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COMIC: MYSTIC MAN 19 VS Cyber Cindy

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FOOD FIGHT: Innovation and comfort food don’t always mix

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Don't be deceived by it's good looks — the toppings on this mac and cheese make for an unpleasant dining experience.

Fable Diner reimagines Main Street with a 1950s flair.

Opened in early July, Fable Diner, a spin-off of Kitsilano’s Fable Restaurant, brings an upscale diner experience while maintaining the integrity of a movie-style diner: wooden tables, forest green leather booths, modern white tile, and retro prints. The service was friendly and genuine, even throughout the busy lunch hour.  

There is an extensive array of comfort food featuring interesting ingredients (kimchi, cola onions, and gochujang), but the dishes clearly show how hard Fable Diner tried to think outside of the box. There is little room for error when it comes to changing popular dishes, and while their ideas are original, some of them missed the mark.

The mac and cheese had an amazing sauce but was topped with tooth-breakingly hard corn nuts and strong goat cheese. The veggie BLT replaced the “B” with rubbery shiitake mushrooms. The FD burger took a chance with a medium-well burger patty which, despite being ground in-house and perfectly safe to eat, left us feeling kind of squeamish after we left the restaurant.

Hiding amidst these misses was the delicious tomato soup, which put Campbell’s to shame. If nothing else, have a bowl of this soup when you go. It is the perfect blend of cream and slightly tangy tomato coming together in light and delicious harmony.

As Fable Diner’s customer base continues to grow, the chefs at the restaurant continue to experiment with different ingredients and bolder flavours to stay true to their unique, upscale diner experience. The creative dishes that appear on the ever-expanding menu will have us coming back even if the dishes weren’t that great this time.

Satellite Signals

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Surrey

Students can attend YVR Master Plan consultations at SFU Surrey November 8, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. This event allows students to discuss the future of YVR, as they develop a plan to make YVR a “world-class airport.” For more details, visit YVR’s Master Plan 2037 website.

Harbour Centre

India is the world’s fifth largest economy, but over half its population continues to live in poverty according to Multidimensional Poverty Index 2013. Professor S. Parasuraman, director and vice-chancellor of Tata Institute of Social Sciences in Mumbai, explains India’s poverty and economy, and the future of the diverse country. The Munro Lecture will be in room 1200 on November 15 at 7 p.m. at the Segal Graduate School of Business. For more information, visit SFU Public Square’s website.

Woodward’s

Filmmakers Banchi Hanuse and Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers present their films on November 9 at 7 p.m. in the Djavad Mowafaghian Cinema. Their films examine nature, colonialism, and First Nations culture throughout British Columbia. The film screening will be followed by a panel discussion with the filmmakers and other guests. For more information, visit SFU Woodward’s website.

SFU contributes to Surrey becoming Canada’s first City of Refuge

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Housan Al-Mosilli (above) is one of the safe, previously persecuted, artists to become a part of the International Cities of Refuge Network (ICORN). Surrey joins the 60 cities that are part of this network.

Writer and journalist Housam Al-Mosilli, who was born and raised in Syria, was arrested three times and tortured by Syrian security because he was reporting on anti-government demonstrations. He was forced to flee from his home country, in 2012 and did not find a safe place to call home until August 2013.  

Al-Mosilli is one of many artists worldwide whose stories of persecution prompted SFU to partner with the City of Surrey to create a committee, resulting in Surrey becoming Canada’s first City of Refuge for persecuted artists and writers.

Surrey will join with more than 60 cities worldwide that have been accepted into the International Cities of Refuge Network (ICORN). This is an organization that aims to protect and promote writers and artists who are at risk. The program has placed over 140 artists and writers into safer homes, where their artistic abilities can be put to use without fear of persecution. ICORN not only places the artists in a host city, they also assist the writer in distributing their works. This opportunity gives the artist a strong voice in the world.

Najati Tayara, a writer from Syria, wrote in a testimony to ICORN’s effectiveness that the organization gave him “two years to organize [his] life, and to enrich and activate [his] experience.” While in his host city, Tayara continued to write for “Arabic newspapers and websites,” the difference being he was able to write without fear that he would be harmed for his work.

