Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

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A Smile Changes Everything. Island Dental Health Centre Dr. Randy Koniuk Dr. Scott Stewart (250)748-6673 IDHC.ca Monday – Friday 8:00 am – 5:00 pm Wednesday 8:00 am – 6:30 pm 7265121 Serving the Cowichan Valley www.cowichanvalleycitizen.com Wednesday, November 11, 2015 Bill Greenwell’s Musings of a Magpie Mind explores unusual pets LIVING, Page 11 ‘Star Wars never gets old for Charles Ross and his one-man show A&E, Page 16 WEDNESDAY REMEMBRANCE DAY SPECIAL SECTION Continuing a longstanding tradition, Cowichan Valley cadets place crosses at the graves of men and women who served in Canada’s armed forces in preparation for Remembrance Day. Check out our special section for Remembrance Day, starting on page 20. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN] RCMP busts grow op SARAH SIMPSON CITIZEN One fewer magic mushroom lab exists in North Cowichan thanks to a Nov. 6 raid. North Cowichan/Duncan RCMP’s street crimes unit got help from E Division’s special- ized Clandestine Laboratory Enforcement and Response Team (CLEAR) to execute a warrant on a psilocybin grow op Friday night. Seized were both drug parapher- nalia and a number of containers used to cultivate what is suspect- ed to be psilocybin mushrooms. “It is unknown how long the homeowner has been operat- ing this illegal lab,” said a press release issued by North Cowic- han/Duncan RCMP spokesperson Cpl. Krista Hobday. She said mould and fungi are generally associated with the growing of magic mushrooms and that’s a concern. THREE IN A ROW FOR ISLANDERS /37 See MAN AND WOMAN, Page 5 MAGIC MUSHROOMS

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November 11, 2015 edition of the Cowichan Valley Citizen

Transcript of Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Page 1: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

A Smile Changes Everything.Island Dental Health Centre

Dr. Randy KoniukDr. Scott Stewart(250)748-6673

IDHC.caMonday – Friday 8:00 am – 5:00 pm • Wednesday 8:00 am – 6:30 pm 7265121

Serving the Cowichan Valley www.cowichanvalleycitizen.com Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Bill Greenwell’s Musings of a Magpie Mind explores unusual pets LIVING, Page 11

‘Star Wars never gets old for Charles Ross and his one-man show A&E, Page 16

W

EDN

ESD

AY

REMEMBRANCE DAY SPECIAL SECTION

Continuing a longstanding tradition, Cowichan Valley cadets place crosses at the graves of men and women who served in Canada’s armed forces in preparation for Remembrance Day. Check out our special section for Remembrance Day, starting on page 20. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]

RCMP busts grow opSARAH SIMPSON CITIZEN

One fewer magic mushroom lab exists in North Cowichan thanks to a Nov. 6 raid.

Nor th Cowichan/Duncan RCMP’s street crimes unit got help from E Division’s special-ized Clandestine Laboratory Enforcement and Response Team (CLEAR) to execute a warrant on a psilocybin grow op Friday night.

Seized were both drug parapher-nalia and a number of containers used to cultivate what is suspect-ed to be psilocybin mushrooms.

“It is unknown how long the homeowner has been operat-ing this illegal lab,” said a press release issued by North Cowic-han/Duncan RCMP spokesperson Cpl. Krista Hobday.

She said mould and fungi are generally associated with the growing of magic mushrooms and that’s a concern.

THREE IN A ROW FOR ISLANDERS /37

See MAN AND WOMAN, Page 5

MAGIC MUSHROOMS

Page 2: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

2 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

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Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 3

Stolen trailer a dent in local artist’s transitSARAH SIMPSON CITIZEN

A Cowichan Valley artist’s efforts to do right by the environ-ment have been spoiled by some-body not doing right by the community.

Potter Hilary Huntley’s bike trailer was stolen a few weeks ago. Huntley and her husband made the tough commitment when they moved to town, to be a single-vehicle family. The arrangement has been success-ful since 2007 with her husband riding his bike to work during the week and Huntley taking her bike and trailer to haul her pot-tery to work at the Duncan Farm-ers’ Market on Saturdays.

“This integral part of our transportation plan has been locked to a security plate/ring in the carport for several years with a heavy duty bike lock,” she explained. “The trailer and I often come home filthy with road grit and dripping salty water so it can’t be stored inside.”

Now, the trailer has vanished from her North Cowichan home.

Huntley said the thief took the time to unbolt the wall plate and take the trailer away still locked to the giant bike lock.

“I am very upset that they took my property but it also means that I have to get dropped off at work and picked up which takes four car trips instead of zero car trips,” she explained.

Huntley is not only dismayed at such a brazen theft but also disheartened at the amount of time it will take her to replace the trailer.

“As a subsistence artist I will have to work very hard to replace my transportation,” she said. “I am currently expecting a little one so my capacity to work is greatly reduced.”

Huntley asks those who’ve seen her trailer around town to con-tact the North Cowichan/Duncan RCMP at 250-748-5522.

S e e H u n t l ey ’s wa r e s a t wwwtrialbyfirepottery.ca

Potter Hilary Huntley with her bicycle and trailer at the Duncan Farmer’s market. The trailer, a vital part of her family’s transportation plan, has since been stolen. [SUBMITTED]

Review sees pool emptying schedule stay as-isSARAH SIMPSON CITIZEN

Like in years past, the Cowichan Aquatic Centre will be closed for routine maintenance come late August/early September 2016.

The North Cowichan council decision comes despite outcry from a small segment of the pub-lic, concerned about the timing of the annual shut down and the draining of 1.7 million litres of water from the two pools, par-ticularly this year during a time of significant drought.

Council had agreed to have staff look at the issue and consider alternative closure times and the resulting report was delivered Wednesday during the regular council meeting.

In the end council opted to con-tinue on with the regularly sched-uled closures as recommended by staff — but with one change.

Should stage 3 water restric-tions be in effect, the municipal-ity will refill the pool with ground well water from a backup well on the aquatic centre site.

They will leave the domestic water supply alone.

Coun. Al Siebring wondered if using that well on the pool site would have the same affect on the overall water system as using the domestic water supply.

Mayor Jon Lefebure explained: “The influence of a well sur-rounds the well and it lessens as the distance increases. Our domestic wells right beside the

river have a far greater potential to impact the river than drawing from a well that is as far away as the Aquatic Centre,” he said. “I think you can argue quite safely that withdrawing water from the aquifer near the pool is much safer than drawing it from a domestic supply immediately adjacent to the river.”

When the pool was initially constructed, they had to remove water from the site. In doing so, a well was dug and it was through that source the pool was initial-ly filled. In more recent years the pool has been filled with the domestic water supply after maintenance. Staff ’s recom-mendation is a bit of a short- to medium-term compromise.

Parks and recreation direc-tor Ernie Mansueti said he may approach council in the future to reevaluate the situation.

“I think if we continue running into dry, hot summers…I think we don’t shut the pool down dur-ing that period of time,” Man-sueti said. “It will be a disrup-tion during other periods of the year but when we run into the summer that we’ve had the last few, and we continue to do that, I think the optics when we’re ask-ing our public to do something [to conserve water], I think we’re just going to have to make that decision to move it to a different time of year.”

So while it’s over for now, the issue is far from over.

The pool at the Aquatic Centre will continue to be emptied in summer for maintenance. [CITIZEN FILE]

Page 4: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

News

Former Brentwood rower, coach, missingSARAH SIMPSON CITIZEN

Former Mill Bay resident Harold Backer went for a bike ride on the morning of Tuesday, Nov. 3 and he hasn’t been seen or heard from since.

Now a resident of Victoria, Backer, 52, had told his wife he was going out to ride his bike but didn’t expect to have too long of a ride.

But, according to Const. Matt Rutherford, the Victoria Police Department’s spokesperson, the missing persons case has turned into a multi-jurisdictional, cross-border investigation.

“Our initial investigation has revealed that he left Victoria on the Black Ball Coho Ferry the morning of Nov. 3,” Rutherford wrote in a press release. “VicPD investigators contacted Port Angeles Police, who have been vital in our efforts to locate him.”

The ferry was bound for Port Angeles in Wash-ington State.

“Both through our efforts and the fantastic support from our U.S. law enforcement partners, such as the Port Angeles Police Department, we continue to receive tips that we’re working with now,” VicPD Detective Sgt. Kris Rice said. “Tips are important in a missing persons file like this and sometimes it is the smallest detail that helps. It could be something that appears insignificant that helps us bring Harold safely home to his family.”

Backer is believed to be wearing a red cycling jersey, black riding pants, possibly carrying a black backpack and would be riding his black Cannondale road bike.

The missing family man stands six-foot-three-inches tall and has a medium build and has blue/green eyes and short grey hair.

Port Angeles Deputy Police Chief Brian Smith said his investigating officer “is 85 per cent cer-tain” that the cyclist spotted on the surveillance cameras at the ferry was Backer.

“We have found no evidence that he stayed in Port Angeles,” Smith said. “The US Customs and Border Protection Agency checks persons into a data base when they board the Coho. They visual-ly check documents when they disembark in Port Angeles but do not do any database entry. We do not have any additional or new information.”

Backer was a high-level rower who competed in the 1984, 1988 and 1992 summer Olympics.

The Brentwood College Alumnus (1980) went on to row at Princeton University and returned to Brentwood for a time as a coach.

Family and friends are trying to put together the pieces of just what has happened to their loved one.

A Facebook page (Finding Harold Backer. Missing since Nov 3rd 2015) has been set up to share information about Backer’s whereabouts and the places that have been searched.

Victoria police are asking those who see Back-er to call 911. Those with information as to his whereabouts, are asked to call Victoria Police at 250-995-7654.

“All federal, state and local law enforcement agencies have the information and lookout for Mr. Backer,” Smith said.

Harold Backer, 52, has been missing since Nov. 3 when he went out to ride his bike. Backer is well known in rowing circles in the Cowichan Valley, particularly in the South End. [SUBMITTED]

CUPE generosity to see pool open on Family Day

The Cowichan Aquatic Centre will be open for four hours on Family Day, from noon until 4 p.m.

The opening is being made pos-sible by a donation from the Can-adian Union of Public Employees, local 358.

“I think this is just a great thing by CUPE to do this. It’s really appreciated,” said North Cowic-han Mayor Jon Lefebure. “It made it happen.”

Years ago the facility had been closed on Family Day, the muni-cipality citing the high cost of running the pool on a statutory holiday.

It’s then that CUPE stepped up and offered to help pay for oper-ations on that holiday.

“We’ve done this for several years,” Lefebure noted. “This is the kind of relationship we want with our employees and the union that represents them,” he added. “I just think it’s great.”

Should North Cowichan receive a provincial grant, as it did last year, the user fees would be waved on that day.

Otherwise there will be a fee for use that day, noted corporate servi-ces director Mark Ruttan.

Multiple councillors encouraged the mayor to write a letter to local 358 expressing council’s gratitude.

Lefebure was pleased to comply.

4 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

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Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 5

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News

SARAH SIMPSON CITIZEN

The park at Echo Heights has been renamed Wul’aam (Echo) Park.

Mayor Jon Lefebure confirmed last Wednesday he consulted with officials from the Penelakut First Nation.

“I was able to communicate to their band manager and through her to their chief and they have supported this renaming,” Lefe-bure said.“The naming of this park reflects North Cowichan’s commit-ment to recognizing and respecting areas of importance for the Penela-kut people.”

Pronounced “wool-ahm” and meaning “echo” in Hul’qumi’num, the name was suggested by Flor-ence James, a Penelakut member and elder in residence at Vancouver Island University.

Penelakut chief Earl Jack is thankful the area was made into parkland after talks in 2014 and 2015 between the First Nation, greater community and municipality.

“It is meaningful to us that this culturally and spiritually signifi-

cant area is being set aside as a park and is being left in its natural state,” he said.

Wul’aam’ (Echo) Park is located in an important area for the Penelakut people. The site was used for cultur-al ceremonies and is a biodiversity hot spot for many plants that were used in traditional medicines.

In officially adopting the new name, Councillor Maeve Maguire had suggested the word “echo” be removed from the park name.

“I hope we get to go beyond needing an explanation for Hul’qumi’num words,” she said in suggesting the English word be taken out.

Coun. Kate Marsh explained that the parks committee enjoyed the play on words with echo literally echoing the Hul’qumi’num word of the same meaning.

The majority of council agreed so the park in the Echo Heights neighbourhood will carry both the Hul’qumi’num and English words.

A public ceremony will be held in the spring to celebrate the naming of this park.

SARAH SIMPSON CITIZEN

A Crofton resident saw a curi-ous sight Wednesday morning — a little white BC Assess-ment van driving around photographing homes. That in itself wasn’t odd, noted the gentleman, who declined to be named, but the licence plate on the van most certainly was.

The van had Missouri tags.“I’m not complaining, I’m

just saying, gee that’s odd. Is that somebody out here doing something illegal or what?” he wondered.

Or was it really a BC Assess-ment vehicle with weird plates?

“We live in an age where all sorts of weird stuff goes on.”

The man heard the truck had also been in Ladysmith the other day as well, so was making the rounds.

It turns out that a Texas-based company called Tyler Technologies has been con-tracted to do the work on behalf of BC Assessment.

“It went out to contract for an open bid process and unfortu-nately we didn’t get anybody local,” confirmed spokesman Christopher Whyte, a deputy appraiser based in BC Assess-ment’s Courtenay office.

“We did try. This company has the technology we need and then met all of the Free-dom and Privacy Act require-ments. It is an American com-pany. It is what it is and in this

case they were able to meet our needs.”

The company has done the work for BC Assessment in the past as well.

“They have the technology that allows us to do it in the most efficient way possible,” Whyte said, noting the cam-eras produce images “some-what like a Google Street View image” but in a higher resolution.

If faces or personal informa-tion such as business names are captured in the images, those are blurred for privacy, he added.

Whyte said he’s not directly involved in the bidding process but he believes the contract is bid on annually.

Penelakut’s James names Wul’aam (Echo) Park

BC Assessment taking photos

N. Cowichan councillor oversteps authority

North Cowichan Mayor Jon Lefebure reminded his coun-cil of the limits of their power Wednesday evening, cau-tioning them not to speak for the municipality to tradesmen.

“I was made aware that a councillor had spoken to a contractor working on Willow Street in Chemainus and felt it was important for council to understand, and I think most of you understand this, that

there is no role or authority for a councillor in dealing with a contractor who has a contract with the municipality,” Lefe-bure said. “There just is no role. There’s no authority.”

He said the worker is prob-ably a foreman working for his boss. His boss has a contract with the municipality. Lefe-bure added that if a councillor were to see something they were concerned about, they should notify North Cowichan CAO Dave Devana.

“[Councillors] have no role

talking to those people work-ing on the street. No authority. That can be very, very confus-ing for somebody working on the street when somebody with some sort of political authority is telling them that they’re doing the wrong thing or performing poorly or what-ever it is.”

Lefebure said he wasn’t there and he didn’t know what words were exchanged but he hopes it won’t happen again.

Sarah Simpson, Citizen

“This type of criminal behav-iour poses a threat to the health and wellbeing of anyone entering the home,” she said, including investigators.

As such, “all necessary precau-tions were taken to ensure public and police safety as the lab was dis-mantled,” Hobday said.

A 32-year-old man and a 34-year-old woman — both citizens of North Cowichan — are expected to face a judge on charges of production of

a controlled substance and posses-sion for the purpose of trafficking and possession of stolen property.

Those with information on this or any other crime are encouraged to contact the North Cowichan/Duncan RCMP at 250-748-5522.

For those who wish to remain anonymous, please call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477). Anonymous tipsters whose infor-mation leads to an arrest or the recovery of stolen property or the seizure of illicit drugs could be eli-gible for a cash award.

RCMP BUSTS, From Page 1

Man and woman arrested, charged

Page 6: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

6 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

Greedy oil companies gouging us at the pump

I think we should all be angry at the new gas prices of $1.15 per litre and do what this fellow in Salmon Arm did about his frus-tration with the insane gouging at the pumps we are getting.

These big oil companies seem to be trying to see how much they can put up the prices before we start to complain; well this is my second time I’ve complained to this paper about this unfair apparent price fixing which is against the law in Canada (someone is instructing all the gas stations to raise their price at the same time).

Today’s average U.S. was $2.45 per U.S. gallon which is 3.80 litres per U.S. gallon, which equals 64 cents Canadian, plus the 25 per cent exchange rate of 16 cents equals 80 cents per litre Canadian, is what they pay in the U.S. So why are we being forced to pay 35 cents per litre or more for the same gas?

It is bad business practice to shove your greed down the throats of the people whose country is supplying you with their oil resources; sooner or later something is going to snap. What do we have to do to get our government to fairly regulate these overly greedy gas compan-ies? It’s time to do something. Write to this paper, express your anger and organize something against this raping of pension-ers, people on disability and the Canadian people in general as most of the gas companies are U.S. owned.

R. CalderwoodDuncan

Not impressed with CVRD waste management

I am writing to you, and to anyone else I can think of, about CVRD’s latest stupid waste dis-posal proposal: to use a survey to manoeuvre out private busi-ness — again. It’s against the CVRD Community Plan which states we support local business, and it will put Pan Disposal out of business. How can that POSSIBLY be a good? Pan Dis-posal’s owners and employees earn their living by running a very good disposal/recycling program.

I, nor any of the literally hundreds of other people I’ve spoken to, are impressed with

CVRD’s waste management; from the super-expensive Eco-Depot fiasco, which would have shut down the private recycling business at Fisher Road (in addi-tion to the one they effectively did shut down in South Shawn-igan via their massive propa-ganda campaign informing everyone they had to travel to Bing’s Creek), to the removal of community bins, which people were using but CVRD couldn’t properly manage; to the limited service of the new blue bins — garbage and recycling pick-up both reduced to every two weeks.

I have no confidence in CVRD’s clearly inept handling of waste. Our “zero-waste” plan has moved from less waste to more I.e. glass and plastic film. Will

CVRD now move to increase their already inflated salaries to compensate for all the per-ceived extra work of planning and managing “better” garbage strategies?

Pan Disposal has always pro-vided excellent service, even during CVRD’s bullying (when they misled them regarding the compost pick-up) causing them financial and customer service challenges. I don’t know the folks at Pan Disposal per-sonally, but I’ve watched them, and other private businesses, be treated very badly by CVRD over the last few years. It’s pretty distressing and quite disgusting.

Karen ChongCobble Hill

Cowichan Valley Citizen is a div-ision of Black Press Limited, located at 251 Jubilee St., Duncan, B.C., V9L 1W8Phone: 250-748-2666Fax: 250-748-1552

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As each Remembrance Day goes by fewer of our veterans from the Second

World War remain.As each year slips into the next

the stories that they can tell us of that important era in our world history are lost to time, one after another.

Already, no veterans from the First World War remain. It is a stark reminder for many of us who remember very well when there was a large contingent from the Great War who used to march proudly to the cenotaph every Nov. 11.

