Author Archives: Todd

Poet Gary Geddes recieves 5th annual Lt. Gov's award for Literary Excellence

Gary Geddes is a facinating man.  He would be a fitting literary figure to speak at a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner event.

image

Gary Geddes is descended from Scottish ancestors from the Northern tip of Scotland. He wrote me: “Just Scots fisherfolk from the north coast who fished in Orkney waters
for herring, until they were all fished out. Then they came over here
and did the same nasty thing to the salmon. The family name comes from
the ged, a North Atlantic sea pike. The people of the geds, totem
animal and all that. Nasty little bite they have, too.”

He also has a fascination with things Asian.  Nevermind the 1421 voyage of Chinese admiral Zheng He  Gary Geddes has written The Kingdom of Ten Thousand Things (HarperCollins, 2005), an entertaining and philosophical travelogue of about the Chinese or Afghan monk named Huishen, who might have reached the west
coast of North America about 1,000 years before Columbus. Geddes traveled to the Himalayas, the Taklamakan Desert and Central
America (where Huishen is most likely to have landed, according Chinese
archives). 

Gary also has written poetry collections titled The Terracotta Army (1985), and
I Didn't Notice the Mountain Growing Dark (Cormorant, 1986)- translations of Li Pai and Tu Fu, with the assistance of George Liang.

Probably the first time I came across his work was his anthology 15 Canadian Poets.  I either shelved it at the Vancouver Public Library or studied it taking poetry or Canadian literature classes at Capilano College.  But it was a few years ago that our paths actually converged.  Gary was writer-in-residence for the Vancouver Public Library, where I was working at the information desk.  Somehow we connected, and we soon were setting appointments to attend events and have a meeting.

Gary shared with me his role in creating Canada's first anthology of Asian-Canadian literature, Many Mouthed Birds.  He had a connection with grants and publishers and shared the connection with Jim Wong-Chu, co-editor of the anthology.

Through his many anthologies, his own writings, and his roles as teacher, mentor and community activist, Gary Geddes  has created his own indelible mark on both BC and Canadian literary landscape.  He has taught at Concordia Univiersity and the Creative Writing School of UBC, as well as being a Distinguised Professor of Candian Culture at Western Washington University in Bellingham Washington.  Last year he received an honourary Doctorate of Laws from Royal Roads University in BC.

Here is the Press Release from BC Book Prizes

imageFOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE 
– April
19, 2008 

Vancouver

 

 

Gary Geddes named recipient of the fifth annual

Lieutenant Governor’s Award for Literary
Excellence

 

Vancouver, BC – The West Coast Book Prize Society is proud to
recognize Gary Geddes as the
recipient of the fifth annual Lieutenant
Governor’s Award for Literary Excellence
. British
Columbia ’s Lieutenant Governor, the Honourable
Steve n Point, will present the award at the
Lieutenant Governor’s BC Book Prizes Gala to be held at the Fairmont
Waterfront Hotel in Vancouver
on April 26, 2008. The event will be hosted by
broadcaster Fanny Kiefer.

 

“From 15 Canadian
Poets
to Skookum Wawa
to 20th Century Poetry and Poetics,
Gary Geddes has raised the literary profile of both our province and nation,
and has long been considered one of
Canada ’s most important men
of letters. He has given decades of his life to teaching Canadian literature
and the craft of writing as well as working as a university professor,
writer-in-residence, critic, anthologist, translator, editor, and most
importantly, writer. Gary Geddes’ writings have crossed countries and
continents in performance and translation. He has received numerous awards,
including the E. J. Pratt Medal, a
Canadian Authors Association prize, two Archibald Lampman awards, and the
Gabriela Mistral Prize for service to literature and the people of
Chile .
His work as a poet has been generous in its outward-looking gaze. His poems
bring song and light into darkened corners of the human experience, document
silent and hidden lives, and enter politics through the individual and the
personal. His newest book of poems, Falsework,
explores the 1958 collapse of Vancouver ’s
Second Narrows
Bridge . His meditative
memoir Sailing Home: A Journey Through Time,
Place and Memory
(2001) chronicles his return to the West Coast with
a deep sense of awe and gratitude for the beauty, wildness, and history of this
place. In whatever genre he pursues, Gary Geddes writes with eloquence and
intense awareness of mystery within the commonplace, and the single human voice
singing inside the crowd. He tells the truth, in all its rawness and splendour.

