Get your five-day weather

2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games

125 Things We Love About Vancouver

In honour of Vancouver’s quasquicentennial, we present 125 of our favourite things about the city. After all, 125th birthdays don’t happen every day

By Sheri Radford

The beaches at English Bay. Photo by KK Law

1 Sunning ourselves (wearing sunscreen, of course) on local sandy beaches.
2 The four beehives on the Vancouver Convention Centre’s 2.4-hectare (6-acre) living roof.
3 James “Jimmy” Cunningham. The master stonemason spent more than three decades directing the construction of Vancouver’s seawall. Even after retirement, he still kept showing up to the worksite almost daily, right up until his death at age 85 in 1963.
4 All of the movies and TV shows filmed here each year, such as Fringe, Battlestar Galactica, Smallville, The X-Files, X-Men Origins: Wolverine, Juno and the Twilight series. As North America’s third-largest film centre (trailing only Los Angeles and New York), the city deserves its “Hollywood North” nickname.
5 Canadian pride, which still lives on more than a year after the Vancouver 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games filled the city with red-and-white-clad cowbell-ringing revellers high-fiving each other and belting out “O Canada.”
6 The new and improved BC Place Stadium, which reopens this autumn. Gone is the puffy white roof that looked like a giant marshmallow. In its place is the world’s largest cable-supported retractable roof, transforming the stadium into an open-air venue.
7 Whale watching.
8 Terry Fox. Despite losing a leg to cancer, in 1980 the local athlete embarked on his Marathon of Hope, a run across Canada to raise money for cancer research. He died before completing his quest, but in September every year fundraising runs are held around the world in his honour (www.terryfox.org).
9 Bouncing the night away at the Commodore Ballroom.
10 The fact that it’s a short drive from downtown to the picturesque snow-capped mountains.
11 Our reputation as one of the greenest cities on the planet—and not just because environmental activist David Suzuki lives here. There’s more than a kernel of truth to our reputation as granola-eating, Birkenstock-wearing, planet-loving hippie freaks.
12 Stanley Park.
13 Our local sports teams, ranging from the Vancouver Canucks (the 2010-2011 NHL season’s dominant team) to the Vancouver Whitecaps (BC’s first Major League Soccer club) to the BC Lions (the CFL’s youngest team) to the Vancouver Canadians (farm team for the Toronto Blue Jays). We love them all, win or lose.
14 Soaking up the cool counter-culture vibe along Commercial Drive and Main Street.
15 Bryan Adams. Long before winning international acclaim, the raspy-voiced rocker washed dishes at Tomahawk Barbecue.

Science World perched on the shores of False Creek. Photo by KK Law

16 The large inukshuk that sits in English Bay, welcoming the world.
17 Sarah McLachlan. The local singer/songwriter resurrected her hugely popular Lilith Fair tour last summer.
18 The abundance of restaurant patios that make the most of warm summer days and stunning ocean and mountain views.
19 James Doohan. The actor who portrayed Star Trek’s Scotty (“I can’t push it any faster, Captain!”) was born in Vancouver—then explored the universe aboard the Starship Enterprise.
20 The love and appreciation for all things local and sustainable, including food, drink and even clothing.
21 Watching real estate prices soar, even during a recession. No matter how bad the economy gets, people want to live on the Left Coast.
22 Jillian Harris. An interior designer, the Vancouver resident was the first Canadian to star on the reality TV series The Bachelorette. On one memorable episode, she and her beaus rode the rails on the Rocky Mountaineer.
23 Gay pride. Rainbow flags fly high all year long, but even more come out during Vancouver Pride.
24 Yoga pants by Lululemon. Chip Wilson opened the very first Lululemon store in Kitsilano in 2000, and now there are locations around the world.
25 Homegrown authors such as William Gibson (Neuromancer), Joy Kogawa (Obasan), Nan Gregory (How Smudge Came) and Douglas Coupland (Generation X).
26 Waiting in line for servings of friendly abuse alongside banana-walnut French toast and “big ass” pancakes at The Elbow Room Cafe. Don’t even bother asking for a refill of coffee; just get it yourself.
27 The Burrard Street Bridge, which connects downtown to Kitsilano in Art Deco style.
28 Watching cruise ships sail into the harbour.
29 Mountain Equipment Co-op. Canada’s largest supplier of outdoor recreation gear and clothing turns 40 this year. That’s four decades of helping Vancouverites maintain a reputation as healthy, fit, active folks who’d rather compete in a running race than the rat race.
30 Screaming our heads off at Playland. The newest ride, Atmosfear, which opens this month, travels 360 degrees at 70 km (43 mi) per hour at 66 m (218 ft) up. Let the screaming begin.
31 The Grouse Grind. Nicknamed “Mother Nature’s Stairmaster,” it’s a steep 2.9-km (1.8-mi) trail straight up the face of Grouse Mountain. Crazily intense athletes do the Grind in under 30 minutes, while mere mortals require more like 90 minutes—and perhaps CPR.
32 Giving the credit cards a workout on Robson Street, shopping for brand-name clothes and shoes.
33 Gourmet Japanese delicacies at Tojo’s—and the welcoming, smiling face of Hidekazu Tojo himself.
34 Pamela Anderson. The blonde bombshell, an actress and Playboy model, was discovered at age 21 when shown on the big screen at a BC Lions game.
35 Pixar. The Academy Award–winning computer animation company—creators of Toy Story, Finding Nemo, The Incredibles and Up—opened a studio in Gastown last year.

