Category Archives: Vancouver Area Adventures

Vancouver Women Love David Beckham

Vancouver Women Love David Beckham


Our
Gung Haggis girls, Linda and Wendy, hold up their souvenir towels with
LA Galaxy soccer star David Beckham somewhere in the background down on
the field – photo Todd Wong/L.Daly collection

We
had a group of 11 Gung Haggis paddlers and 4 friends join us to go to
the LA Galaxy vs Vancouver White Caps game featuring David Beckham on
November 7th at BC Place Stadium.  We were all there to see soccer
superstar David Beckham, but the females in our group were more vocal
about being happy to attend the game and especially happy to see
Beckham.  Julie, Wendy, Linda, Jenna and even Keng!  When
Beckham took off his game jersey to give to a young fan, they declared
it a bonus seeing the topless Beckham.


David Beckham at centre field – photo L. Daly

I
haven't seen a lot of soccer games.  The last time was a White
Caps game was back in the 1980's, and it was at BC Place Stadium. 
But in the large stadium, it was generally easy to pick out the
blonde-headed Beckham.  The man carried himself with
presence.  His image was often up on the large video screen. 
The crowd cheered when he got the ball.  And… the entire arena
got excited when Beckham took two corner kicks in the 2nd half – but
neither were dangerous.

Soccer is a very multicultural
sport.  It is played almost everywhere in the world, probably even
at the research stations on Anarctica.  When I was growing up in
East Vancouver during the 60's and '70's the best soccer players were
the Italian and Portuguese-Canadian kids.  They were usually
taller and faster than me and my Chinese-Canadian friends.  But
sometimes we would get together and just have games with Asian kids –
then we were pretty well all the same size and still having fun.

Over
48,000 fans attended the game, the 4th largest in White Caps soccer
history.  I saw people from many ethnicities and heard many
different languages at the game.

Todd, Wendy, Jonas and Linda – sitting in the stands – photo Victor/L.Daly collection

Attending
the game was a great way for our dragon boat team members to socialize
during the off-season.  While in the stands, we talked about how
much we knew or didn't know about soccer.  We talked about
learning a new paddling technique, about going to different races –
like Hawaii if one of us won that night's $35 Million 6/49.

My library friend Kay took a video of Beckham's corner
kick.  Kay saw Beckham play many times for Manchester United while
she lived in England.   Kay also used to paddle for a UK
junior dragon boat team that raced at the World Championships. 
Maybe one day… Kay will come paddle for the Gung Haggis Fat Choy
dragon boat team. She sent me this review of the game:

“Having seen David Beckham play many times for Manchester United, I
found the Whitecaps game a very different experience. I think a lot of
it was down to the enclosed stadium. Although the crowd was far quieter
than your average Premier League crowd (who sing, shout, cheer and
stamp their feet at a deafening level, so you emerge after 90 minutes
with your ears still ringing) the atmosphere felt a lot closer and more
intimate in the indoor stadium. The pitch also looked smaller than the
Premier League standard, although that might have been my imagination.

“On
the pitch, Becks was still Becks. He's slower than he used to be, but
his right foot still has the magic. In the United treble-winning team,
he didn't really stand out because the whole team were so good. In this
match, he was clearly a class apart. He can still hit a cross with
pinpoint accuracy, and send a ball two-thirds of the way up the pitch
onto the toe of the player running for the pass. He's also still a
consummate professional, and very much a team player: he never holds
onto the ball when he can see someone in a better position.

“The
match wasn't stellar football by any means (although the Whitecaps
should definitely have won) but with the Beckham show in town, most
people weren't really there for the football. Personally, I was there
for the memories – and it was a wonderful reminder of the best United
team I ever saw.”

A
man proposed to his girlfriend on the video screen while the game was
in progress during the second half.  She said yes.  But the
biggest cheer of the night went to a streaker who ran up the East side
of the field, across the North side, then down the West side before he
was finally tackled.

The streaker had a good run. – photo L. Daly – Click on this link for the you tube video by Kay.

Check out the story on Beckham star attraction for 48172 soccer fans in Vancouver

Gung Halloween Fat Choy: Gung Haggis dragon boat paddlers go to Parade of Lost Souls

Gung Halloween Fat Choy: Gung Haggis dragon boat paddlers go to Parade of Lost Souls

Dragon Heads hiding in the night at the Parade of Lost Souls event on Saturday Oct 27th in Vancouver's Commercial Drive neighborhood – photo Todd Wong

“Where are you?” I talked into my cell phone, as I wandered through Grandview Park's lower field.