 

For the integrity of his creative work, for his active and
generous promotion of other writers, and for the words he has given to help map
the literary geography of British
Columbia , we proudly celebrate Gary Geddes.”


Jury member Carla Funk

 

The jury
for this year’s Lieutenant Governor’s Award: Carla
Funk , poet laureate for the city of Victoria;
Margaret Reynolds ,
executive director of the Association of Book Publishers of BC; and Mel Bolen,
owner of Bolen Books, Victoria.

This
prize was established in 2003 by former Lieutenant Governor, the Honourable
Iona Campagnolo, to recognize British
Columbia writers who have contributed to the
development of literary excellence in the province. The recipient receives a
cash award of $5,000 and a commemorative certificate.

 

All BC Book Prizes info at www.bcbookprizes.ca

Media Contact:
Karen Green ,
Rebus Creative: 604.687.2405, ext. 21, karen@rebuscreative.com

 

-30-

 

 

Music for a New World special concert April 20 at Centennial Theatre in North Vancouver

This sounds like an incredible concert!  World Music in a bottle marked Vancouver World Music Collective.

And I know and have performed with many of the featured musicians.  Silk Road Music's Qiu Xia He and Andre Thibault have performed at Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner & First Night events since 2004.  In the past few years I have become a big fan or Orchid Ensemble's Lan Tung, as she plays her erhu.

Pepe Danza plays with Andre and Qiu Xia in the group Joutou which mixes French Canadian and Celtic with Chinese music styles.  I love Amy Stephen's accordion playing with Mad Pudding. And then add in all the other brilliant performers and styles from all over the world such as Khac Chi's Vietnamese stylings or the latin and african rhythms of their fellow World Music Collective musicians.

Too bad, I can't skip dragon boat practice on Sunday to attend.  I'd be there otherwise!

newworld.jpg

Music for a New World


Sunday, April 20


2 pm

From the Centennial Theatre website

This incredible collaboration brings together 17 of Vancouver’s best
world music artists in a one of a kind partnership in which influences
from around the world mix into a melting pot of sights and sounds.
Centred on a spirit of cooperation and collaboration, Music for a New World celebrates the diversity of world music.

Members include Amir Haghighi, Jou Tou, Khac Chi, the Masabo Culture
Company, Orchid Ensemble, Silk Road and Tzimmes. Together their music
draws from Quebecois, Uruguayan, Irish, Chinese, Vietnamese, West
African and Jewish roots. Performances include everything from ancient
traditional music, to jazz, Celtic, several Latin styles, contemporary
songs, as well as new music. It is an astounding collection of
experience and ability.

Join the celebration and experience the diversity and excitement of this unique musical event!

www.vancouverworldmusic.org

Music for a New World is presented in cooperation with the Vancouver International Children's Festival  http://www.childrensfestival.ca/

Music for a New World is presented in association with the
North Shore Multicultural Society    www.nsms.ca

Check out the Vancouver Sun Article:

Eclectic offering lets kids hear world music

Sunday afternoon's Music for A New World project, spearheaded by the Vancouver World Music Collective at North Vancouver's Centennial Theatre,

Gung Haggis dragon boat practice SUNDAY 1:30pm, April 20

The sun is expected to peek out for Sunday – while the chance of flurries is also expected.

It's snowing on the North Shore right now, after some hail this afternoon.

BUT….
Last Sunday was soooo much fun with two boats out, doing sprint races
side by side.  Expect more fun and practices like this as more people
come out.

SUNDAY APRIL 20th
1:30pm
Dragon Zone
Creekside Park @ Science World
bring your windbreaker and a cap… (for the sun 🙂

Next week is our video taping and special coaching session with Kamini Jain.  April 27th,

We have had 18 practices so far…

It is one month / 4 weeks until our first race at Lotus Sports Club Bill Alley Memorial Regatta, on May 17th,

we have practiced on Sunday afternoons, Tuesday Nights and Wednesday night

We have have been filmed by 2 news crews, Global TV News and City TV Breakfast Television.

We
have had 32 experienced paddlers out and at least 12 rookies…. and 3
signed up and paid veteran paddlers still missing in action.