So this Remembrance Day,

think about taking a few min-utes to ask a veteran to tell you what they remember from that time. The window to be able to do so is closing.

We have spoken to many veter-ans over the years and brought their stories to these pages, and we can tell you without reserva-tion that to hear them speak of their experiences, feelings and motivations for taking up the call to fight for their country is a moving, unforgettable experi-ence that you should have for yourself.

It is often said, with great truth, that those who do not

understand history are doomed to repeat it.

The first step to understanding is to know our own history. And to know it from such a personal perspective, face to face, helps us to understand it more than any book or archive ever could.

We must remember. We must remember the bravery and the courage, but also the ugly realties of war — the death, the pain and the loss that those who experienced it will never forget.

It is hard for many of us to imagine conflict on this kind of scale. It is certainly something we hope our children and grand-

children will never know of first-hand.

Yet we look at the refugees from Syria and other countries in the Middle East pouring over the borders into Europe at great peril, desperate to escape the sudden upheaval of their ordin-ary lives. They remember when, just short months ago, they went to school, went to work, went to the market or the gro-cery store just like we do now.

Peace and ordinary life is not something that we can take for granted. When we know what the alternative is, we are far less likely to do so.

Take a moment with a vet, while you still canOUR VIEW

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Write 300 words or less on the topic of your choice, include your full name (first and last), and a town you hail from.

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Page 7: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 7

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Publisher, Shirley [email protected], Andrea [email protected]

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contact us

Reducing GHGs by the numbers

It is apparent: efforts to reduce GHGs have failed. Absent are actual solutions with funding.

Electricity is the largest contributor, followed by trans-portation then building heat. Options are, improve efficiency or change energy source.

Technology is here so with funding a goal of 86 per cent reductions in 10 years is feas-ible. Funding is key, including application.

Only option to get to no CO2 from power is to change the source. Energy efficiency improvements are the only option to transport fuels. Encourage building methods to improve energy losses in buildings. Each person con-tributes to energy, read carbon use, each shares the responsib-ility to change.

Simplest: surcharge the energy user not the producer. [Institute a] national sur-charge; transport fuels at $30/tonne, electricity: seven cents per litre; gasoline, increased 0.7 cents annually for 10 years. Eight cents per litre diesel, increased 0.8 cents annually for 10 years. Two point one cents per kilowatt hour, for 10 years. Surcharge revenue: fuel, $5.9 billion; power $13.5 billion; total $19.8 billion annually.

Application applies to hand-ling funds. Funding must be dedicated to CO2 reductions; national program equalizes distributions. Run by a dedi-cated organization removed from other monetary influ-ence! Transparency with over-sight a must.

Cost: for purchasers of new vehicles using less fuel, replace all coal power plants and 90 per cent natural gas power plant.

Vehicle rebates for 1.44 mil-lion vehicles per year at aver-age $7,500 each — $10.8 billion. Power plant replacement, 8,000 MW each coal/natural gas at $5.4 million/MW, $86.4 billion, yearly — $8.64 billion.

We Canada, make it happen, world will follow!

Bob Conibear, engineer, Retired oil, gas industry Duncan

How about something like Homesteading Acts

Re: Syrian refugeesWhile listening to the polit-

icians talk; debate, angst, and wring their hands about this issue, a thought occurred to me: what if our (newly elected) federal government looked at a plan similar to the one imple-mented many generations

ago? Let’s call it a modernized version of the Homesteading Acts.

Canada encouraged and brought tens of thousands of people to Canada from various countries and offered them land to cultivate, farm and develop.

We all know this is a huge country land mass wise with a small population.

Yes, I know that much of the land is not that hospitable. But, if we think creatively, aren’t there areas that could be, and might even need to be developed for agricultural pur-poses, and small businesses in rural communities and other geographic locations?

It may even assist in helping to populate sparsely populated areas. Actually that is how my wife’s grandparents (et. al.) made it here, as had many other thousands many years ago.

Small businesses, agricul-ture, farming, small general stores, contributing members of the community, etc. The options could be many and varied for new Canadians. Among this group of new Canadians there are sure to be highly educated, skilled mem-bers of numerous professions.

Just a thought

Steve FrankelThetis Island

Fireworks spook dogs, cause accidents

I was reading your article on how this lady’s goats were affect-ed by the fireworks and that people should think about the animals when you set off your fireworks.

Every year when this happens our dog also shakes and hides from this noise and this year it was not just our dog.

We had company from out of town and one of their dogs was also shaking and trying to hide

from the noise. Then the next day I go to work

and find two of the guys that I work with had very serious problems from the fireworks; one tried to help a dog on the high-way, (scared from the noise). He pulled off the highway to help this dog and it got hit by a truck and died. The second guy had his dog jump over his fence out into the Cedar area and also got ran over by a car.

Micheal WaltersSaltair

LETTERS to the editor

Should I mail my Christmas cards now?

I received a phone call today from a very dear friend of mine in the Vancouver area. She wanted to let me know she had finally received the birthday card I mailed to her on Oct. 9 (here on Bundock Avenue) and she received it today, Oct. 29.

My father was born in 1885. Seems as if our mail system has gone back to the ways of 1885 or so. This is unacceptable and I do hope our new government can wake up and correct the mail sys-tem. My cutoff date for my bank statement is 25th of the month. I used to receive my statement before the end of current month. Now I get it the following month

on 7th or 8th day. My friend’s birthday was Oct.

18. I wonder, should I mail my Christmas cards now?

Gladys McManusDuncan

See fi lm ‘The Railway Man’ on Nov. 11

On this re-memberment day, may I urge everyone to watch the movie The Railway Man — a true story (don’t miss the “extras”) of what love can do.

May we re-member ourselves each and every day.

Juanita HaddadCowichan Valley

Page 8: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

8 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

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FOUR LETTERS WILL BE DRAWN RANDOMLY TO WIN A VERY SPECIAL GIFT CARD

Your letters will be published in a special editions of the Citizen on December 18th

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News

Unpopular AAP overshadows issuesLEXI BAINAS CITIZEN

A large and angry crowd turned out at the Cowichan Lake Sports Arena to grill regional represent-atives about recently announced bylaws and the controversial Alternative Approval process being used to push them through.

The Cowichan Valley Regional District’s CEO Brian Carruth-ers took most of the heat as he answered questions about the AAP, which requires 10 per cent of an electorate to quash a bylaw by sending in ‘no’ ballots, and also about the arts and culture and flood management bylaws.

Honeymoon Bay director Ian Morrison quarterbacked the event and regional district heavy-weights Kate Miller and John Elz-inga were also on hand to intro-duce the bylaws.

The audience included residents from Lake Cowichan, Youbou, Honeymoon Bay and Sahtlam, along with observers and polit-icians from all around the Cow-ichan Valley.

Although questions ranged all over the place, it soon became clear that no one, including regional directors and staff, like the AAP.

Carruthers reiterated many times throughout the two-hour session that if enough people express their opposition, the bylaws cannot go through. He also urged several people who wanted to talk about Catalyst and their weir application to attend a session scheduled by that com-pany on the following evening.

One man asked which adminis-trative body would be in charge when such diverse groups as North Cowichan, Duncan, Cow-ichan Tribes and the CVRD were involved. Another said that hav-ing North Cowichan’s mayor, Jon Lefebure, at the head of the

CVRD board led to a conflict of interest.

Still another said that if AAPs can be used so easily, then voters should be able to use that process to recall their director.

Others, who said they didn’t live on their Cowichan Lake property in winter, asked for better notifi-cation about the AAP, since they don’t get Valley papers where they live.

Several times throughout the evening, Carruthers explained that the regional district has only two choices when dealing with things they want to do. They can either go to a referendum, which can cost up to $100,000, or they can use the AAP. By law, they have no other choices.

One person said that the maps on the CVRD website made it hard to understand who was affected by the flood manage-ment bylaw and who was not.

Carruthers said that, because the area chosen was the Cow-ichan River watershed, it’s not always easy to show on the map.

Another often repeated ques-tion was: “Why am I, as a Lake Cowichan resident, being asked to pay for dams in the delta area?”

The CEO had his work cut out on that one, given the groans from the audience, but he tried to convince them that, “It’s a col-lective process, it’s about com-munity. You may not all benefit directly but the schools and busi-nesses you go to may benefit.”

People who tried to make prac-

tical suggestions for raising money, like Honymoon Bay’s John Harmon, who suggested charging Catalyst and others for consumption of water from Cow-ichan Lake, got an unpalatable answer.

“The province doesn’t allow us to tax people for the use of water,” Carruthers said.

He also urged people to fill in forms if they opposed the bylaws.

“This is democratic. You do have a say. We just want you to decide with all the information. We think an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, but if you don’t agree, the forms are here. If you don’t want to pay [for a proposed function], you can vote ‘no.’”

Several property owners from Youbou to Sahtlam were con-cerned about silt and gravel in the river, some expressing con-cern that it was increasing and others asking why the CVRD was talking about removing gravel from the lower river when they can’t even cut the lawn near the water’s edge on their riverfront property at the upper end. Still others complained about differ-ing requirements on construc-tion, with at least one person not-ing that the runoff from Cowic-han Commons mall was another spanner tossed in the works.

Miller tried to address some of these, pointing out that not only is climate change affecting how often floods occur and their mag-nitude, there is actually a lot of gravel — more than 18,000 cu. metres — moving down the river annually now.

Lorne Scheffer of Meade Creek appeared to speak for many when he urged regional officials to have the courage of their convictions.

“Put it to the taxpayer. If you really believe in these things, put them to referendum,” he said.

At the meeting held in Lake Cowichan on Wednesday, Nov. 4, a Sahtlam area resident complains that wells where he lives are already affected and asked the CVRD to ‘leave the river alone.’ [LEXI BAINAS/CITIZEN]

“This is democratic. You do have a say. We just want you to decide with all the information.”

BRIAN CARRUTHERS, Regional District CAO

Page 9: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 9

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News

BELL TOWER TROUBLE

An unstable steeple at St. Ann’s Church on Tzouhalem Road required crews and cranes to prop it up in late October, before the bell tower could be replaced. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]

LEXI BAINAS CITIZEN

Businesses and organizations can be torchbearers, support the Cowichan Sportsplex and maybe even win a great prize by taking part in an event called Passing the Torch.

Catherine Brandon, Sportsplex executive director, explained all about it.

“We take our torch trophy and pass it around town. Between Nov. 13 and Nov. 27, the torch will be physically passed between the people who become our torch-bearers. To do that, they have donate $100 to the Sportsplex. We then take a picture of the torchbearer and their staff in their office and then post it on Facebook so other people can follow the torch as it passes around town.

“It’s such a fun idea and people really like being part of it. I think it’s the physic-al aspect of receiving the torch from some-body else,” she said.

Perhaps because most of us will never get to be a torchbearer in the Olympic sense?

“That could be it. And we also focus on the message as well. People who are receiving the torch are promoting the importance of health and fitness in our lives. It increased the chance of a happy future.”

The mandate at the Sportsplex is changing, too.

“Back at the beginning, we were really focused on building physical facilities here with all the fields and that. But over the last couple of years we’ve been re-evalu-ating what we’re going to mean to the community in the future. Being able to go out and share our message is important. In our busy day-to-day lives, we don’t always do what we know we should be doing. People just like to be part of spreading our positive message and saying, ‘Yes!’”

This year, the Sportsplex will also be sharing the message with elementary school students at the Valley’s public schools by distributing special bookmarks.

“The other thing that I like is we’re set-ting a good role model for the kids, too. If they see adults spreading an important message like this, it makes is real,” Bran-don said.

Businesses or organizations who wish

to get involved just need to contact the Sportsplex at [email protected] and express a willingness to donate $100.

“Then we will schedule them in when the torch starts making its rounds. That’s $100 well spent. It’s fun and brings the com-munity together. The torch will be leaving from Scotiabank on Nov. 13. They are the presenting sponsor of this event and will match up to $5,000 of the money we raise. Also, to encourage people to become torch-bearers, Cowichan Golf & Country Club has given us five rounds of golf for two, plus a cart. All the torchbearers will be put in a draw and one of them will win these 10 rounds of golf. That’s a great prize and there’s a good chance to win it, too.”

Community invited to take up the torch

The Cowichan Sportsplex is fundraising by Passing the Torch this month. [CITIZEN FILE]

Page 11: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

A division of

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 11

MUSINGS of a Magpie Mind

(Bits and pieces of history, travel and trivia, collected over the years by Bill Greenwell)

“Wilful wallaby wanders the Big Apple!”Pets and their people.......from bouncy to bizarre: conclusion

Where we left off: But we were never confronted by anything spectacular, nothing like that energetic New York kangaroo whose adventure prompted me to start looking for info on strange pets. What I found is worth retelling.

Show biz people seemed most likely to favour the unusual, so that’s where

I searched first. And it soon became apparent that nobody had been a match for Michael Jackson in his zeal to collect bizarre animals. Owning a private menagerie on his Never-land 2,700 acre spread became a priority for him. He visited friends, attended rehearsals and entertained audiences around the world, accompanied by some of his favourite pets, on stage and off.

Quincy Jones, who is a legend in the music industry as trumpet player, arranger and general all-round nice guy, took exception when one day Jackson arrived at their recording session wrapped in Muscles, his enormous live boa constrictor. The snake actually took a nip out of Quincy’s little daughter who was in the studio at the time. That incident really soured the relationship between the two entertainers from then on.

Jackson also spent many happy hours with his eight-een foot white python, but his favourite pet was Bubbles the chimp, which travelled with

him everywhere and slept in the same bed regularly. This little character, as you can imagine, created lots of work for house-maids and hotel cleaning staff around the world, but as its owner was a big tipper, com-pensation was always liberal. There were even rumours that the chimp was offered book and movie deals after his master’s death in 2009!

Yes, it’s all there in the MJ biog, page after whacky page. And the urge to please Michael in his high flying days prompted many admirers to present him with more bizarre live gifts, including a five ton Indian ele-phant that arrived in 1991. Her name was Gypsy. She was a thank you present from Eliza-beth Taylor to her dear friend for hosting the last in her string of eight marriage ceremonies. On that day the bridal party and 160 very special guests at the ranch were guarded by a hundred security agents on the ground and a flight of helicop-ters above. But that didn’t faze one of the intrepid paparazzi. He jumped into the fray by parachute!

So for me, linking celebrities with their pets was fun, but it was also illuminating. Who would have thought that George Clooney would be so devastated when Max, his 300lb pet pot-bel-lied pig died in ’06? Mind you, he and his hog had been together for 18 years.

Leonardo diCaprio, who like me has a soft spot for terrapins, paid the princely sum of $400 for a colourful tortoise five years ago, and it will probably out-live him and all his Hollywood contemporaries. Most of them

would probably prefer a less silent pet. Reese Witherspoon for instance has two noisy ones, and they cavort around her pad-dock. Honky and Tonky hee-haw their way through their days and occasionally their nights, much to the chagrin of her com-plaining neighbours, who don’t share her love of donkeys.

Back in the Thirties the legendary Josephine Baker was the talk of Paris and kept her French fans in thrall off stage as well as on, by mincing down the Champs-Elysee with a large leopard on a jeweled chain. Her chauffeur always opened the rear door of the white Rolls Royce first on one side for the big cat to leap in, then on the other for Josephine to grace-fully enter. The crowds in the sidewalk cafes were always impressed by this well-re-hearsed performance.

And of course during our vari-ous armed conflicts, the com-pany of pets did much to raise the moral of soldiers, sailors and airman on both sides. I wrote a column a while back on the role played in the First World War by the Canadian bear cub Winnie, who became so popular through the writings of A.A. Milne, long after hostilities ended. But noth-ing quite matches the exploits of a tough little moggy which used up three of his nine lives in surviving sea battles of the last war. Unsinkable Sam as he became known, was a favoured pet of a gun crew on the mighty German battleship Bismarck. She met her fate against the combined British fleet in frigid northern waters. Very few of her crew survived and the Brit-ish destroyer Cossack picked

up most of the half-dead sailors who did. One of them had the cat tucked into his jacket.

The destroyer crew made much of their new shipmate, but it wasn’t long before a U-boat torpedo sent Cossack to the bottom, with much loss of life. But Sam survived, was rescued and put ashore at Gibraltar. His reputation now earned him respect around the fleet and the crew of the legend-ary aircraft carrier Ark Royal won the right to invite him on board. Months later, the news that the carrier had been sunk sent shock waves through the navy and the nation. But guess who survived? Rescue boats found Sam clinging to a piece of debris and according to an officer’s report, he was “soak-ing wet, very angry, but quite unharmed!”

By then the Royal Navy was taking no more chances with its famous feline mascot. Sam was

honourably discharged and pre-sented to fellow matelotes at the Old Seaman’s Home in Belfast. He stayed there dry and much loved, and crossed the bar for old sailors in 1955.

History is full of animals wild and tame that embellished the images of the high and mighty. The Romans in particular, the Assyrians, Egyptians and Per-sians sported everything from eagles to lions as confirmation of status. (Sadly, nowhere is a tortoise mentioned).

And I mustn’t ignore pets in history and those today, which do tricks to entertain. For instance, in the first Queen Elizabeth’s time, she and her court were fascinated by the ability of a handsome horse trained to dance and prance to the music of the fife, and even keep count of numbers called out to him.

See TRAINED HORSE, Page 13

Page 12: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

12 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

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Rock your year.Save $100 off the iPhone 5s on a 2-year Your Choice plan.*

*Subject to approved credit. Not available to customers on the credit limit program. Available for clients who activate or renew on a 2 year Your Choice plan with a $70 monthly spend before tax or a $50 monthly spend when adding a line toan existing plan. SIM not included. $5 Tablet Share plan required to be added to a TELUS Your Choice rate plan. Customers will receive the $5 rate for as long as they choose to stay on the Tablet Share plan. Available only on Consumer accounts.Only available at participating locations. Limited time offer, prices subject to change. Retail price of the 16GB iPad mini 2 is $470. Customers must pay back the balance of the tablet over a 24 month period via monthly payments equal to$20/month. TELUS, the TELUS logo are trademarks of TELUS Corporation, used under licence. TM and © 2015 Apple Inc. All rights reserved. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. © 2015 TELUS.

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951A Canada Ave250-748-4847

Cowichan Commons250-715-1599

B1- 845 Deloume Road, Mill Bay250-733-2626

We SERVICEwhat we sell!

Check out the latest offers & arrivals at www.cowichansound.com

Get it at TELUS. Home of Canada’s happy customers.

iPhone 6 isn’t just bigger—it’s better in every way. Larger, yet thinner. More powerful, yet power efficient. It’s a new generation of iPhone.

Experience the amazing iPhone 6 at TELUS.

DEALER LOGO AND ADRESS GO HERE

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Get it at TELUS. Home of Canada’s happy customers.

iPhone 6 isn’t just bigger—it’s better in every way. Larger, yet thinner. More powerful, yet power efficient. It’s a new generation of iPhone.

