Category Archives: Vancouver Area Adventures

Vernon Morning Star: Vernon home-town girl steers Gung Haggis dragon boat team to gold medal

Vernon Morning Star: Vernon home-town girl steers Gung Haggis dragon boat team to gold medal

Deb Martin (far right) steers the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team to a beach landing.  Sitting in the boat Steven Wong  (hidden w/red hat), Cheryl McIntosh (yellow & black hat), Dan Seto (partially hidden), Jim Blathewick (big smile and blue pdf), Dave Samis (looking at camera), Jonas Ng (black sleeves), Gerry Black (partially hidden behind paddle), Leanne Riding (black hat), Richard Montagna (partially hidden with white hat), Emma Hopkins (green hair), Hyuma (black glove) – photo Ginger Snaps

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team gets some more media!  They liked the angle of home-town Vernon-raised Deb Martin, returning to Vernon and steering her dragon boat team to a gold medal in Mixed Adult B division.

Deb Martin grew up at her parents'
lakeside home on Kalamalka Lake.  She learned to canoe, kayak and
sail.  Every summer she looks forward to swimming in the lake, and is
happy to bring her dragon boat team along with her to visit her parents
and lakeside home.


Deb
Martin started paddling on the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team in
2003, shortly after dating Gung Haggis
dragon boat team founder Todd Wong. She now helps Wong manage the the team, and assists with the Gung Haggis Fat Choy: Toddish McWong's Robbie Burns Chinese New Year Dinner annual fundraiser for the team which has attracted up to 570 people in past years.



Deb paddled dragon boats for her first two
years on the team, then quickly took to drumming.  Coaches Todd Wong
and Bob Brinson found her to be a quick study with a naturally inspiring
manner for the team.  This year Deb has taken over the steering job,
after spending lots of time steering the boats during practice over the
past two years. 



This was the first time she had steered a medal
finish.  On Saturday there were two 200m sprints, a 500m race and
a 1000m race with a challenging turn.   Deb steered the boat to 1st place in both the 500m semi-final and 500m final on the
Sunday.  The team has lots of confidence in Deb's abilities, and she
has even steered for other teams during races, such as last week's
Fraser Valley Dragon Boat Races held on Harrison Lake.




Todd Wong & Deb Martin, Clan Chieftain & Steers + organizers of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.

Dragon boat races make a splash

By Jennifer Dyck
Morning Star Staff

Behind a sea of paddles digging through the waters of Kalamalka
Lake was another record year for Vernon’s third annual Dragon Boat
Festival.

The weekend-long event, which wrapped up Sunday, brought 1,090
participants to town (not to mention spouses tagging along to cheer
them on) from across B.C. and Alberta.

“We had double the teams from last year and the event may even
double again next year,” said Shawn Samol, president of the festival.

“A lot of the teams were very ecstatic, especially the ones that had never been here before. They said they’d be back for sure.”

While there was a high number of participants, the spectators on shore far outweighed those numbers throughout the weekend.

An estimated 10,000 people took in the three days of action on Kal Beach.

“The beach was pretty packed most of the day,” said Samol, who was pleased to see the community taking in the sport.

Those on board for the Sunday races were also in for a couple of events that made a big splash.

A Kelowna team capsized in the water during a race after hitting what one team member assumes was a wave.

“The drummer got dumped and the steerer fell off, and all the
women on the right side of the boat began sliding down, and then it was
a few seconds of body parts and paddles flying as the boat tipped us in
the water,” said Cheryl Wierda, from the team.

Another bit of Sunday action (a planned event) was the Good
Life Fitness Waterski Challenge. Twelve teams competed in the
challenge, with several showing their paddle power by successfully
getting a waterskier up out of the water. Calgary’s Top Made Plastics
took the winning title for that event.

Overall for the weekend’s dragon boat races, undefeated
champion Pacific Reach from Vancouver took the win for their third year
in a row in Vernon as No. 1 mix team.

In the mixed B division, Vernon-raised Deb Martin steered her team, Gung Haggis Fat Choy of Vancouver, to a gold finish Sunday.

