PDF Version - Western Financial Group
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PDF Version - Western Financial Group
inside: shooting the birds nose Art restorAtion our lAst pioneer West THE WESTERN CANADA QUARTERLY Western Financial Group ...because we live here. winter 2008/2009 Canadian Publications Mail Agreement 40030911 BC’s year-round Surfing Paradise WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 1 plus: Magic mules, quilting, foiling an octopus attack, fishing with Gordie Howe and more. 12/10/08 9:23:54 AM WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 2 12/10/08 9:24:10 AM Do you have a device, a concoction, a service you’re ready to let loose? Do you need recognition, startup money or expertise to get it off the ground? If so, submit your business concept to the CalgaryInc Innovation “Pitch Fest” by February 27, 2009 for your chance to be selected to present your idea to a panel of experts. Pitches will be broadcast on TV and online with the winners being featured in CalgaryInc’s June Innovation issue. No idea is too trivial or frivolous. Enter today at www.calgaryinc.ca/pitchfest West 3 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 3 12/10/08 9:24:13 AM GLOBAL RAINMAKER BUZZED ABOUT CHOPPERS NEW CLIENT MATCHMAKER LOOK WHAT JUST FLEW IN COOL SPIN CYCLE PEDALLING LOCAL TRAILS BVS`SO`S P`]YS`a MAY 2008 ROPING IN ALSO INSIDE: UNTAMED BURBS IDENTITY FRAUD Beware of PIN poachers + PLUS: CLEANING UP at the $1,000 car wash BIG PROFITS on the big screen MOWING OVER the competition $4.95 BLAST FROM THE PAST MAPPING IT OUT OBSESSIVE STALKER CHECKING OUT ILLUSTRIOUS ALUMNI TOP 40S’ GLOBAL DOMINATION TRACKING DOWN ELUSIVE ALUMNI SEPTEMBER 2008 /\RbVS\ bVS`SO`S P`]YS`a SPECIAL 10th ANNIVERSARY ISSUE 40 Top UNDER 40 ONLY George Gosbee President resident and CEO Tristone Capital Inc. $4.95 ! 0gQ][^O`W\U`ObSaO\RQ]dS`OUSOP`]YS`aSO`QVSabVS[O`YSbb] ¿\Rg]cSfOQbZgbVS`WUVbW\ac`O\QSObbVS`WUVb^`WQS/b>SOQS6WZZa eSY\]ebVOb]TTS`W\UQV]WQSdOZcSO\R^`]TSaaW]\OZORdWQS[OYST]` OeSZZW\T]`[SRQ]\ac[S`eVWQVWaeVgeS¸`S^`]cRb]PS`S^`SaS\bSR PgbVSESabS`\4W\O\QWOZ5`]c^]TP`]YS`a7b¸aOP]cbST¿QWS\Qg ÀSfWPWZWbgO\RcZbW[ObSZg¿\RW\Ug]c`^S`TSQb¿bEWbV]c`RWdS`aS ^`]RcQbZW\SY\]ebVObeSQO\bOYSQO`S]TWbOZZ/aYg]c`ESabS`\ 4W\O\QWOZ5`]c^`S^`SaS\bObWdSOP]cb>SOQS6WZZab]ROg VISIT WWW.CALGARYINC.CA, CALL 403-240-9055 EXT. 262 OR EMAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS @REDPOINTMEDIA.CA WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 4 > 3 /13 67::A7<AC@/<13 1=; =C@>=:71G7AE=@97<54=@G=C 12/10/08 9:24:15 AM West THE WESTERN CANADA QUARTERLY • Winter 2008/2009 Features 12 The art of war Even in the middle of a desperate war, pilots and ground crews decorated their aircraft with humour. Wendy Dudley visits Clarence Simonsen who’s restoring their “nose art”. 20 Surfing’s hot in cold Tofino Diane Selkirk, not a surfer, decides to give it a shot on a cold, grey day in the chilly Pacific waters off our far West Coast. Turns out, she’s not all that good at it but she loves it anyway. 26 Dyed in the wool addicts Diana Skoglund reports on the enthusiastic westerners who share a strange addiction to the fine art of quilting. They just can’t stop, which is great for the rest of us. 32 Lullaby of birdland Photographer Mike Sturk finally got his chance to shoot the birds at BC’s Reifel sanctuary. Bruce Masterman writes about the sanctuary and Mike shares his photographs. 38 Standing Tall Dan Tallman started working during the Depression and built a huge chunk of the West’s transportation infrastructure. Judy Waytiuk introduces us to one of our last pioneers. rr Departments 10 Roundup Mules win prestigious horse event … wacky car art … giant octopus attack in BC … trappers whoop it up in The Pas … fishing guide’s boat becomes a Howe collectible … Canada’s crocus capital … reptiles and bugs … revisiting SK’s last steamboat … Terry Fox’s van rides again. 32 26 42 42 Simply Delicious Cinda Chavich’s onion ideas. 46 Health Matters Nurse Angela Morrison’s advice about frostbite. 48 Backgrounder The bad guys in WWII decorated their planes, too … often with the same Disney images our guys used … rebuilding historic trestles … finally, a report on our movie project. 50 Editor Raves Photo: Taylor Kennedy Freaking out about freaking out. On the Cover A lonely surfer calls it a day at Long Beach in Vancouver Island’s Pacific Rim National Park. 49 22 12 10 22 West 5 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 5 12/10/08 9:24:22 AM West Western Financial Group Published by Western Financial Group, 1010 - 24th Street SE, High River, AB T1V 2A7 All rights reserved. For permission to reprint articles, excerpts, or photographs, please e-mail bill.rogers@westernfinancialgroup.net Send Letters to the Editor to above address or e-mail dena.degrofft@westernfinancialgroup.net PUBLISHER: Scott Tannas GENERAL MANAGER: Bill Rogers EDITOR: Mike McCormick ASSIGNMENT EDITOR: Bruce Masterman ASSOCIATE EDITOR: Dena DeGrofft CONTRIBUTORS: Bruce Campbell, Cinda Chavich, John Dietz, Wendy Dudley, Taylor Kennedy, Mike Kerr, Bruce Masterman, Julie McLaughlin, Angela Morrison, Jane Mundy, Carey Shaw, Diane Selkirk, Clarence Simonsen, Diana Skoglund, Mike Sturk, Jared Sych, Hans Tammemagi, Judy Waytiuk, Shel Zolkewich Publications mail agreement No. 40030911 Return Undeliverable Canadian Addresses to: Redpoint Media Group Inc. Suite 105, 1210-20th Avenue SE Calgary, AB T2G 1M8 SUBSCRIPTIONS Subscriptions in Canada: $12.00 plus GST for one year, $22.00 plus GST for two years. Payment may be made by cheque, money order, Visa or MasterCard to: RedPoint Media Group, #105, 1210 - 20 Ave. S.E., Calgary, Alberta, T2G 1M8 Phone: 403-240-9055 ext. 262 E-mail: subscriptions@redpointmedia.ca rr Produced by: REDPOINT MEDIA GROUP INC. Suite 105, 1210-20th Avenue SE Calgary, AB T2G 1M8 ExECUTIvE vICE-PRESIDENT: Gary Davies CREATIvE DIRECTOR: Anders Knudsen CORPORATE PROjECT MANAGER: Kelly West ART DIRECTOR: Teresa Johnston PRODUCTION ARTIST: Rikki Maniel SALES MANAGER: Karen Hounjet ACCOUNT MANAGER: Deise MacDougall PRODUCTION MANAGER: Mike Matovich PRODUCTION COORDINATOR: Jamie Buechler PRINTING: Teldon Print Media CIRCULATION & DISTRIBUTION MANAGER: Rob Kelly SUBSCRIBER SERvICES MANAGER: Laurena Pollock 6 West . iSSUe 15 . winter 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 6 12/10/08 9:24:24 AM Welcome Welcome back to West with a story in the magazine and that at least helped to focus the discussions. We frame all of our covers and hang them on the wall of a corridor in our office building here in High River. There are 14 hanging there now (the surfer will be the 15th). The other day, our editor happened to meet one of our computer whizzes in front of the display and he took the opportunity to ask her “Which one of the covers do you like best?” She carefully considered each image and thought about her answer, then said “The ducks. No question. Best cover ever.” People on the other side of the Rockies probably heard Mike’s laugh. All of which is a long-winded way of inviting you to weigh in on the discussion. If you like a cover, please let us know why, ditto if you don’t. You can write or email your thoughts to Dena DeGrofft. Her addresses are just over there on your left. Hope you enjoy this issue (especially the cover.) Correction: In our last issue on page 38, there was a photo in the White Sturgeon story that we identified as the view from the Fraser River. It wasn’t, but it was close. The view is from Harrison Lake which connects to the Fraser through the short Harrison River. All the best, Photo: Diane Selkirk T he last thing we do before we put an issue of West to bed is make a decision about the cover. We usually have three or four options to consider and everybody has an opinion, which is great. I tend to prefer cowboy images, the old days. Other people like families, kids, dogs, birds, food, cattle, mountains, prairie, fish, boats, old buildings, etc. When we started, our editor picked an image out of the blue, something that had no direct connection to a story in the magazine. Our first cover was a picture of a farmer in a field of canola. Our second showed a woman with her small son “talking” to a horse in a grove of trees. All went well until our 5th issue when Editor Mike wanted to run a photo of a pair of flying ducks. With one exception, none of the other seven or eight people involved in the discussion liked that photo much (or at all) but nobody had a better idea at the time, so we reluctantly went with the ducks. But the floodgates had opened and now every West cover choice is the result of a lot of back and forth discussion. Shortly after the duck brouhaha, the decision was made to run cover photos that have something to do Scott Tannas President and CEO West 7 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 7 12/10/08 9:24:26 AM ROUND UP Photo: Terry Fox Foundation Still rolling 28 years later T erry Fox’s support van from his Marathon of Hope in 1980 was refurbished recently and enlisted in a good cause last summer. Fox, from Port Coquitlam, BC had lost a leg to cancer. He caught the public’s attention when he tried to run across Canada to raise money for cancer research. He started in St. John’s, Newfoundland, but his worsening condition forced a halt in Thunder Bay, Ontario. He died in 1981, a month short of his 22nd birthday. This year, the van completed the Marathon for him, St. John’s to Victoria, with dozens of stops along the way, from May 25 to September 12. One of the stops was in Okotoks, Alberta on Labour Day where Tracy Watson remembered Terry Fox. “To think that he ate and slept there while he was attempting his run is amazing,” she said. Rolly Fox, Terry’s father, had joined the van in Winnipeg. He will never forget the first time he saw the van. “We were parked at a service station in Preston, just outside of Halifax, and around the corner came the van. Shortly after that came Terry. It was a very emotional moment.” W Photo: Gerald Kornelsen Terry Fox’s van: World’s largest crocus The prairie crocus is the first native wildflower to bloom as the snow is melting, usually around April 15th. Visitors to Arden, Manitoba in the second half of April will find thousands of crocus blossoms in a four acre natural prairie site situated, whimsically we imagine, near the oxcart monument, clear across town from the giant crocus. Still, spring is flowery in Arden, as crocus blossoms are soon followed by a parade of native plants and wildflowers that lasts until the serious snow starts to fall. W rrwrr Boat Signing Captain Nemo, call your office. Last November, underwater photographer Derek Holzapfel slipped into the water off Pender Island, BC and went deep. On his way down, he snapped a friendly whitespotted greenling and an alabaster nudibranch. Then, at 21-metres, as he focused on a vermillion star, a shadow emerged from the darkness. Suddenly, tentacles wrapped around his arm and chest and began to drag him deeper. He was in the grips of a giant Pacific octopus, about three metres (10 feet!) from tip to tip. Octopuses like this have been known to kill sharks. As the tentacles tightened, Holzapfel felt their enormous power and knew he was in a life and death struggle. After what seemed an eternity, the octopus released its grip, who knows why?, and Holzapfel shot to the surface. Octopus attacks are extremely rare, but none of Holzapfel’s diving buddies joined him when he returned to the same spot a week later. W