Monthly Archives: April 2007

Pictures of Gung Haggis dragon boat team in April 14 sprint regatta

Pictures of Gung Haggis dragon boat team in April 14 sprint regatta

check out pics from the regatta on www.dragonboatwest.net
The gallery:
http://www.bcphotoforum.com/tempest/041407_regatta/


These pictures are taken by our friend Ray Shum – please hire him for your action photography

You can find him at http://bcphotoforum.com/tempest/



Photographer:


Raymond Shum


C: (604)841-2941

tempestphoto@hotmail.com

For these races on April 14th, some of our regular paddlers couldn't
make it.  We asked our friends from other teams to join us.

From Pirates dragon boat team in Chilliwack – Ian Paul and Cory
From Scaly Justice draogn boat team in Vancouver – Stuart Higginson, Sarah Glazzard and Linda Pleece
From Jericho paddling club –  Craig Brown – longtime friend and original 1997 paddler on the Celebration/Gung Haggis team.

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Drummer Julie and UA Power Dragons

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Gung Haggis 2nd race

We had a great practice start – and it set us up for our fastest race of the day.

Stephen Mirowski is steering.  Deb Martin is drumming

right side paddlers are: Wendy, Keng, Kristine, Sarah, Craig,
Dan, Stuart, Steven, Melissa, Alex

leftside paddlers are: Todd, Cory, Gee, Ian, Georgia,
Ernest, Gerard, Linda, Joe, Cindy

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C Final Demo Race with TV Camera
    

  

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C FINAL Demonstration race with tv camera in seat 1

right side: Todd, Keng, Gee, Steven W.,
Dan, Stuart H., Sarah, Melissa, Georgia

left side: Wendy, Cory, Kristine, Stuart M.,
Craig, Gerard, Linda, Joe, Ian

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after the C Final with TV Camera

Good picture of drummer Deb steadying Tal, the cameraman, as he stood
up on the boat to get an overhead shot of the Gung Haggis paddlers.

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B Final – our last race of the day

After a few practice starts for the camera,  then a demonstration
race in C Final with a cameraman in seat 1 – it is fair to say we were
a bit tired for our B Final race.

right side: Wendy, Cory, Kristine Sarah, Craig
Dan, Stephen M, Melissa, Stuart M., Alex

left side: Todd, Keng, Gee, Ian, Georgia,
Ernest, Stuart H., Linda, Joe, Cindy

Steers is Steven W. and Drummer Deb

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after B Final – waving to the crowd!

 

The UA Power Dragons watched the races from the shoreline, and
chanted our names after the race.  They have turned into our #1
cheering section.  It was great to see such enthusiasm in a 1st
year team.  I coach them on Saturday mornings.

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Vancouver Historical Society presents Karin Lee's film “Comrade Dad”

Vancouver Historical Society presents Karin Lee's film  “Comrade Dad”

It's
been a great pleasure getting to know film maker Karin Lee during the
Head Tax redress movement.  She is an astute historian and story
teller.  She won a Gemini award for
the documentary Made in China – the Story of Adopted Chinese Children in CanadaCanadian Steel: Chinese Grit, is a historical documentary about the Chinese who helped build the CPR.

Vancouver Historical Society

Thursday, April 26, 2007, 7:30 pm
Comrade Dad: A Father and a Vancouver Bookstore
Speaker: Karin Lee

Vancouver Museum, located at 1100 Chestnut Street at 7.30 pm.�

All meetings are FREE and open to the public and visitors are welcome.

The story of Comrade Dad
is a quintessentially Vancouver story. Presented as a half hour DVD
followed by an engaging talk and discussion, Karin Lee presents the
story of a Chinese-Canadian family's journey through a particular
period in time, the late 60s to the early 80s. It is a story about
conflicted family which, with equal amounts of idealism and
stubbornness, marginalized itself within the greater society of the
time.

Writer/director
Karin Lee reflects on her father Wally Lee and the communist bookstore
that he ran on Vancouver's Skid Row from the mid-1960s until the early
1980s.

Production still from Comrade Dad

This
experimental biography of archival documentary photographs and footage,
explores both the person and the effect that his ideological beliefs
had on his family, set within the political landscapes of Canada and
China at the time of the Cultural Revolution. It is also a little known
story about how a segment of Vancouver's Chinese community embraced
Chinese socialism and how their idealism was affected by a changing
political climate in China. This work is not only about memory and the
filmmaker's relationship with her father, but also about questioning
his place within a divided political community as well as her own
ideals and identity.

