We Pivot

3 September 2024 – Yesterday, Monday, was the pivot.

Holiday Monday, Labour Day, and good-bye to summer. One season ends; a new one begins — kiddies go back to school, organizations launch fall schedules, our clothing is suddenly no longer / once again appropriate.

I do myself a Monday loop down around my end of False Creek. Me plus half the city. We are at play!

Cyclists stop to buy yerba mate from a tricycle-based vendor…

a lone kayaker veers toward the Creekside Paddling Centre…

a busker sets up shop outside Science World…

but, oh, not everybody has a holiday.

These two are hard at work…

turning the white railing white again.

Over at Plaza of Nations, Batch (a pop-up shipping container bar) is closed for the day…

but right opposite, on the other side of the Seawall pathway, Alien E-Bike Rentals is open for business.

Locals may depend on their own bikes, or their own two feet, but visitors like what the six-language website tells them: rent a bike for two, or three, or even five hours, and loop your way around the whole Seawall.

Any day, the basketball courts in Coopers’ Park resound with the thunk of bouncing balls.

Sometimes — as in, a moment from now — they also ring with yelps of triumph, when someone sinks his shot. Look slightly above & to the left of the net. See? That ball is on its way.

It’s not just humans, pivoting from one season to another. We only do it because nature leads the way.

As I climb the incline ramp at the north end of Cambie Bridge, I look between the levels, and there it is…

colour! Our very own Trooping of the Colour.

It’s not yet officially fall, here in Canada. That arrives with the Fall Equinox, this year at 8:43 a.m. on Sunday, 22 September.

So: officially, no. But viscerally, in our bones, in our blood, in the quickened rhythm of our day? Oh yes.

Fall is here.

Love & Death & All of Us

31 August 2024 – Post-COVID yay! we can travel again. But, whoa, what’s going on? World-wide, attitudes to tourists have changed. Some locations are now actively hostile and others are imposing stiff restrictions.

British Columbia still puts out the welcome mat. However, as signage next to the Information kiosk on Bowen Island demonstrates…

the province now expects more from its visitors than money.

Want to be a better lover? Click for info about impacts and solutions that are relevant well beyond BC boundaries.

Full Colour

26 August 2024 – A full-colour day that starts in monochrome. With A Monochrome Journey. Italicized like that because it is the short form of a long exhibition title at the Vancouver Art Gallery, and that’s where I start my day.

I haven’t come to the VAG specifically for this exhibition. I plan to look at some of whatever is on at the moment… and then… see what happens next.

What catches my attention, right there on the ground floor, is the dramatic entrance to this dramatic Monochrome show: +100 works by +50 artists, all from the permanent collection, exploring “the enduring appeal” of black and white and everything in between.

In the room devoted to black…

I am struck, not just by the works, but also by the way ambient lighting can throw shadows that play with the image — here adding dimensions and tones to Untitled (Black Books), by Rachel Whiteread (1996-96).

More shadows in the room devoted to white…

but this time intentional, the result of precise lighting for the acrylic installation Untitled, by Robert Irwin (c. 1965-67).

It is only an hour or so later, as I finally turn to leave the show, that I realize the impact of my immersion in monochrome. I look through the doorway, and I don’t read it as pragmatic way-finding…

instead, I see an art installation. I see myself about to enter an immersive greyscale experience.

But then I walk out the door into Robson Square, and I return to the full-colour world. I am walloped by it!

Colour in the acrylic letters of art overhead…

colour all around, in the vivid Marché signage and the foodstuffs and crafts that fill the participants’ booths…

and emotional colour also, let’s call it — the laughter and energy of people enjoying the possibilities of a late-summer afternoon.

There are free hugs on offer, here in the Marché area…

and an impromptu exercise class just beyond, tucked into one corner of the lowest level of Robson Square…

all safe and sound thanks to the gigantic red Spring (Alan Chung Hung, 1981) that apparently holds the upper level in place.

Thank you, monochrome.

The calm austerity of that earlier focus has me hyper-alert to everything that surrounds me now: colour, shapes, sounds.

The verticality of Hornby Street, as i start my way back cross-town…

the horizontality of False Creek, once I’ve reached its Seawall…

and the pop-up exuberance of this grand finale in David Lam Park.

It is the end of the two-day Cascade RSVP 2024 bike race — as in Ride Seattle Vancouver Party; as in ride from Seattle to Vancouver and then party. They’ve had the RSV; P is imminent.