“SFU’s Surrey campus is thrilled to partner with the City of Surrey and KPU [Kwantlen Polytechnic University] to help designate Surrey as Canada’s first City of Refuge,” said SFU’s Surrey campus executive director Steve Dooley in a press release from the City of Surrey. “We are working to open doors that might have otherwise been closed on these important literary voices.”

Dooley explained to SFU News,that while the refuge is here, there will be opportunities for the writer to be part of the Surrey and SFU community.  He continued to say it shows “that we recognize and value literary excellence, no matter what the underlying struggle.”

The process of opening Surrey’s doors to the first artist has begun. A committee comprised of the City of Surrey, SFU, KPU, and the Surrey Public Library is currently working on the next step in the process, which is selecting a candidate and fundraising for their arrival. The committee is searching for an artist or writer who will thrive in the Surrey community.

In a recent interview with The Peak, Surrey Councillor Judy Villeneuve stated that the ideal candidate will be someone who is willing to “talk about their writing, and share their experiences” with the community.

Similar to the ambitions of Dooley, Villeneuve hopes to see the artist “inspire our own students, as well as remind our citizens that we take so much for granted. In Canada, we can express freely in our arts, while writers and artists elsewhere don’t have this ability.”

World News Beat

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Iceland – Pirate party falls short of poll predictions in general election

The results of Iceland’s October 29 general election reveal that the Pirate party, positioned pre-election to become the country’s biggest party, won just shy of 15 percent of the vote. The Pirate party was formed by Internet activists, who value government transparency and pure democracy. More voters opted for the Independence party, which won 29 percent of the vote and ran on a platform of lowering taxes and further economic recovery. The election was spurred by the resignation of former prime minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson after the Panama papers scandal in April, which brought to light the existence of offshore accounts held by Icelandic officials.

With files from The Guardian and Reuters

Italy – Country’s worst earthquake in over 30 years leaves 15,000 homeless

On October 30, an earthquake of magnitude 6.6 hit Italy’s central region, the highest magnitude recorded in the country since 1980. The region had been experiencing tremors for the past two months. The earthquake, the epicentre of which was near Norcia, affected several towns, non-critically injuring 20 people. The civil protection agency said it was providing assistance to 15,000 people forced from their homes, and providing shelter to 10,000 of those. Norcia residents mourned the collapse of the 13th century Basilica of St. Benedict, described as the cultural and historic heart of the town.

With files from BBC News and Reuters

Morocco – Death of fishmonger sparks protest

Protests were held October 30 in several Moroccan cities in response to the death of a fishmonger. Mouhcine Fikri was crushed in a garbage truck while trying to recover the fish he had bought at a port. Following this, many took to social media to denounce “hogra” a term for injustice, while the fish were confiscated by the police. These rallies are being compared to demonstrations during the Arab unrest in 2011, which were organized by the same activist group responsible for the current protests.

With files from BBC News and Reuters

Adrian VanderHelm is swimming towards the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo

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Last season, VanderHelm recorded the fifth fastest time in NCAA Division II history in the 500-yard freestyle.

If Adrian VanderHelm’s journey had to be summarized in one sentence, the Muhammad Ali quote “Impossible is nothing” would probably be a good one. The freestyle swimmer revealed to The Peak where his passion for swimming came from.

“Swimming was never a family thing. I was the first person ever to swim in my family. I started swimming after the 2008 Olympics. I watched Michael Phelps winning gold and said to myself, ‘That’s pretty incredible. He is by far the most amazing athlete of all time.’”

Despite a tough childhood due to health-related problems, swimming has built VanderHelm’s confidence.

“I took it natural into the pool because I was overweight when I was young, so I was able to float really well,” he chuckled. “I had asthma and I was borderline diabetic. Swimming changed my life in a lot of ways. Because of it, I can attribute a multitude of positive impacts on my life. I wasn’t confident when I was younger and I was ashamed of my body. Swimming also helped me with health and social complications.”

While many student athletes deliberately choose SFU for its uniqueness in being the only Canadian institution in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division II, the Ontario-native recalled what brought him all the way to the Canadian West Coast.

