Workboat parade makes waves along New Westminster’s waterfront

More than a dozen craft of different sizes and tasks sailed along New Westminster’s waterfront on Saturday, Sept. 27.

The annual Lucille Johnstone workboat parade is part of the RiverFest celebration of BC River’s Day.

The event is named in honour of the late Lucille Johnstone who helped build Rivtow into one of the largest tugboat operators in the world. She was also a driving force behind Expo 86. She’s also a recipient of the Order of British Columbia and Order of Canada.

Beloved Westwood track lives on in racers’ hearts

This story first appeared in the Tri-City News in Feb., 2019

Al Ores helped build the sport of car racing in British Columbia. So much so, his efforts are being honoured by the Burnaby Sports Hall of Fame when he’s inducted as a builder on Feb. 28.

But the 85-year-old mechanic and racer can’t bring himself to visit the site where most of that building took place.

Almost 30 years after it was closed to make way for a golf course and luxury homes, the loss of the Westwood Motorsport Park on Coquitlam’s Westwood Plateau still cuts deeply into the heart of the province’s racing community.

“It was something very special,” Ores said of the 2.9 km track that sliced through the woods on the southern flank of Eagle Mountain.

Westwood was the first purpose-built permanent road racing course in Canada. It was constructed and operated by the Sports Car Club of British Columbia (SCCBC) to support grass roots racing and help develop young racers who were looking to step up from the go-kart track nestled inside Turn One of the eight-turn circuit. One of its most famous graduates was the late Greg Moore, who worked his way up from the karts at 10-years-old to Formula 1600 and 2000, Indy Lights and then won five races in four seasons in the Champ Car World Series before he was killed in a racing accident in California in 1999.

Ray Stec, who served as the president of the SCCBC three times, said while Westwood was geared toward the amateur racing crowd of local hobbyists and weekend warriors, the track’s unique challenges attracted some of the sport’s biggest names, like former Formula 1 world champion Keke Rosberg, Indy 500 winners Bobby Rahal and Danny Sullivan, Daytona 500 champion Bill Elliott, as well as Gilles Villeneuve and Michael Andretti in the formative years of their illustrious careers. Even the legendary Stirling Moss visited.

“The setting of the track was very technical and quick,” Stec said, recalling the often rainy conditions that made navigating the 15-degree banking of the first corner or the hump halfway along the long backstretch that was known as Deer’s Leap especially precarious and teeth-clenching. “The luminaries were all impressed with the facility. Nobody had negative comments about it.”

COQUITLAM ARCHIVES
Racers clash in one of the famous turns at the old Westwood Motorsport Park that was closed in 1990, but not before it attracted a star-studded lineup of amateur racers from across North America, and top professionals from around the world, including Formula ! champions like Mario Andretti and Gilles Villeneuve.

Ores said the ability for amateurs to rub shoulders — and paint — with top professional racers was part of Westwood’s magic.

“You were just the average guy talking to these big time racers,” Ores said.

The hobbyist nature of the track also made it a family place, where the racers tried to keep their costs down by enlisting family members and friends to work in the pits, count laps, and keep time.

Ores said his four kids grew up at the track, helping out by bleeding brakes, or keeping time from the bleachers. All of them went on to take driver’s training at the track and his late son, Mike, raced for a stretch. Some of his grandchildren remain active in the sport.

“We were involved so much,” he said. “We lived up there the whole time in the summer.”

Westwood’s first official race was held on July 29, 1959. It attracted more than 20,000 spectators. Open-wheel Formula Atlantic cars raced there regularly from 1971 until it closed, as did sedans from the Sports Car Club of America Trans-Am series, the Players GM Challenge series and even high-powered Porsche 911s. Motorbikes, including ones with sidecars attached, held races there, and modified mud buggies churned around before the track was paved.

Ores recalled ploughing his way through two-foot snowdrifts to open the gates to the track so the Canadian military could conduct winter maneouvers there.

But as Vancouver’s urban sprawl began extending eastward towards Coquitlam, Ores said the racing community sensed the end of Westwood was nigh.

“We knew we were going to have to move,” he said, adding efforts to establish a new facility in the Fraser Valley inevitably ran into resistance.