Experience the amazing iPhone 6 at TELUS.

DEALER LOGO AND ADRESS GO HERE

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Locally ownedand operated

Limited time offer, prices subject to change. Offer available for customers who activate or renew a 2 year Your Choice plan with a $70 minimum spend before taxes .SIM not included. Consumer accounts only. TELUS, the TELUS logo, the futureis friendly and telus.com are trademarks of TELUS Corporation, used under license. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. © 2015 TELUS.

DEALER LOGO AND ADDRESS GO HERE

(dotted line does not print)

To learn more visit:

Rock your year.Save $100 off the iPhone 5s on a 2-year Your Choice plan.*

*Subject to approved credit. Not available to customers on the credit limit program. Available for clients who activate or renew on a 2 year Your Choice plan with a $70 monthly spend before tax or a $50 monthly spend when adding a line toan existing plan. SIM not included. $5 Tablet Share plan required to be added to a TELUS Your Choice rate plan. Customers will receive the $5 rate for as long as they choose to stay on the Tablet Share plan. Available only on Consumer accounts.Only available at participating locations. Limited time offer, prices subject to change. Retail price of the 16GB iPad mini 2 is $470. Customers must pay back the balance of the tablet over a 24 month period via monthly payments equal to$20/month. TELUS, the TELUS logo are trademarks of TELUS Corporation, used under licence. TM and © 2015 Apple Inc. All rights reserved. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. © 2015 TELUS.

DEALER LOGO AND ADDRESS GO HERE

(dotted line does not print)

Amazing.

Available on a 2 year TELUS Your Choice and 2 year Easy Tablet offer.

iPhone 5s with iPad mini 2 from $0 upfront.

*

Get it at TELUS. Home of Canada’s happy customers.

iPhone 6 isn’t just bigger—it’s better in every way. Larger, yet thinner. More powerful, yet power efficient. It’s a new generation of iPhone.

Experience the amazing iPhone 6 at TELUS.

DEALER LOGO AND ADRESS GO HERE

(dotted line does not print)

951A Canada Ave250-748-4847

Cowichan Commons250-715-1599

B1- 845 Deloume Road, Mill Bay250-733-2626

We SERVICEwhat we sell!

Check out the latest offers & arrivals at www.cowichansound.com

Get it at TELUS. Home of Canada’s happy customers.

iPhone 6 isn’t just bigger—it’s better in every way. Larger, yet thinner. More powerful, yet power efficient. It’s a new generation of iPhone.

Experience the amazing iPhone 6 at TELUS.

DEALER LOGO AND ADRESS GO HERE

(dotted line does not print)

Get it at TELUS. Home of Canada’s happy customers.

iPhone 6 isn’t just bigger—it’s better in every way. Larger, yet thinner. More powerful, yet power efficient. It’s a new generation of iPhone.

Experience the amazing iPhone 6 at TELUS.

DEALER LOGO AND ADRESS GO HERE

(dotted line does not print)

Locally ownedand operated

Limited time offer, prices subject to change. Offer available for customers who activate or renew a 2 year Your Choice plan with a $70 minimum spend before taxes .SIM not included. Consumer accounts only. TELUS, the TELUS logo, the futureis friendly and telus.com are trademarks of TELUS Corporation, used under license. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. © 2015 TELUS.

DEALER LOGO AND ADDRESS GO HERE

(dotted line does not print)

To learn more visit:

Rock your year.Save $100 off the iPhone 5s on a 2-year Your Choice plan.*

7139665

Check out the latest offers and arrivals at www.cowichansound.com

Client TELUS TELTP273_Q4FalconT3P2_Cowichan_8_83X12_vf Created October 30, 2015

Account Emily Creative BC Mac Artist Jay Producer Sonal

Ad Size 8.83” X 12” Insertion Date(s) Wednesday, November 4, 2015

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Publications Cowichan Valley Citizen

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All colours are printed as process match unless indicated otherwise. Please check before use. In spite of our careful checking, errors infrequently occur and we request that you check this proof for accuracy. The&Partnership’s liability is limited to replacing or correcting the disc from which this proof was generated. We cannot be responsible for your time, film, proofs, stock, or printing loss due to error.

APPROVAL

Creative Team Proofreader Producer Studio Client/Account Manager

*Limitations apply. TELUS, the TELUS logo, telus.com, and the future is friendly are trademarks of TELUS Corporation, used under licence. © 2015 TELUS.

TELUS STORESDuncan951A Canada Ave. 2951 Green Rd.

Internet 150 has arrived in the Cowichan Valley Region.

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Learn more at telus.com/cvr

TELTP273_Q4FalconT3P2_Cowichan_8_83X12_vf.indd 1 10/30/15 3:00 PM

Page 13: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 13

CLIP THIS COUPON AND SAVE! IS YOUR VEHICLE READY FOR FALL AND WINTER?

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SMOKE CONTROL BYLAW NO. 3716 RESTRICTS BACKYARD BURNING WITHIN CVRD ELECTORAL AREAS A, B, C, D, AND E

KNOW THE RULES BEFORE YOU BURN. FAILURE TO COMPLY CAN RESULT IN PENALTIES OF UP TO $750

For all lands in Electoral Areas A - E (Agricultural Land Reserve included), open burning is allowed:• from Mar. 15th - Apr. 15th or Oct. 15th - Nov. 15th ONLY;• when the Provincial Air Quality ‘Venting Index’ is rated as

“Good” (please refer to website noted below); • for untreated natural wood, prunings, or branches only (no

leaves, grass clippings, garbage or construction waste);• a minimum of 10 metres from any property line;• if it is limited to one pile 2 metres (W) x 2 metres (H); and• between 7 AM and sunset of the same day.

Burning garbage or yard waste in your backyard spreads invisible, toxic chemicals throughout the region. Be a good neighbour: drop off yard waste for free at any CVRD Recycling Centre or at Central Landscape Supplies in Cobble Hill.

FOR DETAILED INFORMATION ON CVRD BURNING BYLAWS, RULES AND ALTERNATIVES TO BURNING, PLEASE VISIT:www.ClearTheAirCowichan.ca or call the CVRD at 250-746-2500 or, after hours, Bylaw Enforcement at 250-746-2600.

Burning garbage or yard waste in your backyard spreads invisible, toxic chemicals throughout the region. Be a good neighbour: drop off yard waste for free at any CVRD Recycling Centre or at Central Landscape Supplies in Cobble Hill.

2016 Budget Meeting ScheduleThe Cowichan Valley Regional District is holding 2016 Budget meetings on the following dates and locations. These meetings are open to the public and you are invited to attend.

The CVRD 2016 Budget can be viewed online at www.cvrd.bc.ca If you have any questions or comments regarding the 2016 Budget please contact Lyle Smith at 250.746.2500 or by email at [email protected]

November 13 10:00 am Island Savings Centre Commission (ISC)November 16 5:15 pm Kerry Park Recreation Centre Commission (KPRC)November 19 7:00 pm Cowichan Lake Recreation Commission (CLSA)November 23 9:00 am Corporate Services Department (CVRD Boardroom)November 24 9:00 am Community Services Department (CVRD Boardroom)November 25 9:00 am Engineering Services Department (CVRD Boardroom)November 26 9:00 am Planning & Development Department (CVRD Boardroom)

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The narrow-minded church bishops attending her Majesty inevitably took exception to these performances, and soon William Bates, the horse’s owner, was arraigned on charges of witchcraft. So was the horse. The ecclesiastics demanded death sentences.

When the case came up before the Lord Chamberlain, Blake’s plea for mercy was unexpectedly reinforced, because his horse actually knelt before the Bench in sup-plication. That did the trick; the Tudor equivalent of “case dismissed” was the verdict, and the two performers were allowed to retire to a quiet life in the country, where they both enjoyed Bates’ consider-able earnings.

The history of pets and people seems inexhaustible, but the smiles that some of these relationships produce for us have occasionally

turned to horror. We realize only too well that the wild creatures favoured by a few misguided owners can be a lethal menace, if let loose or when they manage to escape captivity. Even an untrained dog can wreak havoc and injury. Those incidences are reported so often that sanity should be our guide in choos-ing a pet, because responsib-

ility for its behaviour really rests with us, seldom with the animal.

And one last point. We owners usually have high regard and affection for our pets, but do we ever give a thought to what they think of us? On the wall just above me is some framed calligraphy which I enjoyed scribing many years ago. This is what it says: “If you need to know the char-acter of a man, find out what his cat thinks about him!”

Mine is stoically silent on that subject. I bet yours is too.

Bill Greenwell prospered in the ad agency arena for 40 years in the U.K. and Canada. He retains a passion for medieval history, marine paint-ings and piscatorial pursuits. His wife Patricia indulges him in these interests, but being a seasoned writer from a similar background, she has always deplored his weak-ness for alliteration. This has sadly had no effect on his writing style, whatsoever.

Trained horse had bishops claiming witchcraftMUSINGS, From Page 11 When the case came

up before the Lord Chamberlain, Blake’s plea for mercy was unexpectedly reinforced, because his horse actually knelt before the Bench in supplication... the Tudor equivalent of “case dismissed” was the verdict.BILL GREENWELL, COLUMNIST

BIG SEWING JOB KNITS ARTIFICIAL TURF FOR FIELD“On the way down Sherman [Road] I noticed a gang of guys who looked like they were having a giant tug of war. They were staining to lift, pull and straighten a huge flap of turf that reached right across the field,” said Kathryn Swan. She stopped to get some photos of this, one of the final steps of installing the artificial turf at the Sherman Road field. Here, workers sew strips of the turf together. [KATHRYN SWAN PHOTO]

Page 14: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

14 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

7297676 Children @ Family Council

of the Cowichan Valley

NOVEMBER 20TH ISNATIONAL CHILD DAY

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I learned about United Way during the first week of my first job out of college. I was

young and extremely excit-ed to be out in the grownup world, so I don’t remember many details. I do remember some nice people came to us during employee orientation and explained how a payroll contribution was a way of helping a lot of people, with one easy choice. And I do remember it seemed to make a lot of sense.

Over the years, as I changed cities and jobs, the United Way was a constant, quiet presence. Where ever I was, there too was United Way. It was like a big com-forting umbrella over whatever commun-ity I happened to be in.

And I’ll be honest — in those days, I never really thought much past that.

Then 11 years ago, our son entered our lives. It was clear early on that he was special. By the age of six, he was diag-nosed with autism spectrum disorder. The formal diagnosis was in many ways a blessing. It allowed us room to breathe — to realize the issues we were dealing with weren’t because of terrible parent-ing, which is the conclusion many jump to when faced with an autistic child hav-ing a sensory meltdown in the grocery store.

And it allowed us to get help. As resour-ces became available to us, Sasha began

an afternoon program at the Clements Centre. At first, he couldn’t get through two hours without significant social malfunction. Slowly, with infinite patience from the angels who work at Clements,

he improved. Three years later, he has gradu-

ated to full day attendance at a local independent school.

As it turns out, the Clements Centre is one of the many local agencies supported by the United Way. So when I was asked to help with this year’s Cowichan United Way campaign, it was a way of coming full circle. My family — my precious boy — benefited from the generosity of those who gave before. And now it is my turn to be one of those “nice people”, asking for help for those who will come after us.

United Way Cowichan has an ambitious goal to raise $250,000 this year. All the money raised stays in our community, helping nearly two dozen local agencies, who provide services to nearly one in three Cowichan Valley residents. Please help us help the community. It was our collective generosity that got my son the help he needed — let’s make sure every child is as fortunate. To make a donation to the 2015 campaign, please call the United Way office, 250-748-1312 or visit www.cowichanunitedway.com to donate online.

TOGETHER WE ARE POSSIBILITY

Damir Wallener, 2015 Campaign cabinet chair for United Way Cowichan. [SUBMITTED]

Giving every child the chance to reach their full potential

Page 15: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 15

1. Why is the CVRD conducting the survey?In September 2015, CVRD Electoral Area Directors requested that CVRD Recycling and Waste Management staff collect feedback from residents in the Electoral Areas regarding the curbside program. This request was triggered by the following: • The most recent version of the CVRD’s Solid Waste Management Plan expires in 2016. This plan outlines short and long term strategies to manage waste in the region. As part of the planning and public consultation process, this survey along with multiple open house meetings will be completed to assess the gaps and ways to improve waste management in the CVRD. • The CVRD recently began receiving funding from Multi-Material BC (MMBC) to support the curbside recycling collection program. This funding could be applied towards providing additional curbside services.• The CVRD curbside collection program is not uniform across the region. While all Municipalities within the CVRD receive three-stream curbside collection (garbage, recycling, and organics), some Electoral Areas within the CVRD receive garbage and recycling collection while others receive only recycling collection. Private waste- hauling companies offer curbside collection services to residents in some of the Electoral Areas, however, there are many residents within the CVRD who do not have access to curbside collection and must haul their garbage and organics to recycling facilities themselves. The survey provides residents in all CVRD Electoral Areas with the opportunity to express their opinion regarding curbside collection services.• The 2015 Waste Composition Study found that organic materials make up approximately 36% of the garbage from CVRD Electoral Areas that receive garbage collection from the CVRD. This highlights the need for greater organics-diversion efforts in the region to move towards the goal of Zero Waste.

2. Is the survey a vote?No, the survey is not a vote. The results of the survey and feedback collected throughout the duration of the survey exercise (by email, phone calls and letters) will be used to gauge residents’ views regarding curbside collection services in the CVRD. This correspondence will be provided to the CVRD Board for consideration.

3. Who makes the final decision regarding changes to the curbside collection program?The CVRD Board will make the final decision regarding changes to the curbside collection program.

4. If one Electoral Area decides to make changes to the curbside collection program, will all Electoral Areas have to follow suit?No. Under CVRD Bylaw 1958, Electoral Areas can each have different curbside collection services if approved by the CVRD Board.

5. If services are added to the curbside collection program in my Electoral Area, will my taxes go up? No, the curbside collection program is funded by user fees, not property taxes. Residents who receive curbside collection services receive an annual utility bill which covers, the collection tote(s) and pick-up of materials.

6. If I did not receive the survey or if I am going to be away when the survey is distributed, can I still participate? Yes! We want to hear from all residents in all Electoral Areas. You may view the survey at cvrd.bc.ca and then let us know which service option you prefer by email ([email protected]) or by phoning the CVRD Recycling Hotline (250-746-2540 or toll free 1-800-665-3955).

7. If my Electoral Area adopts new curbside collection services, can my household opt out?No, under the proposed pricing model, if the Electoral Area that you live in adopts a new curbside collection service, all residents in the Electoral Area will receive the same services. This approach best protects quality of life by ensuring that waste is collected in a consistent, reliable, lawful, and safe manner. This approach also eliminates the need for staff to monitor each household’s garbage collection needs. However, the final service delivery model decision rests with the CVRD Board and the CVRD is continually assessing service delivery models.

8. Our household already uses a backyard composter. Why would we need curbside organics collection as well?Although backyard composting is often the best way to divert organic material from the landfill, the Regional District of Nanaimo Residential Food Waste Collection Pilot Project reflected that even in areas where there are high rates of backyard composting, both urban and rural households were able to significantly reduce their garbage by using a curbside organics tote. This is because residents are able to put a much wider range of items into their organics tote than can go into most backyard composters, for example dairy, fish, bones, grains, and food-soiled cardboard.

9. Do the additional service option prices include all expenses associated with curbside collection and will costs remain the same? Yes, the budget is fully costed and includes labour, fuel, truck operation and maintenance, government allocations, debt repayment, and disposal. The budget is funded solely through CVRD residents’ user fees. The CVRD launched a new curbside collection service model in 2013 in which all curbside collection program user fees were reduced. There has not been an increase in curbside collection user fees since 2013. Going forward, the curbside budget will face normal inflationary pressures but it is expected to remain stable long term. Details on these costs are available for viewing on the CVRD website under Curbside Budget 515.

10. Where is the survey being distributed? The survey is being distributed to households in all nine CVRD Electoral Areas. This includes 13,000 homes throughout North Oyster, Diamond, Saltair, Youbou, Meade Creek, Cowichan Lake South, Skutz Falls, Cowichan Station, Glenora, Sahtlam, Cowichan Bay, Cobble Hill, Shawnigan Lake, Mill Bay, and the Malahat.

To learn more about the survey, please visit cvrd.bc.ca/survey, call the CVRD Recycling Hotline at 250-746-2540 or toll free 1-800-665-3955, or email your questions to [email protected]

The Cowichan Valley Regional District (CVRD) is currently conducting a survey in the region’s Electoral Areas to collect feedback regarding the curbside collection program. A number of questions have been raised regarding the survey. Following are some of the more frequently asked questions and responses to those questions.

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Black ice is a hazard here on Vancouver Island and the best defence is a good set of winter tires.

They are designed to help hold the road better than M+S rated all season tires and it’s now time to find a set for my wife’s Honda CR-V.

I’m fortunate to be able to afford what I want, so it was off to Honda for a set of steel wheels, Consumer Reports for the best tire choices and then the retailers for the best price. I thought that I had it all wrapped up until I remembered the Tire Pressure Monitoring System (TPMS).

TPMS is important to help call tire inflation problems to my attention if they change before I find it with my tire gauge. Poor inflation can affect traction, the tendency to hydroplane, fuel economy and tire life. Let tire pressure fall too low and the tire can destroy itself or fail suddenly, resulting in a collision. I opened my web browser and searched on TPMS and win-ter tires. The results told me that I could buy a second set of modules and pay the dealer to have the vehicle’s computer reset every time I changed the tires and wheels as the car’s com-puter can only manage the four sensors that it has been told about.

If your vehicle uses the anti-lock brake sys-tem (ABS) to sense tire pressure instead of a module in each wheel, this situation will not apply. You may change your tires and wheels and the system will continue to function with-out having to be adjusted. Check your owner’s manual or contact the dealership for more information if you are unsure of which system your vehicle uses.

Some articles complained about traction control and vehicle stability systems being negatively affected if the TPMS modules were not present and functioning properly. This is not the case according to my Honda dealer. The worst thing that I will have to put up with is the tire pressure warning light shining bright-ly until I put the original wheels back on again.

For now, since it is not mandatory to have a functional TPMS, I’ve decided to make sure that I check my tire inflation with a good gauge on a regular basis and let the inflation warning light shine. When I decide that I can’t live with it or the law changes, I’ll buy a set of sensors and a reset tool.

Tim Schewe is a retired constable with many years of traffic law enforcement experience. To comment or learn more, please visit drivesmartbc.ca

DRIVESMART

Winter puts on the pressure

LEXI BAINAS CITIZEN

If you love to buy fair-trade items for Christmas gifts, the Fiesta World Craft Bazaar, on Saturday, Nov. 14 at the Eagles Hall in Duncan from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. will open a new world to you.

This special event offers the creations of hun-dreds of artisans: unique quality crafts from many non-profit and ethical, fair-trade business vendors.

“It’s just amazing, the groups that are coming,” said Duncan event spokesperson Sue Darlington.

