoned on the chest of any cinema-championing superhero. It’s divided its more than 300 films into nine new separate streams – Panorama, Ignite, Impact, Next, Gateway, M/A/D, ALT, Youth, and True North – and introduced VIFF Hub, which will transform VIFF’s Vancity Theatre into the central location for interactive screen-based experiences, creator talks, networking, and late-night, post-film performances. In other ways,VIFF at 35 is doing what it’s always done: presenting a line-up of the

best, the boldest, and the most audacious filmmaking from around the world – including the largest showcase of Canadian cinema on the planet. All the new stuff is the plus symbol in the festival slogan for 2016: “Film+: Discover More.” “It’s an experiential model,” says Jacqueline Dupuis, VIFF’s executive director, in a recent phone interview. “We continue to program more than 300 films, [and schedule] 500 screenings, and in addition to that we do talks, we do exhibitions, we do workshops, we do events and awards, and all of that is how we showcase and engage creators.” The changes to this year’s VIFF – which runs Sept. 29-Oct. 14 at venues around Vancouver, including Vancity Theatre, the Rio Theatre, Vancouver Playhouse, The Cinémathèque, and others – reflect the fest’s commitment to serving the ever-changing needs of local film lovers and people who work in the industry: intersecting groups that consume and create content in the third largest film production centre in North America and the third largest digital media produc-

tion centre in the world. “Vancouver is probably one of the most creative and innovative cities in the world, so you have to think about, what do these people want to engage with?” says Dupuis. “And I think it comes down to an experience.” Nowhere will the VIFF+ experience be more evident than at VIFF Hub, which takes over VIFF’s Vancity Theatre for the first eight days of the festival. VIFF Hub’s schedule includes creator talks (speakers include showrunners Marti Noxon (UnREAL) and Simon Davis Barry (Van Helsing), as well as Orphan Black actress Tatiana Maslany, whose The Other Half screens at VIFF on Sept. 30), late-night video-music performances, opportunities for networking, and an entire day dedicated to the virtual reality industry. “It’s about creating a central place for people to come and enjoy the film-plus experiences, and also to have somewhere to go after the screenings to celebrate and chat,” says Dupuis. Dupuis is reluctant to pick her can’t-miss favourites for this year’s fest from the 300plus films in the schedule,

but when pressed, she offers up the following:

MAUDIE

Sally Hawkins portrays Canadian folk artist Maude Lewis in this biopic from director Aisling Walsh. Hawkins has already won acclaim for her portrayal of the celebrated self-taught artist, who contended with rheumatoid arthritis and became a leading figure in the Naïve Art movement. “It’s always a priority for us to open the festival with a Canadian film, and it had incredible accolades at Telluride [Film Festival], and it tells a beautiful story,” says Dupuis of the Canada/Ireland co-production. “It’s emotional, obviously, but hopeful in a really compelling way.” Sept. 29, Oct. 1 & 10.

SPIRIT UNFORGETTABLE

Director Pete McCormack (Facing Ali) brings us the story of John Mann, lead singer of the iconic Vancouver band Spirit of the West, and his struggle with early onset Alzheimer’s. Says VIFF’s press release: “McCormack has built a compelling and emotionally powerful narrative around archival clips and intimate interviews that reveal Mann, his wife Jill and his bandmates to be endlessly engaging and surprisingly can-

Spirit Unforgettable is among VIFF’s must-see films. Contributed did.” Says Dupuis: “It’s one of the most inspiring films for me this year.” Oct. 8 & 12.

FRANCA: CHAOS AND CREATION

Director Francesco Carrozzini is behind this intimate portrait of his mother, Franca Sozzani, the legendary editor-in-chief of Vogue Italia magazine since 1988. Encompassing both the ridiculous and the sublime, her astonishing but often controversial magazine covers have not only broken the rules but also set the high bar for fashion, art and commerce over the past 25 years. “The film is outrageous and extremely fascinating,” says Dupuis. “[Franca] revolutionized the way that photography and fashion coexist, so it’s a really exciting one.” Oct. 12 & 14.

THE VOYAGE OF TIME: THE IMAX EXPERIENCE

The latest from Terrence

Malick (A Thin Red Line) is billed as a celebration of life and the grand history of the cosmos, transporting audiences into a vast yet up-close-and-personal journey that spans the eons from the Big Bang to the dinosaur to our present human world (and – dun dun dun – beyond!). The 45-minute IMAX film was selected to close this year’s VIFF because “it was 35 years in the making, it’s our 35th birthday, and it was shot on 35mm, which is very unusual for these times,” says Dupuis. Oct. 14. Reel People will have indepth coverage ofVIFF’s BC Spotlight films during the festival. BookmarkWestender. com for online exclusives and @sabrinarmf for red carpet coverage. W VIFF runs Sept. 29-Oct. 14. Tickets and schedule at VIFF.org.

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Westender.com

September 22 - September 28, 2016 W 17


ARTS // CULTURE

WESTENDER.COM

MUSIC

Tegan and Sara: Pop music with a message Canadian electropop duo overcomes struggles to raise LGBT awareness

ALEX HUDSON @chippedhip

Publicly,Tegan and Sara present a unified front.The Calgary-bred Quin sisters are identical twins who share songwriting duties, are known for their hilarious on-stage banter, and jointly campaign for LGBT equality. In their personal lives, however, things have not always been so smooth. The two have warred behind the scenes, and when Sara relocated to Montreal in 2003, it was partly because she wanted to move away from her sister and establish her own identity. “It was my attempt, in a way, to preserve the band,” Sara remembers, speaking to Westender on the line from Saskatoon. “It wasn’t neces-

sarily a breakup in the true sense of the word, because we obviously continued to be both sisters and bandmates, but it did feel like a sort of forced exile or an estrangement – just in order to get myself feeling like I had my own life. I desperately wanted autonomy.” Not only did the Quins clash personally, they also struggled to find musical common ground. “A lot of times I was like, ‘Wow, it feels like she [Tegan] is in a different band than the band I’m in,’” Sara admits.This lack of unity didn’t seem to hurt the duo’s artistry, as their blend of emotive folk and hook-filled indie rock earned them a fervent following, critical praise, and a major-label deal with Warner Bros. Records. Now, the twins have found a shared musical direction. On 2013’s Heartthrob, the siblings set aside their guitars in favour of synthesizers, and their electro-pop reinvention catapulted them to new lev-

