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April 21, 2026
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NSSWD corrects Maxwell plant estimate difference

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If there’s comfort to be had for ratepayers surrounding the high costs for Salt Spring’s planned Maxwell Water Treatment Plant, it’s that at least the price is not as unexpected as believed.

That slightly complex message came from North Salt Spring Waterworks District (NSSWD) chief administrative officer Mark Boysen, who brought a mea culpa to district trustees at their meeting Thursday, Jan. 29. Boysen told the board a report presented at a special board meeting Friday, Jan. 16 contained an error: the “Class A” estimate, forecasting the cost of the new plant, was far more accurate than presented.

“There’s no way around it,” Boysen told the Driftwood last week. “It was a staff error in the estimates that were provided.”

A bit of inside baseball: a Class A estimate is a detailed, nearly definitive construction cost prediction used for planning — and budgeting — late in a project’s process, with an expected accuracy within five to 10 per cent of the median of competitive bids, according to Canadian Construction Association standards. 

Between civil construction and engineering and project management, on Jan. 16 the board approved the project cost of $16.6 million — almost 14 per cent higher than the Class A estimate NSSWD staff had reported as $14.6 million. 

But, Boysen said, that was staff’s mistake; consultants Kerr Wood Leidal (KWL) had submitted a Class A estimate back in September that worked out to a $16.1 million price tag — or just 3 per cent off the number that would be accepted by the board months later.

“Staff apologize for that error,” Boysen said. “We were moving quickly through a lot of different numbers.”

The price tag is still higher than some early estimates made by the district — including a familiar-sounding $14.6 million number, which had been used both for planning before the borrowing referendum and in a significant grant application the district made to the Canada Housing Infrastructure Fund in late 2024.

That application was not successful, trustees learned Thursday; Boysen said staff had received an email that morning indicating that there could be an opportunity to carry over the application to the new provincial Build Communities Strong fund.

Trustees reiterated that the loan authorization secured by last year’s ratepayer referendum would stay the same, at $11.7 million in borrowing, and that there would be no new parcel taxes or water toll charges to make up the higher cost of the Island Health-mandated plant. Instead the district will put off the $1.5-million Crofton Road pump station until 2027 and use some capital and connection charge reserves.

Seeking savings, district trustee David Courtney made a motion to rescind the nearly $1 million construction engineering award, but the motion was not seconded. Most trustees on Jan. 16 had indicated they agreed with the staff assessment that any re-tendering at this point would not result in lower bids.

The water treatment plant project is being required by regional health authorities as part of an effort to remove more of Maxwell Lake’s organic matter, which reacts with existing chlorine treatment to create trihalomethanes.

Award-winning Marlee Matlin film at ArtSpring

By STEVE MARTINDALE

For SS FILM FESTIVAL SOCIETY

At the age of 21, Marlee Matlin became a household name as the youngest-ever winner of the Best Actress Oscar for her groundbreaking performance as a teacher in a school for the deaf in the 1986 romantic drama Children of a Lesser God.

Also starring William Hurt, the film was directed by Randa Haines and was based on Mark Medoff’s Tony Award-winning 1979 stage play.

Matlin is now the subject of the award-winning documentary Marlee Matlin: Not Alone Anymore, being presented at ArtSpring by the Salt Spring Film Festival as part of their ongoing Best of the Fests series on Wednesday, Feb. 11 at 7:30 p.m.

After her Oscar win, Matlin went on to become Hollywood’s best-known deaf actor, appearing in dozens of films and television shows, including fan-favourite roles on The West Wing, Reasonable Doubts, Picket Fences and The L Word, as well as memorable guest appearances on Seinfeld, Glee, The Practice, ER, Sesame Street, Desperate Housewives and Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.

In the 2011 season of Celebrity Apprentice with Donald Trump, Matlin came in second place after country singer John Rich, raising awareness about accessibility rights for the hearing-impaired and also raising a cool million dollars for the Starkey Hearing Foundation.

The role that finally brought Matlin’s career full-circle, however, was in Sian Heder’s 2021 film CODA, which won the Oscar for Best Picture. As the film’s highest-profile star, Matlin had the power to insist that only deaf actors be cast to play deaf characters, which led to Troy Kotsur becoming the second deaf actor ever to win an Oscar.