The blue whale skeleton is an imposing presence at the Beaty Biodiversity Museum. Photo by KK Law

36 The plethora of outdoor activities, everything from scuba diving and rock climbing to hiking and mountain biking.
37 The fact that something is always under construction here. The skyline just wouldn’t be complete without a couple of giant cranes.
38 Dal Richards. At age 93, Canada’s “King of Swing” keeps his schedule jam-packed with gigs ranging from Summer Live (Jul. 8 to 10) to multiple performances daily during the PNE (Aug. 20 to Sep. 5; www.pne.ca) to 76 consecutive New Year’s Eve shows.
39 Spectacular sunsets.
40 Sweeping dramatically up the grand staircase in The Centre in Vancouver for Performing Arts.
41 Dogs, dogs and more dogs. You’ll find them in off-leash parks, in boutiques such as Barking Babies and Fetch, and even in downtown hotels. Both the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver and L’Hermitage employ canine concierges—though we’re pretty sure they get paid in doggie treats and tummy rubs.
42 Clothing-optional Wreck Beach. Be warned: no gawking allowed.
43 All the wildlife in Stanley Park, everything from squirrels and raccoons to Canada geese and skunks.
44 John “Gassy Jack” Deighton. You’ll find his statue in Gastown, commemorating the talkative (“gassy”) fellow who was an early settler and a saloonkeeper here in the late 1800s.
45 Botox. Vancouver physician Dr. Jean Carruthers was the first person to use Botox to smooth wrinkles—and locals have been looking fabulous ever since.
46 The clean streets.
47 Rick Hansen. The local paraplegic athlete circled the world in a wheelchair for his Man In Motion World Tour, raising money for spinal cord injury research. To mark the 25th anniversary of this achievement, on Aug. 24 a relay will begin in Cape Spear, Newfoundland, and it won’t end until it reaches Vancouver on May 22, 2012 (www.rickhansen.com).
48 Zipping along on the SkyTrain.
49 Fresh local seafood—especially when it’s certified Ocean Wise (www.oceanwise.ca).
50 Larger-than-life concerts in Rogers Arena. This month, the arena hosts Britney Spears (Jul. 1), New Kids on the Block and Backstreet Boys (Jul. 9 and 10), Katy Perry (Jul. 19), Kenny Chesney (Jul. 20) and Soundgarden (Jul. 29).
51 Living in a rainforest. Sure it’s wet, but the undeniable upside is the lush green beauty.
52 Critical Mass. On the last Friday of each month, rain or shine, hundreds of cyclists reclaim city streets en masse (www.vancouv ercm.blogspot.com).
53 Bee Bop, the smiling mascot for the Vancouver Aquarium.
54 The fact that the whole city (the whole province, really) is 420-friendly.
55 Married musicians Diana Krall and Elvis Costello, who own a home here. Other famous residents over the years: Jimi Hendrix, Bob Geldof, and too-cute-for-words couple Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell.
56 Quatchi, Miga, Sumi and Mukmuk. Though the 2010 Winter Games ended 16 months ago, our adoration of the Olympic and Paralympic mascots lives on.
57 The two kitty-corner Starbucks at Robson and Thurlow, featured in the movie Best in Show.
58 Spending a lazy Saturday or Sunday morning wandering through a farmers’ market.
59 Captain George Vancouver. Our fine city—along with Vancouver Island and Vancouver, Washington—is named after this officer of the British Royal Navy, who explored and charted this region in the 1700s.
60 Science World at Telus World of Science. Who knew learning could be so much fun?
61 Courting Lady Luck at the slot machines in Edgewater Casino, right down on the waterfront.
62 The colourful array of umbrellas on every rainy day. A savvy Vancouverite always packs both an umbrella and sunglasses.