Calgary electro-pop duo Tegan and Sara perform at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre on Oct. 5. Contributed photo els of commercial success. “I think right now there’s definitely something a little bit more unified,” Sara says

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piano arrangement providing the backdrop for the confession, “I swear I tried to leave you / At least a hundred times a day.” Sara explains, “The songs are about us, but they’re really about me figuring out who I was and that breaking off period where I needed to go and do my own thing for a while.” Elsewhere on the album, the twins overtly explore queer themes. Lead single “Boyfriend” tells of a love triangle and explores sexual identity with lines like, “You call me up like you would your best friend / You turn me on like you would your boyfriend / But I don’t want to be your secret anymore.” On the standout new wave anthem “BWU,” Sara rejects traditional ideas of matrimony and sings, “We don’t need a white wedding / All the girls I loved before / Told me they’d signed up for more.” The latter song was in-

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of the recent sonic style. “We have an aesthetic and we have a sound, and our different songwriting approaches and lyrical approaches fit better.” They even live in the same city these days, as both have homes in Vancouver. On LoveYou to Death, released this past June, Tegan and Sara have once again ventured into the slick, glossy realm of radio-friendly synth-pop. Like Heartthrob, the LP was helmed by blockbuster producer Greg Kurstin (Adele, Sia, Beck), and it teems with sparkling synths, pulsing drum machines and giant-sized choruses. The album’s widescreen soundscapes are given an intimate, human touch by the deeply personal lyrics. On “White Knuckles” and “100x,” Sara addresses her past tensions with her sister; the latter number resembles a lovesick breakup ballad, its uncharacteristically spare

spired by Sara’s experiences with her longterm partner. “I’m in a relationship with someone who I’ve been with for six years,” she notes. “Gay or straight, people start saying, ‘So when are you getting married? When are you having kids? When is the next step?’ And I’m like, ‘Fuck off. We’re doing just fine. We have cats, we own a house – what else do you want from us? Get off our backs.’” By openly acknowledging their sexuality in lyrical form, Tegan and Sara are attempting to shine a light on the LGBT issues they care about so deeply. The commercial success they’ve enjoyed in recent years means that the 36-year-olds have a prominent platform from which to share their message. “It’s more important than ever to raise awareness and visibility about our community and the inequities between so many different groups amongst the community,” Sara says. “It is still an incredible fight ahead.” Despite society’s recent progress in regards to marriage equality and LGBT rights, speaking about queer themes within the context of a radio-ready pop song still carries a powerful positive message, and Sara is more than happy to use her music as a jumping-off point for her political cause. “It can seem like a small thing – like, ‘Oh, it’s just a pop song, and you’ve kind of skewed the gender in it,’” she reflects. “For me, it’s just an opportunity to talk about these things publicly.” W

A Sophisticated Approach to Lifestyle Attainment. Professional Advisement and Marketing of Fine Vancouver Properties. Number One Realtor in Downtown Office 2012-2015 2014 & 2015 RE/MAX Chairman’s Club Award Winner

CURRENT LISTINGS:

MOUNT PLEASANT NEW PRICE

JUST SOLD OVER ASKING PRICE! 306-663 Gore Avenue, “Strathcona Edge,” $348,800 • 5 Years Young 606SQFT • 1 Bedroom Upper Level • Steel and Concrete Construction, Elevator • On Park-Like Setting • Pets and Rentals Allowed • Right Next To Hot Chinatown, in Uber Hot Strathcona • Skytrain, Beach, Seawall 3 blocks away!

Crest Westside Ltd.

OVER 50 SALES IN THE FIRST HALF OF 2016 SO FAR!

FALSE CREEK NEW LISTING

OPEN SAT & SUN 2-4PM 53-1425 Lameys Mill Road, “Harbour Green,” $498,000

BURKE MOUNTAIN, COQUITLAM NEW LISTING

OPEN SAT & SUN 2-4PM 3419 Pritchett Place, “Summit View Estates,” $1,588,800 • Massive Designer Renovated 949SQFT • Summit View Estate Gem! 1 Bedroom • Stunning 4000SQFT 5 Bed, 2 Bath, • Concrete Strata Right On Seawall/ 2 Car Garage Waterfront • Great Covered Balcony Overlooking • Brand New Home, Reputable Natural Setting. Builder, No GST! • New Kitchen, Floors, Paint & More! • Incredible Location - Walk to Everything • Panoramic, Breathtaking Views • Quality Finishings, High Ceilings • Pets & Rentals Allowed. • 1 Secure Parking, 1 Secure Storage • 1 Bedroom Legal Suite. Locker • 2-5-10 Warranty • Welcome Home!

Prepare to be MOVED™.

More on My Website at: www.MichaelDowling.ca

WESTWIND, RICHMOND NEW LISTING

DOWNTOWN NEW LISTING

SILVERVALLEY, MAPLE RIDGE NEW LISTING

OPEN SAT & SUN 2-4PM 23-11100 Railway Ave, “Westwind Terrace,” $1,138,000 • Inside/Duplex-Style 2000SQFT Townhome! • Gated Community, 52 Homes • Great Location In Westwind near Steveston • 2-3 Bedrooms, 3 Bath • Nice Sunny Private Yard • 2-Car Attached Garage • Close to Schools, Shops,Transit

OPEN SAT & SUN 2-4PM 804-33 Pender Street, “33 Living” $1,138,000 • Stunning 1250 SQFT Designer Penthouse Loft • Hot Gastown/Chinatown Area • Massive Rooftop Deck With Mountain & Ocean Views • 7 Years Young, Gorgeous Finishings • Massive 30’ Ceilings - Incredibly Cool Feel • 2 Parking! Pets & Rentals Allowed • Walk to The Best of Everything

OPEN SAT & SUN 2-4PM 23166 Gilbert Drive, Maple Ridge,“Stoneleigh,” $658,000 • Gorgeous “Like-New, 6 Years Young Row Home • No Strata or Fees! End Unit Duplex-Like • 3 Levels, 2000SQFT Approx. • 3-4 Bedrooms, 3 Baths • 2 Car Attached Garage • Beautiful Whistler-Like Community • Tranquil Hiking Area. • Incredible Value. Great Family Location.