Although Martin now lives in Vancouver, having been raised on
the shores of Kalamalka Lake gives her pride to see the dragon boat
festival reach such levels of success in her hometown.

“I am glad that Vernon has the chance to experience dragon
boating now, and I am sure it’s going to grow really big here too,” she
said
.

With double the number of participants, Samol estimates this
year’s event had a spinoff of well over $2 million during the weekend
.

“Plus talking to a lot of the teams they actually spent a
couple extra days in Vernon, some are still here now and some of them
are even staying for the rest of the week.”

Hip, Hapa and Happening: What to do in intercultural Vancouver this weekend.

Hip, Hapa and Happening:  What to do in intercultural Vancouver this weekend

My computer mother board tanked my computer time yesterday… so articles are down to a bare minimum this week, as I also head up to Vernon for the 3rd Annual Greater Vernon Dragon Boat Races.

Check out:

Enchanted Evenings summer concert series at the Dr. Sun Yat Sen Chinese Classical Gardens in Vancouver Chinatown.  This is a great way to spend a Friday evening with great musicians in an intimate setting.

Dr. Sun Yat Sen Chinese Classical Gardens.
578 Carrall St. between Pender and Keefer.

July 27

Vancouver Chinese Ensemble

The Ensemble presents to the public an eclectic repertoire that
embraces popular and traditional Chinese music as well as Western
classical and contemporary compositions.

Go see COWBOY VERSUS SAMURAI at the Firehall Arts Centre

July 20 – August 3, 2007
put on by Vancouver Asian Canadian Theatre.

I went on opening night with 15 members of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team and we all really enjoyed it.

Cowboy Versus
Samaurai is a multicultural re-telling of the Cyrano de Bergerac story,
that was retold and reset in Nelson BC, in the Steve Martin movie
“Roxanne.”  This time prepare for a Western setting of Wyoming –
complete with cowboys and samaurais. I will be writing a review from
the opening night performance.  Check out the following press releases,
and check out the website
www.vact.ca

ALL OVER THE MAP

Outdoor dance and music series
Ron Basford Park, Granville Island
Sundays at 2pm
FREE
July 29th


Feel it!  
Tango Paradiso and dancers

http://www.newworks.ca/alloverthemap.html

Last week I ended up on stage learning Celtic dancing to Punjabi-Celtic fusion music.
Barbara Clausen of New Works has created a wonderful culturally interesting summer series of dance, music and fun.  Tango Paradiso is exciting… Wish I could be there…  I started learning to play tangos on my accordion when I was 12 years old.

Toddish McWong learns Irish Step Dancing on Granville Island

Toddish McWong learns Irish Step Dancing on Granville Island

I went paddling in a marathon canoe with Gung Haggis paddler Art
Calderwood. We heard celtic fiddle music as we paddled into Alder Bay
behind Granville Island. And of course I had to check it out.

Imagine our surprise to discover the Violet Moore Irish Dancers on stage with Delhi 2 Dublin – with Kytami fiddling away!  

I
had attended the first Delhi 2 Dublin event at the 2006 Celtic
Festival, and loved the energy that Kytami brought to the stage. Delhi
2 Dublin blends celtic fiddle tunes with bhangra beats, and they performed at the Alcan Dragon Boat Festival in 2006.  Here's my story about my first Kytami/Delhi 2 Dublin experience:
my first Kytami/Delhi 2 Dublin experience on St. Paddy's Eve.

When
they asked for audience volunteers to learn ceil dancing for Bridge of Athlone…. I was there! So was Gung Haggis paddlers Steven Wong who
had been sitting in the audience. It was great fun, learning to Irish
step dance. We shall have to organize a ceil dance party for Gung
Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team, food and social club.

After I stepped off the stage and outside the Performance Works building, I met the New Works producer Barbara Clausen, who had hired dancer/choreographer Andrea Nann to do some workshops in Vancouver last year.  I love Andrea…  She worked with author Michael Ondaatje and choreographed some dances based on his works for explorASIAN in 2003.  Andrea came and performed a dance for the Save Kogawa House Nov 12 Special Concert awareness event at the Vancouver Public Library in 2005.  I think it would be fun to work together with Barbara Clausen on a Gung Haggis Fat Choy type of project.

