Archive for the ‘Other News Articles’ Category

Key Travel websites whether for a house swap or a lake front cottage

Saturday, April 29th, 2006

Whether you want a lakeside cottage or a house swap, you’ll get help online

Andy Riga
Sun

Whether you’re still short-listing destinations or you’re ready to hammer down arrangements, now’s the time to jump online and get started on summer vacation planning.

Here’s a list of key sites to help you in your summer planning:

A lake, a deck and a case of beer. If a week at a cottage sounds appealing, visit one of the many sites offering rental listings, complete with photos and detailed descriptions. Try www.atthecottage.com, www.cottagesincanada.com, www.spiritofthenorth.com, www.cottagelink.com or www.cottage-canada-usa.com.

House swapping — you use a family’s house at your destination while they use yours — is a popular route for those with big travel dreams but tight budgets. Research and booking is usually done online. Swappers describe their homes and outline where they would like to visit and when. Other members contact them for information and to arrange swaps. Start browsing: www.homelink.ca, www.intervac.ca, www.homebase-hols.com, www.homeexchange.com.

Visit the Canadian Tourism Commission at www.explore.canada.travel, a government-industry site with data and links for the entire country. Browse by places to go or by things to do.

Help is on the way. Stumped for a family-friendly trip idea? Here are some Internet tools that offer inspiration and tips on travelling with kids:

travelwithkids.about.com, www.familytravelguides.com, parenting.ivillage.com (click on Being a Mom, then Family Travel), MomsMinivan.com, www.kidstravelfun.com.

Camps for kids. For those seeking a summer camp for a child or teenager, several sites can help, including MySummerCamps.com. It lists information on 17,000 camps, categorized by location (around the world), activity (from art to religion to sports) and price. It also has tips and suggestions for parents. Other good starting points are www.campsearch.com, www.summercamps.com and www.kidscamps.com.

World travel. Canadian youth aged 18 to 30 who would like to see the world but can’t afford to bankroll their backpacking trip might be interested in checking out International Youth Programs at www.Canada123go.ca. This Foreign Affairs department site offers information about work-travel programs in about 20 countries, from Australia to the United States. Search by country or region, or read up on all the available working holidays, young workers’ exchanges and cooperative education programs.

Travel medicine. www.travelhealth.gc.ca is a good site for travel-related health information brought to you by the Public Health Agency of Canada. On the opening page, click on Information for Travellers. The site offers travel-health advisories, disease-related travel recommendations and immunization suggestions, plus general advice for travellers. Scroll to the bottom for a link to a long list of other travel- and health-related sites.

The Consular Affairs department (www.voyage.gc.ca) is a crucial federal resource for Canadians travelling abroad. Among the practical bits is Bon Voyage, But . . . , a new version of Foreign Affairs’ informative, 29-page pamphlet. It includes things to think about before you go (types of documents required, items not allowed on planes); while on the road (precautions to take, avoiding legal problems); and upon your return (what you can and can’t bring home). The site also features a travellers checklist, country profiles (information on what to expect in terms of crime, health-care services, etc.), travel warnings, and data about current issues (avian influenza, natural disasters, security).

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

 

Expo 86 brought the world and transformed our False Creek with buildings

Saturday, April 29th, 2006

EXPO 86 I The city opened its door and became more livable, more sophisticated and a lot more interesting

Doug Ward
Sun

IAN LINDSAY/VANCOUVER Jimmy Pattison, who became Expo 86 president, returns to the False Creek site of the fair, which he says succeeded beyond everyone’s expectations.

VANCOUVER SUN FILES Expo 86 was marketed as a fun event with parades, fireworks, distractions and late-night partying.

Diana, Princess of Wales, chats with Vancouver-based rock star Bryan Adams at the Expo Theatre in Vancouver in 1986. Adams was one of many performers who took part in a gala rock concert at the fair. Photograph by : Ryan Remiorz, Canadian Press Files

Expo 86 crowds in October 1986. The final count of 22 million visits far exceeded the fair’s original projection of 13.7 million. Photograph by : Bill Keay, Vancouver Sun files

Back in 1948, long before he began making his billion-dollar fortune, Jimmy Pattison worked in the windowless pantries of CP Rail passenger trains.

He made salads, often cut his hands cracking ice and slept on tables. Upon his arrival back in Vancouver after trips to Calgary, Pattison and other crew members would be unloaded at the CPR rail yards on the north shore of False Creek.

Pattison recalled that summer job recently as he returned to the CPR’s former western terminus site. The place he visited is now better known as the site of Expo 86 — the world’s fair that opened 20 years ago on May 2 and is now seen as the pivotal event marking Vancouver’s late-20th-century coming of age.