Call Us Today for a Confidential Needs Assessment and Market Analysis

604-787-5568

www.MichaelDowling.ca Westender.com


REAL ESTATE //

@WESTENDERVAN

Rob Joyce West End Specialist MLS Diamond Master Medallion Award 2015

Nobody knows the West End better!

Barclay Square Estate Sale One Bedroom

1274 Barclay #311. Sharp price for this spacious 720 SF suite with open balcony in a well maintainced strata in the heart of the West End. South-facing, corner windows & large sunny balcony. Two cats OK; rentals maxed out. Hurry! $399,000.

WEST COAST

Top Producer Rob Joyce

Panorama Place Coming Next Week .....

2055 Pendrell. View! View! View! Sought-after English Bay view suite on the edge of Stanley Park. Higher floor boasting direct views to the beach, renovations and almost touching the trees of Stanley Park. Bird’s eye views!. Call for details.

Sales Associate Roger Ross

Huntington West Coming Next Week .....

1995 Beach Ave. WATERFRONT. Beautifully renovated one bedroom suite at the iconic English Bay Huntington West. Problem free sought-after strata building with no issues, an amazing rooftop deck and an ideal location. Call for details.

604.623.5433 www.robjoyce.ca robjoyce@telus.net

CARNEY’S CORNER

808 Gore Avenue, Vancouver

ROYAL WELCOME! Vancouver and British Columbia are favourite vacation destinations for many from around the world and who wouldn’t want to live here or at least be able to visit on a regular basis. The internet and major local events over the past couple of decades have put Vancouver on the map. So many others have learned what we already knew about our fabulous home. Many locals accepted long ago that the single family lifestyle was out of reach in the areas they chose to live, work and play. Condo/apartment lifestyles were accepted decades ago and became the norm. Real estate practice in Vancouver has become much more complicated than the usual markets driven by births, deaths, marriages, divorces and transfers. The increasing pressure for space and available units in our communities has resulted in even greater demand for those downsizing, retiring, renting and being bought out/pushed out of their homes. The importance of teaming up with a seasoned local realtor in touch with all aspects of the business has never been more important. In addition to the life event planning that motivates most transactions residents now have to plan for unexpected relocation, potential loss of rental income, unexpected tax gains and the anxiety of securing affordable replacement properties whether they are owner occupiers investors or tenants. The depletion of stable living accommodations where the sense of certainty, safety and community is paramount, strikes at the very heart of the neighbourhood and threatens to destroy the very fabric of what the world has come to know and love as the West End. Great effort will be required from all stakeholders to ensure these fundamentals are not lost. It is imperative that all of us do our part to preserve the home we all know and love and to ensure the respect it so royally deserves.

2 beds, 3 baths, 1,076 sq.ft.

$1,188,000

OPEN Sat. & Sun. 2-4pm Unique detached heritage-style house in charming Strathcona neighbourhood. Chinatown, Downtown, Gastown, False Creek seawall, parks and amenities at your doorstep. Pleasant open plan, soaring ceilings, hardwood floors throughout, spacious gourmet kitchen complete with granite countertops, solid maple cabinets. High end appliances: Bosch gas stove, OTR Kitchen-Aid, Fisher-Paykel fridge, Miele d/w. Built-in pantry & breakfast bar. French doors lead to back porch and shared green space in this five home strata. Two bedrooms upstairs each with spa-like ensuite + washer and dryer. 542sq ft amazing crawl space for all your storage needs. Level 1 & 2 electric hookup for an electric car in garage. This home has it all!

HERE FOR YOU Your time to look into real estate consulting? Need advice on upsizing, downsizing, retirement planning, investing, senior living, strata dissolution, developer buyout, strata, coop, leasehold, undivided interest; whatever your issue—we can help! wanTs anD neeDs Qualified buyers seeking units in El Cid, Huntington, Stratford, Queen Charlotte, Sandpiper, Kensington or Lagoon Royale. Give us a call!

WEN

West End Neighbours

New info always available on the website; an opportunity for community to stay in touch and keep up on local issues. www.westendneighbours.ca

TALK TO LIZ CARNEY 685-5951/603-3095

Call me today for details

604

liz.c@r?>y@c>?tury21.c@ • www.vancouvercondo.com C>?tury 21 I? ToA? R>@lty • 421 P@cific • 1030 D>?m@?

LAWRENCE SICCIA

In Town Realty

604-315-5085

WESTMAR

More pictures and listings at www.lawrencesiccia.com

Macdonald Realty Westmar | #203-5188 Westminster Hwy. Richmond

Westender.com

September 22 - September 28, 2016 W 19


REAL ESTATE //

WESTENDER.COM

www.dexterrealty.com 604-689-8226 Yaletown 604-336-3539 Main Street 604-263-1144 Kerrisdale Evelyn Singer 604-314-4123

Taking our Listings Global Tony Iaonnou • 604-725-6441 Kelley Lindahl • 604-761-6140

Martin Ramond 604-263-1144

1709-1331 W. GEORGIA

NEW LISTING

tonyandkelley.com

$708,088 204-1788 ONTARIO ST

$817,800

905-1328 MARINASIDE

$3,380,000

HIGH IN THE SKY — Coal Harbour opportunity in a great building with 24/7 concierge & excellent facilities. Top location in the city, close to Stanley Park. Rentals allowed.

604-318-5226

301-933 SEYMOUR ST.

NEW LISTING

STUNNING, open concept loft at The Spot! Soaring 16 foot ceiling, espresso floors, 2 bathrooms and parking! Check out our website, www.dexterrealty.com for current market condition updates.

