In/Inter + Active

5 July 2025 – Not a theme even remotely in mind yesterday, when all this began. But then came today.

Yesterday I am increasingly grumpy as I stomp down some farther-south blocks of Quebec Street. It is all very boring. My end of Quebec is good fun; this southern stretch is bland good taste.

Until!

Inactive

I don’t assign the category, not then, but it fits. This driveway object is definitely inactive.

Finally something to look at! I am actively grateful, though I bet the neighbours are not. With an admiring glance at the one bit of this ancient Ford not under tarps…

I walk on, good humour restored.

Interactive

Today it’s once more to False Creek, and right there in Olympic Village Plaza — which years ago briefly hosted a chalk-art labyrinth — I discover a very precise maze. (Labyrinth = in, to the centre, out the same entrance/exit; maze = separate entrance & exit.)

That man is patiently walking the maze, with much back-tracking but no cheating. He succeeds, too — I can testify to this, since I watch him with admiration as I try my own skills at the challenge.

I do considerable back-tracking and brain-scratching as I go. As do these two women, following soon after me.

The exit rightly admonishes me. I did cheat, but only once, and I am unrepentant. I reward myself with Okanagan yellow cherries from the farmer’s tent just off the exit…

and dip into the bag as I double back to read the other words, back there at the entrance.

“Interactive Art by Gregory Smith,” it says. (Sorry, I can’t solve the Gregory Smith mystery.)

“Interactive Art.” I like this concept. And, as mysterious Gregory Smith surely intended, it here applies to physical interaction, feet on maze, and not to the cerebral/emotional interaction we have with any work of art.

I find myself applying the concept more broadly. Human physical interaction with inanimate objects.

For example, “Interactive Books.”

All those community take-one-leave-one bookstands, each one brimming with books left by the active choice of individual local donors and taken away again by someone else.

Yesterday, at Main & East 41st, this trilingual welter of options in a kiosk run by someone in the adjacent apartment building:

Look at the range — Hemingway to Lévi Strauss; bios of both David Bowie & St. Paul; the cruelty of depression but also the mystery of wholeness; and French and Spanish, photographic art for the former (perhaps the Drummondville museum) and US political analysis for the latter.

Farther north on Main, a table inside Sweet Thea Bakery:

Merely (!) bilingual this time, but again, what a range: Peter Carey, Amor Towles, John Irving, Jane Smiley… And Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s 1762 treatise on education. And a bathroom reader.

Earlier in today’s False Creek walk, yet another example, run by the Creekside Community Garden people…

with impressive (& trilingual) variety in its limited selection.

Vegetarian cookbook; an Italian journalist’s challenge to the accepted view of Italian resistance during WWII; the francophone guide to this year’s Canadian Pride celebrations, complete with a “tartlette au buerre” reference on the cover; even a talking words factory for the kiddies.

(Later, in retrospect, I decide the interactive maze of course led me to interactive books. Winnipeg author Carol Shields followed her 1995 Pulitzer Prize winning The Stone Diaries with her 1997 tribute to maze-building, Larry’s Party.)

Still dipping into those yellow cherries, I head for the little footbridge at the west end of Olympic Village Plaza. And that’s where I discover…

“Interactive Rocks.”

People celebrating summer warmth, each other — and low tide! — on the stepped stones to the south of the bridge…

and hanging out on convenient boulders here on the north.

I’m warm, but not too warm, and nicely cherry-fuelled. I keep walking, past the Spyglass Place dock, past Stamp’s Landing, all the way to Leg in Boot Square.

Where I discover…

“Interactive Music.”

Today, unexpectedly & exceptionally, there’s a live trio of Celtic fiddlers in the square.

We are transported to Cape Breton. We are all, young and old, jigging away in our chairs.

The cherries are now in my backpack. I remind myself not to lean back. Turning cherries into cherry purée is not an interaction I care to discover.

Riprap! (and other discoveries)

7 June 2025 – Having walked down Heather Street, right to the False Creek Seawall, I am — not surprisingly — at the Heather Civic Marina. Which — also not surprisingly — is full of gently rocking boats.

I am not interested in the boats. I look left, where my feet will next take me…

and my mind bounces off most of what I see. Bounces off the low tide, the prow of a boat, the Seawall pathway, the bench in the bend of that pathway, and the collection of blue café umbrellas in Leg in Boot Square just ahead. My mind lands squarely on all that rock.

