B.C. woman overcomes adversity by choreographing positivity
It’s not unusual to find Lesley Carlberg out and about wearing a tutu.
WITH ADAM SAWATSKY
It’s not unusual to find Lesley Carlberg out and about wearing a tutu.
Whenever Sophia Vaillant would go on family road trips as a kid, she’d inevitably play songs by the same singer.
If you ask Yi Zhao why he’s been pointing his camera at the sky for so long, his answer will be simple.
Sandra Kroek and her grandson Remington spent 200 hours painting a massive Star Wars mural together.
After driving near the water that winter day, Brian Lavery thought he saw a dog splashing in the waves – then realized it was way too cold for that.
Since she was a little girl, Chizara Frank-Imoh has wanted to be an engineer. But she says building community is even better.
When he first moved to his urban neighbourhood, Barry Devonald was surprised to be welcomed by a whole flock of new neighbours.
As Don Dixon flips through his photo album filled with all sorts of serious things, the 102-year-old is proving to be quite silly.
Adam finds out how woman wearing a tutu is overcoming adversity by choreographing positivity.
Got a story idea for a Swatsky Sign-Off? Contact Adam at signoff@bellmedia.ca.
B.C.’s police oversight agency has been called in to investigate after a woman on Vancouver Island suffered a serious injury while being arrested Friday.
Rising sea levels could prove catastrophic for Vancouver International Airport, according to a new report from the Senate of Canada looking at the risks climate change poses to critical infrastructure across the country.
A B.C. man whose neighbours lopped the tops off of four of his bamboo plants has been awarded $1,000 in damages by the province’s Civil Resolution Tribunal.
Prime Minister Trudeau is facing pressure from premiers on border security and defence spending. Jeremie Charron reports.