Discover Vancouver Island: Where Getting There Is Part Of The Fun!

Getting to Vancouver Island in the Pacific north-west is a major part of the attraction of this fascinating Pacific Island. Extend your vacation by including your method of arrival as a major part of your plans.

‘The best part of a vacation is in the planning, but the most exciting is the getting there.’ So said my much traveled aunt who was also the one to encourage me to explore the Pacific north-west in the first place, and as far as visiting Vancouver Island is concerned, she is quite correct.
Being a large island, so close to the mainland, the one hour and forty minute luxury ferry ride is like a mini- cruise, through the scenic Gulf Islands, at camera length from Orca Whales, Dolphins and the occasional eagle looking for a fish lunch. Not only that but after docking at Saanich, on the Island, you are only a thirty minute drive away from downtown Victoria, the British Columbia capital.

Take a scenic ferry from the British Columbian mainland at two points, or from Seattle in the Pacific north-west of the U.S., or travel on the Washington ferry service to Sidney, any one of which is an adventure, as you find your way through the San Juan or Gulf islands. If you want speed, try the Victoria Clipper catamaran from Seattle.

If that’s not adventurous enough for you, why not try arriving in Vancouver Island by sea-plane? These float-planes have daily schedules from various locations, including Vancouver and Seattle and most land in the Victoria City harbor. Yes, believe it or not, every year more than 300 000 passengers to the island, arrive by float-plane, many of them into the Victoria Harbor. Well not actually into the harbor but the landing is on the water in the harbor and the access right to downtown Victoria, in front of the parliament buildings. You can’t do that in many capital cities!

Okay, still not convinced, then how about arriving by a whale watching and Eco-tour speed boat? You can do that from downtown Vancouver, where it leaves at 8 am in the morning and takes you on an Eco-tour of the gulf islands before arriving in downtown Victoria on Vancouver Island. You can also link up with a bus tour from here, and they will take you back to your hotel in Vancouver in the evening by speed boat, if you so desire.

You see, getting to Vancouver Island is a major part of the attraction so make it part of your travel plans. Whether you sail in, kayak in, take a bike, car or bus on a ferry, use a float plane or speedy whale watching craft, you get to enjoy the added bonus of exotic scenery, pristine wilderness, marine life and quality tourist facilities even before you arrive. Getting there is more than half the fun!

Of course you could always fly into Victoria airport, but where’s the fun in that, as my aunt always used to say. She actually said a lot of things, but this time she was right.

Discover Vancouver Island: If You Think Your Really Up To It!

One thing Vancouver Island is famous for is the “great outdoors”, and if you are one of those travelers who loves the adventure of walking, climbing, pot-holing, mountain biking and generally carrying large weights on your back, then have I got a challenge for you!

Besides the outstanding, pristine scenery, the wildlife, both marine and land locked and the opportunity to experience the outdoors safely, Vancouver Island has some of the most challenging hiking trails in the world.

But let’s work up to it slowly: I have seen first hand what it can do to the so-called amateur outdoors man.

On the south end of the island, starting in Saanich and winding its way around Victoria to the south-west coast, is the famous ‘Galloping Goose Trail’. Named after a rather strange looking railway carriage of earlier times, this former railway line right of way extends for fifty-five kilometers along wheelchair accessible terrain. Besides passing through a great variety of scenery it also has access to fishing, beaches, and areas for pot holing, kayaking and other water activities.

To start us out on our fitness trails, take the Galloping Goose and try the fifty five kilometer walk: or maybe cycling would be easier for you to start out!
Well, while we are all warmed up, why not drive up to Strathcona Provincial Park, in the centre of the island, and do a bit of wilderness hiking.
This is not only the oldest Provincial park on the island but the largest, and has the highest mountain peaks of the Vancouver Island Range; with several towering at over 2,000 meters in height.

This list includes The Golden Hinde, which at nearly 2,200 meters is the tallest in the park and Elkhorn Mountain, just tens of meters shorter.
One of the tallest waterfalls in Canada can also be found in this Park. Della Falls is 440 meters up which provides some astonishing and majestic views to those brave enough to manage the steep hike..
Of course all of this makes an ideal getaway for outdoor enthusiasts and those who feel at home in nature and its surroundings. However, there are bears, cougars and other potentially dangerous animals.

Within Strathcona Provincial Park are dozens of different trails, ranging from easy to advanced. Some trails can be easily done in a less strenuous hike while others are several days long; all are wilderness trails with few amenities.

Now I have you aching for more, so to speak, we can take a look at the Vancouver Island special, the West Coast Trail. What the big boys call “The real Canadian experience”.

This is one tough hike! Besides being 75 kilometers in length it can take anywhere from five to ten days to travel. You will need to bring all your own supplies including food and water, and because of the location on the pacific coast side of the island it is only open to use between May and September.
You have to get a permit, you will get lots of rain and mud, you will have to deal with tide changes, long steep climbs, tree ladders, steep cliffs, natural bridges and manually operated cable cars over deep chasms: and don’t forget the wolves and bears!

Vancouver Island is full of adventures for you to discover, so if you think you can handle a real hiking experience, head to the Pacific North-west and give these three suggestions a try. But come prepared, the British Army training group didn’t find it very easy, and neither will you.

Think your up to it?

BCIT: Profile, Scholarships, Student Services

British Columbia Institute of Technology is located in Burnaby, British Columbia. Burnaby is the city immediately east of Vancouver. It is the third-largest city in British Columbia by population, surpassed only by Surrey and Vancouver itself.  It was established in 1960 under the direct management of the provincial government. It became a polytechnic institution in 2001. There are approximately 20,000 full-time students and 30,000 part-time students that currently study at the Institute.

Some of its facilities are unique to the school. They include: a 300,000 square-foot state-of-the-art Aerospace Technology Campus, which features a fleet of 20 aircraft (such as Boeing 737) in addition to an airport-controlled tower simulation technology; full-equipped television and radio studio, broadcasting station (Evolution … 107.9 FM); a pulp mill that’s fully operational; a salmonoid enhancement facility on the Seyumour River that was developed by BCIT students; a Technology Centre that focuses on applying high tech research and development; an automated manufacturing robotics lab; a fire simulation theatre that interacts with the students; Canada’s first Confucius Institute that teaches the Chinese languages and culture to develop trade and tourism; the Centre for the Advancement of Green Roof Technology; the only Prosthetics and Orthotics training program that is operating in Western Canada; Telus Call Centre of Excellence’s advanced telecommunications equipment for a leading-edge industry training; Western Canada’s only Marine Engine Room Simulator that operates in an actual training for marine engineering students.

BCIT also offers students on campus residences. The Maquinna Residence can accommodate 336 residents and is ideally located on the Burnaby campus, which is next to the recreation facilities and sports field. Students have the option to choose an all-male, co-ed, or an all female suite; and each house comes with a Residence Advisor who gives counselling and emergency services to students.