As far as we know, Nick Tanner of Tanner Trout Tours in High River, Alta. owns the only boat in the world autographed by Gordie Howe. It happened in early September. Tanner, a 28-year-old fishing guide, took the 80-year-old hockey legend and his son Marty on a daylong flyfishing trip for trout on the Bow River in southern Alberta. Gordie, a native of Floral, Sask., caught and released several fish, the biggest a fat 20-inch rainbow. For Tanner, it was a thrill just meeting, never mind fishing with, the man who’d played on four Stanley Cup winners and won six scoring titles before retiring in 1980, the same year Tanner was born. Tanner played hockey as a kid and knew he was in the company of a man regarded by many as the greatest player ever. He says Howe is easy to talk to and a very keen angler. “He’s such an awesome guy. It will be tough to beat that day.” The part of the boat with the autograph has already been laminated. W 8 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 8 12/10/08 9:24:27 AM A Saskatoon dive team spent four days in early September searching for relics from the S. S. City of Medicine Hat which sank in 1908 after crashing into Saskatoon’s Traffic Bridge. At the time, it was described as a marine disaster, although accident would be more like it. The ship was carrying five businessmen and a cargo of flour bound for Winnipeg. It didn’t actually sink right away; it drifted downstream and sank slowly so everyone had time to escape. The only injuries were onshore when some folks were trampled by cattle panicked by the noise of the crash and the only casualty was the demise of steamship traffic along the Saskatchewan River. About 30 artifacts likely belonging to the ship were recovered in the dive, including a pair of valve springs, a gasket, a chunk of brick from a boiler firebox, a padlock, a blue enamel heating grate, and a marlinspike, a tool used to splice rope and untie knots. The pieces of history are being cleaned up and checked out by the Royal Saskatchewan Museum, and may end up on display there. W Mules Rule! T eam Mule won the annual TELUS Battle of the Breeds in September at the prestigious Spruce Meadows equestrian centre in Calgary. That’s right, Team Mule! The long-eared wonders, half horse (mom)-half donkey (dad), competed against teams of 13 different horse breeds in Compulsory Skills, Trail Riding, Jeopardy Jumping, Precision Driving and Barrel Racing. Team Mule earned 31 points overall. Team Quarter Horse came second with 30 points and third went to Team Thoroughbred. Considered the underdogs when they began competing in the popular event a decade ago, the mules brayed in the face of ridicule, finally proving they are anything but stubborn and stupid. “When we first started, you would hear the comments, the laughs and the whispers,” said team member Katherine Cook, of Camrose, Alberta, who rode Mastco Jane, the only mule in the country with the official Equine Canada passport needed to compete in high-level show jumping. “But no one’s laughing now,” she chuckled. The team’s riders also included Jessica Bishop of Scio, Oregon on Hot Buckaroo, Deloit Wolfe of Missoula, Montana on Horse, and Mogens Nielsen of Falkland, BC on Maizie. “This should help debunk the myths about mules. They are actually very smart, and quite willing if they trust you,” said Nielsen. “They’re just awesome animals. They really can do it all,” added Cook. As winners, the mules and riders paraded in the venue’s elite jumping arena, sharing the turf in front of thousands of spectators with the world’s top Olympic and World Cup show jumping horses. Teams earn Battle of the Breeds Championship points for each event, based on where they finish: 1st Place, 10 points; then 8,7,6,5,4 for 2nd though 6th places and 2 points for 7th to 14th. Team Mule had a 1st, a 4th, another 4th, a 3rd and a 14th. W Car Art Photo: Jane Mundy Photo: Wendy Dudley Full Steam Ahea … Oops! “That is my favourite car,” says a little boy as he walks by a parked 1986 Toyota Tercel. When she hears comments like that, Catherine Russell’s mission is accomplished. “The whole point of car art is to have fun,” she says. Russell, aged 65, started out with old buttons and beads and soon her Vancouver neighbours were donating items. Occasionally she puts a sign on her car window: “Come by Sunday and help me decorate my car.” She’s met new neighbours, especially kids. “I often find a bag of toys hanging on the car, sometimes with a note,” says Russell. “Someone left me 10 yellow rubber duckies. How cool is that?” She recently noticed Superman attached to the side mirror. Russell says plastic toys are popular and plentiful. She pokes around the Sally Ann and never comes home empty-handed. She limits the height of stuff on the hood: it is important to maintain visibility. And she uses Goop, a glue like rubber cement, so nothing flies off while she’s driving. “Some people just don’t get car art but I usually see smiling people in my rear view mirror; they wave and give me the thumbs up.” W West 9 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 9 12/10/08 9:24:28 AM ROUND UP CreepieCrawlies Я Us S mack in the middle of Manitoba prairie, housed in a former military barracks in Douglas, Manitoba, 90 minutes west of Winnipeg, is the highly-unlikely Westman Reptile Gardens, home to Canada’s largest collection of reptiles and bugs. It’s run by Dave and Candi Shelvey, who’ve amassed more than 300 living exhibits, including Canada’s largest snake, the only two Nile crocodiles in Canada, and a giant tarantula that’s 12 inches across and is aptly called the Goliath Birdeater. The museum sprang from Dave’s fascination with reptiles, which Candi knew about - but she married him anyway! - and she now helps run and publicize the museum. Exhibits here have “starred” in 15 films, like Addicted in which gawdknows how many hissing cockroaches had walk-on roles and Stone Angel – yes, Margaret Laurence’s Stone Angel! The black harvester ants that scampered up Hagar Shipley’s leg in the film were understudies to the red ants who were fired for biting the actress. Black ants can’t bite but they have tongues so they can lick. “ewwwwwww, ick” said one reviewer. W When Mother Nature unleashes her February blasts across northern Manitoba, you’d think residents of The Pas would huddle around their woodstoves. Not a chance. Instead, the 6,000 residents of this town about 650 kilometres north of Winnipeg throw an outdoor party like no other. Welcome to the Northern Manitoba Trappers’ Festival where a great batch of bannock can put some prize money in your mukluks and a meal of deer stew, pan-fried moose meat, wild rice and breaded whitefish will put meat on your bones. For some, the highlights of the festival are the dog races that attract teams from across the continent, vying for over $40,000 in prizes. For others, it’s the King and Queen Trapper events where skills such as fire starting, log throwing, ice fishing, bannock baking, snowshoe racing, trap setting, leg wrestling, moose calling and flour packing come in mighty handy. Think you’re tough? The record for flour packing still belongs to a gentleman by the name of Henry Sayese who, in the 1920s, carried 1,200 pounds (544 kilograms, roughly the weight of a healthy Holstein) the required 20 feet (six metres). W Photo: Trappers’ Festival Trappers’ Festival 10 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 10 12/10/08 9:24:29 AM When the bank makes you feel all alone... call us Bank West is a western-based federally chartered bank, similar to other larger financial institutions. The difference is we are small enough to care. For wrap up loans and term loans, call us. 1-888-440-BANK No Worries GMS_Halfpage_WEST_CAA_110307:GMS_Halfpage_WEST_151108 BANK WEST 24/11/2008 3:57 PM Page 1 Western Financial Group Complete Health Coverage for Your Lifestyle Individual Health Insurance Choose the comprehensive health benefit plan with the options that are right for you and your family’s needs. • Massage Therapy, Physiotherapy, Chiropractic Services, Acupuncture & Other Health Practitioners • Prescription Drugs, Pay-Direct Drug Card • Dental - Preventative, Minor & Major Procedures • Vision and Hearing Care • Annual Emergency Medical Travel Insurance Photo: Trappers’ Festival Planning retirement? Convert to Individual Health from a group benefit plan and your acceptance is automatic. looking after you and the ones you love www.gms.ca • 1-800-667-3699 Individual Health from GMS - forRetirees,Entrepreneurs, Contractors-anyonewithoutanemployer-sponsoredbenefitplan. See your Western Financial Group Insurance Broker or visit www.gms.ca for your Health coverage today! Individual Health Insurance underwritten by Group Medical Services. Group Medical Services is the operating name for GMS Insurance Inc. West 11 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 11 12/10/08 9:24:29 AM MR by Wendy dudley no se a rt Clarence Simonsen sits in the cockpit of a Lancaster bomber featuring his Sugar's Blues nose art. The painting was based on the January 1945 pin-up girl in Esquire magazine, which inspired most of the nose art depicting curvaceous ladies. Sugar's Blues was the title of a wartime swing tune. The original painting is by Canadian air gunner Sgt. Tom Walton. Simonsen's replica on the Lancaster can be seen at the Nanton Lancaster Air Museum. T hey were young men flying deadly missions over foreign soils. Days were riddled with doom and gloom, but joy was as close as the noses on their aircraft, where paintings, most of them of voluptuous women, wooed the men home, and were thought to guarantee a safe trip. Known as nose art, the designs were borrowed from various sources, including Walt Disney and Esquire magazine 12 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 12 12/10/08 9:39:17 AM Photo: Jared Sych West 13 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 13 12/10/08 9:39:23 AM 1 2 3 4 5 Photos: Wendy Dudley 6 1 The No. 427 Squadron RCAF was adopted by the Metro Goldwyn Mayer film studio, so its aircraft were decorated with paintings of MGM stars, including Joan Crawford. This replica, by Clarence Simonsen, is on display at the Nanton Lancaster Air Museum in southern Alberta. 3 Little Bear was designed by the Walt Disney studios for the aviation training school at Winnipeg. This is one of 1,200 pieces of nose art Disney created for war-time aircraft. This replica, by Clarence Simonsen, is on view at the Nanton Lancaster Air Museum in southern Alberta. 5 Stork with Baby originally appeared on an Avro Anson aircraft. Nose artist Clarence Simonsen replicated the image on a piece of cowling from an Avro Anson assigned to an air force training school in Estevan, Sask. After the war, that plane was flown to Vulcan, Alta. and sold as scrap to a farmer. 2 Walt Disney's Bambi appeared on a Halifax bomber. Disney had five artists dedicated to designing insignias for military aircraft in Canada, the US and Britain. The RCAF received 32 Disneydesigned insignia. 4 Nose art was largely inspired by paintings of pin-up girls that appeared in Esquire magazine. The artists were often the pilots, or members of the flight squadron. Many of them thought of the paintings as guardian angels who would help bring them home. 6 Clarence Simsonsen with his rendering of Willie the Wolf from the West, which appeared on a Halifax bomber during World War Two. The name came from the 1943 movie, Riding High, which featured a song titled Willie the Wolf of the West. The original was removed before the plane was scrapped and now hangs in the Canadian War Museum in Ottawa. 