Some paddlers are opting to skip Alcan Race, so we will have one good team for Alcan with a mix of veterans and a few rookies.

We are welcoming our new paddlers and will give them priority for our next races, as we continue to build a second team.  In the next few weeks, we would like to identify and prioritize our racers for each race.

It is 8 weeks until Rio Tinto Alcan
Dragon Boat Festival

Wednesday night, I attended the managers/captains meeting with Stephen Mirowski, Steven Wong, Stuart Mackinnon and Pash Brar.

There
will be no 50+ race.  It was dropped because there weren't enough
entries (they needed 6) Last year Gung Haggis & Friends entered and
came 4th, just a second out of 3rd place.

The actual Racer's
village and festival site is undecided because of construction, but the
race course will still be exactly the same, with boats finishing
towards the North East corner of False Creek.

Race format is the same as last year – 32 teams in Comp.  64 teams in upper Rec, and 32 teams in lower Rec/Novice.  

With
combined paddlers from CC Dragons and Gung Haggis Fat Choy + other
experienced paddlers + keener rookies, I see us improving over last
year's performance in the Lower rec/Novice division.  The boat feels
strong and smooth with the experienced paddlers.  The rookies are
learning fast. 

Let's get out and fill the boat for practices, and make it to the middle of the Upper Rec division.

See you SUNDAY!!!!

Todd

Accordionist Danny Federici of Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band, dies of cancer

Danny Federici grew up playing accordion like many Italian kids in North America.  He was born in 1950, and studied classical accordion pieces, much as I did in Vancouver during the 1970's.  But by 1973 when I had only been playing accordion for just two years, Federici was playing accordion with Bruce Springsteen, for the song July 4th Asbury Park (Sandy) for Springsteen's second album “Greetings From Asbury Park).

One of the original members of the E Street Band, Federici was more known for playing organ for both studio recordings and live concerts. His organ solo was a highlight on Springsteen's first top ten hit “Hungry Heart” from “The River” album.

“Danny and I worked together for 40 years – he was the most wonderfully fluid
keyboard player and a pure natural musician. I loved him very much…we
grew up together.” wrote Bruce Springsteen on his website http://www.brucespringsteen.net/news/index.html

I just emailed my accordionista friends Rowan Lipkovits and Bruce Triggs, hosts of Accordion Noir radio show on Co-Op Radio.  I am hoping they will do a spot light tribute for Federici on their radio show tonight 9:30pm to 10:30pm  CFRO FM 102.7.  Check out: Accordion Noir Co-op Radio

Boston A.M. Saddler Backstreets

Bruce
Springsteen with Danny Federici and Roy Bittan from the Boston 2007
concert.  Normally Ferderici sits behind the organ, and Bittan at the
piano.  photo from www.springteen.net

Check out some articles:

globeandmail.com: Danny Federici, 58

Danny Federici waves to the crowd as he takes the stage with Bruce Springsteen and the Federici played accordion on the wistful “4th Of July,
www.theglobeandmail.com/…/RTGAM.20080417.wfederici0418/

VIDEO: DANNY FEDERICI WITH HIS LIFELONG COLLEAGUES
E Street Band keyboardist Danny Federici treated Indianapolis fans to a special appearance at Conseco Fieldhouse on March 20th.
Danny's performance was a profound expression of the healing power of
music and community, all the more poignant in light of his death just a
few weeks later. Here, from the Indie show, is an excerpt from one of
Danny's signature accordion performances on the rarely-played Sandy.

Check
out the official Bruce Springsteen web page for a video tribute of
Danny Federici playing his accordion solo during “4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)”
http://brucespringsteen.net/news/index.html

Danny Ferderici on how he started playing accordion:
from http://www.chorusandverse.com/content/200206/20020616_DannyFederici01.htm

I started off as a classical accordion player when I
was seven years old. And, my mother basically pulled me around by my ear and
showed me off to the neighbors. I had a whole little career going. I think
she wanted me to be friends with Wayne Newton and play the Vegas thing, you
know? And be the snazzy accordion virtuoso kind of guy. But I was real good
at a real young age. And then, when I turned into my early teens, she was
kind of like my stage mom. She kind of rented a place, a local hall in the
town. Got a couple of musicians together for me to play with, and we had a
little rock n’ roll band. And, I was playing the accordion and it wasn’t
going over. I say it wasn’t going over … the girls weren’t digging it.