At the Academy Awards ceremony that night, with the CODA filmmakers and the entire cast receiving a standing ovation, Matlin was at long last able to share a heartfelt and deceptively simple message from the stage in reference to her co-star’s award, 35 years after she had shattered that particular glass ceiling: “I’m not alone anymore.”

Directed by deaf actor and filmmaker Shoshannah Stern, this entertaining and enlightening film is also something of an experiential, empathy-building exercise, as the sound is intentionally modified to simulate the experience of hearing loss, forcing all viewers — regardless of the quality of their hearing — to rely on their eyes instead of their ears.

In addition to discussions of Matlin’s difficult childhood, her struggles with addiction and her abusive relationship with Hurt, one of the surprising revelations of this film is that Matlin was instrumental in introducing closed captioning, which the U.S. government legislated as mandatory in all new television sets after Matlin successfully lobbied Congress in the early 1990s to make broadcast television more accessible for the deaf and hearing-impaired. 

Following the annual Salt Spring Film Festival at Gulf Islands Secondary School from Feb. 27 to March 1 — at which over 40 documentaries will be presented — the Best of the Fests series continues at ArtSpring with a bonus film to celebrate International Women’s Day in collaboration with The Circle Education Society: Between the Mountain and the Sky on Friday, March 6. Edited by Salt Spring resident Piet Suess, this award-winning documentary is an engaging profile of CNN Hero of the Year Maggie Doyne, who founded an orphanage and school in Nepal after adopting more than 50 orphans.

Lady Minto Thrift Shop welcomes volunteers

The second week of our Stepping Up volunteer series puts the spotlight on a beloved community hub that provides invaluable services: the Lady Minto Hospital Auxiliary Thrift Shop.

The Thrift Shop is a popular venue for island residents who want to donate or purchase good, usable clothing, shoes, books and a wide variety of special treasures. Sales provide the main source of revenue for the Lady Minto Hospital Auxiliary (LMHA). 

Each year the auxiliary makes major grants to Lady Minto Hospital and to the Greenwoods Eldercare and Braehaven assisted living facilities for equipment and improvements that they need to enhance care and comfort of patients and residents. Auxiliary members also provide voluntary services at these facilities. As well, we have a new initiative to reach seniors at home. 

Our Lady Minto Thrift Shop is becoming busier, not only with increases in sales but also by accepting very good in-kind donations. We need more volunteers to work in the shop and to receive and process incoming donations.  

For more information, send an email to contact@lmhas.ca or phone the office at 250-931-3311 to leave a message.

Meet LMHA Thrift Shop volunteer Jackie Jensen!

Q. How long have you been volunteering with your group?

A. 31 years.

Q. What attracted you to this particular group?

A. I was browsing in the Thrift Shop when it was underneath Mouat’s when Betty Ann Caldwell, the then LMHA president, approached me and asked if I would like to volunteer. I said “yes,” and the rest is history.

Q. What role do you have now and what other roles have you had?

A. I am shift leader for the Wednesday morning shift and sit on the Thrift Shop Committee as communications person. Some of the things I have done, or still do, are secretary and publicity on the shop committee, created the Facebook page for the shop, sort donations, managed the children’s boutique, sort the donated eyeglasses and pass on the prescription ones to the Lions Club for third-world countries, train new volunteers, fix the jammed or broken barbing guns and ensure the coffee room is well stocked.

Q. What past experience have you had that has been helpful in your role(s)?

A. I have worked with the public in retail and alongside my husband Aino in the businesses we have owned.

Q. What do you like best about volunteering with your group?

A. I love the comradeship that develops amongst the volunteers and the fact that the funds from our work go towards helping support the various health-related facilities on the island.

Q. What is something that has surprised you or you did not expect?

A. That I would still be here 31 years later. I think what surprises me most is the volume and wide variety of items that we receive in donations.

Q. What are a few traits that would be helpful for potential volunteers to have?

A. A sense of commitment even though it is a volunteer job.

Q. How long have you lived on Salt Spring Island?

A. 35 years.

Q. How else might islanders know you?

A. I worked at the Sears Catalogue office from 1992 to 1995. Some may know me as the voice on the phone of our business, Salt Spring Bottled Water, the first on-island bottled water company, from 1991 to 2006.