14 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 14 12/10/08 9:39:27 AM 3 4 6 paintings of women in languorous positions. Those images, by painters George Petty and Alberto Vargas, were published as pin-ups and became known as the Petty and Vargas girls. Sadly, most original nose art was lost in the post-war years when the planes were sent to scrap yards. But, thanks to the efforts of Clarence Simonsen, an artist and former member of the Canadian Army Provost Corps, replicas of many of those images are now part of the Nanton Lancaster Air Museum in southern Alberta. “Nose art is part of aviation history. It’s part of our war heritage,” said Simonsen. He has spent more than 40 years researching and replicating nose art for aviation museums, private collectors and military organizations and his endeavours have earned him the nickname “Mr. Nose Art.” Nudes? Why not? This past year, Simonsen completed the Willie the Wolf logo that originally appeared on a bomber flown over Nazi Germany by Harold Kearl of Calgary. The image portrays a wolf chasing a naked woman, descriptive, perhaps, of Kearl’s behaviour between missions. He also completed a life-sized replica of the Lady Orchid, a naked Lady Godiva-like figure riding a bomb while holding two Western style six-shooters. Flown by Calgary’s Ron Jenkins, the plane returned to Canada, with two red maple leaves painted over Lady Orchid’s upper torso. “We were young and foolish,” recalled Ken Lofts, a navigator during World War Two. “We thought of those paintings as our guardian angels.” Lofts, originally from Jasper, now lives in Claresholm, Alta. For pilot Joe English, the art was a morale-booster. “It made you feel good,” said the Nanton resident. “It was a superstitious thing. We believed if we had a painting, we’d make it home. Sometimes they painted bombs on the side of the plane, a tally of its success.” Personalizing aircraft with pictures and names began earlier but was popularized during the Second World War, peaking in 1945. Simonsen’s interest in the art form began when he was a young farm boy in Protect the things you value most At SGI CANADA, our Western Financial Group brokers offer a range of insurance products tailored to meet your needs. No matter what the unexpected situation, SGI CANADA will be there to see you through. We’ve got you covered. www.sgicanada.ca West 15 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 15 12/10/08 9:39:27 AM FOR THOSE WHO APPRECIATE THE FINER THINGS IN LIFE. Wine Access is CanadaÕs food and wine magazine. Enjoy more than 125 wine reviews in every issue! Wine Access only reviews wines that are widely available on the Canadian market, timed to their release. Our content is intelligent and informative for readers of all levels of wine knowledge. Published in Canada, the magazine is written by celebrated Canadian wine critics from across Canada. ItÕs wine from a Canadian point of view. 25 KILLER VALUES UNDER $15 ¥ 26 CATEGORY CHAMPIONS WINE ACCESS OCTOBER / NOVEMBER 2008 CanadaÕs Wine Magazine ¥ wineaccess.ca 25 Killer Values Under $15 BEST ¥ Full results of 2008 International Value Wine Awards WINES $25 UNDER WINNERS AND RESULTS FROM THE 2008 INTERNATIONAL VALUE WINE AWARDS FOR ONLY $5 MORE, YOU WILL ALSO RECEIVE THE 2008 CANADIAN WINE ANNUALA GUIDE TO MORE THAN 250 WINERIES FROM COAST TO COAST. ONLY ¥ TaylorÓs Port $35 INSIDE: TAYLOR-MADE PORT OCTOBER/NOVEMBER 2008 A vertical century PM#40030911 PAP#10868 $5.95 FOR A ONE YEAR SUBSCRIPTION RedPoint Media Group Inc. 105, 1210 - 20 Avenue S.E. Calgary, Alberta T2G 1M8 WA-cover final-08.indd 1 9/2/08 2:36:10 PM SUBSCRIBE TO WINE ACCESS TODAY AND ENJOY YOUR PASSION FOR WINE AND FOOD THROUGHOUT THE YEAR! GO TO WINEACCESS.CA AND ENTER PROMO CODE WFG-W-09 AND RECEIVE AN ADDITIONAL 50% OFF YOUR SUBSCRIPTION! To subscribe: Call toll free 1-877-963-9333 ext.262, visit our website at wineaccess.ca, or e-mail subscriptions@redpointmedia.ca WFG-W-09-Features.indd 16 1 WA-SUB_PROMO_08_FULL.indd 12/10/08 9:39:30 12/5/08 9:50:30 AM AM largest collection; the second largest collection, 14 panels, is at the Canadian War Museum in ottawa. (The Midland museum is currently raising funds with a “Save the Girls” campaign to help preserve its collection.) Thanks to farmers who built sheds from bomber scrap metal, Simonsen has a plentiful supply of hull panels which he uses as his canvases. “you should see my basement. It looks like a plane crash.” During the year, Simonsen lectures about this forgotten and neglected chapter of military history. Photo: Wendy Dudley ARt SCHooL – oF HARD KNoCKS. E . e nt site Artists had to stop using house paint because it damaged the plane’s skin and could be detected by radar. rrrr!rrrr Acme, Alta., watching Harvard planes pass overhead on their training course from Medicine Hat to Penhold. “They were training NAto pilots, and they would be flying solo on their navigators’ course. That was my introduction to aviation.” An amateur cartoonist, Simonsen saved his money to buy war comics, so he could study the bomber planes and their nose art. As a teenager, he discovered the inspiration for the art while viewing his first girlie pin-ups. But it wasn’t until 1965, when he travelled to Cyprus with the united Nations Peacekeeping Force, that he fully understood the art’s impact on military men. “That’s where I saw my first bodies and death. I started to understand how those men back then must have felt,” said Simonsen who lives in Airdrie, just north of Calgary. to boost morale in Cyprus, he painted murals, and did cartoons for his buddies. “I would do things Canadian, like hockey or football. I saw how everyone reacted to them. And it made me think how this same thing inspired so many men during those wars.” RECoVERING HIStoRy. Back in Canada, Simonsen began researching nose art. With little written on the subject, he relied on photographs and the memories of surviving air crews. Because most of the photos were black and white, he had to imagine the colours. He’s written three books on nose art, and has painted over 500 replicas. More than 50 hang in the Nanton Lancaster Air Museum. others are in England and the uS, and one is on display in the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC. Most are in private collections. Simonsen also helped restore the few remaining original nose art panels. The American Airpower Heritage Museum in Midland, texas, has 33, the world’s Nose artists were usually members of a plane’s ground crew, who received little, if anything, for their artistic legacies. “Some got about $50, but most did it for free, or the flight crew would take them out for a night on the town,” Simonsen said. After the war, many pursued their talents and became commercial artists. Leading Canadian nose artists were George oliver, Floyd “Skip” Rutledge, Albert Edward “Muff” Mills, and Calgary’s Matthew Ferguson. All are now dead. Decorating military weaponry can be traced back to ships and prow figureheads. Aircraft art began with the French during the First World War and during the Second World War Canadian, British, Australian, New Zealand and South African fliers all had their planes painted. The trend continued through the Korean and Vietnamese Wars, as well as the Gulf War. “I’ve heard there are some in Afghanistan, and that last Christmas someone painted a Grinch on a plane’s tail,” said Simonsen. The art on Canada’s planes — the Lancaster and Halifax bombers— usually included a maple leaf and many carried the word “Canuck”. Moose, snowy oils and native chiefs also were used to identify squadrons. one pilot, a Saskatchewan cattle rancher named Heard, had his plane named “Thundering Heard,” with a scene of stampeding cattle. unique nose art made it easy to identify planes, but its main purpose was to boost morale, said Simonsen. Pilots became attached to their aircraft, West 17 9:50:30 AM WFG-W-09-Features.indd 17 12/10/08 9:39:33 AM Photo: Wendy Dudley Glenbow Museum NA-4341-15 “It was a superstitious thing. We believed if we had a painting, we’d make it home.” rrr!rrr Bomber command crew, #6 Group, Royal Canadian Air Force. ! Ken Lofts, of Claresholm, Alta., was a navigator during the Second World War. He said the nose art paintings were the crew's guardian angels, ensuring a safe trip. and always referred to them as females. “The plane was there to protect them, and they were there to protect her.” Many had names like Memphis Belle (subject of a terrific 1990 movie with Matthew Modine and John Lithgow, as well as of an earlier documentary) and Pistol Packin’ Mama, while others were named after girlfriends and wives. Popular music made its way onto planes during the Viet Nam war with Led Zeppelin, Eve of Destruction and Good Golly, Miss Molly, and television had its influence on bombers blessed with I Dream of Jeannie, War Wagon and Have Gun Will Travel. Nose art was also reproduced on jackets, in mess halls and recreation centres. Through the years, the art changed little. Occasionally, officials would ask that naked women be covered up, so the artists would paint bathing suits on them, but with water colours so the original form would return in a rainstorm! In Viet Nam, pilots tended to be more mature, educated and married, so the painted women were less erotic and usually clothed. What has changed, said Simonsen, is the technology. Artists had to stop using house paint because it damaged the plane’s skin and could be detected by radar. Today, they use grease pencils or chalk and protect the images by spraying them with ScotchgardTM. Passionate about his work, Simonsen continues to search for records and photographs of nose art. “All the artists are gone now,” he said. “But thank God, I can pass on their stories.” West 18 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 18 12/10/08 9:39:34 AM brought to you by Glenbow Museum NA-4341-15 To subscribe, complete order form below and mail, fax, email, phone, or order online. 