Karin
Lee is a Canadian Academy Award (Gemini) winning filmmaker. She has
directed films and videos, both fiction and documentaries about the
effects of global displacement, feminism and the Chinese diaspora in
North America. Her other films include
Oyster and Chocolate; the Gemini award winning documentary Made in China – the Story of Adopted Chinese Children in Canada; Canadian Steel: Chinese Grit – a historical documentary about the Chinese who helped build the CPR; Songs of the Phoenix about contemporary feminists in China; and My Sweet Peony a short drama about cultural identity and sexuality.


Bilingual book launch: Finding Memories Tracing Routs, Chinese Canadian Family Stories

Bilingual book launch: Finding Memories Tracing Routes, Chinese Canadian Family Stories


Author
Dan Seto holds a copy of the original Finding Memories Tracing Routes,
Chinese Canadian Family Stories anthology collection.  In the
picture on the right, he is signing copies at the book launch. 
Dan is also a member of the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team.

Tuesday, April 17, 7:30 PM, the bilingual edition of Finding Memories,
Tracing Routes, Chinese Canadian Family Stories will be launched at the
Vancouver Public Library.  Please come meet the authors and translators
of this very unique contribution to Chinese Canadian history. Copies of
this bilingual edition will be available for sale that evening. http://www.vpl.vancouver.bc.ca/cgi-bin/Calendar/calendar.cgi?isodate=2007-04-17 .

See my pictures and stories from the original english language book launch

“Finding Memories, Tracing Routes:” CCHSBC book launch BIG SUCCESS for Chinese Canadian Family Stories

upcoming event: “We're All In This Together”

Vancouver Moving Theatre
in association with urban ink's Fathom Labs
and the Carnegie & Roundhouse Community Centres present

imageLive Shadow Theatre on a Giant Shadow Screen
Featuring 30 DTES involved musicians, crew and actors!
A contemporary fable from the Downtown Eastside
Two families from different social backgrounds encounter humanity's struggle with addiction.
Out of the shadows emerge dreams and memories,
fears, hopes and visions.

APRIL 19 to APRIL 29, 2007
Thursday to Sunday Shows 8pm
Russian Hall, 600 Campbell Avenue
Campbell and Keefer, seven blocks east of Main
Suggested Donation $5 – $20
Reservations Recommended 604-254-6911
www.vancouvermovingtheatre.com

“Stunning, stark and startling all at the same time.”
Robyn Livingstone, Carnegie Newsletter
“There is more wisdom in this play then in 150 years of research.”
Author, SFU Professor Emeritus Bruce AlexanderBy Rosemary Georgeson and Savannah Walling
with Sheila Baxter, Wendy Chew, Paul Decarie, Mary Duffy, Melissa Error, Patrick Foley, Leith Harris, Stephen Lytton, Muriel Williams
and contributions by Larry Reed and James Fagan Tait

Savannah Walling
Artistic Director
Kim Collier Director
Ya-wen V. Wang
Musical Director
Joelysa Pankanea & Ya-wen V. Wang Music
Tamara Unroe w/ Sharon Bayly Design
Adrian Muir T.D. and Lighting Design
Robin Bancroft-Wilson Stage Manager
David Chantler & Larry Reed Shadow Theatre Consultants
Terry Hunter Producer
John Endo Greenaway Graphics

Post Performance Talks Sharon Kravitz, ModeratorApril 19th – Coco Culbertson, Director, Lifeskills CentreApril 20 – Aline LaFlamme, Executive Director, Aboriginal Front DoorApril 21- Gabor Mate, Doctor, newspaper columnist, and authorApril 22 – Dennis Wardman, Doctor, community medicine and addictions specialistApril 26 – Bud Osborn, Poet & community activistApril 27- Susan Boyd, Author of From Witches to Crack Moms: Women, Drug Law and PolicyApril 28- Professor Emeritus Bruce Alexander, Author of Roots of Addiction in a Free Market SocietyApril 29- Donald MacPherson, Vancouver Drug Policy Coordinator

Vancouver Sun: A tradition restored – a story about Vancouver Chinatown's Modernize Tailors

Vancouver Sun: A tradition restored – a story about Vancouver Chinatown's Modernize Tailors

Modernize Tailors
on the southwest corner of Pender and Carrall St. in Vancouver
Chinatown is a cultural landmark.  It stands right beside the
skinniest building in the world, owned by Jack Chow Insurance.  As
a child growing up in Vancouver, I learned that my Uncle Laddie worked
there – the  husband of my mother's eldest sister.  I also
learned that it was run by a man named Bill Wong, the same name as my
father.  So my father was known as “Bill Wong the sign painter,”
as opposed to “Bill Wong the tailor.”