Then, I bought this thing called the Cordovox. Which was
way back when they had an accordion that sounded like an organ. You didn’t
have to squeeze it. You could just turn it on its side and play the keys
like an organ. And I use to turn it over on my amp. And then I could stand
up and I could move around. And that was definitely a big hit with the
ladies, that made it a whole lot better.

So that’s pretty much how the transition happened. But, as
I say, I studied probably eight or ten years classical accordion. Reading
and writing and going to a conservatory in Philadelphia. I was pretty much
on my way to do this classical accordion thing, until the Beatles and
Rolling Stones and all that stuff just hit. I ended up having a professor
come into my school, who was sitting in for another professor. He said,
‘Just sit back, I wanna play something for you.’ And he played me jazz and
blues on the accordion. I had never heard anybody play anything but polkas
and Russian and Italian songs and all kinds of intricate German things on
accordion and I was floored. I quit music lessons in like two weeks after
that.

Wow.

I mean, I always wanted to play between the lines. I
always, you know, I could play the music on the sheets. But I always wanted
to be able to take what I had learned and be able to bend notes and have my
own timing. There’s a lot of people out there that can read like champs and
they can’t do that.

So that’s really where my roots are. They’re really jazz
and bluesy based. Some of my favorite accordion music I play with a band in
LA every once in a while, Zydeco. That’s very, very bluesy rock n’ roll,
jazzy, you know, Tex-Mex kind of stuff. It’s really great.

So it’s just … a chance to return to
your roots more? Just to focus on that?

Yeah, it is. I get a lot of people when I play live that
come and go, ‘My God, you can really play that thing.’ You know, I play
organ and I get to play a long time. And I get to front the band and it's
just a whole different thing. People are like, ‘Wow, we didn’t know you
could do that.’

So, after all this time, you know, I could go out there
and just play what I want and say what I want. One of my favorite lines is,
‘So this what it feels like to stand in front of the band.’ Bruce got a kick
out of that one.


Gung Haggis dragon boat team finally paddles in the sunshine!!!

GREAT PRACTICE on Sunday!

The sunshine stayed out – and it was warm!!!
no rain in sight… and lots of dragon boaters came out to paddle in the sunshine.

We had 28 people show up, so we took two dragon boats out.  Gayle Gordon led one boat, and I lead the other.  Both Stephen Wong and Stephen Mirowski started steering.  Ashleigh and Wendy were lead
strokes on the Chinchillas. Tzhe and Keng were lead strokes on the
Donkeys.  Gayle and I also took some turns at lead stroke as well.

We
divided people up into two teams, and alternated lessons with mini
sprint races.  The Green Swamp Donkeys won the first two
sprint races.  The Flaming Red Purple Chinchilla teamwon the third race.  As is our
tradition – after each race, the losing team gets to pick somebody from
the other team to join them.  So after they lost each race, the Chinchillas got to pick somebody off the Swamp Donkeys team, finally winning with 15 paddlers to 11 paddlers.

Sunday
practice was a lot of fun.  People really liked racing each other.  With more
people out on Sundays – we can have more races, as well as teaching
people how to paddle when another boat is right beside you, as well as
how to avoid collisions.

upcoming practices

TUESDAY April 15
6pm – on the water asap

This will be our only evening practice this week, as we are going to cancel the WED practice, because of the Managers.& Captains 7pm meeting for the Rio Tinto Alcan Dragon Boat Festival.  

Maybe with only one practice we will have more than 10 or 12 paddlers out for the evening – CROSS YOUR FINGERS!!!

Tuesday Night foodie club in effect… 
I think the vote is to go for 40% off happy hour at Kyushu Island.

WEDNESDAY- April 16
no dragon boat practice
7pm Managers & Captains meeting for dragon boat festival
@ Chinese Cultural Centre
corner of Carrall and Pender St.
– walk into the courtyard and enter the David Lam Multi-purpose hall.