Barabra hasput together and incredible array of Sunday events at Ron Basford Park on Granville Island as part of New Works “All Over the Map” Dance and music series.  Two weeks ago our dragon boat team paddled by Granville Island and hear the Japanese Taiko drums of Uzume Taiko.

Next up for “All Over the Map”:

July 29th – Feel It!
– Tango Paradiso Ensemble with Dancers
August 12th – Shake it!
– Guinean Dance and Music with Kocassale Dioubate and friends
August 19th – Hit it!
– Traditional Indonesian Dance and Music in partnership with the Consulate General of the Republic of Indonesia.

What do do in Kitsilano on a Sunday? Farmer's Market? Folkfest? Spanish Banks?

What do do in Kitsilano on a Sunday?
Farmer's Market? Folkfest? Spanish Banks?

Sundays can be lazy…  I haven't been rushing to go off to Church since January.  I first blamed it on being busy organizing the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinner and related events… then dragon boat paddling started… and I had to prepare my coaching lessons before going out on the boats… and then the weather got too nice to spend indoors… or maybe it's because my girlfriend makes such good tasty breakfasts on Sunday mornings?

Sunday mornings in Kitsilano… walks along the beach… shopping along 4th or Broadway… But now there is something brand new and “very Kitsilano-ish.”  After having lovely french toasts with my favorite “lazy maple” bacon, we headed over to the Kitsilano Community Centre after noon, to attend the inaugural West Side Farmer's Market.  The market is held on the Eastside parking lot behind the community centre and adjacent to the playing field.  Just East of Larch and between 12th and 11th Avenues.

I hadn't even been there 3 minutes, when I bumped into organizer Mel Lehan.  He was surveying how everything was going… acting as a good will ambassador.  He told me that the Farmer's Market had been doing well at Trout Lake Community Centre, and it was time for one on the West Side.  Mel lives close by, just over on MacDonald St.  Mel is an incredible community organizer in Kitsilano.  He helped Mel co-founded St. James Community Square, helped organize the Kitsilano sign at the south end of Burrard Bridge, plus so much more.  The Vancouver Courier interviewed Mel for this story: Mel Lehan instigated the Kitsilano Farmers Market to give West Siders a …

And then we bumped into former city councillor Fred Bass, who lives close by on Larch St. Fred was wearing his biking gear, as he bikes almost everywhere.  Last summer, I introduced Fred to dragon boat paddling, so now he introduces me to people as his “dragon boat coach.” 

There was lots of fresh produce.  I loved the smell of fresh basil… and wanted to buy some, but knew anything would be sitting in a hot car while we had dragon boat practice in the afternoon.  I checked over the freshly frozen lox… all the fresh raspberries, cherries and blueberries… I even considered buying some ostrich leather to make a new sporran.  In the end we settled on some mango jam.  $10 for a large jar.  I used to love this mango grill sauce – but now I can't find it anywhere.  I plan to mix the mango jam with other sauces to create some special marinades… yum yum!

After dragon boat practice, our team congregated at Mario's Gelato.  It's a new team tradition – go have gelato after practice.  As we were paddling back to the dock, I asked our drummer Stephen Mirowski to ask each paddler to shout out their favorite ice cream flavour.  Back came the enthusiastic answers, “Chocolate,” “Mango,” “Strawberry,” “Sorbetto,” “Durian” (I don't think they were serious…), but then neither was Wendy, when I prompted her to shout “Tequila!” to lots of cheers.  Our dragon boat team is a foodie team and it loves its ice cream.

The afternoon was coming to an end. After relaxing a bit, we decided to bicycle out to Jericho and check out the Folk Festival.  We both remarked that we hadn't seen so many vendors along the walkway before.  I was last at the Vancouver Folk Music Festival two years ago. It's a great place to find some real exciting intercultural music. People still talk about the workshops that featured Silk Road Music and Pepe Danza a few years ago.  Musicians meet… and music happens… it doesn't matter what  instrument, style, race, or culture.  Musicians come together, meet and make music.  Why can't politicians do the same thing?  Music is something that always finds ways to transcends racial and cultural boundaries.

