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CALLING ON CHINAWest Vancouver School District looks to China as its overseas enrollment drops
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N O R T H S H O R E
WeeklyReal Estate
STARTS ON PAGE 27
Rob Newell photo
WEST VANCOUVER
It’s the latest fi tness surge to hit Canada, It’s the latest fi tness surge to hit Canada, and it’s starting in West Vanand it’s starting in West Van
>> PAGES 10 - 11 >> PAGES 10 - 11
T H U R S D AY M AY 2 6 2 0 1 1 W W W. N O RT H S H O R E O U T L O O K . C O M36
pagesWatch for breaking news at:
MR. ROBOTORob Zylstra grew up admiring sci-fi novel covers. Now he brings his love of robots to the canvas.
>>PAGE 7
waveBrainBrain
2 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
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141 West 14th Street, North Vancouver BC V7M 1H9 | Tel: 604.985.7761 | Fax: 604.985.9417 | [email protected]
CityView Find the City on Facebook | www.cnv.org/Facebook
Bike to Work Week, May 30 - June 5 The Vancouver Area Cycling Coalition invites new and experienced cyclists to participate in Bike to Work Week from May 30 - June 5. There will be several commuter stations on the North Shore, including one in the City’s Civic Plaza at Lonsdale and 14th Street, beside the City Library. Drop by on Tuesday, May 31 between 4pm - 6pm for free refreshments, cycling information and the chance to win prize packs. Plus, get your bike tuned up for free by a helpful onsite bike mechanic. Participants can also register online to track greenhouse gas reductions, kilometers travelled and calories burned, plus enter to win daily prize draws. Register at www.biketoworkmetrovan.ca or go to www.cnv.org for details.
Animal Control Services UpdateAnimal control services in the City of North Vancouver are provided through the City’s Bylaw Services Department. Impounded pets may be claimed at Northwest Kennels, located at 1310 Monashee Drive, North Vancouver. Northwest Kennels is a private kennel operator, not a municipal animal welfare facility. It provides overnight sheltering services for the City, not adoption, sales or other services. To contact the City’s Animal Control Officer, call 604-983-7384 during the daytimeMonday through Friday. All other times, call 778-837-1143. If your dog or cat is missing, you may contact the Animal Control Officer or Northwest Kennels at 604-985-4913. To report animal cruelty or neglect, call the Vancouver SPCA Emergency Line at 604-879-7343. Details at www.cnv.org/AnimalControl.
Property Taxes Due Monday, July 4 City of North Vancouver property taxes are due Monday, July 4. In the event of a postal strike, do not mail your payment. Tax payments are still due on this date and you may use one of the many options available such as paying online, by phone, at your bank, in person at City Hall or the after hours drop box located by the main entrance on the lower level of City Hall. For more information, go to www.cnv.org.
Get Fired Up About FirefightingThe three North Shore municipalities want girls to know more about becoming a firefighter. Camp Ignite will be an empowering experience for girls in grades 10 - 12. Run by female firefighters, the camp includes an introduction to firefighting, health and nutrition seminars, fitness, team building and includes meals and accommodations.
The camp runs from August 5 - 7 and the deadline to apply is June 2. Drop by any Fire Hall for an application or find out more at www.cnv.org.
KENNETHGORDONMAPLEWOODSCHOOL
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT MR. JOHN WILSON, HEAD OF SCHOOL [email protected] | 604.985.5224 | WWW.KENNETH GORDON.BC.CA
The Kenneth Gordon Maplewood School is accepting new students.
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REBECCA ALDOUS
S T A F F R E P O R T E R
Despite a dip in internation-al student revenue, West Vancouver School District
escaped being in the red.Unlike recent years, the district
didn’t face hard deci-sions when balanc-ing next school year’s $62.5-million budget, superintendent Chris Kennedy says. Overall enrollment is up, with the district’s eastern schools near capacity. As a result, next year will see Bowen Island students heading to Rockridge rather than West Van secondary school.
“It is really a status quo budget,” Kennedy says. “The highlight is that it was a non-issue.”
While overall student numbers have jumped, international student numbers fell. Offshore tuition fee revenue is down $492,000. The bulk of the reduction comes from a slow down in Korean students venturing to West Van, Kennedy says.
“Korea changed its rules for stu-
dents going overseas,” he says. “But we have seen a huge growth in the China market.”
This year the district culled its transportation services, a move that saved $100,000, he says. New sports academies, such as the golf pro-gram, generated $750,620. That rev-enue stream is up by approximately $76,000 from this school year. Kennedy also expects Rockridge school’s middle years International Baccalaureate program to help gen-erate income in the coming year.
Moving forward, the district will continue to diversify its interna-tional student program, drawing on a variety of countries, Kennedy says. But as more locals fill upspaces, the district has eased its oversea enroll-ment push, he notes.
The district is always reviewing its revenue streams, Kennedy says, noting unexpected costs can rattle any budget.
In 2009, when the dis-trict was forced to use its $846,000 contingency fund on school mainte-
nance because the provincial gov-ernment axed its $1.2-million facil-ity grant, it also faced unforeseen bills for an H1N1 prevention plan.
“We are always conscious of gov-ernment revenue,” Kennedy says.
Editorial submissions are welcome, however unsolicited works will not be returned. Submissions may be edited for brevity, legality and taste at the Editor's discretion. Copyright and property rights subsist in all display advertising and other material appearing in The Outlook. If, in the Publisher's opinion, an error is made that materially affects the value of the ad to the advertiser, a corrected advertisement will be inserted upon demand without further charge. Make good insertions are not granted on minor errors which do not lessen the value of the advertisement. Notice of error is required before second insertion.Opinions expressed in columns and letters to the Editor are not necessarily shared by the Publisher.
Published every Thursday by
Black Press Group Ltd.104-980 West 1st Street North Vancouver, BC V7P 3N4Phone 604.903.1000Fax 604.903.1001Classified 604.575.5555Distribution 604.903.1011
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Counting the
WV school district’s international student
enrollment drops
Chris Kennedy
GREG HOEKSTRA
S T A F F R E P O R T E R
A four-year-old West Vancouver child is expected to make a full recovery after
tumbling from a second-storey win-dow Thursday night.
Police say the young girl was sit-ting on a window ledge around 8 p.m. on May 19 when she leaned back and fell through the window screen, falling 12 feet to a concrete patio below.
Paramedics and West Vancouver
Fire personnel were called to the home, located in 600-block of Fairmile Road.
The girl was taken by ambulance to Lions Gate Hospital for precau-tionary measures, but has since been released.
“The West Vancouver Police want to remind homeowners to be vigilant when they have children around open windows and to take all necessary precautions to ensure the safety of their loved ones,” said WVP spokesman Jag Johal, in a press release.
The incident comes less than a week after an eight-year-old boy survived a four-storey fall in Abbotsford.
[email protected]/greghoekstra
West Van tyke survives two-storey fall
Four-year-old expected to make a
full recovery
numbers
The figures:
Total revenue $61,564,404
Total salaries $44,586,811
Employee benefits $10,558,808
Total expenses $62,525,975
4 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
www.mulgrave.com2330 Cypress Bowl Lane, West Vancouver, British Columbia V7S 3H9
For more informationcall: 604-913-6018 or email: [email protected]
MULGRAVESCHOOLInspiring Excellence in Education and Life
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Still welcoming applications for September, 2011.
June 3, 4, 5Expo Hours 10 – 6 Saturday & SundayInter River Park, North Vancouver
Bring the whole family out for MEC Bikefest
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For more details. visitmec.ca/bikefest
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Decide for yourself. Learn more at HSTinBC.ca
Small businesses receive HST input credits. That means they don‛t end up paying taxes on the goods and services they buy to run their business.
B.C. has the lowest HST rate in Canada, making our province an attractive place to foreign investors and for existing business to expand.
HST‛s single tax system reduces costs for B.C. businesses. That helps strengthen the economy, create jobs, and makes us more competitive internationally.
HST‛s one tax system reduces the amount of time and money B.C. businesses spend on administrationby about $150 million per year.
Consumers have to pay the HST on the end product. But since businesses no longer pay embedded taxes during the manufacturing process, their savings can be passed onto the consumer.
REBECCA ALDOUS
S T A F F R E P O R T
The District of West Vancouver is trading advertising space for bus stops.
The more than half a million tran-sit users in the district can expect to see approximately 30 sheltered bus stops pop up along Marine Drive. The upgraded stops are a part of a partner-ship between the district and advertising company Pattison Outdoor.
In return for constructing, install-
ing and maintaining the transit ameni-ties at no cost to taxpayers, the district is allowing Pattison to sell advertising space at the bus shelters.
The advertising company will hand a percentage of the advertising revenue to West Van. Over the span of the 20 year agreement, it’s estimated that will amount to approximately $2 million.
The stops have been custom designed for the municipality, said Raymond Fung, the district’s director of engineer-ing and transportation. They include sustainable features, such as low-energy lighting and benches made from recy-cled content.
“We want to provide protection from the elements and enhance accessibil-ity for all transit riders,” Fung said in a press release.
For the first time in the municipal-ity, the shelters provide outdoor signage opportunities for local advertisers, said Rob Hunt, vice-president of Pattison Outdoor.
“This project will enhance the streetscapes of West Vancouver, while also enabling small business owners to reach out to consumers in their own neighbours through very cost-effective outdoor advertising — an option that, until now has not been available,” he said.
The bus shelters will be placed from Lions Gate Bridge to Dundarave and in Horseshoe Bay.
Pattison Outdoor expects the project to be completed by Labour Day week-end.
Opening doors to advertisingWest Van expects to earn $2 million from Pattison partnership
REBECCA ALDOUS
S T A F F R E P O R T E R
With applications rolling in, West Vancouver has extended its secondary suite registration incentives.
Approximately 390 residents have enrolled their suites, says Bob Sokol, director of planning, lands and permits. District staff are fielding up to 30 inquiries a day, while receiving approximately 10 applications a day.
“It has been going through the roof,” Sokol says.
To keep the momentum, the district extended the deadline to register secondary suites under its alternative life safety standards building codes to November 30, 2011. Any alterations that adhere to West Van’s codes do not require a building permit.
The municipality’s safety standards are easier to meet than the stringent B.C. Building Code. They also can save homeowners money.
“We want people to take advantage of this pro-cess,” Sokol says.
Municipal staff estimate there are approxi-mately 800 secondary suites across the district. As deadlines draw to an end, staff will move toward enforcing its secondary suite regulations with tickets and injunctions.
“Over the next few months we are going to be a bit more proactive in identifying suites,” Sokol says.
For homeowners who don’t want to register their suite, they can decommission them. This involves removing any cooking facilities and completing a declaration.
For more information call 604-925-7152 or visit www.westvancouver.ca/secondarysuite.
Suite incentiveWest Van extends secondary suite registration deals
The District of West Vancouver
is partnering with Pattison Outdoor in a deal that sees the company build bus
shelters in return for advertising space.
The advertising company is also
handing the municipality a
percentage of the ad revenue.
Submitted photo
REBECCA ALDOUS
S T A F F R E P O R T E R
Design plans for West Vancouver’s latest seniors housing development have
been given the thumbs up.
Last week, the Pacific Arbour Retirement Communities’ 130-rental-unit project, slated for the former Wetmore Motors site on the northwest corner of Marine Drive and 22nd Street, received coun-cil’s approval for a needed Official Community Plan amendment, rezoning bylaw and its design plans.
The plans state the build-ing will stand six storeys tall on the north eleva-tion and seven storeys along the Marine Drive front. The top two storeys are smaller, stepping back from the footprint of the building.
The proposal includes 7,870 sq. ft. of commercial and institutional space for Capilano University’s Eldercollege. The district’s report highlighted the facility will include a dining room, lounge, bistro, fit-
ness/spa area and arts and games rooms.
The project will provide 105 underground parking stalls — 65 of which will be for residents and the facility’s staff and the remain-ing 40 stalls will be for public use. The proposal also drafts 30 under-ground bicycle and scooter stalls.