Pattison stood along the False Creek waterfront and recalled how the area was once home to railroad tracks, factories and lumber mills. These days, the land along the inlet is dominated by a forest of towers inhabited by white-collar middle-class professionals, many of whom shop at the nearby upscale Urban Fare, owned by Pattison himself.

On the afternoon of his visit to the scene of Expo, Pattison ran into Vancouver Mayor Sam Sullivan and venerable band leader Dal Richards. Both men live in nearby condos built as part of the post-Expo real-estate boom downtown.

“It’s really wonderful — what’s happened in downtown Vancouver,” said Pattison.

“Where we were and where we are now is a big difference, no question about that.”

As a point in time, Expo stands at the juncture of two Vancouvers — the old village on the edge of the rainforest and the new post-industrial landing strip for capital.

Pattison said the 165-day fair, which drew Diana, the Princess of Wales, Liberace, the Soviet Soyuz spacecraft and your aunt and uncle from small-town Saskatchewan, succeeded beyond everyone’s expectations.

“But it seems like the traffic never went back to what it used to be,” said Pattison, who was famously paid $1 to be chairman and later president of the Expo Corporation.

“Our slogan was invite the world. And they came. They showed up.”

Yes, and as some people have lamented, the world stayed.

Which was the hope of most of Expo’s political and business backers all along.

Kris Olds, a geography professor at the University of Wisconsin, has written about how Expo was the “perfect resolution” to the desire of B.C.’s political and business elites to forge links with successful Asian economies and become a centre for Pacific Rim commerce.

Expo’s motto was “World in Motion — World in Touch,” which in hindsight is apt considering how Vancouver used Expo to get in touch with — or grab onto — a fast-moving world.

Vancouver became busier and less affordable. Expo critics in a recent Discover Vancouver bulletin board on the Internet said: “All the funky little boutiques on Robson became chain stores. Traffic congestion increased. Rents went up, housing costs went up. My earning capacity did not. Expo 86, I hate you.”

But as a character in the highly popular Spirit Lodge, at the General Motors Pavilion, said: “To stop moving is to die.”

Traffic, chain stores and high-priced real estate notwithstanding, Vancouver became more livable, more sophisticated and a heck of a lot more interesting — post-Expo.

A new middle class came to live in Vancouver’s downtown close to the city’s booming service and information economy. Vancouver became the envy of city planners across North America.

Besides marketing Vancouver to the world, Expo was accompanied by significant government-funded infrastructure, including Canada Place, Science World, the Plaza of Nations, SkyTrain and the Cambie Bridge.

So Expo’s significance extended beyond the fair, which was organized according to the dictum set by its first president, the American Michael Bartlett: “You get ’em on the site, you feed ’em, you make ’em dizzy, and you scare the s— out of ’em.”

“I don’t want to downplay the fair at all,” said Vancouver planning director Larry Beasley, “but at other world’s fairs, amazing things happened, but not much else happened afterwards.

“In our case, Expo was just the beginning because it happened at such a pivotal moment when we were in search of a new image for our city.”

Expo Ernie — or at least the remote-controlled voice of Expo’s mascot — couldn’t agree more.

“Vancouver had a different feel to it afterwards. Vancouver wasn’t a secret anymore,” said GraigWheeler, who guided one of the six Expo Ernie robots on promotional tours and at the fair.

Wheeler, who talked to crowds through a microphone in Ernie’s chest, said what he loved about Expo wasn’t any particular exhibit or pavilion, but just the energy that came with “having a community the size of Kamloops or Kelowna all in one place. I was just happy sitting at a cafe or The Unicorn pub and watching people.”

But the best thing about Expo, said Wheeler, now a landscaper, was that it changed how we saw our city. “We weren’t that sleepy little city. We were now able to hold our heads up and expect that someone from another part of the world would know about Vancouver. It produced civic pride.”

Expo 86 ran between May 2 and Oct. 13, 1986. The final count of 22 million visits far exceeded the fair’s original projection of 13.7 million. Expo’s total cost of $1.5 billion was shared by Ottawa and Victoria and corporate participants. The $311-million deficit was covered by provincial lottery revenues.

There are more numbers: The average daily attendance was 120,000 and the single-day record was 341,806, 54 nations participated, there were 70 restaurants and 43,000 entertainment performances, over 25,000 full-time jobs were created for six months, $20 million was spent on amusement ride tickets and $94 million on food, including 4.2 million hot dogs.

Expo was truly an event of mega-consumption.

And a good investment, according to conventional wisdom these days.

“Expo gave Vancouver the attention of the world in ways that we didn’t have before,” said Bob Williams, the former NDP cabinet minister who like many on the political left was a critic of Expo when Socred premier Bill Bennett first proposed it in 1980.

Williams described himself as a “reverse snob” about Expo: initially he felt Expo was a frivolous event, a bread-and-circuses project designed to make the masses forget about the economic hard times under Bennett in the early ’80s.