Red lampposts in Chinatown. Photo by KK Law

63 Flying a kite in Vanier Park on a sunny, windy day.
64 The friendly residents.
65 Bard on the Beach, which mounts four Shakespeare plays under tents every summer.
66 The University of British Columbia. Spend a morning wandering around the lush campus, then check out the blue whale skeleton in the Beaty Biodiversity Museum.
67 Shopping at Holt Renfrew.
68 Bike lanes downtown, which make getting around on two wheels just as convenient as getting around on four.
69 Spiked milkshakes at Society. Who could have guessed ice cream and alcohol go together so well?
70 The adorable otters at the Vancouver Aquarium.
71 Douglas Coupland’s 8-m- (25-ft-) tall Digital Orca, which looks like it was built out of giant Lego blocks. Folks love to pose for photos beside this eye-catching art installation outside the Vancouver Convention Centre.
72 Browsing for art and antiques on South Granville.
73 Ross Rebagliati. In 1998, the easy-going Vancouver boy won the first-ever Olympic gold medal for snowboarding.
74 Totem poles.
75 Travelling to Vancouver Island, the Gulf Islands or the Sunshine Coast with BC Ferries.
76 Shoes by John Fluevog. The local designer creates unique soles for unique souls.
77 Raymond Burr. It’s a fact: Perry Mason was born here, in New Westminster. Case closed.
78 Greenpeace. The environmental organization started in Vancouver in 1971, further contributing to our hippie-dippie reputation.
79 The Art Deco details of the Marine Building.
80 Taking in the scenery on a 12-minute “cruise” to the North Shore via the SeaBus.
81 Jack Poole. The Vancouver businessman was responsible for bringing the 2010 Winter Games here. To honour his memory, the Olympic cauldron sits in Jack Poole Plaza.
82 Munching on Triple O burgers at White Spot.
83 Expo ’86. This five-month-long world exposition really put Vancouver on the map.
84 Working up a sweat in the Richmond Olympic Oval.
85 Emily Carr University. Located on Granville Island, it’s named after the beloved West Coast painter and writer.
86 The exquisite art collection at Cactus Club Cafe. Admire works by Warhol, Basquiat and Sir Anthony Hopkins while sampling “Iron Chef” Rob Feenie’s eclectic fare.
87 Vancouver International Airport, which keeps racking up accolades: for the second year in a row, YVR has been named North America’s best airport by the 2011 Skytrax World Airport Awards.
88 The 100-Mile Diet: A Year of Local Eating by Vancouverites Alisa Smith and J.B. MacKinnon. After reading it, you’ll never look at the choices on your dinner plate the same way again.
89 Joshua Jackson. Born in Vancouver, the star of Dawson’s Creek has spent much time here recently, filming the addictively watchable sci-fi TV series Fringe. (Or is it really Joshua Jackson’s doppelganger from a parallel dimension…?)
90 Shopping for fresh produce and seafood in the public market on Granville Island.
91 Celebrity spotting. See someone who looks like Reese Witherspoon? It most likely is Reese Witherspoon. (She was in town recently, filming This Means War.)
92 Michael Bublé. Born in Burnaby, the debonair jazz and swing crooner keeps scooping up Grammy and Juno awards.
93 Passing through Millennium Gate to all the exotic sights and smells of Chinatown.
94 The fact that, unlike in many major cities, no freeways run through downtown.
95 Watching toe-tapping musicals under the setting sun at Theatre Under the Stars in Stanley Park.
96 Sushi.
97 Riding on False Creek Ferries or Aquabus Ferries and checking out the charming houseboats in False Creek.
98 Sanctioned graffiti areas. Why try to stop graffiti when so much of the artwork is absolutely stunning?
99 All the neon signs lining Granville Street.

The Vancouver Lookout at Harbour Centre. Photo by KK Law

100 The cliché that’s true: you can indeed ski, sail and golf all on the same day here. Golfing and sailing are year-round activities, and even in July you can ski Blackcomb Mountain’s Horstman Glacier.
101 Eco-friendly West Coast fare at Bishop’s and Raincity Grill.
102 Spending a leisurely afternoon meandering through the Vancouver Art Gallery.
103 Lions Gate Bridge. This often-photographed suspension bridge, which links downtown to the North Shore, was built by the Guinness family back in 1937. Yes, that Guinness family, of Irish beer fame.
104 The Eye of the Wind. Scaredy-cats and acrophobics avoid it, but everyone else loves this wind turbine on Grouse Mountain. Ascend to the pod suspended beneath the turbine’s massive blades, and your breath is taken away by the sweeping 360-degree views.
105 Coffee culture.
106 Ryan Reynolds. Born in Vancouver, the star of Green Lantern and The Proposal was named People magazine’s “sexiest man alive” for 2010.
107 Learning about First Nations culture at the Museum of Anthropology at UBC.
108 The seawall.
109 The cement factory on Granville Island—which reminds visitors of the area’s roots as an industrial zone. Keep an eye out for cement trucks decorated as a strawberry and as a bundle of asparagus.
110 The tranquillity of Lost Lagoon in Stanley Park.
111 Exploring Gastown, the oldest part of Vancouver.
112 The quantity (and quality!) of food carts on city streets.
113 Breathtaking views from the top of the Vancouver Lookout at Harbour Centre.
114 Doing yoga on the beach. It’s a cliché, but we love it anyway.
115 Glass. Author Douglas Coupland gave Vancouver the nickname “City of Glass,” thanks to all the glass condominium towers dominating the city’s skyline.
116 Watching dragon boats glide along False Creek.
117 Arthur Erickson. The celebrated architect and urban planner was born in Vancouver. His designs include Simon Fraser University, Robson Square and the Museum of Anthropology at UBC.
118 Seth Rogen. The Knocked Up star, along with his friend Evan Goldberg, wrote the movie Superbad about attending Vancouver’s Point Grey Secondary School.
119 Giant public art outdoors all around the city.
120 Fleece. It’s pretty much every Vancouverite’s fabric of choice.
121 Lining up at Vij’s for lamb “popsicles.” No reservations, but worth the wait. Rumour has it that actor Harrison Ford had to stand in line just like the rest of us.
122 Michael J. Fox. Best known as the star of Family Ties, Spin City and the Back to the Future movies, the local actor and author is also an activist for Parkinson’s disease research. He was diagnosed with the disease in 1991.
123 The central branch of the Vancouver Public Library, right downtown. Reminiscent of the Roman Coliseum, this striking building often appears in movies and TV shows.
124 Living in an earthquake zone. It makes every day an adventure.
125 The fact that it’s impossible to take a bad photograph here. Just point your camera at all that natural beauty and click.