The district will be getting $14.5 million out of a 125 year lease with Pacific Arbour.
The seniors care company
will also put $500,000 toward improvements to John Richardson Park, with an annual payment of $20,000 for park maintenance.
GREG HOEKSTRAS T A F F R E P O R T E R
From Ambleside beach to Dundarave pier to the rocky shores of Whytecliff Park, the waterfront is an integral part of West
Vancouver’s identity.Next weekend, the district wants to celebrate
that connection to the water with a series of beach-themed celebrations.
West Van’s annual Community Day takes place Saturday, June 4, at locations across the municipality.
“Community Day is a great day in West Vancouver for families and people of all ages,” said Mayor Pamela Goldsmith-Jones in a message on the district’s website.
“Our theme this year is a pretty obvious cause for celebration and respect. As a waterfront com-munity, we take the cleanliness, environmental protection and beauty of our beaches seriously, and we have the time of our life on the sands, logs, rocks, docks, piers, bays, benches, shore-lines, boats and rafts that are so intrinsic to West Vancouver and why we live here.”
The celebrations kick off at 9:45 a.m. with a North Shore tradition — the Masters’ Mile Race — along Marine Drive for men and women over the age of 40.
From 10 to 11:30 a.m. a parade will wind
its way from Ambleside Park to the West Van Community Centre Campus at Marine Drive and 22nd Street.
Following the parade, the Community Centre will have scores of children’s activities, includ-ing a petting zoo, pony rides, carnival games and musical performances.
There will also be a concert series for adults with two separate stages.
The main stage will feature acts such as the West Vancouver Youth Band, the Ambleside Orchestra, the Sea to Sky Band, the West Van Monday Concert Band, Keynote Singer, and the West Van Thursday Pops.
The Jazz Stage will showcase the Music Hall REAL Rock Band, Jazz Connexion, and bands from Rockridge, Sentinel and West Van Secondary schools.
There will also be lots going on inside the community cen-tre, including gymnastics class-es, puppet shows, sports, and free swimming.
The seniors’ activity centre will be bustling with a plant sale, barbecue, and a wine and beer cafe.
Please note the parade route along Marine Drive will be closed to traffic from 9 to 11:30 a.m., and no vehicles will have access to Ambleside Park until after 11 a.m.
Due to limited parking, the municipality is recommending people travel by bus or bicycle to enjoy the parade and community celebrations. For more information on traffic restrictions con-tact Gary Watt at 604-925-7026.
For more info on Community Day, including a full schedule of events, visit www.westvancouver.ca/communityday or call 604-925-7194.
[email protected]/greghoekstra
Pacific Arbour project designs approved
District celebrates sand, surf and sun as part of 2011 Community Day
Pacific Arbour Retirement Communities is aiming to get LEED gold certification for its latest project. Submitted image
Life’s a beach
“Community Day is great day in West
Vancouver for families and people of all ages.”
Pamela Goldsmith-JonesWest Vancouver Mayor
Thrill-seekers Kyle, 8, and Caydon, 7, ride the waves at West Vancouver’s Ambleside Beach on a picture-perfect Friday afternoon last summer. Greg Hoekstra photo
6 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
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Anyone who thinks robots lack personal-ity has obviously not seen the artwork of Rob Zylstra.
In his colourful paintings, the Lynn Valley resident — appropriately dubbed “Robot Rob” — brings to life everything from angry robots with bellies full of fire to smiling robots with octopus tentacles, Coca-Cola machine torsos, and pink floral dresses.
In many ways the work is a melding of Zylstra’s two interests. The vibrant, play-ful style is a reflection of his recent training as a storybook illustrator, while the creative and imaginative subject mat-ter comes from his lifelong love for classic science fiction novel covers and film posters.
Looking back, Zylstra says he can’t pin-point exactly when he began drawing bots and androids. But art, he says, has been a part of his own life for as long as he can remember.
Growing up in a farming area outside Port Coquitlam — with chickens to chase and a cow named “Dinner” — Zylstra was a quiet, intro-verted child, who spent much of his childhood sketching and dreaming of becoming a comic book illustrator.
“I had cousins who lived on the North Shore, in West Van, and I remember feeling like the country mouse coming to the city whenever we had holiday dinners,” he says.
As a teenager, Zylstra’s passion for artwork grew like a weed, stretching in all different direc-tions. He tried his hand at everything from air-brushing to sign painting. At school, he used a felt pen to sketch AC/DC and Mötley Crüe logos on his classmates’ denim jackets.
“I’d make $20 here and $50 there... it was great,” he laughs.
After high school Zylstra studied art at
Langara College, but upon graduation he ended up working in the trades instead, sandblasting glass for shower doors, coffee tables, and wall partitions.
The money was good, but after 12 years of the daily grind, Zylstra says he woke up with an epiphany and knew it was time to return to his first love: art.
These days, Zylstra says he lives his life balancing his cre-ative side with his constructive side.
He’s branded himself with two distinct identities. Half the time he’s covered in paint as Robot Rob, the other half cov-ered in sawdust as the owner of his home renovation busi-ness, the Handy Hubby.
“At first glance the two might not seem con-nected, but I think there’s an artistic element to building things and fixing things,” he says. “Being artistic allows me to think spatially and come up with creative solutions.”
Sitting in his kitchen, Zylstra, now 42, says he’s happy with the path he’s carving for him-self. He’s particularly proud that his first solo art show recently opened at Tartooful in Edgemont Village. In the coming months, he hopes to make a push toward another dream — becoming a chil-dren’s storybook illustrator.
“I feel like I’m finally starting to pull back and do the stuff I really want to do,” Zylstra says.
“In some ways, I feel like I never really grew up,” he adds with a smile, pointing to the Fantastic Four coffee mug in his hand.
Rob Zylstra’s art will be on display at Tartooful (3183 Edgemont Blvd.) until mid-June. For more information on Zylstra’s work visit www.robotrob.com. You can also follow him on Twitter @robotrob or @handyhubby.
Brush strokes and circuit breakers North Vancouver’s Rob Zylstra lives a bit of a double life,
balancing his work as a handyman and his work as an artist.
COFFEE WITH
Growing up, Rob Zylstra’s mother owned a used book store with thousands of classic science fiction and fantasy novels. As an adult, Zylstra now paints playful portraits inspired by those works of fiction under the moniker “Robot Rob.” Rob Newell photo
www.northshoreoutlook.com Thursday, May 26, 2011 7
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It was a star-studded opening last week as several North Shore show business names were spotted at a very special restaurant reveal. Crystal Bublé, sister of international singing sensation Michael Bublé,
rolled out the red carpet for VIP friends and family at the opening of her new Displace Hashery restaurant in Kits. The timing was perfect as newlywed brother Michael was also in town celebrating his recent marriage to Argentine actress Luisana Lopilato at a posh post-wedding reception at Vancouver’s Pan Pacific Hotel this past weekend. The excitement doesn’t end there either as Bublé also revealed that he is now part owner of the new Tsawwassen Springs project – a $400-million, 490-home golf resort community in Tsawwassen with fellow investors Pat Quinn and Bruce Allen.
B Blonde bombshells! Actress Luisana Lopilato, left, cuddles up to her new sister-in-law, Crystal Bublé, a former actress herself who is now a mom and part owner of the Displace Hashery restaurant on 4th Avenue in
Kits. C Superagent Bruce Allen is no stranger to success having launched the careers of Anne Murray, Bryan Adams and Bachman-Turner Overdrive in addition to Michael Bublé. CBC sports gal Jody Vance, left, takes a break from her Canucks Stanley Cup playoff broadcasts to chat with Juno award-winning recording artist Jann Arden. E Taking a break from pickles and ice cream, Virgin Radio 95.3 personality Drew Savage and wife Shelley-Ann Rogers don’t mind sharing a spam burger (seriously, try them, they’re great!)F Record producer Bob Rock, left, who has worked with the likes of
Metallica, The Cult, Bon Jovi, Bryan Adams, Michael Bublé and Motley Crue, chats with Turner Media Canada executive and West Vancouverite Craig Turner. G I loved him in the 80s, and I still love him now. Loverboy lead man Mike Reno, seen here with girlfriend/singer Catherine St. Germain, are two of the greatest people you will ever meet. H It’s all smiles at the end of a big week. From left: record producer Bob Rock, newlyweds Luisana and Michael Bublé and restaurant owner/actress Crystal Bublé.
CAT’SEYE
[email protected] Barr
CAT CALLS To send event information to Cat visit her website, catherinebarr.com or fax 604-903-1001. Follow Cat on Twitter: @catherinebarr
21
5
76
3 4
Homeless population shifts from street to sheltersJEFF NAGEL
B L A C K P R E S S
The number of Metro Vancouver home-less people is almost the same as three years ago, but the latest count has found
the number living on the streets is down sharply thanks to the opening of new shelters and transi-tion housing.
Volunteers who fanned out March 16 for the Metro Vancouver Homeless Count found 2,623 homeless, down slightly from 2,660 in 2008.
The shift from the street to shelter was dramat-ic. Unsheltered street homeless were down 54 per cent to 731 from 1,574 three years ago, while the number in shelters rose 74 per cent from 1,086 to 1,892.
The North Shore showed a modest decrease in street homeless, from 123 people to 117. The big-gest drops were found in Vancouver (down from 815 to 145), Surrey (down from 307 to 231), the Tri-Cities (down from 76 to 27) and New Westminster (down from 72 to 39.) Maple Ridge
was the only city where the number of street homeless rose – from 40 to 61.
“It looks to me like we have begun to turn the corner,” said James Pratt, spokesman for the Greater Vancouver Shelter Strategy. “There’s much more to be done. We have to keep our eye on the prize of eliminating homelessness.”
Vancouver added new shelters ahead of the 2010 Winter Olympics, three of which continue to operate with 340 year-round spaces. A new 55-bed shelter also opened in Langley since 2008 and another is opening in the Tri-Cities.
More than 1,700 new supportive housing units have been built by the province in Metro Vancouver or converted using old hotels over the last three years.
“It’s starting to have some effect,” said Housing Minister Rich Coleman. “When you can stem the tide and start to see the reversal, it’s really good.”
He said another 500 housing units are still slated to be built in the Metro Vancouver area, plus an additional 150 further east in the Fraser Valley.
8 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
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FRUSTRATED or FAILED at Past (or Present) "Piano Lessons"? Even if you've never played before, in just 2½ hours, with BOTH HANDS
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REBECCA ALDOUSS T A F F R E P O R T E R
It’s the brain wave; a new market sector that is expected to reach $8 billion in rev-enue by 2015. Last week, it hit the North
Shore. Penny Wilson stands by a table crowded with
colourful puzzles and card games. She’s slim, freshly dressed and her sandy-coloured hair falls neatly over her shoulders. She’s also sharp.
“I want to make rock stars out of neuroscien-tists,” she says.
Wilson has opened Canada’s first brain fitness-inspired retail space. Located in the heart of Ambleside, Nognz sells computer games, puzzles, crosswords and books all directed at exercising one’s word skills, coordination, critical think-ing, memory and focus. Besides these products,
the store organizes
games nights, brain boot
camps and online programs.
“I want to be the Running Room of brain fitness,” says the former marketing
executive. Wilson dreams of a world in which people can
name the brain’s lobes with the same ease as list-ing our major muscle groups. Armed with this knowledge, individuals will be able to pinpoint what they need to work on and move forward, much the same as physical training, she says.
“I want people to learn what it is like to exer-cise the five areas of the brain,” Wilson adds.
The store’s product manager and scientific director, Justin Davis, is seated at a computer
beside a man with silver hair. On screen is an image of a phone. A female voice says a phone number and later, the player has to type in the correct digits. After that exercise, it’s off to the game’s parking lot to play meter maid, a memory game in which the player must recall which car owners have tipped the meters.
Before taking this job, Davis hung out with worms. The then-Uni-versity of Western Ontario student was studying how worms remember things. He later earned his PhD in neuromechanics at the University of British Columbia where he examined the nervous system function that allows us stand up and be balanced.