“We have every continent covered. There really is something for every pocket book, from hacky sacks to carpets! There will also be opportunities for you to buy an alternative gift or living gift,” she said, emphasizing the diversity of the event.

The event also has another side: ethnic foods of many kinds, along with fair-trade coffee, tea and juices.

Admission is $2 per person and the Eagles Hall is wheelchair accessible.

This Christmas Craft Bazaar off ers buyers a fair trade

Goods from all over the world can be found at the Fiesta World Craft Bazaar scheduled for this Saturday. [CITIZEN FILE]

Page 16: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

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16 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen A&E250-748-2666 ext. [email protected]

Star Wars never gets old for Charles RossLEXI BAINAS CITIZEN

Charles Ross may just be traveling over the Malahat from his home in Victoria to bring his show to the Cowichan Per-forming Arts Centre on Sunday, Nov. 15 but he’s been everywhere, man.

His One-Man Star Wars TM Trilogy has literally been seen around the globe.

“I’ve been doing this show since 2001, thousands of times in 500 markets on four different continents. It’s a strange experi-ence: to do the show for 14 years and still have it resonate with people,” he said.

Star Wars seems newer than new now, which makes his Duncan show timely.

“The funny thing about Star Wars, though, is that it’s never gone anywhere. It’s never stopped even as years pass. The first trilogy was made, and then the second set of films, now the new ones are made but people still love them. There’s not many things like that out there, except Lord of the Rings, or comic books or maybe Jane Austen, where you have all this raw material to reference back to.”

Ross had bread and butter on his mind when he came up with the idea of the One-Man Star Wars TM show.

“It was a way of combatting the contin-ual situation of being unemployed, or look-ing for work, when you work in theatre,” he explained.

“I studied theatre at Uvic back in the 90s and when I graduated I started to work in my vocation but I was having to trav-el across the country. I also tried to make something that was a bit more of my own.”

Ross tried a couple of solo shows but felt a pull towards Star Wars.

“I generally loved the films. Everybody has their favourite. I love the trilogy, of course, but I’d watched the first film espe-cially because, at the time, it felt like it was my life. Luke Skywalker was a farm boy who wanted adventure and to escape his situation. I, too, was living on a farm and really was hoping there’d be light at the end of the tunnel.”

He turned, at the times when TV recep-tion failed on the farm, to watching Star Wars on video. Over and over.

“I watched it to the point where I think brain damage was done!” he said.

Flash forward to 2000 and there he was, trying out his impressions of the very first Star Wars film in front of about 60 people in a 25-minute presentation.

It worked.“People were able to keep up with it. That

surprised me. I completely underestimated the nerdy reach of Star Wars. Then, it went so well I realized it needed to be the trilogy. It became a one-hour show and still people kept up with it.”

Next he took it to the Fringe Theatre Festival.

“Then things just started to mutate. I began getting offers to do it in places that had nothing to do with the Fringe. I went to Chicago and Lucasfilm found out about it while I was doing it there. They didn’t kill me, which was great. They were inter-ested. I sent them my materials and they were okay with it. I guess it’s because it’s a show that captures the spirit of being a kid.

I’m using the skills I have developed and my own sense of humour but I’m being like an eight-year-old kid. It’s unabashed-ly nerdy and unbridled, as you would be when you you’re a kid. But it’s artful, too,” he said.

The show really speaks for itself, Ross said.

“I actually don’t do much in the way of setting things up. I come out on stage wear-ing a pair of black coveralls. They hide all the padding underneath because I throw myself around the stage. I start from the very beginning of the film.” (He makes the sounds of the famous theme.)

“It’s me retelling the story, using lines and scenes from the films. I throw in jokes, of course, but it’s me doing a long-form homage to the original trilogy. Retelling a story that everybody already knows.”

And because everyone knows, they fill in the blanks themselves.

“My show is now licensed by Lucasfilm. I’m kind of like their walking, breathing action figure.”

What is extra special for this Victoria boy is that he’s near home for this Island exclusive show.

“It’s perfect. It’s nice to be able to go away to do the show but it’s also wonderful to be as close to home as possible.”

He said he thinks his show reflects some of B.C.’s own special brand of humour.

“I can’t say exactly what it is, but this is the show’s perspective, where it comes from. It’s irreverent, but in a light way,” Ross said.

So, go online to cowichanpac.ca or call 250-748-7529 and get those tickets. They’re $28 for adults and $25 for students. And may the Force be with you.

Charles Ross becomes a nerdy eight-year-old boy as he leads the audience through the ‘Star Wars’ trilogy. [SUBMITTED]

LEXI BAINAS CITIZEN

The Cowichan Folk Guild’s coffeehouse, scheduled for Saturday, Nov. 14 this month, features Gerry Barnum.

A soulful and seasoned artist, Barnum’s songs range from tender to foot-stomping and both his guitar technique and har-monica playing are excellent.

His career highlights include sharing the stage with some of the best in the business including Lyle Lovett, John Mayall and John Hammond. His instru-mental skills have also seen Barnum tak-

ing part in many recording sessions with such names as Michelle Wright and kd lang and David Gogo.

The coffeehouse is held at Duncan United Church, 246 Ingram St. in down-town Duncan.

Doors open at 7 p.m. and an open stage starts at 7:30 p.m. with the headliner to follow.

Admission is $10 or $5 for folk guild members. If you love these events, why not ask about CFG membership when you attend? It’s reasonably priced and offers discounts to many great shows.

Gerry Barnum headlines Folk Guild Coff eehouse

Enjoy veteran performer Gerry Barnum at the Folk Guild’s November coffeehouse held at the Duncan United Church Saturday, Nov. 14. [SUBMITTED]

Page 17: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 17

cowichanpac.caTicket Centre: 250.748.75292687 James St. Duncan, BC

RED ROCK DINERQ & Awith

legendaryDJ Red

Robinson!

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Photo: David CooperThe cast of Red Rock Diner

Friday Nov. 20, 2015 7:30 PMTickets $40 / Seniors $38

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cowichanpac.caTicket Centre: 250.748.75292687 James St. Duncan, BC

Tickets $28 / Student $25 / eyeGo $5

SundayNov. 15, 2015 6:30 PM

One Man Star Wars Trilogy performed with permission of Lucasfilm Ltd. All ‘Star WarsTM’ elements property of Lucasfilm Ltd. All rights reserved.

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YOUNG MUSICIAN OF THE WEEK

Mary Paridaen Van Veen is in her second year of piano studies with Connie Masson. She also loves singing, and is currently a member of the Cowichan Valley Youth Choir.

COURTESY COWICHANMUSICTEACHERS.COM

Marlis Peterson sings the lead role in Alban Berg’s opera, ‘Lulu’, screening live at the Cowichan Performing Arts Centre on Saturday, Nov. 21 starting at 9:30 a.m. [SUBMITTED]

Opera ‘Lulu’ a tale of desire, murderLEXI BAINAS CITIZEN

Are you ready for a walk on the wild side?

The Met: Live in HD has just the tale for you Saturday, Nov. 21.

The lusty opera, Lulu, offers desire, seduction and murder most foul.

Just like most operas, you say?Lulu, by 20th century composer Alban

Berg, is notorious for providing a sur-feit of these dramatic features.

The heroine seduces, kills, winds up a prostitute and gets murdered by Jack the Ripper. It’s a case of: she who climbs the highest falls the furthest.

For this Met production, acclaimed artist and director William Kentridge (who also did The Nose) applies his unique theatrical vision to a unique woman.

“It’s about Lulu, who goes through many lovers and several husbands and each time there’s impossibility. She can never fulfil all the desires of both being the femme fatale and the faithful quiet wife,” he says.

Taking on the role of Lulu, soprano Marlis Peterson has excited audiences around the world with her portrayal of the tour-de-force title role.

The drama unfolds in Vienna, Paris

and London. No time is specified but references and characters like Jack the Ripper suggest a late-19th-century setting.

Berg’s score is a masterpiece of 12-tone music as well as a work of pene-trating social commentary in the spirit of much of German theatre in the ear-lier part of the 20th century.

Showtime is 9:30 a.m. at the Cowichan Performing Arts Centre.

Tickets are $27 for adults, $25 for sen-iors and $22 for students.

Get them in person at the Cowichan Ticket Centre, or by phone 250-748-7529 or online at cowichanpac.ca

We remember on Nov. 11

We remember on Nov. 11

We remember on Nov. 11

We remember on Nov. 11

Page 18: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

18 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

Thursday,Nov. 19, 20157:30 PM

East Coast Week

cowichanpac.caTicket Centre: 250.748.75292687 James St. Duncan, BC

Tickets:Adult $28

Student / Senior $25Cowichan Folk Guild $25

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ARTISTS AT WORK

Potter Cathi Jefferson, left, works with her apprentice, Sarah Leckie, in her light-filled studio during the Cowichan Valley Artisans studio tour Sunday, Nov. 8. [LEXI BAINAS/CITIZEN]

LEXI BAINAS CITIZEN

Ever wondered what you want from life? So do Jack and Jill.

The subjects of the play, Jack and Jill, the latest offering by the Shawnigan Players, will help you find your way through the maze.

With shows Nov. 25-28 and Dec. 3-5 at Queen Margaret’s School theatre, you’ve got lots of chances to find out, too.

Jack and Jill is a Theatre Crit-ics Association Award winner

by playwright Jane Martin that dares to ask the question: “What the heck do humans want?”

Marshmallow worlds don’t exist outside romantic songs so expect some sparring as you follow Jack and Jill through the years in an on-again, off-again, and warily-circling-each-other relationship of highs and lows and joys and frustrations.

It’ll strike a chord in you somewhere, too.

This is a fast-moving and hil-

ariously heartbreaking opus starring Laura Faulkner (last seen in Romeo and Juliet) andMatt Williams (most recently on stage in The Real Thing), and they take full advantage of these flawed, funny, and very human characters.

Tickets are $15 each at Ten Old Books in Duncan, Mason’s in Shawnigan Lake, Butler Locksmithing in Lake Cowic-han, or reserve them through email at [email protected]

Shawnigan Players bring award winning script to life

ARTS Briefs

Morning Musicale welcomes clarinetist

Pianist Sarah Hagen promises a “sultry and jazzy” Morning Musicale when she welcomes clarinetist Franç ois Houle on Monday, Nov. 16.

Her intimate musical mor-nings, on the stage of the Cow-ichan Performing Arts Centre, attract music lovers who want to learn as well as listen.

It’s a great chance to hear Houle in music that sensuously includes hints of many genres.

Hagen says the clarinet is unique and the program she and Houle have put together will be a splendid showcase. Brahms’ Clarinet Sonata No. 2, Schumann’s Fantasy Pieces for Clarinet and Piano and Pou-lenc’s Clarinet Sonata are to be performed.

Each Morning Musicale begins with an informal pre-concert chat, accompan-

ied by coffee, tea and a table of treats.

It all starts at 10:30 a.m. Tickets are $24 each or $22 for Elder College members.

Remember: seating is limited. Tickets are available in person

at the Cowichan Ticket Centre, or by calling 250-748-7529 or online at cowichanpac.ca

Students get top marks in music theory

The Cowichan Valley Music Teachers’ Association is recog-nizing the following students for getting the highest marks in the area for theory exams during the last academic year.

In Basic Rudiments: Clara Seinen; Intermediate Rudi-m e n t s : S a r a h R i c h a r d s ; Advanced Rudiments: Jizelle Balae and Sarah Kaufmann (tied); Keyboard Harmony 1: Holly Collis Handford; and His-tory 1: Kara Labelle. The stu-dents will each receive a trophy.

Their teachers are Christine Gillespie, Andrea Rodall, Tri-sha Daniell, Ann Mendenhall and Connie Masson.

Sarah Hagen.

Page 19: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 19

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Page 20: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

20 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen Remembrance Day

Cowichan Remembers

Stories for this section were written by historian and columnist T.W. Paterson. For more from him, go to www.twpaterson.comAdditional contributors: Jack Bridges, Kevin Rothbauer, and Barb Simpkins, Kaatza Museum.Photo: This grave at Mountainview Cemetery reminds us that many of our veterans are now gone. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN] T.W. Paterson

CHRONICLES

Page 21: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Remembrance Day

Canada’s fi rst VC sleeps in foreign soilGreat Britain’s fabled Vic-

toria Cross has been that nation’s highest award

for “gallantry in the face of the enemy” since its creation in 1856 by Queen Victoria following the Crimean War.

A total of 1,353 VCs have been awarded over a century and a half, with 94 Canadians (includ-ing Duncan’s own Maj. Charles H. Hoey) receiving the honour.

Navy pilot Hampton “Hammy” Gray (another British Colum-bian) was the last Canadian to receive the VC, in 1945; as was that of Hoey’s the previous year, his was awarded posthumously.

Our first Canadian VC dates much farther back — all the way back to the Charge of the Light Brigade during the Crimean War. And therein lies the fasci-nating story of Lieut. Alexander Dunn.

At six-feet-three, the blond, mustachioed cavalryman’s extended reach prompted him to commission a sabre sev-eral inches longer than that usually crafted by the famous sword firm, Wilkinson’s. As events proved, this was a sound investment.

Described as having “cut a glamorous, romantic figure,” the York-born (Toronto-born) fifth son of the receiver general of Upper Canada attended Upper Canada College then Harrow School before, at the age of 19 in 1852, purchasing a commission (the practice of the day) in the 11th Hussars (Prince Albert’s Own Regiment of Light Dra-

goons) aka the Cherry Pickers.A born cavalryman, Dunn set

a high standard for his men and became known as a strict disciplinarian. For all that, his men respected him — seldom the case in an army of rich, priv-ileged and often egocentric offi-cers who lorded it over the lower caste ranks.

Dunn was in command of F Troop when his unit sailed for the Crimea to join in the English and French campaign attempting to thwart Russia’s incursion into Turkey. On Oct. 25, 1854, he was in the very thick

of the action — the illustrious, infamous Charge of the Light Brigade, where British cavalry charged the Russian guns at Balaclava in what has become known to history and to litera-ture as the Valley of Death.

Gallant, glamourous though it may have been, the charge against an entrenched enemy was suicidal to the point of insanity. Of the 630 cavalrymen who charged, 156 were killed or missing, 134 wounded, 14 taken prisoner. Dunn’s 11th Hussars, which formed the second line of attack, were hard-hit, too, with

only 25 survivors. Several times Dunn led his

men against those murderous guns, only, finally, withdrawing when their decimated ranks came under fresh fire from the right. That’s when Dunn saw Sgt. Robert Bentley, who’d suf-fered a lance cut in the neck and a bullet in the calf and whose horse had been severely wound-ed, being targeted as a straggler by three Russian Hussars.

Demonstrating superb horse-manship, Dunn and his trusty steed pirouetted their way through the carnage of dead,

wounded and terrified riderless horses to reach Bentley’s side and to kill — cut down, as his award citation put its — the three Russians with his cus-tom-made sabre.

Because Bentley’s maimed ani-mal was unmanageable, Dunn leapt to the ground, helped the sergeant to mount his own horse then slapped it on its rump to send it running off toward the British lines and safety.

This left Dunn afoot, and his attention was immediately drawn to another of his men, Pte. Harvey Levett who’d lost his horse and was being attacked by a Russian Hussar. Again, it was Dunn’s super-sized sabre to the rescue.

Both men survived, Dunn to break down in tears when he learned of the devastation of his troop.

His “gallantry in the face of the enemy” in going to the aid of Sgt. Bentley and Pte. Levett certainly qualified him for one of the 11 Victoria Crosses that were first awarded for the Crimean War.

He was the only officer who participated in the Charge of the Light Brigade to be so honoured.

In fact, his heroism on that ill-starred battlefield is believed to have been the inspiration for instituting the VC.

His citation, which is almost unbelievably terse given the dra-ma that precipitated it, reads:

The Charge of the Light Brigade by artist Richard Caton Woodville, Jr. [WIKIMEDIA COMMONS PHOTO]

See GRAVE’S, Page 22

Cowichan Valley Citizen salutes our veterans

Nov. 11

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 21

With Respect, Honour & Gratitude

We Remember!

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On the 11th Hourof the 11th Day

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Page 22: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

22 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

MANN’SServing the Cowichan Valley since 1968

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Our Cowichan Valley Veterans served

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Remembrance Day

Grave’s location forgotten in abandoned cemetery until 1945 “For having in the Light

Cavalry Charge on the 25th of October, 1854, saved the life of Sergeant Bentley, 11th Hussars, by cutting down two or three Russian Hussars, who were attacking from the rear, and afterwards cutting down a Rus-sian Hussar, who was attacking Private Levett, 11th Hussars.”

Ironically, when Alexander Dunn suffered a fatal gunshot wound as commanding officer of the 33rd Regiment of Foot (later the Duke of Wellington’s Rgt.) at Senafe, Eritrea, 14 years later, it wasn’t in the line of duty, but from the accidental discharge of his own fowling piece.

So ruled a board of inquiry which rejected rumours that he was murdered by a servant or that he’d committed suicide, and the celebrated hero of Bala-clava was buried, alongside six other men of the 33rd Foot, in isolated Senafe Cemetery near the disputed Eritrean-Ethiopian border.

His final resting place was forgotten and remained a mys-tery until 1945 when a British soldier on border patrol with the Eritrean Mounted Police noticed an abandoned cemetery. One grave, marked with a large rock on a grassy slope, caught

his eye. Incredibly, this grave had been cared for by Italian sol-diers during their occupation of Eritrea during the Second World War; as a courtesy, no doubt, to its heroic occupant. Twen-ty-nine years passed before the British Trade Commission could investigate, an attempt at resto-

ration having had to be suspend-ed for almost another decade because of military activity in the region. Dunn’s grave now receives bi-annual maintenance.

Although a policy was estab-lished during the First World War not to repatriate Canadian war casualties, in 2004, the 150th

anniversary of his winning the VC, Toronto accountant Brian Patterson started a campaign to bring Dunn’s bones home to a Toronto cemetery. “The plan is complete,” he told the media. “We think the process will cost about $100,000 to have the body exhumed and returned. And we’ve had great cooper-ation so far from the Eritrean government.”

Said Arthur Bishop, son of First World War Canadian flying ace Billy Bishop, and author of a book about the VC: “Our first Victoria Cross has lain too long in a foreign soil to which neither he, nor we, have any real signif-icant attachment. He belongs at home.”

In 2009, 141 years after his death, a Canadian detachment of troops serving with the UN in Eritrea undertook to refurbish Dunn’s burial plot and those of the other 33rd Foot soldiers who’d died far from home in the line of duty. Unfortunately, just a year later, Dunn’s grave was said to have been “scavenged” (despite, it seems, those regular attempts at maintenance).

Raged Patterson: “It’s [the cemetery] in the middle of nowhere, in an area that’s been fought over two or three times.”

