An Expat in Vancouver: The Trees of Kitsilano

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If like me you love trees, especially big old gnarly ones, a walk through Kitsilano in springtime is for you. And today I just discovered this handy dandy walking map of the trees in the area. However, it does not seem to identify the trees on each street, which are quite varied. For that, you need to be accompanied on your walk with the Baedeker of tree touring in the city, “The Trees of Vancouver” by Gerald Straley.

Both of these documents will be with me on the next clear weekend day, when I will clear three hours off my calendar to finally come to know my neighborhood’s trees.

Next, I have to find out who put up the dozen or so birdhouses in the trees at Larch and 10th.

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A Rare Spring

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We have had a week of this weather, so unusual for us. A day here or there is not unthinkable, but seven?

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An Expat in Vancouver: The Opera

There are a few options for high culture in Vancouver. The Recital Society, the Vancouver Symphony and the Vancouver Opera are some standouts. The quality, I hear, can be uneven so I’ve tried to be careful when buying tickets to look for the right combination of performers and material. You don’t want to aim above what local arts groups can offer. Because the reality is that Vancouver is a 2nd tier arts city. Therefore it is unfair to compare the arts resources of a 2nd tier city like Vancouver with those of Toronto or New York.  Plus, Vancouver arts have been seriously cut recently by a philistine provincial government.

(There is something curious about Vancouver’s art scene: with rare exception, performances are poorly marketed. Sometimes I hear of a visiting Russian ballet company or leading opera singer coming to town at the last minute or only because I’ve gone a deep dive search for local happenings.)

I am privileged enough to have been to big opera houses in the US and Europe. When the stops are all out, opera is an immersive and awe-some experience. I’ve also been to smaller opera houses in the US, and as in Vancouver there is no way they can ever measure up to the grand ones. Fact.

Not to say that all is perfection at the Metropolitan Opera and such. I’ve cringed at some tenors and sopranos on that stage who were way past their prime, and some of its super expensive productions were exercises in abysmal taste.

The Vancouver Opera‘s production of Mozart’s “The Magic Flute” looked promising. Its concept was intriguing, and inspired: First Nations characters in a Pacific Northwest setting, appropriately costumed and staged. It made a good fit with Mozart’s vision of a lost Prince in a bewitched forest accompanied by a loveless bird catcher.

And I have to say, I just love the VO use of manga to market its productions. It strikes me as a clever, creative way to demonstrate relevance to younger audiences. The company’s artistic choices strike the right chord.

But somehow, the concept fell flat in execution. What did work clashed with what did not; opportunities for a better integrated mix of the First Nations aesthetic were absent, or attempted weakly. The attempt to blend the contemporary and fantastical ancient world seemed an afterthought and ultimately unnecessary. The voices were generally good but the staging plodded.

Now, while I think this was a miss, it was still a good opera for children. There was enough to keep them delighted, and the fact that it was sung in English, with surtitles, meant the story would not be lost to them or confusing.

I’ll return to the VO. I owe them that. There is an interesting contemporary opera coming up. A Gilbert and Sullivan production would interest me. But the classics and grand operas I might have to leave to the Live at the Met Opera broadcasts.

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An Expat in Vancouver: Spring

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I took a walk around the neighborhood this afternoon. Everything is popping, including the cherry blossoms which remind me of Washington, D.C., Japan and Zen painting.

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An Expat in Vancouver: The Wild Lands/Reifel Bird Sanctuary

Sandhill Crane at the Reifel Bird Sanctuary

Sandhill Crane at the Reifel Bird Sanctuary

Oh, happy day! The sun came out to play.

I’ve been waiting for the perfect weekend day to visit, for the first time, the George C. Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary on Westham Island, in the Delta area south of Vancouver. This was finally just the day to do it: bright sun, low wind, pleasant late winter temperature.

What a treasure. The flocks of nearly tame mallards and Canada geese on the paths are nothing compared to the Bald Eagles in the tree branches, the Sandhill Cranes swooping overhead to land a few yards from your feet, catching sight of two species of Herons (Black Crowned Night and Great Blue) and the glimpses of many species of small wintering birds. I felt lucky to witness a protracted fight between two pairs of geese, all puffed up chests and open wing spans with lots of hissing and mad flights towards each other.

Reifel landscape with Great Blue Heron

Reifel landscape with Great Blue Heron

The best times of year to visit are during the spring (mid-March through April) and fall (September through October) migrations, so I’ll definitely return.

Of course, it is not only a sanctuary for birds, but for us. The Riefel Sanctuary is another one of those many natural places outside Vancouver to get a comforting break from the sterile forest of glass condo towers and the incivility of honking drivers. As always when an urbanite connects to wild nature, you leave feeling an internal balance. Replacing city cacophany with a sound track of wind rustling through the dry wheat grass and gloriously unrestrained bird calls put me in a blissful mood for the whole day long.

Lesser Scaup and Mallard at Riefel Bird Sanctuary

Lesser Scaup and Mallard at Riefel Bird Sanctuary

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