In the past 10 years there have been great strides in neurosciences, but there’s a disconnect in getting the new knowledge to public use, Davis says. Tired of working in labs, he wanted to translate these advances into people’s lives.
“A lot of researchers are picking up on the benefits of brain training,” Davis says. “Now it is time to really test it.”
There is no question that, no matter how old, the human brain can change depending on one’s experience. This modern theory, know as neuroplasticity, has opened up the door to a wide range of ideas, every-thing from brain plasticity pills to training tools, says Max Cynader, director of Vancouver’s Brain Research Centre. But he says the jury is out on how effective brain fitness exercises really are.
In September 2009, Lab UK launched a scientific study, which involved 13,000 participants completing a six-week brain-training ses-sion. At the end of the experiment, researchers concluded there was no evidence to support playing these games can meaningfully boost brain-power. What the study did find is that people who played the games did get better at the specific task — practise makes perfect.
There are lots of things happening to the brain as we age, Cynader says. Brain volume and weight decreases. On average this mass of pro-tein and fat loses five to 10 per cent of its heft between the ages of 20 and 90. Given the tremendous amount of variables, it’s more difficult to pinpoint certain exercises for one’s brain than other muscle groups, Cynader says. But it’s not a “crazy” concept.
“Whether these tests can do that is the question,” Cynader says. Unlike the drills that drugs go through by organizations like the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration, games claiming health benefits such as memory gains haven’t undergone the same clinical trials, Cynader notes.
“Some of [the companies] have done scientific experiments that are published in peer review papers,” he says, adding they don’t meet clinical trial standards.
So far there are more questions than answers — do improvements last, what are you comparing any improvements to and to whom are you comparing improvements?
Penny Wilson, founder and president, and Justin Davis, scientific director and product manager, test some brain fitness products at the new Nognz retail location in West Vancouver’s Ambleside neighbourhood.Rob Newell photo
Brainwave As West Vancouver’s population ages, seniors are looking for ways to keep on the ball
10 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
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to count the day’s earnings. Titcomb
recently turned 99 and volunteers every day.
Rob Newell photos
Cynader isn’t rul-ing out such improve-ments can occur with the proper technique. Cynader is studying how to strengthen weakened pathways in the brain. To do this, the centre must utilize millions of dollars’ worth of equipment, including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
In the meantime, there are proven things one can do to keep one’s brain healthy, he notes. A not so obvious one is physical exercise.
“Exercise promotes the growth of new brain cells,” he says.
With seniors making up 25 per cent of the Canadian population by 2036, more people are looking for ways to keep their minds fit. Being a member of Silver Harbour Seniors Centre’s com-puter class keeps Darrell Derban on the ball, the 82-year-old North Vancouver resident says, while playing on his cellphone. The club’s 36 members gather in the computer room to share ideas and solve computer problems. Derban bought his first computer in 1982 and the machines continue to challenge him today.
“I find them fascinating,” he says. A number of Derban’s family members were
hit by Alzheimer’s disease. It’s a story thousands of Canadians face every year. The disease is the most common form of dementia in Canada, mak-ing up 64 per cent of all dementia diseases.
Learning computer shortcuts, new programs and playing games has helped Derban keep his memory, he says.
“I come here as much as I can,” Derban proud-ly states.
Over in West Vancouver, at the seniors’ activ-ity centre, Fred Titcomb gets ready to count the centre’s earnings from its services for the day.
“I never use a calculator,” he says. Titcomb has volunteered at the centre for 30
years. He arrives at the building at 8:30 a.m., works until 11:40 a.m., walks home to cook him-
self lunch and then returns to volunteer until 3 p.m. Titcomb says he’s always had an active mind and been “a fun guy.” He can recall all his memories back to the age of six when he lived in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan.
Longevity runs in his family. Titcomb’s dad lived to 100, his grandfather to 94 and his moth-er passed away at 91 years of age.
When Titcomb’s wife passed away 17 years ago, it was the activity centre that kept him going, he says.
“Belonging to a place like this has been my life,” Titcomb says.
Social interaction is an important part of keep-ing one’s noggin healthy, says Ed Kry, Capilano University’s Eldercollege board chair. It’s one of the reasons Kry attended the college himself. Up until recently, social interaction and the curiosity to learn were the primary reasons seniors signed onto Eldercollege courses, but not any more.
“That is changing, as more and more are dis-covered that there are health benefits [with learning],” he says.
The college currently has 250 members enrolled, all 55 years of age and older. The aver-age age of attendees hovers between 65 and 75 years old. No grades are handed out; the classes are solely designed for the enjoyment of learning.
“We have people into their 90s,” Kry says.One great thing about this so-called brain
wave is it has got people talking about keeping one’s marbles shiny, he says. And no matter what direction people choose, whether it is a card game, club or college course, Kry says any kind of mental stimulation is a good thing.
“The more it is used, the more it will stay healthy,” Kry says.
www.northshoreoutlook.com Thursday, May 26, 2011 11
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It looks a lot like the floor hockey so many Canadians grew up playing — two defence-man, three forwards and a goalie competing
against a team with the same make up, with the objective of scoring more goals than those wear-ing the other jerseys.
But, says West Vancouver native and
sports
On the floorPopular in Europe for years, floorball is making inroads on the North Shore and across the country
West Vancouver’s Robbie Wilkinson (left) makes a play for the ball at the recently under-19 world floorball championships in Germany.Submitted photo
Capilano Coho defenceman Robbie Wilkinson, the differences between the two games are vast.
“It’s a really fast game, great to watch. You can’t lift sticks, there’s no slashing and you can’t hit the other players’ blades,” says Wilkinson of floorball.
“It’s clean, more of a skill game.”Wilkinson, a lifelong ice hockey
player, was enrolled in the Sentinel secondary school hockey academy from Grades 8 to 10. In one of the many off-ice training sessions required of academy members, Wilkinson was taught floorball by guest instructor Greg Beaudin, pres-ident of BC Floorball and coach of the Cohos.
Some hockey players, says Wilkinson, are hesitant about the game because of the different rules but he says he was hooked right away. Wilkinson started playing immediately and was invited by Beaudin to play with some of the older guys after exhibiting a knack for the sport.
“Kids take that first zinger and they’re hooked,” says Beaudin, floorball stick in hand.
“You nail that first snapshot from 20 or 30 feet off the crossbar and you can’t stay away.”
Both Wilkinson and Beaudin recently returned from Germany where Wilkinson competed in the under-19 world championships, the only British Columbian on the national team. The squad finished with an impressive 3-1 record, although failed to advance out of the round robin.
Still in a comparatively infant stage in Canada, floorball com-
mands a massive following in Europe. Particularly popular in Scandinavian countries, as well as Switzerland and the Czech Republic, major floorball matches attract upwards of 10,000 fans.
But, Beaudin says, Canada is catching on. There are 100 Hockey Canada skills academies using floor-ball as a training exercise, with 35 such camps in B.C.
Professional hockey players are also jumping on the bandwagon. Last spring, Beaudin played a three-hour floorball session in Yaletown with the Canucks’ Ryan Kesler, Mason Raymond and Kevin Bieksa. Swedish-born Alex Edler and the Sedin twins all played floor-ball growing up, and their North American teammates were interest-ed in learning the game.
Floorball was also recently recog-nized by the International Olympic Committee and may become part of the Olympics as early as 2020. The announcement was welcome news to Beaudin, whose been campaign-ing tirelessly for the game for years.
“This is the fastest growing sport in the world. The North Vancouver Minor Hockey Association has con-tacted us [BC Floorball] to provide off-ice training,” says Beaudin.
“There is still a lack of awareness but our goal is to become an elite team and an elite country in the floorball world.”
Beaudin also hosts drop-in floor-ball sessions in the gym at the West Van Community Centre Thursday nights. Beaudin says the North Shore Winter Club will also offer floorball summer camps. Visit www.bcfloorball.com for more info.
12 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
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Sign up today for the North Shore Outlook online newsletter, arriving every Thursday morning in your inbox.
Visit northshoreoutlook.com and click on the link found under “Community Links.”
www.northshoreoutlook.com Thursday, May 26, 2011 13
OnedaydayinMayinMay
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MIRRORIMAGES
Mom & daughter, Nuala and Natalie spendOne Day in May
starting with a visit toPIZAZZ
Waterfront Diningat Lynnwood Marina
May is the month to honour mom. Best friends and mother-daughter duo, Nuala and Natalie Teti, spent a day together, taking in the sights
and enjoying a little retail therapy on the North Shore. They started with a trip to Edgemont Village. Moms love jewelry - judging by the huge grin on Nuala’s face when she saw the Pandoracollection at Pizazz Gifts. The girls’ shopping trip continued down in Ambleside where they stocked up on summer clothing staples – including cute Seychelles sandals - at So Blu. Taking advantage of the fresh spring air, Nuala and Natalie decided to cruise up to the Capilano Suspension Bridge for some natural inspiration. In the sleek 2011 Suzuki Kizashi SX from North Van Suzuki, it was a perfectmid-day diversion. Reenergized from their walk in the woods, one more stop was in order. Nuala and Natalie headed to Couch Potato on Pemberton, to see if they could fi nd a new sofa – or maybe an occasional chair – for Natalie’s Lynn Valley home. Time – at last – for lunch and Natalie knew just where to take her mom. MarinaSide Grill under the Second Narrows Bridge. A glass of Merlot on the spectacular patio, some fresh seafood, a stunning view – and the day would be complete.
Take a look through the following pages to see details of One Day in May.
Photos by Rob Newell.Storyline by Maria Spitale-Leisk
Gifts
14 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
Nuala & Natalieexplore the stunning
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Splashes of 14-karat gold, silver and colourful Murano glass light up the Pandora
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relationship. Pandora jewelry brings out both
quality and sentiment in its craftsmanship.
The concept behind Pandora is layering: you
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special occasion.
“It’s a piece of jewelry that allows people to express
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Pizazz Gifts owner,Roberta Perrin.
Pizazz is celebrating its one-year anniversary in Edgemont Village as an
eclectic gift storecarrying the works
of unique, celebrateddesigners in the arts and
crafts of jewelry,fashion accessories,
bath & body, home decor, furniture, and tableware. Pizazz Gifts
3131 Edgemont Blvd., North Vancouver,www.pizazz.biz
Pandora Silver bracelet ($80) with silver charms – some featuring Murano glass - clips and spacers are $25 to $335 each. Pandora Double Leather bracelet ($55) with silver charms – somefeaturing Murano glass -clips and spacers are $25 to $335 each.
Natalie and Nuala peruse the colourful Pandora trinkets. Each Italian-crafted Murano glass charm compliments the
14-karat gold Pandora bracelets and necklaces. Natalie and Nuala play dress up in the accessories nook at
Pizazz. Natalie is wearing a fringed scarf by Echo ($42), a 14 karat gold Pandora bracelet (approx. $2,000) with emerald
Murano glass charm and gold spacers which each range in price from $110 to $1,030. Pandora 0.03 carat diamond-
embellished gold ring, $800. Nuala's choice - Pandora sterling silver bracelets range in price from $110 to $195.
FASHIONACCESSORIESfrom scarves tohandbags at
PIZAZZ
778.340.7660
For the perfect gift for a Graduate, Teacher or Bride-to-Be, visit us at:
1519 BELLEVUE AVENUE WEST VAN 604.913.1519 M-SA 9:30-5:30; SU 12-5
LIFESTYLE CLOTHING FROM HEAD TO TOE
2010
ODD MOLLY
www.northshoreoutlook.com Thursday, May 26, 2011 15
Our team fi ndsthe true meaning
of comfort atCOUCHPOTATO
The Sofa Co.
A mid-daydiversion to
Capilano Suspension Bridge in the
2011 KIZASHI SXfrom
NORTH VANSUZUKI
So Blü Clothing Co.1519 Bellevue Avenue,
West Vancouver www.sobluclothing.com.