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In my imagination I ride the warm, turquoise waves off Costa Rica or Hawaii surfing toward a white beach and palm trees. When I’m done for the day, I slip into a sarong, pick up a fruity drink in a coconut shell and sit to watch the sun sink into the Pacific. So, naturally, when I finally got the chance to surf, it was in the 13⁰ slate-grey waters off tofino, where a token palm tree shivers at the north end of Pacific Rim National Park on Vancouver Island’s wet west coast. They surf year round here, even have Christmas surfing packages. Somehow I’ve grown older than I was in my imagination, no longer a lithe 20-year-old but a somewhat creaky 40-year-old, squeezed into a rented wetsuit, lugging a long board down a sodden beach. tofino is home to Long Beach where the shoreline is, indeed, long and sandy and the surf is huge and rolling. This 20 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 20 12/10/08 9:39:37 AM When I told friends I was planning to go surfing in Tofino, most were sceptical. “What’s wrong with Hawaii?” g West 21 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 21 12/10/08 9:39:40 AM Right: Diane Selkirk actually standing up on her board. Below: Final words from instructor Paul Horscroft before hitting the waves. Even farther below: Horscroft and fellow instructor Shaun Marchant teach beginners the fundamentals of surfing … on the beach, where it’s safe. whole area was inaccessible by road until 1959 and then only by a logging road until 1971 when the park was created and the road was paved. Since then Tofino has grown. Once the pristine home of the Nuu-chahnulth people, it’s now a bustling tourist town of 2,000 (swelling to 11,000 in the summer.) Resorts, hotels, B&Bs, campgrounds and hostels provide lodging for tourists who come for the beachcombing, whale watching, hiking, storm-watching, kayaking — especially After three pathetic attempts I was covered in sand and ready to pack it in. through the calm waters of the nearby Broken Group Islands — and, most recently, surfing. When I told friends I was planning to go surfing in Tofino, most were sceptical. “What’s wrong with Hawaii?” asked one. Although surfers, including Pierre Trudeau, have been heading to Tofino for years, it was home mostly to draft dodgers and hippies until the park was created. In those days, a few hardcore dudes and dudettes hung out at Cox Bay, rippin’ down juicy waves and speaking a kowabunga-type lingo that sounds dumb coming from anyone not permanently leashed to a surfboard. In the late ’90s, surfing in Tofino went mainstream and the first surf schools opened up. Then in 2002, the surf movie, Blue Crush, came out. Suddenly surf shops popped up all over town to cater to experts and wanna-bes – most of whom will never graduate to Hawaii’s Ma’alaea pipeline. My first surfing lesson. Big cold raindrops fell on the windshield, obscuring the rainforest around us as we drove into the parking lot at Chesterman Beach. We parked in one of the last spots and headed to the Pacific Surf School van, which contained our surfboards and wetsuits. 22 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 22 12/10/08 9:39:44 AM Photo l Make In a wor newspa real imp In a mag 105 - 121 Photo location: Koolhaus Calgary Make your message last In a world where consumers fast-forward through TV commercials and line bird cages with newspapers before they’re finished reading, magazine advertising is the best way to make a real impact. On average, a reader will revisit a magazine three times and even put it on display. In a magazine, your marketing message grabs—and holds—your audience’s attention. 105 - 1210 20th Avenue SE, Calgary, Alberta T2G 1M8 ph 403.240.9055 fx 403.240.9059 redpointmedia.ca WFG-W-09-Features.indd 23 We’ve got your story to tell 12/10/08 9:39:45 AM The instructors, Shaun and Dan, explained to the class how to put on the thick wetsuits and tuck in the booties and hoods, so we wouldn’t freeze. Even though the rain had stopped, I was very much worried about freezing. Then we trekked out to the middle of the cold beach and sat in a semicircle. Looking out at the water I marvelled at how the heavy cloud, low mist and grey waves turned the horizon into a Tofino’s Road Tofino, BC is the end of the road, literally, and the town once lobbied for the privilege. In 1928, Tofino was chosen as the Official Western Terminus of the Trans Canada Highway. (How else would people get to the open Pacific?) Pretty soon, though, the plan’s opponents struck. Campbell River and Victoria wanted the mile zero designation. Anyway, it was argued, Tofino was simply too foggy and the Pacific too cold to attract visitors. By December 9, 1949, Victoria had won the long battle and Tofino continued to go without a road, or even the hope of a road, until the forest industry entered the picture and, in 1959, built a logging road through the mountains from Port Alberni. Electricity soon followed. In 1971 the federal government finally noticed that Tofino wasn’t too foggy after all, and the Pacific Ocean wasn’t too cold. The feds paved the road and, since then, millions of visitors have made the trip to see the ocean and Pacific Rim Park. Tourism Tofino www.tourismtofino.com Pacific Surf School www.pacificsurfschool.com Long Beach Lodge www.longbeachlodgeresort.com 24 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 24 12/10/08 9:39:46 AM There is nothing like being propelled toward land by the ocean, even clinging to your surfboard Bottom Left: Sea star and anemones in a tide pool on Chesterman Beach Above: A surfer catches a wave on Cox Bay. dark smudge. Even the Leonard Island Lighthouse, just over there somewhere, was lost in the fog. With more rain threatening, I started to think my what’s-wrong-with-Hawaii friend had a point; this seemed like a silly place to surf. But there were dozens of black blobs out there in the dark froth. Occasionally, one would stand up and zip along for a while before sinking back into the waves, but most of them just seemed to be bobbing in the swell, like flotsam and jetsam. “Why aren’t they doing anything?” one of my classmates asked. It turns out they were doing something. Dan explained that they were watching the waves to see where they were breaking and the pattern of the break. Then he explained that as surfers we needed to be aware of wind direction and speed, swell direction and height, tide changes, shore currents, danger areas and other surfers. Once he had us oriented to the beach, it was time to learn how to get up on the board. My surfing fantasies never covered this part. In my sun-dappled imagination I paddled out to the break and the next thing I knew I was surfing back toward the beach. It turns out I was missing a detail or two and the first step was learning the stance. “Goofy foot (left) or regular (right) foot?” Dan asked. My blank look gave away the fact that I had no idea what he was talking about. So he pushed me, gently. “Regular foot,” he said, as I lurched forward and caught my balance with my right foot. Once I had the stance down, it was time to learn how to actually get on a surf board. It should have been easy – we were still on the beach. But we were pretending we were in the water so we tried the method of choice, the pop-up, which seems to have been designed for my lithe 20-year-old self, who no longer exists, if she ever did. Levitating from belly to balanced, feet-apart, knees-bent, stance in one fluid movement is beyond me, for now. After three pathetic attempts I was covered in sand and ready to pack it in until Dan showed me a novice manoeuvre – I got to hop up on my knees on the board before I attempted to stand. Into the ocean Despite my worry about freezing I never noticed the cold. After happily bobbing around watching the waves, I heard Dan say it was time to surf. “Look for a wave that’s already breaking with lots of space in front,” he said, looking seaward for the nautical counterpart of the skier’s bunny hill. Then an even line of froth started to move toward me. “On your board,” he called. I leaped on, nearly slid off the other side, and then, with a shove from Dan, I was off. “Paddle! Paddle! Paddle!” He yelled after me. Racing toward shore, I tried to recall the steps involved in actually surfing. Hands under my shoulders, pop-up to kneeling. Hmmm. Too far forward, or to the left, or something. My board nosedived and I went under for what felt like the spin cycle. I came up sputtering and grinning and paddled back out to try again. This time, just for the thrill, I skipped the getting up part and body boarded into the beach. Back out in the froth, I started looking for my classmates. All were younger and fitter and, I noticed, far more successful at getting upright. I wanted to slink back to shore to find an activity more suitable for my mature years. Quilting, maybe. But heading back to shore, I was, surprisingly, happy enough to decide I could do better if I tried again. Pretty quickly I understood the draw of the sport. Sure, actually standing up would be cool but there is nothing like being propelled toward land by the ocean, even clinging to your surfboard. On shore, the sun struggled to break through the clouds. After loading the boards back in the van, I stripped off my wetsuit and felt cold for the first time. Back in my room at Long Beach Lodge, I poured a cup of hot coffee, pulled on a heavy sweater and went out on the balcony to watch the expert surfers on Cox Bay. Without realizing it I found myself feet apart, knees bent, arms out for balance. With the roar of the surf all around me I closed my eyes and felt the swell beneath my board. Now when I imagine surfing, it’s in a place where mist hangs in the rainforest and steel coloured waves pound against ancient sandy shores. I can’t wait to go back. West West 25 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 25 12/10/08 9:39:49 AM by Diana SkoglunD T alk to quilters and the odds are that the conversation will quickly turn to addiction. Not the sordid lower Eastside of Vancouver kind of addiction. Heavens, no. You’ll never hear of a quilting addict losing home, spouse or family because of the urge to stitch pieces of cotton together. This is different. Consider the quilting group of the Royal Inland Hospital Afternoon Auxiliary in Kamloops, BC. These are women who have met every Wednesday for 30 years to make quilts. Opposite page: The cost of quilting fabric can really add up, around $1,600 a year for a serious leisure quilter. They laugh a lot and their laughter is as genuine as their stitches are tiny. They meet on Wednesday because 85-year-old Geraldine Hubbard, who founded the group in 1978, plays golf on Tuesdays and Thursdays. “I don’t why we can’t change the meeting days in the winter, because I know she doesn’t ski,” says Vicki Gray to a round of giggles. As some members appliqué felt stems and leaves onto pale green cotton squares, Geraldine meticulously stitches petals and centres on daisies. The stitches are tiny and true, although she says her miniature work isn’t what it used to be. The workspace here in the old gift shop is tight with quilts, supplies and ladies filling every available square inch. Audrey MacKenzie, Sonja Marek, Abundia Cobb, 26 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 26 12/10/08 9:42:43 AM Photo: Carey Shaw West 27 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 27 12/10/08 9:42:45 AM Photo: Carey Shaw “When I lie on my death bed … I am not going to wish I had spent more time dusting …” Earla Horne and Vicki Gray sit close around the floral quilt that will be spring’s main raffle prize. It’s tightly wound on a frame for hand quilting. They’ve decided to stitch double lines so this one’s going to take twice as long to finish. They work quietly and always behind the scenes, never seeking applause for the many hours of charity work they do. They estimate they’ve made nearly $200,000 for the hospital. They think of it as money they raise to help buy medical equipment for their own friends and family. When they add up the total they’re surprised. They haven’t been quilting all these years for the glory. They just have to quilt. As much as the quilters talk about things like giving back to the community through charity quilts, and the fun of socializing through their art, they will admit, usually with a laugh, that quilting is, indeed, addictive. Meanwhile, about 1,800 kilometres east. Late in the night near Somerset, Manitoba, 48-year-old Laura Kotschorek passes the time between hauling loads of grain. She cuts fabrics, thumbs through quilting magazines and plans her next project. “I used to feel guilty about how much money and time I spent quilting,” Laura said one morning last fall as she waited for the wheat to dry so the harvest could begin again. “But