Who is Your Backup Team

Comments 11 by Rebecca Bollwitt

There are only two games left in round one of the NHL playoffs, both coming down to the wire for the Caps vs Flyers, and the Sharks vs Flames. Tonight the Habs took the Bruins in another Game 7, which is probably for the best since my nephews now all own sweaters and my niece wouldn’t have grown into my Boston jersey for another few years.

Whenever the home team gets left behind for the post season those who aren’t too soured on the entire sport chose another team to follow.


Photo credit: Darren Barefoot on Flickr

With hockey sometimes it’s the “other Canadian teams” in the playoffs or perhaps the team that beat us out because hey – it stings a bit less to know you were defeated by the best. Other times you’ll start to root for your favourite player, you’ll chose a team by geographical location, or finally your friend has a favourite team and since you’ll be watching the playoffs together you just go along with their choice.

I’ve poked around the blogosphere to see who’s looking good to some bruised Canucks fans right about now:

  • I’m pretty sure DaveO is backing the Caps and aside from Alex the Great, it may have something to do with Cookie being over there.
  • Rod’s got a playoff pool going on Canuck Nation.
  • Jennifer usually loves the Canucks but is a Habs fan at heart: “It’s true, I bleed bleu, blanc and rouge… …I even owned a hair scrunchie and a sweet pair of shoes with logos on them. I had earrings and necklaces to go with my hoodies, t-shirts, shorts, pants and socks.”
  • Canucks Fangirl wonders if she’s a traitor for watching other teams.
  • Terry speculates which ex-Canuck will take the Cup, “Two (maybe three) ex-Canucks have the best shot at touching the cup this spring. They include one time rental Bryan Somlinski with the Habs and lovable pest Jarkko Ruutu with the Penguins. Add to this a reasonable chance for D-Man Adrian Aucoin and the Flames IF Iggy and crew can get by the Sharks.”
  • And Yankee Canucks isn’t too sure, “With no real stake left in hockey and my preferred team rapidly becoming a laughing stock, I feel now is a good time to run out of the country for a few days. I could come back and a Muppet could be the GM of the Canucks who knows?” but does play favourites in the end, however he’ll come back to find out only one of his picks is still alive… (at least until tomorrow).
  • So how about everyone else? You can select up to two answers in the Miss604 Poll below:

    [poll=6]

    I’ve been keeping my eye on the Eastern Conference as I am one of those bitter people who can’t stand to look at any other team in the West right now. I must admit, it’s been some pretty fantastic hockey with end to end action and the league’s most exciting players.

    Tuesday will decide which other two teams carry on to round two with the Washington vs Philly at 7pm ET and San Jose vs Calgary at 10pm ET.

    Vancouver History: Jack Wasserman

    Comments 4 by Rebecca Bollwitt

    There are pivotal characters that have put Vancouver on the map in many different realms, from First Nations literary works, legendary hockey skills, to helping children learn to swim in English Bay. Vancouver’s history is made by its people, from many generations.

    Wasserman's Beat

    Anyone who has passed by the intersection of Georgia and Hornby may have noticed a sign marking the route as “Wasserman’s Beat”. This refers to former Vancouver Sun reporter, Jack Wasserman.

    Starting May 12, 1954, [the Vancouver Sun] gave him a man-about-town column, and he hit his stride. His column on the second front page of the afternoon paper, often detailing the city’s underbelly, became a hugely popular feature. His biggest scoop was the death in 1959 of Errol Flynn in a West End apartment. [VancouverHistory]

    The self-described “Saloon Columnist” hung out at places like The Cave Cabaret, the Mandarin, and Isy’s Supper Club, which are now just faint dots in our city’s rear-view mirror. These nightlife hot spots (from the 1930s and into the 80s) hosted such acts as Mel Torme, Milton Berle, Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, a young Yvonne De Carlo got her start at the Palomar (on Alberni and Burrard) thanks to Dal Richards. [source: SunSpots].

