Okanagan Major Bantam Classic Capital News Centre & Rutland Twin Arena, Kelowna, BC January 29 – February 2, 2020

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Okanagan Major Bantam Classic Capital News Centre & Rutland Twin Arena, Kelowna, BC January 29 – February 2, 2020 Okanagan Major Bantam Classic Capital News Centre & Rutland Twin Arena, Kelowna, BC January 29 – February 2, 2020 Start End Game Type Game Number Arena Home Away Wednesday January 29th 10:00 AM 12:30 PM Round Robin MBC 01 CNC 1 Knights of Columbus Cariboo 11:00 AM 1:30 PM Round Robin MBC 02 CNC 2 DHA White North Island 12:45 PM 3:15 PM Round Robin MBC 03 CNC 1 Airdire Okanagan 1:15 PM 3:45 PM Round Robin MBC 04 Rutland West POE Prep PAC 1:45 PM 4:15 PM Round Robin MBC 05 CNC 2 Seattle Jr Fraser Valley 6:30 PM 9:00 PM Round Robin MBC 06 CNC 1 OHA Prep St Albert Thursday January 30th 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Round Robin MBC 07 CNC 1 North Island Knights of Columbus 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Round Robin MBC 08 Rutland West Cariboo DHA White 8:30 AM 11:00 AM Round Robin MBC 09 CNC 2 PAC Airdrie 10:45 AM 1:15 PM Round Robin MBC 10 CNC 1 Okanagan POE Prep 10:45 AM 1:15 PM Round Robin MBC 11 Rutland West St Albert Seattle Jr 11:15 AM 1:45 PM Round Robin MBC 12 CNC 2 Fraser Valley OHA Prep 3:00 PM 5:30 PM Round Robin MBC 13 CNC 1 Knights of Columbus DHA White 3:00 PM 5:30 PM Round Robin MBC 14 Rutland West Cariboo North Island 3:30 PM 6:00 PM Round Robin MBC 15 CNC 2 Airdrie POE 5:45 PM 8:15 PM Round Robin MBC 16 CNC 1 Okanagan PAC 5:45 PM 8:15 PM Round Robin MBC 17 Rutland West Seattle Jr OHA Prep 6:15 PM 8:45 PM Round Robin MBC 18 CNC 2 Fraser Valley St Albert Friday January 31st 9:00 AM 11:30 AM Quarter Final MBC 19 CNC 1 4th 5th 9:00 AM 11:30 AM Consolation Semi Final MBC 20 Rutland West 10th 11th 9:30 AM 12:00 PM Quarter Final MBC 21 CNC 2 3rd 6th 11:45 AM 2:15 PM Quarter Final MBC 22 CNC 1 1st 8th 11:45 AM 2:15 PM Consolation Semi Final MBC 23 Rutland West 9th 12th 12:15 AM 2:45 AM Quarter Final MBC 24 CNC 2 2nd 7th 5:30 PM 8:00 PM Skills Competition CNC 1 ALL TEAMS Saturday February 1st 11:45 AM 2:15 PM Consolation Final 1 MBC 25 CNC 1 Winner of MBC 20 Winner of MBC 23 12:15 PM 2:45 PM Quarter Final Loser MBC 26 CNC 2 Loser of MBC 19 Loser of MBC 22 3:00 PM 5:30 PM Quarter Final Loser MBC 27 CNC 2 Loser of MBC 24 Loser of MBC 21 3:30 PM 6:00 PM Consolation Final 2 MBC 28 Rutland West Loser of MBC 20 Loser of MBC 23 5:15 PM 7:45 PM Semi Final MBC 29 CNC 1 Winner of MBC 24 Winner of MBC 21 5:45 PM 8:15 PM Semi Final MBC 30 CNC 2 Winner of MBC 22 Winner of MBC 19 Sunday February 2nd 8:00 AM 10:30 AM Ogopogo Final MBC 31 CNC 1 Winner of MBC 26 Winner of MBC 27 10:45 AM 1:30 PM Championship MBC 32 CNC 1 Winner of MBC 29 Winner of MBC 30 POOLS Jamie Benn Josh Gorges Shea Weber Cariboo Cougars Airdrie Xtreme Fraser Valley Thunderbirds DHA Bantam White Okanagan Rockets OHA Bantam Prep Knights of Columbus Squires Parkland Athletic Club Saints Seattle Jr Bantams North Island Silvertips POE Bantam Prep St Albert Greg Distributors Sabres .