Dunn had inadvertently sparked a previous public cam-paign, this one to reclaim his

medals which had been sold at auction in 1894. So great was national resentment that the minister of militia authorized Canada’s high commissioner in London to buy them from their new owner. They were returned to Canada in time to be dis-played at the Quebec Exhibition. Today, Dunn’s VC is owned by Upper Canada College where he took his early studies and is on loan to the Canadian War Muse-um, Ottawa.

In addition, an article in the Legion Magazine tells, “...A plaque erected in 1966 by the Archaeological and Historical Board stands at the northwest corner of Clarence Square, near the foot of Spadina Avenue, south of King Street in Toronto where Dunn spent his youth. It is headed, ‘Canada’s First Victo-ria Cross.’”

In 2008 the Canadian Govern-ment instituted a look-alike Canadian version of the VC, the Canadian Victoria Cross. It, too, is of bronze suspended from a crimson ribbon and bears a lion and crown insignia, with the addition of a fleur-de-lis and “For Valour” in English rather than in Latin as is the case of the British original.

With the instituting of the Canadian Victoria Cross the Canadian system of military honours is entirely our own.

CANADA’S, From Page 21

An example of a Victoria Cross. [WIKIPEDIA PHOTO]

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Page 23: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 23

“As members of this community and this

country we thank all the veterans who have made

us proud to be Canadians”

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Remembrance Day

Sharpshooter poet just a little to goodIn Memoriuam: BROWN,

Frank Smith1893 – Feb. 3, 1915

This fascinating tribute to the “Poet of the Pats” appeared in the Times-Col-

onist, Feb. 3, 2015Scoutmaster, poet, sharpshoot-

er, Frank Smith Brown went to war at the outset with the first Canadian contingent shipped overseas in 1914. He was a char-ter member of the newly-formed Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry, entering with the rank of sergeant from the militia.

What we know about the ser-geant today has been presented by the editor of a London lit-erary magazine, T.P.’s Weekly, whose preface to a book of Frank’s soldierly poetry pro-vides the only glimpse we have of this young man’s life and death.

Brown met the editor through letters sent by the 22-year-old soldier who was convalescing at the time from a bout of flu in hospital in the Salisbury Plain. Due to his illness, he missed joining his unit as it proceeded to France just before Christmas, 1914. According to the editor, Holbrook Jackson, Brown called at the publication’s Covent Garden office in early January “with a packet of poems under

his arm”. They met on three or four occasions and Jackson formed a strong impression of the “sturdy, keen-eyed, self-con-fident, but unassuming...son of Empire”. And he was quite impressed with his work. Jack-son published Brown’s slim book of poems under the title Contingent Ditties and Other Soldier Songs of the Great War, later that year.

Because he had yet to taste trench life, Frank wrote of the army life he knew. His poetry reflected the spirit of an earlier

imperial age, more of Kipling than of Owen and Brooke. The sergeant was no jingoist but he had a patriotic spirit shared by the early recruits. It might seem quaint today to find Can-adian-born soldiers of that time refer to themselves as British and unabashedly state they were fighting for the Empire.

Jackson said Brown’s two immediate wishes were to get to the front with his comrades and to have his poems published.

“Both wishes have now been gratified,” wrote Jackson, but

the first was to last only a few hours. Brown went into the trenches near St. Eloi Feb. 3. In his letter to Frank’s parents, Rev. Samuel Gorley and Joseph-ine Brown, in Almonte, Ont., Frank’s commanding officer, Capt. Talbot M. Papineau (great grandson of Lower Canadian rebellion “patriote” leader Louis-Joseph Papineau, and a hero himself who died in 1917 at Passchendaele) wrote glowingly of Frank and described in detail that day.

“As you know,” wrote Pap-

ineau, Sgt. Brown “was an expert shot, and he showed at once the most commendable enthusiasm in his work. Indeed, it was this which caused his death. During his first day he fired nearly 80 rounds at the enemy, probably as much as the rest of the Company put togeth-er, and undoubtedly attracted the attention of the German sharpshooters to himself.

“About 3:30 that same after-noon, he was struck in the head and died instantly and without pain. That evening we reverent-ly buried him behind the firing line...with his feet to a large tree and his head to the enemy. A wooden cross was erected to his memory. Either myself or Cor-poral Smithers of my Company could direct you to the exact spot.”

But that spot was plowed over countless times as the tide of battle passed back and forth in the Ypres Salient and Brown’s remains were never found. The name of the “Poet of the Pats” remains on memorials such as Belgium’s Menen Gate, the Almonte town cenotaph, and in the Book of Remembrances that resides high in Ottawa’s Peace Tower. The book of poems is in my possession (I am David A. Brown of Victoria) but its con-tents can be accessed from the University of Toronto website.

The name of Frank Smith Brown, the ‘Poet of the Pats’, is memorialized here in the First World War Book of Remembrance in the Peace Tower in Ottawa. [GOVERNMENT OF CANADA PHOTO]

Page 24: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

24 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

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After 70 years, a soldier is fi nally laid to restOf the 24,525 Canadian

soldiers who lost their lives liberating Europe

during the Second World War, more than 1,000 of them have no known graves. One of them, until earlier this year, was Pte. Albert Laubenstein who was serving with the Lincoln and Welland Rgt. when he was killed in action in the Nether-lands, on Jan. 26, 1945.

The 4th Canadian Armoured Division had been tasked with taking Kapelsche Veer Island, a “significant” and well-en-trenched German bridgehead. As part of the 10th Infantry Brigade, the Lincolns were among those leading the attack. In the “gruelling” five days of battle (as a Govern-ment of Canada press release described them) before the Germans were dislodged, the regiment suffered 183 casual-ties. Of these, 50, including Pte. Laubenstein, were fatal. Because of the continued fighting, his body was interred in a makeshift grave and duly marked. But, somehow, its exact site became obliterated and Pte. Laubenstein joined the

ranks of the tens of thousands of Canada’s servicemen with no known graves.

That ended in June 2014 when a Dutch souvenir hunt-er exploring with his metal detector turned up human remains on the southern bank of the river Maas near Sprang-Capelle and reported his discovery to the Recovery and Identification Unit of the Royal Netherlands Army. With decades of experience in deal-ing with exhumed war dead, they went to work and found several clues to the skeleton’s identity, among them a Can-adian Volunteer Service Medal, a ribbon for a second medal, the 1939-1943 Star, a silver sig-net ring embossed in gold with the letter “G,” and eight 9mm cartridges.

Informed of the find, Can-ada’s Directorate of History and Heritage which is “respon-sible for using historical and scientific methods” to deter-mine the identities of Canadian war casualties as they are found on former battlegrounds around the world, began by checking military personnel

files, burial registrar docu-ments, war diaries, maps and regimental histories “to create an historical profile of the unknown person”.

Documentation rarely is enough, unfortunately, which is where science lends a hand. Biological anthropologists study the remains to determine the deceased’s age and height, their overall state of health and the approximate time and cause of death. Dentists trained in forensic odontol-ogy take it a step further by studying the teeth; this step often proves to be “the primary identifier allowing a designated authority to render a positive identification”.

Because the Dutch Recov-ery Unit has previously dealt with the remains of Canadian servicemen, particularly from the last war, they had on file the medical and dental records not just of Pte. Laubenstein but those of five of his comrades of the Lincolns who’d also gone missing and couldn’t be found after the shooting ceased.

See EACH AND EVERY, Page 25

HONOURING THE LOST

A member of the Knights of Columbus and a Cadet salute during the annual placing of crosses at the graves of veterans in the cemetery at St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church in Mill Bay. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]

Page 25: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 25

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(Only in his case, it appears, was the body initially recovered and buried on-site but the loca-tion of the grave was lost.)

The Royal Canadian Dental Corps confirmed the Dutch iden-tification of Pte. Laubenstein of whom records showed that he’d had “extensive dental work, including the use of distinctive gold inlays”.

This combined use of dental records, historical context and artifacts “helped to reach an unmistakable confirmation” of Pte. Laubenstein who was just three months short of his 30th birthday when he was killed. Born in Saskatoon, Sask., the hockey, football and soccer play-er left school in Grade 8 then left the family farm to work as a farm labourer before enlisting in the Royal Canadian Artillery in 1940 and serving in Canada before being posted overseas in November 1941.

After joining an anti-aircraft artillery unit he again was transferred, in October 1944, to the Infantry Corps. Apparently rebellious, he was sentenced to 21 days without pay for being insolent to a corporal, and, in May 1943, he was court-mar-tialled for selling cigarettes for which he argued in his own defence that his customers

had been civilians not fellow soldiers. As part of his punish-ment, it would seem, he was kept in the Infantry despite his training as an artilleryman and his openly expressed resent-ment. Nevertheless, he was assigned to the Rocky Mountain Rangers. As noted, the would-be sheet metal worker was serving with the Lincoln and Welland Rgt. when he was killed during the five-day-long assault on Kapelsche Veer Island.

(This personal slant on Pte. Laubenstein was uncovered by Heather Whiteside, a University of Waterloo history student who was selected to participate in the Canadian Battlefields Foundation academic study tour of Europe last May. “His story, at least for me,” she explained, “really emphasized the fact that each and every man buried in the cemeteries we’ve been visit-ing had a personality, a charac-ter, and in many cases, plans for how they wanted to spend their time...back at home after the war.”)

As it happened, five of his comrades were missing. The remains of three of those lost soldiers were found by the Dutch Recovery Unit between 1999 and 2002. Ptes. George Barritt, Charles Beaudry and Victor Howey were buried with full military honours at Ber-

gen-Op Zoom Canadian War Cemetery in Noord-Brabant, the Netherlands. With the finding of Pte. Laubenstein, that leaves Ptes. Stanley Stokes and Lorne Watchorn of the Lincolns still unaccounted for — just two of the nearly 28,000 members of Canada’s army, navy and air force who died in the First, Second and Korean wars who have yet to be identified and buried in a known grave!

In May, Pte. Albert Lauben-stein belatedly joined 968 of his fellow countrymen in the Bergen-Op-Zoom Canadian War Cemetery, about 70 km from where he died. In attendance were his nephew, Glen Lauben-stein of Victoria and grandniece Sarah Penton of Winnipeg, along with representatives of the Canadian Armed Forces and the Canadian Government. His funeral coincided with the commemorative celebrations of the 70th anniversary of the lib-eration of the Netherlands.

His deceased mother never had the closure that comes with an official burial, not even the photograph that she’d requested of the army of his grave in 1945.

For one more week the Can-adian War Museum will con-tinue to highlight the Lauben-stein story in a six-month-long exhibit entitled A Century of Canadian Military Dentistry.

‘Each and every man buried...had a personality, a character’AFTER 70 YEARS, From Page 24

Pte. Laubenstein, right, died during the assault on Kapelsche Veer Island. He and a number of his comrades for years had no known grave. [SUBMITTED]

Page 26: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

26 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

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On the homefront, women were encouraged to knit or sew the latest in military fashions for the whole family. It was just one of the many activities women engaged in for the war effort. [T.W. PATERSON COLLECTION]

Lady Warriors — women of Lake Cowichan, WWII

For this illuminating look at the Home Front we’re indebted to Barb Simpkins, curator, Kaatza Station Museum, who presented it in a talk in November 2006.

Cowichan Lake during the war years wasn’t much different from any other

small community on the west coast. There was rationing, blackouts, fundraising, knitting and everyone pulling together for the war effort.

There were some remarkable differences, however.

We raised $8,000 (over $115,000 at the current exchange rate) for an airplane — not every community did that. Youbou and Lake Cowichan wanted to raise funds to purchase a train-ing plane for the Air Supremacy Drive. Over 300 people showed up for the first meeting in June of 1944 at the Youbou Hall. A committee was formed, headed by Dr. Beevor-Potts and Col. Boyd.

By July 11, $5,000 had been raised and a week later they were just $200 short of their goal. All Industrial Timber Mill employees were asked to give up one day’s pay and the company

matched [them] dollar for dollar. The committee at large contrib-uted also. By Aug. 22, a plane was sent to the #8 Elementary Flying School in Vancouver. There was to have been a fly-over on Nov. 11, but there were engine problems with the plane.

The IWA Women’s Auxiliary, who were very involved in the war effort, decided that more could be accomplished by coordinating all the various groups in town.

They called it the United Organizations. Two delegates represented each group. Mr. Say-well was the first chairman and Edna Brown was the secretary. They held bi-weekly dances — 30 cents admission.

They also began Labour Day Sports, which evolved into Lake Days. The Auxiliary women sent magazines, cigarettes, Christ-mas presents, cards and letters to local men and women in the services.

They canvassed for war bonds, stamps and the Red Cross. They fought to improve the operation of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board Organization. They held an Island-wide campaign

for canning sugar rations and would check local stores for inflationary prices and union label goods. The women lobbied Ottawa to extend rationing to all essential foodstuffs. They also conducted a campaign to extend the vote to all soldiers, regard-less of race or birthplace.

At the beginning of the war a group of patriotic and energetic women wanted to do knitting as their part in the war effort but were discouraged from forming a Red Cross branch.

Eventually, in March 1940, they were registered under the War Charities Act as the Lake Cowic-han Knitting Club.

There were 42 members and they met once a week to make quantities of knitted articles. They held rummage sales, accepted donations and held bridge parties.

They gave money to the Air Supremacy Fund, the Lord May-or’s Fund and sent blankets to the Red Cross.

They sold chocolate bars and lemonade at the roller skating rink every Friday.

See RATIONING, Page 27

Page 27: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 27

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At Christmas they made up parcels of food and knitted comforts for the Cowichan Lake boys in the service. They knitted socks, turtleneck and sleeveless sweaters, mufflers, caps, mittens and 407 quilts. They sent 25 car-tons of clothing for bombed-out victims and adopted a prison-er-of-war. By June 1946 it was requested that they wind up their activities and they shortly formed a local branch of the IODE.

The ration book contained coupons of various colours to be exchanged for different com-

modities — tea, coffee, meat, butter, sugar and jam. Trading coupons was illegal, but it was frequently done. Certain items disappeared from the shelves. Bananas — you could buy banana flakes — candy bars and chocolate were rare and expen-sive. There was also a shortage of milk, as it was too expensive to ship from Duncan. Canned milk was used in its place. Gas-oline was severely restricted — coupons were issued to all motorists. It was hard to find new tires.

In 1941 the community was blacked-out at night — houses had heavy screens and thick

drapery or plywood for all win-dows. There were tightly fitting black-out covers for car and truck headlights. Citizens gave up aluminum pots and pans to make planes.

Bacon fat and bones were used to provide glycerine for explo-sives. Rag and paper bag drives were held and children saved string and foil.

In November 1945, a Victory Show was held at Youbou and, in March 1946, a welcome home banquet was held for 70 return[ed] vets. The music was by the Swingettes and the guest speaker was Maj.-Gen. George Pearkes.

The original comes from The UBO Bulletin and this article was published in April 1947. The magazine/newsletter was published by BC Forest Products. [CAM CHOUINARD PHOTO]

The war influenced every aspect of life, even on the home front. Knitting was just one of the things women were encouraged to do for those serving overseas. [T.W. PATERSON COLLECTION]

Rationing was a fact of wartime lifeLADY, From Page 26

Page 28: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

28 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

Let's not forget....Remembrance day is a time to remember those who have given their lives so that we can enjoy the precious freedoms that we enjoy today. It's easy in our peaceful day to day existence to take for granted these freedoms and it's just as easy to become numb to all the suffering that people regularly face in other less fortunate parts of the world.

Having served in Canada's Armed Forces prior to settling here in the Cowichan Valley, Kim Johannsen and Rod Macintosh would like to personally remind you to not forget the men and women of our Armed Forces who have served and sacrificed to preserve those freedoms that we hold so dear.

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Jack Bridges remembers how it felt when he was the young man in the photo, heading home from war on another continent. [ANDREA RONDEAU/CITIZEN]

How it began: Bridges remembers fi rst daysJACK BRIDGES SPECIAL TO THE CITIZEN

In 1936 you could not buy a job.

When a girl left school she either became a teacher or a nurse or did house work.

The army paid one dollar a day and the militia paid one dollar per week. This was big money, so I went to the Perth

regiment. They needed bands-men and I was able to join up. I was 13 years old, but they arranged to have me born six years earlier as they needed bodies.

On Sept. 1, 1939 I was sleep-ing in bed when my brother ran into my room and held up the local newspaper and there, in three inch letters, “Britain

declares war”. It’s hard to remember my

feelings; I was scared, I was excited, I wondered what will happen. I went downstairs and had breakfast and then the phone rang: “Put on your uniform and get down to the armouries as fast as you can.”

See BOYS, Page 29

ISLANDERS SALUTE VETERANS

The Kerry Park Islanders welcome an Honour Guard from the Malahat Legion for their game against Saanich on Nov. 7. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]

Page 29: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Remembrance Day

I got into my uniform and ran about three blocks to the armouries and there on the road was C company with rifles and fixed bayonets.

I ran into the building and grabbed my clarinet and headed back to the road to join the band. We marched down the street and put a guard on the telephone office, the hydro office and the water works, and spent the rest of the morning marching around town playing military music.

At 2:30 p.m. our colonel received word from Ottawa to bring the regi-ment up to strength for active duty. He phoned Dr. Kenner and Dr. For-ester and told them they would be needed to look after the medicals for the troops.

Most of the boys that were in the militia joined up immediately, but some preferred the navy or air force. I took the test and Dr. Kenner, who was our family doctor, said, “I will pass you, Jack, but Dr. Forester will not, as you can’t see.”

The boys came in from the schools, the farms and offices and within a month the regiment was up to strength. If you could type with one finger you were in the orderly room. If you could open a can, you were a cook. If you could ride a bicycle you were a dispatch rider. Eventually everyone found their place.

Where do you put 700 boys, where do they sleep? It just happened that a furniture factory went out of busi-

ness and this became their barracks. Straw was dumped and they made their mattresses and now the task started to toughen them up: march, march, march. And what a funny looking army, some with army pants and a fedora, some with civilian pants and an army jacket. Canada was not ready for war and they didn’t have the guns or the uniforms. They trained in a vacant field near the Avon River an eventually their uni-forms and equipment arrived.

One night a single file of soldiers was spotted going towards the train station. It was supposed to be a secret, but pretty soon one could see the mothers, girlfriends and kids fol-lowing them and saying goodbye.

The Perths went to Niagara for more training and then to Camp Bor-den. In 1941 they returned to Strat-ford and attended a church service and what a difference, they were now soldiers.

They left for England 833 strong in October and this was the last time my sister and many girls would see their

husbands.In 1941 it was easier to pass the med-

ical and I joined the Royal Canadian regiment. In 1943 I went to chemical warfare in Ottawa and then off to Petewawa camp where I joined the artillery. When I arrived in England I joined 664 Squadron air observation post and found myself with the 4th Canadian armoured division.

On the night of May 4, 1945, 25 of us took one side of the Oldenberg airport in Germany. I was an artillery signaller and I was on the 19 set when the cease fire came through at 7:58 in the morning of May 5. About 10 min-utes later divisional headquarters came on the air and asked the we find a vacant field and empty all guns. I sent one of our pilots up and we found a vacant field and we emptied the guns of two 25 lb field regiments and one medium regiment.

