What a beautiful ending to a glorious first day of 2020 in Vancouver! Westcoast sunsets are spectacular! The intensity of the coral pink in the evening sky took my breath away. The sunset reflecting on the water was almost supernatural. It truly is as the tourism slogan says, "Super. Natural. British Columbia."
Earlier in the day, I took a long walk along Vancouver's False Creek seawall, celebrating the new year, and the new decade. The difficult teen years are over, and we're in the twenties now. There's promise in the air!
The birds and b's were everywhere! Bicycles, backpacks, benches, boats - all the b's jostling for space along the seawall.
So much for birds, let's talk about the b's. B is for bike paths. One quickly learns that the seawall is divided into two paths. One side of the painted white line is for pedestrians, the other, for bicyclists. Boys with backpacks, and mothers with baby buggies, kept to their side of the walkway, to allow couples on bicycles to pedal past on the other side of the dividing line. Even as the afternoon crowd grew larger, the dividing line was never crossed.
As I walked along the path, I overheard pieces of conversations, and observed the little vignettes of life. A young mother, carrying her toddler spread-eagle across her hip, ran down an embankment laughing as she cried, "fly like a bird!" The little one raised her arms, as if to soar. A bride-to-be and her friend were discussing the merits of her fiancees guest list, which to her relief, included most of their mutual friends. An elderly Asian man squinted in the sunlight to see the dragon boats his son was pointing out to him.
B is for buildings. The False Creek of my childhood was an industrial area, often shrouded in thick fog. From the Cambie Bridge, one could still see Sweeney's Cooperage, an old barrel making business, long since replaced by condos and parkettes. Expo '86 and years later, the 2010 Winter Olympics changed the landscape of False Creek. Prior to 1986, only the far West side of the water was developed. Afterwards, development spread Eastward to where Science World, and the Olympic Village condos are located. There's new development along the entire stretch of False Creek.
Photographs Copyright of: Ruth Adams, Widow's Endorphins Photographic Images Incorporated.
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