According to Student Scholarships, there are over 1000 scholarships distributed to BCIT students each year.  Most of the scholarships available to students are awarded specifically to a designated area of study.

Dealing with Car Accidents in Canada: The Stats and Where to Find Help

Car accidents are as common in Canada as anywhere else in the world. These accidents cannot be escaped no matter where you go. As a matter of fact, Canada has relatively low car accident stats compared to other countries including the United States. But this does not discount the fact that car accidents in Canada are still common, dangerous, and scary.

Canada and Car Accidents: The Stats

In Canada’s case, around 160,000 road accidents occur in Canada every year, and the Transportation Safety Board reports up to 2900 deaths resulting from these accidents.

Statistics also report that the most common car accidents are those that are related to alcohol use, and that most of these accidents involve young drivers. Reports show that there is a much higher number of these accidents during June, the time when young drivers are celebrating graduation and proms, and are thus having a lot of parties. The reports also show that a large number of these accidents lead to fatalities or serious injuries.

Drivers between the ages of 16 and 24 are found to be most vulnerable to car crashes. Frighteningly, the same age bracket makes up only 5 percent of all licensed drivers in Canada. And 43% of the drunk driving crashes involved young drivers.

Where the Accidents Happen

Statistics also observed trends in where the accidents occur. The number of car accidents in the Greater Toronto Area has decreased over the past few years although the number remains higher than gun violence cases, making it the number one cause of fatality in the area.

Car accidents are also very common in the busier cities in Canada, which includes Vancouver and Richmond BC. Several car crashes in Burlington have also been featured on the news. And earlier this year, a car crash in Hamilton resulted in three deaths.

Finding Car Accident Lawyers in Canada

When faced with the aftermath of a car accident that occurred on any of the roads in Canada, you should immediately look for a car accident lawyer who can assist you in filing a claim and defending your case. In order to get the best help, look for a lawyer that specializes in car accidents and one that’s based in the city where your accident occurred. You can find different reliable lawyers in Toronto, Vancouver, Burlington, Hamilton, and in other Canadian cities. Expect these lawyers to have different rates and fees since the fees are affected by the car accident rates and the competition of car accident lawyers in these different cities.

A car accident lawyer in Canada can help assist you in facing the legal battles and hassles that follow a car accident on Canadian roads. These car accident lawyers can help you understand Canada’s special no-fault law, which means that regardless of who is at fault, those who suffer damages from a car accident will receive just compensation for whatever disadvantages he suffered. A car accident lawyer in Canada will know any other special laws and new regulations pertaining to car accidents in Canada.

Do: Choose a car accident lawyer wisely. Drive safely regardless of Canada’s lower car accident rates.

Don’t: Don’t hire just any car accident lawyer. Look for one that specializes in car accidents and works in the city where you are located or where the accident occurred.

The Verdict: Car accidents happen all over the world, and Canada is not exempt from the staggeringly high car accident rates. Even though Canada has relatively lower car accident rates, the dangers are still there. And only a car accident lawyer in Canada can help you deal properly with a car accident.  

To find more about Canada Car Accident Lawyers visit our website

Copyright 2009 Best-car-accident-lawyers.com, all rights reserved.

Yukon: Essence of the Gold Rush

1. Yukon

                The Yukon, the vast, rugged, thinly populated expanse of land located above the 60th parallel in northwestern Canada which shares its border with Alaska and accurately earns its self-proclaimed slogan of “larger than life,” is a topographically diverse, serenely beautiful, and intoxicatingly attractive territory of barren, treeless plains, boreal forests, rugged mountains, glaciers, and mirror-reflective lakes and rivers inhabited by Canada’s First Nations people and abundant wildlife.  Because of its high latitude, it experiences more than 20 hours of daylight in the summer, but fewer than five in the winter, replaced, instead, by the northern lights known as the “aurora borealis.”  Aside from the major “cities,” most communities are only accessible by floatplane or dogsled.

                The Yukon’s history is, in essence, that of the Gold Rush.  Sparked by the August 16, 1896 discovery of a gold nugget in northwestern Canada at the confluence of the Yukon and Klondike Rivers, it began when some 100,000, seeking wealth and adventure, set off on what had later been designated the Klondike Gold Rush Trail between 1897 and 1898.  The event, which produced an instantaneous population boom and ultimately shaped the territory, traces its path to five significant locations in both the United States and Canada.

                The first of these, Seattle, Washington, had served as the gateway to the Yukon.  Advertised as the “outfitter of the gold fields,” it sold supplies and gear stocked ten feet deep on storefront boardwalks, grossing $25 million in sales by early-1898, and was the launching point for the all-water route through the Gulf of Alaska to St. Michael, and then down the Yukon River to Dawson City.  Despite the high fares, which few could afford, all passages had been sold out.

                Dyea and its Chilkoot Trail, the second location, had provided a slower, more treacherous, alternate route, via the 33-mile Chilkoot trail which linked tidewater Alaska with the Canadian headwaters of the Yukon River.

                Skagway, Alaska, the third location, quickly replaced Dyea as the “Gateway to the Klondike” because of its more navigable White Pass route which, although ten miles longer than that of the Chilkoot Trail, had entailed a 600-foot-lower climb.  The trail, quickly destroyed because of overuse, had ultimately been replaced by the White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad whose construction, financed by British investors, had commenced in May of 1898 and had extended to the White Pass Summit by February of 1899, Bennett Lake by July of 1899, and Whitehorse by July of the following year.  Skagway itself had been metamorphosed from a cleared, tent-dotted field to boardwalk-lined streets sporting wooden buildings with 80 saloons in the four-month period between August and December 1897.

                At Bennett Lake, the fourth location, 30,000 stampeders awaited the spring thaw, constructing 7,124 boats from whipsawn green lumber and launching their flotilla on May 29, 1898, fighting the Whitehorse rapids before following the Yukon River to Dawson City.

                Dawson City itself, the fifth location, had been the site of the first gold nugget discovery and had begun as a small island between the Yukon and Klondike Rivers hitherto only occupied by the Han First Nations people, but exploded into Canada’s largest city west of Winnipeg and north of Vancouver with up to 40,000 gold seekers covering a ten-mile area along the river banks.  Thirty cords of firewood were used to burn shafts through the permafrost to the mines themselves.  Of the 4,000 who actually discovered gold, only a few hundred ultimately emerged “rich.” 

2. Whitehorse 

                Whitehorse, the Yukon’s wilderness capital on the banks of the Yukon River with a population of 23,000, had itself been shaped by the gold rush and the transportation means which developed to facilitate it.  Named for the rapids on the Yukon River, which resembled the flowing manes of charging white horses, the area had first served as a fishing encampment of the Kwanlin Dun First Nations people.  In 1987, the tent-comprised Canyon City served as the operational base of a horse-drawn tramway which, for a fee, carried people and goods, particularly gold rushers, round the treacherous White Horse Rapids on log rails.