“Even to the last year or two, we were still hopeful that the winds of politics would change and people would realize the value of the track being there,” Stec said.

When the checkered flag fell for the last time in August, 1990, it was a tough moment, said Ores, who was among the crew of volunteers who helped dismantle the track after it closed.

“We got so hooked being up there, it was like an addiction,” he said.

Stec said membership in the SCCBC plummeted from about 350 to 80 in the aftermath of Westwood’s closure. And while the club is back to around 350 members now as racers rent track time at Mission Raceway, it’s not the same.

“Racing has fallen out of the top of mind of people,” Stec said, adding the demise of high-profile events like the Vancouver Molson Indy, along with the declining interest in driving amongst young people hasn’t helped.

The Westwood track is memorialized in some of the Plateau’s street names, like Paddock Drive, Carousel Court and Deer’s Leap Place, that wind amidst the multi-million dollar homes and exclusive townhomes. But, Stec said, aside from a delivery he once made to the area, he’s had no inclination to revisit past glories on those streets.

“I just can’t bring myself to go up there,” he said. “Once the door closes, you can’t.”

Ores said he’s only visited once, to attend a friend’s memorial at the golf club.

“I went on the balcony and saw part of the pits, the way it was, and turn one, and that’s it, I don’t want to go back there anymore,” he said.

Local high school football teams looking to make gains

St. Thomas More’s homecoming football game on Sept. 6 was just that for Knights’ head coach Jared Power.

The sports field behind the Burnaby school that hosted Notre Dame is named after his grandfather, Patrick Power, the patriarch of a family that’s been connected to STM for generations.

“It’s pretty cool and special for me to be able to head coach a program that meant so much to me as a kid,” said Jared Power, an alumnus of the school himself. “It is extra special to have the privilege to lead a team that defends its home field with my family name.”

This year’s Knights is laden with seniors hungry to improve on last season’s record of two wins and four losses followed by a quick exit in the first round of the playoffs.

But their experience will be tempered by the loss of several players to injuries even before practices started in late August.

“It feels like we have been ‘battle-hardened’ because of the setbacks the kids have already gone through,” Power said. “It should make for a team this is high in skill and motivation even if we lack depth.”

Power said he’ll be leaning on leadership from seniors like center Alex Jaspar, guard Aiken Chavez as well as running backs Milano Peloso, Tason Tran, Cristian Coletta and Steven Nicklin to ease the path into the varsity lineup for a pair of promising sophomore quarterbacks, Isaiah Smith and Ken Marasigan.

“They are very different athletes that offer very different strengths for our offense,” Power said. “It will be fun to watch them step up as young difference makers on our team.”

Tran, especially, could be a catalyst for success. He joined the football program last year after winning the provincial 100m track and field championship when he was in Grade 10.

“He will stand out an as absolute burner on the field,” Power said. “We are looking to him to be an explosive player for us on both sides of the ball.”

New Westminster Hyacks

After going 4-2 last season and reaching the third round the playoffs, New Westminster Hyacks co-coach Darnell Sikorski said his charges are ready and eager to take the next step.

“There’s a level of focus and hunger with this team that we might have lacked a bit the last few seasons,” he said. “They’re attentive and really want to improve.”

Sikorsky said the Hyacks’ strength will be its speed and versatility.

“We feel we have a group that can hurt teams in different ways.”

Leadership will come from senior quarterback Gavin Rai, who played the position part-time last season.

Sikorsky said his confidence and poise progressed during the spring season last May.

“He’s an intellectual guy who makes good decisions,” said Sikorsky of Rai.

“You can see him playing much more freely and he is letting the ball rip.”

Grade 12 linebacker Mateo McDonell is also one of the Hyacks’ biggest offensive threats running the ball out of the backfield.

Sikorsky said he’s a “fast, aggressive and versatile athlete.”

Newcomers to watch include linebacker Adriano Maranhao and wide receiver Nigel DeRasp.

Terry Fox Ravens

Staying healthy will be key to the fortunes of Port Coquitlam’s Terry Fox Ravens.

After a winless season in 2023, Fox improved to 3-3 in 2024 but fell short in its lone playoff game.