So Blü Clothing Co.in Ambleside is really
embracing their romantic side when it comes to
picking up clothing trends for spring and summer
2011.“This season we are
seeing lots of lace, eyelet and embroidery,” says So Blü Clothing Co.
owner Jennifer Sharp.Sharp is in love with
Odd Molly. Conceived in Sweden, Odd Molly
designs are very feminine, 'boho chic' and really fl at-
ter the female fi gure.
Bass saddle shoes have been huge in Europe for several seasons and are
now making their way to North American shores.
Natalie and Nuala, who works at So Blü, couldn’t
resist trying on plenty of cute clothes in the store.
At right, Nuala approves of the pastel colours on
Natalie’s plaid shirt by DEPT. It adds a vibrant splash of colour to her
casual, springtime outfi t.
Natalie tries on:Shirt by DEPT $110.
Boyfriend capri jeans by Miss Me $145. Can-
vas combat boots by Seychelles $245
Embroidereddetail on the back
of Natalie'sOdd Molly
jean jacket from SO BLÜ
Above, Seychelles shoes from Nuala's outfi t (appeared in O Magazine as part of the famous "O List")
Right, taking a break at the Capilano Suspension Bridge. Nuala's outfi t: Tunic by DEPT $105. Pants by Jbrand $220. Jacket by Not the Same $130. Shoes by Sey-
chelles $155 . Bag by Co Lab $105
Natalie's outfi t: Jacket by Odd Molly $299. Pants by Not the Same $110. Top by Free People $118. Cami
by Mexx $29. Scarf by Not the Same $110. Saddle shoes by Bass $120. Bag by Co Lab $80
Rich colourpalettes and
new textures intrigue Nuala at
COUCH POTATOTHE SOFA
COMPANY.
Couch PotatoThe Sofa Co. is an easy shopping stop for Nualaand Natalie. Alwaysinterested to see what'snew in fabrics, colours, and styles for home furniture, they know thatCouch Potato has a great selection of samples and swatches to review. And while they make some decisions, there's no end of comfortable chairs and sofas try out as well .
Couch PotatoThe store that friends tell friends about.Sofas, Loveseats, Chairs, Ottomans, Sectionals, Sofabeds and more.Available in fabrics & leathers. Custom orders welcome.
Couch PotatoThe Sofa Co.
1405 Pemberton Ave.North Vancouver
604.988.8271
16 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Mon-Sat 9:30-5:30 • Sun 12-5
1405 Pemberton AvenueNORTH VANCOUVER • 604.988.8271
LANGLEY • COQUITLAM • NANAIMO • VICTORIA
Celebrating 13 years on the North Shore
SECTIONALS & SOFABEDS
20% OFF CUSTOM ORDERS
The store that friends tell friends about
Relaxing, drawn out lunches are the norm on the deck at MarinaSide Grill at Lynnwood Marina.
A freshly prepared seafood dish and a glass of chardonnay pairs nicely with the seaside entertainment: watching luxury yachts pass under the Second Narrows Bridge and glide across the sparking waters of the Burrard Inlet.
The MarinaSide Grill is boater-friendly and even reserves the dock below the patio for patrons of the restaurant.
During fi reworks evenings in the summer, some boaters make a pit stop at MarinaSide Grill for a sunset dinner before heading off to English Bay.
MarinaSide Grill1653 Columbia Street(off Main & Mountain, under the Second Narrows Bridge)North Vancouver604.988.0038www.marinasidegrill.com
~ on the coolest patio in town ~~ on the coolest patio in town ~Brunch is our specialty.Brunch is our specialty.
Join us for breakfast, brunch, lunch or dinner.Great steak and prime rib, sh & chips, pastas, fajitas,
kids menu and much more.It’s fresh, fun, and the food is fantastic. See you soon!
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEKUNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
Waterfront Waterfront Dining Dining
1653 Columbia Street (off Main & Mountain)www.marinasidegrill.com | under the 2nd Narrows Bridge | 604.988.0038
AT LYNNWOOD MARINA
Natalie’s clutch purse is by Co Lab $80, So Blu. The wine
is the Peller Estates Merlot. And the cake is the Chocolate
Sensation from MarinaSide.
For their specialmother-daughter lunch
Nuala savours theTwo-Piece Halibut and
Chips meal withhouse-made tartar sauce
and coleslaw;meanwhile, Natalie opts
for a fresh Shrimp and Papaya Salad served
with house-maderaspberry vinaigrette. Both ladies sip Peller
Estates Merlot.
The best deck,best friends and
best food.It all comes together at
MARINASIDEGRILL
The tunic,the top and the
handbags,from
SO BLU CLOTHING CO.
Natalie picksout her favourite!Boat-spotting at MARINASIDE
GRILLAT LYNNWOOD
MARINA
www.northshoreoutlook.com Thursday, May 26, 2011 17
The 2011KIZASHI
fromNORTH VAN SUZUKI
is a splash hit with Nuala & Natalie
North Van Suzukiwww.northvansuzuki.com 604-983-2088 1695 Marine Drive, North Vancouver
DRIVE SOMETHING DIFFERENT ANDDON’T FOLLOW THE HERD.
FIGHT CARFORMITYTIME TO
$199 0.9%2011 KIZASHI SX iAWD
CONSUMERS SHOULD READ THE FOLLOWING: All offers include Delivery & Destination ($1,495 for Kizashi), $100 A/C Excise Tax (where applicable), $29 Tire Tax, $1 Environ-mental Handling Fee, $399 Dealer Administration Fee and $5 OMVIC Fee. Offers exclude PPSA up to $72 (when fi nancing), applicable taxes (including HST and tax for fuel conservation, where applicable), license, registration, insurance and a down payment of $2,300. Vehicles may not be exactly as shown. These offers cannot be combined with any other offers and are subject to change without notice. Dealers may sell for less. See participating dealers for details. *Limited time fi nance offers available O.A.C. Special bi-weekly purchase fi nance offers are available on 2011 Kizashi SX iAWD Model 6B23V41 (Selling Price $30,224), for a 72 month term. Selling prices include Delivery & Destination ($1,495), $100 A/C Excise Tax (where applicable), $29 Tire Tax, $1 Environmental Handling Fee, $399 Dealer Administration Fee and $5 OMVIC Fee and exclude PPSA up to $72 (when fi nancing), applicable taxes (including HST and tax for fuel conservation, where applicable), license, registration, insurance and a down payment of $2,300. The bi-weekly 72 month payment interest rates are based on 2011 Kizashi SX iAWD @ 0% purchase fi nancing, bi-weekly payments are $199 with $2,300 down payment. Cost of borrowing is $1,634 for a total obligation of $31,858. Offer valid until May 31, 2011. When properly equipped. **Between May 26, 2011 and May 28, 2011 consumers who purchase, lease or fi nance any new 2010 or 2011 Suzuki vehicle may choose either a $750 gas card, or $750 worth of genuine Suzuki accessories, or a $750 discount. For consumers choosing $750 worth of genuine Suzuki accessories, $750 must be used at the time of purchase, lease or fi nance contract execution and can only be used towards the purchase and installation of genuine Suzuki accessories from an authorized Canadian Suzuki retailer. For consumers choosing the $750 discount, $750 will be applied against the purchase, lease or fi nance of the 2010 or 2011 Suzuki vehicle and will be deducted from the negotiated price before taxes. Offer valid until May 28, 2011.
$7500% PURCHASE FINANCINGPLUS FOR 3 DAYS ONLY CHOOSE BETWEEN:
• GAS CARD OR
• ACCESSORIES OR
• CASH DISCOUNT
Bi-Weekly payments plus tax
Purchase Financing for 72 months
From the moment you steer Kizashi onto the road, a unique sense of power rests in your hands. It's the power of control; an experience of synchron-
icity born from new technologies, advanced engineering, and a commitment to achieving perfection. Maneuvering feels seamless, acceleration and deceleration effortless. Every bend in the road appears as an opportunity to expand your soaring sense of freedom. Every day is an appeal to start your senses.The Kizashi gives you a precise sense of handling and brakingcontrol as well as outstanding visibility and awareness of the conditions around you. The Kizashi surrounds you with exten-sive protection in the form of 8 airbags and impact-absorbing materials and structures.
North Van Suzuki,604-983-2088
1695 Marine Drive,North Vancouver
www.northvansuzuki.com
KIZASHI: Performancepromised and
delivered. From NORTH VAN
SUZUKI A full day of shopping, sight-seeing and a late lunch was accomplished in style and comfort in the 2011 Kizashi from North Van Suzuki. Even the rain didn't bother Natalie and Nuala on their Capilano Suspension Bridge diversion. Clothing and shoes from So Blü.
Control,comfort and style make the Kizashi a
perfect drivingexperience. NORTH VAN
SUZUKI
18 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
So Blü Clothing Co. has some exciting ideas that will make this season cool as a summer breeze.Odd Molly brings out the romance. Slip into this cotton Cypress dress and head down to a beach barbeque at Amble-side.
At leftOdd Molly Cypress dress $250Karen Telio sterling silver leaf necklace $110
And below:Supertrash top $165Creative Designs clutch (hand made in Bali) $55
Couch Potato is the store friends tell friends about. All their sofas are locally, Canadian made.Contemporary, Traditional and Transitional styles for you to choose from. And choose your fabric from our large selection. Come on into Couch Potato soon – there’s always something new.
It’s something you simplymust try. Pick a warmsummer afternoon or evening, call a friend or gather up the family, and head toMarinaSide Grill.There’s plenty on offer for lunch or dinner and then… there’s dessert.Indulge in their Chocolate Sensation cake ~ served with house-made chocolate whipped cream.Life doesn’t get much better!
Among the eclectic ideas from the collection of celebrated designers at Pizazz Gifts, you will fi nd a good cross selection of Michael Aram’s polished, rustic creations. With nature as inspiration, his works are elegant and functional.
Above:Honey Pot Apple with Spoon– in nickleplate $95
Black Orchid 4x6 Frame– in nickleplate $108
At the endend
The best fi nds,good deals & great ideas to inspire you.
It’s all right here on the North Shore.
CONSUMERS SHOULD READ THE FOLLOWING: All offers include Delivery & Destination ($1,395 for SX4 model), $100 A/C Excise Tax (where applicable), $29 Tire Tax, $1 Environmental Handling Fee, $399 Dealer Administration Fee and $5 OMVIC Fee. Offers exclude PPSA up to $72 (when fi nancing), applicable taxes (including HST and tax for fuel conservation, where applicable), license, registration, insurance and a down payment of $2,000. Vehicles may not be exactly as shown. These offers cannot be combined with any other offers and are subject to change without notice. Dealers may sell for less. See participating dealers for details. *Limited time fi nance offers available O.A.C. Special bi-weekly purchase fi nance offers are available on 2011 SX4 Hatchback JX iAWD with manual transmission Model H3NB2J1 (Selling Price $21,664) for a 72 month term. Selling prices include Delivery & Destination ($1,395), $100 A/C Excise Tax (where applicable), $29 Tire Tax, $1 Environmental Handling Fee, $399 Dealer Administration Fee and $5 OMVIC Fee and exclude PPSA up to $72 (when fi nancing), applicable taxes (including HST and tax for fuel conservation, where applicable), license, registration, insurance and a down payment of $2,000. The bi-weekly 72 month payment interest rates are based on 2011 SX4 Hatchback JX iAWD @ 0% bi-weekly payments are $139 with $2,000 down payment. Cost of borrowing is $0 for a total obligation of $21,664. Offer valid until May 31, 2011. 1When properly equipped. **Between May 26, 2011 and May 28, 2011 consumers who purchase, lease or fi nance any new 2010 or 2011 Suzuki vehicle may choose either a $750 gas card, or $750 worth of genuine Suzuki accessories, or a $750 discount. For consumers choosing $750 worth of genuine Suzuki accessories, $750 must be used at the time of purchase, lease or fi nance contract execution and can only be used towards the purchase and installation of genuine Suzuki accessories from an authorized Canadian Suzuki retailer. For consumers choosing the $750 discount, $750 will be applied against the purchase, lease or fi nance of the 2010 or 2011 Suzuki vehicle and will be deducted from the negotiated price before taxes. Offer valid until May 28, 2011.