My was was over and I opened up a bottle of wine we had taken from the Oldenberg winery. It wasn’t a good move as it cost me 10 days guard duty.

I had joined the army as a private and after five years was still a pri-vate. It seems I celebrated too many statutory holidays that the army didn’t know about. I joined the army with a nickel and came out with a nickel. I had spent 95 per cent of my money on wine, women and song and the other five per cent I wasted.

I consider my time in the army as an interesting experience and after five years never got a scratch. I would do it all again.

Boys immediately gathered for marchHOW IT BEGAN, From Page 28 Most of the boys that were in the

militia joined up immediately... I took the test and Dr. Kenner, who was our family doctor, said, “I will pass you, Jack, but Dr. Forester will not, as you can’t see.”

JACK BRIDGES, veteran

PLACING A CROSS

A Legion member and a cadet work to place crosses at the graves of veterans in the cemetery at St. Francis Xavier Church in Mill Bay. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 29

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CNR engine 6004 (shown in 1943) drew the Continental and was destroyed in the wreck. The Korean War era rail tragedy claimed the lives of soldiers before they even left Canada for the battlefields and embroiled a future Canadian prime minister in a court battle that would help to define his career and would forever change rail regulations. [WIKIPEDIA PHOTO]

Canoe River disaster direct result of warTo railway history buffs British

Columbia’s worst railway disaster is known as the Canoe River train

wreck; to lawyers studying Canadian legal precedent, it’s the Canoe River case. Neither sobriquet even hints of the fact that it was the Korean War, then raging, that precipitated this tragedy...

November 1950. For the third time in less than half a century, Canada was at war, this time in Korea. This time, it was different only in that it was called a police action; but all the inevitable hor-rors of human conflict were at full play and all the resources of the Canadian

government were called upon to meet our commitments to the UN.

Caught almost flat-footed in peacetime with only a rump of a professional army left from the Second World War, just five years earlier, a call was put out for volun-teers. Thousands responded and began training at Camp Shilo, Manitoba, Wain-wright, Alberta, and Fort Lewis, Wash.

Nov. 21, 1950, 23 officers and 315 men of the 2nd Regiment of the Royal Can-adian Horse Artillery were heading from the Prairies to the coast to embark for Korea, all packed into 17-car west-bound Passenger Extra 3538. At mid-morning,

having crossed into British Columbia on the CNR transcontinental mainline, it approached Canoe River, near Valemount in the Rockies and began to ascend a long, winding curve — as, from the oppos-ite direction, the 11-car Vancouver-Mont-real Continental Limited entered the same loop, on a downward grade. As fate would have it, this 180-mile-long stretch of mountainous track was the only part of the CNR mainline in that region not protected by automatic block signals.

From a nearby embankment, a forestry worker saw the impending collision and tried to warn the Continental by frantic-ally waving, only to get a friendly wave in return. There was no further warning, no chance even to begin to brake before the locomotives met head-on, killing both engineers and firemen in a screaming meshing of opposing steel and sparks, splintering wood and, worst of all, escap-ing steam.

The locomotive of the troop train was lifted up and over its tender to come down atop the second car, crushing it. The effect on the other wooden passen-ger coaches was equally catastrophic. Positioned as they had been between heavier steel cars, the resulting effect was not unlike that of their suddenly being squeezed like a concertina. Some cars imploded, some were upended and pitched from the tracks in a screaming of grinding metal and wood and glass and scalding hot steam that seared then froze the flesh in the -18 C temperature.

In just seconds, 17 of Canada’s Korean army contingent, one as young as 17,

most of them in their early 20s, were dead or dying (one made it as far as a hospital), 60 more injured. The final toll, besides the four trainmen, was 17 soldiers killed. Killed without ever having made it to Korea. Killed without ever having left Canadian soil.

The cars at the head of the train had taken the greatest impact, their wreck-age reaching as much as 50 feet high, and described by a survivor as not being recognizable “as anything but a jumble of twisted steel and splintered wood”.

In the three hours that it took for a hospital train to arrive from Jasper, Dr. P.S. Kimmett who, with his wife, a nurse, was a passenger on the Continental, took charge.

Those of both trains who weren’t injured overcame their initial shock to do what they could in six-inch-deep snow to help those who were hurt but alive with little in the way of medical aids. Injuries of those aboard the express were minor but not so those of the soldiers. Making the sense of horror all the more excruci-ating were the cries of the injured and the fact that some of the victims had been dismembered and their body parts, some still in uniform, were scattered about — as they discovered when they tried to extricate what they thought to be a victim, or a whole body, from the carnage. Four of those killed were never found, likely consumed in a fiery explo-sion that occurred the next day.

How could it happen?

See FUTURE PM, Page 31

Page 31: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 31

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Dispatcher Alfred John Atherton was represented in court by none other than future Canadian prime minister John Diefenbaker. [WIKIPEDIA PHOTO]

How could two CNR trains have been on the same track at the same time? Who was responsible? Obviously, somebody had to be responsible. Somebody had screwed up and killed 21 men! That some-body had to be punished.

Not surprisingly in a bureaucracy such as Canada’s national railway, that some-one was at the bottom of the hierarchy: the telegraph dispatcher who’d taken but failed to relay correctly the Kamloops dispatcher’s order that the troop train pull onto a siding.

That dispatcher was 22-year-old Alfred John Atherton and his trial for man-slaughter began in Prince George six months after the tragedy. The Crown based its case on the fact that Atherton, having been alerted to the eastbound express, was to have relayed the order that the troop train pull over at Cedarside until the track was clear. But he hadn’t done so, according to the eastbound’s conductor. Missing from Atherton’s telegraphic dispatch were the crucial words, “at Cedarside”. So the westbound troop train had carried on westward towards disaster.

Enter no less a personage than John Diefenbaker, future Conservative prime minister, then an MP and a practising criminal lawyer. Initially, he declined Atherton’s father, who lived in his con-stituency and wished to have him serve as his son’s defence counsel. But Diefen-baker was tied up with Parliament, his wife Edna was seriously ill and he wasn’t a member of the British Columbia Bar.

As is so often the case, there’s a fascin-ating story within a story as to how he did become Atherton’s counsel. Years later, he explained the circumstances (with several discrepancies) in his mem-oir, One Canada.

He was in Australia, he wrote, attending a Commonwealth parliamentary meeting when the train wreck occurred, which he read about in the press, and an Aus-tralian colleague had suggested that it would make for “a likely case” for him. To which Diefenbaker had replied that he wasn’t qualified to practise law in B.C., thus he was unqualified to become involved. And his thoughts returned to the prospect of rejoining his wife Edna for several days in Hawaii on the way back to Canada.

Instead, he received a cable informing him that she’d meet him in Vancouver. There, a second cable awaited him, this one from a doctor that Edna was in a Saskatoon hospital, dangerously ill (with leukemia). She was, in fact, near death by

the time he reached her side. Nevertheless, her thoughts weren’t for

herself but for the young railway tele-grapher who’d been charged with man-slaughter after a calamitous train wreck in British Columbia. She believed that the higher-ups in the CNR were passing the buck for any responsibility and scape-goating young John Atherton. The real issue, as she and many others saw it, was not the so-called incomplete telegram but the fact that those old wooden passenger coaches in which the soldiers were riding had been sandwiched between heavier, stronger coaches of steel, which proved to be a major factor in the resulting human carnage.

Couldn’t he, a crack criminal lawyer, help Atherton?

Diefenbaker agreed with her but point-ed out that joining the Bar in B.C. cost a hefty $1,500. To which she replied that she’d already given her word that he’d take up Atherton’s defence. As it hap-pened, Edna Diefenaker didn’t live to see how the trial unravelled.

Diefenbaker’s interviews of Atherton weren’t promising: “Everyone’s hand seemed to be against him.” The CNR, he believed, was railroading its hapless tele-grapher. As he put it so colourfully in his memoir, “Atherton had only one passport and that was marked ‘prison.’”

He contacted the B.C. Law Society and paid his fee, to learn that he had to pass an “intensive examination” of provincial statutes; if he failed, there’d be a wait-ing period before he could try again. He needn’t have worried: the examination was almost farcical, challenging at best to a first-year law student — “or even one who wasn’t” — and he was sworn in as a barrister legally licensed to practise in B.C.

In Prince George for the prelimin-ary hearing, which was well attended because of the public interest, Diefen-baker found himself up against the dep-uty attorney-general, Col. Eric Pepler. When Atherton was committed for trial at the Spring Assizes, Diefenbaker arranged a continuation of his bail and began his preparations for the trial in May.

He spent weeks studying “the inside and out” of transmissions of railway dis-patch messages, a procedure which dated from 1908, until he “knew the rules better than anyone else”. Not only had they been loosely drawn but, in his mind, were so holed that “two teams of horses could have walked through them”. (They would be revised as a result of the wreck.)

Future PM takes the caseCANOE RIVER, From Page 30

See THINGS LOOK DARK, Page 32

Page 32: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

32 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

7298

229

KEN & KELLIJanicki Anderson

www.kenandkelli.ca

250-746-8123

7298

229

NOW ANDFOREVERWE REMEMBERANDHONOUR

IslandTractor & Supply Ltd.4650Trans Canada HighwayDuncan 250-746-1755

7297

083

Thank You

Lockhart Industires would like to thank the local businesses and people whose contributions for a proper PA system to ensure that all attending the Remembrance

Day Ceremony in Duncan can hear the service. We are all proud to be given the privilege to help enable this to proceed again this year to pay respect to our veterans attending and those who gave the supreme sacrifi ce.

Thank you to:• Bow-Mel Chrysler Ltd.• David & Cathy Conway• Discovery Honda Ltd.• Duncan Auto Parts Ltd.• Exchange Energy• Island Ford Superstore• Greg’s RV Place• HB Electric Ltd.• Leon Signs Ltd.• Madrone Environmental

Services Ltd.

• North Pacifi c Divers Inc.• Pacifi c Industrial and

Marine Ltd.• Palmer Leslie Chartered

Accountants• Island Chevrolet Buick

GMC• Poland Crane Service Ltd.• Robins Power Lunch• Surespan Ready Mix

7296447

Remembrance Day

Once in court, Col. Pepler asserted that Atherton’s failure to advise the westbound troop train to pull over at Cedarside was the sole cause of the crash. Atherton, the operator at Red Pass Junction, had handed the order he’d written down to the conductor of the troop train, and the Blue River operator had done the same for the Contin-ental crew.

Atherton assured Diefenbaker that he’d included those two vital words, “at Cedarside,” in his order. Tellingly, the Blue River operator was sure that he hadn’t, which explained why the express train thought it had the right-of-way and why the crew of the troop train expected to meet the express at Gosnell, 25 miles west of Cedarside.

The collision occurred south of Valemount, less than a mile east of Canoe River station.

By that time the single preced-ent that Diefenbaker had turned up for a previous broken tele-graph message was the work of a seagull having dropped a fish on the snow-covered wires! It did help his case that the telegraph wires in the Valemount area had been freshly covered with snow the night before and that there’d been a communications gap several days before the wreck.

If human failure were involved, Diefenbaker contended, it was that of the Kamloops dispatch-er for not noticing Atherton’s omission of “at Cedarside” in his repeat order.

But Diefenbaker had an ace up his sleeve, one which he never revealed until after he’d retired from law practice. Whenever he had a jury trial, he’d place an agent, in this case an articling law student, in the courtroom to monitor the reactions of the public galleries.

He believed their emotions, as revealed by facial expressions and comments, were likely to be those of the jurors who also were ordinary citizens not mem-bers of the legal fraternity.

In this way he had a key to what he thought the jury to be thinking.

He then let Pepler have the stage through the first mor-ning, neither interjecting nor asking questions of the various witnesses.

At lunch, his agent informed him that the spectators were mystified by, even indignant at Diefenbaker’s silence. He was supposed to be a top defence lawyer; why didn’t he say some-thing, anything, on Atherton’s behalf?

What he’d been doing was studying his opponent. Not only was Pepler a former army officer

as identified by his rank, one who’d served in the First World War, but his manner in court was that of some senior officers who were “superior” not just in rank but in attitude.

The case involved 17 killed soldiers yet Pepler was in effect absolving the railway of any culpability by trying to lay the entire blame on young Ather-ton. Diefenbaker sensed that jurors could see this conflict of loyalties which Pepler was unconsciously reinforcing with his supercilious manner.

It was during Pepler’s ques-tioning of a senior CNR official that he struck. This witness admitted that the composition of the train, the placing of steel-framed wooden passenger cars between all-steel cars, had been his department’s doing. (This, despite a 1947 order by the Board of Transport that part-wooden passenger coach-es not be placed between steel coaches. As with most regu-lation, however, there was a loophole: wooden cars with steel underframes didn’t qualify as “wooden cars”. Nevertheless, even the CNR had discontinued using them for regular passen-ger service, relegating them solely to the transporting of mil-itary personnel.)

Things look dark for the accused

The Canoe River cairn, erected to the memory of the 17 soldiers who died in the Canoe River train crash in Canoe River, south of Valemount, British Columbia. [WIKIPEDIA PHOTO]

FUTURE PM, From Page 31

See ‘SUPERIOR’, Page 33

Page 33: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Remembrance Day

For all the horrendous com-pounding of tragedy caused by those outdated coaches of wood having, literally, accordioned, the CNR man-ager said he had no qualms; it was Atherton’s fault with his incomplete message to the trainmen.

Diefenbaker, sarcastically: “I suppose the reason you put those men in wooden cars with steel cars on either end was so that no matter what they might subsequently find in Korea, they’d also be able to say, ‘Well, we had worse than that in Canada.’”

Everything “broke loose,” Diefenbaker recalled. Pepler sputtered, expressed shock: one didn’t say things like that in a B.C. courtroom! The judge was willing to let it pass if defence counsel meant it was a statement not a question. But Diefenbaker said he’d put it to the witness as a question. Both he and His Honour were interrupted by Pepler blurting out that he wanted to make it clear that the Crown wasn’t “concerned about the deaths of a few privates going to Korea”.

“Oh, Colonel, you’re not concerned about the killing of a few privates?” snapped

Diefenbaker.It was pure drama on his

part, of course, as he knew full well that Pepler had real-ly meant that the Crown’s charge against Atherton dealt with the death of one of the firemen not the deaths of passengers.

But the damage was done. That the Crown’s case had been scuttled by Pepler’s out-burst was made abundantly clear when one of two jurors who were veterans of the First World War muttered a curse at the attorney-general.

Diefenbaker called no wit-nesses, concentrating instead on cross-examination for the balance of the trial, and recit-ing the incident of the seagull who’d dropped a fish on the telegraph wires, while taking every opportunity, real and staged, to remind the jury of Pepler’s military career by addressing him as Colonel.

In his hour-long charge to the jury Justice McFarlane pointed out that if they believed Atherton’s story that he’d relayed the troop train’s order as he’d received it, an acquittal was justified. In just 40 minutes jurors returned a verdict of not guilty

The CNR installed block signals on the fatal stretch of track, realigned the blind

curve that obscured train crews’ view of the what lay ahead, and, within two years, ordered 302 new all-metal pas-senger cars.

Too late for the 21 men who died in the Canoe River train wreck which ultimately proved to be beneficial to Dief-enbaker’s legal and political career while going down in Canadian history as a tragic sidelight of the Korean War.

Ironically, the RCHA suffered more casualties in this inci-dent than in its first year of action in Korea. A memorial cairn and monument have been erected near the crash site as has a monument at CFB Shilo where a memorial parade is held each year.

Because they were on active duty when killed, the names of the 17 servicemen who died at Canoe River are inscribed in the Korea Book of Remem-brance, on the Wall of Remem-brance in Brampton, Ont., and on the Korea Cairn in Winni-peg’s Brookside Cemetery.

However, because they never made it to the Korean war zone, they have not been awarded posthumous Can-adian Volunteer Service Med-als — an injustice according to one of the survivors who has unsuccessfully campaigned to have the medals awarded.

‘Superior’ attitude of prosecutor turns the tideTHINGS LOOK, From Page 32

FRESH FACES AT LONGTIME TRADITIONAir and Sea Cadets stand at attention during the ceremony to raise the Poppy Campaign flag at Duncan City Hall on Nov. 1.[KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 33

GALAXY MOTORS

7329 Trans Canada Hwy, Duncan www.galaxymotors.net 250-597-0424

“We remember that we enjoy our

today’s because of their courage

yesterday”

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HoursMon - Sat 9 to 5 pm

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Over 40 YEARS IN THE COWICHAN VALLEY

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1-800-593-5303107-2ND ST., DUNCAN, BC 250-748-1732

Your Furniture Design Girls!UNCLE ALBERT’SFURNITURE

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7266991

Page 34: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

34 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

On November 7, 2015 Mrs. Rattan Atwal passed away peacefully at home with her family at her side. She is predeceased by her husband Hardial Singh Atwal and son Harjinder Atwal.She leaves behind five children, five grandchildren, two great grandchildren, four siblings and numerous nieces and nephews. She will always be remembered for the love she had for her family, friends and community. She will be missed by all. The family wishes to express their heartfelt thanks to Dr. J.K. Harris, Dr. R. Thompson, Dr. G. Blackburn, Dr. Tanya Clark-Young and Heidi Bovey. The family also thanks the Community Home Care Workers and Community Home Care Nursing – West Team, whom without you she would not have been able to remain in her home.A Funeral Service will be held on Sunday, November 15, 2015 at 11:30 AM at HW Wallace Cremation and Burial Centre, 5285 Polkey Road, Duncan, BC.In lieu of flowers please donate to a charity of your choice in Rattan’s name. Online condolences may be made at www.hwwallacecbc.com

Rattan Atwal

MAJOR GENERAL (RETIRED) RUSSELL BARBERJune 7, 1926 – October 16, 2015

He is survived by his wife Joan Barber, his son-in-law and family John Vanderkooy of Barrie Ont., and his two sisters Lois Friesen of Victoria and Arvelle Slawson of Brandon. He is predeceased by his fi rst wife Shirley, daughter Kathy, brothers Graeme and Murray.

Russ was born in Brandon, MB, and grew up in Maryfi eld. He enlisted in the Royal Canadian Airforce in 1943 and proceeded overseas as an Air Gunner; he returned from England in the summer of 1945, was demobilized in September 1945 and attended University in Saskatoon. In May 1946 he returned to the RCAF as a Leading Aircraftsman and trained as a Radar Technician. In 1947 he re-mustered to Aircrew serving as a Radio Navigator for the duration of his military service. He retired in Duncan in 1979 after 36 years and then served in the Active Component of the Airforce Reserves for an additional 12 years.

His fi rst fl ying assignment after the war was with 414 Photo Squadron assigned to photographing the Arctic for the creation of the fi rst detailed maps of northern Canada. He served in Training Command, Transport Command and Air Defense Command. He was promoted to Chief of Staff of Airforce Operations upon the reformation of Airforce Command and his fi nal assignment was in Colorado Springs as Deputy Chief of Staff , Plans and Programs, North American Aerospace Defense Command.