I realize it just doesn’t matter. You only get to live once. When I lie on my death bed, I know I am not going to wish I had spent more time dusting, but I am going to say that I wish I finished more quilts.” She concedes that one of the attractions of quilt guilds and quilting friends is that quilters don’t make each other feel guilty about stashing fabric or the money they are spending. With the average price of quilting fabric at $15 a metre, the cost of a project can escalate quickly. Add embellishments, threads, batting and backing, and it’s not unusual for materials for a lap quilt to go to $100 or more. It’s also not unusual for a quilter to have a lot of projects, small and large, in various stages of completion. A 2003 US survey reported that the serious leisure quilter is a “dedicated quilter” who spends $1,556 annually on quilting materials. That’s probably gone up a bit in five years. Laura has used quilting as way to spend time with her mom. When her three children reached their late teens and adulthood, she wasn’t spending so much of her day getting them to hockey or dance practice and she could spend more time with her mother. Quilting is the perfect outlet for two generations of farm women who can’t justify unproductive coffee klatching. It’s the same in Moose Jaw. At Quilter’s Haven, one of four quilt shops in this city of 35,000, co-owner Heather Carruthers fielded calls; Monday’s charity quilt group was anxious to get going again after the summer hiatus. “The charity quilters who meet here on Monday’s are just totally addicted,” Heather said, describing the group of 10 to 12 women as a little club. “There’s always coffee on for them, cake for their birthdays. They rarely miss. They get a little miffed if I have to reschedule.” Quilting retreats are a growing part of the social component that is broadening the quilting circle. Friendship and camaraderie. They’re elements of today’s quilting culture that Lois Papworth wishes she had taken more time for as she thinks back on the Country Lane Quilter’s guild she started 28 years ago in Millarville, Alberta. She and her husband, Don, had moved to a ranch in the area from Calgary, which isn’t far away. With her son and daughter grown, Lois looked at quilting as a way to get to know people. “We didn’t have classes. We learned from each other – and books.” Still quilting at 84, she says she has to watch that she gets her work done first because the hours will just fly away from her once she starts quilting. She relies on her daughter’s eye for colour and estimates when she plans a new project. She has made at least 18 queen size quilts and dozens of baby quilts 28 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 28 12/10/08 9:42:52 AM Save 5% on TravelMate® Annual when you renew or buy for two. More protection! More savings! More vacation! Less is more. Call: 1-866-890-1960 Click: www.westernfinancialgroup.net Come in: visit Western Financial Group TravelMate ® Tra v e l I n s u r a n c e West 29 V1 25/07/08 FILE NAME TRAVELMATE_MAGAD_DEADLINE1AUG WFG-W-09-Features.indd 29 APPROVAL PROOF@ 100% DATE SIGNATURE 12/10/08 9:42:53 AM Photo: D ADVERTORIAL “Ideally, you want the best possible coverage for the lowest possible premium” Ideally, you want the best possible coverage for the lowest possible premium … tailored to fit your circumstances. The beginning of every year is a good time to take a minute to find out how to do that and we can help make it happen. It’s a big part of Western Financial Group’s Guarantee of Value. Changes in risk that could affect coverage and/ or premium include: a new wood stove, buying or selling equipment, paying off a mortgage, drivers moving into or out of a home. Graham Day, CIP Western Financial Group, Cochrane, AB A client has two companies but operates them as one, which could have caused some liability problems. Rather than insure both companies, we worked out a new insurance contract that saved our client $6,000. Mike Hordichuk, Western Financial Group, Yorkton, SK Depending on where you live, it’s a good idea to ask if your existing insurance reflects current rebuilding values for your home, new purchases in the home, business interruption values and, in some provinces, changes in vehicle usage or new drivers. To get started, all you do is call your broker* to set up a review of your insurance policies: Life, Property & Casualty, Business, Farm, Travel, Auto, or Mortgage insurance. Insurance companies change discounts often. Sometimes we don’t know that a client qualifies for a new discount until we ask them and then apply it. You can drop by the office or we’ll come to see you. Either way, we’ll ask you a few questions and then tell you if we think you’re: Underinsured, Getting the Best Possible Coverage for the Lowest Possible Premium. We’ll also plan ahead to help you consider any revisions you might want to make later in the year. Angela King, CAIB Western Financial Group, Westbank, BC In a conversation with a client, we discovered that they had two boats and three ATVs they assumed were covered but they’d never told us they’d bought them. They were underinsured and an annual review brings this type of thing to light. Deanna Jinjoe, CAIB Western Financial Group, Vernon, BC Your insurance needs change every year And you might not even notice. While you’re busy with life, your circumstances can change: a new baby, a new job or promotion, retirement, home improvement, a new car, upgraded farm equipment, a new boat or ATV. *You can always call us, toll free, at 1-866-843-9378 (1-866-THE-WEST) to get your broker’s phone number. www.westernfinancialgroup.net WFG-W-09-Features.indd WFG-ADVERTORIAL.indd 30 11 Perhaps you’ve started travelling more, or staying closer to home. Your income might have gone up or inflation is changing the value of your possessions. Even barely noticeable changes over the year can add up to one big change when you put them all together. And that can affect your insurance needs. Some changes can qualify you for discounts we can apply immediately. Please call Western Financial Group soon to set up your review. You’re our client and we’ve promised to look after your best interests. Call your local broker now, or make a point in your calendar to call before renewal. It’s important to you, your business and your family. Because if you don’t discuss this with us, you may not be getting the best possible coverage for the lowest possible premium. Western Western Financial Group Financial Group … because we live here. 12/10/08 9:43:01 9:04:25 AM 08 9:04:25 AM Right, top: Kamloops’s Royal Inland Hospital Afternoon Auxiliary quilters: Abundia Cobb, Sonja Marek, Earla Horne, Audrey MacKenzie and Vicky Gray hand-quilt next fall’s spring’s prize. Right, bottom: Geraldine Hubbard, now 85, founded the RIHAA quilting group in 1978. Below: Tiny stitches are crucial. “A good week is when I can spend at least 40 hours quilting …” workshops. Vicky has worked for three years to get Elly Sienkiewicz, the guru of the Baltimore Album style, to come to BC’s Interior for two days of classes that will be opened first to Sage Brush Guild members. The new technique has her building a stash of hand-dyed threads and intricately folded silks. despite a closet full of fabrics, carefully washed and sorted by colour, Vicky is now drawn to the silks. Many quilters joke about “… sneaking fabric into the house,” Vicky says. “But in truth, I think most of us have very supportive husbands who encourage our hobby. They, and most of the population, just don’t have any idea of the amount of money spent on quilting supplies. Who would ever think that a small plastic bag could hold hundreds of dollars worth of fabric? But we, and they, don’t begrudge the expense or the time when we produce Photos: Diana Skoglund and probably worn out three sewing machines over the years. “I liked to do my own projects. With the group getting involved in charity projects it seemed like I had less time to work on my own quilts,” lois said from her home in Calgary. She moved back to the city a couple of years ago. Back in Kamloops, Vicky Gray, at 63, is retired from her work as an ontario research scientist. once she and her husband, Bill, settled into their ski cabin near Sun peaks, BC, she turned easily to quilting, having taken her first 10-week class during a six-month leave from work. “I remember I was supposed to come back to work on a Monday, and I called in to work and asked to come in the next day because quilting class was Monday.” Vicky readily admits she’s addicted and does some quilting almost every day. “Sometimes only for a few minutes, sometimes most of the day,” Vicky said. “A good week is when I can spend at least 40 hours quilting, when I don’t do housework, don’t cook, don’t do paperwork or turn on the computer.” Because she is passionate about quilting, it’s easy for her to take on too many of the administrative duties of the four Kamloops’ quilting groups (Marigold Appliqué Society, RIH Afternoon Auxiliary Quilters, Sage Brush Quilters, Heffley Creek Quilters) and several associations she belongs to. In addition, she competes and judges in quilting shows and organizes quilts which are often given away to family members, friends or even strangers as heirlooms or something the recipient will treasure.” The reason quilters support causes through their hobby? Vicky has a theory. “Many quilters are retired or out of the workforce. Everyone needs some sense of satisfaction whether it is in the form of a paycheque or a pat on the back. We can get that from the joy our quilts give to others.” In Kamloops, the RIH Quilters’ fall fund raising project is labelled, bundled and ready to be go on the road. The quilters will leave the cramped space of the old hospital gift shop and help sell raffle tickets in local malls for the queensized Star in Bloom quilt. And they’ll keep stitching, appliquéing the pattern onto the squares of the fall raffle prize. West West 31 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 31 12/10/08 9:43:13 AM by Bruce MaSterMan Photography by Mike Sturk The mindboggling reifel bird SanCTuary Opposite page: Mallards flock to a mother and son on a Reifel bench who might, just maybe, you never know, throw out some food. p rofessional photographer, Mike Sturk of Calgary, had heard about the George C. Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary near Vancouver long before he finally managed to visit it last February. He got his chance when he covered a World Cup ski event at Whistler Mountain and he jumped at it, seizing the opportunity to spend hours taking pictures of birds. 