I stick with the Seawall for a while longer, then cut up through this mews…

and catch a bus for home.

Surveillance

23 August 2024 – There are eyes upon you, as you wander Quebec and its cross-streets, in around Hillcrest Park.

Baby eyes…

feline eyes…

lepidoptera eyes…

(oh, the depths of schmetterling)…

and, of course, electronic smart-home eyes.

Though perhaps this home owner is secretly counting on Goof Bird, not Telus?

At WITT’s End

21 August 2024 – I am metaphorically at my wit’s end, as I step down from Brentwood Town Centre onto a busy street…

and, it turns out, geographically at WITT’s end as well.

This Burnaby shopping mall is the south end of Willingdon Linear Park, which the website tells me runs 13 blocks along Willingdon north to Hastings Street. I only later learn it is also a WITT project — a Walking Infrastructure To Transit project, part of a civic program to improve pedestrian access to public transit.

I might have enjoyed the pun, had I known it at the time.

Nahhh. Much more likely, as I turned the corner onto Willingdon Ave., that I would have simply continued to feel at wit’s end (“confused, uncertain what to do next”).

Does this look like any kind of park to you? No signage, just a double-wide sidewalk.

Well, okay. I head north.

And it begins to improve.

Some undulations, some landscaping, some diversions.

I begin to see bright side panels…

eco-sculptures…

and micro-parks, one with a fountain and generous seating…

and one with a climbing sculpture.

The bus stops have marshland scenes etched into the glass…

and utility boxes are photo-wrapped with artwork.

City workers are out in force…

though, while I applaud civic clean-up, I do wonder about the utility of simply blowing leaves from one place to another.

One last side panel, its blue curves echoing the curves of the Coast Range mountains beyond…

and I’m almost at Hastings, northern end of the park.

A final amusement.

I do like this! Mad puppy-dog biplane pilot careening through startled geese: thank you Emily Zimmerman. Created in 2010, her mural long predates the linear park. It’s also a lot more fun.

I think about it later, the lack of fun. And yes, maybe I am over-thinking. It’s just that… I find I am still at wit’s end about this experience. It was so lifeless! I bet you noticed that, in my photographs.

I did meet other pedestrians, people did walk and roller-blade the pathway, but nobody paid any attention to it, or its amenities. The fountain was turned off. No child bounced in the climbing sculpture. Nobody sat on a bench. It was emotionally inert. Chilly.

Mad puppy-dog biplane pilot was a relief, up there at Hastings: it warmed me up again.

Odd.

“Heritage”… and Heritage

17 August 2024 – Nothing as grand as the slippery nature of abstract nouns is on my mind. Not even the nature of heritage, within that slippery world.

I’ve simply decided to go look at the very specific, very tangible, very proper-noun Barclay Heritage Square that I’ve just noticed to the right of the caption WEST END on my Downtown Vancouver Walking Map. My route develops from there. I continue down Nicola to English Bay and along the Seawall to (bottom-centre of map) the David Lam Dock on False Creek.

It’s only after all that, that I have my moment of linguistic/philosophical fuss about the meaning of words.

Back to the beginning.

I’m at Broughton & Haro, north-east corner of Barclay Heritage Square, an enclave designated under the National Trust for Canada that preserves 12 Edwardian-era homes and woods in combination with an adjacent City park.

The houses are lived in…

and the woodland now contains a children’s playground, used by residents…

as well as families from the modern condo towers you can see in the background — the kind of towers now increasingly dominant in the West End environment.

For no particular reason, I make Nicola my route on south to the water. It rewards me immediately. I’m already a fan of Little Free Library kiosks & their unofficial equivalents, so I gurgle happily at the sight of this Pet Food Pantry, just past Barclay.

Wet & tinned dog & cat food are welcome donations, ditto dog & cat toys and accessories, but please nothing large and nothing for other small animals: “We don’t have the space.”

One more block, and here’s the Vancouver Mural Festival 2020 tribute (by Annie Chen & Carson Ting) to Joe Fortes, the City’s first official lifeguard.

In 1986 he was also named Vancouver’s Citizen of the Century by the Vancouver Historical Society, and for good cause — a Trinidadian immigrant, Fortes spent years unofficially guarding the beach and rescuing people before receiving the official appointment.

The Nelson-to-Comox block down Nicola is friendly underfoot…

and bright with flowers on vintage apartment balconies overhead.

