Saturday, July 18, 2026

Vancouver mail history

Mail delivery has certainly changed over the years.  This is how Vancouver handled mail in the 1950s from the train that brought mail from across Canada to the Pacific region.  Who knew this?

The tunnel was built in the 1950s to move mail between the main Vancouver Post Office on West Georgia Street and the CPR station—the site that is now Waterfront Station. It stretched roughly 2,400 feet and used two conveyor belts to move mail directly from arriving trains into the sorting plant.

 BC POSTAL HISTORY

VANCOUVER MAIL PROCESSING PLANT: TUNNEL-CONVEYOR

The following article first appeared in the May 1959 Postmark Magazine. It describes a labour-saving innovation incorporated in the “new” Vancouver Mail Processing Plant with the launch of a mile-long underground conveyor linking the VMPP and the C.P.R. Station. Capable of moving tons of mail in minutes, the innovative system streamlined sorting and transport while operating around the clock with minimal human intervention.

March 12, 1959, marked the inaugural run of Vancouver’s mile-long tunnel-conveyor system, through which mail bags are conveyed in either direction between the Post Office and the C.P.R. Station. The conveyor went into full operation on Monday, March 16th.


The tunnel was built at a cost of $1,140,000 through which the conveyor system operates is approximately 2,400 feet in length. Commencing at the northeast end of the Main Post Office building, it runs (from 15 to 35 feet underground) west on Dunsmuir to Richards, north on Richards to Cordova and west on Cordova to the C.P.R. Station and north into the station.

Nearly a mile of electronically controlled belting carries the mail to and from the C.P.R. Station Mail Room in approximately 9 minutes.


Dynamite charges set, skilled miners in new post office tunnel get ready to blast sandstone under Dunsmuir Street.  Crews are drilling towards each other fro opposite ends of mail tunnel which will link Canadian Pacific Railway station and block square post office.

By the 1960s, Canada Post stopped using trains for mail transport. Trucks took over, and the tunnel became obsolete. It sat unused for years, occasionally rented out for film shoots and even Halloween events. Eventually, due to structural and safety concerns, the tunnel was filled in.

Friday, July 17, 2026

Sportsmanship?

I thought sports wasn't political.  It appears I am wrong.  I watched the Argentina/England FIFA game the other day.  I was cheering for England but knew the best team will win.  I'm sure my UK relatives won't agree with me, Argentina was superior.

I always watch the national anthems.  I didn't even realize they were playing God Save the King until they showed the players mouthing the words.  I had no sound, but I was having problems with my TV.  When the Argentina national anthem was sung I heard it.  I found out Argentina's fans were chanting during the UK anthem!  Pretty disrepectful.

Then I read this that really disturbed me:

England’s national anthem was drowned out by Argentinian boos and chants before Three Lions fans repaid the gesture as tensions boiled over before their seismic World Cup semi-final even kicked off.

Sharing a storied footballing rivalry, this last-four clash also has a sharp historical edge to it, with conflict over the Falkland Islands forming part of the narrative going into the match in Atlanta.

Argentina invaded the British Overseas Territory in 1982 but emphatically lost the Falklands War in 74 days, which claimed the lives of 907 people: 649 Argentine military personnel, 255 from Britain and three Falkland Islanders.

Argentina still vehemently believe that the archipelago in the South Atlantic Ocean, which sits 300 miles away from its east coast, should be under its sovereignty, with the cause enshrined in much of the country’s culture, including its football.

As the players lined up around the centre-circle for the national anthems, Argentina fans were deafening with their chants of “whoever doesn't jump is English”, before heavily booing “God Save the King”.


Thursday, July 16, 2026

Rogers/Shaw Xfinity


We have Rogers/Shaw Xfinity TV.  The top one on the picture.  The box is smaller than a 1950's cigarette pack.  Our TV is getting old and we also have a surround sound unit that is older.  Our TV would go black, then go back on again.  This has been happening for a while.  Then our sound would cut off for 15 seconds, sometimes 30 seconds.  PVR recordings were not working right!  It was so frustrating,

We have a newer larger TV upstairs so we went up to watch TV.  It was doing the same thing on the newer TV so we figured it was the Rogers/Shaw connection.

I went online and found this:

Perform a System Refresh directly from your TV to resolve channels or box glitches. Press the A button on your voice remote, select System Refresh on the screen, and press OK to confirm. The process takes about 10 to 20 minutes, and the box will reboot automatically.