2011 Sx4 Hatchback JX iAWD:
The most fuel-effi cientintelligent All-Wheel Drive
vehicle in Canada. This is Fighting Carformity at its best.
Its 150 hp 2.0L engine, 16” Aluminum Alloy Wheels, and
European-tuned suspension will take you on any side street
or highway life demands.
It’s the Suzuki Way of Life. Own it for $139 Bi-Weekly at 0% Purchase Financing for 72
months.
North Van Suzuki,604-983-2088
1695 Marine Drive,North Vancouver.
www.northvansuzuki.com
Pizazz Gifts 3131 Edgemont Boulevard,North Vancouver.www.pizazz.biz
So Blü Clothing Co.1519 Bellevue Avenue,West Vancouverwww.sobluclothing.com.
of the day…of the day…of the day…of the day…
MarinaSide Grill1653 Columbia Street(off Main & Mountain, under the Second Narrows Bridge)North Vancouver604.988.0038www.marinasidegrill.com
Couch PotatoThe Sofa Co.1405 Pemberton Avenue,North Vancouver. 604.988.8271
Seniors
Boosting Seniors’ One StopGREG HOEKSTRA
S T A F F R E P O R T E R
The North Shore’s Seniors’ One Stop pro-gram is once again running at full capacity thanks to a United Way grant and a hand-
ful of corporate sponsors. Li Boesen, executive director of North Shore
Community Resources, says the popular program had received a second lease on life thanks to the generosity of sponsors Neptune Terminals, Living Well Home Care, Royalty Home Health Care, and the North Shore Outlook.
“This is very good news for local seniors,” said Boesen. “This money dedicates people to seniors issues on the North Shore.”
Two years ago, Boesen said, the program lost 100 per cent of its funding after a round of cut-backs by Vancouver Coastal Health. The cuts
were devastating to the organization, which was fielding upwards of 5,000 calls and walk-in visits, from local seniors and their families, she said.
Without the program, many seniors would be unable to navigate the maze of seniors benefits and services, she added.
The Outlook’s partnership with North Shore Community Resources first began in 2010, when the newspaper assumed printing duties of the popular Seniors Directory. Doing so helped the organization reach an audience eight times larg-er than it normally would have, and saved the group significantly in production costs.
The Outlook has followed up on that commit-ment with a cheque for $3,478. Publisher Aaron Van Pykstra said the company is proud to sup-port the agency’s important work, and extends thanks to advertisers, who did their part by buy-ing space in the Seniors Directory.
Li Boesen, executive director of North Shore Community Resources, centre, says The Outlook’s financial support helps keep programs running. Presenting a cheque for $3,478 are Outlook publisher Aaron Van Pykstra, left, and sales manager Greg Laviolette, right.Greg Hoekstra photo
www.northshoreoutlook.com Thursday, May 26, 2011 19
Hearing loss can be helped.
The key is early detection.
We offer FREEhearing tests...because we care.Call now to book your test!Our commitment is to ensure youexperience the clearest sound possible, whether this means using a hearing aid or simply taking steps to protect the good hearing you presently have.
FREE HEARING TESTS this month for readers of the Outlook.
For more information and to take advantage of our current special offers, see www.clearchoicehearingclinic.com
3 locations to serve you:Lonsdale Medical Clinic, North Vancouver — 604 988 8013Hollyburn Medical Clinic, West Vancouver — 604 922 61114705A Hastings Street, Burnaby — 604 294 3273
SpecialCare forSpecialPeople We’ve been supporting seniors to safely
stay in their own homes since 1980.
Call us for a FREE, no obligation, in-home assessment of your healthcare needs.
1305 St. Georges Avenue, North Vancouver(across from Lions Gate Hospital)
604.985.6881 l www.shylonursing.ca
Wills, Estates & Trusts
Ratcliff & Company LLP
Lawyers
604.988.5201www.ratcliff.com
#500 - 221 West Esplanade,North Vancouver
Effective planning for the future
Peter BonnyLawyer
If you die with no valid will, your spouse, partner or children may receive less than you wish. Without a valid will to indicate your wishes, the court steps in and your property will be distributed according to provincial laws.
We assist you to plan your estate, to build andpreserve your wealth, and to ensure your familyand property are protected.
For estates of all sizes, we provide expert advice tailored to your needs. If a loved one has passed away, we can also assist you in administering their estate or trust.
20 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
W. VANCOUVER BURNABY604. .10 0
WHITE ROCK604. .10 0
www.acousticahearing.com 11 years experience
100% SATISFACTIONOR MONEY BACK!GUARANTEED!
We are different. Acoustica Hearing, in partnership with Siemens, one of the world’s leading hearing aid manufacturers, has been making and servicing hearing aids for over a decade in the Lower Mainland. Our clinics in West Vancouver, White Rock and Burnaby are unique in that we do everything locally.
Shop local, buy local.We offer unbeatable value! Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded! Visit any of our clinics and experienced registered practitioners will help you select from a wide range of the latest hearing aid technology best suited for you and your lifestyle.
A+Member
W. VANCOUVER2432 Marine Dr.604.922.1080
FACTORYDIRECT!
Special Offer!Siemens hearing aids:• Pure 701 • Pure 501
BUY ONE hearing aid& get the second at50% OFF
Limited Time Offer
digital processingbesteverdeveloped
All Makes
HEARING AID REPAIR
$198Same Day Service
$$995995from
SIEMENSSIEMENSRechargable Hearing AidRechargable Hearing Aid
NEWlocationin West
Vancouver!
DrivingMiss Daisycan help you!604.720.4030
Reliable &safe senior’s
accompaniment and transportation service
www.drivingmissdaisy.net
When you can’t be there, show her you care!
Natural Herbal Supplements
111 West 3rd St., North Van. 604.988.5271Independently owned and operated for over 33 years.
ANDERSON’S PHARMACYGREAT SELECTION OF HOMEOPATHIC REMEDIES
Prescriptions • Vitamins • Herbs • HomeopathicsFree prescription
pick-up and drop-off
Bio-RegrowStopsHairLoss.Regrows Hair
$$3939999960 caps
Viagreat-SXRegain virility in two hours. Increase desire
Reg. 49.99
$$44449999
AT HOME OR HOSPITAL CARE• 5% Seniors
Discount (1 year)• Live-In OR Live-Out• Fully Licenced,
Bonded & Insured• Certi ed Care Aides
& Nurses• Personal /
Companion Care
• ASL Interpreter for the Deaf or Hard of Hearing
• Housekeeping, Groceries,Transport Assist
• Mobility Aides & Transfer Devices
FREE IN-HOME Consultation & REGULAR follow-up visits
Tel: 604.312.0798 • TTY to Voice: 711 • Fax: 604.929.5485
www.TenderHelpersHomeCare.com
10-0210
OPEN HOUSEFriday, May 20th - Monday, May 23rd, 2011
11:00 am - 4:00 pmUnique 2 Bedroom Now Available!
Now is a great time to start enjoying all the things and activities that bring you pleasure — a time to relax, yet stay active, a time to meet new people with common interests and life stories, a time for you! We invite you to explore the lifestyle opportunities and everyday choices at Amica at West Vancouver.
Seniors
Driving and dementiaKENDRA JONES
N O R T H S H O R E C O M M U N I T Y R E S O U R C E S
Driving is a complex activity that requires quick reactions, good judgment, and the ability to divide and maintain atten-
tion and recall the rules of the road. All drivers with Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias will eventually become unsafe to drive; however, depending on the timing of the diagnosis and the progression of the disease some individu-als with dementia can continue to drive for a period of time. Typically, it is up to friends and family members to bring up the issue when they feel that the individual has become unsafe to drive. Try to introduce the idea of “hanging up the keys” gradually. Calmly and clearly outline your point of view and do not accuse or belittle the individual. Remember, he or she is not a “bad driver”; rather, his or her driving is being adversely affected by a medical condition.
If a person decides to give up his or her driv-er’s licence voluntarily, he or she can swap their licence for a B.C. Identification Card (BCID) at any driver licensing office.
However, due to the lack of insight that is often seen in those with dementia, many indi-viduals with dementia are not able to accurately assess their ability to drive and friends and family must trust their “gut feeling.” Some of the signs to look for include the individual mixing up the gas and brake pedal; having trouble with turning, merging or changing lanes; missing stop signs or traffic lights; getting in a crash, having a near-miss, or accidentally damaging the car; receiving a traffic ticket; or getting lost in familiar places or forgetting where he or she is going.
If the individual will not voluntarily stop driv-ing, friends or family must intervene. It may be helpful to involve an objective third-party, such as the individual’s family doctor. The doctor can assess the individual using a short paper-and-pencil based test, such as the SIMARD. Doctors, as well as registered psychologists and optometrists, have an obligation to report an individual to the Office of the Superintendent of Motor Vehicles (OSMV) if he or she believes that the individual is unsafe to drive. When the OSMV receives such a report, they may request that the individual come for testing through the DriveAble program, which involves a computer-based test and a road test (depending on the outcome of the computer-based test). There is no charge for DriveAble testing as long as the test-ing was requested by the OSMV. If the driver fails the testing, the OSMV has the power to impose conditions on or revoke the individual’s driver’s license.
Once a person lacks insight into their demen-tia, conversations about driving cessation will be difficult. It is a good idea to introduce the topic early. Speak with the person about their safety, as well as the safety of others on the road, and discuss how driving cessation may impact their independence and identity. Involve the person in brainstorming ideas for the time when he or she can no longer drive. Without a licence, the individual may need to rely on family members, volunteer drivers, or a paid service for trans-portation. Remember, although conversations about driving and dementia may be difficult, keeping your family member (and others on the road) safe should be a top priority and must be addressed.
Exceptional Service, Compassionate Care
For a FREE in-home hearing test (ages 50 and over),
call 778-840-7203
MO BI LE HE AR IN G CL IN IC
Visit us at hearathome.com
Seniors
Spring Cleaning
With the first breath of sunshine my mind clears and my energy increases – hello to longer days and shorter nights, out-
door dinner parties and long walks. I find our dog sleeping in the sunshine on the trampoline and the doors of our home swing open all day, almost like we are blowing the old stale air out and letting the new fresh air in.
My husband seems to get the spring bug too. This year it was the catch-all utility drawer in the kitchen that became his early spring proj-ect. The man who is a fan of gadgets, and usually has my wine bottle resealed with a vacuum pump even before I can get to my second glass, has the contents of this drawer rattling! He proudly brings everything home from trade shows he attends to display to us like trophies. The top of his dresser is piled with bits and pieces. He calls it organized chaos.
There he is, standing in front of the drawer in his housecoat that Sunday morning mumbling to himself as he starts his attack. Doesn’t he know this is my organized chaos?
Before long, he has the kids and I in stitches – not only because he has discovered certain comi-cal treasures but because as he stood there, his his leg kept twitching because of a sciatic pain
brought on by too much hockey. The laughter was real and one of those special bonding times a family has. Like a Dave and Morley story, I guess.
As he pulls things out I can hear him say “we don’t need this, you still have this, we never use this,” and I refrain from commenting, wait-ing for his next discovery, all the while appreciating his efforts.
I quickly find a box for him to toss the rejects in, the famous “university box” to hold all the stuff we don’t need but somehow feel attached to. I am sure our
daughter will enjoy the rubber jar opener and the weird wine cutter, a couple of shot glasses, the homemade wine charms and all of the other rejects from the family utility drawer. It’s almost a rite of passage to be the recipient of such fam-ily treasures.
I still can’t confidently close the drawer with-out fear that the next time I go to open it, it will jam. Nothing ever really changes; we just reshuf-fle our junk.