Speaking of transcending racial boundaries… we bumped into friends Margaret Gallagher and Omar Kassis.  Margaret was taking a break from introducing acts in her role as a media host from CBC.  I told Margaret that I had caught the promos and her first show for “Flavour of the Week” the new cooking show she is doing with Fred Lee.  Blueberries are featured this week. gonna have to listen Wednesday 3:30 or Friday 7:30pm on CBC 690AM Radio… blueberries are my favorite.  I love the blueberry sorbetto at Casa Gelato.

We cycled all the way out to Spanish Banks. We checked out Spanish Banks Creek, where a salmon creek had been reconstructed with a holding pool.  Very nice… the tall trees kept the area cool.  We cycled past people having barbeques, people swimming in the water, people playing bocce, badminton and volleyball.  I remembered the sites where we held barbeques parties for the Gung Haggis dragon boat team on Canada Day weekends for the past 3 years.  Hmm… I think it's time for a BC Day weekend bbq for the team.

We watched the sun setting from the farthest point, past the last parking lot – just before Marine Drive starts to go uphill.  It's a lovely view with Georgia Straight to the West, Howe Sound with Lighthouse Park to the North, and Stanley Park and downtown Vancouver to the East.  It is peaceful and reminds me of all my family summer weekends in our little 17 foot power boat, fishing Howe Sound and Sechelt.  My dad used to launch our boat from Kitsilano's Vanier Park. 

We cycled back and to my dismay I discovered all the concession stands had closed.  It was not event 8:30 yet!  No fish & chips!  Darn.  We mosied past all the vendors again, listening to somebody singing Janis Joplin songs from the Folk Festival main stage.  Then I  saw the large video screen.  Wow!  Folk Festival finally goes 21st Century.  The images changed from performers, front view… back view… audience members… mothers holding toddlers… very cool… very folkfest!  And to top off my evening… I bought a straw cowboy hat for $5.


“Imagenes del Oriente” Mozaico Flamenco & Orchid Ensemble performance of Cafe de Chinitas at Edie's Hats on Granville Island

“Imagenes del
Oriente”

Mozaico Flamenco & Orchid
Ensemble performance of Cafe de Chinitas at Edie's Hats on Granville Island

Thursday June 14, 2007, www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com

By Todd Wong & Christine Chin

image
Kasandra La China dances Flamenco Tango for Cafe de Chinitas – photo Todd Wong

It's an incredible intimate affair with passionate flamenco music and dancing
performed by people who love what they are doing and share what they love with
the audience.   Imagine a small funky hat store in Granville
Island 's Net Loft turned
into an intimate cafe.  Fill the store with seats for a cafe setting, set
up tables of food and a bar.  Allow the Orchid Ensemble to let loose with
their incredible musicianship, set fire by the flamenco artistry of Mozaico Flamenco's Oscar and
Kasandra La China
with their troupe of hot smouldering dancers dressed in Chinese cheong sam
dresses.  Wow!

Cultural fusion has happened all around the world.  Not just in Canada ,
but also Spain , the
Mediterranean, the Silk Road … but this
event was on a richter scale!  The event by invitation only took place on
Friday, June 8th… but repeats for the public on June 15th, Friday.  Call
Edie's Hats for tickets.  Check
here for the event info: http://www.ediehats.com/events/index.html

image

Here's a review of the evening by Christine Chin:

From the moment of the first chords plucked and the last dance tapped,
I was dazzled and enchanted with it all!  Café de Chinitas is a
re-creation of 19th century Flamenco culture, as it originated from the
Gypsies, in the cafes of southern Spain . 
Flamenco style dramatically performed tonight incorporated Spanish guitar
playing, ancient erhu and zheng sounds, staccato clapping, singing, and dancing
in an intimate Van Gogh café-like richness, electrified many times over! 
The dancers moved with combined gracefulness and intensity, and those who were
not singing or dancing were clapping and shouting out words of
encouragement:  ole! baile! baile!–Dance! Dance!