Recommended publications
  • Okanagan Valley
    OKANAGAN VALLEY DESTINATION DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY HIGHLIGHTS MYRA CANYON Photo: Grant Harder THANK WHAT’S YOU INSIDE The Okanagan Valley Destination Thank you to our tourism partners 1. INTRODUCTION Development Strategy is the outcome who participated in the process by of a nineteen-month, iterative process attending community meetings, 2. REALIZING THE POTENTIAL of gathering, synthesizing, and participating in surveys and validating information with tourism interviews, engaging in follow-up 3. AT A GLANCE partners about the current status conversations, and forwarding 4. GEARING UP and future direction of tourism in relevant documents and insights. the Okanagan Valley planning area. Special thanks to the members of the Working Group, as well as the We thank the Syilx people and the facilitator of the destination Okanagan Nation on whose traditional development process. territories we gathered for meetings in Kelowna and Summerland. OKANAGAN VALLEY | 2 1 INTRODUCTION WHY A STRATEGY? District, and part of electoral area E (West Boundary) the creation of a provincial destination development of the Regional District of Kootenay Boundary. strategy thereby ensuring a truly integrated and The Okanagan Valley Destination Development Municipalities include Lake Country, Kelowna, West cohesive combination of bottom-up and top-down Strategy was developed to enhance the competitiveness Kelowna, Peachland, Summerland, Penticton, Oliver, destination planning. of the Okanagan Valley planning area over the next 10 Keremeos, and Osoyoos. The planning area includes years and beyond. The strategy was developed as part most of the Okanagan Valley, Sakha Lake, and the of Destination BC’s Destination Development Program Okanagan River. A KEY IMPERATIVE to support and guide the long-term growth of tourism in British Columbia.
    [Show full text]
  • Fraser Valley Geotour: Bedrock, Glacial Deposits, Recent Sediments, Geological Hazards and Applied Geology: Sumas Mountain and Abbotsford Area
    Fraser Valley Geotour: Bedrock, Glacial Deposits, Recent Sediments, Geological Hazards and Applied Geology: Sumas Mountain and Abbotsford Area A collaboration in support of teachers in and around Abbotsford, B.C. in celebration of National Science and Technology Week October 25, 2013 MineralsEd and Natural Resources Canada, Geological Survey of Canada Led by David Huntley, PhD, GSC and David Thompson, P Geo 1 2 Fraser Valley Geotour Introduction Welcome to the Fraser Valley Geotour! Learning about our Earth, geological processes and features, and the relevance of it all to our lives is really best addressed outside of a classroom. Our entire province is the laboratory for geological studies. The landscape and rocks in the Fraser Valley record many natural Earth processes and reveal a large part of the geologic history of this part of BC – a unique part of the Canadian Cordillera. This professional development field trip for teachers looks at a selection of the bedrock and overlying surficial sediments in the Abbotsford area that evidence these geologic processes over time. The stops highlight key features that are part of the geological story - demonstrating surface processes, recording rock – forming processes, revealing the tectonic history, and evidence of glaciation. The important interplay of these phenomena and later human activity is highlighted along the way. It is designed to build your understanding of Earth Science and its relevance to our lives to support your teaching related topics in your classroom. Acknowledgments We would like to thank our partners, the individuals who led the tour to share their expertise, build interest in the natural history of the area, and inspire your teaching.