Denise Kelly is a North Vancouver Boomer proudly living with her two children, husband and dog Mel. She looks forward to sharing sto-ries to motivate others. She can be reached at [email protected].
[email protected] Kelly
ZOOM ZOOM
When you set a gadget-happy husband loose on an empty drawer, be prepared for what happens next!
www.northshoreoutlook.com Thursday, May 26, 2011 21
Where good things come together.
Eat Together
What to have for dinner today? Pistachio-crusted Pacific salmon with herbed rice. Maybe vegetarian lasagna and Caesar salad. Then seasonal fresh fruit for dessert – or orange crème brûlée. So much choice.
Through our exclusive TasteBuds™ program, our residents choose from a variety of wholesome, homemade meals that are served in the comfort of our dining room – and in the company of friends.
What’s on your menu today?
Dine at The Summerhill. Phone for your personal tour. 604.980.6525
135 West 15th Street (off Lonsdale) North Vancouver | 604.980.6525 www.the summerhill.ca
Part of Pacific Arbour Retirement Communities
TIRED OF DENTURES?
What a difference a day makes!
June 7, Tuesday 6pm orJune 8, Wednesday 6pmPlease reserve your seat by calling: 604-439-8885
Information Night Location:Chrysalis Dental Centre#402 4603 Kingsway,Burnaby, BCV5H 4M4
Let’s fi nd out about ‘Teeth In a Day’ & ‘All-On-4’ solution. Dr. Mark Kwon will explain the revolutionary implant solution that may change your life.
Call us to join our complimentaryImplant Information Night
“As I got older, I eventually needed implants, so I went to Dr. Kwon’s implant only centre in Metrotown.From the fi rst visit to fi nish, it was a fantastic experience. Also, I’ve never had pain during and after the procedure.”
— Charlie 63
We can help.
Looking for a feline friend?
604 922 4622
1020 Marine Drive, West Vancouverwww.spca.bc.ca/westvancouver
Mon-Sat 10-5; Closed Stat Holidays
Each year the BC SPCA fi nds new homes for thousands of animals - dogs, cats, rabbits, gerbils, hamsters & many more!Come in today and meet your new best friend.
DAUGHTER FOR A DAY778-990-8315www.daugh-terforaday.caHelping seniors to be independent, healthy and happy in their homes. Companion-ship, house & home, personal and profes-sional services.
SENIOR SERVICES AT A GLANCE:
Churchill HouseRETIREMENT RESIDENCE
www.seniorstar.ca
Call 604-904-1199 150 West 29th St.
North Vancouver BC
— FINALS —JUNE 16th, 2011 • 2 - 4 pm
DOORS OPEN AT 1:30Presentation House Theatre
333 Chesterfield Ave. North Vancouver BC
Tickets available at Churchill House Retirement Community
150 West 29th St., North Vancouver BC
Competition
GREG HOEKSTRAS T A F F R E P O R T E R
North Vancouver’s Danielle Gould will be pirouetting
her way across the Pacific this summer as part of Goh Ballet’s production of L’amour.
The internationally renowned dancer and former Sentinel secondary student is one of 35 dancers who will travel to four cities in China this August as part of a cul-tural exchange invitation from the Chinese govern-ment.
Gould, a Lynn Valley resi-dent, is featured in the per-formance alongside recent Tanzolymp gold medalist Yoshiko Kamikusa. Following the tour, Gould will fly to Germany to accept a full scholarship to attend and perform with John Cranko Stuttgart Ballet School for
one year — a prize she won while competing as a final-ist in New York at the Youth America Grand Prix Ballet Competition 2011.
Gould says she is “extreme-ly excited” for the opportu-nity to dance overseas once again.
“It will be my second time going and I am so happy to be able to go again. I loved the tour last time as I loved the performance experience, the audience, and the cul-ture,” she says.
Gould says she’s also eager to put on a showcase for her hometown crowd next month as Goh Ballet prepares for the trip.
“L’amour is a wonderful showcase full of young danc-ers. I am so excited to per-form the repertoire for China to the Vancouver audience as it is a much different arrange-ment of pieces from that of the Nutcracker, which was
our last performance,” says Gould.
North Shore residents interested in seeing Gould’s graceful dancing will have an opportunity to do so June 4, as the Centre for Performing Arts in Vancouver hosts a
preview of the repertoire to be performed in China.
Tickets are available online at www.ticketstonight.ca or by phone at 604-684-2787.
For more on Goh Ballet’s programs and performances visit www.gohballet.com.
thearts
NV ballerina pirouettes across the Pacific
When she was only 16, The Outlook named Danielle Gould one of the North Shore’s “30 under 30.” In her short career as a ballerina, Gould has lived up to the title, winning awards and international acclaim. Submitted photo
This weekend, Centennial Theatre will be hosting the Vanleena dance recital: Thursday, May 26 at 7 p.m.,
Friday May 27 at 7p.m. and Saturday May 28 at 1 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.
Tickets are $19 for adults and $17 for seniors and children. Teghan
Fedor and Arielle Locke (pictured) are two of 20 students performing a
jazz piece called Toxic. Call 604-983-2623 for tickets.
Meanwhile, the dancers have done well at recent competitions:• 2nd place overall at Peak
Invitational Dance Competition: Burnaby • 1st place overall at Peak
Invitational Dance Competition: North Vancouver • 1st place overall
at Festival Du Ballet.Rob Newell photo
Seymour Dance will be presenting Beauty and the Beast followed by a dance showcase for their year-end show at Centennial Theatre on Sunday, June 5. The 2 p.m. showcase will be of the non-competitive classes and the 7 p.m. showcase will be competitive dances. Tickets are reserved seating and can be purchased from the Centennial Theatre box office at 604-984-4484. Adults $20, senior/student $18, and children $15. Katrina Leppanen, pictured, who will be performing the role of Belle, recently was awarded trophies and bursaries for high marks in her division at both Dance Power Burnaby and Peak Invitational North Vancouver competitions, placing first and third overall respectively. She has also been accepted to American Musical and Dramatic Academy in New York for the fall with a scholarship. Submitted photo
22 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
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Seymour Dance808 Lytton Street, North Vancouver
www.seymourdance.com • 604.929.6060
Half Day Camp forGirls and Boys 3-6yrs9-1pm Camp involves crafts and creative movement based on various fairytales
Girls and Boys6-12 years10-3pmAn excellent opportunity to try various styles of dance
SeniorSummer School9-3pm
Aug 8-12 “Once upon
a time.”
Recital June 5th
“Beauty & the Beast”
Aug 15-19Junior
Summer Sampler
Aug 22-26
dance with us!
2011
VOTED BEST DANCE STUDIO ON THE NORTH SHORE
For more information or to registervisit www.seymourdance.com
Shows 2pm & 7pmFollowed by a dance show-case at each show. Tickets are available from Centenni-al Theatre or from the dance school (cash & cheque only)
For more information please call
604-638-26311-800-826-4536
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The Urban Tea Merchant thanks you for your loyalty and continued business. We are very proud to say our original store is located in West Vancouver.
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Monday - Tuesday: 9am - 7pmWednesday - Friday: 9am - 9pmSaturday: 9am - 7pmSunday & Holidays: 11am - 6pm
Suite 401-100 Park Royal,West Vancouver, BC V7V 1A2 Tel: 604.926.6614 • Fax: 604.926.6647 www.westvanchamber.com • [email protected]
Tickets are $99 each. To reserve please register online at westvanchamber.com or call 604.926.6614
Best Business of the Year
Citizenof the Year
Home-based Business
of the Year
Green Business of the Year
YoungEntrepreneur
of the Year
Celebrate with us at the
2011 President’s DinnerWest Vancouver Yacht ClubTuesday, June 7, 20116 pm to 11 pmDinner and Awards Presentation
The West Vancouver Chamber of Commerce
Awards of Excellence
Join your peers andcelebrate the 2011nominees and winners.
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Gold Sponsor - Grosvenor Canada Limited Silver Sponsor - The Consulting Edge (David Gouthro) Bronze Sponsor - Park Royal Mall
We’ve been serving the North Shore Community for over 50 years, providing excellent customer service while repre-senting the largest and most secure insurance markets available.
Our Mission is to provide our clients with the knowledge and comfort that their most valued assets are being pro-tected by the best possible coverage available, handled by experienced and knowl-edgeable professionals.
At Peake & Richmond we continue the tradition of be-ing an active member of our community.
We are proud to be members of The Dundarave Business As-sociation, The West VancouverChamber of Commerce, and the Insurance Brokers Asso-ciation of British Columbia.
2435 Marine Drive, West Vancouver604.922.0181
www.peakeandrichmond.bc.ca
PEAKE & RICHMOND LTD. Insurance for your needs.
We are thrilled to benominated in the WestVancouver Chamber ofCommerce Awards ofExcellence 2011. We would like to thank our loyal customers who continue to support our business and recognize our excellence in customer service.
~ Peake & Richmond Team.
NOMINEES FOR:Citizen of the Year
NOMINEES FOR:Business
of the Year
THE NOMINEESThe West Vanco
Awards
Natacha BeimCore Education & Fine arts
Tiffany & Kelli KoCupcakes Park Royal
Alex RoddeEddible Arrangements
Jim StewartHollyburn House
Selina LadakStittgen Fine Jewelry
Patty StewartTommy Bahama
Jeff & Mark VaughanVaughan Landscape Planning & Design
Karinna JamesThe Urban Tea Merchant
Adrian Rolland Carey HoogeWalker Group
Gerry HumphriesWVCF
Mark SagerSager Legal Advisors LLP
Raineer MuellerPacifi c Arbour
Mike & Sandra WeberWeber Hardwood Floor Company
Doug, Rob & Antonio Mangia E Bevi Ristorante
Annabel St. JohnPaper Queen
Jim & Mike RichmondPeake & Richmond
Margot WareShylo Nursing & Home Healthcare
Gillian HuntPandoras Vox
Jeff White
For th e pr incess in your life...handcraft ed in 19k wh ite gold
24 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
Congratulations Carey Hooge!
C. Walker Group Inc.#300-1455 Bellevue AvenueWest Vancouver604.922.6563www.cwalkergroup.com
Serving the Canadian marketplace for over 43 years.
Waker Group of Companies is proud to support great citizens like Carey who promote the
communities they work and live in.
Write a thank you note on paper (not an emailor text). Get organized. Order your ownpersonal Calling Cards. Send a printedinvitation (not an evite). Take the timefrom your busy life to make your friends andloved ones feel special.
Life is not a dress rehearsal. Stand out,brand yourself and be your best!
We inspire the art of good etiquette.
ouver Chamber of Commerce 2011
s of Excellence
NOMINEES FOR:Home-based
Businessof the Year
Anne BairdGodess Cards
Lois KeaneLois Keane Flowers
Jayne & Peter Lloyd-JonesSpectacular Ink
NOMINEES FOR:Green
Businessof the Year
Colleen MacDonadCoCo Fleur
Dr. Sara KinnonBellevue Natural Health Clinic
Jorge & TerezaWhole Foods
NOMINEES FOR:Young Entrepreneur of the Year
Dr. Sara KinnonBellevue Natural Health Clinic
David PoiFreedom Health
Delaram HajipourDelkicks
Richelle ForsethMajorly Marketing
Rick KimOlive & Anchor
President'sDinner & Awards
presentationJune 7, 2011
www.northshoreoutlook.com Thursday, May 26, 2011 25
26 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
SpectacularINKYo u r l i n k t o t h e w o r l d
Thank You!
604.925.8187www.spectacularink.com
We’re honored to be nominated in the category of
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Thank you to our loyal clients for the past 22 years.
BLACK MOUNTAINCONSTRUCTION LTD.
604.761.9950
fl oral arrangements for all occasions
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caulfeild village, west vancouver604-922-2206 • www.cocofl eur.ca
to Dr. Sara Kinnon and the team.
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Cong
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And a BIG thank you to West Vancouver for your support.
You make this a great place to work and live.