“SFU is chosen on three accounts. First, it is the only NCAA school outside of the States. I was born in the States and I wanted to compete in the States, but I wasn’t sure about living there. The second reason being three of my best friends go to SFU and they’re all from Barrie and they all went to SFU for swimming. I was interested to see if I could follow them out here and recombine my friendships with them.

“The third reason is that SFU is the only school in Canada that can offer full athletic scholarships, which I ended up obtaining.”

VanderHelm is the first member of the Clan swim team to qualify for the NCAA Division II Championship; he also became the first male All-American swimmer at SFU, achieving both accolades in his freshman year. But when it comes to the Olympic level, the likelihood of qualifying for the world’s most popular sports event is slim to none. For junior VanderHelm, this dream could become a reality, as he’s already been to the Olympic trials for the 2016 games.

“As a student athlete, I would say it is one of my biggest accomplishments if not my largest and most proud moment [thus] far. As college swimming goes, being able to swim at the Olympic trials in hope of representing Canada was another one of my top moments. I am still hoping to represent Canada at Tokyo 2020. That was always kind of my goal.

“2016 was kind of rushed. I haven’t been swimming for very long. I started swimming in Grade 9. Somebody like Phelps, or any other competitor, would start when they’re four or five.”

Despite his massive achievements in swimming, adjusting to the student-athlete lifestyle is an ongoing process for junior VanderHelm.

“My biggest struggle? I would have to say the choice between napping and studying. I don’t have a nap schedule, but I should really make one. It’s really hard to distinguish when it’s responsible and academically viable to take a nap versus study. You have to manage your time very well and that’s difficult because you need to sleep and eat [a] lot when you’re swimming. I’m in four courses and I have to get good grades in order to compete. Our coach set a goal for us to reach a 3.0 GPA. You have a sense of recompense when you feel like you’ve accomplished things socially, academically, and athletically. Those are the three pillars of my life.”

Apart from the benefits swimming had on his life, VanderHelm gives a lot of credit to coach Liam Donnelly for helping him grow as a person.

“We have four coaches on our team and I deal directly with Liam. He has coached athletes in the Olympics and the World Games. My relationship with him is really good and we have moments where we’re proud of each other. I plan on swimming after graduating and I would like to do that with coach Liam.”

Richmond mayor hopes to reduce Canada’s food waste by 50 percent by 2030

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SFU professor, Stephanie Bertels discussed the the role of new packaging companies reducing plastic production.

“The best way to make change in the world is to make it rather than talking about it,” said Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Media Lab professor Neri Oxman at Vancouver’s Zero Waste Conference.

The annual gathering brought together intellectuals, designers, and executives from diverse backgrounds to address the challenges of eliminating waste, while improving life for consumers in the process. The goal of the conference is to move to a “circular economy,” where everything is reused, recycled, or composted.

Oxman gave the morning keynote speech, explaining how the MIT Media Lab is drawing inspiration from nature in order to create replacements for plastics and new surfaces for buildings. In particular, she explained that “the world of design has been subjugated by the rigours of manufacturing and mass production.” She suggested designers could transition to using 3-D printing and reactive materials to build complex structures in one piece rather than assembling many different parts.

“We don’t want to work with plastics anymore in the products design realm,” she said, adding that instead we would have products that could biodegrade on demand.

Later in the conference, Stephanie Bertels, professor at SFU’s Beedie School of Business, hosted a discussion with industry leaders in redirecting waste from landfills. The audience heard from companies like Ecovative, which uses lab-grown fungus to make replacements for styrofoam packaging, and Looptworks, which has created designer luggage lines that use scraps of material collected from other industries.

The federal government joined in on the action, too. Joyce Murray, Liberal MP for Vancouver Quadra, told attendees that it was time the government “get [their] own house in order.” She explained that the government will take progressive steps to achieve a 40 percent cut to emissions by 2030, including shifting government fleets to electric and hybrid vehicles and retrofitting government buildings to make them more energy efficient.

The biggest announcement of the conference came when Richmond Mayor Malcolm Brodie spoke to the Zero Waste Committee’s desire to take a bite out of food waste.