Ravens’ head coach Tom Kudaba said a rash of injuries late in the season sealed Fox’s fate.

“We will need to be healthy this year,” he said, adding more consistency and greater depth across the team’s lineup should help smooth the inevitable bumps and bruises.

Requiring fewer players to do double-duty on both offence and defence will also help.

“We think we will be able to stay fresher throughout the season,” Kudaba said.

Leadership will come from Grade 12 quarterback Bobby Tilley and his junior battery-mate, Ben Firth, with Grade 11 running back Cameron Seed carrying the ball and senior wide receiver Cole Samson ready to catch it.

Grade 11 linebacker Lukas Graham and senior outside linebacker Ethan Lafortune will be looked to for defensive leadership, Kudaba said.

Centennial Centaurs

Centennial Centaurs head coach Dino Geremia said his team has “growing and maturing to do” if it’s to improve on its .500 season last year.

“Building confidence and playing with confidence will be the factors that will help us make those improvements,” Geremia said.

Leading the way will be a trio of seniors; running back and safety Jasper Baron, quarterback Jacob Cusker as well as offensive and defensive lineman, Amir Ghambari.

Geremia said Ghambari has worked to improve each season.

“Amir is one of those players that has consistently gotten better and continues to just work and dedicate himself to being a great football player.”

Cusker is coming off a strong showing at the National Prospects game last spring in Hamilton, Ont.

“His leadership consistently shines through,” Geremia said.

Baron also played in Hamilton, where he finally had form after playing with a broken hand most of last season, though that didn’t stop him from making the conference All-Star team.

“He is always the hardest worker,” Geremia said.

Regular season begins Sept. 26

St. Thomas More opens its regular season schedule Sept. 26. The Knights host Carson Graham at the Burnaby Lake Sports Complex West at 1:30 p.m.

Centennial plays Belmont at Gaudy Field in Victoria at 4 p.m. while the Terry Fox Ravens travel to Chilliwack to play G.W. Graham at 7 p.m.

The New Westminster Hyacks host Robert Bateman at 7:30 p.m. at Mercer Stadium.

New faces fuel optimism for Coquitlam Express anniversary season

A few more fans might have been inclined to pick up lineup sheets for the Coquitlam Express prior to the team’s BC Hockey League home opener on Saturday, Sept. 20.

Only a handful of players from the squad that finished fifth in the Coastal West division last season and then lost its first round playoff series in six games to the fourth-place Victoria Grizzlies remain.

But Express head coach Jeff Wagner said the addition of several veterans who feel they still have something to prove makes for an enthusiastic, motivated group.

“The guys that we’ve added, they kind of have a fire in their belly,” said Wagner, who’s entering his second full season as bench boss of the Express. “There’s a lot of guys in that room that really want to win.”

The lineup revamp also meant a busy training camp for captain Cooper Wilson, who’s been charged with integrating the newcomers into the Express’ systems on the ice and culture off it.

“We play a style that some of these guys have never played before,” Wagner said. “So we just talk about the details and habits they need to do in order to be successful.”

The results through the preseason were encouraging, as Coquitlam won three of its four games.

Wagner said second-year defenseman Liam Loughery appears ready to elevate his game after his promising rookie season with the Express was cut short by an injury.

“He’s mature beyond his years,” Wagner said of Loughery, who’s from Pitt Meadows. “He’ll be a guy that we’re leaning on heavily.”

Newcomers bolster defense

Bolstering the blue line corps will be BCHL newcomers Tyler Russell, who played 27 games with the Wenatchee Wild in the Western Hockey League last season, and 18-year-old James Odyniec, the younger brother of former Express forward Joseph Odyniec.

As well, Wagner said he expects Will Distad, who scored 23 points in 27 games in his final season at White Bear Lake High School in Minnesota, to have an immediate impact in his first season of junior hockey.

“Despite our veteran presence, we really like our young guys as well,” Wagner said. “It’s a really nice blend.”

Veterans lead offense

Up front, familiar names include Nate Crema, who’s back for his third season with the Express after scoring 28 points in 45 games last year, and Carson McGinley, who contributed 17 points in 25 games after starting the season with the Vernon Vipers and then the Sherwood Park Crusaders.