THURSDAY – April 17
6pm practice with Gayle's women's team
if you can't practice on Tuesday….
Come out to paddle with the women!
email Gayle to confirm.   ggcater@mac.com
She says there has been room on the boat so far…

SUNDAY – April 20
1:30 @ Dragon Zone
It is Sun Run in the morning… so the traffic should be cleared up by the after noon for us.
We are hoping to have enough people for two teams again!
Following Sunday on April 27th, we have a special coaching & video session with Kamini Jain.

Joy Kogawa reads “Naomi’s Tree” at Vancouver Kidsbooks.

Joy did a book reading last night at Vancouver Kidsbooks. 

It was a good event for the launch of  Naomi’s Tree.  So good that all the books that had been delivered in advance to Kidsbooks sold out.  We were holding two extra copies, so I passed them on to two people who didn’t have any.  They were both very thankful. 

One of them, an Asian women said she had met me before.  She was a cousin of Joy’s, and we had met once at a dinner, then again at the Church when Joy’s brother Rev. Timothy Nakamura came to speak.  It was nice to see her again, and I am glad that she had a book that Joy could sign for her, and take home with her children.

P4100237

When Joy performed her reading, she told the audience of children and adults that she had fallen in love with a tree.  It was a special “Friendship Tree” – a cherry blossom tree. 

She explained that she had a special unbound copy of the Naomi’s Tree.  She could hold it up and show the beautiful pictures by Ruth Ohi, while she read the words on the other side of the page.

Reading a book together with your kids is an excellent way to spend quality time with them. It’s not only a great opportunity to bond and stimulate their imagination but also promotes language development and a love for reading.

Along with fostering their intellectual growth, ensuring that your child is dressed properly and comfortably is important. Providing them with suitable baby girl clothes can enhance their overall experience and ensure their comfort throughout the activity.

It’s a beautiful story that spans across an ocean, beginning in the “Land of Morning” – Japan, and travels over the Pacific Ocean  to the “Land Across the Sea” – Canada.  The story also spans many generations.  And along the way it also briefly tells about the internment of Japanese Canadians during WW2.

But the story is also about forgiveness, remembering and love. 

Joy and Todd

It’s been almost 3 years since I got to know Joy during the May 2005, when One Book One Vancouver chose Obasan to become it’s literary selection for that summer.  It’s been a pleasure becoming friends with Joy, as we have shared the fears of her childhood home being threatened by demolition, and the joys of watching Vancouver Opera Touring Ensemble’s production of “Naomi’s Road” – her children’s novel as a mini-opera.  After the reading, Joy signed a copy for me.

Joy writes the the Afterword of the book, and writes

My
brother Tim and I were born in Canada, in Vancouver, B.C.  When I was
six years old in 1942, our family along with the entire
Japanese-Canadian community on the West Coast were classified as enemy
aliens and removed from our homes.  All our property was confiscated. 
Following WW2, the community was destroyed by the government’s
dispersal policy, which scattered us across Canada.


On August
27, 2003, I discovered that my old family home, with the cherry tree
still standing in the backyard, was for sale.  On November 1, 2005,
which was dcalred Obasan Cherry Tree Day, Councilor Jim Green and I
planted a cutting from the cherry tree at Vancouver City Hall.  On June
1, 2006, after a short intense campaign, the Land Conservancy of B.C.,
with the help of the Save Joy Kogawa House Committeee, purchased the
house for a writers’ center.  The cherry tree, sadly was fatally ill,
but a new Friendship Tree grown from a cutting of the old tree was
planted on the property.  To this day, children can visit the
Friendship Trees at Vancouver City Hall and at my childhood home, at
1450 West 64th Avenue.


I
would like to thank with profound appreciation the work of the Save Joy
Kogawa House Committee, the Land Conservancy of B.C., the writers’
organizations, school children, and others too numerous to mention.  Without the initial vision and
heroic labor of Anton Wagner and Chris Kurata in Toronto and
Ann-Marie Metten and Todd Wong in Vancouver, the house and tree would not have been saved
In particular, I wish to thank members of the Historic Joy Kogawa House
Society for their ongoing commitment.  Finally, I offer my deep
gratitude to my dear friend, Senator Nancy Ruth, whose action made all
the difference.
Check out pictures at

Naomi's Tree reading by Joy Kogawa at Kidsbooks

Naomi’s Tree reading by Joy Kogawa at…

Ann-Sophie Mutter is a violin goddess: Enthralls Vancouver VSO audience

I first saw violinist Ann-Sophie Mutter in Montreal, April 1985.  She performed Beethoven s violin concerto with the Orchestre Symphonie de Montreal.  It was an amazing performance for the rising violin star 2 months prior to her 22nd birthday.  I went to the concert because it was my first time in Montreal and I thought it would be nice to see the symphony.  Mutter received standing ovations and played an encore.