He announced a newly created National Food Waste Reduction Strategy, which outlines different steps that will be taken with the goal of reducing food waste in Canada by 50 percent by 2030. Practical regulations to target food waste at the consumer and distributor ends by clarifying best-before labels on perishables and using tax credits to incentivize food bank donations over food disposal.

Vancouver has already been a hotbed of this kind of waste reduction and other green initiatives in recent years. Since 2008, the city has reduced its solid waste going to landfills by 23 percent, with the goal of reducing it by 50 percent by 2020. SFU has a similar program in place that has already achieved its goal of diverting 70 percent of solid waste from landfills.

For SFU students who are hungry for more opportunities to reduce their environmental footprint, they can also participate in the Food Rescue program organized by Embark, SFU’s student-led environmental organization.

The program receives donated food from the Nesters Market on Burnaby Mountain and hands it out to students in Blusson Hall.

The Peak is hiring for the spring semester!

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Don’t give away your shot: The Peak is hiring for the spring semester. Applicants should send in a resume as well as a brief cover letter. Sample work relevant to the position(s) applied for is highly encouraged.

The Peak‘s hiring board is looking for the best and brightest SFU students to help report on stories that are of interest to the student body. If you are passionate about campus politics, arts and culture, local and regional sports, satire, leadership and management, photography, graphic design, in-depth investigation, sex jokes, and/or free pizza, this is the job for you.

Working for The Peak is an excellent way to gain hands-on experience in the field of journalism as well as building skills in communications, public relations, illustration and design, critical thinking, leadership, photography, and more. You will meet like minds who work hard and play hard in a high-energy environment.

Applicants must be registered SFU students for the duration of the semester for which they are applying. Previous experience with our newspaper is preferred, but not required. Please address your applications to The Peak hiring board at [email protected], or drop them off at our offices in MBC 2900. Any questions about the process can also be sent to this address.

Applications close on Friday, November 18 at 11:59 p.m. Job descriptions for available positions can be found below:

Production and Design Editor

Copy Editor

Print News Editor

Web News Editor

Opinions Editor

Features Editor

Arts Editor

Sports Editor

Humour Editor

Photo Editor

Multimedia Editor

Website Manager

Social Media Manager

Layout Assistants (2)

Multimedia Assistant

Weirdest research at SFU

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Built on top of a mountain blanketed in fog, SFU was destined to have a mysterious, at times almost eerie, feel. Flash forward 50 years: SFU has become a leading Canadian research university. Hidden somewhere within the concrete expanse of SFU lays many research labs — each with their own story.

You may pass them on your way to a class, or while lost in the Shrum Science Centre, but for the majority of students here (in particular undergraduates), that’s the extent of our relationship with these labs.

These shrouds of intrigue have stories to tell. Here are some of the most eccentric research projects SFU has ever seen.

Fall for science

The slapstick comedy staple: a guy walking down the street and slipping on a banana peel still earns laughs to this day. However, if this were to happen in Dr. Stephen Robinovitch’s Injury Prevention and Mobility Lab, your fall would be a bunch of data points for the lab to analyze in the name of science — specifically to reduce fall-related injuries in seniors.

Even though most falls are “benign events,” Robinovitch explained that “falls are among [the] top 10 cause[s] of death in seniors. About 25 percent of hip fracture patients will die within one year, and 50 percent will have a major decline in independence, often moving from their community-based homes to long-term care.”

So along with Fabio Feldman (then a PhD student in his lab), he set out to study footage captured from cameras of common areas in long-term care facilities — the places where seniors would frequently fall.

After analyzing about 1,700 falls experienced by over 500 seniors, they were able to analyze the most common types of “imbalance events” that caused the falls.

Surprisingly, slips are rarely the cause of falls. Instead “incorrect shifting of body weight” and “loss of external support” were found to be the major causes. Though, even if there is no resultant injury, falls can result in “loss of confidence, fear of falling, and restriction of physical activity.”

But in this case, what they found isn’t as interesting as how they found it. For this and other studies, the researchers built the “Slipitron 2000”: a large “perturbation platform” that literally makes you fall.