“We are over at the 'Table of Plenty'” said Tzhe.

“Is that near the Fire Dancers?”

“Closer to the candle alter.”

It was Saturday night in Vancouver's East End, and the Parade of Lost Souls was taking place throughout Grandview Park, the Britannia Oval, along Commercial Drive and throughout the immediate neighborhood.

We were a band of dragon boat friends from the Gung Haggis Fat Choy
dragon boat team.  Some of us had adopted the theme of angel wings to
coincide with a “life-affirming” take on the “Celebration of Life”
theme for the event organized by the Public Dreams Society. 

Okay…
some of us had adopted a “fallen angel” theme.  My wings were actually
irridescent purple bat wings, and I wore a black carnival mask. 
Cecilia was a punk gothic fallen angel.  Wendy was sweet with white
angel wings.  Tzhe had one red wing and one white wing – that he bought
at Value Village…

We wandered around seeing puppet shows, dragon heads, carved pumpkins and a carnival band. Along Commercial Drive, we saw many many costumes.

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We bumped into an old lady who turned out to by writer/comedian Charles Demers with his french maid fiance Cara.  Charles and Cara belong to the Gung Haggis family because Cara's brother Jonas is a 2nd year paddler on the team.  Two weeks ago, many of the team members came down to see Charles's sketch comedy show at the Media Club with his partner Paul Bae, as their performing group “Bucket.”  They sung their “Happy Hapa Song” – perfect for the Gung Haggis crowd.
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Afterwards some of us decided to go home, and some of us went to a house party filled with lots of incredible movie theme costumes…

I met Bat Girl, Audrey Hepburn's “Holly Golightly” from Breakfast at Tiffany, Hellraiser, and even an Optimus Prime Transformer.  I saw a yellow Wolverine from the X-Men comic book… but thought the Jean Grey/Phoenix was incredible.

Perfect for Gung Haggis paddlers…  we bumped into a kilted William Wallace, who looked at me strange when I shouted out the Robbie Burns lines from the poem “Scots Wha Hae' wi' Wallace bled.”
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 and a female pint of Guinness “dark body with a blonde head,” she told me
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Amazing, that none of our group wore kilts.  Heck we wear kilts usually at least once or twice a month for Kilts Night and for dragon boat races anyways….


The surviving Gung Haggis paddlers who made it to the party.  Todd with bat wings, Alf as That 70's Guy with handle bar moustache (it's real), Hillary as (Not an) Asian warrior princess, pirate Leanne, Spider Woman Julie, and Tzhe with angel wings.- photo Todd Wong

Check out my flickr photos.

Halloween 2007

Halloween 2007

Fall has come to Vancouver

Fall has come to Vancouver

IMG_0262-photo Deb Martin

It's definitely fall  when you can jump into a huge pile of leaves, We've had some cold weather for awhile… I've paddled and picketed through the recent rain.  But this weekend, the weather warmed up, and all the leaves have started falling on the ground.

I started my Sunday off with a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team practice.  The day was warmer than expected.  Good short sleeve
paddling weather.  We are doing long slow distance paddling from
Science World to Granville Island.   It's about a 2km distance.  Much
more than a usual 500m dragon boat race.  But after doing the recent
2km races for UBC Day of the Long Boat and Fort Langley Cranberry
Festival Canoe Regatta, everything is easy.  We are going to paddle up to Remembrance Day, then take a break over Christmas… then start up maybe after Valentine's Day.  Come out and join us on Sunday 1pm. We meet just south of Science World at the Dragon Zone clubhouse.

IMG_0240IMG_0241IMG_0243-photos Todd Wong
Marlene and Wendy have been a wonderful pair of lead strokes and really
enjoy paddling with each other.  Georgia joined us this year for her second year of paddling, and we've put her in
more situations than she expected – including eating haggis, wearing a
kilt, dragon boat sprint races, dragon boat barrel racing, tipping over in a voyageur canoe race. She's such a good sport.

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Here's the huge pile of leaves… me in the leaf pile!