That was a young artist who had made her debut with Herbert von Karajan at age 14.  Under the mentorship of von Karajan, at age 15 she recorded both the Beethoven Violin Concerto and the Beethoven Triple Concerto with a young Yo-Yo Ma.

In Vancouver last week, Mutter played Beethoven s violin concerto to a sold out audience.  She stunned the crowd with the exquisite phrasing and tone of her violin playing.  After the first movement, she smiled to the audience.  She was happy, and it showed as she swayed to the music with her eyes closed, wrapping the wonderful playing of the VSO around her in a musical embrace.

Mutter really believes that the violin concerto is not simply a showcase for solo violin, but a collaborative dialogue with the orchestra.  She really worked at creating a balance, watching conductor Bramwell Tovey for cues, as he watched her.  The audience was very appreciative, listening so intently and quietly that you felt all attention was on Mutter's violin.  And it should be… every note was perfect.  But it wasn't just the technical brillance that Mutter is famous for, nor her drop dead gorgeous strapless evening gowns she wears.  It was for her playing, that you could soak up each note and cadenza.  To me, it's like being enthralled.


Her only other previous performance in Vancouver had been in 1989.  I was there in the 2nd row, absolutely enthralled.  It's the only way I can describe her performance.  You absorb up every note and the music vibrates dances in it's aura.

In 2002, I drove down to Seattle to see Mutter perform at Seattle's Benaroya Hall for a concert recital with her favorite accompanist Lambert Orkis.  After the concert I was one of the few who made our way downstairs to the Green Room to have cd's signed.  There weren't many people in line, so we were able to have a short conversation and I invited her back to Vancouver, reminding her that so many people had looked forward to a planned 1995 recital that she had been cancelled due to her pregnancy.  She seemed pleased that we had traveled down from Vancouver to see her, and she said she would love to get back back to Vancouver.

On Friday night in Vancouver, there were probably two hundred people in front of the line for signings, at the Orpheum.  Even after signing autographs for 45 minutes, she was still ever so gracious.  Definitely my favorite concert violinist.

Very strange… in my music collection, I have the most Mutter cd's in the my classical collection, and Bruce Springsteen is the largest collection in pop/rock.  And I see them both in the same week.

Tonight: Joy Kogawa reads her new book “Naomi’s Tree”

TONIGHT
Joy Kogawa is reading her new book “Naomi’s Tree” at Vancouver Kidsbooks

Naomissm.jpgDate:  Thursday April 10th, 2008
Time:  7:00pm

Kidsbooks: Author and Illustrator Events

Place: Vancouver Kidsbooks – 3083 West Broadway, Vancouver Please Note: Tickets are fully redeemable toward Joy Kogawa’s books on the night of the event
www.kidsbooks.ca/kidsbooksevents.htm – 38kCachedSimilar pages

 

A Musical Evening with Joy Kogawa and Friends
Friday Apr 25, 2008

Tickets: To secure a seat, please email kogawahouse@yahoo.ca.
Vancouver composer Leslie Uyeda presents two song cycles written to accompany five of Joy Kogawa’s most exquisite poems. “Stations of Angels” will be performed by soprano Heather Pawsey and flutist Kathryn Cernauskas, and “Offerings” by Heather Pawsey and pianist Rachel Kiyo Iwaasa. These performances are the world premiere of both song cycles, which were composed especially for these three artists. To complement the musical performance, poets Joy Kogawa, Heidi Greco, Marion Quednau, and Vancouver’s poet laureate George McWhirter will read.

Set
in the Historic Joy Kogawa House, this National Poetry Month event takes place in Joy Kogawa’s childhood home—a place that commemorates both the brightest hopes and the darkest hours of Canadian history. The house, representative of many properties owned by Canadians of Japanese descent, was confiscated during the Second World War when its occupants and 20,000 other Japanese-Canadians were interned. After a hard-fought effort by The Land Conservancy and the Kogawa House Committee to save the house from demolition, it is being restored, and beginning in the spring of 2009, will host a writer-in-residence program.