PROXIMITY – The newest project from

$559,000 Bastion Development, completing spring 2016.

PROXIMITY features 9’ ceilings & gourmet kitchens that include: Caesarstone counter tops with FULL SIZE Fisher Paykel, Bosch & GE appliances. Sleek Hydrocork vinyl flooring throughout. Spa inspired bathrooms, featuring Moen fixtures. Chill in the Club House or outside in Communal garden plots. Be a part of the new thriving community and lifestyle that is South East False Creek. Steps from the seawall, shopping, dining and recreation. PROXIMITY to everything in False Creek. Sales Center open noon to 5pm every day but Friday.

loftsvancouver.com

Commercial Real Estate Needs? Dexter Associates Realty’s

Ed Gramauskas Cell: 604-618-9727

to set up your business or retail store, or are looking to buy an investment property we can help you. Call us at 604-689-8226 today.

commercial team will answer all of your questions and will help with

Details & Photos of all lofts for sale in Vancouver

STEPHEN BURKE YOUR SUITE

SUTTON GROUP - WEST COAST REALTY

301-1508 W BROADWAY

Fabulous 2 bed & den waterfront home with unobstructed views of False Creek to Mount Baker. Amazing suite has been meticulously maintained, has lots of upgrades and a private 2 car garage as well – all in Yaletown’s best building w/ 24hr concierge.

604-714-1700

www.stephenburke.com

604-551-4190

PANORAMA PLACE

CLASSIC TUDOR MANOR

SOLD HERE!

LAGOON ESTATE SALE

13

SO • • • • •

1100 sf. fully reno’d 2 BR 2 Bath Fully loaded open plan kitchen Massive living room & sep dining area Quartz & SS premium kitchen Euro lacquer cabs, ice-maker fridge

2055 PENDRELL

• • • • •

LD

W NE

Sliding bedroom wall for loft style On-trend entertainment space King Master BR w/luxe ensuite Sleek guest bath w/hi-tech shower Elegant, sophisticated, minimal modern

• • • • •

20 W September 22 - September 28, 2016

.F

T.

G TIN LIS

Lagoon, mountain & Bay views 7th floor 2 bedroom 2 bath plan Windows on 3 sides for X-breeze Great opportunity to make it your own House-size living & dining spaces

$1,295,000 710 CHILCO

5

Q 0S

• • • • •

Large kitchen w/ marina/mountain view King-size master bedroom w/walk-in 4 pce ensuite bath+2 pce guest powder Quiet & private building & location 1 parking. Adults, no pets or rental

$975,000

• • • • • • •

Iconic landmark architecture Sweeping SW view of Bay & inlet Only 3 suites per floor 1350 sf 2 BR + open den, 2 full baths Windows on 3 sides-cool ocean breeze Huge living–gorgeous ocean views Perfect entertaining space

1311 BEACH

• • • • • • •

Large kitchen w/eating area, pantry Open plan den/office/grand piano area King size master BR w/ 5pc ensuite 1 owner suite–make this your own! Elegant updated lobby & common areas Concierge & security. Recreation centre 2 SxS parking + storage. Pet ok.

$1,350,000 Westender.com


LIFESTYLES //

@WESTENDERVAN

HEALTH & SEX

For the love of garlic Patty Javier Gomez Whole Nourishment

Ask Mish: First date-ophobia Sex with Mish Way

@MyszkaWay

@WholeNourishBC

The other day I was looking for soup recipes, because ‘tis the season! And I came across a garlic soup.This should not have surprised me the way it did, because I love garlic and it literally makes its way into every meal I eat. But the idea of an actual garlic soup was weird to me (for like five seconds), then I realized it was the best idea in world and I was upset I had not come across it earlier or come up with it myself. Garlic is one of those things that I have rarely heard anyone complain about. It is very well-liked by most, and those who avoid it seem to do so because of a particular reason, like an allergy or that it just doesn’t sit right in their stomach. I have yet to actually hear someone say they just don’t like the taste of garlic. Cause why would they? Garlic has been around for since forever, and has long been popular as a folk remedy, all over the world. I am constantly amazed at the many different ways that garlic can be used. It’s so versatile and aromatic and did I already mention delicious? It’s one of those perfect foods that really adds meaning to the Hippocrates quote, “Let food be your medicine and medicine be your food.” In fact, garlic was used as a natural antibiotic when there were no pharmacies or modern day drugs and is often referred to as the most important preventative remedy. I mean it’s the true embodi-

Continued from page 16 Such an environment led my eyes to shapes, lines, and forms,” she says. However, hers was not a clinically clean home. “When I was little, I saw my mother making a little mess after cleaning the house perfectly. I could not understand why she was doing that so I asked her. And she said: ‘The house is a really important place – it has to be comfortable and warm. A perfectly clean house does not help us to be relaxed.’ That became my biggest

Garlic is one of nature’s most delicious medicines. iStock photo ment of a whole food. Garlic originally comes from Middle Asia. In ancient China, garlic was recommended for conditions like depression, due to its stimulating effects. In the kitchen, you might often find garlic chillin’ with its cousins chive, onion, or even leeks. They work well together and their flavours compliment each other beautifully. Here are some more reasons to add more garlic into your life (you know, besides warding off vampires, which is the obvious first choice).

NUTRITION

Garlic is packed with all sorts of nutrients and minerals such as calcium, copper, iron, manganese and vitamin C to name a few. Just another reason to make sure these little bulbs get a front seat in your everyday meals.

REDUCES BLOOD PRESSURE

804-33 Pender St, Loft, $1,138,000, Sat & Sun 2-4pm

808 Gore Ave, 2 bdrm, $1,188,000, Sat & Sun 2-4pm

Westender.com

Cholesterol issues got you down? Or rather up? Get some garlic into you stat! Garlic is known to reduce your bad cholesterol, which in turn may help you get back to regular, healthy levels.