32 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 32 12/10/08 9:43:20 AM It’s a perfect spot with natural intertidal marshes and critical feeding areas for waterfowl and shorebirds. d y West 33 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 33 12/10/08 9:43:23 AM Left: An observant black-crowned Night Heron roosting. Above, top: A Northern Pintail Duck takes flight. Above: A Belted Kingfisher perches above a lagoon. Opposite page: A Sandhill Crane anticipates dinner. Sturk's biggest challenge was deciding where to focus first. There are so many different birds that it ís sort of mind-boggling, he said. He was surrounded by thousands of birds, including snow geese, trumpeter swans, great blue herons, northern pintail ducks, belted kingfishers and sandhill cranes. It was a dream for Sturk, an ardent birder and nature photographer who photographed and wrote about Manitoba's Riding Mountain National Park for our Summer, 2008 issue. Who was George C. Reifel? Very few westerners know much about him. George C. bought what was then an island in the Fraser River estuary as a family getaway back in 1927. Over the years, he improved the land and built a magnificent mansion. In the ‘60s, his son, George H. leased part of the land to the British Columbia Waterfowl Society for a bird sanctuary to be named after George C. It's a perfect spot with natural intertidal marshes and critical feeding areas for waterfowl and shorebirds. Six years later, Ducks Unlimited Canada got involved and helped to develop managed ponds and islands in a partnership that continues today. DUC and the Society jointly offer educational programs to schools in Greater Vancouver. The sanctuary is located where the 34 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 34 12/10/08 9:43:35 AM Although you can see birds all year, October to early December is a must. West 35 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 35 12/10/08 9:43:37 AM Left: A Spotted Towhee, a large sparrow, checks things out. Above: A Northern Pintail Duck takes a breather. IF YOU GO: main channel of the Fraser River meets the Strait of Georgia. It's one of Canada's top bird-watching areas with washrooms, picnic facilities, wheelchair-friendly walkways and a 10-metre-high observation tower in the northwestern corner of the property. Along the trails, visitors can quietly watch the birds from several small buildings with slat-like windows. Although you can see birds all year, October to early December is a must because of the huge flocks of migrating ducks, geese, swans and up to 80,000 lesser snow geese arriving from Wrangel Island in Russia. The snow geese winter at the sanctuary and in adjoining wetlands. In spring, millions of western sandpipers stop to feed and rest in the sanctuary's shallow ponds. Spring is also prime time for hawks, bald eagles, seals, cormorants and ospreys. West More photos at www.mikesturk.com Hours: 9 am to 4 pm Admission: adults $4, seniors and children $2. What to bring: binoculars, camera. What to leave home: pets, bicycles. Getting there: the sanctuary is 13 km west of Ladner in the Municipality of Delta, south of Vancouver. It is west of the intersection of Highways 10 and 17. From Ladner, follow Highway 10 west to 47A Avenue and onto River Road. Follow River Road westward for 3 km and cross the bridge to Westham Island. Follow the main road to where it ends in front of large black gates. The driveway to the left leads to the sanctuary’s parking lot. For more information: www.reifelbirdsanctuary.com. 36 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 36 12/10/08 9:43:59 AM West 37 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 37 12/10/08 9:44:04 AM by JuDy Waytiuk A lIFE SpENT build bui ld l d ing H Opposite page: Dan Tallman at the Western Canada Aviation museum in Winnipeg. In the early days, he built the runways for 62 airports across the west. Page 40: Dan and May Tallman at a 2008 charity dinner. e turned 90 in october, so dan Tallman says he doesn’t buy green bananas anymore. But he’s still got an agile mind and good health, and he can look back on a life that’s been built on concrete. literally. over 20 years or so in the 1940s and 1950s, this man – who never saw the inside of a Grade 8 classroom – paved the runways at more than 60 airports in Western Canada, and built some of the airport terminals, too. That was in addition to numerous projects that made his company a major construction player throughout Manitoba. Then, at the age of 50, Tallman sold the company he’d built, TallCrete, and retired to play golf, enjoy his family, and give both time and money to community causes. That’s the short version of dan Tallman’s life story. It leaves out his early start in the work world as a 14-year-old whose family struggled through the Great depression. In 1933, young dan earned his first real money shovelling dirt to dig out the ground for a runway at Stevenson Field, Winnipeg’s first airport and a depression-era make-work project. That was his first brush with airportbuilding. But the young teen needed to find more solid work. THE HARd YEARS. He quit school after Grade 7 and headed to northern Manitoba where he became a fur trapper for a year, then turned to freighting goods around northern communities. “I learned in life that two and two makes four and you can’t make four-and-a-half out of it,” he says of those hard early years. At 22, still in northern Manitoba, he 38 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 38 12/10/08 9:44:10 AM Photo: Judy Waytiuk d g West 39 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 39 12/10/08 9:44:11 AM Photo: Courtesy of Tallman family found and married his first wife, Sally. Then he moved back south, briefly joined his father’s construction company before leaving it to work for a local paper mill and then move on to British Columbia where he worked on his second airport, this one in Smithers, operating a dragline (power shovel), digging ditches and levelling ground to keep the runway properly drained Throughout those years, Tallman knew his education needed brushingup, so he got tutoring. “Without the tutoring I would have been in big trouble as I went, but I found out I was good at certain things—good at mathematics, lousy with spelling, very good with history and excellent with geography,” he recalls. “And the school of hard knocks helped.” He returned to Winnipeg briefly to work with his father again before signing up for the military in World War II. He served with several units before winding up with The Royal Winnipeg Rifles on the Belgian Front. MoRE uSEFul IN CANAdA’S WEST. despite his name, Tallman’s not what you’d call a big guy, the exact opposite in fact, so he was more useful to the war effort working on excavation for his father. He and his brother, Ervin, then branched off to build their own company, specializing in paving large surfaces, and very long, horizontal ones - He went on to build 62 airports throughout Western and Northern Canada, and one in Ceylon. like highways and airport runways. In 1940, an airport at portage la prairie, Manitoba needed a rebuild so the British Commonwealth Air Training plan could use the facility to train pilots. Tallman decided to bid for the $1.3 million job, even though he’d never tackled anything like it before. “There was a lot I thought I knew, and a lot I took for granted I didn’t know,” he says now. “In the back of my mind, I said if I had to, I could do it. If somebody else could do it, I could do it.” But building the thing turned out to be a lot easier than getting the contract in the first place. He put in a bid for the work. “And it took almost a year for the politicians to push me around and do everything they could to stop this little company from getting the job.” But he did get the job. THE GRoWING YEARS. dan and Erven’s company, which began as Tallman Gravel and Building Supply, grew to become provincial Concrete and TallCrete (concrete block), and Tallman Paving and Equipment Rental, specializing in heavy construction, land development, building highways all over the prairie provinces – and airport runways. over the years, he says, “I lived by a code of honour, and it helped dealing with other companies in North America.” And when other companies didn’t return that favour, “… you’d take your beating and look for the next street car.” From the first big job at portage la prairie, he went on to build 62 airports throughout Western and Northern Canada, and one in Ceylon (now Sri lanka). At the Edmonton International Airport he built two 11,000 foot (two miles) runways that, at the time, were the longest in the country. He helped rebuild the Vancouver Airport for jets. “They pumped about a million and a half yards of sand out of the Fraser River with dredges, let it settle, and the following year we put it on top of the old runways, built them up, and put concrete on top of that.” He built a dam on the North Saskatchewan River. And he built six drive-in theatres. His 40 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 40 12/10/08 9:44:13 AM first was also Winnipeg’s first, a 500-car drive-in that was, according to one story, built over an old stable where louis Riel and his followers once kept their horses. “I didn’t believe the fellah who told me that, so I took a shovel and dug up a spot or two, and sure enough, there was a lot of manure down there.” He did a few other things too—built the Rossmere golf course in the East Kildonan suburb of Winnipeg, for example, as a favour to his friend the mayor. He did get two passes for one free round of golf, which he gave to two golfers who had no money. “I was happy to do it. I enjoyed doing it for him,” he says of the golf course, though it involved more laying of sod than pouring of concrete. “I’ve found out in this world it’s better to be a giver than a taker.” TAKING IT EASY NoWAdAYS. Now dan Tallman, at 90, has lost two sons to cancer and his first wife Sally, to Alzheimer’s. He’s been lucky enough in love to find and marry his second wife, May, in 1999, and to spend his summers in Winnipeg and his winters near Miami, Florida – not Miami, Manitoba. And he spends his money by giving much of it away. one of 119 original founders of the Jewish Foundation of Manitoba in 1964, in early 2007 he donated $1 million to the Foundation. That gift created the Tallman Transportation Fund which enables seniors to get to and from the Foundation’s special seniors’ programming, social events and even medical appointments. It was publicized, says May Tallman “… only because he felt this might draw other people—contemporaries of his, acquaintances—to do the same.” It did, she adds. But other gifts and donations have not been publicized, and Tallman won’t talk about them. “He believes in giving back,” says May, and he does not seek public credit for that charity. “There are channels,” she says. “There are contacts.” So now he gives back using the channels and contacts he developed over the decades, plus that lifelong sense of honour. It’s the same way he built a company, and a big chunk of the west: more than five dozen airports, numerous buildings and other projects, and countless kilometers of highway. West West 41 WFG-W-09-Features.indd 41 12/10/08 9:44:23 AM SIMPle & DelIcIoUS StorY AnD PHotoGrAPHS by Cinda Chavich The art of braising Got a winter cold? Try eating your allium. 