Author Archives: Todd

New Year's Day Roadkill on the highway from Vernon

New Year's Day Roadkill on the highway from Vernon

Roadkill is usually defined as animals hit and killed by cars and left dead on the road or highway. 

On my drive today from Vernon BC, on my way back home to Vancouver, I was amazed at the unusual road kill today.  We expected New Year's Day to be heavy with traffic – but did not expect the sights that we saw.

MJokinen-Snow Shoeing (Goshawk).jpg (165160 bytes)
Goshawk eating a winter white rabbit – picture from www.albertadirectory.net
 
There was a hawk on Hwy 97, alongside Kalamalka Lake.  Very unusual to see a hawk as roadkill.  The outstretched wing was large – too large for a raven.  Hopefully it wasn't one of the eagles that I had seen partaking in a mating ritual earlier in the week.  This past week I had also seen a goshawk, recognizing it immediately because of its speckled plummage.  But this roadkill hawk had brown feathers.  It could have been a red tailed hawk or even an eagle.  This raptor had  probably been scavenging on some rat, squirrel or racoon that was already roadkill.  It was probably so happy having fresh food that it didn't see the oncoming car.  Bye-bye Mr. Hawk.

My second thought was to grab some of the feathers for my friend Suzi, a wildlife biolgist.  Suzi collects roadkill.  It's actually her nickname.  Fresh roadkill can actually be eaten.  It's usually a healthy animal, and hopefully free of disease.

My next thought was to take a picture of it.  Very unusal to see a large raptor bird as roadkill.

The weather grew blustery as we were leaving Kelowna and Westbank.  As we climbed the Okanagan Connector  Hwy 97C, heading west, the snow was falling heavily.  The snow plow was out.  Cars drove carefully, as only the right line was cleared to the asphalt.  Flashing lights greeted us up ahead.  A white sedan had spun out of control and was now facing backwards against the snowbank beside the road.  Definitely a reminder for safe driving.

Heading south from Merrit BC, down the Coquihalla Hwy, the snowbanks were tall on the mountain road, about 3 feet high.  The trees were covered with snow like frosted icing on cakes.  A shiny red pick-up truck was turned upside down.  Maybe it was somebody's new Christmas present, and they went too fast on the icy snow covered road. 

The driving conditions got worse as we passed the Coquihalla toll booths.  Icky slushy brown snow on the road.  It was raining heavily by the time we got to the snow sheds.  The windshield wipers couldn't go fast enough to clear all the rain. 

Just past Hope, Chilliwack was still 10 km aways… And the traffic slowed down to a crawl.  We were expecting a busy New Year's Day traffic rush back to Vancouver – but not this far up the Fraser Valley.  Uh oh… flashing lights up ahead.   A Police car  was parked by the side of the road.  Just past it, were the charred remains of a small 4-door sedan.  It looked like a VW Jetta.  The car hood was open.  Steam was rising from the car.  It was all one colour – charcoal grey.  Not a good way to start off the new year.  And again, we had driven by too fast for me to grab the camera.


Globe & Mail: Flights of fancy – Eagle watching in Brackendale BC

Globe & Mail: Flights of fancy – Eagle watching in Brackendale BC

image


Here's a picture of eagles in Brackendale BC from www.nusalya.com/brackendale/index.htm

globeandmail.com: Flights of fancy: Getting an eagle-eye view

Special to The
Globe and Mail. BRACKENDALE, B.C. — With only their famous white heads

The main viewing area for these iconic birds is at
Eagle Run,


Here's the 2004 article: globeandmail.com: Wings over Squamish

This is a great story about eagle watching in Brackendale BC – just north of Squamish.  It is incredible to see 500 eagles sitting in the trees at River Run viewing site.  Over the years I have seen eagles in the trees, in the river and in the snow.  Sometimes the salmon carcasses
in the Squamish and Cheakamus Rivers are frozen solid.  Other times, the temperature
is above freezing and they stink like the rotting fish they are.

Thor Froslev is an incredible visionary.  It is through his 1994 efforts to create the Brackendale Eagle Reserve was realized as a 550 hectare Class A Provincial Park in 1996.

10 years ago for New Year's Day 1997, with Rev. Susan Hunt, I helped initiate a tradition to visit the eagles on New Year's Day and create a ceremony for starting the year with a New Year's vision, using the eagles as a metaphor. 

Susan Hunt has continued this tradition, and the group meets at 10am at the Brackendale Art Gallery Chapel.  The ceremony includes music, a brief talk about visioning with eagles, and bringing new vision for the New Year.  An offering for the Eagle Watch program is made.  I wish I could go this year – but I am up in Vernon BC.

image
Brackendale Art Gallery Chapel in 1997 for the inaugural gathering of the New Year's Day Eagle Watch.  Todd Wong is standing in back row.  Thor Froslev (owner of Brackendale Art Gallery) is 3rd from right.  photo courtesy of Susan Hunt.