LIVE LONG AND PROSPER

Because of garlic’s many health benefits, it is suspected that having it on a regular basis will help you live longer. After all, if you are healthy, you generally live longer.

FLAVOUR

inspiration and memory when I design. A good design has to visually feel comfortable when you look at it for a long time, even if it is new or distinctive.” Home is also the inspiration for Ryoo’s debut collection, which is her graduate project for her final year at Parsons. We’re not the only Song Ryoo fans. Her work has recently been featured in US Vogue and W Korea. As a result of this publicity, she’s in discussion with various retailers about stocking her line, although unfortunately, we can’t buy her pieces yet.

( +F94 6EH <6$2 =:6EH B69" D;66 =94 I2$ :$=94 =H B69gRyoo.com. W

18

18

3419 Pritchett Pl, 5 bdrms, $1,588,000, Sat & Sun 2-4pm

19

23166 Gilbert Dr, 3-4 bdrms, $658,000, Sat & Sun 2-4pm

4 .*/*, +6/,6=962#<;? 3;2 $ 026$, 26<*86 3;2 0$2%*< /;)81

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Oh, anxiety, my old, ugly, annoying friend that shows up unannounced with way too much baggage. She is the worst. I hate you, anxiety. Please take your shit and go home. I wish it was that easy, but it’s not. Only psychopaths are free of anxiety. According to psychiatrist Hervey Cleckley’s book The Mask of Sanity, not only are psychopaths unable to love, they are also incapable of getting nervous. They don’t experience fear or anxiety in any capacity. Sweaty hands, butterflies that make you want to vomit, racing blood – none of it. “Coldblooded psychopath” is quite a literal term.This is their biological phenomenon. Next time you get that sick, nervous feeling in your stomach, don’t think of it as crippling, but a reminder that you are a normal human being who is capable of empathy and love. I’ve had anxiety my whole life. At one point, it was so bad and involuntary I could not keep food or drink down. I would throw up after a sip of coffee. I would have lunch with my co-workers and throw up on the street. I

OPEN M-F ■ 9AM- 4PM ■ APPOINTMENT PREFERRED

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Family Physician + Associates

F AMILIES

Richmond

18

yourself into a frenzy over a reply on Tinder. Have you every tried group dates? Have a friend set you up and go on a group date with her in tow. Perhaps having a friend there will give you familiarity and a boost of confidence.Then, after a few of those, you can take the training wheels off. It’s just a date.You aren’t walking down the aisle into your arranged marriage.You are meeting someone new and asking them questions about their life. It’s basic. It’s human interaction. As for Tinder, I think you shouldn’t message with someone for too long. Exchange numbers and arrange to meet up. I don’t believe in this constant messaging garbage. Get out from behind the screen.Without human touch, you are missing an essential part of interaction. If you really don’t feel as though you can get over this on your own, I suggest you see a therapist or someone who can actually help you address the issues of your past that you aren’t telling me. Don’t resort to booze or SSRIs.The whole world is addicted to that crap.You are already a step up. You can fix it once you actually address the root of the problem. But until you face that, not much will change. I know you can do this. Love, Mish W

EMAIL MISH 76=9 '*/- >;)2 ;A= /6@ 5)6/,*;=/ $=9 5)62*6/ ,; /6@:A6/,6=962#<;?

Rolfing is Manual Therapy which strengthens the body’s structural integrity and functional resources. Rolfing can help you move again.

Discover the freedom that balance can bring! OFFERING TREATMENT FOR:

• Scoliosis and Sciatica • Pain relief and management • Stress reduction • More efficient movement • Better balance

Ask me how I can help you achieve your optimal health.

STEPHEN G. INABA

CHILDREN

Coquitlam

Strathcona

IMPROVES CHOLESTEROL LEVELS

Garlic is delicious and even though some people aren’t crazy about garlic breath, it’s totally worth it. Not only is it aromatic and flavourful, but it can be the perfect missing ingredient or addition to any meal. W

23-11100 Railway Ave, 2-3 bdrms, $1,138,000, Sat & Sun 2-4pm

False Creek

53-1425 Lameys Mill Rd, 1 bdrm, $498,000, Sat & Sun 2-4pm

Beat the common cold by adding garlic to your foods. You can also use garlic as a preventative tool by making sure that you incorporate it into your meals on a regular basis.

Cardiovascular disease affects all sorts of people across the board, and it is no joke. High blood pressure is one of the most important drivers that lead to this growing epidemic. Garlic supplementation in high doses can help lower blood pressure and can be as effective as some medications. Like always, consult your main medical provider before trying anything new.

Real Estate Opens

Downtown

NATURAL COLD MEDICATION

I am a 24-year-old woman and I have the worst anxiety when it comes to going on dates. It’s so bad I can barely figure out what to say when someone messages me on Tinder. I constantly doubt myself and I feel frozen. It’s as though I’m having a small, paralyzing attack of self-doubt. I am confident in every other aspect of my life (my job involves public speaking on the regular), but when it comes to dating I regress. All my girlfriends tell me to have a drink to relax but I don’t drink and I don’t want to. What do I do?

was fighting the urge to puke every other breath. I was in a constant state of anxiety. I went to the doctor. He tested me. He made me swallow this gross liquid and put me on a stretcher, next to a big machine and turned me upside down.The tests came back and nothing was physically wrong with me. I just had to learn how to calm down. I was going through some rejection. My issue wasn’t involuntary bulimia, but losing someone I had loved. Everyone gets nervous but when your anxiety is so crippling you can’t even stomach drinks with another human being who you maybe would want to sleep with, then we have a problem. I don’t know what I can say that hasn’t been said to you by friends before. I am sure you have heard it all. How long has this been going on? Have you ever had a successful relationship? Is there a missing piece to this story? What’s in your baggage? I admire that you aren’t using alcohol to self-medicate. I have done that my entire life and it does nothing but make you unhealthy and reliant. I’ve been reading this book by former McGill professor Ann Dowsett Johnston called Drink:The Intimate Relationship BetweenWomen and Alcohol. So often when we suffer from anxiety or depression, we chalk it up to a female issue and use alcohol to cope. The fact that you have stayed away from this easy out is something you should be proud of. You are 24 years old.You should be having fun and being courted, not whipping

