End of the Season and Kat Kam MIA?

Like many Van­cou­verites, last night I watched one of the most painful and edge-of-your seat hockey games in years. Backs against the wall, the Van­cou­ver Canucks, the last Cana­dian team left in the NHL Stan­ley Cup play­offs, man­aged to once again snatch defeat from the jaws of vic­tory (some­thing I tweeted a cou­ple of days ago re. the game that brought them to the brink). To quote Char­lie Smith of the Geor­gia Straight:

The only ques­tion left for the Canucks is who won’t be return­ing to the squad next year. After the sign­ing of Mats Sundin ear­lier this year, there were high hopes that this would be the year that Van­cou­ver would finally win its first Stan­ley Cup. But once again, the fans’ hopes have been crushed.

Some things never change.

This morn­ing, on the radio, I heard many say­ing ‘Wait till next year!’. Well, Hope does spring eter­nal, but the Black­hawks (among other teams the Canucks played against this year) were notable for the num­ber of young play­ers in their 20s just begin­ning to come into their prime. Unless Van­cou­ver can get some ris­ing stars of their own, as Buzz Bishop pointed out on Twit­ter, the win­dow is clos­ing or per­haps even closed on it being their year in 2010. I felt par­tic­u­larly bad for Roberto Luongo, who after a very strong sea­son, picked last night to have an off game. For some­one with the rep­u­ta­tion of being per­haps the best goalie in the NHL, let­ting 7 goals through is just not a way any goalie wants to end a sea­son. In fact, the game felt more like Bas­ket­ball (a sport I’m not very fond of) because of the see-saw of scor­ing for either side.

I remem­ber these feel­ings, that of every other year or so, the home team get­ting close but ulti­mately los­ing, from the 1980s and 90s in Boston for the Red Sox. Anx­ious to blame it on any­thing but the play­ers, Bosto­ni­ans attrib­uted it to ‘The Curse of the Bam­bino’, but in the end, it was just a mat­ter of time. So my advice to Van­cou­ver fans might be: Just hang in there for another 20 years or so, and your time will come.

The Kat Kam, Stuck?

Speak­ing of win­dows clos­ing, is our vir­tual win­dow on False Creek also clos­ing? For about 13 years, there has been a cam­era pointed West South­west on the Bur­rard Bridge and the view beyond it of Eng­lish Bay from the offices of Tele­mark Sys­tems in the West End of Van­cou­ver,  post­ing the live image on the web­site: The Kat Kam. Before I moved here, I used the Kat Kam as a way of accli­ma­tiz­ing myself to the weather and gen­eral look of this city, like a new aquar­ium fish look­ing out of it’s plas­tic bag­gie into the new aquar­ium it was about to enter. It turns out that ‘Kat’, the per­son who ran the web­cam left Tele­mark Sys­tems at the end of last month to pur­sue a career in Culi­nary Arts. While I’m thrilled that she is start­ing out a new chap­ter in her career and life, I won­der if per­haps this might spell the end of the view of False Creek on my desk­top. For­tu­nately, there are now sev­eral other cam­eras on Van­cou­ver on the web, although this was per­haps the best known and cer­tainly the old­est con­tin­u­ous view (not to men­tion, it was a pretty one, espe­cially later in the day). I sus­pect that sev­eral peo­ple planned their com­mute based on the traf­fic on the bridge, and I enjoyed see­ing the Sun Run run­ners as they were caught by the Kat Kam. So, here’s the last view we got, 15 min­utes past 9 PM, May 11, 2009. Let’s hope that’s not the image of False Creek I’ll get from my win­dow­less home office:

The Kat Kam on the evening of May 11, 2009

The Kat Kam on the evening of May 11, 2009

I’m hop­ing the view gets ‘unstuck’ soon, but until then, there are other cams:

Gee, maybe this office really is a room with many win­dows. Too bad I don’t get a breeze from any of them.


Update: Well, after about a 16–20 hour break, the Kat Kam started updat­ing again. Hope­fully it will keep going for a while yet to come.

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