They’ll be supported by veteran acquisitions like Cole Bishop, who joins the Express after two seasons with the Alberni Valley Bulldogs, and Port Moody’s Luke Pfoh, who’s played for the Langley Rivermen, Cranbrook Buck and Merritt Centennials.

Christian Maro spent the previous two season with the Powell River Kings, where he scored 54 points in 80 games, while Justin Ivanusic spent time with the WHL’s Vancouver Giants and Calgary Hitmen before playing last season with Camrose and Drayton Valley in the Alberta Junior Hockey League.

One rookie forward who’s likely to attract a lot of attention is Cole Bieksa.

The 18-year-old son of beloved Vancouver Canucks’ defenseman and current Hockey Night in Canada broadcaster, Kevin Bieksa, signed with the Express last February but spent much of training camp with the WHL’s Giants. He helped lead his Fairmont Prep program in Southern California to the national final last season, scoring 73 points in 55 games.

Goalie position wide open

The departure of starting goaltender Andrew Ness for Wilfred Laurier University has left that position wide open.

Ness blossomed in the Express net after he was acquired last November from the Penticton Vees, where he’d been playing a secondary role.

Wagner said he’s hoping former Trail Smoke Eaters’ backup Ryan Parker will follow a similar developmental trajectory.

Parker won 12 of the 20 games he played last season, including one shutout, and posted a .910 save percentage.

“He was part of probably one of the best goalie tandems in the league,” said Wagner of Parker. “He’s calm and he plays the puck really well so that helps our transition game.”

Also seeking time in the crease are returnees Logan Kennedy and Mitch Pearce.

Kennedy played in three games for Coquitlam last season, losing twice and allowing 11 goals, while Pearce allowed seven goals in his two appearances.

Wagner said he’s confident both will continue to progress under Parker’s mentorship.

Wagner said despite the high turnover of players, he’s setting high expectations for this milestone season.

“We’ve created a non-negotiable standard for our players to abide by,” he said. “The guys who are willing to compete and do what it takes to win are the guys you’ll see here at the end of the year.”

Express tame Grizzlies

Three goals in the third period powered the Express past the Victoria Grizzlies, 4-3, in Saturday’s season opener for both teams.

Trailing 3-1 midway through the final frame, a power play goal by Christian Maro at 12:42 sparked the late comeback.

Nolan Dupont tied it 3:09 later, then Nolan Flynn scored the game-winner with 2:45 remaining in regulation time.

Maro added an assist to lead all Coquitlam scorers.

Justin Ivanusec scored the other goal for the Express, 4:21 into the first period.

Ryan Parker stopped 27 of the 30 shots he faced in the Express net, one of them a penalty shot by Victoria’s Max Silver.

Coquitlam fired 42 shots at Grizzlies’ goalie Carter Capton.

The Express host the Chilliwack Chiefs on Friday, Sept. 26. Game time is 7 p.m. at the Poirier Sport and Leisure Complex.

Express honours quarter-century team

As part of Coquitlam’s 25th anniversary season, the team unveiled its Quarter Century Team of distinguished alumni as voted by fans.

Forward:

  • Kyle Turris
  • Mark Soares
  • Tyler McNeely
  • Alex Kerfoot
  • Corey Mackin
  • David Jones
  • Tyler Kopf
  • Brett Hemingway
  • Massimo Rizzo
  • Brandon Yip
  • Andrew Ladd
  • Ryan Tattle

Defense:

  • Brad Hunt
  • Keith Seabrook
  • Matthew Campbell
  • Marc Biega
  • Noah De la Durantaye
  • Alan Mazur

Goal:

  • Clay Stevenson
  • Mark Dekanich

‘He was our warrior’: Port Moody hockey player loses cancer battle

A Port Moody hockey player has lost his battle with brain cancer.

Wade MacLeod died Sunday, Sept. 13. He was 38 years old.

In a post on social media, Karly MacLeod said her husband died “in a room filled with love, surrounded by family.”

Wade MacLeod first fell ill in 2013 after collapsing while playing his second pro season for the Springfield Falcons in the American Hockey League.

Golf ball sized tumour

Doctors subsequently removed a non-cancerous tumour the size of a golf ball from the left side of his brain.