Did we miss one of your favourite things about Vancouver? Let us know at www.where.ca/vancouver and we may print your suggestion in an upcoming issue.

15 Things We Love About Whistler

Photo by Chad Chomlack courtesy Tourism Whistler

1 Spectacular scenery, such as the gorgeous Whistler Olympic Park with its welcoming inukshuk. Whichever way you turn, you’ll see a picture postcard come to life.
2 Devouring a juicy Triple O burger at White Spot. This local restaurant chain was founded in 1928.
3 The abundance of festivals and special events, everything from bike races to rock concerts to a children’s art festival.
4 Looking for reminders of the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games. Their spirit lives on in venues such as the Whistler Sliding Centre. (more…)

What’s the Difference?

Confused about the types of events? Read on

by Kristina Urquhart

The world’s most elite sporting competition is also arguably the oldest: an ancient version of the Olympic Games began in 776 B.C. In 393 A.D., the Games—believed by then to be a “pagan cult”—were banned until the first modern Olympic Games in the summer of 1896. Today, able-bodied athletes participate in the 26 summer sports and 15 winter sports, but athletes with disabilities are also eligible.

Ice sledge hockey. Photo courtesy Tourism BC

Like the Olympic Games, the Paralympic Games are also held every two years, alternating between summer and winter competitions. These Games offer Olympic-style sports (20 in summer and five in winter) for athletes with a physical or visual disability; thus able-bodied athletes are not eligible to compete. The first official Paralympic Games were held for athletes with spinal-cord injuries in 1960, and 1976 saw the inclusion of athletes with other disabilities.

Often confused with the Paralympic Games, the Special Olympics, founded in 1968 by philanthropist Eunice Kennedy Shriver, are open to athletes with intellectual disabilities. Keeping with Games tradition, the Special Olympics World Games are held every two years, alternating between summer and winter competitions; however, there are also regular contests at local, regional and national levels in more than 150 countries around the world.

If you just can’t get enough of the competitive spirit, tune in to the first-ever Youth Olympic Games, for athletes aged 14 to 18, in Singapore from Aug. 14 to 26.

Building the Games

The athletes may be the stars of the 2010 Winter Games, but the backdrops for their amazing feats are these equally impressive venues

by Sheri Radford // Photos by KK Law

The twin domes of BC Place (left) and Canada Hockey Place (right)

CANADA HOCKEY PLACE
Ice Hockey

Though it has a new moniker during the Games, GM Place is still the same arena Vancouverites know and love. Completed in 1995, downtown’s 19,300-seat venue serves as home ice for the Vancouver Canucks during hockey season and hosts big-name concerts ranging from Britney Spears to The Police. Its NHL-sized ice, which is smaller than international-sized ice, is being used during the 2010 Winter Games, marking a first in Olympic history.

UBC THUNDERBIRD ARENA
Ice Hockey, Ice Sledge Hockey

This 6,800-seat arena on the University of British Columbia (UBC) campus opened in 2008. You might call UBC the birthplace of Canada’s Olympic hockey dreams: in 1963 at UBC, in preparation for the 1964 Olympic Winter Games in Austria, Bob Hindmarch and Rev. Father David Bauer established Canada’s first national hockey team. The newborn team almost scored bronze.

VANCOUVER OLYMPIC/PARALYMPIC CENTRE
Curling, Wheelchair Curling

This eco-friendly building, completed in 2009, recycles energy and minimizes water use. Post-Games, it will become a community centre housing a curling rink, ice arena, aquatic centre and library.