    [Show full text]
  • Okanagan Ecoregional Assessment  Volume 1  Report
    VOLUME Okanagan 1 Ecoregional Assessment REPORT October 2006 OKANAGAN ECOREGIONAL ASSESSMENT VOLUME 1 REPORT Okanagan Ecoregional Assessment October 2006 Prepared by Nature Conservancy of Canada The Nature Conservancy of Washington and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife OKANAGAN ECOREGIONAL ASSESSMENT VOLUME 1 REPORT Okanagan Ecoregional Assessment Volume 1 – Report Citation: Pryce, B., P. Iachetti, G. Wilhere, K. Ciruna, J. Floberg, R. Crawford, R. Dye, M. Fairbarns, S. Farone, S. Ford, M. Goering, M. Heiner, G. Kittel, J. Lewis, D. Nicolson, and N. Warner. 2006. Okanagan Ecoregional Assessment, Volume 1 – Report. Prepared by Nature Conservancy of Canada, The Nature Conservancy of Washington, and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife with support from the British Columbia Conservation Data Centre, Washington Department of Natural Resources Natural Heritage Program, and NatureServe. Nature Conservancy of Canada, Victoria, British Columbia. Cover Design: Paul Mazzucca Copyright © 2006 Nature Conservancy of Canada Vancouver, British Columbia Issued by: The Nature Conservancy of Canada Cover Photo Credits: #300 – 1205 Broad Street Methow Valley, Robin Dye; Western screech owl, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada V8W 2A4 A.M. Bezener/One Wild Earth Photography; Great Email: [email protected] basin spadefoot toad, A.M. Bezener/One Wild Earth Photography; Seton Lake, Ian Routley; Canadian Cataloguing in Publication Data: Townsends big-eared bat, Harry van Oort; Mormon metalmark, Orville Dyer; East Chopaka, ISBN 1-897386-00-1 Barbara Pryce; Mountain bluebird, Ian Routley; 1. Biological inventory and assessment – Sockeye salmon, Kristy Ciruna; Badgers, Philippe Okanagan. Verkerk; Lynx, Grant Merrill; Mountain lady’s I. Nature Conservancy of Canada. slipper, George Thornton; Long-billed curlew, Ian II.
    [Show full text]
  • Agricultural Economy in the Fraser Valley Regional District TABLE of CONTENTS
    Image courtesy Chilliwack Economic Partners Corp Regional Snapshot Series: Agriculture Agricultural Economy in the Fraser Valley Regional District TABLE OF CONTENTS A Region Defined by Agriculture Competitive Advantage Economics of Agriculture: A National Perspective Economics of Agriculture: Provincial Context Economics of Agriculture: Regional Context Agricultural Land Reserve Agricultural Diversity Agriculture Challenges Agriculture Opportunities Regional Food Security The Fraser Valley Regional District is comprised of 6 member municipalities and 7 electoral areas. City of Abbotsford, City of Chilliwack, District of Mission, District of Hope, District of Kent, Village of Harrison Hot Springs and Electoral Areas A, B, C, D, E, F and G. Fraser Valley Regional District In partnership with: A NOTE ON CENSUS DATA LIMITATIONS Although every effort has been made in the preparation of the Regional Snapshot Series to present the most up-to-date information, the most recent available Census data is from 2006. The most recent Census of Agriculture took place in May of 2011, however results will not be available until mid-2012. The snapshot will be updated to reflect the 2011 Census of Agriculture results. A REGION DEFINED BY AGRICULTURE CHOICES FOR TODAY AND INTO THE FUTURE OUR FUTURE: Agriculture: A 21st century industry The Fraser Valley Regional District (FVRD) is comprised of six member municipalities our Regional and seven electoral areas and features a variety of diverse communities, from small rural hamlets to the fifth largest city in British Columbia. The FVRD is one of the most Growth Strategy intensively farmed areas in Canada, generating the largest annual farm receipts of any regional district in British Columbia.