                Three years later, in 1900, the tracks of the White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad reached the city, today the only international narrow gauge railroad still operating in North America, and passengers transferred to the extensive riverboat service, which completed the journey to Dawson City by the Yukon River.

                In 1942, the US Army completed the 1,534-mile Alaska Highway in a record eight months, 23 days, and Whitehorse had been incorporated as a city in 1950.  Three years later, it replaced Dawson as the capital of the Yukon.

                Whitehorse itself is accessible by multiple travel modes.  The paved Alaska, Haines, and Klondike Highways provide road access within the territory and to Alaska, while the gravel Dempster Highway connects Dawson City with Inuvik above the Arctic Circle in the Northwest Territories.  The Alaska Marine Highway and multiple, daily cruise ships serve Skagway and Haines, Alaska, during the summer season.  The White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad connects Skagway with Fraser and Bennett Lake, British Columbia, with service soon to be extended to Whitehorse.  And the Whitehorse airport offers daily service, via Air North, Air Canada Jazz, First Air, and Condor, to Yellowknife, Dawson, Fairbanks, Vancouver, Edmonton, Calgary, and Frankfurt, Germany.  Floatplanes provide remote community access.

                The story of Whitehorse can be traced by its many diverse sights and attractions.

                The MacBride Museum, for instance, toted as “Yukon’s first museum” and housed in a log structure with a sod roof, had been established in 1951 by historian Bill MacBride in order to explore the Yukon’s history.  It features stuffed wildlife in its upper gallery; “Rivers of Gold,” an exhibit depicting Yukon prospecting and placer mining since 1883, and Yukon’s First Nations people, in its lower gallery; and early copper mining equipment, blacksmithing, and Sam McGee’s original, 1899 cabin in one of two outside exhibition areas.  The other contains overland stages used by the White Pass and Yukon Route between Whitehorse and Dawson, an 1895 Northwest Mounted Police Patrol cabin, and Engine number 51, built in 1881 and used on the White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad seven years later in 1898.

                The Old Log Church Museum, an Anglican cathedral built in 1900, is one of the oldest buildings in Whitehorse and tells the story of the early Yukon missionaries, including that of the priest who survived a winter expedition by eating his own boots for sustenance.

                Perhaps the most popular sight, and one which serves as the very city symbol, is the S. S. Klondike, a National Historical Site of Canada.  The largest of the 250 sternwheelers to have plied the Yukon River at 64 meters long and 12.5 meters wide, it had been constructed in 1920 by the British Yukon Navigation Company, a subsidiary of the White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad, in the city of Whitehorse itself, and had been an integral part of the inland water transportation system which connected Whitehorse with the remainder of the territory and hence served as the principle element of its own growth.

                The design, which traced its lineage as far back as 1866 when the first such steam-powered riverboat reached Selkirk, the S. S. Klondike I, with a 1,362.5-ton gross weight and powered by two 525-hp compound jet-condenser engines, had featured a revolutionary hull which enabled it to offer 50 percent more cargo volume than previous configurations without sacrificing shallow draft instability, enabling it to accommodate more than 300-ton loads for the first time, along with 75 first and second class passengers.  Of its three decks, the first, or main, deck housed the engines, boilers, and cargo; the second the lounge, communications office, dining room, galley, and sun deck; and the third the bridge and the crew quarters.

                Succeeded by the dimensionally identical Klondike II after the initial vessel ran aground in 1936, itself completing the 460-mile downstream run from Whitehorse to Dawson in 36 hours with only one or two wood-replenishing stops, it had been operated as a cargo boat between 1937 and 1952 and had ultimately been converted into a small cruise ship for service until 1955.

                The current dry-docked boat appears in its 1930 guise.

                The Whitehorse Train Depot, which replaced the originally constructed, but later fire- consumed structure, reflects the typical western Canadian architecture of the early 20th century, although alterations had been made during World War II and during the Alaska Highway project.  After scheduled railway service had been discontinued in 1982, the Yukon government had purchased the building and restored it, its passenger waiting room now reflecting its 1950s heritage.

                The Whitehorse Waterfront trolley, using the narrow-gauge White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad tracks and paralleling the Yukon River with stops at Rotary Peace Park, the Tourist Information Center, the White Pass Train Depot, Wood Street, Shipyard’s Park and Kishwoot Station, and Spook Creek, provides an excellent introduction to the city, using a single trolley car, number 531, for its hourly round-trip service.

                The car itself, in its original yellow color scheme, had been partially built by the J.G. Brill Company of Philadelphia in 1925 for the Lisbon Electric Company which subsequently assembled the kit in its Santo Amaro shop.  Of the 202 cars constructed there, 24 had been of the car 531 type.

                Trolley 531 had operated in Lisbon until 1976, at which time it had been acquired for the Lake Superior Museum of Transportation in Duluth, Minnesota, where it remained until the Yukon government had purchased it in 1999.  Flatbed truck transport, through bitter cold and ice, enabled it to reach the White Pass and Yukon Route engine restoration shed in Whitehorse on January 6, 2000.

                The double-ended tram car, with controls at either end, has two 25-hp General Electric motors and two k.3 controllers, and had been intended to operate off of overhead electrical lines with a power pole, but the lack of such facilities in Whitehorse necessitated the temporary provision of a trailer-installed electrical generator.  The present 600-volt operation replaces its originally intended 550-volt current, and the installation of railroad wheels permits it to run on the White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad’s 36-inch tracks, although it had been designed, with its original trolley wheel base, to utilize the narrower, 34.5-inch rail width.

                Because of the equally standard-gauge body, it permits four-abreast, two-two, seating, sporting a varnished hardwood oak, mahogany, and cherry interior with original signs still in Portuguese.

                The Whitehorse Rapids Fish Ladder and Hatchery, located five minutes out of town, had resulted from the late-1950s construction of the Whitehorse Rapids Hydroelectric Facility by the Northern Canada Power Commission.  The Alaska and Klondike Highways, linking many communities and obviating the need for the then-vital sternwheeler river transportation system, ultimately led to the transfer of the Yukon’s capital from Dawson to Whitehorse, and its population expansion could no longer be supported by the downtown diesel generator electricity method.  Construction of the greater-capacity hydroelectric dam, commencing in 1956, formed Schwatka Lake, and this produced the city’s first electricity two years later, in 1958.

                Although the facility improved the quality of life for the human population, it proved the detriment to the salmon species in the river.  Salmon had traveled up the Yukon River to spawn for thousands of years, laying their eggs in gravel which, after the winter gestation period, hatched into alevins in early-spring, and fed and developed in the cold, clear waters for up to two years.  Swimming out to the ocean, they returned several years later to the exact location of their births to lay their own eggs and begin the process anew.