The day grows steadily warmer. I am ever more appreciative of the shade offered by street-side trees, sometimes combined with lush ferns, as in this display near Pendrell…

and sometimes high over bare earth, as in this half-block interruption of Nicola’s vehicular status between Pendrell and See-em-ia Lane.

Yet even barren like this, it is a welcome space, a little spot just for people, very neighbourhood. The lane title is part of the charm: like other area lanes, it honours area history, in this case Mary See-em-ia, granddaughter of Chief Joe Capilano and a Squamish Nation matriarch.

A reminder as I cross Davie Street of real-estate trends…

and later a reminder, down at Harwood, of developer/cultural handshakes, here in the form of this Beyond the Mountains mural commissioned by the builder from Heiltsuk artist KC Hall.

On downhill to the water. I’m now at the foot of Nicola, about to emerge onto Beach Avenue, bordering Second Beach.

Apartments of various eras face the water, dozing in the afternoon sun…

and “open-air museum” installations, courtesy of the Vancouver Biennale, are as much part of the beach scenery as flowers, palm trees and sand.

I first pass Dennis Oppenheim’s Engagement

and then, as I walk east along the Seawall…

I come to my all-time favourite, Bernar Venet’s 217.5 Arc X 13.

Not much shade, here on the Seawall.

I pause under handy palm trees to cool off, agree with a bemused pair of Austrian tourists that outdoor palms are somehow not what we expect to see in Canada…

loiter under the next cluster of friendly palms to watch a mother finally tear her toddler away from these lifeboats and lead the child on down to the water…

and then buy myself a rum & raisin waffle cone at the Sunset Beach concession stand…

and find yet more shade in which to enjoy it.

I even manage to eat it all without dribbling any down my arm. (Live long enough, and you acquire a few Life Skills.)

Enough blazing sunshine. I forsake the Seawall to climb uphill to Beach Ave. and the shade offered by its trees. It gives me a distant view of Squamish artist Chrystal Sparrow’s mural on the Sunset Beach sport court, currently being repainted…

and a close-up of the mossy walls of the Vancouver Aquatic Centre as I carry on east.

But then, somewhere between George Wainborn Park and David Lam Park — bottom-centre of that first Walking Map image, if you care to scroll back up — I return to the Seawall and False Creek.

Where I am first amused by this tiny, very unofficial, birdhouse hanging from an official Seawall tree…

and soon afterwards hopeful of a ferry ride home from the David Lam Dock.

Look at this: two ferries converging on the dock (left & right, the rival Aquabus and False Creek lines respectively), eager to pick me up.

But, no, we are at cross-purposes. I want east; they are both headed west to Granville Island.

They assure me an east-bound boat will come by soon. One does. It then steers a slow zigzag route, meeting rider needs — which gives me time to think about “heritage.”

What counts, what doesn’t? In today’s walk, did only the very official and historically designated Barclay Heritage Square count? Or all of it?

The online Cambridge Dictionary gives me the answer I realize I want: heritage consists of “features belonging to the culture of a particular society.”

Yes. With that kind of latitude, it all counts.

From the designated Edwardian homes to the Fortes mural to “hi” on a sidewalk and a Pet Food Pantry; from ice cream and real-estate trends and Biennale art to lifeboats and palm trees and a silly little birdhouse and rival ferry lines.

All of it.

One Pole, Two Pole

15 August 2024 – Only later do I realize I have been offered a Dr. Seussian experience, right here at the corner of East 7th & Main.

It will have me chanting my rewrite of the tag line from his 1968 Foot Book: “One foot, two foot, red foot, blue foot.”

But not yet.

At the moment, as I approach Main on East 7th, all I notice is the message tacked to an aged wooden telephone pole. It catches my eye because, one, it is the only message, and, two, it looks polite & quiet & official & totally unlike everything else that bombards us from utility poles.

So I take a closer look.

I am charmed! This is surely the most polite “Post no bills” warning in the entire universe. Not just polite, but whimsical… and successful. This weary telephone pole is being allowed to rest in peace.

I am sufficiently intrigued to read the small print, and resolve to look up City of Vancouver Ordnance [sic] #17-B-9883 once I reach home. What are the official rules for postering, I wonder.

As Mr. Google points out, this very polite notice is marked by a typo, as well as by whimsy. “Ordnance” = guns, artillery & the like. Accept the suggested revised spelling, and all is well. “Ordinance” = a piece of legislation enacted by a municipal government.

Even then, missing “i” firmly in place, I still can’t find #17-B-9883 online.