Unsuspecting volunteers are fitted with reflective markers on their joints, and movements are recorded by a 3-D motion capture system. The volunteers then stand on a plastic rug which is on top of a flat cushy surface and, without notice, the rug is pulled off.

The data captured is fed into mathematical models to measure muscle activation, and other physics-related things that are far beyond my understanding.

After examining the videos, the researchers were wondering if there was indeed a way to teach people to fall. In other words, an ideal way to fall. Their answer: judo.

Judo practitioners train in the ukemi falling technique, where they don’t block a fall by stretching out their hands; instead, they fall sideways, slam their arm down, and roll it off. The judo experts performed as well as the average Joe on the Slipitron, suggesting that “hardwired responses may override training.”

Currently, the researchers are trying to analyze the benefit to seniors of exercise programs that focus on “training balance recovery and safe landing strategies.”

Paranormal activity: The research dimension

Some of us will always want to believe — and Dr. Paul Kingsbury’s research certainly adds fuel to the fire of any X-Files fanatics or Alien believers out there. He’s out there tracking and profiling UFOs, ghosts, and Bigfoot hunters.

As a cultural geographer, he has previously been to the Fusion Festival in Surrey to look at Bollywood music, Navroz celebrations in West Van to study the role of food, and has examined the role of TVs and cafés in Portuguese and Italian communities during the World Cup, to name a few. But nothing compares to his research into the supernatural seekers.

“The paranormal, in many parts of the world, has gone mainstream,” Kingsbury said, highlighting the influx of paranormal content in movies and in television.

The project doesn’t aim to prove or disprove the paranormal claims, but instead looks at “attending to their cultural aspects.”

Now two years into a four-year project, Kingsbury has gone on seven excursions with paranormal investigators across the Lower Mainland, as well as two UFO conferences, as part of his research. Unlike popular belief, UFO conferences (at least structurally) are increasingly mimicking regular academic conferences, where the attendees are a mix of lifelong devotees and novices.

As Kingsbury explained, “One of the reasons why people get into ghost investigations or ufology is that they themselves have experienced a paranormal activity that they can’t explain, and they want to interact with other like-minded people who wouldn’t judge them as crazy.” The investigators are mostly middle-class, average income individuals working in banal jobs, who like to try and explain the unexplainable each weekend.

The investigators do take the assistance of technology to aid them, such as voice recorders, electro-magnetic frequency machines, and the “spirit box.” These are used to scan different frequencies they claim can capture voices from the “other side.” The teams themselves are a paradox: while some use equipment to get to a basic scientific explanation and debunk the haunted feeling, the mediums try to “feel any presence or residual energies.” As Kingsbury said, “the typical paranormal investigator is a skeptic; they want to disprove the ghosts.”

When asked about a particularly spooky expedition, he recounted when he went to the Vancouver Police Museum. It was about 2:30 in the morning, in a room used to drain bodies before they went to the morgue. It was a spirit box session, during which he felt there was a sustained communication with a paranormal entity, from the way the paranormal investigator was interacting with the “obscure voice-like phenomenon.”

Oliver Keane, one of Kingsbury’s PhD students, is overseeing the cryptozoology aspect of the project, by analyzing sasquatch investigations. Cryptozoology looks at both folklore and fossils to study creatures whose existence is as yet unsubstantiated or questioned heavily. However, according to Kingsbury, this is no pseudoscience. As Keane mentioned, pieces of evidence have been examined relating to the sasquatch, the most prominent being footage captured by Patterson and Gimlin in Bluff Creek, CA, in 1967, showing what appears to be a “female sasquatch.”

According to Keane’s research, there have been striking similarities between the depictions of the sasquatch in First Nations stories and what investigators have imagined it to be through their findings.

Creepy, crawly research on campus

Saywell Hall, to me, is nothing but a long flight of stairs, followed by a longer walk to the bus loop. But did you know that under that corridor in a corner of that building lies an RCMP-protected research lab?

I sat down with Dr. Gail Anderson, a professor of forensic entomology and co-director of the Centre for Forensic Research at SFU, to enquire about how she studies insect-infected corpses to help law enforcement solve homicides.