For more information about Dr. Sara Kinnon and the team at
Bellevue Natural Health Clinic, please visit our website
bellevuenaturalhealth.ca
MEDIA SPONSOR
Suite 401-100 Park Royal,West Vancouver, BC V7V 1A2
Tel: 604.926.6614Fax: 604.926.6647
Celebrate with usat the2011
President’sDinner
West VancouverYacht Club
Tuesday, June 7,6 pm to 11 pm
Dinner andAwards
Presentation
Tickets are $99 each.To reserve pleaseregister online atwestvanchamber.com
or call604.926.6614
See how the WestVancouver Chamber of
Commerce can helpyou grow!
Sign up today atwestvanchamber.com or call 604.926.6614
for information.
President'sDinner & Awards
presentationJune 7, 2011
1305 St. Georges, North Vancouver(across from Lions Gate Hospital)
www.shylonursing.ca 604 985-6881
Thank you
to all our loyal staff & clients for your support.
Special Care for Special People
We’ve been supporting seniors to safely stay in their own homes since 1980.
We bring the care to you.
Call us for a FREE, no obligation, in-home assessment of your healthcare needs.
www.northshoreoutlook.com Thursday, May 26, 2011 27
Aurore Viau AMP
Ext.222604.831.8428
John Ribalkin AMP
Ext.224604.831.6682
Felicity Brempong AMP
Ext.2251.604.848.8882
Ethan RibalkinExt.226
778.996.3694
Serving Borrowers and Investors Since 1978
Each VERICO Broker is an independent owner operator604.985.951124hrs. [email protected]
The Ribalkin Team
FINALLY! THE FINAL - GO CANUCKS GO!d
BRIGHT, UPDATED and PRIVATE 3200 sq ft split level home at the end of a quiet cul-de-sac with mountain views in a prime Grouse Woods location (Handsworth School Catchment). 3 bedrooms upstairs. This home has a fully renovated kitchen with granite counter tops and stainless steel appliances, updated bathrooms, new hardwood, vaulted ceilings with skylights, a home office (potential
4th bedroom), a huge rec room downstairs perfect for a home theatre, a fenced, flat and fully landscaped private backyard with an amazing new brick patio under a custom glass covered awning, 3 fire places, new paint inside and out, a new furnace, newer hot water tank, lots of storage, plenty of crawl space, newer driveway and a double garage. See all Kasha’s listings at www.KashaRiddle.com
5558 Swordfern Place, North Vancouver Just Listed $1,149,000
www.northshore-rew.com // 604.903.1017
Serving the North Shore for over 35 years
Open Homes Index page 31
OPEN SAT/SUN
2-4
Real EstateN O R T H S H O R E
OpWeeklyWeekly
Amazing Home In Grouse Woods!
Kasha Riddle604 803.7070Video @ www.kriddle.com
#1 REALTOR® in Grousewoods (since 2007 based on MLS Data)
CREST REALTY
28 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
The ultimate in luxury. This gorgeous Pent-house is being offered for the fi rst time on the market. The private elevator will lead you into the foyer and into the lap of 3300+ square feet of luxury. You wont believe your eyes as you gaze upon the best view in West Vancouver from every room. Step onto a 1500 square foot veranda to breath in the fresh mountain air. It almost goes without saying that only the best quality fi nishes and fi ttings are featured in this home as ev-ery upgrade imaginable was ordered.
Beautifully remodelled from bottom to top that beats a new house in one of the most demanding area, in Del-brook, almost 3000 sqft of high quality which fi ts 2 families, 2 brand new open kitchens with S/S appliances, new dark H/W fl oors for the entire house ,new windows with high-end coverings ,new plumbing & wiring, new roof and hot water heating system. Sitting on a newly Land Escaped lot, fi nally enjoy an out-door swimming pool on newly fenced and private backyard.
Enjoy unobstructed 180 degree view of City,Ocean,Lions gate and Island from this S/E corner of Stonecliff complex next to Provin-cial park with over 2000 sqf,2bdrm, 2 bathrm,Family room and offi ce, high-end fi nishing, hard wood fl ooing, granite counters, S/S ap-pliances & designer window cov-erings A/C system, Gym,Spa, Fire-side Lounge with full size kitchen comes with 2 secured parking.
480 Evergreen Pl., N.V. $1,348,000
#1001-3335 Cypress Pl, W.V. $1,648,000
MASTERSAmir Abadian604.290.2647abadianhomes.com
Sutton West Coast
101-2255 Twin Creek Pl, W.V. $1,399,000102-2255 Twin Creek Pl, W.V. $1,599,000301-2255 Twin Creek Pl, W.V. $3,359,000
2567 Lawson Ave, W.V. $1,585,000
SOLD
252 West 26th St., N.V. $1,195,000
SOLD
OFFERPENDING
SOLD
RECENTLY SOLD BY DOUG
DOUG SHWERY604-607-4907
505 - 1785 ESQUIMALT AVENUE403 - 1785 ESQUIMALT AVENUE401 - 460 14TH STREET
501 - 540 LONSDALE AVENUE332 MOYNE DRIVE1154 HAYWOOD AVE
1768 INGLEWOOD AVE $2,388,000English Tudor Estate with approval for detached Carriage House on over one half an acre. This 7 bedroom, 5 full bathroom character home has been completely restored & renovated. Upper level has 4 bedrooms, & 2 full bathrooms. Lower level walkout is completely renovated.
32-2246 FOLKESTONE WAY $879,000Absolutely one of the best renovated condo’s I have seen Designer/Builder flown in from New York. One level, 2 bedroom, open plan, insuite laundry. Enjoy massive south facing veiws from Mt Baker to vancouver Island and wounderful sunsets from large 13 x 18 Balcony.
2769 OTTAWA AVE $2,099,000Gorgeous Poski -designed West Coast beauty nestled into a private sanctuary offering sunny gardens, child-friendly yard & beau ful water views. This 6 bed home offers a wonderful ambience with an extraordinary floor plan featuring incredible designer kitchen & family area, formal living & dining spaces, vaulted ceilings, oversized fir “plenk” windows & extensive use of glass. This lovely home also has a brand new roof & furnace.
NEW LISTING
OPEN SUN 2-4
OPEN SAT
& SUN 2-4
NEW LISTING
www.northshoreoutlook.com Thursday, May 26, 2011 29
Viv Harvey knows that buying or selling a home can be like sailing through rough seas. That's why she uses her business acumen, marketing expertise and extensive area knowledge as a navigational aid for her clients.
604-218-1108VIVHARVEY.COM
5646 Westport Road, West VancouverOffered at $1,588,000
New Listing! An Entertainer’s Paradise! Open Sunday 2-4A complete transformation has occurred in this stunning four bedroom home which enjoys absolute privacy! The attention to detail is evident throughout including the new custom designed gourmet kitchen and the exquisite bathrooms embracing fine grade Italian ceramic tile and the highest end fixtures and finishings. Soaring vaulted ceilings will greet you in the spacious open plan living/dining area while the numerous skylights welcome in natural lighting giving a bright inviting atmosphere. As you venture outdoors you will find two beautiful new decks for your entertaining pleasure and a fabulous outdoor pool amongst the lush gardens!
Call Roger at 604-657-0645 now to arrange for showings.
206 Lonsdale Avenue | North Vancouver, BC V7M 2G1 | 604-960-1100
[email protected] 604.657.0645 www.rogerjung.ca
THE
A T M A R I N EIVY
NOW OPEN DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY
18 HOMES UNDER $400,000
theivyliving.com1265 Marine Drive, North Vancouver, B.C.
Exclusive BoutiqueResidences
Developed by:
OPEN 12-5
OPEN SUN 2-4
GARDENER’S DELIGHT!Update and enjoy this 1964 bi-level with oak
hardwood oors in 3 BIG BR’s up and spacious open plan on main.3636 Fromme Rd., $742,500.View by Appt.almost anytime!
Vera 604-318-0024
GOLD MINE! NOW $798,0002BR up, extra family area down
on large 67 x 124 ft. lot with a creekrunning thru backyard. Fresh and clean--ready to move in!
3648 Fromme Rd.Vera 604-318-0024
RARE GEM IN BENTLEY MEWS111-216 E 6TH N VAN.
This immaculate townhome has 4 BR. Three levels. New laminate oors throughout main
areas. Private patio off kitchen and a spacious deck with views of city and inlet.
Very quiet! $648,750Heather, 778-847-1452 or
Vera 604-318-0024
RETIRE IN STYLE!Like living in a grand resort, this 2 BR apartment keeps you safe and secure, surrounded by other 50 yrs. plus empty
nesters! Immediate possession possible.1327 Keith Rd. Now asking $383,000.
Heather, 778-847-1452 orVera 604-318-0024
QUIET TOWNHOME!3 BR’s up, den/of ce on main,
Priced to sell at $528,000! #8-9288 KeeferVera 604-318-0024 or Angus Fu 604-720-8619
Royal LePage Northshore
Helping You is What We Do!
604-926-6011
Vera Holman604-318-0024
HeatherKim778-847-1452
NoraValdez604-351-0625
Thinking Of Selling? What’s Your Home Worth? Call Us Today!
OPEN SUN 2:30-4:30
www.jimbond.ca
BondBondJimJim
LundLundDaveDave
Just move right in and enjoy an incredibly well built family home at the end of a cul-de-sac with city views backing onto greenbelt and offering great privacy. Upstairs are 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, master with 5 piece ensuite, walk-in closet and nice view. Main has formal living and dining area, large kitchen with adjoining family room leading out to a sundeck overlooking the backyard and forest beyond. Downstairs is storage. A self contained 1 bedroom suite with potential to add approx. 875 sq ft more. This beautiful home features granite counter tops, top of the line appliances, new hardwood and tile fl ooring, 3 gas fi replaces, double garage, and professionally landscaped lot with fenced backyard and hot tub. Very nice residence!
NEW PRICE $1,298,000
OPEN
SAT & SUN
2-4
UPPER LONSDALE
4265 ST. PAULS AVE, NORTH VANCOUVER
Everything you need in a fantastic family home. Large living areas throughout with family room off spacious kitchen, sunken living room, dining room and den. Upstairs are 3 bedrooms, Master Bedroom with vaulted ceilings, walk in closet and and 5 piece ensuite. Downstairs recreation room, plenty of storage and attached 2 car garage with workshop. Easy care lot. Updates include: exterior paint, roof, furnace, air condition, hot water tank, central vac, wireless alarm, California shutters. Quiet, safe cul de sac location with all amenities just minutes away including elementary and high school, Caulfeild Village Shopping Centre, numerous hiking trails, restaurants, yacht clubs, recreation centre and golf course.
NEW LISTING
5310 WESTHAVEN WYND, EAGLE HARBOUR
$1,250,000
30 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
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OAC lender/broker fees may apply
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W W W. T H Y R A M C K I L L I G A N . C O M
RE/MAX Masters2010
Lions Bay’s ecclectic beachside neighbourhood. This home exudes the special charms of a westcoast retreat;expansive decks, custom wood windows and detailing,3 bdrms,3 full baths, great room with stone replace, seperate Coach house for guests or private of ce, an irreplacable package. Easy to show!
Situated on a spectacular, private 1/2 acre forested setting in Lions Bay, this unique Westcoast designed architectural home features an open oor plan&multiple levels with outstanding SW ocean views & amazing natural light. The home features an open kitchen, vaulted ceilings, open staircases & walkways, expansive windows, skylights, & decks.
Waterfront at Brunswick, Lions Bay’s ecclectic beach community. A terri c weekender now, this spot would be perfect for a future custom build. The current home is meticulous and mechanically updated. The oceanfront privacy will surprise you! The main house offers open plan, 3 bedrms, and amazing views.
20 Brunswick Beach, Lions Bay$2,150,000
225 Mountain Drive, Lions Bay$1,150,000
41 Brunswick Beach Rd, Lions Bay$1,779,000
GREAT FAMILY HOME YALETOWN IN CHARMING HORSHOE BAY....