                In order to circumvent the new hydroelectric dam and permit them to continue their life cycles, the world’s longest wooden fish ladder, at 366 meters, had been built in 1959.  Progressively rising in steps by 15 meters from the Yukon River to Schwatka Lake, it enables salmon to safely pass round the dam and continue their migration process.

                A two-hour boat cruise on Schwatka Lake by the appropriately-named m/v Schwatka, a 28-ton, dual-decked, 40-passenger boat, provides an excellent introduction to Whitehorse’s wilderness side and sails through Miles Canyon, the turbulent “Devil’s Punchbowl,” and the Yukon River itself.

                Several interesting attractions are located along the Alaska Highway, up Two Mile Hill Road.

                The Copperbelt Mining Railway and Museum, the first of these, provides a 1.8-kilometer figure-eight loop from its red McIntyre Station building through the skinny spruce forest, using an abandoned spur line of the White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad located in the historic Whitehorse Copper Belt mining district.  Its two engines, 10- and 20-hp Loke diesels, were manufactured by the Jenacher Werks in Austria in 1969 and 1967, respectively.

                The Yukon Transportation Museum depicts the territory’s Gold Rush transportation heritage, displaying unusual travel modes associated with the north, from the snowshoe to the dogsled to the airplane.  Exhibits include a Canadian Pacific DC-3 mounted on an outside pedestal; a full-size riverboat, the “Neecheah,” and a steam locomotive.  Inside exhibits include a gasoline-powered Casey car, which transported workers on the rails; a passenger car used by the White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad; a White Pass and Yukon Route Railroad model train layout; a Ryan B-1 Bougham designated “Queen of the Yukon,” a sister ship to Lindbergh’s “Spirit of St. Louis,” which served as the first commercial airplane to have operated in the Yukon after its purchase from the San Diego factory by Yukon Airways and Exploration, Ltd., in 1927 for $10,200.00; dog sleds; a 1927 Chevrolet convertible; a five-cylinder Kinner engine; a Lycoming R-680 engine; a 1965 International Travelall ambulance; a welded steel frame from a Fairchild FC-2W2; a Smith DGA-1 “Miniplane” homebuild; a bus from the B.Y.N. Bus Lines; military vehicles, including a seven-passenger Dodge Carryall used by the US Army’s Northwest Service Command during construction of the Alcan Highway; and a log rail tramway which used parallel logs as “tracks.”

                The Yukon Beringia Interpretive Center examines Beringia, a sub-continent of the last Ice Age which had been located in the Bering Strait and had encompassed Siberia, Alaska, and the Yukon.  Although the remainder of Canada had laid under massive ice sheets, Beringia itself had been untouched by glaciers because of the 125-meter reduction in sea levels, producing tundra whose tough, dry grasses had supported a wide range of herbivores and carnivores.

                The woolly mammoth, among them, had been the predecessor to the modern Asiatic elephant and the museum sports a full-size cast of the largest example ever recovered.  The short-faced bear, which had been one foot taller than today’s grizzly counterpart, had been the largest, most powerful land carnivore in North America during the last Ice Age.  The museum also features a reconstruction of the 24,000-year-old Bluefish Cave archaeological site.

                The earliest human inhabitants, following bison and mammoth herds 24,000 years ago, had migrated from western Beringia to current Canada. 

3. Kluane National Park               

                One of four contiguous national and provincial parks, inclusive of the Yukon’s 21,980 square-kilometer Kluane National Park, Alaska’s 52,600 square-kilometer Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, Alaska’s 13,360 square-kilometer Glacier Bay National Park, and British Columbia’s 9,580 square-kilometer Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Park, Kluane National Park itself is topographically diverse, encompassing massive mountains, valleys, lakes, boreal forests, valley glaciers, and ice fields.  Of the two mountain ranges—the Kluane and Icefield—the latter sports Canada’s highest peak, Mount Logan, at 19,545 feet.  The largest non-polar ice field in the world, a remnant of the last Ice Age, is also located here.

                Of the two types of populations—human and animal—the former includes the Southern Tutchone people, who had previously lived a nomadic lifestyle, but continue to practice a culture which closely revolves round the natural world, and the latter includes grizzly bears, lynx, mountain goats, moose, wolves, black bears, caribou, coyotes, 180 species of birds, and the world’s largest concentration of dall sheep.

                Haines Junction, which is located two hours from Whitehorse via the Alaska Highway and serves as the national park’s base, is a year-round, full-service village whose modern history began in 1942 with the completion of the Alaska Highway itself at Milepost 1016.  A year later, a branch road, over the Chilkat Pass, connected it with Haines, Alaska, and Kluane National Park had been designated a preserve in 1972.

                Its few sights, always flanked by the breathtaking, purple-hued St. Elias Mountains, include the Village Monument, a local wildlife sculpture; the eight-sided log St. Christopher’’s Anglican Church; and the Our Lady of the Way Catholic Church, which had been constructed in 1954 from an old army Quonset hut remaining from the Alaska Highway project.

                The ubiquitous slender, dark green spruce, encountered during my own tour of the national park, lined either side of the deserted Haines Highway, the vertical ridges of the St. Elias Mountains of Kluane National Park on the right side hues of purple, chocolate brown, and velvet-green at their bases.  The silver surface of Kathleen Lake reflected between them.

                Kluane National Park and the adjacent Wrangell-St. Elias National monument across the border in the United States had been jointly nominated to the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1979.  Together, the properties present an unbroken, pristine natural system, with a rich variety of vegetation, patterns, and ecosystems.

                The first stop of my own drive revealed a pebble beach, which, acting like a threshold, led toward the emerald green water of Kathleen Lake, bracketed on either side by tall, silent, fragrant spruce, the water itself interfacing with the green-carpeted mountain on the far side in seamless transition, taking the eye up to the brown, vegetationless top, from which a slender “s” of snow still snaked, a remainder of the long winter and short summer “pause” between the next frigid cycle.  Since it had been August, that beginning had not been very far way in these northern latitudes.

                The Kokanee salmon, living in the fresh water lake for the first three years of its life, swims the short distance to Sockeye Lake in the fourth year, at which time it dies.  In the 1700s, the Lowell Glacier had surged across the Alaska River, blocking its drainage into the Pacific Ocean and thus creating an enormous lake.  When the dam suddenly burst in 1856, the waters had been released in torrential floods, draining the basin.

                Kluane National Park sports both glaciers of ice and rock, the latter formed in cold, alpine environments on mountain slopes.  During the last 8,000 years, brittle bedrock shattered into fragments by the freezing and thawing action of the winter-summer cycle.  Lubricated by meltwater and riding a core of glacial ice, a continually accumulating mass of rock slowly ground its way down the mountainside, forming rock glaciers.

                The huge, deep blue of Dezadeash Lake, encountered at another stop, had been surrounded by considerably-distanced mountains, whose soft-curved, inverted bowl-like peaks had been reduced to gray and green, almost indistinguishable silhouettes in the early-afternoon beneath the high, unobstructed, gleaming sun.  The sky had been a flawless blue.