PACIFIC COLISEUM
Figure Skating, Short Track Speed Skating
The newly renovated home of the Vancouver Giants hockey team has been used for everything from concerts and basketball games to ice shows and circuses. Opened in 1968, this 14,200-seat arena was home ice for the Vancouver Canucks until GM Place was completed in 1995.

The award-winning Richmond Olympic Oval

RICHMOND OLYMPIC OVAL
Speed Skating

Named the 2010 Winter Games’s “sexiest” venue by Omega Lifetime magazine, this new building on the Fraser River keeps racking up awards for its stunning design and eco-friendly building practices. The extraordinary 2.6-hectare (6.5-acre) roof, made from pine-beetle-damaged wood, collects and funnels rainwater, while energy required to make the speed-skating ice is captured and used elsewhere in the building. During the Games, you might notice 13 million cranberries floating in the shapes of a maple leaf and the Olympic rings in the river outside the Oval; this is a tribute to Richmond’s iconic berry. Post-Games, the Oval will house fitness and sports medicine centres, as well as ice rinks, hardwood courts and running tracks.

WHISTLER CREEKSIDE
Alpine Skiing

After several unsuccessful attempts over four decades, Whistler (in partnership with Vancouver) finally won the bid to host the Winter Games. Now Whistler Mountain’s original base, which opened in 1966, has undergone more than $30 million in upgrades to prepare for the monumental event. Men’s alpine skiing events take place on the black-diamond Dave Murray Downhill, the world’s second-longest downhill course, while Franz’s Run hosts the women’s Olympic and all Paralympic alpine events.

WHISTLER OLYMPIC/PARALYMPIC PARK
Biathlon, Cross-Country Skiing, Nordic Combined, Ski Jumping

Opened in 2008, after years of work and $120 million spent, this sprawling park in the picturesque Callaghan Valley hosts a third of all the Olympic events and half of all the Paralympic events. The park’s elevation ranges between 840 and 930 m (2,756 and 3,051 ft).

THE WHISTLER SLIDING CENTRE
Bobsleigh, Luge, Skeleton

Completed in 2007, this slick new venue is part of an extremely elite club: there are just 15 international-competition sliding tracks in the world. And if the secret to a building’s success is location, location, location, then it has a bright future, indeed. It sits on an area of Blackcomb Mountain called Wild Spirit Place (Kwekwayex Kwelh7aynexw) by the Squamish people and Spirited Ground (A7x7ulmecw) by the Lil’wat people.

CYPRESS MOUNTAIN
Freestyle Skiing, Snowboard

A 30-minute drive from downtown Vancouver, this area is popular with locals for

The Olympic and Paralympic Village Vancouver, on False Creek

skiing, snowboarding, tubing and snowshoeing. In case of mild weather, a snowmaking system (complete with 35 snow guns) guarantees a winter wonderland.

OLYMPIC AND PARALYMPIC  VILLAGE VANCOUVER
Forget about the cost overruns and financing snafus: this billion-dollar village is a wonder to behold. Located on the waterfront in False Creek, with a view of downtown, the low- and mid-rise apartment buildings are housing 3,000 athletes and officials in style during the Games. After, they will be sold as eco-friendly condos.

OLYMPIC AND PARALYMPIC VILLAGE WHISTLER
In the gorgeous Cheakamus Valley, bordered by forests and the Cheakamus River, this mix of apartments, townhomes and hostels comprises the home-away-from-home for more than 4,000 athletes and officials during the Games.

BC PLACE
For the first time ever, the Winter Games’s opening and closing ceremonies are being held indoors. The nightly victory ceremonies, featuring a stellar line-up of musical acts, also take place inside downtown Vancouver’s 55,000-seat domed stadium, which opened in 1983. Better take a snapshot of the venue’s marshmallow-like roof, since it won’t be around much longer: a state-of-the-art retractable roof will replace it next year.

WHISTLER MEDALS PLAZA
After the Games’s medal presentations and nightly concerts are a mere memory, this outdoor venue’s amphitheatre, children’s play area and performance spaces will still attract locals.

WHISTLER MEDIA CENTRE
Journalists lucky enough to be assigned to Whistler are headquartered in the

The newly expanded Vancouver Convention Centre is the Main Media Centre during the Games

Whistler Conference Centre, which underwent a huge renovation in 2003. The building is now larger—and kinder to the environment.

MAIN MEDIA CENTRE
Media assigned to Vancouver are in for a treat at the newly expanded Vancouver Convention Centre. Its east building, which showed off the city to the world during the Expo ‘86 World’s Fair, and its brand new west building now cover 111,500 sq m (1.2 million sq ft), or four city blocks. Approximately 40% of the west building juts out over the ocean. Its interior walls, made from renewable Vancouver Island and Sunshine Coast hemlock, resemble artfully stacked lumber. And its 2.5-hectare (6-acre) living roof—complete with four beehives, a bee-keeper and 400,000 plants—helps the environment.