    [Show full text]
  • 11 000 Years of Fire History and Climate in the Mountain Hemlock Rain Forests of Southwestern British Columbia Based on Sedimentary Charcoal
    Color profile: Disabled Composite Default screen 292 11 000 years of fire history and climate in the mountain hemlock rain forests of southwestern British Columbia based on sedimentary charcoal Douglas J. Hallett, Dana S. Lepofsky, Rolf W. Mathewes, and Ken P. Lertzman Abstract: Little is known about the role of fire in the mountain hemlock (Tsuga mertensiana (Bong.) Carrière) rain forests of southern British Columbia. High-resolution analysis of macroscopic charcoal from lake sediment cores, along with 102 accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) ages on soil charcoal, was used to reconstruct the long-term fire history around two subalpine lakes in the southern Coast and North Cascade Mountains. AMS ages on soil charcoal provide independent evidence of local fire around a lake and support the interpretation of peaks in lake sediment charcoal as distinct fire events during the Holocene. Local fires are rare, with intervals ranging from centuries to several millennia at some sites. Overall fire frequency varied continuously throughout the Holocene, suggesting that fire regimes are linked to climate via large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns. Fires were frequent between 11 000 and 8800 calen- dar years BP during the warm and dry early Holocene. The onset of humid conditions in the mid-Holocene, as rain forest taxa established in the region, produced a variable fire period until 3500 calendar years BP. A synchronous de- crease in fire frequency from 3500 to 2400 calendar years BP corresponds to Neoglacial advances in the region and cool humid climate. A return of frequent fire between 2400 and 1300 calendar years BP suggests that prolonged sum- mer drought occurred more often during this interval, which we name the Fraser Valley Fire Period.
    [Show full text]
  • Our Work for Sustainability INSIDE
    The Fraser Basin Council 20th Anniversary Celebration in 2017 ANNUAL HIGHLIGHTS 2019 – 2020 Our Work For Sustainability INSIDE OUR VISION About FBC 2 Social well-being supported by a vibrant economy and sustained by a healthy environment Climate Change and Air Quality 3 Watersheds and Water Resources 5 OUR MANDATE To Advance Sustainability in the Fraser Community and Regional Sustainability 6 Basin and throughout British Columbia Project Highlights 9 Our Directors 10 Connect with Us 12 Fraser Basin Council — Facilitation – We bring people together Supporting BC communities The Fraser Basin Council is frequently invited to serve as an impartial facilitator on sustainability issues. We help government, The Fraser Basin Council (FBC) brings people together to find private and non-profit sector leaders connect – and we bring practical, common sense solutions to today’s sustainability together people representing different interests and perspectives issues. Formed in 1997, the Council is a non-profit society to safe tables to learn, canvass options and find collaborative that serves British Columbia’s communities as a facilitator and solutions. We do not advocate for a specific position or prescribe educator — helping leaders in multiple sectors work together. a particular course of action, but rather help people find common The Council is led by 38 directors drawn from the four ground. This is what inspires us most in our work! orders of government — Federal, Provincial, Local and First Nations — and from the private and not-for-profit sectors. Education – We build understanding Representatives from local government are appointed by regional districts in the Fraser Basin and work collaboratively The Fraser Basin Council supports opportunities to advance on the direction of our organization.
    [Show full text]
  • Strategic Review of Transit in the Fraser Valley Foundation Paper #1
    S t r a tegic Review of Transit in the Fraser Valley Foundation Paper #1 Prepared by: Transit Market Analysis TABLE OF CONTENTS SUMMARY .............................................................................................................................................. I 1.0 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................ 1 1.1 THE STRATEGY PROCESS ....................................................................................................................... 2 1.2 KEY FEATURES OF THIS FOUNDATION PAPER .............................................................................................. 3 1.3 FACTORS AFFECTING THE TRAVEL MARKET ................................................................................................. 5 2.0 TODAY’S TRANSIT MARKETS ........................................................................................................ 9 2.1 LOCAL TRANSIT MARKETS .................................................................................................................... 13 2.1.1 Profile of ValleyMAX Users ......................................................................................................... 13 2.1.2 Abbotsford Local Transit ............................................................................................................ 18 2.1.3 Mission Local Transit ................................................................................................................. 21
    [Show full text]
  • Wildsafebc Fraser Valley Regional District