Leaves have been changing colour and
now are on the ground. The weather is
chilly, and the beaches are finally
empty of sun worshippers.  We went for a walk around Kits Point and discovered a huge pile of maple  and chestnut leaves.  Some people had been raking the leaves and jumping from a tree into the leaves.  CRAZY!

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We walked around Kits Beach, up to Heritage Harbour, and often down behind the Kitsilano Yacht Club to Trafalgar St.  We saw a Kingfisher sitting on a sail boat mast at the Yacht Club.

Kitsilano Pool is a gorgeous long outdoor pool, beside English Bay.  During the summer, it is one of the best beachside hangouts..  It's such as shame that that pool was closed half-way through July when the Vancouver civic strike happened.  Pools, libraries and community centres were closed. All the other regions were able to settle without a strike but the City of Vancouver seemed to have a different agenda.  see www.fairnessforcivicworkers.ca

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Kitsilano Pool was for the birds this summer.

Only the seagulls really seemed to enjoy Kits Pool this summer. Once the strike went into it's 2nd week, the pool had become quickly unfit for swimming. By mid-August it was clear the city probably had no intention of draining it, and refilling it with clean water before Labour Day. 

CUPE 1004 and CUPE 15 Outside and Inside workers are all back to work now.  It's only CUPE 391 Library Workers still out.  Talks went on this Monday afternoon… which is better than most of the summer when the Library Bargaining team went almost 5 weeks before replying to a union proposal.  As a library worker… it's been a disappointing bittersweet  summer, as the non-talks dragged on after our contract expired in December.

see my articles and pictures on the strike situation here:

Shh…. Salt Tasting Room is a Vancouver secret

Shh…. Salt Tasting Room is a Vancouver secret


Todd Wong hold up his glass at the Salt Tasting Room, with the daily menu chalkboard behind on the wall. – photo Judy Maxwell

Salt Tasting Room


Back in early September the Vancouver Sun published Vancouver slurp-and-swirl a top-five secret
– it was a story about the results of a  Travelocity.ca poll which asked members for their top Canadian local secrets.  I couldn't find an entry about Salt Tasting Room – but I did find a link for British Columbia local secrets.

Even though I hadn't been to the Salt Tasting Room yet, I felt that I was already in on the secret because I had a gift certificate for the restaurant.  It had been sitting on the shelf since April 21st when I won the door prize at the BC Book Prize soiree event. (read my  my article).

I finally went last Sunday.  It was a cold drizzly Thanksgiving Day Sunday, the kind best spent indoors with wine and cheese.  And besides, I was moving pretty slowly after paddling 3 canoe races Saturday at the Ft. Langley Cranberry Festival Canoe Regatta.

The first remarkable thing you notice about Salt, is that it isn't the usual restaurant on a street – it's down an alley…Blood Alley is so-called because there used to be many butcher shops along the alley way… or is it because of Gastown's pioneer days there used to be lots of muggings?  Owner Sean Heather writes on the Salt blog that “Salt’s
location will have the look and feel of NY’s meat packing district,
right down to the cobblestones.”  I recognized the location across from Salt as being used in the Catwoman movie with Halle Berry.

You can sit in the window, at the zinc bar (very cool and shiny) or at the long 18 ft spruce table made from a 700 year old tree in the main room.  I chose the window seats so my friends could easily see me when they came in.  The first thing we talked about was walking down the alley.

Salt is rightly called a tasting room.  There is no kitchen.  Cured meats are served, hence the name salt, along with fine cheeses and nice wines.  The concept is to match cured meats and artisan cheeses, with delightful condiments and great wines.

For $15, you choose a platter of 3 items. We asked the server to select her favorite things for us.  Ash Camembert and Comte cheeses arrived with Mike's Corned Beef.  They were each paired with their own matching condiment.  Ambrosia apples, balsamic reduction and Guinness mustard. We also ordered a side dish of Coppa meat which the server behind the bar suggested. 

Our wines were deep delicious reds.  I had the Shingleback Cabernet Sauvignon, and my companion had the blended d'Arenberg Shiraz Viognier.  Everything was very tasty – perfect for sampling this and that… looking out the window and feeling warm and cosy inside.

Our third companion arrived and I ordered another plate.  This time I chose the sea salt chorizo, and artigiano salami while Judy chose the bleu de Gex cheese.  The setting was great.  Not too crowded, but still warm and cosy in this post-modern West-Coast wood, zinc and concrete decor.  And too soon… our time shared was over.