Unique,1 bdrm condo at ‘Galleries on the Bay’.3 years young, quality nishes, Granite, silstone,s/s, cherry cabinets, porcelain oors,soaker tub, huge window areas. Pets and rentals ok.
Warm , inviting 5, bedroom family home on a large 1/2 acre property with oceanviews. Vaulted ceilings,custom windows, hardwood oors, new cedar decks, great yardspace. Easy driveway with tons of parking including double garage.Bonus in-law accomodation too! Located on the end of a quiet cul-de-sac in beautiful Lions Bay...10 mins on the scenic Sea to Sky from West Vancouver. See you at the open house.
Amazing views from this custom 4 bdrm 4 bath Kelvin Grove home. custom kitchen, granite and stainless, hardwood oors, Huge decks for entertaining. Gorgeous master with custom shower, large walk in closet and view deck. Rare lawn and gardens. All with an easy entrance double garage. A must see!
260 Kelvin Grove Way, Lions Bay $1,489,000
Panoramic oceanviews from this beautifully updated 4bed, 3 bath home. hardwood oors, new custom kitchen, spa like ensuite. Bonus mtge helper. V833662
Charming westcoast home with dramatic oceanviews and peaceful forrest setting. 16900 sq ft lot provides incredible privacy! 1666 sq ft, 2 beds(possible 4) 2.5 baths, large decks....walk to the beach, 1/2 hr. to downtown...work in the city, live the dream.
#103-6388 Bay St, West Vancouver$432,000
565 Upper Bayview, Lions Bay $998,000
40 Panorama, Lions Bay$890,000
373 Oceanview Rd, Lions Bay $895,000
LOCATION, LOCATION...93% on walkscore.com...The Park is a worry free building with private garages. This one + den open plan home is ooded with natural light, Brazillian cherry oors, island cooktop oor to ceiling windows....walk to everything Coal harbour has to offer....a must see
NEW
LISTING!
NEW PRICE!
NEW PRICE
NEW
LISTING NEW
LISTING
OPEN SUN 2-4
#1808-1723 Alberni Street, Vancouver$415,000
www.royal lepage.ca P:604.926.6011F:604.926.9199
NORTHSHOREBUYING OR SELLING? 604-926-6011
Enter through new gates to a private and pretty landscaped garden and patio. This 3-4 bed/4 bath home has lovely beech wood fl oors that lead you to a modern open-plan, with living room, dining room, 2-piece bath, 2 fi replaces, thoughtfully-designed kitchen and great room, all with quality fi nishings. Large sun-drenched deck off the great room provides a perfect extension for entertaining. Spacious master suite up with jetted tub. Expansive mountain views. 2 more rooms (one with a bonus private west-facing deck), a second full bathroom, laundry area with new washer/dryer. Downstairs off ers a large bedroom or fl ex room for the extended family, with an adjoining full bath. Desirable 2-car garage.
2 BEDROOMS + 2 BATHROOMS + INSUITE LAUNDRYWHY RENT? When you can own your own home at HILLSIDE TERRACEin the historic BROW OF THE HILL neighborhood just a 10 minute walk to the SKYTRAIN and QUAY.This well managed strata has been recently painted and the plumbing has beenupgraded. The unit, just under 1000 sqft has newer appliances, laminate fl oors, a walk-through closet to the ensuite. Enjoy the RIVER VIEW while BBQ’ing on the large balcony. Monthly maintenance includes heat and hot water. Large storage locker and parking. INVEST IN YOURSELF!
Chloe Kopman604-833-6932
$719,0006372 Bruce Street, West Vancouver
$238,800101-1040 4th Ave, Uptown, New West
OPEN
SAT/SUN
2-4
Situated on a ten acre site within a thousand acre park, this suite off ers panoramic views from Stanley park to Vancouver Island. Remodelled to the highest standardsthis 1547 sq. ft. 2 bdrm and den apartment is a gem. Custom fi nishes make it. A truly amazing residence, in a building with only 3 suites per fl oor, and private double garage. More pictures at www.imandzuk.com/3315cypress502.asp. Call Irene Mandzuk to view this Exclusive Listing.
Offered at $1,488,000Karin Morris
604-338-8778Irene Mandzuk
778-836-4648
View from Downtown to Vancouver Island
Chris Westwick604.349.2148
Karin Morris604.338.8778
Kathy Suffel778.989.5570
Bedo Kaviani604.725.5705
Alphonse Quenneville604.328.2554
Stella Chang604.603.0223
Chris Wong604.789.1807
Nora Valdez604.351.0625
Irene Mandzuk778.836.4648
Chloe Kopman604.833.6932
Vera Holman604.318.0024
Heather Kim778.847.1452
OPEN
SUNDAY
2-4
www.northshoreoutlook.com Thursday, May 26, 2011 31
Erna
MAKI604.323.3762
www.ernamaki.ca • [email protected]
Sussex RealtyWest Vancouver
This Unique 4 bedroom Lewis post and beam family home with full headroom basement shows with pride of ownership. It is a well maintained home that offers large sunny decks, newly paved level driveway, a large and very bright kitchen with skylights, cozy gas replace in the living room, newly painted exterior, and even a hot tub. This gem is in a great location, close to Eagle Harbour School, beaches, tennis, and the community center.
5497 GREENLEAF, WEST VANCOUVER
$910,0005497 GREENLEAF WEST VANCOUVER
OPEN
SAT/SUN
1:30-3:30
NEW
PRICE!
Which is better?
A. Paying prime + 1 /2 % with anRBC Homeline Plan® credit line.
or B. Keep paying prime + 1 % at
your bank.
*We will pay the basic title insurance fee (not including migration fee), appraisals/property valuation fee and one discharge/switch out fee at another financial institution (up to $225 maximum). Offer excludes mortgage prepayment charges that you may have to pay. Minimum advance $50,000. †Savings based on $100,000 secured line of credit paid down monthly over 10 years comparing a 3.5% annual interest rate to a 4. 0% annual interest rate. Personal lending products and residential mortgages are provided by Royal Bank of Canada and are subject to its standard lending criteria. ® Registered trademarks of Royal Bank of Canada. RBC and Royal Bank are registered trademarks of Royal Bank of Canada.
ine
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Hint:
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with your bank, that’s how much interest you could save by
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Switch to RBC Royal Bank, and we’ll even pick up your switch* costs
– now that’s a lot of savings.
Switch to an RBC Homeline Plan® credit line at 3.5% (prime + 1 /2 %)
4.0%
redit lineow mud save by
your switch* costs
n®
Hi
Linda Findlay Mortgage Specialist604-786-1421
Michael AlexanderMortgage Specialist604-961-6457
Kelly BrommelandMortgage Specialist604-551-7706
• 15 years experience as conveyancer for various law firms throughout BC. • Received outstanding achievement awards during successful 10-year career as a Realtor.• Received award from UBC for top mark in conveyancing section of Notary exams.
t: 604.985.4150 f: 604.985.4145
#204-1401 Lonsdale Avenue, North Vancouver, B.C. V7M 2H9
Sincere, Prompt and Knowledgeable Service
Notary Public www.lorrainejohn.com
• Real Estate Conveyancing
• Mortgages• Notarization of
Documents• Last Will and
Testaments
• Representation Agreements• Power of Attorney Documents• Affidavits and Statutory Declarations• All other Notarial Services
Lorraine E. John
Shakun Jhangiani604.725.9179
NORTHSHORE
#320-123 E19TH ST. , NORTH VAN
#323-123 E19TH ST. , NORTH VAN
NEW LISTING, 2bd 1.5bth TOP FLOOR 1046sq ft incl balcony CORNER UNIT wide open mountain VIEWS. MLS# V889113 LP: $369,000
JUST RENOVATED, south facing TOP FLOOR one bedroom VIEW unit. 726sq ft with balcony. MLS #V873431LP: $279,000
662 WEST KEITH RD. N.V.$649,000
#101-123 E19TH. N.V. LP: $265,000
#9-2160 EASTERN AVE. N.V. LP: $579,500SOLD SOLDSOLD
GREAT CENTRAL LOCATION, JUST OFF LONSDALE AVE SHOPPING,
REC CENTRE, PUBLIC TRANSIT. OPEN
SUNDAY 1-3
OPEN
SATURDAY
1-3
REAL ESTATE
TRADEWINDS MARKETING LTD.
TRADEWINDS
VANCOUVER’S PROPERTIES
TERESA DE COTIIS604.649.4215 [email protected]
6 Bedrooms, 5 Bathrooms “Move in ready” 4,447sf of Luxury Living
2554 Westhill Close, West Vancouver
MLS#V872213MLS#V872213
New PriceNew Price$1,360,000
6 BBB ddd
OPEN
SAT & SUN
2-4
Whytecliff / Horseshoe Bay
★ 719,000 6372 Bruce Street ................................Sat&Sun2-4
Eagle Harbour
★ 1,588,000 5646 Westport Road .................................Sun.2-4
★ 910,000 5497 Greenleaf ........................ Sat&Sun 1:30-3:30
★OpenOpenss
Panorama
Village
★ 879,000 32-2246
Folkstone Way
Sat&Sun2-4
Dundarave
★ 2,099,000 2769
Ottawa Ave
Sun 2-4
Westhill
★ 1,360,000
2554 Westhill Close
Sat&Sun2-4
Capilano
★ District Crossing,
802-1150 Marine Drive
Daily 12-5 except Fri.
★ THE IVY
1265 Marine Drive
Daily 12-5 except Fri
Grousewoods
★ 1,149,000
5558 Swordfern Place
Sat&Sun2-4
Upper Lonsdale
★ 1,298,000
4265 St. Pauls Ave
Sat&Sun2-4
Central Lonsdale
★ 369,000
320-123 East 19th St
Sun.1-3
★ 279,000
323-123 East 19th St
Sat. 1-3
Lower Lonsdale
★ 648,750
111-216 East 6th Street
Sun 2:30-4:30
Other
★ 415,000
1808-1723 Alberni St
Sun.2-4
★ 238,800
101-1040 4th Ave
Sun.2-4
32 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
“We bought a 2-bedroom home
at District Crossing.”
Pam, Kevin & daughter Maddie
Presentation Centre: 802-1150 Marine Drive, North Vancouver Open noon - 5pm daily except Fridays
districtcrossing.com 604.985.1665
Sample 1
When you come in to view District Crossing, you will see real display homes in the actual building. They’re not mock-ups in a sales centre
with artifi cial views. What you see is literally what you will get, and with construction well along, you won’t have to wait for years to move
into your new home. And now, owning at home at District Crossing is even easier with only a 5% deposit due at signing and an additional
5% due two months later. Shop and compare. Our purchasers did and they came back to buy at District Crossing. Unbeatable prices
and quality. Below is an example of just how easy and affordable it can be to buy a new home and move in this year.
District Crossing. Buy the numbers.
Ready
to m
ove i
nto
this
Summer.
1 Bedroom Payments from Square feet Price/sq.ft.
Suite 203 - 1679 $309,900 $1066/month 601 $516 including net HST
Based on 25% down payment, 3.7% interest rate and 30 year amortization. Prices and rates are correct at time of press and subject to change without notice. E.&O.E
www.northshoreoutlook.com Thursday, May 26, 2011 35
36 Thursday, May 26, 2011 www.northshoreoutlook.com
START FRESH IN UPSCALE SURROUNDINGS.WATERFRONT LIVING AT THE PIER.
At the Atrium, enjoy all the benefi ts of a brand-new, air-conditioned home
PLUS adjoining Pinnacle Hotel amenities: 80-foot pool, fi tness centre and
hotel concierge services. With waterfront views and Lonsdale Quay nearby,
Atrium at The Pier is the place to be.
2 BDRM SUITES
FROM $649,9001 BDRM SUITES
FROM $399,900
SALES CENTRE & 4 DISPLAY SUITES OPEN DAILY, NOON-5PM
172 VICTORY SHIP WAY, NORTH VANCOUVER | 604.983.9065
www.thepier.info
Marketed byProudly developed by
MOVE IN NOW