                Klukshu Village, dotted with tiny log cabins and a gift shop, had been an important place for many Champagne and Aishihik families, particularly during salmon-spawning season between June and September when king, sockeye, and coho salmon migrate up the river. 

4. Conclusion

                 The Yukon, with its capital city of Whitehorse and wilderness Kluane National Park, indeed provides an interesting journey through its Gold Rush legacy and the transportation means which had developed to facilitate it.

Google Buzz Tips And Tricks

Here are some tips and tricks about new google buzz

1.Add google buzz button to your blogspot. 2. How to Disable e-mail notification

3. Add more connecting sites.

Google Buzz lets you import content from services like Google Reader, Picasa, Blogger, Twitter, Flickr.

4.Google buzz -keyboard shortcuts

Shift+l – like a message m – mute (ignore) a conversation r – add a comment

5.Subscribe to a Google Buzz account in a feed reader Google Buzz’s search feature shows the latest public messages that match your query. Some useful searches:

6. Hide Google Buzz counter

Google Buzz’s search feature shows the latest public messages that match your query. Some useful searches: author:@gmail.com – find all the messages written by a specific user (you can also use a partial name instead of an email address)commenter:@gmail.com – find all the messages that have a comment from a specific userhas:photo, has:video, has:link – restricts the results to messages that include photos, videos or links (for example: vancouver has:photo)source:flickr, source:twitter, source:reader- restricts the results to messages imported from Flickr, Twitter, Google Reader (for example: vancouver source:flickr)

7. View Google Buzz photos in a slideshow When you upload photos to Google Buzz, they’re added to Picasa Web Albums. If you click on a thumbnail, Google Buzz will open a lightbox to help you quickly navigate between images. Unfortunately, there’s no option to view the images in a slideshow, but Picasa Web Albums has this feature and there’s a small link that opens the photo album. Click on “view all” and you can select the slideshow option, export photos using Picasa or print photos.

Read more about Blogger buzz tips and tricks

Article by- Fun with blogger

Burnaby Real Estate Market Stabilizes, Then Roars Through 2009

December real estate sales in Vancouver soared, far outpacing activity from a year ago. Transactions were well ahead of December 2008’s total of 924, a number that represented half of the total sales for December 2007. Starting at a meager 724 transactions in the city of Vancouver during January, sales doubled in February, then jumped to 4,259 homes selling in June. Transactions continued at much-improved levels throughout the balance of 2009.Per Cameron Muir, British Columbia Real Estate Association chief economist, the housing market experienced great volatility. He commented that January 2009 sales were at lows not witnessed since during the 1980s, yet fall sales rebounded to almost-record levels.One reason for the January sales slump was the onset of severe job cuts. B.C. experienced a loss of 35,000 positions during that month, per Statistics Canada. With the real estate slowdown came the elimination of construction-related jobs. Soon after, the Bank of Canada issued a dramatic cut in interest rates to a level not witnessed since the 1950s. The duo of highly attractive interest rates and low home prices generated a wave of purchasing, particularly among people who had put off buying homes in the latter part of 2008.According to Helmut Pastrick, who is the chief economist of Central 1 Credit Union, home sales increased in tandem with the sharp decrease in interest rates. He noted that in previous recessions, the real estate market is historically the first economic sector to experience recovery. Pastrick also commented that when interest rates ultimately increase, demand will slow considerably, and real estate professionals should be prepared for the consequences.

Wedding Is More Beautiful With Audio Dj

Are you getting married and do wish to throw a party that is accompanied by fun and liveliness? Then one of the best options would be to take advantage of the services rendered by wedding DJs. A disc jockey or DJ as it is fondly referred to, is simply a person who mixes and plays music to suit the nature of the event. However, the role of a deejay is now not just confined to mixing as well as playing right music but also include a range of professional services such as organizing stage shows in order to make your event truly special as well as memorable. In some instance, a wedding deejay even does the job of a MS, otherwise known as the Master of Spokesperson. But, a DJ could make your special day really special only if he is creative, talented, and above all experienced. Here are few tips to choose a deejay to enliven your wedding reception.

First of all, make sure that the DJ you have chosen has in-depth knowledge in various genres of music and adept enough to mix songs and music in such a way that it could entertain all levels of guests gathered for the event. It would be an added benefit if your deejay has expertise in handling different types of basic and advanced DJ equipments. Further, it is important to ensure that your DJ could undertake your unique requirements, in addition to handling multiple roles in the form of event organizer, emcee, light and sound technician, and karaoke. Above all, it is important to make a thorough enquiry regarding the behavior and personality of your DJ. Better Business Bureau can help you to check the criminal background of the deejay you have chosen.

Options are endless for those looking to hire the services of a wedding DJ. Yellow pages, business directories, and references by your recently married friends or close relatives are some of the significant sources that help you find a professional wedding DJ. Browsing through the internet can also help you find an experienced DJ for your wedding. A great choice for those who wish to hire the services of a professional disc jockey in Vancouver would be to step into Audio Edge – a Vancouver based entertainment service provider that provides high DJ services. It is an accredited member of the Canadian Better Business Bureau and makes available the services of some of the best wedding DJ’s in the scenario.

79130524 Employees In The Fashion Designers Industry

Fashion designers:

Introduction:

This paper analysis the income levels of employees in the fashion designers industry, this industry according to the bureau of labour in the United States it is estimated that this industry employs over 20,000 individuals according to the year 2006 statistics. This industry mainly focuses on dress making, clothing, shoes of different styles and making.

Data on the income levels of employees in the fashion industry was retrieved from the bureau of statistics in the US

The data:

Data was retrieved the data contains employment levels in these states, hourly wage rate and the mean annual income in terms of wage, the data below shows the data:

Area name

Employment

Hourly mean wage

Annual mean wage(2)

Los Angeles-Long Beach-Glendale, CA Metropolitan Division

2500

34.34

71430

Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana, CA

2920

33.66

70010

Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA

30

27.19

56560

San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont, CA

240

36.25

75400

San Francisco-San Mateo-Redwood City, CA Metropolitan Division

150

33.8

70310

Santa Ana-Anaheim-Irvine, CA Metropolitan Division

410

29.49

61350

Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV

30

27.07

56300

Boston-Cambridge-Quincy, MA-NH

680

29.8

61990

Boston-Cambridge-Quincy, MA NECTA Division

450

29.61

61600

Brockton-Bridgewater-Easton, MA NECTA Division

60

27.33

56850

Providence-Fall River-Warwick, RI-MA

50

24.5

50970

Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI

90

27.64

57490

Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, PA-NJ

30

30.87

64200

Edison, NJ Metropolitan Division

50

31.12

64720

New York-White Plains-Wayne, NY-NJ Metropolitan Division

6920

37.7

78410

Nassau-Suffolk, NY Metropolitan Division

380

37.28

77540

New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-PA

7390

37.71

78450

New York-White Plains-Wayne, NY-NJ Metropolitan Division

6920

37.7

78410

Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton, OR-WA

200

32.01

66590

Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, PA-NJ

30

30.87

64200

Philadelphia, PA Metropolitan Division

120

25.47

52970

Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD

270

31

64480

Reading, PA

270

20.22

42050

Dallas-Plano-Irving, TX Metropolitan Division

550

37.22

77420

Fort Worth-Arlington, TX Metropolitan Division

40

14.42

29980

Portland-Vancouver-Beaverton, OR-WA

200

32.01

66590

Seattle-Bellevue-Everett, WA Metropolitan Division

160

27.03

56210

Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, WA

160

27.03

56210

Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI

90

27.64

57490

Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, CT

110

25.68

53410

Mean, standard deviation and median:

When we use ungrouped data to analyse the mean and the median of the data our results are as follows:

total

31500

903.66

1879590

mean

1050

30.122

62653

standard deviation

2147.812038

5.384997295

11203.3099

MIN

30

14.42

29980

MAX

7390

37.71

78450

RANGE

7360

23.29

48470

The mean hourly wage is 30.12 dollars, the range is 23.29 and our standard deviation is equal to 5.38, these are measures of central tendencies of data, the mean gives us an estimate of the hourly wage rate in the fashion industry and the standard deviation give us the measure of deviations from the mean of the different wages paid by different states.

Grouped data:

When we group the data into 6 classes and considering the class interval to be two then we will be in a position to obtain our frequency and therefore construct a histogram, after grouping our data the results are as follows:

class

frequency

cummulative frequency

percentage

10.50 TO 15.50

1

1

3%

15.51 TO 20.50

2

3

7%

20.51 TO 25.50

4

7

13%

25.51 TO 30.50

8

15

27%

30.51 TO 35.50

9

24

30%

35.51 TO 40.50

6

30

20%

30

100%

Our histogram will be as follows:

This histogram shows that there is a high possibility that the wage rate will be between 30.51 to 35.50, to be precise the probability that the wage rage will be at this level is 0.5 or 50% probability.

Also our or give will be as follows:

The orgive represents the cumulative frequency data and shows the trend of the cumulative frequency to the 100% level.

The stem and leaf:

A stem and leaf diagram displays the trends in data and also gives us an overview of the nature of the data, whether skewed or normal distribution. Below is the stem and leaf diagram:

Stem and leaf

14

42

20

22

24

50

25

47

68

27

19

07

33

64

03

03

29

49

80

61

30

87

88

31

12

0

32

01

07

33

66

80

34

34

36

25

37

70

28

71

70

22

The above is the stem and leaf representation of the data, it is clear that most of the observation are in the wage rate 27, this data therefore is skewed to the left and does not assume a normal distribution.

Binomial probability distribution:

The binomial probability distribution is applied to find the probability that an outcome will occur in a given number of trials. The variable in this case however must be a discrete dichotomous random variable, in this distribution we consider n identical trials, each trial has two possible outcomes where we refer to a success and the other as a failure, a success in our case will be denoted as P and a failure will be denoted as Q. finally the outcome of one trial does not affect the outcome of the other trial,

In our case we will construct the binomial probability distribution using the statement that the employment level in the fashion and design industry is expected to grow by 5%, assuming that our level of employment in our selected states is 12,000 then we expect that in 2016 the employment level will be 70,000.

According to this statistics the employment level is based on a 2006 report and therefore the time period is 10 years, which also means 120 months, so employment level is expected to increase by 5 individual each month. This statistics were retrieved . if now we assume that the probability of this happening is 70% then our binomial probability distribution will be as follows:

The binomial probability function is given by:

P (x) =    n        ? x ( 1-? ) n-x

X

Where in our case n = 5 which is the number of employment per month, x = 0,1,2,3,4,5) which are the number of outcomes per month, ? = 0.7 which is the probability that the employment level will increase by 5% from 2006 to 2016.

Our binomial distribution is as follows after calculations:

x

P(x)

0

0.00243

1

0.02835

2

0.1323

3

0.3087

4

0.36015

5

0.16807

If we are to draw a chart regarding the binomial probability distribution then our chart will be as follows:

The binomial probability distribution helps us estimate the probability of an outcome, in this case we can be in a position to estimate the probability for example what is the probability that the persons who are likely to be employed will be greater than 2 individuals, more than 3 individuals or even less than one individuals, for this reason therefore the probabilities can be calculated by adding the probabilities of each outcome to come up with the desired answer in question.

Hypothesis testing:

We still consider our data from the fashion design industry to analyse the data, in hypothesis testing we will consider hypothesis test for the data and stating the null and alternative hypothesis, in this case therefore it is clear that we will have to use the T table, Z table or even the F table on the nature of the test and deepening on the hypothesis in question

Confidence interval:

90% confidence interval:

When we are constructing the confidence interval we consider the standard deviation, the mean and the value from the T tables at 90% level of measure: we lookup 10% at two tail from the T table and the figure is 2.015048:

Our confidence interval will take the following form:

P(x – st) ? (x + st) = 90%

Where X is the mean, S is the standard deviation and T is the value from the tables:

P(32.54 –(3.07 X 2.015) ? X ? (32.54 + (3.07 X 2.015) = 90%

P(26.35395) ? X ? (38.72605) = 90%

This confidence interval states that at 90% confidence interval the mean will range from 26.35 to 38.72 where they are the lower and upper bound respectively. This also means that we are 90% confident that the mean ranges from 26.35 to 38.72

95% confidence interval:

When we lookup 5% at two tail t test then the value is 0.726687, therefore our confidence interval will be as follows:

P(32.54 –(3.07 X 0.726687) ? (32.54 + (3.07 X 0.726687) = 95%

P(30.30907091) ? X ? (34.77093) = 95%

This confidence interval states that at 95% confidence interval the mean will range from 30.30 to 34.77 where they are the lower and upper bound respectively. This also means that we are 95% confident that the mean ranges from 30.30 to 34.77.

From the measure of confidence interval it is clear that when we consider a larger confidence interval then it is clear that the lower is the range of the interval as compared to when we use a lower confidence interval.

Linear regression:

We will perform the regression model on the employment level and the hourly wage rate, we will assume that the higher the level of employment then the higher is the wage rate, therefore we will assume that the wage rate dependent on the rate of employment, in this case therefore our dependent variable will be wage rate and the independent variable will be employment level:

After estimation our:

B = 0.0005673

? = 31.391809

Therefore our estimated model will take the following form below:

Y = 31.39 + 0.0005673 X

We can define this model as follows, if we hold all other factors constant and the level of employment is zero then the level of wage rate will be 31.39. if we hold all other factors constant and increase the level of employment by one unit then the wage rate level per hour will increase by 0.0005673 units.