“But Expo really did have a substantial impact,” continued Williams, saying it catapulted Vancouver’s presence in the global marketplace ahead by about two decades — and set the stage for the new downtown.

“In a sense it was a preliminary to the downtown Vancouver, which we now celebrate and enjoy.”

Inadvertently, Bennett set the stage for the dense livable city state, said Williams, which was later designed by Vancouver city planners inspired by left-wing urban theorist Jane Jacobs.

Bennett himself is proud of Expo 86 and its legacy — proud enough to make a rare public appearance on Tuesday, speaking to the Vancouver Board of Trade about the Expo experience.

In an interview recently, Bennett said Expo came together because of a variety of factors. He recalled how then-Socred tourism minister Grace McCarthy travelled in 1978 to London where she met with Patrick Reid, who was Canada’s high commissioner.

McCarthy was wondering how to celebrate Vancouver’s centenary. During their lunch, Reid told McCarthy that he was also president of the Bureau of International Expositions in Paris. McCarthy asked why Vancouver had never been chosen as a site for a world exposition and Reid said, “because it never asked.”

(Actually, McCarthy first suggested to Reid that perhaps Vancouver could borrow the Mona Lisa from the Louvre in Paris and make that the centrepiece of Vancouver’s celebration — but that’s another story.)

Over time, McCarthy’s desire for a world’s fair in Vancouver coincided, recalled Bennett, with his government’s plans to build a stadium in Vancouver and get a rapid transit system and a convention centre. The transportation fair, originally called Transpo 86, was seen as way to leverage federal funds for some of the projects.

In late 1979, two Bennett advisers — Paul Manning and Larry Bell — recommended that the world’s fair be linked to the stadium and built on the False Creek lands owned by the CPR.

In January 1980, Bennett, facing poor opinion polls and a declining economy, announced the development of British Columbia Place, which would tie all these goals together, with Expo being the exclamation point set for 1986.

“I think for us it took some courage,” said Bennett, looking back. “B.C. had been in a downturn with forestry not at its best, and sometimes, you need to put things together to create excitement so that people can feel more confident.

“And getting the fair, the stadium and SkyTrain and everything else did that.”

Everything came together, but not always easily. Expo’s first president, Bartlett, was fired by Pattison in 1985 for allegedly being a big spender and not having the sensitivity required to run a public corporation beholden to government. Pattison blew a gasket when he walked into the Expo parking lot and spotted the $50,000 Mercedes Benz bought by Bartlett with public funds.

Bartlett later rejected Pattison’s accusations of extravagance, saying that he paid the difference himself between the car and the lowest price of any of Expo’s leased cars.

Bartlett also said that it was him — not Pattison — who “took Expo from a small regional experience to a large international event that was an exceptional success.”

A dispute between B.C.’s building trades unions and the Socred government almost killed the entire fair. The Socred government wanted a no-strike guarantee and it also wanted the Expo site to be open to non-union firms. Pattison negotiated a series of deals for labour peace but Bennett scuttled them. At one point in 1984 the labour situation looked so bleak that Pattison recommended to Bennett that he cancel the fair — advice the premier declined.

A deal was eventually struck with the unions, but Expo still looked like a dicey proposition. In 1984, Vancouver Sun columnist Denny Boyd wrote: “Expo has to die and Premier Bill Bennett must do the killing.”

Another Sun columnist, Marjorie Nichols, compared the Socreds to the dictators of impoverished Ethiopia who staged a gala banquet replete with imported French wines. She called Expo a “big, glittering, attention-riveting, reality-deflecting untruth about the province of B.C.”

Expo generated bad press for B.C. because of the eviction of low-income residents from residential hotels and rooming houses being upgraded for the Expo tourist trade. Olaf Solheim, an 88-year-old Downtown Eastside resident facing eviction, committed suicide. Legendary folksinger Pete Seeger staged a free concert in his memory.

But by the time Prince Charles and Diana opened Expo, former critics of the fair were prepared to attend, including then-mayor Mike Harcourt and prominent New Democrats.

Socred-haters were tortured over whether to attend an event so identified with Bennett, but many set aside their consciences and walked through the turnstiles.

There were a few missteps: Diana fainted following a three-hour Expo tour. More tragically, a nine-year-old Nanaimo girl was crushed to death between a rotating theatre stand and a wall in the Canadian pavilion.

The foreign press loved Expo, including E.J. Kahn of The New Yorker, who gave the fair “somewhere between a B-plus and an A-minus,” and remarked: “It’s not so much Expo 86’s substance that accounts for its charm as it is its style. The scene has an ambience of gaiety, even whimsy. You feel good just walking around.”