In retirement he was involved with the Canadian Can-cer Society at all levels; Unit, District, Provincial and National. As an adherent of the local Presbyterian Church he became Director of the Agapeland Christian Nursery School. He was President of the Sponsoring Committee of 744 Air Cadet Squadron and he was a Charter Member of the Cowichan Valley Probus Club. He was an active participant in Provincial and Federal conservative aff airs.A heartfelt thanks to the Staff at Cairnsmore.

A Memorial service will be held at First Memorial, 375 Brae Road, Duncan on

Saturday November 21st at 2:00 pm with reception to follow.

In lieu of fl owers, if wishing donations may be made to a charity of your choice.

FIRST MEMORIAL FUNERAL SERVICES(250) 748-2134, Duncan, B.C.

Condolences may be shared online atwww.dignitymemorial.ca

Hugh Angus Johnson passed away in Duncan, BC with his family at his side November 6, 2015 after a brief illness. Hugh was born October 31, 1936 in Stettler, Alberta. He was predeceased by his parents Walter and Crystal (nee Viers) Johnson, sisters Violet Ferguson, Grace Webster, Dorothy Brennan, Mary Johnson and brothers Walter, George, Joe, Carl, Pat and Charlie. He is survived by four great-grandchildren, his daughter and son in law Cindy and Maurice Last and their children Rhowena (Caldwell), Rosalie (Schlosberg), Virginia and Willow, his son and daughter in law Randy and Patty, Randy’s son Christopher, his siblings Marion (Yates), Mabel (Langmo), Ike, Olive (Tafner) and Paul and many, many nieces and nephews. Hugh started life on a farm in the Halkirk region of Alberta and moved with his parents to Revelstoke, BC in 1945. A polio survivor, he left home for a working life on a farm in Alberta, but soon returned to BC for sawmill work in Salmon Arm where his children were born. Hugh moved to the lower mainland when his children were quite young, finally settling in and working as a carpenter in the Abbotsford, BC area for many years before retiring to Vernon, BC. He suffered a heart attack and a stroke in 2007 and moved to Duncan to be closer to his daughter in 2009. There will be a Funeral Service at 2:00 PM on Friday, November 13, 2015 at HW Wallace Cremation and Burial Centre, 5285 Polkey Road, Duncan, BC.

Online condolences may be made at www.hwwallacecbc.comwww.hwwallacecbc.com

Hugh Angus JohnsonOctober 31, 1936 - November 6, 2015

It is with great sadness that the family of Linda Jensen shares the passing on October 31st, 2015, of their beloved wife, mother, grandmother, sister, aunt, cousin and friend. Linda maintained her happy, positive outlook on life throughout her two year journey with cancer. A beauti-ful angel has gone home to rest. Born in Drumheller, Alberta, Linda returned to her prairie roots for a few years, but spent most of her life on the BC coast. Linda worked in the forestry industry, the last 25 years as Human Resources Assistant at the Crofton mill. She leaves behind her devoted husband, Jim, and her loving, bereaved family, including her furry friends, Mitzi and Ziggy. A Celebration of Life will be held November 14th at 1:00 pm at the New Life Baptist Church at 1839 Tzouhalem Road, Duncan, BC.

Online condolences may be made at www.hwwallacecbc.com

Linda Jensen

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTSFAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

DEATHSDEATHS DEATHS DEATHS

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

IN MEMORIAM

DEATHS

FAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

IN MEMORIAM GIFTS

Thank you for considering donations to: COWICHAN

DISTRICT HOSPITAL FOUNDATION #4-466 Trans Canada Hwy

Duncan, BC V9L 3R6 Phone: 250-701-0399

Website: www.cdhfoundation.ca

Donations may be made via mail, over the phone or on our website. Donations are

tax deductible & fi nance hospital equipment & patient

care. Memorial donations are acknowledged with a

letter to the family and loved ones are commemorated on our Memorial Board or Book

in the hospital lobby.

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

COMING EVENTS

Abbeyfi eld Housing Society of Duncan is holding their AGM

Wed., Nov. 18 @ 6:30PM 5905 Indian Rd., Duncan

Refreshments served.

Looking for healthy choices?

Vegetarian cooking classes on ...

Thur, Nov 12 & 26/15at 6:30 PM

Cost: $10 per class3441 Gibbins Road

Duncan, BCCall Marj 250-748-3733

ULTRA PURE PERFUME & NATURAL PERSONAL CARE PRODUCTS WORKSHOP

Learn to make Beautiful prod-ucts for yourself. No toxins! Sat., Nov. 14. 10am-12pm.

Sweet Arts Studio, 131 Jubilee St., Duncan. RSVP: 250-748-7494. $15.00 (Gift Provided).

DEATHS

AGREEMENTIt is agreed by any display or Classified Advertiser requesting space that the liability of the paper in the event of failure to publish an advertisement shall be limited to the amount paid by the advertiser for that portion of the advertising space occupied by the incorrect item only, and that there shall be no liability in any event beyond the amount paid for such advertisement. The publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement.

Used.ca cannot be responsible for errors after the first day of publication of any advertisement. Notice of errors on the first day should immediately be called to the attention of the Classified Department to be corrected for the following edition.

Used.ca reserves the right to revise, edit, classify or reject any advertisement and to retain any answers directed to the Used.ca Box Reply Service and to repay the customer the sum paid for the advertisement and box rental.

DISCRIMINATORYLEGISLATIONAdvertisers are reminded that Provincial legislation forbids the publication of any advertisement which discriminates against any person because of race, religion, sex, color, nationality, ancestry or place of origin, or age, unless the condition is justified by a bona fide requirement for the work involved.

COPYRIGHTCopyright and/or properties subsist in all advertisements and in all other material appearing in this edition of Used.ca. Permission to reproduce wholly or in part and in any form whatsoever, particularly by a photographic or offset process in a publication must be obtained in writing from the publisher. Any unauthorized reproduction will be subject to recourse in law.

ON THE WEB:

INDEX IN BRIEFFAMILY ANNOUNCEMENTS

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

TRAVEL

EMPLOYMENT

BUSINESS SERVICES

PETS & LIVESTOCK

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

REAL ESTATE

RENTALS

AUTOMOTIVE

ADULT ENTERTAINMENT

LEGAL NOTICES

To advertise in print:Call: 1-855-310-3535 Email: classifi [email protected]

Self-serve: blackpressused.ca Career ads: localworkbc.ca

Browse more at:

A division of

$30GET IT RENTED!BUY ONE WEEK, GET SECOND WEEK FREE!*

SELL IT IN 3 OR IT RUNS FOR FREE!*

*Private party only, cannot be combined with other discounts.

Place your private party automotive ad with us in your community paper for the next 3 weeks for only $30. If your vehicle does not sell, call us and we'll run it again at NO CHARGE!

ALL YOU NEED IN PRINT AND ONLINE

used.ca

fi l here pleaseYour Community, Your Classifi eds.

Call 1-855-310-3535

We Fill You In...

Every Wednesday and Friday, we bring you up to date on news and

community events that matter to you. Our winning combination of features are designed to keep you reading our newspaper.... every week.

Phone: 250-748-2666Fax: 250-748-1552

Page 35: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 35

CHRISTMAS CHAOS36th Annual

Cowichan Valley’s GIANT Arts & Crafts Fair November 12 - 15, 2015

Over 100 tables of handcrafted goods

& people with strollers only Thursday & Friday

Noon-8pm

10 am - 5 pm Multi-Purpose Hall, Cowichan Suite and Heritage Hall

(formerly Cowichan Centre) 2687 James St., Duncan

Call for more info (250)748-7529 or [email protected]

The Lake Cowichan Gazette, a Black Press weekly publication in beautiful Lake Cowichan, B.C. is seeking an exceptional, full-time journalist/photographer to join our editorial team.

We are seeking a candidate who will find and capture compelling stories and features and who will thrive in a deadline-driven environment to produce stories for our newspaper and online products. The successful candidate will be able to work independently to write stories, take photos and assist with online and social media responsibilities.

Qualifications:

including social networking.

This position will require the applicant to work some evenings and

The Cowichan Valley Citizen

Deadline for resumes: Friday, November 20, 2015.

Only those selected for interview will receive a response.

FULL TIME

JOURNALIST/PHOTOGRAPHERThe Gazette, Lake Cowichan, BC

RESPONSIBLECARRIERS WANTED

CALL250-715-7783

LAKE COWICHANDC 519820 – 70 papers

Coronation St. E. 10-38 Cowichan Ave. E. 20-158 Cowichan Ave. W. 29-96 King George S. 3-16

Nelson Rd. W. 64-88 Nelson Rd. E. 16-36 Pine St. 34-90 Poplar St. 25-40

DC519836 - 65 papersNorth Shore Rd 3-134 Wilson Rd Park Rd

DC519846 - 56 papersBerar Rd Fern Rd Sall Rd South Shore Rd 232-350

HONEYMOON BAYDC 519880 - 63 papers

Beach Dr March Rd Paul’s Dr South Shore Rd First St Second St Charles Pl

MAINTENANCE WORKERSHAWNIGAN LAKE COMMUNITY CENTRE

(CASUAL, ON-CALL OPPORTUNITY)

If you have experience performing cleaning routines and basic building maintenance and repairs and are familiar with safety routines and building mechanical systems, then this job may be of interest to you.

The casual, on-call Maintenance Worker performs a variety of basic tasks related to the cleaning and maintenance operations of the Shawnigan Lake Community Centre recreation facility.

Please visit our website for details including qualification requirements and application instructions.

MillwrightsIndustrial Electricians

Western’s recent capital investment to secure the future of coastal sawmilling has resulted in a need for Millwrights & Industrial Electricians at our Ladysmith Sawmill.

Qualified applicants can apply online at: http://www.jobs.net/jobs/westernforest/

en-ca/all-jobs/

3rd Annual

FiestaWorld Craft Bazaar

Over 20 local and global organizations and businesses selling fair trade products.

Unique quality crafts, books, cards, calendars, posters, games, toys, clothing, jewellery & food!

Tasty ethnic snacks!

Saturday, November 1410:00 am to 4:00 pm

Eagles Hall, DuncanOn Boys Rd. just south of the Silver Bridge

Wor aar

Mastering Life

… offers you your next chance to step into the greatest version of self!!

Activated Tour to Egypt: March 16 to 29, 2016

Join us for an experience of a lifetime as we explore beneath the veil of Mysterious and Wondrous Egypt.

Contact: 250.510.4054Masteringlife.info

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

COMING EVENTS

VIMY HALL AGM Thursday, November 26th 7:30 - 9:00pm 3968 Gibbins Rd.

INFORMATION

CANADA BENEFIT Group - Do you or someone you know suffer from a disability? Get up to $40,000 from the Canadian Government. Toll-free 1-888-511-2250 or www.canada-benefi t.ca/free-assessment

IRCRAFT FA S

CHRISTMAS CORNER

COMMUNITY ANNOUNCEMENTS

PERSONALS

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUSWhen you are sick and tired of being sick and tired. Call us. Cowichan Valley AA. Toll free 1-866-233-5255 (24-hours)

TRAVEL

TIMESHARE

CANCEL YOUR Timeshare. No risk program stop mort-gage & maintenance pay-ments today. 100% money back guarantee. Free consul-tation. Call us now. We can help! 1-888-356-5248.

BOOKKEEPERLADYSMITH

MARITIME SOCIETYis seeking a P/T bookkeeper and general offi ce worker for 15 - 20 hours per week in the LMS offi ce. Specifi c times are fl exible.

Applicant must be exp. in Simply Accounting including Payroll, A/Rec. A/Pay Bank Reconciliations, Month End Statements etc.

Please email resume by November 9th to

[email protected]

IRCRAFT FA S

CHRISTMAS CORNER

AUTOMOTIVE

OUTBOARD MECHANIC WANTED- rigging experience an asset. Email resumes to: [email protected] or phone: 250-286-0752.

PARTS PERSON WANTED-must have some experience in marine or motorcycle repair. Please send resumes to Box 305 c/o The Campbell River Mirror, #104 250 Dogwood Street, Campbell River, BC, V9W 2X9.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES

5 BED adult care nursing home for sale in Ladysmith. Will sell equipment or full busi-ness. Leased building, but can be bought. (250)668-4433.

GET FREE vending machines can earn $100,000 + per year. All cash-locations provided. Protected Territories. Interest free fi nancing. Full details call now 1-866-668-6629 website www.tcvend.com.

HIP OR knee replacement? Arthritic Conditions/COPD? Restrictions in walking/dress-ing? Disability tax credit $2,000 tax credit $20,000 re-fund. Apply today for assis-tance: 1-844-453-5372.

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTION! In-demand career! Employers have work-at-home positions available. Get online training you need from an employer-trusted program. Visit: Care-erStep.ca/MT or 1-855-768-3362 to start training for your work-at-home career today!

EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS

FOODSAFE COURSES Lev-el 1. Nov. 14th & Dec. 12th. $75/person. Location: Island Savings Centre. Register on-line: www.saferfood.ca or 250-746-4154

JANITORIAL

HELP WANTED

EDUCATION/TRADE SCHOOLS

Become ARefl exologist

Interested InHealth and Healing?

Register for Feb. 2016For more information go to www.brinjackson.com or

email: [email protected]

HUGE DEMAND for Medical Transcriptionists! CanScribe is Canada’s top Medical Tran-scription training school. Learn from home and work from home. Call today! 1-800-466-1535. www.canscribe.com or [email protected]

START A new career in Graphic Arts, Healthcare, Business, Education or Infor-mation Tech. If you have a GED, call: 855-670-9765

HELP WANTED

DRIVERS WANTED IMMEDIATELY

... for delivery of Citi-zen newspaper bun-dles on Wednesday & Friday of each week.

CALL AUDETTE: 250-715-7783

OFFICE SUPPORT CLERK

OFFICE ASSISTANT NEEDED in Mill Bay20 min from Duncan

20 hrs/weekEmail resume to:

[email protected] or call 1-888-721-2216

JANITORIAL

HELP WANTED

WWORK ANTED

HUSBAND FOR Hire. Nothing but the best - Carpenter, Plumber, Painter, Electrician, Pressure Washing. Just ask my wife. Call 250-709-1111.

PERSONAL SERVICES

FINANCIAL SERVICES

GET BACK ON TRACK! Bad credit? Bills? Unemployed? Need Money? We Lend! If you own your own home - you qualify. Pioneer Acceptance Corp. Member BBB.

1-877-987-1420 www.pioneerwest.com

HELP WANTED

PERSONAL SERVICES

FINANCIAL SERVICES FINANCIAL SERVICES

NEED A Loan? Own property? Have bad credit? We can help! Call toll free 1-866-405-1228 fi rstandsecondmortgages.ca

ADVENTURES

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

HELP WANTED

ADVENTURES

PERSONAL SERVICES

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES

HELP WANTED

CONNECTING JOB SEEKERS AND EMPLOYERS

www.localworkbc.ca

Page 36: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

36 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

*KIWANIS FLEA MARKET*

EVERY SAT. FROM 9AM TIL 2PM. Girl Guide Hall:

321 Cairnsmore St. For info phone

Gloria at 250-746-9678 or Dave at 250-746-3616

MERCHANDISE FOR SALE

GARAGE SALES

PERSONAL SERVICES

FINANCIAL SERVICES

LARGE FUNDBorrowers Wanted

Start saving hundreds of dollars today! We can easily approve you by phone. 1st, 2nd or 3rd mortgage money is available right now. Rates start at Prime. Equity counts. We don’t rely on credit, age or income.

Call Anytime1-800-639-2274 or

604-430-1498. Apply online www.capitaldirect.ca

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

CLEANING SERVICES

FOR ALL your cleaning, cooking and laundry needs. Is-land Domestic has experi-enced housekeepers. We also do apartments, offi ces and one-time cleans. Serving Mill Bay to Ladysmith. Bonded, In-sured, WCB, registered with DVA. 250-710-0864. www.islanddomesticservices.ca

COMPUTER SERVICES

ABLE COMPUTER REPAIRIn-home service. Senior’s

discount. Nico 250-746-6167

HOME/BUSINESS SERVICES

ELECTRICAL

Licensed #LEL0203619. Bonded.

Commercial & Residential. New construction, renos,

and maintenance.Call James: 250-710-4714

FLOOR REFINISHING/INSTALLATIONS

FLOORING INSTALLATION Custom installations of solid and engineered hardwood, laminated fl oor, slate, tile, etc. and repairs. 250-710-5715

HAULING AND SALVAGE

COWICHAN Hauling & Moving

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VALLEY Calendar

Miscellaneous• Remembrance Day service,

Charles Hoey Park, Wednesday, Nov. 11, 11 a.m. Info: 250-746-5013.

• 8th Veteran Tour, Tea and Dis-play, Nov. 11, St. Peter Quamichan Cemetery and hall, doors open 1:30 p.m., tour 2 p.m., display till 4 p.m. $5 admission, includes all three events. Take part in all three or just one or two. Funds to support new Cemetery Sign with maps.

• Canadian Firearm Safety course (non-restricted and restricted) start-ing Friday, Nov. 13, Duncan. Regis-tration and information: Mike 250-748-0319 or [email protected]

• Duncan Fiesta World Craft Bazaar Saturday, Nov. 14, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Eagles Hall, 2165 Jacob St., Duncan.

• Cowichan Intercultural Society presents basic automechanics and tips on how to buy a good used car with Ryan Gough, automechanics teacher at Cowichan Secondary. Nov. 19, 7-9 p.m. Info: 250-748-3112.

• Labour of Love Bazaar and Tea, Saturday, Nov. 21, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., St. John’s, Duncan, 486 Jubilee St. Handi-crafts, baking and attic treasures.

• St. Michael and All Angels Angli-can Church Bazaar, Saturday, Nov. 28, 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m., 2858 Mill St., Chemainus. Full Christmas Tea avail-able, baking, mincemeat, preserves, Christmas crafts, gift items and more.

• Cobble Hill Christmas Variety Show, Sunday, Nov. 29, 6:30-8 p.m., Cobble Hill Community Hall. Entry is a donation to the Mill Bay food bank.

• Mill Bay Christmas Variety Show, Sunday, Dec. 6, 6:30-8 p.m., Mill Bay Community League Hall. Entry is a donation to the Mill Bay food bank.

• Love horses? Cowichan Therapeut-ic Riding Association needs dedicated volunteers in lots of different areas. Help our special needs riders to reach their goals in the ring. No experience necessary, training provided. Info: 250-746-1028, email [email protected], web-

site www.ctra.ca• Friendly Visitors wanted! Volun-

teer Cowichan program connects an isolated or lonely senior in the com-munity with a Friendly Visitor. Inter-ested? Call 250-748-2133.

Seniors• Chemainus Seniors Drop-in Cen-

tre Drop-in Centre pancake breakfast Saturday, Nov. 14, 9-11 a.m., $5.