But I do find a cheerful discussion of the City’s poster cylinder locations, complete with a handy map. No need to abuse wooden poles any longer! Tape your announcements to a purpose-built metal cylinder instead, with the City’s blessing.

I navigate the map, and discover there is an official poster-pole right next to the wooden pole at E7th & Main.

Screenshot

I zip back out in the fading light to have a look.

And there it is. The approved, yes-you-can, post-all-you-want pole, covered in notices.

“One pole, two pole,” I chant. “Don’t pole, do pole!”

I bet Dr. Seuss would approve.

White Bunnies

11 August 2024 – I’m in behind City Centre Artist Lodge, once again epicentre for the Vancouver Mural Festival, now in its final day.

Much to my surprise, I’m not much engaged with VMF official activities this year, but the hoop-la does have me noticing things with a sharper eye — colours, shapes, energy, juxtapositions — as i weave through the adjacent alleys.

I don’t yet know it, but I am curating my very own collection of white bunnies.

Starting with reflections + fence + signage + curb stones in the north/south alley right behind the Artist Lodge…

followed by resting man + dog + red-X motif + pop-up art display in the east/west alley between Main/Quebec/5th/4th…

which brings the white-bunny concept into my life.

It’s the framed quote, bottom-right in the line-up: “Art is a white bunny in a scrap metal yard.”

I like this! Deliberate bunnies, and “found” bunnies as well — whatever adds scamper & bounce to the streetscape.

Right opposite, same alley: four chairs lined up in a deliberate and carefully positioned tribute to the looming chair in the gigantic wall mural behind them…

one detail in Andy Dixon’s 2017 VMF mural Red Studio (After Matisse), his 90-foot-high portrayal of his own Vancouver studio.

After that, my white bunnies are whatever & wherever delights me, whether day-glo construction guidelines on the sidewalk before me at Quebec & East 4th…

or white communications discs high on a roof beyond me, punctuating the tower to their left…

or an eye-level fluorescent X just south of Quebec & East 2nd. (Only later, at home, do I notice the red-X motif in the alley with the pop-up gallery, and realize there must be a connection.)

One final white bunny, down by False Creek.

A multi-coloured white bunny, mind you — art is inclusive! — painted by Nature, and proclaiming a message that seems hard to believe, this hot mid-August day.


Fall is on its way.

Crisp to Calm

6 August 2024 — One day all crisp shadows down a local alley…

and the next, off to the “green calming atmosphere” promised in this sign welcoming visitors to Camosun Bog.

The bog is a tiny, boardwalked ecosystem at one north-east knob of sprawling Pacific Spirit Regional Park. I always choose the same entry point: south from West 16th Ave., down one final residential block of Camosun Street.

And here I am. I set foot on that entry stretch of boardwalk, and I am already calm.

Slower of pace, quieter of thought, I duck under an arch of Mountain Ash and walk around the bend beyond…

to pause at what I think of as “The Sentry” — a nurse stump adorned each season with whatever that season and its weather have to offer.

I next pause at the bog itself, now diminishing in the heat of mid-summer from its abundance of early spring.

Then, I follow the boardwalk.

The sphagnum mosses are beginning to bleach, responding to the same heat that shrinks the bog, but there are still bursts of vivid greenery.

Sometimes I need to peer over the inner railing of the boardwalk perimeter…

but any old time, I can just look over the outer railing at the forest beyond.

Loop complete, side trips complete, I retrace my steps to walk back under the arch of Mountain Ash. This time toward sidewalks, pavement, cars and traffic. Lots of grey awaits me. Lots of noise.

I’m not yet ready for West 16th! I walk eastward on quiet residential streets instead.

And I find myself at another tiny enclave of calm.

Right there, across that intersection, under those street-side trees: some Muskoka chairs grouped companionably around a little table.

I cross. I check it out. I discover that, just like the entry sign for Camosun Bog, the table welcomes visitors.

Though with an admonition.

I obey.

I take a seat. And when I depart, I leave the furniture where I found it.

Water Is Water

31 July 2024 – Water is water!

So you drink it where you find it.

Even if it’s at an Olympic Plaza misting station…

in a dog bowl…

and you’re a gull.

  • WALKING… & SEEING

    "Traveller, there is no path. Paths are made by walking" -- Antonio Machado (1875-1939)

    "The voyage of discovery is not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes" -- Marcel Proust (1871-1922)

    "A city is a language, a repository of possibilities, and walking is the act of speaking that language, of selecting from those possibilities" -- Rebecca Solnit, "Wanderlust: A History of Walking"

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