The Faces of the Games

Canada’s Olympic and Paralympic hopefuls have big dreams

By Lucas Aykroyd

Competing at home in front of family and friends in the Winter Games is a dream come true for Canadian athletes. Yet it also means pressure. Only once before has this scenario unfolded, at the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, Alberta. There, Canadians such as figure skater Elizabeth Manley and alpine skier Karen Percy achieved memorable medals, but none were gold. Will Canada’s brightest stars end the gold drought during the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver and Whistler?

Joannie Rochette

Figure Skating

Jumping is something figure skaters do every day, but Joannie Rochette now wants

Photo by Brett Barden courtesy Skate Canada

to make the biggest leap of her career. The 24-year-old Montrealer has been a perennial Canadian champ since 2005 and claimed silver at the 2009 Worlds. In her second Winter Games, she’ll look to do what no Canadian woman has done since Barbara Ann Scott in 1948: land on top of the Olympic podium for singles figure skating.
Facing stiff competition from rivals such as South Korea’s Kim Yu-Na and America’s Sasha Cohen, Rochette has had mixed results in the 2009-10 season, including lower-than-desired finishes in competitions in Asia. Yet the petite blonde realizes that a fine showing in Vancouver is what people will remember, and she’s consistently shone on home ice.
“I know the key is for me to do a lot of run-throughs, and a lot of repetitions [in training], so that when I get to competition, I have confidence,” she says.

Jean Labonté

Ice Sledge Hockey

Defending Canada’s 2006 ice sledge hockey title won’t be easy, but Jean Labonté has

Photo courtesy HockeyCanada.ca

faced and overcome even greater challenges. Despite losing his left leg to bone cancer in 1990, the native of Hull, Quebec didn’t lose his passion for sports. He made the national sledge hockey team in 1996 and is now team captain.
The defenseman has targeted the opponents Canada must beat to repeat: “Right now, the U.S. is world champion. They have a young, talented team. Norway is our eternal rival, with lots of experience and smarts. The Japanese have a shot at the podium, too.”
Paralympic sports don’t always get the attention they deserve, but Labonté hopes to change that and gain new participants in 2010. “This is the opportunity of a lifetime,” Labonté says. “We want to show people that this is a great sport: hitting, skating, hard shots. It’s hockey.”
Beyond the action at the 6,800-capacity UBC Thunderbird Arena, Labonté looks forward to soaking up Vancouver’s beauty. “I love seeing the mountains everywhere,” he says. “In 1986, I came to Vancouver to participate in Rescue ’86, the world lifeguarding championships. That was the first time I’d been so far from home, and it brings back great memories every time I return.”

Regan Lauscher

Luge

“At my first Olympics in 2002, all I wanted to do was get there and have a great

Photo courtesy Canadian Luge Association

race,” notes this feisty Calgarian, now heading into her third Winter Games. “In 2006, I was considered to be in the top group. For 2010, my challenge is that I’ve been on the ice about half as much as everybody else in the last four years.”
Regan Lauscher, Canada’s most experienced female luger, suffered a bad concussion in Germany in 2007 and underwent surgery on both shoulders in 2008. Lauscher would love to improve on her 10th-place finish in Turin four years ago. But her main goal now, as she puts it, is to “walk away from my Olympic race saying that’s the best I could do, whatever the outcome.”
She’s done the necessary work. Even in the summer, national luge-team members train twice daily—everything from cardio and strength circuit training to rowing and sport-specific, on-ice exercises geared to generate fast starts. Every millisecond counts at the Whistler Sliding Centre, where female lugers can exceed 140 km/h (87 mi/h).
“The payoff is the moment they clear the track and you know there’s 1,200 m (3,390 ft) of ice waiting for you,” Lauscher says. “It’s the adrenalin and the mental challenge. No two runs are ever the same.”

Jeremy Wotherspoon

Speed Skating

Excelling in both the 500-m and 1000-m sprints, Jeremy Wotherspoon

Photo by Jeff Bough

unequivocally ranks among speed skating’s legends. The 33-year-old, who grew up in Red Deer, Alberta, is the winningest World Cup speed skater of all time, and is also a four-time world sprint champion. In November 2007, he powered his way to a new 500-m world record of 34.03 seconds.
But he still hungers for the ultimate prize of Olympic gold, having claimed silver in Nagano in 1998. There would be no sweeter place to get it done than at the Richmond Olympic Oval. Coming back from a broken arm, Wotherspoon plans to retire after the current season.
“Everyone I know who has competed in the Olympics in their country has said it’s an incredible experience,” Wotherspoon says. “It’ll be a great way to culminate my career.”