• Chemainus Seniors Drop-in Cen-tre muffin mornings Wednesdays and Fridays 9:30-11 a.m. except Wednes-day, Nov. 18.

• Chemainus Seniors Drop-in Centre Drop-in Centre blood pressure clinic Wednesday, Nov. 18, 9:30-11 a.m.

• Chemainus Seniors Drop-in Centre Drop-in Centre soup and sandwich Wednesday, Nov. 18, 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.

• Chemainus Seniors Drop-in Cen-tre Drop-in Centre annual general meeting, Thursday, Nov. 19, 10 a.m. Elections to take place.

• Winter Nights Coffee House, 50 Plus Activity Centre, 55 Coronation St., Lake Cowichan, Nov. 21, 5:30- 8:30 p.m. with the Goodtime Boys and the Four Cowichan Lake Tenors. Cof-fee, tea and snacks for sale. Admis-sion $5. Info: 250-749-6121.

• Chemainus Seniors Drop-in Cen-tre Drop-in Centre pot luck birthday party, Saturday, Nov. 21, 5-8 p.m.

• Lake Cowichan’s 50 Plus Activity Centre hopping from Monday to Fri-day, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Home-made lunches 11 a.m.-1:15 p.m., Tuesday savoury pie day, Thursday sweet pie day, Friday dinner specials. Fall Bazaar Nov. 7, Christmas Banquet Dec. 5. Info: 250-749-6121.

• Dance to music from the 50s and 60s at Valley Seniors Centre, 198 Government St., every Wednesday, 3-5 p.m., $5. Info: 250-746-4433.

Recreation• Cowichan Kayak and Canoe

Club meetings second Tuesday each

month except July and August, 7:30 p.m., socializing time 7-7:30 p.m., Seniors Activity Centre, Duncan. Refreshments provided. Info: cowichankayakandcanoe.wordpress.com

• Cowichan Intercultural Society presents Art Healing Series, Wed-nesdays, 2-3:30 p.m., Mill Bay Library. Meet to paint, draw, sketch and create art pieces. Info: Francoise [email protected] or 250-748-3112.

• Duncan Badminton Club, Tues-days and Thursdays, 8-10 p.m., Octo-ber through March Multi-purpose Hall, Island Savings Centre. Recrea-tional and competitive. All welcome. Info: 250-746-4380.

• Youth rowing program, Cowichan Bay Maritime Centre, for ages 10-14. Get some rowing experience with summer staff Thursdays 4-6 p.m. and Saturdays 10 a.m.-noon. $10 drop-in fee, call ahead to reserve a place: 250-746-4955.

• All-ages chess club: all skill levels and ages welcome to play and learn chess in supportive, fun environ-ment. Mondays 6-8 p.m., Duncan library gathering place or available tables.

• Cowichan Fly Fishers meets 1st and 3rd Thursday of every month at the Air Cadet Hall, Gibbins Road. Doors open 7 p.m. Open to all ages and skill levels. Info: www.cowichan flyfishers.com

• Interested in rocks? The Cowic-han Valley Rockhounds meet the third Monday of each month, 7 p.m., Duncan Airport. Info: 250-743-3769.

Meetings• Cowichan Valley Garden Club

annual general meeting Nov. 11, 7 p.m., St. John’s Anglican Church, Jubilee St., Duncan.

• The Mercury Players Society annual general meeting, 7:30 p.m., Monday, Nov. 16, at the Mercury The-atre, 331 Brae Rd., Duncan. Election of officers and membership renewal.

• Shawnigan Residents Association annual general meeting, Thursday, Nov. 19, 7:30 p.m., Hugh Wilkinson Theatre, Shawnigan Lake School. Election of officers, financial report, legal report.

• Fall Sports Fishery Advisory Com-mittee meeting Thursday, Nov. 19, 1 p.m., Valley Fish and Game Club.

• Cowichan Historical Society meeting Nov. 19, 7:30 p.m., St. Peter’s Church Hall, 5800 Church Rd., Duncan. Speaker: military historian Bill Hampson on the history of the Canadian Scottish Regiment and its 100th anniversary.

• Vimy Hall Annual General Meet-ing, Thursday, Nov. 26, 7:30-9 p.m., 3968 Gibbins Rd.

• Alpha at Duncan Christian Reformed Church, dinner and conver-sation, ask anything about life, faith and God, Thursdays, Sept. 24-Nov. 19, info: 250-748-2122 or crc.pastor@shaw cable.com

• Cowichan Valley Prostate Cancer Support Group meetings held the last Thursday of each month from 2-4 p.m. Cancer Society office, 394 Duncan St. Info: Gord Thomas 250-743-6960 or Brian King 250-748-5785.

• Is food a problem for you? Over-eaters Anonymous is here to help. Meetings Sunday morning, Thurs-day evening. For meeting times call 250-746-9366 or go to www.oa.org/membersgroups/find-a-meeting/

Arts• Ladysmith Camera Club presents

The Naturalist as Photographer with Ladysmith-based naturalist, author and photographer Bruce Whitting-ton, Tuesday, Nov. 24, 7 p.m., Har-wick Hall, High Street at 3rd Avenue. Non-members $5 drop-in fee. Info: www.LadysmithCameraClub.com

• Cherry Point artists weekly paint-ing sessions (September to June), Thursdays, 9:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. at Cowichan Exhibition fairgrounds. Experienced and beginners wel-

come. Info: Jack 250-746-4795 or Linda 250-597-1108.

• Warmland Calligraphers meet on the second Tuesday of the month at 9 a.m.-noon, Mellor Hall, Cow-ichan Exhibition grounds. Info: warmlandcallig [email protected] or http://members.shaw.ca/warmlandcalligraphers.

Music• Country gospel artist Belly Chern-

off presents a concert Nov. 7, 7 p.m., Lake Cowichan Baptist Church, and Nov. 8, 10:30 a.m., Lake Cowichan Fellowship Church. No cover charge. Info: Gary Dyck 250-745-3808.

• Inviting female voices, teens to seniors, for The Rivernotes Choir, meets Mondays, 6-8 p.m., Lake Cow-ichan Senior Centre, 55 Coronation St. Info: Judith Quinlan 250-749-3728.

• Like to sing? Join Medford Singers. Rehearsals Wednesdays, 6:45 p.m., Duncan United Church. Men wel-come. Director Simon Leung. Info: Michele 250-748-0287.

• Encore! Women’s Choir meets Monday evenings, Duncan. Seeking motivated women ages 18-plus who read music and enjoy singing reper-toire that is challenging, yet fun! Info: Christine Dandy, 250-715-1568.

• Cowichan Consort Orchestra rehearsal Mondays, 7:30 p.m. Sylvan United Church. Come play with us. All strings welcome. Info: 748-8982.

Dancing• Traditional Square Dances: come

and dance with us to live music by Shady Grove Dance Band first Fri-day of every month. No experience or partner needed. Ages 12 and up, $5, at The Hub, Cowichan Station. Info: Peter 250-929-8226.

Cowichan Ballroom Dance Club welcomes all fellow dancers to regu-lar 6:30 p.m. Wednesday night prac-tices at Valley Seniors Centre. Info: 250-597-1132.

Page 37: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN

The Kerry Park Islanders got off to a flying start in November by winning their first three games of the month and climbing over the .500 mark.

The Isles opened the month with road victories over the Westshore Wolves and Nanaimo Buccaneers last Wednesday and Thursday, then returned home on Saturday to defeat the Saan-ich Braves.

The Isles got off to a hot start against Westshore as Zack Smith, Parker Ellis and Josiah Nadon scored the first three goals, and the opening period ended with Kerry Park leading 3-1.

The Isles gave up a pair of goals in the second, but went back ahead early in the third on a goal by Ryan Paisley. A late powerplay goal by the Wolves knotted the game at 4-4, forcing overtime.

Nothing was decided by the first four-on-four overtime session, but in the second overtime, play-ing three-on-three, Lynden Eddy sprang Smith on a breakaway and he buried his second of the game to give his team the victory.

Chase Anderson got the start and made 30 saves on 34 shots over more than 65 minutes of action.

“That game was the catalyst for the week,” Islanders owner Mark Osmond said. “We battled hard. I haven’t seen us play a first period like that, ever. We were all over them. I’m not sure if they weren’t

ready to play or what.”The momentum from that game

carried over to Thursday as the Isles headed north to Nanaimo. The Buccaneers were the top team in the north going into that game and had won three in a row, including a come-from-behind win over Kerry Park on Hallow-een night.

The Isles found themselves trailing 2-1 after the first period, but battled back in the second

to make it 3-3, then scored two goals late in the third, including an empty-netter, to win. Eddy and Corey Peterson each had a goal and an assist, while Paisley, Smith and David Bittner also scored. Ty Rennie stopped 19 of 22 shots for the win.

“It’s nice to see what our team can do when they all play at the same tempo,” Osmond said.

Unfortunately, the Isles lost Keenan Eddy, their leading scorer

at the time, to a shoulder injury he suffered in the game against Nanaimo, putting a damper on the victory.

Back home on Saturday, the Isles put a stop to another win-ning streak as they dealt the Saanich Braves their first loss in four contests.

The score was tied 2-2 after the first period, but the Isles dominat-ed the rest of the game, winning 5-2.

“In the second and third, we took it to them,” Osmond said. “All the guys were working for each other.”

Lynden Eddy had a goal and two assists, while Peterson, Smith, Bittner and Ellis also found the net. Connor Bissett finished with two helpers. Rennie was back between the pipes and made 26 saves on 28 shots.

Because of injuries, the Isles were limited to just three for-ward lines and one spare skater against Saanich, but they were buoyed by the presence of a stag party from Victoria, who threw themselves into Kerry Park fan-dom, wearing — or in one case, painting themselves — Island-ers blue and orange, and waving signs cheering on Kerry Park heavyweight Patrick Poets and wishing Keenan Eddy a quick recovery.

“I wish I could have those guys there all the time,” Osmond said. “They were freakin’ hilarious.”

There may be no better time than now for the Islanders to look for their first win over the Victoria Cougars since the 2012 playoffs. The Isles head to Archie Browning Arena this Thursday, and Osmond is optimistic the team can stretch their streak to four games.

“If we play like we did last week, we’ll have a good result,” he said.

On Saturday, Osmond’s team will be at home against the Comox Glacier Kings, facing off at 7:30 p.m.

Sports Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 37250-748-2666 ext. [email protected]

Three in a row: Islanders on a roll

KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN

Going into their game last Fri-day against another one of the top teams in Division 1 of the Vancouver Island Soccer League, Cowichan LMG was preparing for a tough, close game. That’s what they got, although the score doesn’t suggest it.

“We weren’t expecting a 5-0 win against Saanich Fusion,” head coach Glen Martin said. “But our goaltender was better than theirs, and we took our chances better than they took their chances.

“It didn’t really feel like a 5-0 win. They felt like the best team we’ve played so far. It felt like a 2-0 or 3-0 win. It didn’t seem like a 5-0 wipeout.”

Cowichan opened the scoring early on, when Jordan De Graf worked a give-and-go with Paddy Nelson and scored in the fourth minute, but Saanich actually had the first good chance of the game, lofting the ball over the net just two minutes in.

After De Graf ’s goal, the game went back and forth until

Cowichan striker Cooper Barry fought his way in close to score his 10th of the season in the 35th minute to take the league scoring lead.

“He did a lot of hard work for that goal,” Martin said.

Josh Cuthbert added his fifth of the year three minutes later on a mistake by the Saanich goal-keeper, and Cowichan led 3-0 at halftime.

“It didn’t feel like a 3-0 game,” Martin said. “We just made the most of our chances, and their goalie was shaky on the whole day.”

Martin kept his troops vigilant, though, knowing that if Saanich scored the next goal, they would be right back in it. At 68 minutes, Nelson scored his 10th of the year to tie Barry for the scoring lead, pretty much sealing up the win for Cowichan at that point. Nelson scored again in the 85th minute to edge past Barry for the Div. 1 scoring lead.

In goal, Sam Hutchison was bus-ier than usual, but was up for the challenge and recorded his sixth

clean sheet of the season, also the best total in the league.

Prior to last weekend, the LMG roster was bolstered by the arriv-al of a trio of players from Van-couver Island University: Andres Algarin and A.J. Kambere came back to Cowichan, where they played club soccer last year, and were joined by newcomer Tyler Leonard.

Cowichan continues to sit first in the standings with 23 points, four more than second-place Bays United, who lost to Nanaimo last weekend, and six more than third-place Comox.

This Friday, LMG will begin the second half of the season with a home game against Westcastle at 8 p.m., in what is supposed to be the team’s last game in Lady-smith before the new Sherman Road turf opens later this month. Cowichan beat Westcastle 4-0 in the season opener, but Martin isn’t banking on a repeat of that result this go-round.

“Westcastle has improved lately, so it should be a good game,” he said.

The Kerry Park Islanders celebrate captain David Bittner’s goal against the Saanich Braves last Saturday evening, part of a 5-2 Islanders win. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]

LMG surprises Saanich in shutout

Andres Algarin takes on a Saanich defender in his return to action for Cowichan LMG last Saturday. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]

Page 38: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

38 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

#UsedHelpsA division of

Sports

KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN

For the second weekend in a row, the Cowichan Valley Capitals started things off with a loss on the road against the Vic-toria Grizzlies on Friday, then followed it up with a solid win.

The Caps lost to the Grizzlies 2-1 on Fri-day, continuing their trend of one-goal games against their South Island rivals. On Saturday afternoon, they doubled up on the visiting Vernon Vipers 6-3.

“Victoria played us tough again,” Capi-tals head coach Bob Beatty said. “I didn’t think we extended ourselves. I didn’t think we brought our best game.”

Goalie Storm Phaneuf was arguably Cowichan’s best player on the night with 36 saves on 38 shots. Patrick Geary had the Capitals’ lone goal.

“They’re an extremely hard-working team,” Beatty said of the Grizzlies, who have won four games in a row but still sit last in the Island Division. “When we were taking our time moving the puck, they were all over us. We had three close games with them where we came out on top, and two where we didn’t. They’re a better team than their record, and I’ve tried to make our team aware of that. They’re going to break loose at some point. We’ve got to learn that we’ve got to bring it every night.”

On Saturday, the Caps were up 3-0 over the Vipers after 20 minutes, and it was 5-1 going into the third period. Vernon scored two goals in the first eight minutes of the

final frame, but that was as close as it got, and an empty-netter iced the win.

“I thought we responded pretty well,” Beatty said. “We played better than we did the night before. We don’t see Vernon very often, but it’s always a passionate game.”

Ryan Hogg opened the scoring with his first career goal, in career game No. 55, set up by fellow Cowichan Valley Minor Hock-ey product Kyle Topping.

“It was fun,” Beatty said of seeing Hogg finally reap the rewards of his hard work. “Everybody was so happy for him. I’ve nev-er seen a dressing room as happy as that. It’s been a long time coming. It’s a monkey off his back, for sure. He’s had his oppor-tunities and played well before that goal. Hopefully that will open a crack in the dike and he’ll notch a few more shortly.”

Kade Kehoe and Adam Osczevski each had a goal and an assist against Vernon, and Luke Santerno, Rhett Willcox and Jar-ed Domin also scored. Ryan Burton had a pair of helpers. Phaneuf was excellent once again with 38 saves on 41 shots.

The Caps will hit the road this weekend, visiting Trail on Friday, Penticton on Sat-urday and Merritt on Sunday. Penticton has won 19 games in a row, while Trail and Merritt sit at the bottom of their division.

“Obviously we want to come back from the road trip still in first place [in the Island Division],” Beatty said. “That will take a minimum of two wins. The last two years, we’ve gone 0-6 on that road trip, so we hope to turn a page in the history books.”

Cowichan’s Kade Kehoe breaks past a Vernon Vipers defender during last Saturday’s 6-3 Capitals win over the Interior team. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]

Caps continue struggles against Grizzlies, beat Vipers

Page 39: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

Cowichan Valley Citizen | Wednesday, November 11, 2015 39

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Sports

KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN

Cowichan Secondary, Frances Kelsey and Shawnigan Lake School are teaming up to host the provincial AAA field hock-ey championships this Thurs-day to Saturday at Shawnigan and the Cowichan Sportsplex.

Games run throughout the three days at Shawnigan’s two hockey surfaces and the Sportsplex.

All three local teams are in

action at both locations.Thursday:• Cowichan vs. ChilliwackSportsplex, 7:45 a.m.• Shawnigan vs. SullivanShawnigan turf, 9:15 a.m.• Kelsey vs. Heritage WoodsShawnigan turf, 10:45 a.m.• Cowichan vs. McMathShawnigan turf, 1:45 p.m.• Shawnigan vs. West VanSportsplex, 2:45 p.m.• Kelsey vs. SardisShawnigan rubber, 3:15 p.m.

Friday:• Shawnigan vs. KelownaShawnigan rubber, 9:15 a.m.• Kelsey vs HandsworthShawnigan turf, 10:45 a.m.• Cowichan vs. South DeltaSportsplex, 10:45 a.m.Playoff games will go at both

locations on Friday afternoon and Saturday, finishing with the third/fourth match at 1:30 p.m. and the champion-ship game at 3 p.m., both at Shawnigan

Field hockey provincials this week

KEVIN ROTHBAUER CITIZEN

With several players unavailable for last Saturday’s game in Bur-naby, Cowichan’s debut in the BC Rugby Women’s Premier League didn’t go as planned, with Cowic-han losing 47-0.

“Unfortunately it didn’t go as we would have liked,” Cowichan captain Sherry Spence said. “In the week leading up we lost eight starting players due to flu or work commitments, so we made the trek with 16 players, in the torrential downpour, and we arrived later then expected so we didn’t have the warm up we would have liked especially in that weather.”

It was a slow, scrum-heavy match, and Burnaby got on the scoreboard early with back-to-back tries.

“They had a solid front row, but

one of their props went down and it evened the scrum out,” Spence reported. “After that, the game was played back and forth midfield.”

Cowichan played better than the score indicated, Spence noted. Two new players, Brittney Brown and Sinead Mallison, performed well in their first appearances in the second row, and Alicia Parker played the entire match on wing, even covering both ends once Cow-ichan got down to 14 players.

Spence and back Rebecca Ker-swell were given Player of the Game honours by Burnaby.

Cowichan will play host to Bur-naby in a rematch this Saturday at 11:30 a.m., with a full squad avail-able this time.

“I’m excited to see how things unfold,” Spence said. “This will be a true test of premier.”

Undermanned roster costs Cowichan in Premier opener

Seen here against Comox on Oct. 31, Rebecca Kerswell was named one of Cowichan’s Players of the Game last weekend. [KEVIN ROTHBAUER/CITIZEN]

Page 40: Cowichan Valley Citizen, November 11, 2015

40 Wednesday, November 11, 2015 | Cowichan Valley Citizen

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FREEINSTALLATION

*

Run Date: Nov 11, 2015 Duncan Valley Citizen (10.3333" x 14") Full Colour EOR#7356

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