Event supported by the Canada Council for the Arts and the League of Canadian Poets.

A Tartan Day dragon boat paddle practice… with bagpiper and proclamation reading

HAPPY TARTAN DAY dragon boat practice!

Photo Library - 2645

Michael Brophy holds Scottish flag, Todd Wong, Deputy Mayor Raymond Louie, bagpiper Joe McDonald – photo Georgia Thorburn

A very different kind of dragon boat practice today.

When I arrived, we passed out the tartan kilts, and the tartan sashes.  Because…

We had a City TV cameraman John Wilson come film our practice this afternoon.

And a bagpiper, my friend Joe McDonald, walked over from the Skytrain
station, while we were doing our warm-up under the covered gazebo.

Photo Library - 2630

Raymond Louie holds the proclamation, while Joe McDonald plays his bagpipers – photo Todd Wong

We had a proclamation reading ceremony with the deputy mayor of
Vancouver, city councilor Raymond Louie.  Raymond used to paddle
dragon boats, and he shared a story, how on a day – just like today. 
with a bit of wind, and a bit or rain… he went out on the boat with
his team the Vancouver Sun Strokers.  And they capsized just beyond the
Cambie St. Bridge.

I told a story about Vancouver s Scottish heritage goes way back to the
first mayor in 1886 – Malcolm Alexander  McLean… way back to the
first Prime Minister in 1867 – Sir John Eh MacDonald…. way back to
the first Governor of British Columbia – James Douglas in 1858.

Tartan Day was first celebrated in Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1986 to help celebrate Canada s Scottish heritage. 

In 1993 Tartan Day was proclaimed in B.C.

In 2002, Sean Connery leads 10,000 bagpipers through the centre of New York for Tartan Day.

And in Vancouver…. nothing…. for Tartan Day…. until this past week.
Tartan Day was proclaimed in Vancouver City Council

I asked Raymond Louie to explain how it happened.  He said there were a
lot of e-mails between us, and he credited me for making it happen, as
I emailed my connections in the Scottish cultural community, and had
the proclamation draft written by Ron MacLeod, Chair V of the SFU
Scottish Studies program.  The motion was made by Heather Deal and
seconded by Raymond.  Deputy Mayor Louie then read the proclamation.

Joe McDonald played another song on his bagpipes.  It was raining. 
People were smiling, and taking pictures.  It was Pam s first practice
with us, and she had kilt on (does she really know what she is getting
into).  It was wonderful for team spirit.

Photo Library - 2656

Photo Library - 2657

Joe McDonald pipes the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team down to the dragon boat for their special Tartand Day Sunday practice – photo Lena Yamulky

We organized the team above the dock, and we were led down the ramp to
the docks by bagpiper Joe MacDonald.  We climbed into the boat.  And as
the paddlers backed the boat out, I unfurled the Scottish flag,
attached to the hockey stick.  The tv camerman was filming us… and it
looked real good.

Then somebody spotted team member Steven Wong, just coming down the
dock.  Question.  Do we continue backpaddling, or come in for Steven. 

We are an inclusive team.  Steven is a big part of our team.  We
paddled back in, waited for him to get a pdf, find a seat in the boat,
then paddled out for the camera again.

Photo Library - 2664

Photo Library - 2663

Bagpiper Joe McDonald plays the pipes, as the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team loads the boat – photo Lena Yamulky

The flag unfurled beautifully.  When we started paddling forward, and
the flag flew nicely.  As we gained speed, it flapped strongly. 
Wheee!!!! Big smiles on our faces.  Great Fun for Tartan Day.

It was a good practice.  The rain stopped for the most part.  We
paddled pretty strongly with 23 paddlers out past David Lam Park.  We
did some technique exercises, backs and fronts, and kept the boat
moving.  We were back just after 2pm.  A shorter practice than usual –
but pretty good for a cold rainy day.

Following the practice, we had a leadership council meeting at the Wolf & Hound pub over on West Broadway.

Looking forward to seeing the everybody out on Tuesday and Wednesday this week.

Vancouver Tartan Day

See pictures on Flickr:  Vancouver Tartan Day

See more on www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com