After months of extensive physical and speech therapy, MacLeod was able to resume his playing career with the AHL’s Toronto Marlies and several ECHL teams.

MacLeod, who played his minor hockey in Port Moody as well as the Coquitlam U18 Chiefs and Port Coquitlam Buckaroos before scoring 146 points in 101 games for the Merritt Centennials in the BC Hockey League, then headed to Germany.

Coming off a 61-point season for the second division Rosenheim Star Bulls, MacLeod collapsed again while preparing to return for another season in Germany.

This time doctors diagnosed a cancerous glioblastoma.

MacLeod worked to get back on the ice. In the spring of 2016 he signed with the Allen Americans. He scored 13 points in 13 games, good enough to secure a contract for the following season with Lowen Frankfurt.

MacLeod played 49 games plus another seven in the playoffs for the Lions. He scored 49 points.

Another setback

But in September, 2018, MacLeod was felled again.

Doctors removed a Grade 3 glioblastoma tumour and prescribed several rounds of chemotherapy.

The setback cost MacLeod three seasons of hockey. But it didn’t diminish his desire to play again.

“I said from the very beginning that cancer wasn’t going to be the reason I retire from professional hockey,” MacLeod said.

Working out with trainer Kai Heinonen and skating at Coquitlam’s Planet Ice with veteran NHLer Brad Hunt helped MacLeod get back into what he called the best shape of his life. In September, 2021, he and his family — that now included two young daughters — packed up for Manchester, England to play for the Storm of Great Britain’s Elite Ice Hockey League.

MARIO BARTEL PHOTO
Port Moody’s Wade MacLeod worked his way back into shape after a third setback from brain cancer.

‘Never give up on your dreams’

“The biggest thing is never give up on your dreams and always stay positive,” MacLeod said.

But after scoring just one point in seven games in Manchester, MacLeod signed with Narvik Eagles in Norway.

In June, 2023, MacLeod announced his hockey career had come to an end.

“I gave all my life to hockey and now it is time to turn the page,” he wrote on Facebook.

Months later, MacLeod underwent a fifth brain surgery. Doctors upgraded his glioblastoma to Grade 4 — the most serious and aggressive form of the disease.

Working with a medical team at Port Moody Integrated Health, MacLeod pursued alternate treatments like hyperthermia, drug and dietary therapy, as well as radiation.

“He was our warrior,” Karly MacLeod said. “Despite any obstacle he had to overcome, he faced it head-on with so much determination and never stopped smiling along the way.”

Indelible mark

MacLeod also left an indelible mark along his hockey journey.

The Manchester Storm posted a message about MacLeod’s passing on social media, “He was a true warrior, and his spirit will forever be a part of the Storm family.”

“We are heartbroken,” said Loewen Frankfurt.

In a statement on its website, the ECHL said, “its member teams mourn the loss and express their condolences to the family and friends of former ECHL player Wade MacLeod.”

The Northeastern University Huskies, where MacLeod scored 137 points in four seasons, said he “left a lasting mark on the program both on and off the ice.”

For this Port Moody teen, basketball is the quiet game

This story first appeared in the Tri-City News on June 13, 2021

Playing a game in front of a gym full of raucous, cheering fans is a highlight for most high school basketball players.

For Olivia Pero, it’s kryptonite.

The Heritage Woods secondary school senior is deaf, and though she has cochlear implants that allow her to have normal, verbal conversations, a loud gymnasium with sounds and vibrations reverberating off the walls, hardwood floor and ceiling can be overwhelming.

That hasn’t held Pero back, though. In fact, she said, it’s made her more resilient, competitive and prepared to advocate for her disability.

Pero’s deafness was diagnosed when she was just six months old. She received her first cochlear implant — a small electronic device that delivers sound signals directly into a person’s auditory nerve — shortly thereafter.

As the only deaf person in her family, Pero said it was important everyone have the ability to communicate normally, although she also knows American Sign Language (ASL).

But, she explained, the implants don’t deliver a perfect experience. Ambient noise fuzzes up the system so she has to be in close proximity and she also supplements the electronic signals that create a sense of sound by reading lips.

Achieving both of those in the frantic action up and down the basketball court, with teammates all around calling for the ball and the coach shouting plays and positioning from the bench can be a challenge, she said.

