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Olympic Sights

Sportsman | February 16, 2010

Fortunately, it usually is very easy for us to meet downtown after work, for the next two weeks, it is even easier…

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we hope to take advantage of the free Bicycle Valets frequently, allowing us to see the sights and hit some of the Cultural Olympiad Events.

We started with the Aboriginal Pavilion…

four-nations

where we were wised into a realm of storytelling, used to pass the four host nations’ history through the generations

ab-house

roudhouse

bienvenue

afterwards, we inexplicably resisted the urge to dine at the Official Olympics Restaurant

gold-in-the-air

although, the current hero of Canada quite possibly is a frequent diner

hero

after a little more wandering, we found ourselves at the Northern House, which boasts a lifestyle that makes a very appealing relocation consideration

live-here

although, mountainbiking doesn’t seem to be a popular mode of transportation

where-are-the-bikes

and there are a few undesirable neighbors

potential-neighb-or

a night downtown wouldn’t be complete without another protest…”These are OUR streets….”

protest

the luxury of riding through downtown, light traffic, lots of closed roads/lanes, ability to quickly cover distances for different sights. a quick spin to the Sea Wall Path led us to the cauldron

cauldron

a few minutes later, and we witnessed the ongoing party at the sparkling Saxony House, to be joined one evening later this week..

saxony-house

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and a little further into Stanley Park took us to the Olympic Rings, floating in Coal Harbor. Green tonight, maybe we’ll pick out an event that the Canadians are favored in to try to catch them Gold..

rings

they are spectacular with the skyline as a backdrop (multi colored peaks are the old Convention Center), Cauldron is being reflected from the windows of the new Convention Center

skyline

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Pre-Olympic Olympic Stuff

Em | February 11, 2010

When it was first announced years ago (10 years?) that Vancouver would be hosting the 2010 Winter Olympics I was still in grad school and doubtful that my career would keep me in this town for so many years.  I’m still here and the Olympic Games start tomorrow. 

We don’t have tickets for any of the events mostly because I am cheap.  A friend from work will be attending a the closing ceremonies for just over $550.  There is, however, a metric tonne of free stuff that Scott and I have scoped out including some of the protests.  And we fully intend on using the free valet bike parking at every opportunity.

The torch relay came to North Vancouver yesterday morning and mostly followed my commute route.  I didn’t have a super strong desire to watch the relay, but I know I would have been disappointed to let this experience go by without participating.  Channeling my inner child- because it really was the children who were the most excited and thrilled- I joined the masses at the Lonsdale Quay at 7am.

family

We don’t need more cowbell- We need more Bear Bells that have been blessed by a local first nation elder.

OlympicNoise

This bit of incomplete combustion was carried by Julie Payette, female Canadian astronaut.

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This puppy was handsome in Olympic mittens.

PuppyLove

The flame heads uphill.  Good thing each member of the relay only carries the torch for 300 m (insert questioning emoticon here).  I was intrigued and distantly intimidated by the runners outfitted in grey (to match the Vancouver skies?) flanking the torch bearer.  That is probably the point.

FireFire

Leaving Lonsdale Quay and starting to go to work I passed this woman.  Canadian flag in her backpack, Canada hoodie, Olympic mittens and bear bells on her handle bars.  The best way to follow the torch is by bike.  The police escort were letting bikes through the closed roads to the ire of the detained drivers.  :)

Follower

This group of children from the local montessori school were waiting for their skating teacher, former silver medalist Karen Magnussen, to carry the torch.

formerglory

Official sponsor Coca Cola brings free sugar, caffeine, and clubbers to the masses at 8:24am.

corporate

But this little girl was too slow and only got a consolation Coca Cola pendant.

consolation

Maybe her parents will take here for a consolation Mcsomething-or-other?

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Searching for Winter

Em | February 4, 2010

There’s plenty of press on Vancouver’s absent winter and upcoming winter Olympics.  November brought cold temps and record setting snowfall, so we got Scott fully equipped with skate skiing and AT gear with a few trips to Sigges, MEC gear swap and Craig’s List.   Then December turned warm, January stayed warm, now the Olympics are almost here and it is still warm.  Cypress Mountain, the North Shore venue for freestyle skiing and snowboarding, is using helicopters to bring snow to the site.  The company I work for had a project at Cypress last year building a water supply reservoir for snow making capacity….looks like it will get used soon.

I knew that if we were going to get out for any ski touring that didn’t involve a 200+ km drive past the fraser Valley (see Scott’s goal of self propelled kms > driven kms), that a trip up the Sea to Sky corridor had to happen before the Olypmic travel restrictions started.  Saturday we went to Elfin Lakes just outside Squamish.  It’s the closest bc tour to Vancouver and there is little to no avalanche terrain on the trail from the parking lot to the cabin.  It’s very popular and very crowded but soooo convenient. Wooohooooo finally out in the SNOW!!!!

Scott showed that making the transition from long-time snowboarder to skiier is easy for the uphill (once we actually hit the snow line at around 1000m).

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smiles. No doubt he can climb. 

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The trip out and back to the cabin is a tour and we didn’t peel off the trail for turns until the return trip.  The few cms of new snow were wet and heavy keeping speed in check.  The downhill is harder than the uphill when you’re learning to make alpine turns.

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Luv the snow. Luv the skiing.  Luv the hubby.

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Scott vs Vehicular Travel. A Battle of Henryesque Proportions

2010 Totals

Cross Check 1293 km
Walt Works 180 km
Peugot 0 km
Roadie 432 km
Runners 52 km
Skis 26 km
Truck 680 km
last updated 2/3/10
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