There's a great opening blog that details how the restaurant was put together.  It includes the trials and tribulations and pictures of how the large tables were put together… fascinating.


Donna Green, Todd Wong and Judy Maxwell – enjoying cured meats, cheeses, condiments, wines and friendship. photo J.Maxwell

Hip, hapa and Happening…. July 24 to 31

Hip, hapa and Happening…. July 24 to 31

I am back from a weekend in Victoria celebrating Chinese-Canadian and Scottish-Canadian activities such as the Victoria dragon boat races, visiting Craigdarroch castle, a Chinese banquet in Chinatown with a Portland dragon boat team, and kilt wearing in the Irish Time Pub.

see my pictures on flickr
http://flickr.com/photos/53803790@N00/sets/72157601627492033/

But for Vancouver this weekend…
check out:

Enchanted Evening series
Sunny and FriendsAn ecclectic blend of India's finest sounds
Dr. Sun Yat Sen Gardens
doors open 7 pm
concert starts 7:30pm

image

These events almost always sell out.  Get there early.  Sunny has performed at Gung Haggis Fat Choy events with Joe McDonald's musical group Brave Waves.  I have also crossed paths with him many times for the group Vishwa, which he formed with his sister and celtic violinist Max Ngan.

ANNIVERSARIES '07 FILM FESTIVAL


FRIDAY NIGHT (AUG 24TH) 
AT KEEFER AND COLUMBIA. 
VIDEO PROJECTIONS STARTING AT 8:30 PM
on the Sun Yat Sen Park wall.  

CURATED BY KAMALA TODD, THIS PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS THE 60th ANNIVERSARY OF 1947 AND LOOKS AT ISSUES OF CITIZENSHIP IN CANADA. 

1947
Citizenship Ltd.
A
lot of gains were made in 1947, including voting rights for Canadians
of Chinese and Indian descent, and the eradication of many race-based
legislations and social exclusions. Hard fought victories worth
celebrating for sure. But do voting rights mean equality? This program
explores the complexities of citizenship and belonging—from Aboriginal
people’s struggles with colonial policies, to Japanese-Canadians
experiences of internment, to Chinese-Canadian veterans fighting for
recognition.

THE PROGRAM:
1.  Michael Fukushima, Minoru: Memory of Exile, 1992, 15:00 
2.  Stephen Foster, X-Patriotism, 2001, 6:00. 
3.  Jari Osborne, 1999, Unwanted Soldiers, 48:48. 
4.  Cherie Valentina Stocken, A Fine Line, 2005, 4:43. 
5.  Rick Shiomi/Powell Street Revue, Images of the First Hundred Years, 1980, 11:00 


VANCOUVER KILTS NIGHT
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Date:
Friday, August 24, 2007
Time:
7:00pm – 11:55pm
Location:
Wolf and Hound Irish Bar
Street:
3617 West Broadway

For the first time we are going to Kitsilano.  Somehow we always get a group of Asian-Canadians wearing kilts and speaking in the best (or worst) Scottish brogues… and then there are the “hangers-on” a bunch of Scottish-Canadians trying to pick up the Asians because they think our kilts are sexy.

Portland's Wasabi paddlers get Gung Haggis Fat Choy team dinner in Victoria for dragon boat races

Portland's Wasabi paddlers get Gung Haggis Fat Choy team dinner in Victoria for dragon boat races

Almost every team has their own banner with a dragon on it – photo Todd Wong

Elena is one of my new friends from Wasabi Team Huge – photo Todd Wong

Victoria Dragon Boat Festival
August 18, 19

On Saturday night… I organized a Chinese dinner for 40 paddlers
from Wasabi Team Huge and Wasabi Mixed.  I brought my accordion and
taught them to sing Scottish songs and recite Robbie Burns “Address to
the Haggis” – just like last year in Victoria for the Dieselfish team, the Cultus Lake Dragonflyers and the Pirates/Gung Haggis team… Everybody loved the
dinner.  On Sunday, people kept thanking me for organizing the event,
and saying they had fun.

But no haggis… I promised to bring the haggis to Portland in January,
and organize a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dinner for them for Robbie Burns
birthday for 2008!