Britt Janyk

Alpine Skiing

Britt Janyk is one of the Canadian “Speed Queens” who’s aiming to follow in the

Photo copyright ACA/Pentaphoto

tracks of Olympic champs such as Nancy Greene and Kerrin Lee-Gartner. But the 29-year-old Whistler resident, who ranked third overall in the 2008 World Cup downhill standings and won gold that year in Aspen, hasn’t always ruled with ease.
“A couple of years ago, I had to requalify for the team,” Janyk recalls. “I was struggling, and I’d lost my confidence.” While her favourite event remains the super giant slalom, with its speed and technical flair, making the podium in downhill got her career back on track. “It gave me confidence that I can work through things when it gets tough,” she says.
Janyk isn’t discounting home-mountain advantage, with female Olympians competing on Franz’s Run at Whistler Creekside. “We’ve trained quite a bit on the race hill, and we’re really familiar with it,” she says. “I grew up skiing on Whistler Mountain, and it just feels like home.” In her downtime, she shops at Lululemon or grabs breakfast at the Wild Wood Cafe.
Janyk’s grandfather Peter, mother Andrée and brother Michael (a fellow Olympic hopeful) all have fine international ski resumes. She’s raced with fellow “Speed Queen” Emily Brydon since age 12, fostering good team chemistry. No wonder Janyk hopes her 2010 Olympic debut will be her crowning glory.

What’s Hot in January Across Canada

Halifax

Roots-rock legends Blue Rodeo return to the Halifax Metro Centre on January 28, performing concert classics like “Hasn’t Hit Me Yet” and “Diamond Mine,” along with their newest material.

Vancouver & Whistler

The 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games are almost here, and they’re bringing a lot more than just sports to Vancouver and Whistler. The Cultural Olympiad 2010 (Jan 22 – Mar 21) is the culmination of three years of Cultural Olympiads on the West Coast, and it features some of the world’s best artists, musicians, dancers, actors and performers. Vancouver highlights include Joni Mitchell’s The Fiddle and the Drum at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre (Jan 22 – 24), Nevermore: The Imaginary Life and Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe at the Granville Island Stage (Jan 21 – Feb 6), and Steve Earle and Joel Plaskett at The Orpheum (Jan 23).

Whistler highlights include Canada’s first theatre of snow and ice, Nix (Jan 22 – Feb 27), Corb Lund at Whistler Village Square (Feb 19), and the Nunavut-based circus Artcirq at the Squamish Lil’Wat Cultural Centre (Feb 20).

Ottawa

During the Carleton Cup Triathlon on Jan 30, fearless participants—athletically inclined or otherwise—skate for nearly 7km up and down the Rideau Canal, run through the ByWard Market, then slide into The Aulde Dubliner & Pour House to pound back a drink. First one in gets the bragging rights, but the real winner is the Canadian Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Led by controversial-yet-charismatic frontman Axl Rose, the newest incarnation of Guns N’ Roses will tour to promote Chinese Democracy, an album that was 15 years in the making.  They stop into Ottawa Jan 31.

Calgary

Known for its memorable songs like, “Matchmaker, Matchmaker,” the Tony Award-winning musical, Fiddler on the Roof plays at the Jubilee until Jan 17. Throughout the month of January, One Yellow Rabbit’s High Performance Rodeo offers theatre-lovers innovative plays, skits and acts from around the world. Highlights include Kawasaki Exit, a play about the dark-side of Japanese social networking sites and The Pajama Men, a comedy duo who perform their act in their pjs.

Winnipeg

World-class men’s curling talent sweeps into Winnipeg for the BDO Canadian Classic Open Jan 20 – 24. Top names like Canada’s Olympic representative Kevin Martin and Scotland’s reigning World Champion David Murdoch are expected to participate.

Edmonton

Coleman Lemieux & Compagnie, one of Canada’s most accomplished dance organizations, brings three brilliant performances to Edmonton Jan 20: In Paradisum; Soudain, l’hiver dernier; and Fifteen Heterosexual Duets, all choreographed by James Kudelka.  Artistic Director Laurence Lemieux promises “an exhilarating voyage to the heights of paradise and the depths of the heart.”  Edmontonians revel in the winter months at the Winter Light Festival. Every weekend brings a blizzard of family fun with many events such as ice carving, ice-skating, art shows and much more. On until Mar 12, free admission.

Canadian Rockies

The Olympic Torch Relay comes through Banff Jan 20 and the town is celebrating outdoors with live music. Watch as teams carve massive blocks of ice into glittering sculptures at the Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise during the Ice Magic Festival, Jan 22 – 24 (if you can’t catch the carving, admire the art until it melts away in a few months). Or hit up Jasper in January for ski lift ticket and hotel discounts, plus fun events like the polar bear dip, Taste of the Town, music and skating parties, Jan 15 – 31.