That sloping expanse of rock.

Riprap!

I grin at the rocks, mouthing the word.

I am surely influenced by Ana’s recent posts in her Anvica’s Gallery blog, in which she pays tribute to Wonderful Words. Most recently, to “ababol” — local slang, in her part of Spain, for “poppy.” She knows the correct Spanish for “poppy” is “amapola,” but she prefers “ababol.” Why? “It’s more fun.”

That’s my attitude to “riprap.” The fun you can have, with those two short syllables! Roll the r’s (Rrrrip-rrrap). Or pop the p’s (Rippp! Rappp)!

For me, though, it’s more than the fun of word games. It’s time travel.

Like Colonel Aurelio Buendía, remembering the day his father took him to discover ice, so I stand here on the Seawall, remembering the day I learned the word “riprap.” I was typing up some handwritten notes for a friend, and dissolved in giggles at a word I couldn’t read but deciphered as something like… “riprap.” Well, it couldn’t be that, could it, that’s not a word. So I said rude things about his horrible handwriting. And he patiently explained the word and its application — loose rock placed so to prevent erosion and preserve structural integrity.

For example… along the maritime edge of the False Creek Seawall.

Though Aurelio Buendía got to discover ice, the memory only surfaced as he faced a firing squad. Now, in much happier circumstances, my memory & I set out to discover riprap as I continue my walk toward Granville Island.

Vegetation has already discovered the riprap. All those crevices, just waiting to host whatever might be blowing in the wind.

From tiny, tenacious growth I can’t identify…

to shrubs and tall spikes of aconite, escapees from planted gardens.

A crow forages, for whatever he might find…

and I, initially taking in yet another sweep of vegetation, suddenly notice a tiny turquoise medallion, set in the Seawall ledge.

Which leads me to other discoveries, this bright breezy day.

It is one more marker in the provincial Control Survey system, a database of coordinates, elevations & related information archived for public access & use. The word “survey” flips me into more time travel. Almost 100 years ago, my dad spent two university summers as part of a survey team paddling the rivers & lakes of northern Saskatchewan.

The Seawall itself invites time travel. At the appropriate spot, signage shows us the unobstructed 2017 view across the water and through the city, right up to The Lions (two iconic mountain peaks, now more often called The Twin Sisters). It is, the signage announces, a protected view.

And yes, today in 2025, there it still is.

Right at the eastern edge of Charleson Park, more signage. This one a warning.

I am bemused. Warning? Are the elderly armed & dangerous? As I play with this very entertaining possibility, I hear the sound of approaching cyclists and a happy voice cries, “Well! That looks good!” The voice belongs to the man pedalling a trishaw, with two elderly passengers on the seat in front of him. A second trishaw follows. Laughter all ’round.

No wonder they approve of the sign — Cycling Without Age is a Canadian charity whose volunteers take local seniors (and their families and friends) out for a spin.

From elderly to young, from sturdy trishaw to tiny bicycle: Polkadot Helmet Missy & I pause halfway through Charleson Park…

to watch a City maintenance man wait for his colleagues before attempting to yoick that heavy fence section out of the way.

More walking, more discoveries. Including the Charleson Park sign that reminds us the pretty pond behind it is a seasonal pond, and it is meant to dry up in summer, and that’s okay. (Got it?)

And then I’m right under the Granville Street bridge, looking yet again at boats bobbing in the water, and yet again I am not focused on the boats.

I’m looking beyond, at that bright blue horizontal line of signage that placards the False Creek Fishermen’s Wharf, with its moorings and facilities for independent commercial fishers, and a wharf where the public can buy their catch.

More precisely, I’m focused on the pale blue rectangle, there on the left, just off all that bright blue.

That’s the old shipping container that now houses Go Fish — the fish purchased right there on the wharf, served up with chips and other delights, both trad & less so. They take no reservations, offer no indoors seating, and there is always a line-up.

Later, with my grilled wild salmon & salad, I plonk myself in one of those green bucket chairs, and enjoy my fish. And the view. And a bit of a rest.

And then… I walk back east.

The high route, this time, not the Seawall. It climbs me into the upper elevations of Charleson Park, all forest and dappled bark-chip trails…

and nary a chunk of riprap in sight.

That’s fine. I’ve had my moment.

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.

  • 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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