I have known the Wasabi Paddling Club since 2001, when I became friends with paddler Suzi Cloutier on Wasabi Team Huge.  In 2003, I steered for Team Huge at the False Creek Women's regatta, and medaled with them at the Kent Cornucopia Races.  At the inaugural Portland Sellwood Park dragon boat races, Wasabi hosted Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team, and loaned us paddlers to win medals in the recreation   division.


Wasabi Team Huge: waiting for our boat to come in.  Joyce, Jenna, Suzi and Sandra – photo Todd Wong



I had an inspiring weekend steering


and being a team member with the top women's team at the festival. 
Wasabi Team Huge…  a team that took the silver medal at the 2006 US IDBF Nationals and won gold at the World Club Crew IDBF races.

It was great to race again with Team Huge.  Sometimes being a male
addition to a women's team can be a challenge, or met with suspicion (thank goodness, I did my Women's Studies courses at college!). 
Thankfully  my friend Suzi and coach Kim spoke well of me, and led
the team with welcoming hugs.  Trust is a big factor in building a
team.  Team Huge not only welcomed me for their Victoria race, but also
paddlers from their Wasabi Mixed Recreation team – Warriors, and Wasabi
senior women's team – Power Surge, as well as a woman paddler from
Vancouver too!  Coach Kim created a powerfully strong positive atmosphere that was inclusive – something I also stress for the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.

Team Huge finished 4th in Gold B Division – out of medal contention… but they were the top Women's team at the Victoria Dragon Boat Festival.  Next closest women's team was in bronze – 15 to 20 teams below us.

We finished #39 of 90 teams, at the bottom of the top 4 divisions… instead of being at
the top of the bottom 5 divisions.  They raced for pride, to improve
with each race, for each other, and for themselves…

Coach Kim Ketcham is great… I have known her since she was a paddler on Team
Huge in 2001.  She started coaching the team in 2003.  She teaches the
women to paddle with heart, with technique, and with control.

The team is very disciplined and responsive.  When they did their power
pieces, you could feel the boat pull forward steadily.  In our Gold B Race Final, the other mixed teams surged past us on the start.  But Team Huge caught up to 4th place Concord Flying Dragons, and passed them.  When the
team moved into their final power series, they pulled away for a 1.45 second lead
with a time of 2:27.74… a big improvement over posting a 2:33 on
Saturday morning.  In the Gold B race the winning times were:
West Shore Warriors 2:20.30 – Dog Paddlers 2:23.53 – Starbucks
Waverunners 2:24.95


Wasabi Team Huge: Anna waxes Caroline's butt before a race – photo Todd Wong


Other races:

The very top teams posted times of Kai Ikaika (with a team stacked with
False Creek paddlers) 2:03.74 – Gorging Dragons 2:04.51 – Dragonauts
2:09.39 – Sudden Impact 2:11.61

Our friends on Swordfish got silver in Diamond division with a time of
2:15.29 and Gung Haggis paddler Teresa Plesner paddled with Tacoma's Destiny Dragons to finish 2:23.24 to get 3rd place ribbon in Diamond consolation.

Manfred Preuss' Chilliwack Crusaders posted 2:24.23 to grab Bronze medals in the Silver Division

In the Crystal Division (the slowest category)
Cultus Lake Dragon Flyers got silver in Crystal 2:32.74 Gung Haggis paddler Richard Montagna paddled with False Creek Grand Dragons missed bronze
by 0.80 seconds to our friends Chix with Stix (from Tacoma).

Friday Night in Vancouver: Robson Square Summertime Dancing + Singapore cuisine

Friday Night in Vancouver: Robson Square Summertime Dancing + Singapore cuisine



Friday Night Dance lessons and Dance Sport demonstrations at Robson Square – photo Todd Wong

Every Friday night at Robson Square in Vancouver, there is dancing…  Last Friday night was tango night.  I joined some Gung Haggis dragon boat food and social club members, for dinner at Primataste Singapore style restaurant. 570 Robson Street, 604-685-7881. Open daily 11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m.  I couldn't remember the last time I had ever been a to Singapore restaurant before… but my cousin's wife is from Singapore, and I have eaten Singapore cuisine many times.

The food was good, and it was fast, once we ordered.  My girlfriend ordered a curry chicken noodle dish for me.  My mistake was in casually adding in the spicy paste that sat on a corner of the dish.  Hot!  Her noodle dish with prawns and calamari was much more mild and very tasty.  The service was friendly and helpful, and we all enjoyed it.