    WildSafeBC Fraser Valley Regional District Annual Report Prepared by: Laura Chappell FVRD Community Coordinator October 15 2014 Figure 1 – Canada Summer Job students Samantha Fischer and Ashleigh Born at Mission Fest WildSafeBC Fraser Valley Regional District 2014 Executive Summary The goal of the WildSafeBC program is to reduce human-wildlife conflict through education, innovation, and cooperation throughout BC. WildSafeBC Fraser Valley Regional District (WSBC FVRD) strives to achieve this goal from Hope through to Mission. The Hope Mountain Black Bear Committee manages the Hope area and the remainder of the Fraser Valley; Agassiz, Harrison, Chilliwack, Abbotsford and Mission are served by the WSBC FVRD Community Coordinator Laura Chappell and during the summer months two Canada Summer Job Students. Throughout the 2014 season WildSafeBC FVRD was able to contact nearly ten thousand people in the Fraser Valley Regional District via door-to-door visits, community events, and through school and club presentations. 2014 had the lowest number of human- wildlife conflicts in the Fraser Valley reported to the Report All Poachers and Polluters (RAPP) line in the three years Bear Aware/WildSafeBC has been in the area. 1 WildSafeBC Fraser Valley Regional District 2014 Table of Contents EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1 HIGHLIGHTS 3 COMMUNITY EVENTS 3 DOOR-TO-DOOR 5 PRESENTATIONS 6 GARBAGE TAGGING 7 CHALLENGES 9 SIZE 10 TEACHER STRIKE 10 INDIFFERENCE 10 EDUCATION 10 THE REGION 11 GOALS FOR 2015 13 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 13 2 WildSafeBC Fraser Valley Regional District 2014 Highlights The Fraser Valley Regional District spans many communities; WSBC FVRD makes an effort to evenly spread time between communities, based on the needs of each community.
    [Show full text]
  • Eocene Paleo-Physiography and Drainage Directions, Southern Interior Plateau, British Columbia1
    215 Eocene paleo-physiography and drainage directions, southern Interior Plateau, British Columbia1 Selina Tribe Abstract: A map of reconstructed Eocene physiography and drainage directions is presented for the southern Interior Plateau region, British Columbia south of 53°N. Eocene landforms are inferred from the distribution and depositional paleoenvironment of Eocene rocks and from crosscutting relationships between regional-scale geomorphology and bedrock geology of known age. Eocene drainage directions are inferred from physiography, relief, and base level elevations of the sub-Eocene unconformity and the documented distribution, provenance, and paleocurrents of early Cenozoic fluvial sediments. The Eocene landscape of the southern Interior Plateau resembled its modern counterpart, with highlands, plains, and deeply incised drainages, except regional drainage was to the north. An anabranching valley system trending west and northwest from Quesnel and Shuswap Highlands, across the Cariboo Plateau to the Fraser River valley, contained north-flowing streams from Eocene to early Quaternary time. Other valleys dating back at least to Middle Eocene time include the North Thompson valley south of Clearwater, Thompson valley from Kamloops to Spences Bridge, the valley containing Nicola Lake, Bridge River valley, and Okanagan Lake valley. During the early Cenozoic, highlands existed where the Coast Mountains are today. Southward drainage along the modern Fraser, Chilcotin, and Thompson River valleys was established after the Late Miocene. Résumé : Cet article présente une carte reconstituée de la géographie physique et des directions de drainage, à l’Éocène, pour la région du plateau intérieur de la Colombie-Britannique, au sud du 53e parallèle Nord. Les formes de terrain à l’Éocène sont déduites de la distribution et du paléoenvironnement de déposition des roches de l’Éocène et à partir de relations de recoupement entre la géomorphologie à l’échelle régionale et la géologie du socle, d’âge connu.
    [Show full text]
  • Chinese Settlement in Canada
    1 Chinese Settlement in Canada 1788-89: The first recorded Asians to arrive in Canada were from Macau and Guangdong province in Southern China. They were sailors, smiths, and carpenters brought to Vancouver Island by the British Captain John Meares to work as shipwrights. Meares transported 50 Chinese workers in 1788 and 70 more in 1789, but shortly thereafter his entire Chinese crew was captured and imprisoned when the Spanish seized Nootka Sound. What happened to them is a mystery. There are reports John Meares, the British captain who that some were taken as forced labourers to Mexico, that brought the first known Chinese to some escaped, and that some were captured by the Canada Nootka people and married into their community. The Fraser Canyon Gold Rush In 1856, gold was found near the Fraser River in the territory of the Nlaka’pamux First Nations people. Almost immediately, the discovery brought tens of thousands of gold miners to the region, many of them prospectors from California. This event marked the beginnings of white settlement on British Columbia’s mainland. Chinese man washing gold in the Fraser River (1875) Credit: Library and Archives Canada / PA-125990 By 1858, Chinese gold miners had also started to arrive. Initially they too came from San Francisco, but ships carrying Chinese from Hong Kong soon followed. By the 1860s, there were 6000-7000 Chinese people living in B.C. The Gold Rush brought not only Chinese miners to Western Canada, but also the merchants, labourers, domestics, gardeners, cooks, launderers, and other service industry workers needed to support the large mining communities that sprang up wherever gold was discovered.
