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Summertime and the living is easy

Local leaders recall their best summer vacation memories
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Councillor Jason Blackman-Wulff at the Brackendale Fisherman's Park with his dogs Apollo and Jasper.

ummer will end soon enough, and childhood as well,” said author George R.R. Martin. Hard to believe a fellow responsible for the violent TV series Game of Thrones could be so whimsical and profound. And so right.

There truly is something magical about summertime as a kid.

Whether it is spent on a vacation far away from home or outside in the yard playing with friends, for children, summer is full of play, nature and the relaxation of rules, if they are lucky.

The Chief caught up with some members of District of ӣƵcouncil to uncover the favourite summer memories of our local leaders.

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Coun. Karen Elliott at Newport Beach. - David Buzzard

Away at camp

Coun. Karen Elliott credits her time away at summer camp as a girl to her living in ӣƵas an adult.

“My summers were split between neighbourhood-roaming with my friends – playing capture the flag and kick the can – and the rest of my summer was spent at summer camp,” recalled Elliott, who grew up in Toronto and Calgary and spent most of her Augusts at a camp at Algonquin Provincial Park in southeastern Ontario.

Her parents were not campers, Elliott noted, joking that their idea of roughing it was to stay at a hotel.

“If it hadn’t been for summer camp, I never would have learned to appreciate the great outdoors, and how to backpack and go on canoe trips. I would never have learned any of that from my family,” she said.

“Without summer camp I likely wouldn’t be living in ӣƵnow. I would likely be in some urban environment.”

The most enjoyable aspects of camp were the canoe trips and access to the lake every day, she said.

“And learning all the arts of living in the outdoors: starting a fire, building a shelter, all those sorts of things, and the camaraderie of living in a cabin.”

Elliott also met Squamish’s future mayor, Patricia Heintzman, at summer camp, though the two weren’t friends at the time because they were in different age groups.

Elliott has passed on the fun of her summer camp experience to her own children; her daughter went away to her first week-long camp at four years old.

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Mayor Patricia Heintzman at her ӣƵhome. - David Buzzard

On the water

For Mayor Patricia Heintzman’s family, summer has always been connected to Georgian Bay, a large bay of Lake Huron in Ontario where her family has a cottage.

“Being at the bay at the cottage was formative,” Heintzman recalled recently.

Summer activities included swimming, kayaking, windsurfing and other water adventures.

Canoe trips were a huge part of growing up, she added.

Her childhood family took two long vacations outside of Ontario that stand out in her memory, Heintzman said: one to the Rocky Mountains and B.C. and the other was to California and Arizona. Both trips involved a flight and then long car drives, which Heintzman didn’t tolerate well.

“I was the car sick one,” she said with a laugh. “I was usually drugged up on Gravol every time we were in the car.”

She still gets motion sick. “You would think you would grow out of something like that, but no.”

“We did everything from going into Yosemite National Park and we did a hike in the Grand Canyon and climbed Half Dome. We did a rafting trip, ” she said.

Going to summer camp was also a part of Heintzman’s youth growing up in Ontario.

“Canoe tripping,” was a fun memory from summer camp.

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Coun. Peter Kent at the ӣƵAthletic Club. - David Buzzard

Time with dad

Coun. Peter Kent’s parents split up when he was four years old and his favourite summer memories all include the somewhat rare time he got to spend with his father at Big Bar Ranch Guest Ranch, which is about 44 kilometres north of Clinton in the South Cariboo.

“That ranch has a long history. It was founded by my great-great uncle, Harry Marriott, and Peg Marriott,” Kent said, adding the ranch was founded as a dude ranch.

Kent spent two or three weeks at the ranch on summer holidays.

“It was just me and him, and I usually didn’t really have a lot of time with him.”

Kent’s father passed away in 1989 while Kent was in Mexico working as a stunt double for Arnold Schwarzenegger in the movie Total Recall.

All told, Kent thinks he spent seven years with his dad.

Together at the ranch during the summers, father and son would fish and go for long horse rides.

“We would go out in the morning and just ride through these beautiful poplar forests and along the edge of the rivers and around the back of the lake,” he recalled.

He would also help his dad around the ranch by bringing in hay bales.

“The [combined] smell of horse pee and hay and horse crap in the barn and oiled leather saddles – whenever I smell that smell it is like I am right back there again as a kid,” he said with a hearty laugh.

Kids were much freer when Kent was a child, he recalled.

“My dad would be on the deck of the lodge with his buddies having a beer and I would be… out in the middle of the lake in a row boat fishing and I would hear him call, ‘Peter!’ and I would row back and then tie the boat up and he would help me clean my fish.”


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A young Jason Blackman-Wulff at a provincial park. - Submitted photo

Day tripping

Jason Blackman-Wulff recalls happy summertime memories of day trips to provincial parks located short car away from his Manitoba childhood home.

“That is pretty much what we always did in the summer,” he said. “It was before the days of cheap Mexico vacations and stuff like that.”

Blackman-Wulff grew up in Oakbank, a small community about 15 kilometres east of Winnipeg.

Looking back, the easygoing summer days were hassle and chaos free. Camping in a tent was a special occasion, while day trips were common summer excursions.

The closest provincial park was about a five-minute drive away, he said.

“It was a smaller lake, but it had a campground.”

Bigger trips were made to Grand Beach on Lake Winnipeg, which has stretches of white sand dunes.

“Our thing was always going swimming and baking in the sun,” Blackman-Wulff said.

“I can remember many days where the sun was starting to set and we were begging our parents to allow us to stay for ‘just one more swim.’”

The trips brought generations of his family together.

“The little kids, the teenagers, the parents and even the grandparents would come and we would set up the umbrellas for the grandparents so they could be in the shade – that was really fun,” he said.

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A teenaged Susan Chapelle during one of her summers at the CNE in Toronto working as a rigger for rock bands. - Submitted photo

Working summers

Coun. Susan Chapelle grew up in Regent Park, a neighbourhood in downtown Toronto, and her favourite summers were spent in her teen years working as a stagehand for musical acts at the Canadian National Exhibition, which is like Vancouver’s PNE.

Though she didn’t appreciate it at the time, big name bands played the stages she worked. In August of 1988 alone the acts included Neil Young, Aerosmith, Rod Stewart, Bob Dylan and The Alarm, Hall & Oates, Willie Nelson and Steve Winwood.

Her first big stage build was for Pink Floyd that same summer.

“It was terrifying,” she recalled, adding she was the only woman working in the stagehand union, the International Association of Theatrical Stage Employees.

There were no female riggers working in the industry yet.

“I showed up on site dressed in a big bulky sweatshirt, wearing my harness. I had shaved my head to look like a guy,” she said. The men soon figured out there was a female among them because Chapelle was forced to take off her baggy sweatshirt in the heat.

On that first job she had to go 120 feet in the air.

“I somehow ended up on ‘point,’ which meant the last one sitting on the steel standard after all the stabilizing structure around was removed,” she said. “I could see across the roof of the stadium to the rides, and the feeling of freedom and of being a pioneer was exhilarating.”

She became an assistant rigger and worked every summer.

“Those summers at the CNE were the hardest, heaviest work I have done. I am forever grateful for the mentorship of my IA brothers and the 15 summers I spent as a woman in industry.”

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