Our TV is now clearer and the audio is much better.  No more blackouts or sound loss!  

I told Cheryl about it and she just texted me and said "The picture on our TV looks way better with the restart!"

It saved calling in, hearing music have someone tell me to unplug and replug.  Yes, I did that three times and it didn't work.  So I thought "search Rogers/Shaw Xfinity problems and I found what we needed.  I enjoy repairing technology!

I'm glad the old Sony TV and sound system is still working!  If you are sight impaired Rogers will send you a big button digital remote for no extra charge! 



Wednesday, July 15, 2026

Third party airline cheap fares

A friend of mine got caught using one of these sites a few years ago.  Her ticket was not valid and they would not answer the phone!  I keep seeing advertisements on social media regarding cheaper air fares.  Beware, this is what I found:

Reviews for the third-party flight booking website Compare Your Fare (compareyourfare.com) are overwhelmingly negative. According to warnings from the Better Business Bureau Scam Tracker and consumer reports, the site is frequently flagged for a bait-and-switch scam. [1]
The typical pattern involves the site advertising artificially low flight prices. After a customer enters their payment information, an agent contacts them—often aggressively or via intimidation—claiming that the original price is no longer valid or that hidden fees are required to secure the seat, sometimes demanding hundreds of dollars more. 
Because of these predatory practices, consumers and travel experts widely recommend booking directly with established airlines or through vetted, IATA-accredited aggregators to avoid losing money. 
Third party hotel sites are also not what they say they are.  I was told by someone in the business, go to the hotel website, join their points program.  They will give you the best rate and possibly upgrade you when you check in.  One hotel told me they save the "worse rooms" for third party bookings.  She gave both of us a complimentary bottle of water and an upgrade!

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

The Unreliability of Social Media: Why We Need to Slow Down and Look Closer

Social media has become the world’s fastest rumour mill.  A single post — sometimes thoughtful, sometimes careless, sometimes deliberately misleading — can travel farther in five minutes than a well‑researched news story might in a week.  And because these platforms are woven into our daily routines, it’s easy to forget that speed and accuracy rarely travel together.

The problem isn’t that social media is all bad. It’s that it’s unreliable, and we often treat it as if it’s not.

Emotion spreads faster than truth

Platforms are designed to amplify whatever gets the strongest reaction.  Outrage, fear, shock, and moral judgment outperform calm, verified information every time.  A dramatic claim — even one with no evidence — can rack up thousands of shares before anyone stops to ask, “Is this actually true?”

By the time corrections appear, the emotional damage is already done.

Algorithms don’t care about accuracy

Social media feeds aren’t curated by librarians or editors.  They’re shaped by algorithms that reward engagement, not truth. If a misleading post keeps people clicking, commenting, or arguing, the system pushes it harder.

This means:

  • Falsehoods can trend.

  • Conspiracies can flourish.

  • Harmful narratives can look “popular” even when they’re not.

And because each of us sees a personalized feed, we can end up believing that “everyone” thinks a certain way — when in reality, it’s just what the algorithm decided to show us.

Photos and videos aren’t proof anymore

We’ve reached a point where images and videos can be edited, staged, or AI‑generated so convincingly that even trained eyes struggle to tell the difference.  A picture used to be evidence. Now it’s just content — and content can be manipulated.

When a video goes viral, people often react instantly, without context, without verification, and without knowing whether the clip is old, edited, or missing crucial details.

Is Mitch McConnell alive?  Who knows?  This picture showed online.  When you put a recent picture of Mitch this one is about two years old at least.  


A clever photoshop that is pretty funny:

Then Jimmy Kimmel on vacation had to post this.
The photoshop comics are having a lot of fun!


People share before they check

Most misinformation doesn’t spread because someone is trying to deceive.  It spreads because someone is trying to help.

A friend sees a warning, a dramatic story, or a heartbreaking claim and shares it “just in case.”  But good intentions don’t guarantee good information.  In fact, well‑meaning sharing is one of the biggest accelerators of false narratives.

The cost of believing too quickly

When unreliable information spreads, real harm follows:

  • reputations damaged

  • communities divided

  • fear amplified

  • vulnerable people targeted

  • public trust eroded

And once trust is broken, rebuilding it is slow, difficult work.

So what can we do? Slow down. Verify. Ask questions.

Before sharing anything, it helps to pause and ask:

  • Who posted this, and why?

  • Is the source credible?