For this reason therefore it is clear that our earlier stated objective has been achieved, this is in reference to the objective that an increase in employment will raise the wage rate level.

Correlation:

When we undertake the calculation of the Pearson correlation coefficient then our correlation after calculation is equal to 0.8366, from the figure of the coefficient it is clear that we have positive correlation between the two data, we also have a moderately strong relation and this is obtained by the fact that the correlation coefficient is close to 1, we therefore can conclude that there is a strong positive correlation between employment and wage rate per hour.

Summary:

From our statistical analysis that we have performed on the fashion and design industry it is clear that the industry provides employment to a large number of individuals in the United States, in our selected states which are 6 in number the industry employs over 12,000 individuals according to the 2006 statistics.

According to the bureau of labour in the United States the growth rate of this industry is expected to grow by 2016 where its employment rate will increase by 5%, when calculating using the percentage given then it is clear that by 2016 the employment level of the industry in our selected state will increase from 19,000.

When we perform a linear regression estimation of the data and consider that the wage rate is dependent on the employment level then it is clear that the employment level positively affect the wage rate, this is to say that the higher the employment level then the higher is the wage rate. Further we found a strong correlation coefficient between wage rate and employment.

Finally we conclude by saying that there is a need to use a larger sample size in order to get a clearer picture of the fashion and design industry, a large data sample will allow us to overcome biasness in statistical analysis, samples are expected to be a representative of the entire population, for this reason therefore there is need to select a larger sample size and compare the results.

References:

Burbidge (1993) Statistics: An Introduction to Quantitative Research,

McGraw Hill, New York

Kroenke (1997) Data Processing: Fundamental, Design and Implementation, Prentice Hall publishers, New York

United States bureau of statistics (2008) the fashion design industry, retrieved on 9th January

Bc Shopping Centers and Malls

Whether you are shopping for food, wine, clothing, or anything else, British Columbia can provide many of things that can fit anyone’s tastes. Since BC is a large province, often referred to as the “sunshine coast”, it also happens to be one of the most culturally diverse places you’ll find in the world. It may be difficult to know where to actually start your shopping trip; but, with a few tips, your shopping experience will be a great one. Did you know that Vancouver, BC, has one of the largest shopping centers in all of BC? The Metropolis, at Metrotown, has well over 470 stores that consist of world class restaurants, courtyards, boutiques, and more.

Besides shopping at The Metropolis, there are plenty of other coastal and interior towns that offer shopping. Make your way up to the world class skiing village in Whistler, BC and you can find The Whistler Village. One of the more appealing aspects of Whistler shopping is that it offers pedestrian only shopping; which means there isn’t a car in sight. There really isn’t a need to use a car as all the different types of shops are easily accessible by foot including arts and crafts shops, chocolate shops, clothes, and more. There are over 200 shops in the Whistler area.

British Columbia Discount Shopping

If you are a shopper who likes to save money, then discount shopping is for you and without a doubt, BC has some of the best discount shopping for your money. There are many discount and consignment shops located throughout British Columbia. Some of the more popular cities for discount shopping stores in British Columbia include Victoria and Vancouver. The stores which you can find in these two major cities range from Salvation Army stores and consignments shops, to stores like Wal-Mart and Dollar Stores.

Discount shopping means looking for great deals, store coupons and sales; and there are many sites on the web, including sites like BC tourism, city and individual stores, which will help narrow down your search for coupons and sales. Shopping for discounts online is another way to find great deals before taking one of the best trips you’ll ever have.

If you love Asian shopping and the unique shops that can be found in the commercial rich area on Richmond’s No. 3 road between Capstan and Alderbridge is perfect if you are itching to feel and taste the sights and sounds of Hong Kong without actually going there. They have four new malls: Yaohan Centre, President Plaza, Aberdeen Centre and Parker Place and if you know anything about making deals, you can find deals at discounts up to 80%.

British Columbia Shopping Malls

The largest shopping mall in BC is the Metropolis shopping centre in Vancouver, which is the largest shopping centre as well. There are also many other centers and shopping malls throughout BC. For instance, there are numerous shopping malls throughout the Victoria area, including Victoria’s only downtown mall, The Bay Centre. There are also malls about ten minutes from Victoria which include Mayfair Shopping Centre and Hillside Shopping Centre. All one has to do is look for shopping flyers, online or off, to find one of the many great malls in British Columbia.

If you are looking for a mall catering entirely to the Asian community, then Richmond, BC is the first place to set your sights on. Richmond has, perhaps, the largest Asian community in western Canada. The Aberdeen Centre is a sprawling three-storey complex with well over 250 stores located inside with a beautiful atrium water fountain display. If you are looking for a little smaller shopping centre, look toward the Yaohan Centre that not only has 80 stores, but also an Asian supermarket and a food court featuring more than 15 different Asian cuisines to tempt your palate.

Free Airline Tickets & Special Treatment

The most popular cruise destinations now are the Mediterranean, the Caribbean and Alaska. Here is how to choose the perfect region for your next cruise…— THE MEDITERRANEANMost cruises focus on one of two regions… – Western Mediterranean, including the west coast of Italy, the French Riviera, southern Spain and Portugal and perhaps Tunisia or Gibraltar. – Eastern Mediterranean. This includes the Greek isles, Turkey, Croatia and the east coast of Italy.Mediterranean highlights: Some people fall in love with Rome and Venice. Others prefer less heralded cities, such as Lisbon, Portugal, and Split, Croatia.When to go: The high season runs from late April through early November. The best deals and weather are in late April and May, before crowds arrive, or September and October, after they leave.— THE CARIBBEANThere are three basic itineraries… – Western Caribbean is best for those who want beaches, with an occasional visit to a historic site.Typical ports of call: Cozumel, Mexico… Jamaica … Grand Cayman. – Eastern Caribbean is best for combining sun worship with – other activities, such as shopping and snorkeling.Typical ports of call: St. Thomas … St. Martin … San Juan, Puerto Rico. – Southern Caribbean is best for those who enjoy exploring islands – the distances between the ports are short.Typical porfs of call: Curacao … Martinique … Antigua.Caribbean highlights: St. Martin/St. Maarten is the smallest island to have been partitioned between two nations, France and Holland … St. Thomas features great duty-free shopping … and Grand Turk and Cozumel have exceptional diving and snorkeling.When to go: High season is January through March. The best deals are during the first two weeks of December, when demand plummets between Thanksgiving and Christmas. April and May also are good times for deals.— ALASKAThere are two basic itineraries… – Inside Passage is best for those who want to see coastal Alaska with as few hassles as possible. It departs from Vancouver and Seattle and typically gets as far north as Glacier Bay, near Juneau, before turning back south. – The Glacier Route makes arranging connecting flights tricky, but it does give cruisers a chance to explore Alaska’s interior before or after their cruise. The ship departs from Seattle or Vancouver. (Or it departs from Seward and ends in Seattle or Vancouver.)Large ships provide more onboard entertainment options, but a smaller ship will get you much closer to the gorgeous coastline.Alaskan highlights: Ships of all sizes cruise the stunning Hubbard Glacier and Glacier Bay.When to go: Alaska’s cruise season is mid-May through mid-September. Prices climb from mid-June through mid-August. Late May and early September offer the best deals. The weather will be cooler, but you’ll see more wildlife.