Susan sent me this message:

One of the big
events of the season is our Annual Eagle Watch, January 1st.

It is important
to remember to dress appropriately by layering clothing. Our west coast climate
can surprise us when we are least expecting it, and we have learned through
nine years of traveling to Brackendale on New Years Day, to be prepared for
anything.

You will need your
binoculars, camera, warm boots, mitts, hat, scarf, and appropriate under
garments to stay warm.

Yes…this
is our 10th Anniversary for the New Years Day Eagle Watch, and we
want YOU to come and join in the celebrations. We will have a full two hours of
music, sharing and meditations (An offering to the Chapel is much appreciated).
The Chapel is held for us each year by the kindness of
Thor Froslev , owners of the
facility. We appreciate their Love and Care of our New Years Day event. Lunch
will follow in the attached Tea House with lots of hot soup and warm bread to
fill your tummy (Cost for lunch can be between $10 to $15.00).

Susan Hunt can be reached at www.gardenofmiracles.com

The 21st annual Eagle Festival and Count is Sunday, January 7th, 2007
Check out this link:
http://www.brackendaleartgallery.com/Festival.html

Christmas & New Year's in Vernon 2006

Christmas & New Year's in Vernon 2006

There's lots to do at Christmas time in Vernon, BC.  Our favorite things include walking in the snow with the doggies at Kalamalka Lake Park and ice skating at Silver Star ski resort.  The last time we were in Vernon was July 2006 when we were dragon boat racing with the GHFC dragon boat team.  But as if on cue… it started snowing on our late afternoon arrival on Dec. 26th.  The next morning awoke to 4 inches of the fluffy white powder snow that the
Okanagan region is famous for.


Todd and Deb enjoy skating at Silver Star – photo T & D

Silver Star is a western mining town themed ski village.  Here there are some of the best runs in the BC Interior.  My parents used to bring our family here to ski when I was a wee tyke when I was in grades 5, 6, & 7.  It was many many years later in April 06, before I skiied Silver Star again.  This year we went ice skating on the man-made lake, around and around the “islands.”  We drank hot chocolate and ate poutine, before going to see the “Best of the Bamff Film Festival” being shown at the Silver Star Auditorium, as a benefit for the local Search & Rescue.

A favorite traditional seasonal activity is going to see Caravan Farm Theatre, North of Vernon, outside of Armstrong BC.  This is really cool.  All the stages and sets are outdoors, and you ride in a sleigh filled with hay bales from set to set.  We went on Dec 30th, before it closed on Dec. 31st.   This was so much fun… riding on a winter sleigh, pulled by Clydesdale horses, under the moonlight.

The show was East of the Sun, West of the Moon – based on an old Norwegian folk tale.  And we saw actor friend Billy Marchenski playing the role of The Prince.  Billy was surprised after the performance when we popped into the Actor's lounge and said hello. 

The Militant: Canadian Chinese call for redress over head tax

Here's an article from Dec 18th in the Militant

Canadian Chinese call for redress over head tax

I attended the Nov. 25th meeting – check my article:
   Head Tax Familes call  for Good Fatith negotiations- nearly 500 people show up

The Militant (logo)
 
   Vol. 70/No. 48   
       December 18, 2006


 
 
 
Canadian Chinese call for
redress over head tax



(front page)
 
BY STEVE PENNER
AND NED DMYTRYSHYN
 
VANCOUVER, British Columbia—Chanting, “Head tax redress,
justice now!” more than 300 people voted at a November 25 meeting to
demand compensation for every one of the 82,000 Chinese-Canadian
families forced to pay a head tax last century. Many of those attending
the event at the Chinese Cultural Center in Chinatown were in their 70s
and 80s.

The Canadian government imposed the racist head tax on all Chinese
immigrants to this country between 1885 and 1923. Initially $50, it was
raised to $100, then $500 in 1903, the equivalent of two years’ pay for
a laborer.

Frank Chan told the Militant, “People had to work for 10
to 15 years to pay off” the money they had borrowed to pay the tax. “If
they died, their family in China was still stuck with the burden of
paying the money back.”

In 1923 the Canadian government imposed the Chinese Exclusion
Act, which banned all immigration from China and remained in effect
until 1947. As a result, many of those who paid the head tax, almost
all men, were separated from their wives and children for decades.
Chinese-Canadians were also denied the right to vote and faced many
other racist laws and practices.