Toronto

Important figures of history continue to draw crowds in the present. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart looms large over the city on select dates between Jan 13 and 24 as the Toronto Symphony Orchestra presents the Mozart@254 Festival, its annual concert series commemorating the 1756 birth of the Classical Era’s greatest composer. This year’s program features guest artists including famed baritone Russell Braun, violinist Pinchas Zukerman and many others. Or, have an archeological encounter with the great rulers of Egypt, by visiting the Art Gallery of Ontario’s ongoing exhibit, King Tut: The Golden King and the Great Pharaohs. The massive display showcases rare artifacts from the days of Khafre, Amenhotep IV, Rameses II and other significant monarchs, as well as more than 50 exquisite treasures from the tomb of Tutankhamun. On until Apr 18.


Hot Essentials: Who Lives in Whistler?

Whistler Village is pedestrian-friendly, with many roads blocked to vehicles. Photo by Leanna Rathkelly, courtesy Tourism Whistler

Whistler Village is pedestrian-friendly, with many roads blocked to vehicles. Photo by Leanna Rathkelly, courtesy Tourism Whistler

Back in 1966, just 527 people called Whistler home. Today, almost 10,000 folks are permanent residents, and up to 30,000 people are here on any given day. During the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, you can add an extra 10,000 to 58,000 spectators per day to those numbers. Whew! Just think of all the fleece and Gore-Tex.—Sheri Radford

The Games Are Here

Live it up in the host mountain resort for the 2010 Winter Games

By Lucas Aykroyd

In Whistler Olympic Park, ski jumps form the backdrop for an inukshuk rock sculpture. Photo courtesy Tourism British Columbia

In Whistler Olympic Park, ski jumps form the backdrop for an inukshuk rock sculpture. Photo courtesy Tourism British Columbia

Whether you visit Whistler before, during or after the 2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter Games, you’re in for a gold-medal experience. It’s been a jam-packed calendar since July 2, 2003, when the International Olympic Committee (IOC) chose Whistler to co-host the 2010 Winter Games along with Vancouver, beating out Pyeongchang, South Korea and Salzburg, Austria. With Alpine skiing, Nordic skiing and sliding events on the menu, Whistler has solidified its reputation as a must-visit sporting destination. Remarkably, all three Whistler competition venues—Whistler Creekside, Whistler Olympic Park and the Whistler Sliding Centre—were completed years early.

Key dates? The Olympic Torch Relay lights up Whistler on Feb. 5. If you’re arriving in time to catch the world’s top winter athletes, go to the official Vancouver 2010 website (www.vancouver2010
.com) for tickets to Olympic events (Feb. 12 to 28) and Paralympic events (Mar. 12 to 21). The Cultural Olympiad (Jan. 22 to Mar. 21) features several free concerts in Whistler Village Square.

All winter long, participate in downhill skiing and snowboarding at Whistler, enjoying the 88 lifts, 200-plus runs and 3,307 ha (8,100 acres) of diverse terrain—over 90 percent open during the Games. See it all from a bird’s-eye perspective in the recently launched Peak 2 Peak Gondola, which offers a magnificent trip between Whistler and Blackcomb mountains.

Alternatively, go cross-country skiing amid the snow-dusted spruce, fir, hemlock and cedar trees of Whistler Olympic Park, where about 55 km (34 mi) of trails will remain open, along with 42 km (26 mi) of the adjoining Callaghan Country this winter (Nov. 21 to Jan. 31 and Mar. 1 to May 2). Or check out the Whistler Sliding Centre, where daredevil lugers and bobsledders exceed speeds of 150 kph (93 mph).

The great thing about visiting the host mountain resort any time of year is that you don’t need to be a world-class athlete to have fun. Those who prefer culture or shopping are in for a treat, too.

Fascinated by aboriginal culture? Two of the official Four Host First Nations, the Squamish Nation and the Lil’wat Nation, have their traditional territories overlap in Whistler. The spectacular Squamish-Lil’wat Cultural Centre, which seamlessly blends glass, Douglas fir timbers and Native artwork in its three-storey, 2,824-sq-m (30,400-sq-ft) layout, offers a great introduction and provides special programming during the Cultural Olympiad.

A Canada flag waves above the spectators in Whistler Olympic Park. Photo courtesy Tourism British Columbia A Canada flag waves above the spectators in Whistler Olympic Park. Photo courtesy Tourism British Columbia

Shoppers can attempt to set a world-record pace. Buy Olympic souvenirs such as jewellery, clothing and mascot toys at The Olympic Store, The Trading Post, The Bay stores, Zellers stores, Vancouver International Airport (www.yvr.ca) and online (www.vancouver2010.com). Head to local liquor stores to pick up 2010-branded Jackson-Triggs wines or Tribute, the commemorative sparkling wine by Sumac Ridge. Games-themed stamps and coins are available from Canada Post (www.canadapost.ca) and the Royal Canadian Mint (www.mint.ca), respectively.

Long after the Olympic flame has been extinguished, retooled competition venues open to the public will foster a lasting legacy. For instance, the Whistler Sliding Centre has already been chosen to host the 2013 FIL World Luge Championships. So beyond golden memories, there will always be Olympic-calibre reasons to keep coming back.