Q. In a nutshell, why would you recommend volunteering with your group?

A. It’s fun. You meet new people. It provides a service to the community and helps support our health care facilities.

Salt Spring non-profit groups wanting to participate in the Stepping Up series should contact Driftwood editor Gail Sjuberg at news@gulfislandsdriftwood.com or 250-537-9933.

Salt Spring performers wanted for Showcase

BY MEGAN WARREN

FOR ARTSPRING

Following the vibrant success of ArtSpring’s 25th-anniversary celebration in 2024, a new island tradition is taking root.

The ArtSpring RoundTable has officially announced the return of the Salt Spring Community Showcase, scheduled for April 17, and the search is on for local performers to fill the spotlight.

The goal of the anniversary event was to create a celebration of the arts by the local community, for the local community. For Showcase co-producer Christina Penhale (working alongside Michael Bean), this goal was the hook that made her want to be involved.  

“My heart work is providing platforms and spaces for our local groups to be seen and heard,” Penhale said. “My focus for the 25th was ‘how do we involve as many local artists from as many different disciplines and as many different backgrounds as we can in a meaningful way?’”

The result was a glorious 25th-anniversary weekend that featured local performers from start to finish, opening and closing the celebration with island talent. With dancers, singers, actors, a swing band, multimedia pieces and even short films, Salt Spring’s incredible creative variety was on full display. It was clear from that weekend that the island wanted more events that centred on local talent. Penhale’s decision to produce this year’s Showcase is a response to a question she heard a lot after the inaugural Showcase: “Why can’t we do this every year?”

ArtSpring has long been known for bringing top-tier acts from around the world to the island. However, the Showcase represents a way forward to ensure that the art deeply enmeshed in the local landscape is also celebrated on ArtSpring’s professional stage.

For Penhale, one of the 25th anniversary’s great triumphs was the breadth of local groups that performed.

“We had Swing Shift and the improv team, we had the GISS dancers, we had musicians from GISS Music, we had StageCoach and we had the Makana Youth Choirs,” she said. “It was just amazing to have all of those people come together in celebration of what we have on this island.”

Organizers hope to see a similar turnout in this year’s application pool, with even more variety in media.

“I would love to see more scenes, poetry, spoken word, monologues, even film,” said Penhale. “More representation of the different disciplines that we have on this island would be great to see.”

To those on the fence about submitting, she offers timeless advice: “If you don’t apply, you can’t get selected. There is no wrong application, you just have to put yourself out there.”

Call for Submissions

Performers of all media are encouraged to apply, regardless of age or experience level. All selected performers will receive an honorarium. General submission time slots are up to 20 minutes long, and youth slots are three to five minutes. 

The deadline to apply is Saturday, Feb. 14 at 11:59 p.m. Interested artists can find full submission details and apply online at saltspringshowcase.com.

For those who are more at home in the audience than onstage, tickets to attend the Showcase are already on sale at purchase.artspring.ca. Book your ticket now for a joyful and uplifting celebration of the people who make Salt Spring’s art scene so unique.

Litter bucket waits for contributions

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A smiling face greets visitors at one section of Salt Spring Island boardwalk: the Grace Point Pick Up Litter Bucket, one resident’s spontaneous creation that for the last month or so has been helping passers-by pick up garbage at the high-traffic waterfront location.

The bucket’s sponsor, who wishes to remain anonymous, said that after a few early hiccups — someone made off with the bucket’s first “arm,” he said, hopefully to pick up litter elsewhere — the little pail on the rail has been a cheerful friend to locals looking to tidy some trash.

Anyone interested in helping or establishing another bucket elsewhere on the island should reach out to gracepointbucket@gmail.com.

Viewpoint: We are a diverse community

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By JASON MOGUS

I was disappointed to read our MLA Rob Botterell’s recent public statements opposing the Trust Policy Statement our current council is trying to move forward.

Mr. Botterell should remember he was elected to represent our whole economically and culturally diverse island, not just those in the traditional Green party base who have hardened around housing issues. 