In June of this year, after a decades-long fight for justice by
Chinese-Canadians, Ottawa agreed to compensate about 400 surviving head
tax payers and their spouses. The Head Tax Families Society of Canada
(HTFS), which organized the November 25 meeting, noted that a bare 0.6
percent of families subjected to the head tax will be compensated.

Wayne Lee, an activist in the HTFS, said that the redress fight
is “important for today because it strengthens other struggles for
justice.”

Another activist, Ron Mah, said winning redress has been a
deeply felt issue for different generations of Chinese-Canadian
families. “I remember how as a boy our family always talked about the
need to pursue justice and how unfair the head tax was,” he said.

Vancouver city councilor David Cadman, who spoke at the
meeting, said, “Many people say this happened a long time ago. But
today in our society there are people who are still being discriminated
against.”

Several members of Parliament spoke, including New Democratic
Party (NDP) leader Jack Layton and former Liberal cabinet minister
Ujjal Donsanjh. Layton said the NDP supports the HTFS demands.

Sid Tan, a co-chair of the HTFS vowed, “We’re building a
movement of such strength” that it will “outlast the [Prime Minister
Stephen] Harper government and any other government” until justice is
achieved.

Grace Schenkeveld, English-language spokesperson for the HTFS,
presented Layton with 1,600 letters from descendants of head tax payers
and a petition demanding redress to be introduced in Parliament.

Dozens lined up to join the HTFS during the meeting. 

Vancouver Sun: Dec 30 page C9 – mention of Gung Haggis World Poetry

Vancouver Sun: Dec 30 page C9 – mention of Gung Haggis World Poetry



Okay….  it's a small picture of me in the top right hand corner of page C9 of the the Vancouver Sun December 30th edition.
I missed it reading the newspaper earlier today, but my girlfriend pointed it out a few minutes before midnight.

Gung Haggis Fat Choy, the unique bicultural New Year's celebration in which dragons meet kilts, will present World Poetry at 7pm, Monday Jan. 15th at the Central Library, 350 W. Georgia.  Hosted by Todd Wong, Ariadne Sawyer and Alejandro Mujica-Olia, it will feature poets Shelley Haggard, Fiona Tin Wei Lam and Leon Yang, plus bagpiper Joe McDonald.  Call 604-526-4729.


Some clarification:

Alejandro will be out of the country, so co-hosts are Ariadne Sawyer and Todd Wong

Dr. Ian Mason of the Burns Club of Vancouver, will also be reading Burns poetry and talking about Robbie Burns.

Joe McDonald will be doing more than just playing bagpipes… Joe and I are planning to perform some singalong Scottish songs, as well as one of his contemporary songs and maybe… just maybe…  we will perform my creation, “My Haggis Lies Over the Ocean, My Chow Mein Lies Over the Sea.”

Tommy Shoyama dies – Great Asian Canadian helped create Canada's universal health care

Tommy Shoyama dies – Great Asian Canadian helped create Canada's universal health care

Tommy Shoyama was born in Kamloops BC.  He was the editor of “The New Canadian” a Japanese-Canadian journal at the time of mass hysteria against the Japanese, and the internment of coastal Japanese Canadians.  After the war, Shoyama worked in Saskatchewan with Tommy Douglas, helping to create the universal health care system that became the template for Canada.  Shoyama was a nation builder for Canada following a time, when Canada and BC tried its utmost to destroy the Japanese Canadian community.

Here are some of the obituaries:


Guelph Mercury (subscription)
Shoyama helped create universal health care
London Free Press, Canada – 29 Dec 2006
By CP. VICTORIA — Thomas Shoyama, who helped create the universal health care system as a deputy minister for Tommy Douglas, has died.
Thomas Shoyama, widely respected civil servant, dies Regina Leader-Post
Veteran senior civil servant dies at age 90 Vancouver Province (subscription)
Thomas Shoyama played a key role in health-care debates Guelph Mercury (subscription)
CBC British Columbia – Canada.com
all 10 news articles »
Civil servant who helped build universal health care dies
A former senior official in Tommy Douglas's Saskatchewan government who played a
role in the creation of medicare
has died. Thomas Shoyama died Friday in

www.cbc.ca/news/story/2006/12/28/health-pioneer.html – 27k – 2006-12-28

Pioneer of universal health care
Montreal Gazette (subscription), Canada – 23 hours ago
Thomas Shoyama, who helped create the universal health care system as a deputy minister for Tommy Douglas, has died. Registered

Civil servant who helped create medicare dies at 90
Victoria Times Colonist, Canada – 27 Dec 2006
Thomas Shoyama,
one of Canada’s most respected civil servants, who helped create the
modern universal health care system as a deputy minster for Tommy Douglas