    [Show full text]
  • Fraser Valley Rotation (FVR) (Burnaby General Hospital, Surrey Memorial Hospital, Royal Columbian Hospital, Eagle Ridge Hospital
    THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA Department of Urologic Sciences Faculty of Medicine Gordon & Leslie Diamond Health Care Centre Level 6, 2775 Laurel Street Vancouver, BC, Canada V5Z 1M9 Tel: (604) 875-4301 Fax: (604) 875-4637 Fraser Valley Rotation (FVR) (Burnaby General Hospital, Surrey Memorial Hospital, Royal Columbian Hospital, Eagle Ridge Hospital) Rotation Goals & Objectives Preamble: General Objectives The elective at FVR provides training in both pediatric and adult general and specialty urology. There is a particular emphasis on laparoscopic, genitourinary reconstructive surgery for renal and pelvic disorders. There is also training in broad-based, general urologic practice including uro- oncology, reconstructive surgery for male/female incontinence, benign prostatic diseases, congenital reconstruction, and men’s health. The resident will be evaluated according to the goals and objectives appropriate for his/her level. The “elective” at FVR is better described as a longitudinal experience. A resident will typically spend one or more elective blocks in a senior role. An ITER will be issued at the end of each block and the resident will utilize these rotations in order to amass ongoing competencies required for progressive achievement in the Program. It should be recognized that much of the teaching during this elective will occur during, or a result of, direct patient care. The resident will recognize that their own education is intricately linked to delivery of patient care and that, through service, their education will be optimized. SPH/MSJ Goals and Objectives This document refers to the RCPSC Objectives of Training in Urology (2009) Locations Burnaby General Hospital is located in Burnaby, British Columbia and is a large 314 bed community hospital affiliated with UBC.
    [Show full text]
  • Fraser Valley, BC Fraser Valley Industrial Report
    Summer 2019 Fraser Valley, BC Fraser Valley Industrial Report FRASER VALLEY INDUSTRIAL REAL Fraser Valley becoming regional industrial heartland ESTATE SALES AND DOLLAR VOLUME amid continuing strong sales and leasing activity 10 21 ith the 10-year average for annual in- number of deals completed in 2016 (258). 2018 16 dustrial sales topping $300 million (M) However, in terms of dollar volume, 2018 was 30 W 119 and more than 200 transactions in 2018, BC’s still the third highest on record after 2017 22 Fraser Valley has rapidly transformed into the and 2015. More than $1.1B was spent on ap- 15 2017 25 region’s most active industrial market. proximately 700 industrial properties in the 28 Fraser Valley between 2016 and 2018. The 148 Demand for industrial properties in the number of sales completed on an annual 21 Fraser Valley remained exceptionally strong 18 basis continues to be tempered only by the 29 in 2018 and through the first half of 2019, 2016 number of industrial strata developments 27 with supply constraints serving as the only 156 delivered in a given year. 14 limiting factor on deal and dollar volume. 14 While Surrey and Langley continued to cap- The first half of 2019 continued to record 2015 18 Ridge Meadows 22 ture the majority of industrial sales activity in significant industrial sales activity in the Chilliwack 140 the Fraser Valley, Abbotsford and Chilliwack Fraser Valley with 105 deals valued at $185M Abbotsford 8 and will likely surpass 2018 in terms of deal 9 Langley are increasingly emerging as destinations 2014 19 Surrey for new industrial development and sub- velocity and match, if not exceed, dollar vol- 21 96 sequent sales and leasing activity.
    [Show full text]