image
Cafe de Chinitas: Shyiang Strong is flamenco dancing in motion- photo Todd Wong


For two days June 8 & 15 the Vancouver-based Mozaico Flamenco Dance Theatre
presents “Imagenes del Oriente”, the first of their Café de
Chinitas series, combining flamenco dance with the complementary sounds of
traditional Chinese harmonies.  A unique blend of culture, dance and
music, the founders of Mozaico Flamenco, Oscar Nieto and Kasandra (also known
as “La China ”),
are truly intercultural visionaries.  They bring together the ideas to
celebrate cultural diversity in the form of sound and performance, by
collaborating with The Orchid Ensemble to create a truly ethnic ambience and by
understanding and incorporating a cultural representation of performers,
respectively. 

Among her many titles as producer and choreographer, and Project Artist
Director for Café de Chinitas, Kasandra is known as one of the rising stars in
flamenco dance in the city.  The combination of passionate expression and
precise style draws the audience in to her world.  As Artistic Director of
Mozaico Flamenco, Oscar is an accomplished flamenco dancer, and is singer in
this project.  Their supporting dancers hail from diverse Asian and
Western nationalities and exhibit a high professionalism to the art of
Flamenco.  Peter Mole is the Flamenco Guitarist, and as a musician, plays
a large part in Vancouver ’s
Flamenco community.

The Juno-nominated Orchid Ensemble
added a distinct Asian sound to complement the dance vignettes.  The
multi-ethnic trio utilizes ancient musical instruments from China ,
such as the erhu, a long-neck 2-stringed (Lan Tung), the zheng, an elongated
wooden tube with bridges and many strings stretching over it (Gelina Jiang),
and the marimba wooden keyboard of African roots to create a harmonious dynamic
rhythm (Jonathan Bernard).


image
Cafe de Chinitas' sponsors, artistic and musical
creators: Edie Orenstein, Kasandra, Sayo Nickerson and Lan Tung – photo Todd
Wong


The Event Sponsor of the show, Edie Hats transformed its space to create an
exquisite café scene of intimacy, elegance, and warmth.  The owner Edie
Orenstein is producer of this series, “Imagenes del Oriente”,
explained that the even the particular wooden layering of the floor was just
appropriate for the dance show, and half-jokingly remarked that smoking was not
allowed in this café because she was worried about her hats!  Edie was a
spontaneous and charmed hostess, guiding us throughout the presentation.

Sitting back on our high stools, a painter and his companion a writer for the
local paper, had graciously allowed me to join them.  We were
mesmerized by the passionate display of emotion, movement and sound, that at
one point I closed my eyes to feel the show.  The interactive dimension of
the audience as patrons to the café, you were captivated by the
experience.  I and all the patrons of the café clapped resoundingly to the
inner and outer beauty of Flamenco.

image
Kevin, Leon, Christine, Edie and Todd enjoy some snacks and socializing during intermission – photo courtesy of Todd Wong

Janice Wong exhibit of monotypes at the Dundarave Print Workshop Gallery

Janice Wong exhibit of monotypes at the Dundarave Print Workshop Gallery


Janice Wong is my famous author/artist 2nd cousin-once-removed. Author of Chow: From China to Canada – Stories of Food and family. She sent me this note:

I'm
exhibiting recent monotypes at Dundarave Print Workshop Gallery (the
printmaking co-operative; I've been a member since 1997).
The exhibition opens June 7, 6-9 pm and continues until June 24.
Regular hours at the gallery are:
Wednesday through Sunday, 11-5 pm
Location: Dundarave Print Workshop Gallery 1640 Johnson Street, Granville Island, Vancouver BC

