Vote for the Hope in Shadows Calendar Cover

Add a Comment by Rebecca Bollwitt

Each year, Megaphone Magazine’s low-income vendors take part in the Hope in Shadows photography contest. Using single-use film cameras, vendors capture images of their communities and submit them for a chance to be featured in the annual Hope in Shadows calendar. Voting is now open for this year’s calendar cover!

Vote Hope in Shadows

Hope in Shadows Calendar

Megaphone received over 1,500 photos for this year’s contest, which a community jury narrowed down to just 30 finalists. These top 30 photographs showcase this year’s theme, Play and offer an intimate look into the lives of Megaphone vendors. 

This project is rooted in creating space for people experiencing poverty to tell their own stories, through their own lens. Hope in Shadows shows the beauty, joy, friendship, and hope that exist alongside the hardship in the lives of people impacted by poverty.

The Shadows calendar is sold by Megaphone‘s low-income vendors on the streets of Vancouver and Victoria. Vendors buy each calendar for $10 and sell them for $20, keeping the profit. 

About Megaphone

For over a decade the monthly magazine, published by professional journalists and designers, has been sharing stories that explore social justice, culture, politics, and independent arts in Vancouver and Victoria. It also serves as a platform for people experiencing poverty and homelessness to share their stories and creativity as writers, featured interviewees and more. Shop online now or find a vendor near you.

Miss604’s Rebecca Bollwitt is a proud contributor to the magazine, since April 2021, writing the Heartbeats column that shines a spotlight on non-profit organizations in the community and the amazing people behind them.

PATIO Vancouver Giveaway

Comments 122 by Rebecca Bollwitt

Hot days call for a cool beverage on a shady patio and John and I experienced just that over the weekend. Our friends at PATIO Vancouver – a collaboration of a bunch of local BIAs (Business Improvement Associations) – have put together a map of over 400 outdoor dining spaces in Vancouver. From Dunbar to the East Village, Cambie to the West End and Gastown, with all points in between – it’s your go-to guide for outdoor dining in the city. To celebrate, I have a giveaway! But first, more important info:

PATIO Vancouver

John and I spent the afternoon on the patio at Minami in Yaletown, thanks to PATIO Vancouver and the Yaletown BIA. In the back courtyard, off the main street, covered by a lush green canopy, we sipped Nojitos (refreshing, non-alcoholic mojitos) to cool off.

PATIO Vancouver Giveaway

For our meal, we sampled the day’s top offerings in the Minami Premium Zen multi-course menu that included our favourite: Aburi sushi for the second course. To top off the dining experience, two desserts: a coconut mango creme brulee and a yuzu raspberry semifreddo.

Stay Downtown, Get More Deals!

To compliment your patio experience, you can also find great deals on Downtown Vancouver hotels – hello, air conditioning – when you book through StayVancouverHotels.com using promo code PATIO. You will receive a $50 Visa PATIO gift card upon check-in. If you use your $50 Visa PATIO gift card at a participating PATIO restaurant, you will receive an additional $20 in value from the restaurant.  Valid on stays from June 15 to July 31, 2021.

Giveaway

I have a $150 gift card for Minami to give away so you can have an epic (and cool) outdoor dining experience in Vancouver this summer. Here’s how you can enter to win:

I will draw one winner at random from all entries at 12:00pm on Sunday, July 4, 2021. UPDATE: The winner is Ren!

Eagle Coaster at Cypress Mountain

Add a Comment by Rebecca Bollwitt

You’ve probably seen this type of alpine ride on your Instagram, from the Rockies to the Alps, but did you know the Eagle Coaster at Cypress Mountain opens this summer? The single track ride will take off from the top of Eagle Express Quad Chair on Black Mountain and travel over 1,700 metres with 279 meters of vertical drop.

Eagle Coaster

Eagle Coaster at Cypress Mountain

Control your own speed by using the brake and safely reach thrilling speeds of up to 40 km per hour as you wind down the alpine forest, with some pretty epic views. Cypress says it’s suitable for all ages and physical capabilities.

Austrian manufacturer Sunkid, who built the ride, has installed more than 50 similar coasters in locations around the world including The Pipe, which opened in 2016 at Revelstoke Mountain Resort.

“This activity positions perfectly within our planned vision for enhancing year round accessibility to our world class public recreation facilities,” stated Cypress Mountain Resort president Russell Chamberlain, who called the Coaster’s installation a “game-changing moment” for the resort. “The Mountain Coaster is the perfect centerpiece to build family focused recreational summer activity,” he said. [Source: North Shore News]

Your ticket includes the chair lift ride to get you to the top. Tickets are available now for $12-$29 with two ride packages available, with July 12th being the first day to book (as of time of publishing this post).

Indigenous Youth are Overrepresented Among Youth Experiencing Homelessness


Add a Comment by Guest Author
Covenant House Logo Small

The #CHVCatchUp is a monthly series featuring the latest updates and news from Covenant House Vancouver. Miss604 is proud to be the Official Blog Partner of CHV to share and tell their stories.

Indigenous Peoples Day at CHV

June 21 is National Indigenous Peoples Day, a day for celebrating the heritage, diverse cultures, and outstanding achievements of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis Peoples. This year marked a significant milestone, the 25th anniversary of National Indigenous Peoples Day.

Indigenous youth are overrepresented among youth experiencing homelessness and make up 24% of the youth served at Covenant House Vancouver. To honour the day, CHV organized a special bannock taco lunch and salmon dinner for youth in all our programs.