“I really can’t hear on the basketball court.”

So Pero’s adopted various coping mechanisms and worked to educate her teammates and coaches on how they can adjust to her unique needs. Some of those include getting them to enunciate very clearly and look directly her way when speaking to her. Her coach at Heritage Woods, Ross Tomlinson, uses cue cards and colour-codes plays on his iPad so she can process them visually rather than aurally.

“Yelling out plays was not an option,” said Tomlinson, who’s coached Pero since she was in Grade Five — a year after she picked up the sport at a Steve Nash camp.

“Your visual response and body language when communicating with a player is just as important as what you are saying verbally.”

Pero said her hearing disability has been both a blessing and a curse, on and off the court. The focus she’s had to learn to be able to follow conversations or absorb lessons in the classroom can serve her well in the chaos of moving bodies and waving arms during a basketball game.

But all that concentration can be wearying. By the end of a busy day at school, she’s ready to remove her implants and just settle in silence to read a book.

Pero said not being able to finish out her high school basketball career because of the COVID-19 pandemic that put the brakes on all school sports since March, 2020, has been difficult. The team continued to practice through the winter, but, she admitted, motivation sometimes flagged.

Instead, Pero said she channelled her competitive energy into her studies and she started a support group for other deaf and hard of hearing students called CoCo.

Invisible disability

She said because deafness is an invisible disability, it can be hard to get the hearing world to understand and empathize with the challenges deaf people face daily.

Connecting with other students in the school district and providing a sounding board for them to share their experiences has been an important outlet.

Pero said one challenge that’s been unique to the past year is the face-masks everyone is required to wear in school and out and about in the community because of the pandemic. They may help keep everyone safe by limiting airborne spread of the virus, but they also hide lips and facial expressions that are vital components of communication for the deaf.

Another was online learning where teachers giving lessons to a mix of live students and those watching from home still wore masks and sounds echoed around the classrooms so Pero sometimes couldn’t tell who was talking.

Starting anew

In the fall, Pero heads to Trinity Western University in Langley to study biology, play basketball and begin anew the process of educating her classmates, teachers, teammates and coaches about how best they can communicate with her.

She said the school’s reputation for small classes and inclusivity should smooth the process.

“My motto is ‘nothing is going to stop me, I’ll just find a way to make it work,’” Pero said.

“It’s my way of living in the world.”

Is there a vast treasure hidden near this Coquitlam mountain?

This story first appeared in the Tri-City News on Sept. 10, 2024

The rugged rainforest environs of Coquitlam’s Burke Mountain where it tumbles down to the west shore of Pitt Lake could hold the key to unlocking a mystery that involves a lost treasure of gold, prospectors mysteriously dying after trying to sleuth it out and an elderly First Nations’ man hanged for murder.

A contemporary attempt to solve the mystery — and maybe get impossibly rich along the way — is about to launch its second season as the reality series, Deadman’s Curse, on the History channel.

Former Port Moody MMA fighter Kru Williams along with mountaineer and wilderness expert Adam Palmer first embarked on their quest to unearth the legendary cache of gold squirrelled away somewhere in the mountains around Pitt Lake in 2022.

Mountaineer Adam Palmer (left) and former Port Moody MMA fighter Kru Williams continue their quest for a lost treasure of gold somewhere near Pitt Lake in the second season of the History channel TV series, “Deadman’s Curse.” GREAT PACIFIC MEDIA

Palmer, a history buff who teaches outdoor education at a First Nations high school, said he had long been intrigued by the tales of treasure somewhere near Pitt Lake, and the Katzie prospector known as Slumach who was allegedly the only person with knowledge of its whereabouts until he was accused of murdering a rival and hanged in New Westminster in 1891.

“It started with curiosity,” he said in a recent phone interview. “Then you find yourself on top of a mountain and you want to know what happened that brought you there.”

The first reports of a lost treasure came to light in 1858 when a series of maps promoting the gold fields of British Columbia were published in San Francisco.

The notations of “gold” and “Indian diggings,” as well as “much gold bearing quartz rock” in the maps’ margins lured prospectors to head north, joining the already swelling ranks of gold diggers funnelling through New Westminster to the backcountry beyond the Fraser River.