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September 22 - September 28, 2016 W 21


Your Community

MARKETPLACE Or call to place your ad at

Book your ad ONLINE:

classifieds.wevancouver.com GARAGE SALES

COMMUNITY

ANNOUNCEMENTS CRIMINAL RECORD? Canadian Record Suspension (Criminal pardon) seals record. American waiver allows legal entry. Why risk employment, business, travel, licensing, deportation, peace of mind? Free consultation: 1-800-347-2540

FOR HE’S A JOLLY GOOD FELLOW! Share the love. classifieds.westender.com

VOLUNTEERS

As a volunteer with the ONE TO ONE Literacy Society, you won’t just be helping a child to read — you’ll be improving their self-confidence and giving them hope for a brighter future. Dedicate just TWO to THREE HOURS a week during the school day and help a struggling young reader develop literacy skills for life. Register at www.one-to-one.ca or contact 604.255.5559 or volunteer@one-to-one.ca.

EMPLOYMENT

GENERAL EMPLOYMENT

Now Hiring FLAG PERSONS & LANE CLOSURE TECHS .

• Must have reliable vehicle • Must be certified • Union Wages from $18.44 per hr & Benefits .

VALLEY TRAFFIC SYSTEMS Apply in person 9770-199A St, Langley Fax or Email resume: 604-513-3661 jobapplication@valleytraffic.ca

RESTAURANT/ HOTEL F/T Hot Food Cook for Sushi Mura. 1-3 yrs Exp. or Equivalent skill, High school completion, $14-16/hr, 6485 Oak st. Vancouver

hire.sushimura @gmail.com

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.

TODAY'S PUZZLE ANSWERS

22 W September 22 - September 28, 2016

Email: classifieds@van.net

PETS

4K( IA@M9/ 5) *A0$AO7/ 57 %9MFD9 G.I" '97IF0C !F71F9+

LF7;AC ? P,N &"!% G. #$ ? 4.A8 QH38 '05AIOA7 'FMIF0AM '97I09 HG(. '58890>OAM %0OE9< BA72 #7)5= J.& 6-.QH4(6 ? ,;8= :(2..

MARKETPLACE

Exquisitries Antiques & Fine Art We have just expanded and are stocking up for the Holiday Season. Generous Prices paid for: • Sterling Silver items incl. Flatware, Tea Sets, Trays, Candlesticks. • Oil Paintings from 1760 - 1960 & Fine Art inc British, European, Canadian Oil & Bronze Sculpture. • Fine Jewellery & Vintage Wrist Watches by Rolex, Omega, Patek, & Cartier. • Military Collectibles, especially Medals, Badges, Swords, Antique Weapons, log books, Telescopes & Nautical Instruments. • Fine Antique Furniture, Georgian to Edwardian. • Misc. Collectibles such as Worcester, Meissen, Sevres, Moorcroft. • Pre 1930 Chinese Items, Lalique, Murano, Lighting. We purchase outright. Complimentary house calls. Call 604.716.8032 for appt. Open Tues-Sat, 11AM - 5:30PM Established 1990 4065 MacDonald Street

FOR SALE - MISC SAWMILLS from only $4,397 Make money & save money with your own bandmill - Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE Info & DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com/400OT 1-800-566-6899 Ext:400OT

ADVERTISING POLICIES

All advertising published in this newspaper is accepted on the premise that the merchandise and services offered are accurately described and wil ingly 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 wil be made to meet the wishes of the advertisers. Further, the publishers do not accept liability for any loss of 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 of changes wil be made in the next available issue. The Westender wil 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!

ALL SMALL BREED PUPS Local, Non-Shedding and Vet Checked. 604-590-3727 www.puppiesfishcritters.com

BUSINESS SERVICES

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES DO YOU HAVE 10 hrs/wk to turn into $1500/mth using your PC & phone? Free info: www.BossFree123.com GET FREE VENDING MACHINES. Can Earn $100,000.00 + Per Year, ALL CASH. Protected Territories. Locations Provided. Interest Free Financing. Full Details Call Now! 1-866-668-6629 or visit our Website WWW.TCVEND.COM MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! In-demand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get the online training you need from an employer-trusted program. Visit:CareerStep.ca/MT or 1-855-7683362 to start training for your work-at-home career today!

FINANCIAL SERVICES HAVE YOU BEEN DENIED Canada Pension Plan Disability Benefits?Fortis Advocacy Partners LLP MDP can help you appeal. Call Allison at 1-844-352-6221 email info@dcac.ca or visit us at www.dcac.ca HIP OR KNEE Replacement? Arthritic Conditions/COPD? Restrictions in Walking/ Dressing? Disability Tax Credit $2,000 Tax Credit $20,000 Refund. For assistance! 1-844-453-5372.

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RENTALS

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DOWN

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By Rob Brezsny

Horoscopes as provided by WE Editorial

Even if you are a wild-eyed adventure-seeker with extremist views and melodramatic yearnings, you’ll benefit from taking a moderate approach to life in the coming weeks. In fact, you’re most likely to attract the help and inspiration you need if you adopt the strategy used by Goldilocks in the fairy tale “Goldilocks and the Three Bears”: neither excessive nor underdone, neither extravagant nor restrained, neither bawdy, loud, and in-your-face nor demure, quiet, and passive – but rather just right.

Some of my readers love me but also hate me. They are drawn to my horoscopes in the hope that I will help relieve them of their habitual pain, but then get mad at me when I do just that. In retrospect, they feel lost without the familiar companionship of their habitual pain. It had been a centerpiece of their identity, a source of stability, and when it’s gone, they don’t know who they are any more. Are you like these people, Taurus? If so, you might want to avoid my horoscopes for a while. I will be engaged in a subtle crusade to dissolve your angst and agitation. And it all starts now with this magic spell: Your wound is a blessing. Discover why.