When Anderson finished her PhD in pest management at SFU in the late ‘80s, she wasn’t set on what she wanted to do, though she “always wanted to do something applied.” In a quintessential moment of a mentor guiding their protégé, her biological sciences professor Dr. John Borden suggested she use her knowledge to aid police in a local homicide case.

Soon after that, she became the first full-time forensic entomologist in Canada.

Many of us would have dissected a rat, or an organ of some other animal in high school — likely with shaking hands and (hopefully) a calm stomach. Anderson, meanwhile, has conducted multiple studies using pig carcasses, which apparently make for an acceptable replacement for humans.

The process: leave the carcass on the ground, or bury them under ground — maybe submerge them in lakes — essentially observing how insects colonize carcasses in different environments.

Given the ostensibly odd methodology of solving crime, she recalled that law enforcement was quite welcoming of her, and she would often get calls from cops to come inspect a body. The trust has built up over time. As she put it, “once they saw it in action, once I had a case, and I could come up with results that could help the case, then they started to appreciate it more.”

Repeatedly collecting samples and examining them is a task very few may be able to do regularly, but Anderson has been able to do important research without flinching.

“Every one of them is different,” she said, when asked if any case stands out to her. “The ones that stand out are the ones that I testified in,” she added. In one of the more infamous cases, her work helped convict Robert Pickton, a serial killer who was charged with the killings of more than two dozen Vancouver women.

Anderson said that interest in forensic entomology is growing rapidly. Who knows where we will be with this kind of science in a few years.

The Vancouver Tea Festival is back and bringing even more to the table

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Blooming tea will be one of the many varieties of tea featured at the 3rd annual Vancouver Tea Festival taking place on November 5.

The Vancouver Tea Festival is set to kick of its third year November 5 at the Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Chinese Garden and the Chinese Cultural Centre of Greater Vancouver.

Don’t worry, though: just because the festival is located in Chinatown this year doesn’t mean it will only talk about and sample Chinese teas. Featuring a marketplace of almost 30 tea purveyors, you would be hard-pressed not to find something you like or that’s in your budget.

Not only does your ticket grant you access to the by-donation workshops and tastings throughout the day (the event runs from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. — that’s a lot of tea!), but it also lets you into the Chinese Garden.

New to the festival this year are plants for sale, tea leaf readings, music, and botanical experts who will be on site.

Festival co-founder and executive director, Del Tamborini — an SFU alumnus and instructor at Vancouver Community College (VCC) for the tea sommelier certification program — talked with The Peak about the festival’s inception, present, and future.

It all started with innocent musings with his friend and colleague, Sharryn Modder, about why Vancouver didn’t have a tea festival — especially since Vancouver is “A gastronomically sophisticated city with such a fondness for quality food and drink.” Together, they brought even more friends into the fold, and created the Vancouver Tea Society, a non-profit with the goal of fostering tea culture, promoting knowledge, and appreciating specialty tea in Vancouver.

The biggest challenge of putting on the festival each year?

According to Tamborini, it’s marketing: “Just getting the word out, ensuring people know this event is happening, and even more than that, communicating to people why it’s worth their time and money to come.” A secondary challenge is keeping it a fresh experience, but Tamborini and company still have plenty of ideas to innovate for future festivals.

Part of future aspirations for the festival include Tamborini’s goal to “Increase the international dimension of the festival in future years and, as our budget allows, bring in some prominent speakers or presenters from the tea industry in other parts of the world. We’ve already had interest in speaking [or] presenting at the festival from several luminaries within the tea world.”

When asked if he likes tea, Tamborini laughed, “You could say that. I eat — well, drink — sleep, and breathe it.” He added that he has thousands of different types of tea in his home and, in addition to the Vancouver Tea Society and teaching at VCC, Tamborini is also working on establishing several companies “that are either tea-focused or have a tea component to them.”

If you don’t have thousands of teas in your home and want to expand your tea repertoire, the Vancouver Tea Festival is your destination for expertise and experience.

To end off with a tea joke, courtesy of Tamborini:

Why did Karl Marx only drink herbal tea?

Because “proper tea” is theft!