Cougar Dragons Race – Junior Dragon Boat Team for Killarney High School

Cougar Dragons Race – Junior Dragon Boat Team for Killarney High School

Killarney Secondary School in Vancouver now has a dragon boat team.  Teacher sponsor Stuart Mackinnon joined the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team earlier this year, and he fell in love with dragon boat racing…. big time!  When Stuart found out about the junior team races, he asked how to start a junior team, and we hatched a plan to gift Killarney with a dragon boat team.  How fitting that a dragon boat team, with Scottish inspirations that has put dragon boats into the St. Patrick's Day Parade, help to found and coach a junior dragon boat team for a high school with an Irish name

On June 3rd, Killarney raced its first dragon boat race. The first race was full of excitement and anxiety.  I told the team to expect to come last or second last as we were racing against better teams that would gradually end up in the A and B finals… while hopefully we would end up at the top of the C or D final.  Stuart has written up a wonderful summary of today's adventures on the Killarney Cougar Dragons website (which I am reprinting down below – but check out all the other glorious pictures and stories on it!)

But first I have to share with you that nobody before April 15th had ever been in a dragon boat before.  But on that day, 10 Killarney students came out to a Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat practice, and went back to school on Monday with the message to tell all their friends about how much fun they had had.  Then we had to wait until we had enough paddlers signed up (20) and whether or not the funding requests through the school would go through.  Finally everything was in place and the first official practice took place on Tuesday April 24th.

Every practice was a learning experience.  Many of the students had never before paddled a canoe, let alone a dragon boat.  The students had to learn how to hold a paddle, how to use it in the water, how to paddle in time, and how to paddle with power.  We had one very very challenging practice when the wind and the white capped waves threatened to push us around, but the students stayed focused and met the challenges with vigor.

Here are Stuart Mackinnon's pictures and his account of the Killarney Cougar Dragons' first race regatta!


We hit the Dragon Zone at 8:00 on Sunday morning. Everybody was excited
but just a bit apprehensive. What would the first race be like? Could
we paddle in time? Would we paddle deep and paddle hard?

With Justin Yee in the drummers seat and Coach Todd Wong steering, the Cougar Dragons hit the water for the first heat.

A
good effort, especially as the Cougar Dragons were racing against older
and more experienced teams. Re-grouping, captains Chi Hsi and Garvin
Pang, encouraged the team, while Coaches Todd Wong and Mr. Mackinnon
offered sage advice and refocused everyone.

Refocused and
re-energized the Cougar Dragons showed their metal and improved
tremendously in the second heat. Michele Shi had taken the drummers
chair and inspired the Cougar Dragons to stay focused and finish fast.
An
incredible effort in the second heat gave the team the incentive they
needed. After a very brief break it was on to the 'D' division final.

A
fabulously exciting race from start to finish, the Cougar Dragons
exceeded all of our wildest dreams, gaining 7 seconds on the previous
race and placing an unbelievably close second.

Well done
Killarney! We have shown what we are made of. We have practiced and
been successful. Can we improve? Sure, but we can now proudly bear the
honourable title of a Dragon Boat Racing team.

Congratulations
Aleck Pham, Caitlin Allum, Cherry Chen, Chi Hsi, Deborah Gee, Dipa
Barua, Eddy Ha, Garry Ly, Garvin Pang, Irene Peng, Jenny Tan, Jordan
Lee, Jordan Wong, Justin Chow, Justin Yee, Krystal Han, Michele Shi,
Sally Chan, Stanley Tsia, Taylor Yee, and Wayne Li. Thanks to Linda
Chen, and all the parents who came out to support us. An extra big THANK YOU to coach Todd Wong– without you, we wouldn't be here!

Outrigger Paddling to English Bay: Huli drills in the rain

Outrigger Paddling: Huli drills in the rain


Outrigger canoe racing is one of the fastest growing water sports on
the Pacific Coast.  Many of my paddling friends have paddled
outrigger canoes.  My friend Craig Brown has pretty well quit the
sprint racing of dragon boats, for the long distance paddling of
outriggers.  There are many clubs in Vancouver, Gibsons BC,
Okanagan Lake, Washington, Oregon, California and of course Hawaii.