In my dream last night, bad guys wearing white hats constrained you in a canvas straitjacket, then further wrapped you up with heavy steel chain secured by three padlocks. They drove you to a weedy field behind an abandoned warehouse and left you there in the pitch dark. But you were indomitable. By dawn, you had miraculously wriggled your way out of your confinement. Then you walked back home, free and undaunted. Here’s my interpretation of the dream: You now have special skills as an escape artist. No cage can hold you. No riddle can stump you. No tangle can confuse you. (PS, for best results, trust yourself even more than you usually do.)

The next four weeks will be a favorable time to come all the way home. Here are nine prompts for how to accomplish that: 1. Nourish your roots. 2. Strengthen your foundations. 3. Meditate about where you truly belong. 4. Upgrade the way you attend to your self-care. 5. Honor your living traditions. 6. Make a pilgrimage to the land where your ancestors lived. 7. Deepen your intimacy with the earth. 8. Be ingenious about expressing your tenderness. 9. Reinvigorate your commitment to the influences that nurture and support you.

GROOVY

Your Clunker is someone’s Classic.

Free Will Astrology

1. Contains cerium 2. Kor = 10 X 3. Side sheltered from the wind 4. Green or Earl Gray 5. “Sunday Morning” network 6. = length x width 7. Belonging to TV’s Stewart 8. Chills and fever 9. Edible tuberous root 10. Common soup container 11. A lyric poem of some length 12. A telegram sent abroad 13. Regions 24. Grow old 25. Atomic #81

31. Turns into noun 32. Burial city of Wm. the Conqueror 35. Stone parsley 38. Grabs 42. Winglike structures 43. Tennessee 44. Touchdown 45. Swiss river 46. On the positive side 47. Diplomatic agent (var. sp.) 49. A light two-wheel carriage 50. Computer-aided manufacturing 52. Though (informal usage) 54. Cuts all ties

ut pm q ~y ~ wmmk| kxylj 59. One of the blood groups 60. Soft shell clam genus 62. Exclamation of surprise 63. Small water craft 66. Put an end to 68. Hillside (Scot.) s ql| {ml ynj|ln w 71. Twain _____, CA 95383 72. Proceeding rate 73. “Love Story” actor O’Neil 74. Excavate things buried 75. Gremlins

26. Groups of physiologically related organs 27. Robbers 28. Public promotion of a product 29. E. Kennedy was one 32. Something serving as a cover 33. Every 34. Cologne 36. Hostelry 37. Word element meaning “ear” 39. Swiss river 40. Women’s undergarment 41. 9th calendar month (abbr.) 48. Island name with 7 down

51. Atomic #18 53. Expresses surprise 54. Stout sword 55. Black wood 57. Civil Rights group ur fw ly |} n}y n ijj|lk 60. Not kind 61. __ Spumante (Italian wine) 64. Dentist’s organization 65. 2000 pounds 66. NYSE symbol for China Unicom 67. Records electric brain currents 68. Characters in one inch of tape 69. A male sheep

PUZZLE ANSWERS ON SEPARATE PAGE

What tools will work best for the tasks you’ll be invited to perform in the coming weeks? A sledgehammer or tweezers? Pruning shears or a sewing machine? A monkey wrench or a screwdriver? Here’s my guess: Always have your entire toolbox on hand. You may need to change tools in mid-task – or even use several tools for the same task. I can envision at least one situation that would benefit from you alternating between a sledgehammer and tweezers.

I’m confident that I will never again need to moonlight as a janitor or dishwasher in order to pay my bills. My gig as a horoscope columnist provides me with enough money to eat well, so it’s no longer necessary to shoplift bread or scavenge for dented cans of beets in grocery store dumpsters. What accounts for my growing financial luck? I mean besides the fact that I have been steadily improving my skills as an oracle and writer? I suspect it may in part have to do with my determination to cultivate generosity. As I’ve become better at expressing compassion and bestowing blessings, money has flowed to me in greater abundance. Would this strategy work for you? The coming weeks and months will be a good time to experiment.

Here’s my translation of a passage from the ancient Gospel of Thomas, a gnostic text about the teachings of Jesus: “If you do not awaken and develop the potential talents that lie within you, they will damage you. If you do awaken and develop the potential talents that lie within you, they will heal you.” Whether you actually awaken and develop those talents or not depends on two things: your ability to identify them clearly and your determination to bring them to life with the graceful force of your willpower. I call this to your attention, Libra, because the coming months will be a highly favorable time to expedite the ripening of your talents. And it all starts NOW.

You can’t completely eliminate unhelpful influences and trivial saboteurs and debilitating distractions from your life. But you’re entering a phase of your astrological cycle when you have more power than usual to diminish their effects. To get started in this gritty yet lofty endeavor, try this: Decrease your connection with anything that tends to demean your spirit, shrink your lust for life, limit your freedom, ignore your soul, compromise your integrity, dishonour your reverence, inhibit your self-expressiveness, or alienate you from what you love.

Work too much and push yourself too hard, Sagittarius. Eat corn chips for breakfast, ice cream for lunch, and french fries for dinner – every day, if possible. And please, please, please get no more than four hours’ sleep per night. If you have any extra time, do arduous favors for friends and intensify your workout routine. JUST KIDDING! Don’t you dare heed any of that ridiculous advice. In fact, I suggest you do just the opposite. Dream up brilliant excuses not to work too much or push too hard. Treat yourself to the finest meals and best sleep ever. Take your mastery of the art of relaxation to new heights. Right now, the most effective way to serve your long-term dreams is by having as much fun, joy and release as possible.

I propose that you and I make a deal. Here’s how it would work: For the next three weeks, I will say three prayers for you every day. I will ask God, Fate and Life to send you more of the recognition and appreciation you deserve. I will coax and convince them to give you rich experiences of being seen for who you really are. Now here’s what I ask of you in return: You will rigorously resolve to act on your core beliefs, express your noblest desires, and say only what you truly mean. You will be alert for those times when you start to stray from the path with heart, and you will immediately get yourself back on that path. You will be yourself three times stronger and clearer than you have ever been before.