In recent years I have
gotten to know Bill Wong the tailor better, as our paths have crossed
more often.  At dragon boat practices, Gung Haggis often bumped
into the Wong Way dragon boat team on Sunday afternoons.  Since
the elder Wong brothers grew up with many of my own family elders, I've
also known a number of their descendants, so there is always somebody
to say hello to.  In 2005, both dragon boat teams participated in carving wooden dragon boat heads

Bill Wong carving a dragon boat head with his grandchildren – photo Todd Wong

Bill
Wong has attended some of the book readings and presentations that I
have organized at the Vancouver Public Library.  And this year, he
came to the Gung Haggis Fat Choy Robbie Burns Chinese New Year dinner,
and sat with my parents.

His son Steven Wong joined the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team last year.  So… lots of cross-overs.

A tradition restored

Milton Wong's ambitious project has returned his brothers' tailoring institution to its original premises

John Mackie,
Vancouver Sun

Published: Saturday, April 14, 2007

Milton Wong has managed billions of dollars in investment funds. His tireless philanthropy helped him earn the Order of Canada.

But
he has never forgotten his roots in Vancouver's Chinatown, where his
father started Modernize Tailors in 1913 in the Chinese Freemasons
building at Pender and Carrall.

Modernize Tailors is still in
business, operated by Milton's older brothers, 85-year-old Bill and
83-year-old Jack. And three decades after being forced to move, they're
back in the original location, because Milton, 68, has bought the
building.

Brothers (left to right) Jack, Milton and Bill Wong are glad to be back at the first premises of Modernize Tailors.View Larger Image View Larger Image

Brothers (left to right) Jack, Milton and Bill Wong are glad to be back at the first premises of Modernize Tailors. photo Stuart Davis, Vancouver Sun

Milton
did more than just buy it. He's completely restored it, and converted
the upper floors into seniors housing so that his family members could
retire back in the neighbourhood where they grew up.

But there's
a hitch. After a three-year restoration, and a couple of million
dollars in renovations, Bill and Jack have decided they're still too
young to retire.

“No one's moving in,” Milton says with a laugh. “That's a downer.”

The
Chinatown social services agency SUCCESS is now going to find occupants
for the 11 suites, which are quite spacious and deluxe for seniors
housing.

Meanwhile, Bill and Jack are busy setting up shop at 5
West Pender, where they were given a month's eviction notice in 1976
after someone bought the building and renovated.

Customers who go
to the old shop at 511 Carrall are directed to the new location by an
ancient piece of Modernize Tailors stationery that's dated in the
1940s, and has a six-digit number (“MArine 0630”).

“We're still using our old stuff,” Bill says with a shrug. “It says the corner of Pender and Carrall, so it's still usable.”

Back
in the '40s, Modernize had 20 employees and was a seven-day-a-week
operation. There were a couple of dozen tailor shops located all over
Chinatown, which was a bustling place full of restaurants and
nightclubs.

The throngs of people that used to fill Chinatown's
sidewalks and businesses are long gone. Modernize is the last tailor
shop in Chinatown, and one of the few old Chinatown businesses that
have survived the neighbourhood's long decline.

Jack has no illusions about the future of tailor shops like Modernize.

“This is a dead business,” he says.

“A
lot of clothes are made in China now, where the labour cost is only 10
per cent of the cost here. People buy into readymades and
wash-and-wear.”

How have Bill and Jack survived? They keep costs
low by doing the sales and tailoring themselves, along with two
employees (one is their 72-year-old cousin Park).

Milton is also an unpaid salesman, buying his suits there and recommending the shop to his friends.

“You
need mouth-to-mouth advertising, and Milton has done his job,” says
Jack. “Either that or he gives suits to his closest friends and forces
them to come down.”

For his part, Milton is optimistic about the
future of Chinatown. He points out that condo king Bob Rennie is
restoring the historic Wing Sang building and selling condos up the
street. Several new businesses are thriving on Pender Street, and the
success of the Woodward's building project finally seems to have
sparked a rejuvenation of Vancouver's historic core.

 

Pictures from Tartan Day Eve – at Doolin's Irish Pub

Pictures from Tartan Day Eve – at Doolin's Irish Pub

The Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team joined the Tartan Day Eve ceremonies at Doolin's Irish Pub on April 5th.  It was a special kind of kilts night.  The team also took part in a kilt fashion show, and scotch tasting.  We also watched the Vancouver Canucks lose to Colorado. 


Todd Wong in Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team shirt, Fraser Hunting tartan with Raphael Fang wearing a black leather kilt.