42 West . iSSUe 15 . winter 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 42 12/10/08 9:31:51 AM I have a friend who is mad about onions.Vidalias, yellow onions, leeks, chives and shallots – it’s all about edible Alliums for this girl. She’ll munch them raw, slice them into sandwiches, sauté, braise and caramelize them like there’s no tomorrow. And at this time of year, she has a lot more interesting vegetable dishes to savour than people who assume an onion is just what you chop and add to the pan before making soup or stew. Because an onion is more than an essential, behind-the-scenes ingredient for cooks, it can turn up on your plate in a leading role. THE RAW MATERIALS Allium cepa comes in many forms and crosses almost every culture. It was revered in ancient Egypt and is still the backbone of modern cuisine. Whether you’re whipping up a Szechuan stir fry, a Mexican salsa, an Indian curry or a very French onion soup, onions are essential. There are wild onions in the woods in central Asia and southern Tennessee – and First Nations families across Canada have long known where to forage for this fine flavouring. The thing about the onion family is that it’s so vast, ranging from fresh little bulbs and crunchy stems for salads (a.k.a. green or spring onions), to garlicky shallots, long fat leeks, big sweet Georgia or Walla Walla onions for burgers, red onions to add colour to salads, or big yellow or white winter storage onions. The other great thing about onions is that they’re loaded with healthy phenols and flavinoids, and compounds like quercetin that have antioxidant properties. The strongest-tasting varieties, like shallots, contain even more of the stuff that can destroy cancer cells. Folk remedies prescribe onions for a multitude of ailments from the common cold to heart disease and diabetes. And the natural compounds contained in every allium are both anti-inflammatory and anti-bacterial. But most of all, onions are delicious. They’re low in calories and high in flavour, so eating them, especially when other fresh vegetables are out of season, makes a western winter far more palatable. It’s also an easy way to make your whole house smell amazing when you’re hosting dinner. Just cook a couple of thinly sliced onions, slowly, in olive oil and butter (and I mean slowly – never let them brown) until you have a sweet jammy confit that you can pile in a bowl and pass with bread or crackers. Roasting a related bulb – a whole head of garlic, for example – will give you similar results. Just slice off the pointy top from a whole head to expose the cloves, wrap loosely in foil, drizzle with a tablespoon of olive oil, and bake at 400°F for about 45 minutes, until the garlic is soft and sweet. Squeeze the creamy flesh out of the dry papery husk and presto, a tasty paste to spread on bread or to mash with your potatoes. It’s also nice to grill thickly sliced or quartered onions on the barbecue. The high heat caramelizes sugars and adds a nice smoky, charred layer of flavour. Charring onions is a classic technique in Mexican cooking. Leeks make lovely soup, and braising leeks in a little chicken stock makes them tender and sweet. Just remember to slice them lengthwise, discard the dark green tops, and rinse the white parts well under running water to remove any dirt and grit. Then simply sauté them in butter until brown, add a little stock, cover and braise until tender, then top with some finely grated THE PROCESS An onion is most pungent and sharp when eaten raw, but becomes sweet and caramelized when slowly cooked. That’s the secret weapon in my pantry – a slow-cooked, caramelized onion jam that lifts a basic sandwich or burger into gourmet territory, and can even stand in as a chic little appetizer when slathered on a baguette. Caramelized onions From The Guy Can’t Cook, by Cinda Chavich (Whitecap Books, 2007). 3 large onions, peeled and thinly sliced (white, red and/or yellow) 1/4 cup (50 ml) virgin olive oil 1 teaspoon (5 ml) sugar 1 teaspoon (5 ml) balsamic vinegar Heat the oil in a sauté pan over medium-low heat. Add the onions and stir to coat with the oil. Cover the pan and “sweat” the onions for 5 minutes. Remove the cover and sauté until the onions begin to turn golden – if they are browning or burning, the heat is too high. Continue to cook on fairly low heat until the onions are very soft and jammy, with a nice color. Stir the sugar and vinegar together and add to the pan, cooking until the liquid is gone. Pile into a bowl and serve warm with bread, or put them in a container and refrigerate until you’re ready to use them. Photo: Cinda Chavich It’s easy to become addicted to onions, especially once they’ve been slowly cooked down into a sweet brown mass (caramelized). Pile them on or fold them into almost anything (a pizza, a sandwich, a burger, an omelette, a bowl of pasta) with spectacular results. Make caramelized onions in advance and keep them in a jar for several days in the refrigerator, or start them an hour before your guests arrive and your house will have that mouth-watering sautéed onion smell, one that crosses all cultures and age groups on the gottahave-that scale. West 43 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 43 12/10/08 9:31:59 AM An onion is more than an essential, behindthe-scenes ingredient for cooks. rrrrsrrrr Parmesan cheese and broil until bubbly for a super side dish. Store onions in a cool, dark and dry place – a moist cellar or refrigerator is not the right place and onions will rot quickly if stored in plastic. Ventilation is key. THE EQUIPMENT Chopping an onion is simple, remove the papery skin, remove the stem end and cut the onion in half, from tip to stem. Lay the onion flat, make 2-3 horizontal slices toward the root end, and several vertical slices, leaving the root intact to hold everything together. Then slice straight down at right angles for perfectly diced onions. The more vertical and horizontal slices you make in the beginning, the finer your onion will be diced. Smaller onions are also easier to dice finely. The downside of onions is the sulfuric compounds that are released when they’re sliced or diced. This is the gas that makes you cry when you slice an onion, especially when you crush the juicy onion cells with a dull knife, so make sure your knife is sharp. You can also buy onion goggles to protect your eyes, and some people suggest chilling your onions for 20 minutes in the refrigerator to reduce the tear-producing volatiles, but I’d rather just open a window or turn on the exhaust fan. You can also try pulsing quartered onions in the food processor if you need to mince a bunch. THE EMBELLISHMENTS A pickled onion makes a nice condiment with bread and cheese, and caramelized onions can be seasoned with a splash of balsamic vinegar or maple syrup, but the onion is simply a necessity on its own. As the poet Carl Sandburg wrote: “Life is like an onion. You peel it off one layer at a time, and sometimes you weep.” And sometimes it’s just deliciously sweet! West French onion soup This is the classic way to start a special meal—a bowl of intense beef stock, flavoured with sweet caramelized onions, and topped with crisp croutons and gooey cheese. From The Guy Can’t Cook by Cinda Chavich. 1/4 cup (50 mL) unsalted butter 4 large yellow onions, peeled and slivered 4 cups (1 L) homemade brown beef broth (or substitute low sodium canned) salt and freshly ground black pepper 4 slices French bread, or sourdough, toasted 1/2 cup (125 mL) shredded Gruyere cheese or a combination of Gruyere and Parmesan In a large saucepan, heat the butter over medium low heat and slowly sauté the onions, stirring often, for 30 to 45 minutes or until they are browned and caramelized. Add the stock, salt and pepper, and simmer together for 15 minutes longer. Preheat the broiler. Place the toasted bread in 4 ovenproof bowls and set the bowls on a baking sheet. Ladle the hot onion soup over the bread, dividing it evenly among the bowls. Top each bowl with 2 Tbsp (25 mL) of grated cheese. Place the soup directly under the broiler and broil for 3 minutes or until the cheese is melted and beginning to brown. Serve immediately. Serves 4. 44 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 44 12/10/08 9:32:03 AM 29201 Homef WHEN MARRIAGE BECOMES ABUSIVE h o m e f r o n t c alg ar y. co m West 45 WFG-W-09-Front back2.indd 45 29201 Homefront and PoliceTape Ad CgyInc.indd 1 12/10/08 9:32:03 PM AM 4/1/08 3:55:56 health Matters by ANGELA MORRISON, RN Frostbite Fallacies Illustration: Julie McLaughlin W e occasionally have a hard time coming to terms with it but let’s face it, our prairies and mountains can get really c-c-cold. The temperature guideline for long term freezing of food is -18⁰C (0⁰F); in the middle of a western winter, we can do that outdoors, sometimes for months. Parts of BC escape the extreme cold, or even any cold at all, but BC skiers and mountain hikers might want to pay attention. Even a relatively warm winter day in Banff, Biggar or Brandon, say -10⁰C, can get very cold in a hurry when the wind picks up. Suddenly that -10 can feel like -20. Really cold temperatures, like -40, which is where Celsius and Fahrenheit meet, aren’t unknown around here and can lead to hypothermia which is very dangerous. More common, though, is a cold weather malady called frostbite, which can be mild or severe. Frostbite occurs when body tissues freeze. What happens is that blood vessels near the skin narrow to help conserve the body’s core temperature. This protective strategy reduces blood flow to areas farthest from the heart. Usually the nose, cheeks, ears, fingers and toes freeze first but frostbite can affect any part of the body. Early signs of frostbite are pain and redness, the “pins and needles” sensation followed by a feeling of numbness in the affected area. Severe frostbite can cause blistering, sloughing of the skin and gangrene and may cause damage to deeper parts of the body such as muscles, nerves and bone. Frostbitten skin has a white or grayishyellow colour. It’s firm, even waxy, to the touch and has no feeling. According to the Medicine Net website, some groups have an increased risk for frostbite: children, because they lose body heat quicker than adults and tend to not be mindful of early warnings; people taking beta-blocker medication which decreases the flow of blood to the skin; and people with circulation disorders such as peripheral vascular disease. What do you do about frostbite? Get medical help as quickly as you can. Pay no attention to skating rink myths about pouring hot chocolate on the affected areas or rubbing and massaging. All but mild frostbite need to be treated by a medical professional. Until the point that a medical professional looks at it, treatment and first aid of frostbite should consist of: 1. Coming in from the cold. 2. Rewarming affected areas with direct skin contact (e.g. hands under armpits), soaking in warm, never hot, water or applying warm compresses. 3. Never using direct heat (e.g. heating pad, hair dryer) which can burn already damaged tissues. 4. Expecting some pain or tingling with rewarming. 