If you loosen yourself up by drinking an alcoholic beverage, don’t drive a forklift or ride a unicycle. If you have a hunch that your luck at gambling is peaking, don’t buy lottery tickets or play the slot machines. If you’re drawn to explore the frontiers of intimacy, be armed with the ancient Latin maxim, Primum non nocere, or “First, do no harm.” And if you really do believe it would be fun to play with fire, bring a fire extinguisher with you. In presenting this cautionary advice, I’m not saying that you should never push the limits or bend the rules. But I want to be sure that as you dare to experiment, you remain savvy and ethical and responsible.

I invite you to explore the healing power of sex. The coming weeks will be a favorable time to do so. You are also likely to generate good fortune for yourself if you try to fix any aspect of your erotic life that feels wounded or awkward. For best results, suspend all your theories about the way physical intimacy should work in your life. Adopting a beginner’s mind could lead you to subtly spectacular breakthroughs. (PS, you don’t necessarily need a partner to take full advantage of this big opening.)

Sept. 22: Joan Jett (58) Sept. 23: Bruce Springsteen (67) Sept. 24: Jim Henson (80) Sept. 25: Heather Locklear (55) Sept. 26: Olivia Newton John (68) Sept. 27: Lil Wayne (34) Sept. 28: Brigitte Bardot (82)

September 22 - September 28, 2016 W 23


NORTH VANCOUVER GRAND OPENING Prices Effective September 22 to September 28, 2016.

100% BC Owned and Operated PRODUCE B.C. Grown Organic Gala Apples from Elams and JMJ Rothe

MEAT

B.C. Grown Acorn, Buttercup, Butternut, and Spaghetti Squash

Farmcrest Non GMO Whole Specialty Frying Chicken

1.94kg

2.82kg

.88lb

7.69kg

California Grown Strawberries

Fresh Coho Salmon Fillets

1.28lb B.C. Grown Organic Black Kale from Myers Organic Farm in Abbotsford

15.41kg

6.99lb

3.49lb Farmcrest Specialty Chicken Drumsticks Non GMO

value pack

454g package

24.23kg

2/5.00

2/3.00

Pork Tenderloin

value pack

HOT PRICE

10.99lb

6.59kg

2.99lb

GROCERY Kettle Brand Baked Potato Chips

SAVE

3/6.99

31%

UP TO

UP TO

36%

34%

3/4.98

Ritter Sport Chocolate Bars

36%

2/5.50

Olympic Krema Greek Yogurt

SAVE

37%

SAVE

5.99 454g 17.99 3lb

33%

Organic Traditions Super Foods

500g product of BC

32%

regular retail price

3.49

BAKERY

SAVE

7.99

SAVE

assorted varieties 500ml • product of Quebec

37% 10.99

Edward & Sons Rice Snaps assorted varieties

SAVE

3.99

65-100g • product of USA

2.99 to

33% 3.69

DELI

Organic Sourdough Bread Levain Style sliced or unsliced

Grimm’s Black Forest, Honey or Old Fashion Ham

North er uv Vanco re Sto Only

530g While quantities last. Not all items available at all stores. We reserve the right to correct printing errors.

210g • product of BC

Canadian Heritage Organics Organic Maple Syrup

170-200g • product of Canada

25% off

assorted varieties

30% 3/9.99

assorted varieties

various sizes

33% 2.99 to

3.49 to 4.49

Tre Stelle Shredded Cheese

assorted varieties

assorted varieties

SAVE

340ml • product of Indonesia

product of Canada

from 4/9.00

37%

1L • product of Canada/USA

assorted varieties

assorted varieties

100g product of Germany

Nature’s Path Organic Frozen Waffles

assorted varieties

Big Tree Farm Organic Coconut Palm Nectar

Edelweiss Granola

assorted varieties

SAVE

UP TO

946ml product of Canada

4.49

UP TO

SAVE

assorted varieties

SAVE

796ml • product of USA

42%

Imagine Organic Soup and Broth

Almond, Sprouted, Cashew)

750ml-1L • Product of USA/Italy +deposit +eco fee

SAVE

5.49

Dream Beverages (Coconut, Blends, Rice,

assorted varieties

SAVE

300g • product of USA

37%

Perrier Sparkling Water and San Pellegrino Mineral Water

SAVE

assorted varieties

assorted varieties

113g • product of USA

SAVE

Eden Organic Beans

Earthbound Farm Organic Frozen Fruit

assorted varieties

3.99

1.69/100g MegaFood Dailyfood Vitamins and Supplements

Natural Factors Rich Concentrate Products

Assorted Varieties Assorted Sizes

Regular Retail Price

Boiron Homeopathic Remedies Assorted Varieties Assorted Sizes

20% off Regular Retail Price

North Vancou ver Community Welcoming D ay

Thursday, September 22, to Wednesday, September 28.

WELLNESS 25% off

North Vancouver Grand Opening Celebration Week

CurcuminRich, CranRich, and more Select Varieties Assorted Sizes

25% off Regular Retail Price

Sukin Face Care Products

Be one of the first 50 customers each day and win special prizes. Store opens at 8am: Thursday, September 22: Grocery goodie bag Friday, September 23: $50 off Choices Deli products Saturday, September 24: Wellness goodie bag PLUS $50 off anything in produce and 2000 points ($20 off) on your Choices Preferred Shopper Card Sunday, September 25: $50 off anything in our meat department AND 2000 points ($20 off) on your Choices Preferred Shopper Card Monday, September 26: $50 off select bakery products

20% off

Regular Retail Price

www.choicesmarkets.com

Tuesday, September 27: Wellness goodie bag

Saturday, Septem ber 24 | 12 – 4pm

We’re so excited to be on the No rth Shore that we’re going to celebrate again on 24th! Enjoy a da y of live music, fam the ily friendly activities , a donation BBQ and best of all, 10% off the entire store for the day. Our prize wheel will also be set up so come down and take a spin for a chance to win some fantastic pri zes.

Wednesday, September 28: Grocery goodie bag

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