The Hawaiian style canoes featued in Hawaii 5-0 opening credits are called outrigger canoes, also known as OC-6
canoes. Dragon Zone has brought in 2 six person outriggers.  I have paddled them out at the Lotus Sports Club from
Burnaby's Barnet Marine Park in years past, and I have also paddled
OC-1 and OC-2 from False Creek Racing Canoe Club on Granville
Island.  To make sure people are properly trained to use these
boats, Dragon Zone is asking its members to take orientation
courses.  I signed up for this course before I hurt my pinkie
finger.

I went out this morning for my outrigger canoe
orientation.  It was lightly raining.  I drove to Safeway and
bought waterproof bandages and a Starbucks coffee.  I had put on
about 8 waterproof bandages, hoping it would help keep my finger and
stitches dry.   The weather was cold and drizzly.  The other four people were
wearing shorts, knowing they would get wet.  I wore my running
tights, thermal long-sleeved undershirt, thermal Sugoi long sleeved
biking shirt + my paddling jacket.  I stayed warmer thany they
did.  Good choice. 

Our instructor Darby gave us an orientation identifying the
parts of the OC-6 such as the ama (pontoon), the aku (pontoon brace),
the moku (end of the pontoon brace attached to the canoe) – belonging
to a tradition of Hawaiian Outrigger Canoe tradition.   Because it was so c-o-l-d, we moved back to the Dragon Zone clubhouse to stay
warm, and Darby filled us in and described what to do for
a huli drill. 

All canoes can be tippy.  Outrigger canoes were designed to handle
the surf in Hawaii.  If an outrigger canoe tips over it is called
a huli.  Every outrigger paddler needs to know how to right the
canoe in the water, so they can get back in and get back to paddling.

We paddled from Dragon Zone, at the Southeast corner of False Creek, beside Science World. And we paddled all the way out to
English Bay – around the green and red harbour buoys marking the
entrance to False Creek (past Vanier Park and Kits Beach). It was the
longest non-stop paddle I had done in a while…

We took a
rest once west of the Cambie St. Bridge, a 2nd rest before the
Granville St. Bridge, then a 3rd rest beneath the Burrard Bridge. then
a l-o-n-g paddle out to English Bay harbour buoy markers, then all the
way back into East side of Granville Island.

We did our huli
drills just west of Cambie Bridge. We all leaned over to the right
side… knowing we would soon be in the cold False Creek water. 
Flip!  Everything was wet and cold, as I tumbled into the water in
full clothing.  I held onto my paddle and surfaced.  I swam
out and went to the front of the boat.   Darby called out
“Count!” 

“One!” I yelled, as each of us counted down our seat numbers.  The
paddlers from seats 3 and 4 climbed onto the aku then straddled on top
of the upside down canoe.  They stood on the moku, reached across
the upside down canoe hull to grab the aku.  On Darby's cue, they
leaned backwards to pull the canoe over right side up.  I swam
over beside seat one, as seats 3 and 4 climbed into the boat and
started bailing the boat.   End of huli drill #1.

Next, I climbed into seat 3, and the former seat 2 paddler climbed into
seat 4.  It would now be our turn to help right the canoe for
huli drill #2.  Again we leaned to the right side, anticipating
the cold plunge into the water.  Into the water we fell… much
less a shock this time.  I bobbed up between the akus and the ama,
beside the canoe.  I swam up under the aku, then remembered I had
to climb up onto it.  The other paddler was already straddling the
upside down canoe hull.  I climbed up, straddled the canoe hull,
then we both stood on the moku, leaned over to grab the aku… and
leaned back to pull the aku up into the air. 

Flip!  The canoe rolled over and fell right-side up.  I
fell back into the water.  To climb into the boat, I
scissor-kicked my legs and
simultaneously lifted myself up with my arms, launching myself out of
the water like a seal onto the gunwale of
the canoe.  Next job – bail out the water from the canoe. 
Seats 3 (me) and 4 bailed the canoe, while seats 2 and 5 climbed into
the canoe.  Seat 3 started bailing the canoe too.  Seats 1, 5
and 6
climbed into the canoe and started paddling us back to dock.  Half
the water was out, and seat 2 started paddling.