  • Does this claim appear anywhere reputable?

  • Is the language emotional or manipulative?

  • Does it feel designed to provoke a reaction?

A few seconds of checking can prevent hours, days, or even years of unnecessary harm.

Social media is powerful — but it’s not dependable

It’s a tool, not a truth machine.  It can connect us, inform us, and entertain us.  But it can also mislead us, divide us, and overwhelm us if we treat every post as fact.

The healthiest approach is simple: use social media, but don’t trust it blindly.  Slow down, look closer, and remember that truth rarely arrives in a viral package.

Monday, July 13, 2026

Oolichans

I remember as a child, every year we would have Oolichans.  I wondered why I never see them anymore.  I found this article and thought I would share it for everyone who grew up eating oolichans every late February and early March.  I understand the Fraser River run has declined.  I don't remember if my dad caught them or bought them.

Only about 15 rivers in BC still carry oolichan, including:
  • Skeena River
  • Bella Coola River
  • Kemano River
  • Nass River
  • Fraser River (hisorically, though runs have declined)

First Nations on the coast mark winter’s end with the return of a small silver fish – now rebounding in abundance in some areas under Nations-led stewardship.

As oolichan return to spawn, First Nations on the coast mark the transition from winter to spring with celebrations such as Hoobiyee and the spring equinox.

For millennia, First Nations on the coast of British Columbia have sustainably harvested oolichan, a finger-sized oily fish that is a member of the smelt family. Oolichan (also spelled eulachon, ooligan, and hooligan, depending on where you are) are sometimes called candlefish because, when dried, they hold enough oil to burn like candles.

Oolichan fish are collected in a white bucket. 

Every spring, Haisla family groups travel to Kemano River to harvest oolichan. Haisla boil aged oolichan to create a white grease to use for medicine and trade with neighbouring villages. 

Oolichan are of great significance to First Nations on the coast, offering substantial sustenance at the end of winter. They have been used for thousands of years for food, medicine, ceremonies, and trade. First Nations people process the grease from aged oolichan and transport it through the mountains to trade with coastal and interior communities. These trade routes, also known as GREASE TRAILS, have lasted  THOUSANDS of years and can still be walked to this day.

Like salmon, oolichan spend the majority of their lives in ocean waters and return to their spawning grounds in rivers and streams to complete their life cycle. But, since the early 90s, oolichan populations have DECLINED SIGNIFICANTLY, likely due to habitat loss, overfishing, pollution, and climate change. According to Central Coast Indigenous Resource Alliance records, there are just 15 RIVERS IN BC CARRYING OOLICHAN.

Nuxalk scientist Ts’xwiixw Megan Moody, has STUDIED oolichan populations and impacts of climate change to oolichan. Her research and previous work in the field as fisheries manager and, later, stewardship director for Nuxalk Nation, combines Traditional Knowledge and Western scientific methods.

In 2024, Nuxalk Nation led stewardship efforts that saw the biggest RETURN OF OOLICHAN to their territory, the Bella Coola River, in decades.

“Although this run was no where near historical run sizes,” says Megan. “The schools of fish, for a short period of time, were a welcome sight.”

Sputc (the Nuxalk word for oolichan) continue to be extensively researched by Nuxalk experts and the Nuxalk Stewardship Office. Since 2001, the Nuxalk Fish and Wildlife Department have conducted an annual Nuxalk Ooligan Study monitoring the Bella Coola River population.

“The study has generated over 25 years of high quality data and understanding of local oolichan science and status,” says Megan.

A person holds a single oolichan fish in their hand. The fish is very small and fits in the palm of their hand.  Ooolichan play an important role in the physical health and cultural well-being of many coastal First Nations. 

“A book called Alhqulh ti Sputc The Sputc Book was created and based on extensive community-engaged research that was conducted between 2014 to 2017.” Alhqulh ti Sputc brings together ancestral (traditional) and contemporary Nuxalk knowledge about oolichan in all its forms,” shares Megan.

Distributed to all community members, and officially approved by Hereditary leaders, this book has become a household staple used in the school curriculum and as an example for other similar projects. It includes detailed knowledge about Nuxalk stewardship values and practices.

Megan, who is also a Coast Funds board director, is working with her community on a Nuxalk stewardship plan for sputc.

“This plan aims to build on place-based ancestral and contemporary Nuxalk eulachon knowledge, governance, and science,” she says. “It is situated within and connected to the larger context of eulachon and anadromous fisheries management and Indigenous governance along the coast.”