Botterell’s criticisms of the Trust Policy Statement don’t hold water. He argues the current council shouldn’t dare move this process forward until another election, yet we’ve been watching this debate for two terms and almost seven years already. Laura Patrick was elected, twice, on a mandate that included housing and environment. The other Salt Spring trustee received the second most votes on a strong housing mandate, and many of the other 26 trustees across the Islands Trust area were also elected on strong housing mandates. It is not anti-democratic for our elected leaders to act on the orders the community gave them. 

What is more concerning is Botterell’s incendiary suggestion that the real reason an evolution to the Trust’s goals is being discussed is to unleash growth and development. “For those seeking urban amenities and growth, Salt Spring and the other islands in the Trust are the wrong places to live.” This tired argument gains clicks but lacks evidence. It dismisses both the data showing a third of this community is housing insecure, and the stories of countless working class and young people who struggle to stay in our increasingly unaffordable community.  

Botterell’s argument is suspiciously aligned with that of a small but vigorous group who have decided any attempts at dealing with our community’s housing crisis, no matter how incremental or responsible they are, is tantamount to treason of the founding principles of the Trust. 

I’ve been in rooms with dozens of islanders who care about making a difference on this issue that impacts us all. While there are varying degrees of agreement around what we should do, all agree we have to move forward, and that those with different views are acting in good faith.

Our MLA has had a full year on the job now. He should listen to a more diverse group of people before taking extreme positions that further erode trust in our institutions and needlessly divide our community.

The writer is a Salt Spring resident who works on campaigns for climate justice and housing around the world.

Islands Trust tax increase firms up

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As both federal and provincial agencies continue to announce job cuts and other belt-tightening measures, finance-focused officials at the Islands Trust hope they can assure skeptical islanders — and fellow trustees — an upcoming tax increase here is necessary to keep the status quo. 

The draft budget before the Financial Planning Committee (FPC) as of Wednesday, Jan. 21 had inched back up to $11.94 million; with the year’s property values now set by BC Assessment, staff said the Local Trust Area general tax increase had shifted to 13.9 per cent, with the increase in the Bowen Island general tax levy rising 31.1 per cent.

For an average property, according to financial and employee services director Julia Mobbs, that’s a roughly $55 to $60 increase per household within the Local Trust Areas — and $50 to $55 for Bowen Island taxpayers.

Notably, the bulk of those tax increases is tied to replacing external revenue streams — like lost grants, lost investment income and lost draws from surplus and reserves, according to Mobbs, who said even zero change in spending next year would still require a 7.1 per cent tax increase for Local Trust Areas to make up the difference.

“And 3.7 per cent of the tax increase is due to non-discretionary costs,” she added, “such as elections and changes to base staff wages.”

That left only 3.1 per cent, which she said was due to more discretionary spending and inflationary factors — very little “wiggle room,” as Lasqueti Island trustee Tim Peterson put it.

Trustees asked staff to prepare “speaking notes” summarizing that lack of flexibility, to help them illuminate the budget — not only to other trustees during budget discussions at the upcoming Trust Council Committee of the Whole meeting but also within their own communities. Trustees said they were already fielding questions from islanders about the wisdom of tax hikes in the current fiscal environment — even from taxpayers who said they deeply valued the organization’s mission.

Indeed, the Friends of the Gulf Islands Society’s delegation to the FPC Wednesday supported a letter, not only opposing any new staff positions — within either the Islands Trust or the Islands Trust Conservancy — but also urging budget increases be capped to the rate of inflation.

“This is a plea for fiscal discipline from this committee,” said society member Maxine Leichter. “We feel the Trust cannot just go on adding staff year after year, especially when we see no increase in actual protection of the Trust Area as the [Islands] Trust Act requires.”

Leichter noted the environmentally focused society was saddened by the likely cut of a planned full-time biologist for the Islands Trust — a critical new position, they argued, given the organization’s mandate — and said that loss represented a misalignment of priorities more than simply an outright lack of funds.

“I know it’s hard to abandon [projects] that so much money has gone into,” said Leichter, pointing to the Trust’s now six-figure groundwater sustainability strategy project as an example. “But sometimes it’s better to cut your losses before there are more.”

The Committee of the Whole meeting on the budget is set for 1 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 18 and can be viewed online through the islandstrust.bc.ca website.

Fire district creates Fulford hall pond

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South-end firefighters have a new tool at their disposal: a recently completed 750,000-gallon water supply pond, now in service at the station serving Fulford. 