5. Being aware that rewarming is complete when the affected area is red, soft and warm. 6. Seeking immediate medical treatment if normal skin colour and feeling do not return after first aid measures. Frostbite does adhere to the adage that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Dress appropriately for cold weather, layering with “breathable” fabrics. Keep all exposed skin covered in extreme temperatures and high wind chills and always stay dry because moisture will freeze quickly. When you’re outside in the cold, take regular breaks and lots of rest. And always remember, it can be even colder than you think. Common sense is your best guide. West 46 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 46 12/10/08 9:32:04 AM SUBSCRIBE NOW! Bring West Magazine into your home! WEST is the only magazine about Western Canada’s people and their communities. If it’s upbeat, important or interesting and about Western Canada, it will eventually be in WEST. Published three times a year, each issue features articles and personal stories reflecting the four Western provinces. WEST is available at no charge to Western Financial Group customers. To subscribe complete order form below and mail, fax, email, or phone in your order. West Magazine-Subscriptions RedPoint Media Group Inc 105-1210 20 Avenue SE Calgary AB T2G 1M8 Phone: 1-877-963-9333 ext 262 Fax: (403) 240-9059 www.westmagazine.ca subscriptions@redpointmedia.ca Please Choose Your Option: 1 Year West Magazine Subscription $12.00 ($12.72 with GST) 2 Year West Magazine Subscription $22.00 ($23.32 with GST) Please fill in fields below: Name: Company: Address: City: Prov./State: Postal/Zip Code: Home Phone: Country: Business Phone E-mail Address: Payment Method: (PLEASE NOTE “REDPOINT MEDIA GROUP INC” WILL APPEAR IN YOUR CREDIT CARD STATEMENT) Cheque Enclosed Card No: VISA MC AMEX Expiry Date: Signature: West 47 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 47 12/10/08 9:32:07 AM back grounder West’s Movie Project: Results T hree issues ago, we asked readers to send us lists of their 10 favourite movies, and their favourite actors, three men and three women. And we got swamped! Dozens of readers sent us detailed lists, mentioning just about every great movie ever made. Some lists were all oldies but goodies mentioning flicks like Mrs. Miniver, Topper and The Thin Man. Others were all more or less newies with movies like Titanic, Chronicles of Narnia and Dead Poets Society. We said we’d print a list of the West’s top 10 favourites, but we can’t because it’s statistically a tricky tie: High Noon, The Sound of Music, Casablanca, The African Queen and Gone with the Wind edged out a pretty good field of a lot of movies tied at 1 vote. Among newer movies, The Shawshank Redemption did well. Favourite male Actors? Johnny Depp, Leonardo Dicaprio, Clint Eastwood and Bogie topped the list. Female actors? Katherine Hepburn and Audrey Hepburn got the most mentions. Some lists had interesting contrasts: Pretty in Pink and The good, the bad and the ugly, for instance. Sounds like two different proms, doesn’t it? Some lists brought back names most of us had temporarily forgotten like Walter Brennan, Rhonda Fleming and Jeanne Crain. All in all, it was great fun and West thanks everyone who took the time to send in their faves. W In August of 2003, a huge forest fire destroyed 200 homes in Kelowna BC and, threatened the entire city. Pushed by high winds and with plenty of dry wood and brush to feed on, the runaway fire roared up a mountainside, into the spectacular Myra Canyon and onto the former right of way of the historic Kettle Valley Railway (KVR) where it destroyed 12 wooden trestles that had been standing for 80 years. The last time a scheduled train, a freight, ran along KVR track was in 1973. The last passenger train was in 1964. But, since its completion at the end of July, 1916, the Kettle Valley Railway had linked BC’s Kootenay region to the Pacific coast, connecting to the CPR main line at Hope at its western end and at Midway 550 or so crooked kms east. (The actual Kettle River and a town named Kettle Valley are near Midway which is named for its location halfway across the province.) In 1990, the BC government bought the old right of way from the CPR, trestles and all, and volunteers with the Myra Canyon Trestle Restoration Society turned it into a popular hiking and cycling trail between Kelowna and Penticton. The volunteers worked hard to make sure the trestles were safe for hiking and bicycle riding. Then came the fire and that would have been that, except a year later, the province and the federal government created a $13,500,000 partnership to rebuild the old trestles. Work began in October, 2004 and was scheduled for completion by late 2007. It took about $5,000,000 and six months more than planned, but by June of 2008, the trestles were back, rebuilt to their original specs by BC workers using BC wood. They’re as good Photo: Bruce Masterman Firestorm casualty as good as new. as new, perhaps better. Since the reopening, thousands of visitors have cycled and hiked the 12-kilometre trail through stark forests of charred trees. Myra Canyon is still spectacular and a part of our history has been revived. W 48 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 48 12/10/08 9:32:18 AM Axis Nose Art? W e asked Clarence Simonsen, Mr. Nose Art, if the Germans, Japanese and Italians painted their planes like our Allied fliers did during WWII. Here’s what he wrote. That’s a whole history question, but yes, all Axis countries used a form of art on their aircraft. Japanese art was rare; they did not use any art until late in the war, after mid-1944. They applied unit flashes to the tail of aircraft and I have one photo of a full tiger painted on the tail of a Japanese fighter shot down over China. When the Wright Brothers were made fun of by the US Government in 1903, and the flying machine was laughed at by the American press, Wilbur Wright took their invention to France. On the eve of WWI France was the centre of world aviation but other countries had also purchased or stolen the Wrights’ inventions. Italy was the first country to use aircraft in operational air war flight. On October 22, 1911 the Italians used the aircraft to spot troops in Libya, and the following week used the first aircraft to drop bombs in war. They were the first to paint a circle over bullet holes on their aircraft. By WWII the Italians were using all forms of nose and fuselage art, plus three squadrons had adopted Walt Disney squadron art. It is funny but during the Battle of Britain, the Canadians, British, French, Polish, Germans and Italians were all painting Walt Disney art on their aircraft. During the buildup of the German Luftwaffe, and the war in Spain, various forms of artistic expression adorned German aircraft. Most of this was in the form of heraldic display. These emblems were ingeniously conceived and skillfully painted. Then, in 1940, the Luftwaffe used nose art to make fun of Prime Ministers Neville Chamberlain and Winston Churchill. An Me109 fighter showed a “Neville” crying bird with a British umbrella tucked under the wing. This appeared on all the squadron fighters. Another showed Churchill bending over and passing wind and the German version of the name “Old F--- Pants”. One featured a German eagle pecking the eyes from a British Lion, etc. You get the idea. After Germany lost the Battle of Britain the unit art disappeared and the nose art returned to a very serious Heraldic form of unit insignia. W Photo: Wendy Dudley Walt Disney goes to war. Wendy Dudley reports that not all the nose art on wartime aircraft depicted curvaceous gals. There were comic strip characters such as Bugs Bunny, Dagwood, Superman, Popeye and Li’l Abner. Most prominent were Disney characters, many created by Walt Disney himself. The studio produced more than 1,200 pieces of nose art for allied aircraft. The RCAF received 32 insignia designed by the Disney team. The training school at Claresholm, Alberta sported the Seven Dwarfs on a ‘V for Victory’. A Halifax bomber, named Medicine Hat after the home town of its pilot, Jack McIntosh, featured Goofy dropping bombs pulled from a hat. It wasn’t long before many of the 300,000 allied aircraft were adorned with portraits of Goofy, Mickey and Minnie Mouse, Donald Duck, Bambi and Dumbo. “When I go into a school and start telling kids about Disney, I have them hooked,” said historian and artist Clarence Simonsen. “It’s a great way to get them interested in history and the role Canadians played in our wars.” W West 49 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 49 12/10/08 9:32:22 AM RANTS & RAVES West’s editor raves… What’s with all the freaking out lately? Illustration by Mike Kerr W hen I was in high school, our boxing coach, the great Jim Marmino, told us “Don’t just aim for his jaw, aim for a point 4 inches behind his jaw. Hit through the target.” The first time I tried it, I knocked out my best friend 30 seconds into the bout and I’ve felt guilty ever since. But I never forgot Jim Marmino’s advice – hit through your target. In real life, that means “Be Thorough” and it’s been very helpful in writing and editing things: “Tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth … as clearly as you can.” In order to get close to the truth, you have to ask questions and I’m sorry to report that just asking questions these days can cause instant and ferocious lashing out. Try it yourself. Ask an Al Gore disciple a question like this: “I’ve heard that occurrences of increased solar flares coincide almost exactly with recorded increases in the global temperature. Is that true?” Then duck. It’s fascinating, to me anyway, that people interpret questions to mean that you doubt their conclusions, and that can really be troublesome when their conclusions are based less on all-the-evidence than on faith. And the problem isn’t limited to questions. Just wondering can get you into trouble. A few years ago I wrote in West about Canada’s conversion to metric and wondered if the astronomical cost and lickety-split speed of the conversion 35 years ago were good ideas. I was careful to point that I wasn’t advocating a return to our old way of measuring things with ounces, feet, Fahrenheit and such. “Dear Idiot …” started one of the nicer letters. I’m ready to believe just about anything except astrology and alchemy but I always have questions. And when I suspect there’s an error somewhere, I might venture a dissenting fact. Consider national elections. Imagine that Party A gets 35% of the national vote but only 25% of the seats in Parliament and Party A people complain that they should have 35% of the seats because “… that’s what we won in the national vote.” The simple fact is that there’s no such thing as a national vote in Canada. This little challenge crops up more often in the US. Gore got 48.38% of the national vote in 2000, more than Bush’s 47.87%. So how come Bush won the election? Well, there’s no such thing as a national vote in the US either. Flawed conclusions based on partial evidence are sort of understandable. A simple, if somewhat strained, example from the World Series 48 years ago: the New York Yankees scored more than twice as many runs as the Pittsburgh Pirates, 56-26, so the Yankees must have won. But there’s more compelling evidence and it’s easy to find: the Pirates won 4 games and the Yankees won 3. They weren’t playing to see who’ d score the most runs over 7 games; they were playing to see who’ d win 4 games. Most of us have no problem discussing anything and objections, questions, assertions, suggestions, modifications, knowledgeable palaver back and forth can be delightful, even if nothing ever gets resolved. But it doesn’t work unless the people involved actually know what they’re talking about and can deal with the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth … without lashing out. So far it’s just annoying but it’s getting nastier. I wouldn’t be surprised to see the return of Star Chamber proceedings any day now. Oh wait, we already have those. Maybe we’ll start burning people at the stake again. W Mike McCormick 50 West . ISSUE 15 . WINTER 2008/2009 WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 50 12/10/08 9:32:38 AM y? WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 51 12/10/08 9:32:44 AM How to add a touch of yellow to your holidays: Canary diamond Butterscotch candy canes Sports car Vacation in the sun Labrador puppy Holiday wishes from Aviva From our family to yours, have a happy and healthy holiday season and best wishes for the new year. WFG-W-09-Front and back2.indd 52 12/10/08 9:32:44 AM