Less enamoured of the middle-brow Expo was Saturday Night magazine’s Robert Fulford who wrote: “The fair was reasonably well-attended, but it was a success in no other way. The exhibits were seldom adventurous or surprising and were often mundane. The films were in most cases predictable. The architecture, with few exceptions, was commonplace or worse.”

But the customers, who are always right, kept walking through the Expo site, with few complaints, except about the lineups.

And the press, once so caustic about Expo, jumped on the bandwagon when the nightly fireworks began.

Sun columnist Vaughn Palmer noted just days after Expo’s closure that “this time all the negative nellies were wrong and the cock-eyed optimists were right.” He added: “So long beautiful. We’ll miss you.”

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In hindsight, Bennett’s Expo is seen as a great idea well-executed. But it was the timing that made Expo so significant in the long term.

Expo occurred just before a major jump in immigration between Hong Kong and Vancouver, due to Hong Kong’s 1997 repatriation to China, and the 1989 Tiananmen Square crisis.

Mega-events such as world’s fairs are designed to attract potential property investors, both local and foreign.

Among the more than 22 million visits to the fair were many Asian investors looking for places to park their money.

And among these were relatives and business associates of Li Ka-shing, Hong Kong’s richest property tycoon, who would later buy the entire 80-hectare Expo site from the B.C. government for $320 million.

Li wanted to provide his son, Victor, with a high-profile project to develop his expertise and establish a more significant North American base for the Li empire, said the University of Wisconsin’s Olds.

The urban geographer believes that the purchase of the Expo lands was even more critical to Vancouver’s development than Expo 86 itself, though it was the exposition that set the stage for the dramatic purchase.

While that purchase has been criticized as a poor deal made by a privatization-obsessed premier Bill Vander Zalm, others say it was a striking gesture that attracted more off-shore investment to the region and set the stage for the massive real estate project built by Concord Pacific under design guidelines set by city hall planners.

“Expo was quite pivotal because it provided a way to bring this huge piece of property into development in a generation,” said planning director Beasley.

He said the sale of the entire site to one developer gave city hall the leverage to get better design and more amenities than if the land had been sold piecemeal over time.

Expo 86’s influence can be overstated, said Olds, because the flow of immigrants and capital from East Asia would have come eventually, given the uncertainty in that region and changes in Canada’s immigration polices, including the business immigration program.

“Expo was in many ways more of a marker or an accelerator rather than the cause of Vancouver’s transition from the old-style Vancouver to a city with a more global metropolitan and cosmopolitan identity.”

Lance Berelowitz, author of Dream City: Vancouver and the Global Imagination, moved to Vancouver from his native South Africa via London in the year of Expo.

He recalled sitting with his wife on the deck of their rented Mount Pleasant apartment in the summer of 1986 and watching Expo’s nightly fireworks. He visited Expo a few times, failed to find much “intellectual depth,” but “it was a fun fair with fireworks, distractions and late-night booze.”

He said Expo alerted the rest of the world to the fact that Vancouver was “a beautiful place with undervalued property relative to other cities and people began to snap up the waterfront property with front rows to the city’s views.”

Berelowitz said Expo “was like Vancouver coming out at a debutant ball: ‘Hi guys. We’re here, we’re sexy and we have this to sell. What do you want to buy?'”

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

 

Luggage with a build in scale – weigh to go!

Sunday, April 23rd, 2006

Gene Sloan
Province

Just when you thought luggage couldn’t get any better, here comes this clever innovation: a bag with a built-in digital scale that tells you the exact weight of what you’ve packed.

The Solutions Luggage Collection from Ricardo Beverly Hills is designed for travellers who get dinged with the $25 US fees many U.S. airlines have begun charging for bags over 50 pounds (about 23 kg).

“It’s a stunningly simple solution to a very real problem,” says Michele Marini Pittenger, president of Travel Goods Association.

Though flyers can weigh their bags at home before departing, “it’s more difficult on the return trip after you’ve accumulated souvenirs.”

Made of high-strength nylon, the Solutions line is the first-place winner of the Travel Goods Association Product Innovation Award.

The luggage comes in two sizes, 63.5 and 71 cm, and three colours — black, teal and berry. Both sizes cost about $200 US (information: ricardobeverlyhills.com).

It rolls out this month at Macy’s stores and will be at macys.com and ebags.com by month’s end. Check with luggage retail outlets in your area.

AWARD RUNNERS-UP

– The Cartdesk: This nifty carry-on bag has a built-in desktop that flips out in seconds, offering a solid work surface. Big enough for a laptop, it holds up to 14 kg. The bag arrives in luggage stores in July and will cost $129 US. Information: cartdesk.com.

Inventor Kenny Johnson, who has launched a start-up company called Cartdesk to make the bag, says he got the idea from his wife, an expert witness who spends hours sitting outside courtrooms and asked him to design a portable desk.

“To my surprise, no mobile portable desks existed,” he says.

