The CNS Insurance Ramming Speed crew practises in False Creek yesterday ahead of this weekend’s Rio Tinto Alcan Dragonboat Festival. The event is the largest of its kind outside of Hong Kong.
« The festival itself is just pure Vancouver. There’s entertainment. There’s music. There’s food from around the world. There are multicultural events.»
Anita Webster, spokeswomanFrom a scant 12 teams in 1989, Vancouver’s Dragon Boat Festival has grow to upwards of 150 teams and is the largest event of its kind outside of Hong Kong.
“It’s really a team sport,” said Anita Webster, spokeswoman for the festival, which celebrates its 20th anniversary this year. “There’s no most valuable player, there’s no superstars. You’re as good as your ability to keep time and be part of a team.”
The sport’s growing appeal — it is one of the fastest growing sports around — is because of its spirit of camaraderie and because it doesn’t necessarily require a ton of athletic ability, Webster said.
“The festival itself is just pure Vancouver. There’s entertainment. There’s music. There’s food from around the world. There are multicultural events.”
The festival begins tonight when Taoist priests will hold an eye-dotting ceremony to awaken the dragon. As well, a group from the Squamish Nation will paddle around the course in traditional red-cedar canoes, spreading feathers and blessing the water.
The racing begins tomorrow on False Creek at 8 a.m. Races are held every 12 minutes until 4 p.m. Admission is free.
–jeff.hodson@metronews.ca
To help lessen the impact the HST will have on B.C.’s real-estate market, the province is proposing increasing the threshold for the new housing rebate.
The largest mass vaccination in the province’s history expanded Friday to include everyone who wants an H1N1 flu shot, said Dr. Perry Kendall, the province’s chief medical health officer.