Christine Van, promotions manager of Doolin's grabs the dragon boat paddle and joins the Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team. (l-r) Wendy, Deb, Todd, Tzhe, Keng (front), Gerard (back) and Stuart.

http://www.gunghaggisfatchoy.com/blog/GungHaggisdragonboatteaminformation2007
photos/_archives/2007/4/13/2879250.html
Our Gung Haggis kilt wearers: Keng, Gerard, Tzhe, Stuart and Todd – photo Deb

Piper Rob Macdonald with mini-kilted ladies with bunny tails for Easter – photo Deb Martin

Gung Haggis dragon boat team…. 200m sprints with a German TV cameraman in seat 1

Gung Haggis dragon boat team…. 200m sprints with a German TV cameraman in seat 1

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Gung
Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team in action, being filmed by ZDF
television crew from Germany, Stephen Mirowski is steering, Deb Martin
is drummer. – photo Ray Shum

Today… we had a GREAT 200m. regatta race.  And we were filmed
for a European travel show for ZDF, a German public television station
– sort of their equivalent of the CBC.  The show will be aired
later this year, and focussed on multicultural Vancouver, and how
dragon boats represent the cultural and ethnic fusion in Vancouver.


Sound
technician George and camerman Tal film the pre-race warm-up for the
Gung Haggis Fat Choy dragon boat team. – photo Deb Martin


Steven
Wong leads the warm-up, while the camera gets into the middle of the
action.  Paddlers from the UA Powere Dragons join us.

We supplemented the team with:

Craig Brown – my 10 year paddling buddy who is now doing outrigger
Stuart Higginson and his wife Sarah from Scaly Justice (Rec E) who are doing outrigger
Linda Pleece from Scaly Justice, 
Kristine Shum from Scaly Justice, and ex-Gung Haggis, she was on the Civil Serpents comp team from 2001.  
Ian Paul and Cory from the Chilliwack Pirates (Rec E)

All friends…. and some of the best paddlers from their own teams.
We had 3 rookies on our boat + our 4, 3, and 2 year veterans.
Dan Seto, Stephen Mirowski, Ernest Wu, Steven Wong, Joe Easton, Tzhe
Lam, Wendy Lee, Georgia Thornton, Keng Graal, Gerarad Graal and their
daughter Melissa + rookies Stuart Mackinnon, Cindy and Alex…. and
myself + drummer Deb Martin.  Steering was rotated between Steven
W. and Stephen M.

We improved performance with each race.  It is challenging with a group
that hasn't paddled together before together… but Stuart and Sarah
did voyageur canoe with us last year.  Ian and Cory have done some
practices with us over the years…  Craig and Kristine have raced with
us in the past.

We almost matched Rec A and B teams…   out
of 15 mixed teams including lots of high end teams such as False Creek
Mixed and DWW (Dangerous When Wet), Scotiabank, Swordfish, Synergy… 
there were 3 finals, and we made the B final.

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Here's
a good pictures series with the cameraman in seat 1.  They wanted
to get shots of our drummer calling the start, then pictures of our
paddlers in action during an actual race.  We did a demo-race in
the Division C final.  With only 18 paddlers saving themselves for
the next B Final race, and a camera man with his camera man weighing
down seat 1.  We did pretty good in the C Final – still coming in
3rd, a second just about 3 seconds behind the almost even 1st and 2nd
place teams. photo – Ray Shum.

We also paddled in
the C final as a demonstration with 18 paddlers and a tv camera in seat
1, filming the drummer, then the lead strokes, then the team….  At
one point, the cameraman stood up and drummer Deb, was leaning across
the drum, grabbing him to help steady him as the boat surged forward.

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Drummer
Deb holds on to help steady Tal the cameraman as he stands to get an
overhead view of the team paddling. – photo Ray Shum

I also coached a corporate team UA Power Dragons… They came 2nd in
the Rec C final for 4 teams.  They beat a more experienced team with
only 19 paddlers!

I am proud of them.  They were skittish and
nervous in the first race… but we told them to focus on the
process… focus on what they have control of… heads up… reach
out…. lean out… rotate….  good exit… 

And they improved every race!

After the race we went to the house of a rookie paddler, who had just
bought a kilt which arrived in the mail from Scotland…. two days
ago!!!!   We had a Scotch tasting… we made deep fried haggis
won-ton… we ordered in pizza.   The German film crew joined us and
filmed us… making the won ton, and I made a toast.  “May our hearts
be strong, and our paddles deep!”   Everybody liked it…  then we all
started adding things…  “May the wind always be at our back…. and
not in our face…. or from somebody's bum…”    May the men on our
team always be strong, and the women pretty”… “and the men be
pretty… and the women strong….”


Scotch
tasting with haggis won-ton for the television cameras.  Todd
Wong, Stuart Mackinnon, Steven Wong and Stephen Mirowski all say
“Slainte!”


The
post-regatta party with ZDF tv crew Susanne, George and Tal + (front)
Deb, Todd, Cindy, Joe, Julie, Steven (kneeling) and Stuart (standing),
(back) Dan, Georgia, Wendy, Stephen, Gee (standing).

We have a team where
everybody likes each other, does their best, enjoys the process, wants
to improve…. and loves to eat.  What more can you ask for?