Check out this reviews:
Hakka House: Prima Taste Restaurant
 
VancouverBest Eating | Prima slings fab Singaporean | Straight.com Vancouver

Then we walked the block over to Robson Square.  Tonight was Tango Night.  While I have played tangos on my accordion such as La Cumparsita and El Choclo… I have never before danced a tango.

“Step, step, step, stop, rock, rock, back…”

The instructors were good and Asian!!!  Gee… that would make sense in multicultural Vancouver, with so many Asians practicing ball room dancing.  They explained and demonstrated each of the opening steps.  But the “dance floor” was crowded and not easy to see up close.  My girlfriend and I tried the steps again.  “Oops…” missed a step.  “Oops…” wrong foot.  It was good to try.  I had taken ballroom dance lessons many many years ago… and it all came back to me quickly – the mis-steps, the hesitations, the clumsy feeling like I had two left feet.  But we were having fun, and if we knew that if we really wanted to be good, we would have to take some lessons.

At 9pm, the first evening showcase began.  Competitive dancers stepped onto the floor to demonstrate the tango, and other dances.  Beautiful.  Then the couple that had been giving the tango lessons did a wonderful dance performance to the same music used in the movie: “Shall We Dance” with Richard Gere and Jennifer Lopez.  Beautiful.  Wow!

We tried some more general dancing – then a few of us headed back to my girlfriend's apartment and we watched “Shall We Dance” leaving the dancing to to the experts.  Of of course, I just had to watch the Richard Gere/ Jennifer Lopez tango dance scene twice!

Check out the DanceSport BC website for information:

DanceSport BC (DSBC) is proud to present the Robson Square Summertime Dance Series 2007.
This free community event has been held every summer since 1979. It is
open to the general public, and people of all ages and backgrounds are
encouraged to join in the fun. Spectators and participants range from
children to the elderly and ballroom enthusiasts to interested downtown
passers-by.

Each week we start the night with a free dance lesson given by a
local hand-picked dance instructor. Lessons will vary each week
providing a fun, social atmosphere. Show-case dancers perform dressed
in full competitive costumes, making the two twenty-minute show-cases
the highlights of each night. Dance couples and teams have been chosen
from local dance studios to perform. This is a chance to see ballroom
at its best with performances which may include Standard, Latin or
Social dances; such as Waltz, Cha-Cha, Tango, Jive, Swing and Salsa.
During the general dancing, DJs will play a mixed selection of ballroom
and social dance music for the audience to enjoy.

Nightly Schedule

  • 8:00 pm – 8:30 pm: Professional dance lesson
  • 8:30 pm – 9:00 pm: General Dancing
  • 9:00 pm – 9:20 pm: First Dance Performance
  • 9:20 pm – 10:00 pm: General Dancing
  • 10:00 pm – 10:20 pm: Second Dance Performance
  • 10:20 pm – 11:30 pm: General Dancing
  • 11:30 pm: Last Waltz

Toddish McWong in Vancouver's Pride Parade

Toddish McWong in Vancouver's Pride Parade



Toddish McWong finds a fellow kilt wearer at the Vancouver Pride Parade – photo E. Harris/T. Wong collection


I had never ever before attended Vancouver's Pride Parade, let alone actually be in the parade. 

But I admit… I'd thought about it before. 

Each year Vancouver Library Workers union CUPE 391 participates in the Pride parade.  This year, I thought it would be good to go out and join fellow co-workers – especially during the strike.

While I am straight… I have supported Gay-Lesbian issues on a number of community fronts, especially in my past  roles with student newspapers, when I once was a regional human rights coordinator for Western Region, Canadian University Press.



CUPE 391 Pride parade participants… Janis (front), Ross, Catherine, Todd and Electra – photo T. Wong collection

It was good fun walking with fellow Vancouver library workers, some I have known for years and years, and some whom I met brand new.  One librarian had only worked four shifts with VPL, before we went on strike, and yet she still came out to join the CUPE 391 delegation for the Pride Parade.

We met on Robson Street, with other CUPE locals and other unions.  Our parade number was 31, just behind the official City of Vancouver delegation with the mayor and other city councillors at number 27.



CUPE 391: Ross with cowboy hat, Janis with child in stroller, Electra with tutu, Sophie with hand bag – photo T. Wong

While past library participants had created the now legendary “book buggy brigade” in which they took book trucks and wheeled them in formations similar to the RCMP musical ride… we simply walked along with the group flow.  Ross danced along waving the CUPE BC flag.  Electra held out bubbles for children to blow.  It was a parade.  It was a happy time.  And it was good to be able to participate.