Salt Spring Island Fire Rescue Chief Jamie Holmes said water from the new pond will be used for training at Fire Hall No. 2, meaning firefighters won’t be pulling from the on-site well or tanks for training nights — and the substantial extra water will likely be a key resource for the district during emergencies. 

“It’s really going to boost our emergency response down toward Fulford,” said Holmes. “We can even take that water and pressurize the two training hydrants that are hooked up there, and put pressurized water out to the front tarmac of the fire hall.”

A six-inch dry hydrant pipe already installed at the site brings water to the corner of the nearby tennis court, Holmes said, where water tender trucks can pull in and out quickly. Holmes said the tailings from digging the pond were all used nearby, levelling out the training grounds and helping with some minor drainage issues around the fire hall — a “win-win,” he said, with most of the water now captured and sloping back into the pond.

The new pond is fully fenced for safety, he added, and a dock will be added in the spring — for drafting drills with the department’s portable water pumps. 

In other news, trustees agreed to support an effort led by regional fire chiefs who are forming a collective to address the role of improvement districts with the Office of the Fire Commissioner — specifically, Holmes explained, the exclusion of improvement districts like Salt Spring’s from fire inspections and investigations under the new Fire Safety Act.

Holmes said he felt joining the coalition was an opportunity to educate provincial regulators, who he had come to believe didn’t fully understand improvement districts — “And I don’t say that lightly,” he said.

“Every level of government I talked to [before the new act] said their rationale was that a regional district was a better representation of the community because they have regular elections,” said Holmes. “So when I explained to them that we also have elections — and hold them more often, so possibly an even truer representation of the public’s wishes — their only reply was, ‘oh.’”

The fire districts — so far including those on Thetis and Quadra islands, as well as Shawnigan Lake, Cowichan Bay and Mill Bay — hope a unified response will ensure any legislative changes don’t leave improvement districts away from the table. For now, according to board chair Rollie Cook, that support will take the form of a letter indicating their endorsement of the group’s work.

Editorial: Good old days are gone

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At a time in life when personal connections can seem vanishing, it’s all the more tragic our treasured elders are urged to be suspicious of new ones.

The message delivered from our visiting B.C. Seniors Advocate Dan Levitt may not have meant to be dispiriting, but there was a sad acknowledgement underpinning his excellent advice at the Salt Spring Seniors Centre last week: times have changed, and we need to keep up with them — even on Salt Spring.

The dramatic increase in calls to the province-wide Seniors Abuse and Information Line, or the rise in reported scams targeting senior victims, represent an industrialization of what once might’ve been a boutique area of criminal operation. With so much personal data being shared online, savvy scam artists have upscaled their efforts to direct fraud toward the most vulnerable with unprecedented precision — and with technologies that can now mimic the voices of loved ones, both seniors and those who care for them have to be vigilant.

It’s one thing to agree to take on the hard work of shifting our old habits; it’s quite another to recognize the downstream effects of making those now-necessary changes. Not picking up unknown phone calls, for example, or even being wary if they look familiar — because even an island prefix can be faked, Levitt confirmed — leaves many older residents mourning a lost opportunity for conversations, particularly as it becomes more difficult to get out and about to have them. It’s a complicated truth that a rise in these types of scams makes socially connecting programs offered for seniors — many supported by our own Salt Spring Seniors Services Society — all the more important.

Perhaps our local governments should also take a page from Levitt’s book of recommendations and begin work on a Seniors Plan — acknowledging this growing demographic’s needs before they reach crisis levels, and setting aside resources to meet reality. Because we will all be someone’s elder, sooner or later.

Nobody Asked Me But: The last Mecca of lost steps and unintentional backtracks

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Let me be brutally honest. I have the worst sense of direction on the planet. Had I been born a few centuries ago and sailed with Columbus, I probably would have fallen off the edge of the earth. Had I been dogsledding with Robert Peary and searching for the North Pole, there’s no doubt in my mind that I would have been stranded together with a flock of penguins on a floating iceberg just off the shores of Antarctica. Had I been leading the Franklin expedition in the quest for a northwest passage that cut across the continent, I would probably have ended up bogged down in an endless lineup at Disneyworld.