– Landor & Hawa’s Frameless Molded Luggage: The latest line, launched in September, is built with a moulded shell that makes it tougher than many framed rollerboards. A three-piece set costs $250. It’s available at luggage-specialty stores and websites such as bagsbuy.com.

© The Vancouver Province 2006

 

Learn the art of a home tour

Friday, April 21st, 2006

First, know that not everyone wants to see your expensive redesign, and if they do, they don’t want to hear every detail

Kelvin Browne
Sun

If you’ve bought a new home, completed a significant renovation or are just very house proud, you’ve likely given tours of your abode to friends and neighbours. From this experience, you know there’s an art to being a tour guide at home. But by giving tours, you’ve also likely learned there should be etiquette for those who are being shown around.

Of course, you first have to ensure the people on the spin around your home actually want to see it. As difficult as it is to imagine, some people aren’t interested in real estate, even yours, and a tour for them is like looking at endless photographs of strangers’ children or watching someone’s dog do tricks. On the other hand, some people are too shy to ask for a tour, but their reticence should not be confused with indifference. I’m a fairly good judge of who wants a tour, however, I’m still tentative when I suggest giving one, so guests can easily say, “how about that drink first” and then subtly ignore the offer.

Conversely, as a visitor, if you want a tour, ask for it. Everyone is proud of what they’ve spent a bundle on. If you don’t want a tour, well, don’t ask — but never, never refuse one if it’s offered. If you say no, you might as well tell your hosts their house is so ugly or boring it’s not worth a five-minute perusal.

Always expect that, if you have a new or intriguing house, people will want to have a look. Make the beds, put laundry away and tidy up. If you don’t do that much, a tour gives too much information. Mess reduces a tour’s commentary to excuses rather than sprightly banter about how you’ve turned down several home magazines who want your home for a cover story.

If you’re on a tour, never barge ahead of the guide. The door to the master bedroom is closed because it’s not on the tour. And contain your curiosity; it’s likely because the room’s not finished, not because it’s become the secret site for satanic rituals. Children’s rooms are especially sensitive areas. They’re never neat, but should always be private; if the child is in residence, snooping will create a big issue and your host will pay for the invasion of privacy for weeks.

Only one person should conduct the tour. Husband-and-wife teams fight when they give jointly conducted tours. Ditto gay couples.

When conducting a tour, walk briskly. No one is that interested in every detail. If they’re fascinated by something specific, they’ll pause and ask. Respond to questions, don’t lecture and never prompt a compliment: “Isn’t that wonderful … I said, isn’t…”

Be particularly careful about comparing your home to others. For instance, saying “I always hated my old side-split,” will undoubtedly pinpoint the exact feature the person you’re showing around loves most about his house.

When you’re the tour guest, walk briskly. You’re neither buying the house nor doing a psychological assessment of its owner by studying his or her possessions. Never touch anything. Don’t say something nice about everything — that’s too phony. Don’t even stare too intently at things, it makes the tour guide/owner nervous. (Something wrong? Do they think I shoplifted that lamp?)

If you’re giving the tour, be modest. Acknowledge the praise, but stop yourself from going on and on. Never discuss the price of anything other than to suggest it cost more than you thought it would, as this is, obviously, a truism all can relate to. If you’re asked about the cost, be vague (“I honestly can’t remember the cost of anything, it’s too traumatic.”) Besides, it’s more amusing to let people guess what things cost. My experience has been that people tend to think you’ve spent more than you did.

If you’re the guest, gush but not too much. If you can find nothing you like, fake it. Never remain silent on a tour; your hosts will spend the rest of the visit pondering what your lack of enthusiasm means. Avoid any sense of one-upmanship. Comments such as “Love your sink, we bought the deluxe version of it” are cruel, even if accurate.

When you’ve finished giving the tour, stop talking immediately about your home. It’s difficult, I know, but your guests have heard plenty. But if you’ve just been taken on a tour, and are now finally getting a cocktail, don’t stop talking about what a wonderful job your hosts have done or what great taste they have. They can’t get enough of this.

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

City hotel pairs up with B.C. wineries

Tuesday, April 18th, 2006

Boutique hotel for wine lovers

John Bermingham
Province

Alex Limongelli, of the Executive Hotel Vintage Park on Howe Street in Vancouver, says the focus is to educated guests about B.C. wineries. Photograph by : Wayne Leidenfrost, The Province

The glasses runneth over at the Executive Hotel Vintage Park in Vancouver.

B.C.’s first wine-themed hotel has launched a unique partnership with 43 B.C. wineries, offering a boutique hotel setting for wine lovers.

At the hotel, 40 of the wineries have wine-designated rooms, with their own brass plaque and artwork.

B.C. wines are promoted at hotel wine-tasting events every evening, with the noble grapes being paired with meals at the hotel restaurant.