First Fish, First Crescent Moon

Further north, Nisga’a construct camps along the banks of Ḵ’alii Aksim Lisims Nass River to harvest and process oolichan, a tradition they’ve been practicing since before recorded time.

Historically, Nisga’a would spend months in Lax– Da’oots’ip as they caught the first fish of the year. In a 2018 STORY published by Coast Funds, Nicole Morven, Harvest Monitoring Coordinator with Nisga’a Fisheries and Wildlife Department, recalled hearing from Elders that camps would operate for up to three months. “The women would be there too,” she said. “Helping to get wood and clean up, getting the poles and gear ready for the whole season.”

Although oolichan have always played a major role in the trading economies and culture of many First Nations, in Nisga’a territory the fish was never extensively exploited through Western commercial economies.

In her thesis research, Megan Moody, summarized that a small commercial fishery for Ḵ’alii Aksim Lisims oolichan existed in the first half of the 1900s until the Nisga’a Tribal Council Convention declared in 1955 that “no Nass River caught oolichans be sold commercially.” Because of this, oolichan return to Ḵ’alii Aksim Lisims in abundance every year.

Today, most of the oolichan caught and processed on the Nass River are distributed among community members or traded with neighbouring First Nations. Oolichan continues to play a significant role in the economies of coastal communities as Nisga’a citizens trade their resource for shellfish, herring, seaweed, and halibut.

Oolichan, called saak by Nisg̱a’a people, hang to dry at a camp along the Nass River. 

Chief Harry Nyce Sr says the fish continues to be a mainstay of Nisga’a culture. “For us, it is a life-saving fish,” he says. “It’s the first fish that comes in the New Year arriving as winter supplies are dwindling.” HOOBIYEE, the Nisga’a new year, starts during spring equinox with the migration of oolichan into Ḵ’alii Aksim Lisims.

Lasting about a week, Hoobiyee celebrates the waxing crescent moon. The unique positioning of the moon and stars is said to PREDICT the spring harvest of oolichan, salmon, and other food sources, preparing Nisga’a for the year ahead. Today, the celebration, which is deeply rooted in thousand-year-old Nisga’a traditions, has been adopted by other Indigenous Nations.

This year, Nisga’a celebrated Hoobiyee at an event in GITWINKSIHLKW between February 20 to 21, 2026.

People wearing regalia hold up a lit-up crescent moon. 
Hoobiyee, the Nisg̱a’a new year, is celebrated in the Village of Gitwinksihlkw. Each year, the arrival of spawning oolichan signals the beginning of the Nisga’a new year.   

Sunday, July 12, 2026

Vancouver’s Granville Street Shines Again: A Transformation Worth Celebrating

 

When Vancouver first announced it would be a FIFA host city, plenty of people were sceptical. We’ve all seen big promises come and go, and for many of us, Granville Street had become a place we simply avoided. Crime, open drug use, and the heartbreaking reality of homelessness kept locals away. I hadn’t walked down Granville in years — and I wasn’t alone.

But something remarkable happened.

In preparation for welcoming the world, the City of Vancouver rolled up its sleeves and took action. Granville Street was cleaned up, reimagined, and brought back to life. And the result is nothing short of astonishing.

Walking down Granville now feels like stepping into a different city. The street is closed to traffic, opening it up to people instead — families, visitors, locals, all wandering freely. Street bars spill out with energy, music drifts through the air, and there’s a sense of celebration that feels contagious.

And yes, the police presence is noticeable — but in the best possible way. It feels safe. It feels cared for. It feels like a place you want to be.

For the first time in years, Granville Street feels vibrant, welcoming, and alive.

No wonder visitors from around the world were impressed. Vancouver showed what can happen when a city commits to reclaiming its public spaces and making them shine again. FIFA may have been the catalyst, but the transformation is something every Vancouverite can appreciate.

So here’s a genuine thank you to the City of Vancouver. You did an incredible job — and you reminded us of what Granville Street can be.

We took the Canada Line downtown and got off at Yaletown-Roadhouse. We walked up Davie Street to Granville Street.




There were a few of these on Granville Street and everyone was in use

The England-Norway game just started when we were there.  Many of the outside bars had TV's and lots of people were watching.  We got home in the extra time and loved the end of the game.

Vancouver mail history

Mail delivery has certainly changed over the years.  This is how Vancouver handled mail in the 1950s from the train that brought mail from a...