Why ENERGY STAR makes dollars and sense

 

Most people want to know what they can do to make their dollar go further, particularly when purchasing household appliances. While most consumers have their eyes on the price tag, it really should be on how much it costs to power those appliances, and that’s where ENERGY STAR comes in.

 

ENERGY STAR is the international symbol of premium energy efficiency. Natural Resources Canada’s Office of Energy Efficiency (OEE) promotes the international ENERGY STAR symbol in Canada and monitors its use. Typically, ENERGY STAR products offer 20 to 30 percent savings on your energy bills. DirectBuy of Ottawa, the leading home improvement and furnishings club with direct insider prices, sells a wide ride range of ENERGY STAR products to help members save.

 

“The irony about ENERGY STAR products is the program itself was set up to combat the negative effect that running our appliances was having on our environment,” said Lise Girard, owner of DirectBuy of Ottawa. “While most people do want to minimize their carbon footprint, in today’s economy, it’s just as much about how much you can save by having appliances that run more efficiently.”

 

So, how much can you save by purchasing ENERGY STAR appliances? Here’s a small sampling:

 

Clothes washers – replacing a 10-year-old washing machine with a new ENERGY STAR machine can save a household more than $160 per year.

Dishwashers – ENERGY STAR dishwashers use 41 percent less energy and water than non-ENERGY STAR washers. That translates to more than $30 a year on your utility bill.

Refrigerators – a typical two-door, freezer-on-top refrigerator can cost more than $110 per year to run. Upgrading to ENERGY STAR can knock $30 per year off that, resulting in savings of nearly $400 in just five years.

Home electronics – the average household spends more than $100 per year powering electronics devices in “standby” mode. ENERGY STAR products use less energy when in standby.

LED Lighting – requires 75 percent less energy than incandescent bulbs and lasts 25 times longer. According to Natural Resources Canada, LED lighting can last more than 25,000 hours than its incandescent counterparts or more than 22 years!

 

In addition to those savings, Canadians who replace their cooling or heating systems with ENERGY STAR systems are eligible for grants up to $5,000 from the federal government. Grant information can be found on the Office of Energy Efficiency Web site at oee.nrcan.gc.ca/.

 

Canadian residents who replace their heating systems might also be eligible for a Home Renovation Tax Credit for the 2009 tax year. The credit applies to expenditures more than $1,000 and less than $10,000, with the credit being no more than $1,350 per family. For eligibility guidelines, please visit the Home Tax Renovation Credit page on the Canadian Revenue Agency’s Web site at cra-arc.gr.ca.

 

“As a company that deals specifically in home improvement, we often hear the expression that this project will pay for itself, but that usually means at resale of your home,” said Girard. “When it comes to ENERGY STAR products, they literally do pay for themselves over time—without selling your home—and lessen the impact on the environment. That’s really an unbeatable combination.”

 

DirectBuy carries a large selection of ENERGY STAR products and appliances at wholesale prices direct from manufacturers or their authorized suppliers. In addition, each DirectBuy club employs product specialists and designers who can help members select the appliance that works best for their home.

 

Since 1971, DirectBuy clubs have offered members the opportunity to enjoy enormous savings on home furnishings, home improvement items, entertainment and outdoor products and accessories by buying wholesale, directly from the manufacturer. With locations all across Canada, consumers can enjoy a comfortable, country-club setting, where they finally have the financial control of buying direct.

 

For more information on a DirectBuy membership, you can visit directbuycares.com For more information on ENERGY STAR, go to oee.nrcan.gc.ca.

 

About DirectBuy

For more than 38 years, DirectBuy has been showing thousands of consumers unparalleled ways to save as they shop for virtually everything for in and around their homes – from furnishings, home improvement and flooring, to entertainment and outdoor products, accessories and much, much more. With more than 160 locations in North America, DirectBuy offers its members access to more than 500 brand-name manufacturers and authorized suppliers in Canada.

 

Consumers interested in seeing DirectBuy’s savings, service and selection up close may obtain a Visitor’s Pass to attend an Open House by visiting www.directbuy.com or www.directbuycares.com.

 

Locations of DirectBuy by province are:

 

Alberta:

DirectBuy of Calgary Unit 17 3900 106th Ave. SE, Calgary, 403-543-1620

DirectBuy of Edmonton, 10427 174 St. NW, Edmonton, 780-413-8242

 

British Columbia:

DirectBuy of Greater Vancouver, 91 Golden Drive Unit #1, Coquitlam, 604-552-5252

DirectBuy of Vancouver, 2659 Lillooet St., Vancouver, 604-251-5822

DirectBuy of Central Okanagan, #5 2260 Hunter Rd, Kelowna, 250-763-4130

DirectBuy of Greater Victoria, 350B Bay Street, Victoria, 250-412-0238

 

Manitoba:

DirectBuy of Winnipeg, 180-117 King Edward Street East, Winnipeg, 204-925-4190

 

New Brunswick:

DirectBuy of New Brunswick, 950 Mountain Road, Moncton, 506-384-3009

 

Nova Scotia:

DirectBuy of Halifax, 60 Williams Avenue, Dartmouth, 902-446-4355

 

Ontario:

DirectBuy of Toronto Northwest, 2500 Williams Parkway E Unit 37, Brampton, 905-793-0639

DirectBuy of Ottawa, 1392 Cyrville Road, Ottawa, 613-749-2700

DirectBuy of London, 4093 Meadowbrook Dr. Unit 108, London, 519-652-0552

DirectBuy of Toronto North, 205 Torbay Road, Unit #2, Markham, 905-948-1911

DirectBuy of Mississauga, 4120 Ridgeway Drive Unit 26, Mississauga, 905-608-9244

DirectBuy of Kingston, 1121 John Counter Blvd, Kingston, 613-545-1200

DirectBuy of Toronto East, 1735 Bayly Unit 17, Pickering, 905-839-7747

DirectBuy of Hamilton – Niagara, 589 Barton St, Suite 102, Stoney Creek, 905-643-8271

DirectBuy of Toronto Downtown, 20 Banigan Drive, Toronto, 416-467-0078

DirectBuy of Waterloo, 755 Bridge St. Ste. 14, Waterloo, 519-885-3231

DirectBuy of Windsor, 2705 Kew Drive, Windsor, 519-945-3200

DirectBuy of Barrie, 320 Bayfield Street Unit 63, Barrie, 705-719-2999

 

Saskatchewan:

DirectBuy of Saskatoon, 201 Robin Crescent, Saskatoon, 306-683-3490