“Our focus at the hotel is to educate people about the different wineries in B.C.,” said Alex Limongelli, the hotel’s general manager, during a tour of the hotel yesterday.

Executive Hotel Vintage Park is also finalizing packages for wine tourists who want a quick tour of B.C. wineries.

The hotel will offer guests a rental car, map and picnic basket (with a suitable wine selection) for those who want to visit B.C. wineries in the Okanagan.

“It’s more like an individual journey through the B.C. wineries,” said Limongelli. “There’s a lot of smaller B.C. wineries that go un-noticed. So we want to educate people.”

Farida Sayani, owner of the B.C.-owned Executive Hotel chain, said the program follows on the success of its wine-themed hotel in San Francisco, which has partnered with Napa Valley wineries for years.

“B.C. wine is getting so popular throughout the world,” said Sayani.

“Making this a wine-themed hotel and working with the wineries so closely, we are able to actually promote B.C. wines to tourists and our customers.”

Sayani said Mission Hill winery is the latest to come on-board.

Angela Lively of Vincor International Inc., which owns numerous wineries including Jackson-Triggs, Sumac Ridge and Hawthorn Mountain, called it a ‘win-win’ partnership.

“It’s exposure for our brands,” said Lively. “We have a partnership with the hotel where they sell a lot of our wines. It’s to support them in their concept as well.

“We’re helping them support their theme and they’re helping us support our brands.”

Jeff McDonald of the B.C. Wine Institute in Kelowna, said wineries are keen to get into wine tourism.

“The industry thinks it’s great that partnerships are emerging like this,” he said .

Sales of B.C. wine grew from $100 million in 2004 to $131 million last year, and have an annual growth rate of 20 per cent.

“The growth in the wine industry has been explosive,” he said. “Hotels and restaurants that want to offer quality experiences want to feature B.C. VQA wines as part of the experience they offer.”

McDonald said B.C.’s wineries are currently developing a strategic plan for wine tourism.

© The Vancouver Province 2006

135 International Newspapers available from new kiosk in Major Centres

Saturday, April 15th, 2006

MEDIA I An Ottawa company can print 135 international newspapers from its kiosk

Kristin Goff
Sun

OTTAWA – An Ottawa company started by a couple of self-described “news junkies” has begun offering the first service in Canada to print international newspapers from a kiosk on demand.

The kiosk, slightly bigger than an automated teller machine, is linked to about 135 electronic newspapers, ranging from the Shanghai Daily in China to Libero Sports of Peru, using a system owned by Satellite Newspaper Corp., based in The Hague.

To operate, the customer inserts a credit card, touches the screen to select a publication and within a minute or two gets a tabloid-sized newspaper in black and white. Prices range from around $4 US to $6 US depending on the size of the paper.

While there are services in major Canadian cities which download electronic newspapers from the Internet, print and deliver them to newsstands or specific customers, this is the first stand-alone kiosk system in Canada, said Ted Britton, co-founder of International Newspaper Kiosks.

The Ottawa company reached an agreement with Satellite Newspapers to introduce the system elsewhere in Canada if a trial run proves successful over the next six months.

Britton, who owns two news and magazine shops in Ottawa, and his partner Shahab Bakhtyar, a former photojournalist, hope to roll out print-on-demand kiosks later in Vancouver, Toronto, and Montreal.

Even in an online world with electronic newspapers, Bakhtyar says he’s confident there will be plenty of demand for the printed word.

“A lot of times when we introduce the machine, the immediate reaction is, ‘I can go on the Internet and read it. Why do I want it?’,” he says.

But there are many reasons why travellers, business and government officials, foreign-born Canadians and others will want them, says Bakhtyar, who immigrated from Iran more than 20 years ago.

Online newspapers don’t always provide the full edition of the paper and some require subscriptions to get access. People also need to have computers and connections. And lastly, there’s a comfort factor. Some people just like the convenience of a newspaper they can hold in their hands, he says.

The newspaper printing machine quietly began operation last week from a seemingly odd location — a small Ottawa restaurant which Bakhtyar owns.

In addition to selling newspapers directly from the kiosk, which they hope to relocate to a busy downtown location, the partners also plan to set up a delivery service to bring the latest edition of selected papers to customers each day. As an extra, they can sell advertising to run on the screen of the kiosk and to print out on newspapers.

For the business to work, they figure they need to sell a minimum of 200 newspapers daily. But they hope to sell many, many more.

“Ottawa is a good place for us with the embassies, foreign affairs, hotels and tourist trade,” said Britton, who already distributes international publications to various government departments and embassies.

There are many more newspapers available through Satellite Newspapers than are now available in most Canadian cities. The print-on-demand papers are updated as new editions are produced, which is also a benefit over two- or three-day-old papers shipped from overseas, he said.