It’s sad, I know, but I have a hard time knowing my left from my right, east from west and north from south. If it wasn’t for gravity, I probably wouldn’t be able to distinguish up from down. They say that there is no up and down in space, so maybe the life of an astronaut should have been my career choice. Unfortunately, any vital instruction telling me to turn left at Jupiter would jumble up any possible intergalactic travel plans for me.

Possibly even more challenging than trying to navigate the Northwest Passage are excursions to the local supermarket. Directions as to where I can find a package of Bob’s Red Mill organic ground flax are just as likely to send me and my shopping cart off into deep space as to the proper location in aisle 7B. Precise verbal directions and hand signals from supermarket staff employees may prove helpful to normal shoppers, but knowing the aisle and shelf numbers always seems to plop me directly facing the canned persimmons display rack. Being informed that a certain specialty item can be located two aisles over on the bottom shelf between the lactose free sour cream and the triple cream Greek yogurt may pinpoint the exact location to other shoppers, but is more than likely to deposit me smack-dab in the pet food section right in front of the doggie rawhide chewy bones. Most discouraging is the feeling I get after I have passed the bulk chocolate-covered jujubes five times and made a mental note to myself to finally pick them up on my last sweep through the aisles. Inevitably, I then forget which bin they are in, which results in my having to scan every container in the bulk food row. Almost as frustrating is leaving my buggy in one of the aisles so that I can quickly sprint over to pick up a forgotten grocery item in another location in the store, and then not be able to locate and retrieve the shopping cart no matter how much I search.

I have discovered, however, that all is not hopeless when it comes to having a rotten sense of direction. There are proven tactics and exercises that can increase the chances of not getting lost. The first and most important one is to ask directions. If you are of the male gender, you will never stoop to this strategy, so you might as well move right on to the next most important maneuver: using clues in your surroundings to assist in helping you find your way. You might recall that in the fairy tale Hansel and Gretel, the siblings dropped breadcrumbs as they wandered through the forest so they could later retrace their steps and find their way back home. It’s a pity that the crumbs were devoured by the forest wildlife, which is why the children ended up on the menu at the evil witch’s cake and sugar house. But hey, at least they had a plan. Other techniques for finding the way back home include tying one end of a large ball of yarn to your starting point, unrolling the ball until you reach the destination, and then rolling it back up as you follow the line of yarn back to where you started. This method is guaranteed to work unless any living being or machine happens to cross the line of yarn and accidentally or purposely breaks it.

Perhaps the most annoying challenge to navigating your way between here and there is the roundabout or traffic circle. Once considered an innovative engineering tool for integrating traffic flow, this monstrosity of misunderstanding and misdirection completely confuses both competent drivers and those who have zero sense of direction. As a result, either all traffic stops because nobody knows who actually has the right of way, or all traffic continues to go around in circles because nobody knows when it is their turn to exit the circle. If, by some miracle, you do manage to disengage from this merry-go-round of disoriented vehicles, you can be certain that the exit you took was not the one you wanted.

Speaking of confused directions, Salt Spring Island is possibly the Mecca of lost steps and unintentional backtracks. So many establishments and businesses have changed locations over the years that directions as to how to find these have to describe not only where they are presently, but also where they may once have been located. An example of such a direction could be something like “turn left at where the Video Ranch used to be before they moved into Grace Point and then head up the hill to the old hospital right across from what was once the cop shop.”

If you’ve lived on the island long enough, you may still remember how to find your way to the Vesuvius Inn or the Fulford Inn, although neither of these still exist. Long gone as well is the dark bar at the back of the Harbour House which was affectionately known as the Dungeon (or was it the Pit?). Any list of business past incarnations would have to include the credit union, which bounced around the downtown core so many times that you can still find old deposit slips blowing along the sidewalk and lining the shores of Ganges Creek.

Nobody asked me, but I’ve learned that it’s still possible to find my way around this island even if my sense of direction is beyond atrocious. The GPS app in my dashboard ought to be a great help if only I could locate its location on the instrument panel. Oh well, a little perseverance and a lot of luck wouldn’t hurt, especially since I can’t often track down my vehicle because I can’t find the actual parking lot where I last left it. Worst of all, however, are situations like the time I drove onto the ferry and walked off. Now that’s beyond beyond atrocious. That would have been the perfect time to jump off the edge of the earth.