Taken with instagram
Would love to learn the name of this flowering bush-tree too (Taken with instagram)
the intoxicating aroma of the wild road (Taken with instagram)
Anyone know what kind of flower this is? @bcrobyn and i found it at Finn Slough (Taken with instagram)
— Captain Vancouver
Some of the best, most authentic Japanese food I’ve had since I lived in Japan! (Taken with Instagram at Kishimoto Japanese Kitchen & Sushi Bar)
Yin Yang Blue in #EastVan. #lifescenes (Taken with Instagram at unity yoga & teahouse)
“A street based movement. In Montreal, there’s more than one demonstration every single day. For the last 25 days, there’s been a night demo every night…”
The proposed 75% increase in tuition fees has spurred Quebec’s student population and their allies to take to the streets in protest. Watch this excellent mini-doc about the Red Square Revolt.
(Source: vimeo.com)
Topping the list of “BC’s most endangered rivers of 2012” are the Kokish River and the Sacred Headwaters of the Skeena, Nass and Stikine Rivers (which author and National Geographic explorer-in-residence Wade Davis is fighting tooth and nail to preserve), as reported by SkeenaWatershed.com. Here’s the full list:
1. (tied). Sacred Headwaters of Skeena, Nass and Stikine (coalbed methane, new mines)
1. (tied) Kokish River (IPP proposal)
2. Kitimat (industrial development, pipeline proposal)
3. Peace River (hydro-electric dam proposal)
4. Kettle River (water extraction, development)
5. Fraser River, “Heart of the Fraser”(urbanization, industrial development, habitat loss)
6. Taku River (mining development, road proposal, leachate concerns)
7. Elk River (development, increasing selenium levels, wildlife migration issues)
8. Big Silver Creek (IPP proposal)
9. Coquitlam River (excessive sedimentation, urbanization – some progress evident
A brilliant reimagination of Vancouver from above in the future, by artist Viego at #regeneration: roof top gardens as far as the eye can see (Taken with instagram)
The City of Vancouver’s Food Policy Council is employing systems thinking toward integrating and localizing 50% more food assets in Vancouver, says Brett Mansfield at #ReGeneration. (Taken with instagram)
Vancouver City Council recently put forth a resolution opposing the twinning of a pipeline between the Alberta tar sands and Vancouver Harbour proposed by Kinder Morgan. Reports CBC.ca:
The company plans to twin its current crude oil pipeline in a $5-billion project that could see tanker traffic in the harbour increase fivefold, and that has some local politicians concerned about the increased possibility of environmental disaster.
The Vancouver Park Board, North America’s only elected parks department, has also voted to support a motion formally opposing the project.
The resolution states that staff will be directed to prepare a by-law requiring “pipeline operators and oil tankers using Burrard Inlet, Vancouver Harbour and/or the Fraser River to indemnify the City of Vancouver and existing local industries through appropriate liability insurance at a level equal to the projected amount of clean up operation costs, and loss of business compensation for a worst case scenario oil spill.”
The Wilderness Committee notes that “This will force Kinder Morgan to show if they intend to actually cover the full cost of clean up and recovery from any incidents that result from their expansion.”
“We bear a ton of risk as a city, not just environmental risk, but also economic risk,” Councillor Andrea Reimer told the CBC. “Our economy depends on a beautiful shoreline — and also our international reputation.”
The resolution also promises:
THAT, interim to a bylaw coming back to Council, the Mayor write to Prime Minister Harper expressing the City of Vancouver’s strenuous opposition to any increase in oil tanker traffic, or measures that lead to increased oil tanker traffic, as it poses an unacceptable and unmitigated risk to Vancouver’s economy and environment;
The thing about pipelines and tankers is that they spill. All of them do. Sometimes only a trickle, sometimes much more.
Oil spills kill animals, destroy breeding habitat and persist as toxins that “cause diseases for many animal species for decades to come.” They’re not only bad for our animal friends but for us too, obliterating entire industries dependent on the health of the ecosystem, such as fishing, aquaculture and tourism.
Further, expanding infrastructure to enable the extraction, processing and sale of tar sands oil is incredibly shortsighted, criminally so. And the extent to which we are enabling the richest companies in the world to plunder our land - our WEALTH - makes us all culpable.
We are poisoning ourselves and our lands in the not condemning the practice - in not taking to the streets in the name of all life on earth - and will be remembered by history as the most greedy epoch of human civilization.
Yes, I feel that strongly about this issue.
Here is the letter I submitted via the Wilderness Committee’s handy letter tool:
To Whom It Concerns:
I am writing to voice my grave concern over the proposed Kinder Morgan oil pipeline from the Alberta tar sands into Vancouver Harbour.
That we should endanger our lands, waters and the habitat of untold species for our own greedy addiction to fossil fuels is untenable given our current understanding of the role our consumption has played in the climate crisis we now face. Moving forward with the pipeline would be an abomination, bringing unforetold costs to be born by those who will profit least from its construction.
I support the resolution by Vancouver City Council opposing the Kinder Morgan pipeline and hope you will join me. It is our duty in the present to ensure the very best for those most subject to our decisions in the future.
Many thanks for your thoughtful consideration.
Sincerely,
Hilary Henegar
Vision Vancouver has also launched a petition to the same effect as the council’s resolution.
Remember those rhubarb babies I showed you last month?! My ma turned them into delicious crumble! #bestmomever #gardening (Taken with instagram)
Being here, by Mark Garry, thread pins, beads
Why Wes Anderson cast Edward Norton as a scoutmaster in his film: “Edward Norton was someone who I corresponded with over the years, and he was...
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