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

 

Local firm’s travel website gets top marks

Saturday, April 15th, 2006

MYTRIPJOURNAL.COM I Forbes magazine praises site, which lets users post blogs to record their trips

Brian Morton
Sun

A Vancouver-based Internet company that allows travellers to post online blogs in some of the world’s most remote locations has been listed by Forbes magazine as one of the best travel websites anywhere.

MyTripJournal.com, which provides travellers with a Web journal to record their trips and stay in touch with friends and family, was started two years ago in the home of Dan Parlow.

“[We have] tens of thousands of clients all over the world,” said Parlow, a lawyer who quit practising law in January to run his website full-time, in an interview Wednesday. “Our biggest markets are in the U.S. and the U.K.”

Parlow said that MyTripJournal.com, which provides online travellers with Web-based tools to draw up virtual maps so friends and family can follow their footsteps, read postings of travel notes and view photos, began two years ago when he and his wife Faye completed a 16-month trip around the world and a four-month trek through China with their two young children.

He said they “tested the waters” at Internet sites in China and quickly realized the idea had great potential.

“The response was overwhelming. We got so many e-mails from people saying it was wonderful reading our journals. That’s when we started thinking of it as a commercial enterprise.”

Parlow said that after returning to Vancouver, they formed a joint venture company with Vancouver software developer GroupInfoWeb.com, which handles the technical end of the business.

He and Faye are responsible for the company’s business development.

Parlow said that GroupInfoWeb president Paul Melhus initially offered to provide them with an interactive map of China before they started their trip two years ago “that would show our position as we moved around and that would link to our daily journal entries.

“That started it.”

Parlow said their website not only provides travellers with a simple tool to keep up an online journal to record their trip and stay in touch with friends and family — without ads — but includes text and photo upload capabilities and messaging and the MyTripJournal IntelliMap system.

Features include the ability to post personal videos, store thousands of print-quality photos and receive a full archive on CD or DVD at the end of the trip.

Viewers can also take various trips by viewing the journals of travellers, he added.

Parlow said that clients can “test drive” the service before signing up for a full version. If they want to continue, prices range from $25 for a standard 60-day version to $99 for a premium one-year version. “All [clients] need is an Internet connection and [the ability] to know how to type.”

Parlow said their website appeals to many types of travellers, from those who visit remote locations around the globe to RVers travelling across North America.

“It had to be fast-loading from slow Internet connections and be super simple to use,” he said of their business plan. “We have a large number of travellers who are frequently in remote locations with slow Internet access.”

Parlow noted that his company has signed partnerships with companies such as Lonely Planet, a travel guidebook company, and The Good Sam Club, an RV owners’ association, to develop “custom brand” sites.

According to the Forbes article, personal travel blogs have overtaken mass e-mails as the tool of choice for staying in touch with family and friends while on the road.

“We like MyTripJournal.com for its colourful and easy-to-use features like ‘Find a Friend’s website’ and the customizable world map,” Forbes said in listing MyTripJournal as one of the 13 best travel websites. “Even if you aren’t currently travelling, browsing the site allows you to experience someone else’s vacation vicariously.”

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

 

Dead man receives $218,000,000,000,000 phone bill

Friday, April 14th, 2006

Sun

KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysia’s largest telephone company blamed a debt collection agency Thursday for a misplaced decimal point that resulted in a $218 trillion US phone bill being sent to a dead man.

Telekom Malaysia said the agency mistakenly sent out a notice demanding payment of 806,400,000,000,000.01 ringgit ($218 trillion) instead of the actual 80.640000000000001 ringgit ($21.80).

The notice threatened court action if the bill was not paid.

“It is a mistake,” Telekom spokeswoman Mariam Bevi Batcha told The Associated Press. “It’s clearly not Telekom Malaysia’s fault … we have given a stern warning to the debt collection agency because they sent out the notice.”

She declined to name the debt collection agency.

She said the mix-up had been explained to Yahaya Wahab, who received the bill on behalf of his late father.

Yahaya said earlier this week that he had disconnected his late father’s phone line in January and settled an 84-ringgit ($23) bill then. Yahaya said he nearly fainted when he saw the inflated bill.

Mariam said the company was waiting for a full report from the agency on the matter, and was not able to say whether any apology would be made to Yahaya.

Government-linked Telekom Malaysia Bhd. is the country’s largest telecommunications company.

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

 

Japan to raise interest rates that can cause markets to suffer

Wednesday, April 12th, 2006

End of easy money likely to have adverse impact on ‘carry trade’

Hans Greimel
Sun

A pedestrian passes by an HSBC Tokyo branch office on Tuesday. For five years, Bank of Japan’s soon-to-end zero interest rate policy helped pump up economies, stocks and foreign currencies. Photograph by : Koji Sasahara, Associated Press

TOKYO — Imagine a bank that doles out loans but charges no interest. For five years, that’s what Japan has been for the world economy — an all-purpose lender with next-to-nothing borrowing costs thanks to the central bank’s zero interest rate policy.