    “Vancouver erupted as the vaudeville capital of Canada, rivaling and finally outstripping Montreal in the East and San Francisco in the south as one of the few places where the brightest stars of the nightclub era could be glimpsed from behind a post, through a smoke-filled room, over the heads of $20 tippers at ringside. Only in Las Vegas and Miami Beach, in season, were more superstars available in nightclubs.” [Jack Wasserman]

    In the heyday of night life in this town, Jack Cullen, Jack Wasserman, and Hugh Pickett would be running around having a late supper with Lena Horne or Duke Ellington and it was big news. Wasserman would have something in the Sun the next day, and Cullen could have an exclusive interview on ‘NW. Whenever he’d play an old interview of his, I swear you could smell the rum and cigarettes off of his breath. [TheCommentary]

    Wasserman wrote about the city’s “underbelly”, but also covered political issues like 1952’s Provincial Election and what he coined “an unholy mess” made by the Social Credit party [see: CBC news archive footage].

    He worked for the Ubyssey at UBC, the Vancouver Sun, CKNW and CJOR radio, CBC TV, and was a pillar of Vancouver journalism. At the Hotel Vancouver in 1977, he passed away mere yards away from what the city would commemorate as “Wasserman’s Beat”.

    EPIC Expo: Parks Canada

    Comments 2 by Rebecca Bollwitt

    A great part about this weekend’s EPIC Expo was the diversity of exhibitors. From office products, to fair trade coffee, electric scooters, and bamboo underpants, EPIC pretty much lived up to its name. I really appreciated the Parks Canada display and DaveO had a chat with Coral over on the happy frog podcast. I stopped by briefly and noticed a large display featuring the Fisgard Lighthouse and Fort Rodd Hill.

    Fisgard Lighthouse

    The Parks Canada representative gave me some information about the National Marine Conservation Areas of Canada.

    National Marine Conservation Areas, or NMCA for short, are marine areas managed for sustainable use and containing smaller zones of high protection. They include the seabed, the water above it and any species which occur there. They may also take in wetlands, estuaries, islands and other coastal lands.

    Although they only currently exist in Ontario and Quebec, they are working toward incorporating two sections of BC coastal waters. The first in the southern Strait of Georgia and possibly another up north. However, determining a NMCA is a long process filled with feasibility studies and much-needed input from the population. The studies are expected to be completed sometime in 2008, which will allow the governments of the region to decide whether a NMCA would be practical and desirable.

    The Strait of Georgia marine region is the smallest of five marine regions found on Canada’s Pacific coast, yet it is also one of the most productive. It includes a wide diversity of seascapes ranging from the fjords of Desolation Sound to the broad mudflats of Boundary Bay, and from the cloudy sediment plumes flowing from the Fraser River to the clear waters among the southern Gulf Islands. [Parks Canada]


    Photo credit: neilbanas on Flickr

    The second proposal for BC is the Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site. The 1470 square km area (part of The Queen Charlotte Islands) was made a BC Provincial Park in 1958 and a National Park in 1988.

    The boundary between earth and ocean exists only on a map and the cycle of life in the diverse marine ecosystems of Gwaii Haanas encircles land and sea. Once the NMCAR is established, nearly five thousand kilometres of Gwaii Haanas will be protected. This will be one of the only places in the world where a representative area is protected from mountain top to the great ocean depths. [Parks Canada]

    It’s pretty amazing what you can learn when you stop to talk to the good folks who make appearances at these exhibitions. Sure, the Parks Canada booth didn’t have free samples of coffee, wine, organic beer or vodka, but it was truly something I was interested in and I learned a lot just by stopping in for those few minutes.


    Photo credit: neilbanas on Flickr

    As a bit of a post-mortem since the EPIC Expo is now over, a huge thanks to happy frog (and our crew-chief DaveO) for having us on their team this weekend. They were the official social media sponsors of EPIC and I think we successfully generated a lot of buzz, not only for happy frog but for all the featured businesses and products we got to explore. You can check out all the content we churned out this weekend over on the frog blog.

    EPIC Expo: happyfrog blogging team

    Comments 3 by Rebecca Bollwitt

    This post was written for happyfrog at the EPIC Sustainable Living Expo

    Here at the happyfrog.ca booth in the concourse of the EPIC Expo we’re blogging and podcasting up a storm. The show continues until 9:00pm tonight and will resume tomorrow from 10am to 5pm. You can’t miss this social media sponsor’s booth as we’re located directly in front of the entrance to the showroom.

    frogblogger

    Live from EPIC08

    happyfrog blog squad

    Raul's podcast interview with Adria Vasil

    Raul got to interview Adria Vasil for his first podcast EVER, which will be posted to happyfrog.