Several died, stricken by mysterious illnesses from which they never recovered.

The mystery deepened early in the 20th century when a story in a Wisconsin newspaper linked the lost gold to Slumach, who allegedly uttered a curse on anyone seeking the treasure before he went to the gallows.

Williams said it was a more pragmatic consideration that lured him into the treasure hunt.

“To think you can put your hand into the dirt and pull out generational wealth, that’s what brought me in,” he said.

Neither foresaw the gruelling nature of heir quest, though.

Along with Indigenous explorer Taylor Starr — a distant relative of Slumach — and her father, Don Froese, Williams and Palmer embarked on a physical journey through dense rainforest, up slippery creek beds and over jagged boulder fields looking for clues that might lead them to the treasure while unravelling its mysteries.

More importantly, said Williams, their quest gave them an insight into the lives and challenges of British Columbia’s earliest residents.

“When you’re out here with a sacred Elder walking his land, it changed my entire viewpoint of the history of the First Nations,” he said.

Palmer said the series takes viewers along as they peel away layers of the lost treasure’s secrets and even leads them down some unexpected paths, not all of them necessarily fruitful to their quest.

“It’s a lot of information and disinformation and we have to sort through that to get to the heart of the legend,” he said.

And unlike reconstructing the history through artefacts, documents, clippings and maps preserved in libraries and archives, Palmer and Williams’ quest came with life-threatening dangers like torrential rainstorms that lasted for days on end, fragile snow bridges and fast-moving rivers. Not to mention encounters with bears and mountain lions as well as a series of eerie ancient pictographs etched into the rocks above Pitt Lake.

“You don’t know what it’s like in the bush until you do it yourself,” Williams said.

Coquitlam Express scrambling for a new training facility

The general manager of the Coquitlam Express is hoping some city councillors will reconsider their decision to deny the hockey club a temporary use permit to use a vacant warehouse space at 1750 Hartley Ave. as a gym facility.

Tali Campbell said the five councillors who voted against the team’s application to use the industrial space for up to three years may not have had a full understanding of its request.

Some of the councillors during Monday’s debate said allowing a gym in a building zoned for industrial use would set a bad precedent.

Coun. Robert Mazzarolo said the city needs to protect its dwindling industrial areas and the jobs they bring to the community.

“The activity can be accommodated in other places with appropriate zoning.”

Mayor Richard Stewart added, “If we approve a project like this, we would end up with the floodgates open.”

Couns. Asmundson and Trish Mandewo expressed concerns about limited parking at the location that had been formerly occupied by an electronics manufacturer.

Campbell said the Express organization, which now numbers 130 young players in various academy programs as well as the BC Hockey League junior team, has outgrown its current training facility in a warren of rooms in the basement of a city-owned building across the street from the Poirier Sport and Leisure Complex. He said organizations located on the second floor are also complaining about the noise.

“Everything is crammed,” Campbell said. “We make do, but we get complaints every day from our upstairs neighbours.”

Campbell said the Express spent more than eight months looking for a suitable location to move its gym facilities, and the warehouse space behind the Home Depot on United Boulevard fit the bill.

“The size was good, the price was good,” Campbell said, adding the location just down the hill from Poirier would just be a “stop-gap” until the Express can secure a permanent solution. He said the temporary gym would be used exclusively by the players, who would be bused in groups to and from their scheduled training sessions.

Coquitlam’s senior manager of economic development, Eric Kalnins, said commercial spaces suitable for a gym facility are “hard to find” in the city.

Coun., Craig Hodge, one of four councillors who supported the Express’ application, said the nature of industrial use is changing and the club does provide employment.

“It’s not industrial, but it does provide jobs and create growth,” Hodge said.

Coun. Dennis Marsden agreed.

“This is supporting a local business,” he said of the gym plan.

Campbell said changes in NCAA eligibility rules that now allow players from the Canadian Hockey League to attain scholarships to Div. 1 programs have increased competition to attract them to Junior A leagues like the BCHL. Giving players a good experience on and off the ice to continue their development is a prime consideration.

“You have to provide a state-of-the-art facility in junior hockey these days,” Campbell said. “It’s the fabric of our organization.”