Afterwards, somebody asked me if I was afraid that people who saw me in the parade might think that I was gay.  I said I wasn't.  The parade is about celebrating diversity… well more sexual diversity rather than ethnic or cultural diversity.  But is still about diversity, human rights and respect. 



Pride parade '07… Does this guy think he is supposed to be Chinese? He isn't short enough! photo T. Wong

Maybe next year will see an official Gung Haggis Fat Choy parade entry.  I have put a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat float in the first three years of Vancouver's St. Patrick's parade, since the Celtic Fest Vancouver people originally asked me to be involved as a way of helping the parade be multicultural.  Hmmm… a dragon boat float in the Pride parade?  Since 1997, I have coached gay paddlers and lesbian paddlers on my teams.  Do you think Vancouver is ready to handle a parade entry full of “Dragon Boat Queens?”



Toddish McWong carrying a CUPE flag in the Pride Parade – photo E. Harris for T.Wong collection


see my Pride pictures at:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/53803790@N00/sets/72157601262211104/

Dim Sum with Olivia Chow in Vancouver

Dim Sum with Olivia Chow in Vancouver


Olivia Chow and Todd Wong (center) with Barry Morley (left) and Mary-Woo Sims (right) – photo Todd Wong Collection

Olivia Chow came to Vancouver, ditched husband Jack Layton, and attended Meena Wong's monthly Dim Sum networking lunch at Rich Ocean Restaurant.  Actually, Jack Layton attended the Pride brunch, as Jack and Olivia attend Pride parades across Canada.  Meena has known Layton and Chow from her time living in Toronto, and is now continuing to handle communications and community building in Vancouver's Chinese language community for the NDP.  I've known Meena since 2002, when soon after arriving in Vancouver, she came to help volunteer for Asian Heritage Month events organized by explorASIAN.


Meena Wong and Olivia Chow addressing 40 people at Rich Ocean restaurant on Saturday- photo Todd Wong

The crowds came out to welcome Olivia to Vancouver.  Libby Davies MP for Vancouver East, dropped in to say hello.  COPE organizer Mel Lehan and his wife attended. Victor Wong, executive director of the Chinese Canadian National Council was in town.  Sid Tan, Sean Gunn and Ron Mah of the Chinese Head Tax Families Society attended.  Even Faye Leung dropped in.  In all there were about 40 people.

I had a nice chat with Olivia.  Meena had seated us at the same table.  I knew she would be interested in hearing about the CBC documentary Generations: The Chan Legacy.  And she was also very interested to learn more about Gung Haggis Fat Choy – which she would love to attend, if and when I bring my Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinner to Toronto.


Olivia joins Vancouver's head tax descendants for a picture: standing: ??, Mary, Ron Mah, Olivia Chow, Sid Tan, Faye Leung, Todd Wong; sitting: Sid Wong, Sean Gunn, Victor Wong (executive director of Chinese Canadian National Council) + head tax redress supporter  Mary-Woo Sims.

The federal NDP was the first national party to recognize the
importance of redress for Chinese Canadian head tax issue.  Olivia
recognized that it was Margaret Mitchell who first brought the issue to
Canadian Parliament in 1984.  Olivia also supported the calls for Chinese Head Tax redress, as head tax became an issue in the 2006 federal election.  She also supports and inclusive redress that would honour every head tax equally, not just for the surviving head tax payers and their spouses, but also the head tax certificates that were left in the hands of the daughters, sons and grandchildren when the original head tax payers couldn't live to see the federal apology by Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

Powell Street Festival 2007

Powell St. Festival 2007 – Always lots to see and do!


Is this Todd Wong?  He's wearing a Gung Haggis Fat Choy shirt and he's
Chinese-looking…  I tlooks like he's hawking haggis won-ton…

Noooo!!!!  It's Todd's friend Walter Quan… and he is holding up his
famous sushi and won-ton cnadles that he sells at the Powell Street
Festival every year.

Lots to see and do at the Powell Street Festival
Great arts, entertainment, history and culture displays.  It integrates
traditional and contemporary Japanese-Canadian cultures with the
Downtown Eastside and the historic sites of Japantown.