Climbing out of the canoe at the end of the practice, we could feel the
cold bite of the breeze.  Glad I had my running tights on. 
Dripping wet, we had a debriefing with our instructor.  We were
cold, we were wet, but we were glad we'd had this experience.  Now
we can confidently go outrigger paddling, knowing that if we ever flip
the boat in a huli, we know what to do.

Wow!  We paddled all the way out to English Bay, did 2 huli
drills, then paddled non-stop back to Dragon Zone – while bailing the
canoe.

C-R-A-Z-E-E-E-E-E-E!!!!!

Pictures from Tartan Day Eve – at Doolin's Irish Pub

Pictures from Tartan Day Eve – at Doolin's Irish Pub

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team joined the Tartan Day Eve ceremonies at Doolin's Irish Pub on April 5th.  It was a special kind of kilts night.  The team also took part in a kilt fashion show, and scotch tasting.  We also watched the Vancouver Canucks lose to Colorado. 


Todd Wong in Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team shirt, Fraser Hunting tartan with Raphael Fang wearing a black leather kilt.


Christine Van, promotions manager of Doolin's grabs the dragon boat paddle and joins the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team. (l-r) Wendy, Deb, Todd, Tzhe, Keng (front), Gerard (back) and Stuart.

http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/GungHaggisdragonboatteaminformation2007
photos/_archives/2007/4/13/2879250.html
Our Gung Haggis kilt wearers: Keng, Gerard, Tzhe, Stuart and Todd – photo Deb

Piper Rob Macdonald with mini-kilted ladies with bunny tails for Easter – photo Deb Martin

Easter Skiing at Silver Star

Easter Skiing at Silver Star


Lots of sunshine… unlimited visibility… and pretty good spring skiing on top of Silver Star- photo Brett Baker

Spring
skiing in the sunshine, what could be better exercise than paddling a
dragon boat in April?  This is the 2nd Easter that I have found
myself skiing at Silver Star.  This is where I really learned to
ski.  We used to have family ski vacations at Silver Star when I
was a kid.  Mom and Dad used to pull my brother and me out of
school for a week in February and enrol us in ski lessons.

Silver
Star has a wonderful hosting program called Ski Partners.  If you
are new to the mountain, or a single skier, you can find a ski host to
give you a tour of the mountain, or show you the best runs of the
day…. absolutely free!


Relaxing in the sunshine on top of Silver Star…

Last
year I met a very friendly man named David Todd, a transplanted Scot,
who had actually watched the CBC Gung Haggis Fat Choy television
performance special a few years ago.  We had a some great chats on
the lifts and enjoyed a round of beers later. 


by
Todd
on Sat 22 Apr 2006 02:39 AM PDT

       
  
  
  
This
year I was again greeted by David Todd.  But he suggested I go
with one of the younger ski partners, a large friendly man named Brett
Butler.  I had also met Brett last year at Long John's Pub, as
part of the Ski Partner's “debriefing session.”  I soon discovered
that Brett had grown up in Vernon and we were both the same age. 

Brett
showed me the runs off the Powder Gulch Express.  Holy Smokes and
The Face, along with Whiskey Jack and Big Dipper were some of the runs
that we enjoyed.  After that we retired to “The Den” to meet up
with David Todd, another ski partner named Don, some more skiiers…
and to watch the Vancouver Canucks beat the San Jose Sharks on the
large screen tv's!


With David Todd, Brett Baker, Don, myself, + more skiiers… having beers in “The Den” at Silver Star during “apre-ski” time.

by
Todd
on Sat 15 Apr 2006 11:54 PM PDT
Silver Star mountain.   And my guide was speaking with a
Scots accent. I asked him if he was from Glasgow, and his mouth dropped
in amazement. He asked how I knew that. I showed

by
Todd
on Tue 18 Apr 2006 12:13 AM PDT
Silver Star had been in 1977, when I was still 16 years
old. The resort has changed, and grown HUGE. My body has changed and I
can't do the same ski ballet or freestyle