CHV bannock tacos

A Youth Worker at Covenant House’s Crisis Program created a beautiful exhibit in the Pender building lobby highlighting the contributions of prominent Indigenous Peoples. It is both beautiful and so informative, youth and staff alike have enjoyed learning about the incredible contributions from Indigenous Peoples.

Supporting Indigenous Youth at CHV

The Spiritual Care Services Team makes sure that we welcome, support, and nurture youth of all faiths and traditions. As a result, they help youth to explore and develop their own spiritual, religious, and cultural identities. And, if a youth wishes, they connect them to safe and healthy spiritual, religious, or cultural communities. 

The Spiritual Care Services Team provided medicines/smudge kits for several youth as well as medicines and smudge supplies for a Community Support Services kayak trip. Youth will have the opportunity to participate in medicines walk at Trillium Park on June 30th with Lori Snyder, a Metís herbalist, and educator.

If you would like to support youth at Covenant House Vancouver now is a great time as any gift you make before June 30th will be matched, allowing you the opportunity to have double the impact to help young people overcome homelessness.

Awesome Indigenous Persons Art Display at Covenant House
A Youth Worker at Covenant House’s Crisis Program created a beautiful exhibit in the Pender building lobby

Since 1997, Covenant House Vancouver has been providing love and hope to youth experiencing homelessness. They are the premiere service provider of residential and outreach services for homeless and at-risk youth ages 16 to 24 in Vancouver. 

Follow Covenant House Vancouver on FacebookTwitter, and Instagram for more info.

Read more: Crisis Program at Covenant House Vancouver, Education Support at Covenant House Vancouver, Community Support Services at Covenant House

Dancing on the Edge Festival Film Pack Giveaway

Comments 2 by Rebecca Bollwitt

The Dancing on the Edge Festival (“DOTE”) will deliver high calibre, challenging and cutting-edge dance featuring innovative and spellbinding works starting July 8th. For its 33rd anniversary, the festival will include a presentation of over thirty online and live stage performances featuring artists from across Canada.

push/FOLD Ash, Liane Burns. Photo credit: Jingzi Zhao
push/FOLD Ash, Liane Burns. Photo credit: Jingzi Zhao

Dancing on the Edge Festival

  • When: July 8 to 17, 2021
  • Where: Digital and in-person for limited audiences, indoors and outdoors at the Firehall Arts Centre
  • Tickets: $15 to $30, available online now

This year’s festival is a hybrid model with live dance performances accompanied by films; film screenings; films online and one live stream event where performances are influenced by the tides.

“The pandemic has had a devastating effect on the performing arts community and we are thrilled to be able to provide dance artists and companies both online and live performance opportunities to support and profile their work,” says Festival Producer, Donna Spencer.

On offer will be some specially curated digital programming with recorded online performances, premieres of dance films, dance discussions, outdoor live performances in the Firehall’s Courtyard (for very limited audiences with safety precautions in place) and theatre performances with limited capacity, if permitted (Firehall Arts Centre Theatre).

Spencer also announced seven commission projects the COVID Commissions, premiering at this year’s Dancing on the Edge Festival. As part of a COVID commissioning project, companies/choreographers presenting commissioned works include Ouro Collective/Cristina Bucci, Raven Spirit Dance, Billy Marchenski, Immigrant Lessons/Kevin Fraser, Generous Mess, Rob Kitsos and Meredith Kalaman.

Immigrant Lessons. Photo credit: Vanessa Yuen
Immigrant Lessons. Photo credit: Vanessa Yuen

Canadian artists include Wen Wei Dance, Radical System Art/Shay Kuebler, Rachel Meyer, Inverso Productions/Lesley Telford, Dumb Instrument Dance/Ziyian Kwan with Rianne Svelnis, Alexis Fletcher/Vanessa Goodman, Future Leisure/Julianne Chapple, Company Ci/Gabrielle Martin, CAMP, Kirsten Wicklund, Shion Skye Carter & Kaiyuu, Peter Smida, Tara Cheyenne Performance/Tara Cheyenne Friedenberg, O’Dela Arts/Olivia C. Davies, and many more.  

Festival Film Pack Giveaway

I have a Festival Film Pack to give away that includes access to the following online performances, which will be available to steam July 8 to 20, 2021:

Flow Tide | Shion Skye Carter
Vicarious Time | Stand Up Dance/Meagan O’Shea
Dazzle | Future Leisure/Julianne Chapple
Become, this earthly plane | Kelly McInnes
Straight, No Chaser | Olivia C. Davies/O.Dela Arts
APE & APE (3.0) | Tara Cheyenne Performance/Tara Cheyenne Friedenberg
MOI – the partitions | Radical System Art/Shay Kuebler
“1:1:1” (phase one) | Inverso Productions/Lesley Telford
Two | Wen Wei Dance
TUNING | Vanessa Goodman
The Threshing Floor | Rob Kitsos
ORIGINS/ How Do We Co-exist? | Immigrant Lessons
Limb(e)s | Company Ci
Excerpts | push/FOLD
the sea of my tomorrows | Meredith Kalaman

Here’s how you can enter to win:

  • Leave a comment on this post (1 entry)
  • Click below to post an entry on Twitter
[clickToTweet tweet=”RT to enter to win a @DOTEFestival Festival Film Pack #DOTE2021 http://ow.ly/IuuL50Fi0fj” quote=” Click to enter via Twitter” theme=”style6″]

I will draw one winner at random from all entries at 12:00pm on Wednesday, June 30, 2021. UPDATE: The winner is Jason!