    Everything you ever wanted to know about organic beer. Side note: It tastes great, the lager, the pale ale, and the lager… and the pale ale again…


    Photo credit: DaveO on Flickr

    Big shout out to Salt Spring Coffee for allowing DaveO to borrow a thermos of caffeine to keep us going.

    EPIC Expo: Mike Holmes Makes it Right

    Comments 4 by Rebecca Bollwitt

    This post was written for happyfrog at the EPIC Sustainable Living Expo

    At this time yesterday Mike Holmes was in Toronto redoing a roof and getting a sunburn.

    Although we can’t control our flip flopping weather in Vancouver, this city was sure grateful for Mike’s appearance. I had the chance to take some notes during his presentation although my blog post simply can’t express the passion and commitment this man emits, but I’ll try.

    Mike Holmes

    Over 7 seasons the TV show Holmes on Holmes has helped over 100 families, 365 days a year often working on 3-5 projects at a time. Mike announced that the final episode of the show will air in June and after that he’s moving on to bigger things.

    Going to the next level of homebuilding, Mike’s new show Make it Right will see him in building houses in New Orleans and even heading to Africa to build 5 homes for children. Not only is he going international with the program, but he’s starting up a development company to make: “homes that will not burn down, fall down, blow down, will not mould, are totally enviro-friendly and ‘greener than green’.”

    After we had been updated on various projects, and got over the sad news of the show’s ending (followed by the joy of knowing he’ll be spreading his knowledge across the world), Mike launched into his talk that contained so many energy-efficient tips I didn’t have the time to catch them all, but here are a few which he details as various “shades of green”:

    Dark Green:

  • Two storey homes are not the most energy-efficient; bungalows are better
  • Flat roofs are a great way to collect rain water/grey water, they can be green, have a grass lawn or vegetable garden. You would be using the square footage you already own. Head up a flat roof to have a BBQ and a beer.
  • Shingles are asphalt which is oil-based. Not only are they more expensive, they are conducive to fires (50% of house fires spread from roof to roof). Try a flat roof or steel roof, which lasts up to 50 years.
  • MIke Holmes

    Mike shared a story about a local fire department that was asking him to help promote the use of sprinklers in buildings and homes. Unfortunately he couldn’t back their campaign, “why would I get behind something that would put more water into a house I’m trying to keep water out of?” – “build a house that won’t burn!”

    Dark Green:

  • Mike addresses a question he often hears, how much more expensive is it to build a sustainable home? It’s only about 10-20% more to get the right materials that will last longer than a lifetime.
  • “Cradle to Grave”: Designing a product that is environmentally friendly from beginning, middle, to the end of its life. ie. concrete – how much energy does it take to make it? A lot actually however, how long does it last? forever.
  • Lighter Shade of Green:

  • Combine a bunch of products within your home. The “lipstick and mascara” with energy efficient appliances does help.
  • Even Lighter Shade of Green:

  • Those 6 litre “low flow” toilets that, in Mike’s words, “take 5 flushes just to get your number two down.” Products like these are a great concept but unless you can find a low-flow that has enough ‘suction’ and won’t need multiple flushes, it’s not doing its job 100%. Mike says that in a home, 6% of water is used on washing our things and 13% is spent flushing the toilet.
  • Mike used a few obscenities on stage and laughs them off, “I’m sorry, I’m a contractor!”. Other parts of the presentation were a little too technical for me, especially the explanation of a Thermal Break and Thermal Barrier. Gotta love those vapour barriers, folks.

  • Fact: Concrete holds the most amount of moisture in a home.
  • Fact: In-floor heating is the most energy-efficient way to warm up a home.
  • Face: Spray-foam insulation is the most environmentally friendly, “Cradle to Grave”.
  • Unfortunately too many homes are built to ‘minimum code’, and that won’t change until lives are lost. How often do you hear about 100 condos in a complex going up on flames? Minimum code needs to change – there is no reason why homes and lives need to be lost if things are built right.

    After a long question and answer period followed by book signing, Mike was catching a flight out of Vancouver. His insights are appreciated and it’s nice to see someone with so much passion for the greater good who is thinking about the future its generations.