In the meantime, the Express has dismantled its current training facility and players will be able to work out at a local commercial gym, OT Performance, for the next three weeks. Beyond that, though, remains uncertain, Campbell said.

“If council doesn’t reconsider, we’ll have to go back to the drawing board.”

Port Moody will study feasibility of new day care at city hall

Port Moody will study the cost and feasibility of constructing a new childcare facility in a modular building behind city hall.

The facility will offer 37 spaces for the children of city staff, although unclaimed spaces would be available to the general public as well.

Project coordinator Linda Santos told council’s strategic priorities committee on Tuesday, Sept. 9, using a modular building for the daycare is the cheapest, quickest to construct and least intrusive of several options considered.

Those include construction of a brand new building next to the amphitheatre behind city hall, placing a modular structure on Knowles Street which would be permanently closed and building a new childcare space on the roof of the recreation centre’s physio office and skate shop.

Staff also looked at adding a second floor to the library or repurposing the recreation centre’s wellness room.

Santos said all of those had considerable downsides, including expense, loss of public access to some existing amenities like the amphitheatre or a playground in front of the ice arena, and the inconvenience of closing Knowles Street.

Santos added even the preferred modular structure would mean the loss of some staff parking spaces.

CITY OF BURNABY
An example of a daycare in a modular building in Burnaby.

But city manager Anna Mathewson said alternatives could be arranged, like opening up surplus parking spaces at the Inlet Centre fire hall.

Mayor Meghan Lahti said a childcare facility would “be a positive addition to the city hall precinct,” while Coun. Diana Dilworth said a modular structure would address an immediate need.

“A temporary modular facility gets us that needed daycare in the very short term for the very lowest expense.”

Coun. Kyla Knowles said though a temporary structure “makes the most sense,” she cautioned the city also has to keep its eye on the long term picture so childcare spaces are considered as part of upgrades to existing civic facilities and the construction of new ones.

Port Moody butcher to lead Olympian effort

A Port Moody butcher is leading Canada’s team looking to win gold at the “Olympics of Meat.”

Taryn Barker, of The Little Butcher in NewPort Village, will captain six butchers and two alternates competing at the 2028 World Butchers’ Challenge.

Barker was co-captain of Butchery Team Canada that finished fifth at this year’s challenge held in Paris in March. But the placing was just 1.5 points shy of France’s gold-medal effort.

Barker said preparation for the 2028 competition is already underway, with the five members committed to the team so far heading to a chefs’ camp in Pemberton next week to process an entire cow.

“I want to start building the team relationships, getting to know each other and how we work,” Barker said.

The World Butchers’ Challenge is held every three years. It pits teams of top meat cutters from around the world to transform sides of beef and pork, as well as whole lamb and several chickens, into about 70 different value-added products. Their efforts are judged for presentation and flavour.

Barker, who participated in her first Challenge in 2022, said each competition is a learning experience.

“We’ve learned it’s a very serious competition. The teams practise with intent and they compete with intent.”

To raise their own game, Barker plans to bring her team of butchers, who come from across Canada, together several times over the next few years to determine the roles each will play on competition day, plan their cuts and presentation, and hone their communication skills.

“We have to walk as a team and talk as a team,” Barker said, adding the butchers will also work with coaches who can provide feedback and help decipher what the judges might want to see.

And now as the team’s captain, ensuring all those elements come together falls on Barker.

It’s a weighty responsibility, she said.

“There’s more pressure to make sure everyone is participating in practices and preparing at home.”

But with two stabs at the competition already under her apron, Barker said she’s up for the challenge.

“I think the more you do it, the more confident you get,” Barker said. “But you know the other teams feel the same way.”

Fundraising garden party

Barker has organized a special Butcher’s Garden Party fundraiser to support Butchery Team Canada’s preparation for 2028.

The party, to be held Sept. 14, from 7 to 10 p.m., at OpenRoad Toyota (3166 St. Johns St., Port Moody), features canapés, desserts and beverages prepared by top chefs and bakers from across British Columbia and as far away as Ontario. There will also be goody bags, a silent auction and a cornhole tournament.

Tickets are $110 and can be purchased here.