The trend helped pump up economies, stocks and foreign currencies from the United States to Australia. But concerns are mounting it could all unravel on a global scale with the Bank of Japan’s decision last month to finally tighten the taps on all the easy money.

At risk is a flow of funds known as the carry trade, an investment strategy that has lured people to Japan to borrow money on the cheap and invest it overseas for higher returns.

No one is sure how much money is at stake, but economists say stopping the flow could prompt global investors to sell their holdings of stocks, bonds and other assets outside Japan, particularly in the United States.

That could weaken the U.S. dollar, push up yields on U.S. Treasury bonds and boost interest rates in the U.S. and Europe.

“When it starts to reverse, it could lead to some real shock waves in the market,” warned Kenneth Courtis, the Asia vice-chairman of Goldman Sachs Ltd. in Tokyo.

The carry trade is driven by the gap between near-zero per cent interest rates in Japan and higher rates elsewhere in the world.

In an attempt to bail the world’s second-largest economy out of more than a decade of doldrums, the BOJ implemented a super-loose monetary policy five years ago to make it easy for companies to borrow funds.

Not only did the central bank hold interest rates close to zero per cent, it flooded commercial banks with about 35 trillion yen ($338 billion Cdn) in daily liquidity, nearly six times the amount banks actually needed, by many economists’ estimates.

It didn’t take long for global investors to start exploiting all this cash sloshing around at close to zero per cent.

They borrowed money from Japanese banks and invested it overseas for higher returns. In the 12-country Euro zone, the key interest rate is 2.5 per cent, while the U.S. benchmark rates are now 4.75 per cent.

Other popular destinations have been New Zealand, where the key interest rate is 7.25 per cent, and Iceland, where the central bank recently hiked rates to 11.5 per cent.

On March 9, however, the BOJ declared Japan’s economy is back on track and soon ready for higher interest rates — a trend that will squeeze the profit margin, or spread, on carry trades, making them riskier and less attractive.

It’s hard to know to what degree — and where — investors will move their money, but many experts believe that U.S. markets could suffer as a result.

© The Vancouver Sun 2006

Vancouver is No. 15 in the world in Lonely Planet survey of 200 cities

Sunday, April 9th, 2006

JOSEPH KULA
Province

So, how do you think Vancouver rated in Lonely Planet’s massive The Cities Book — A Journey Through the Best Cities in the World (Raincoast)?
   Very nicely, thank you, placing 15th out of 200 cities around the globe. We even beat out rivals such as Rio de Janiero (17), our sister city of Montréal (20), Florence (27), Krakow (30), Athens (38), Venice (40) and Los Angeles (49).
   The other Canadian cities that made the list are Toronto (31) and Quebec City (95).
   And No. 200? It’s Ashgabat (The City of Love, in Arabic). Haven’t heard of it? Neither have I, but this city in Turkmenistan is described as one of the oddest.
   Each city gets a two-page spread and, refreshingly, the photos used aren’t your predictable picture-postcard variety.
   The text also is not the usual pablum dished up by guidebooks. Instead, we get the following gems (here we use Vancouver as an example):
   Typical Vancouverite: “With the knowledge that they live in an all-round ‘top foreign city’ known for its ‘best quality of life,’ have a laid-back mind-set, happy to be part of a pioneering Pacific Rim city where marijuana is tolerated and the foodie scene has exploded.”
   Strengths (among others): Vancouver Art Gallery, Wreck Beach, Stanley Park, Museum of Anthropology and Coal Harbour seawalk.
   Weaknesses: The rain — 170 days a year; house prices; blocked-off streets for film sets.
   Gold star: Granville Island (need we say more).
   Cityspeak (a little bit of editorializing): “Safe-injection sites — controlling drug use or promoting drug abuse.”
   Starring role in . . .
(somewhat dated): The X Files, Double Jeopardy, Douglas Coupland novels.
   Import: Hong Kong/ Chinese citizens and money; Hollywood productions.
   Export: Greenpeace, Generation X, k.d. lang, Michael J. Fox, Pamela Anderson — you get the picture.
   All in all, it fairly profiles the character of our city, albeit in simplistic terms.
   So, which city is No. 1 in Lonely Planet’s eyes? You guessed it. It’s Paris, the City of Light.
   It’s not surprising, considering that Paris draws more tourists than any other city in the world and that France is the No. 1 country for tourism.
   If you want to see how your favourite city rates, be prepared to shell out $65 for the privilege.
   It’s the cheapest tour of the world’s finest cities you’ll ever find.