Showing posts with label Article. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Article. Show all posts

Sunday, September 6, 2015


"Archivist helps history live forever"

(Suzanne Wilson in front of
 St. Clement's Anglican Church, North Vancouver)
"by Laura Anderson, North Shore News Sunday, August 30, 2015
                                      Photo Cindy Goodman, North Shore News

"Suzanne Wilson looks through Churches on Sunday, a booklet she produced
of photographs and histories of North Vancouver churches. The volunteer archivist  has also completed projects documenting North Vancouver homes
and buildings slated for demolition.

"Recently,pair of robins hatched their family in nest they built one the
wreath that decorates the front door of a North Vancouver home. Suzanne Wilson, born in Wisconsin and now Canadian,and her husband,
Alan,Vancouver born and a retired elementary school librarian, raised
their own family in this home in the Cloverly neighbourhood where they have
lived since 1972.

"Suzanne recorded the story of the robins and their offspring in their twiggy home in series of photographs. It’s what she does.Her
vocation as documentarian of North Vancouver homes began in the year
2000 with Y2K.

“When Y2K came along ,realized we were living in interesting times,”she says.
“I began thinking about what could do to mark this time.”

She set out to photograph 2000  homes in the City of North Vancouver in 
one year. To accompany each photograph in the Your House/Our Home
project, Suzanne recorded as much about the house and its occupants 
as she could  learn.

She began on New Years Day with the home of Percy and Marjorie Barber
at 1835 Westview Drive. The Barbers purchased the lot on View Drive, as it was
known then, in 1955. It had taken the family 14 years, with Percy walking 
everyday from their rented wartime house to his job at the shipyards, to
save enough money to buy the lot and build home. The full story of the house
and the Barber family is available to read at the North Vancouver Archives 
in Lynn Valley.

As heritage houses become more rare, and interest in them grows, says
North Vancouver Archivist, Janet Turner, so will the value of these records
and photographs ,in colour for the first time in the archives collection, 
increase.

For the next project, Demolition and Construction, Suzanne focused her
camera’s eye on(houses) scheduled for demolition and kept it there 
for 10 years ,expanding her scope to include North Vancouver’s non-­‐residential buildings. 
Suzanne processed the film, yes ,black and white film, in her
basement darkroom, which doubled as the laundry roomjust as her father, a
hobby photographer, had done back home in Milwaukee,Wisconsin.
Her blog, Demolition Mama, documents the place these buildings occupied
in the community through
photographs and, where possible,a record of the building and its occupants.

When the demolition (Blog) closed, Suzanne found herself “wit hall
these churches”. Every Sunday for (four) years, Suzanne
posted photographs and records of North Vancouver churches in her
Churches on Sundays blog. Even those long gone are remembered in
category she calls “Posthumous”.

“This entire community is our home, ”says volunteer documentarian
Suzanne Wilson, about North Vancouver.“This is our history, and it
needs to be collected, preserved and shared.” 

Recently, Suzanne collected the posts in series of bookletsDeep Cove, Lynn
Valley, the City and the District, First Nations Lands and Posthumousand
donated them to the North Vancouver Archives.

Janet Turner comments, “This compilation of Suzanne’s blog postings
of North Vancouver churches different denominations is an invaluable
asset to the community record. Usually, such records are maintained
in their respective church archives. Suzanne has contributed a
unique portrait of North Vancouver churchesinteriors, exteriors,
architectural details and stories. The value of these records will grow
enormously. ”Suzanne’s documentary projects have found permanent
home in the North Vancouver Museum and Archives.

“In my experience”, says Janet, “the most common reference question is 
‘does the house have a story?’”

In combining photographs and histories of the houses and buildings
of North Vancouver, Suzanne has created unique documentary record
of lasting interest and increasing value to her community.

“Suzanne has passion for built heritage, skill as photographer, and
the determination to see project through to the end,” says Janet Turner.
“She’s had the vision, in all her projects ,of making the photographs and
research she has accumulated available for future generations. The North
Vancouver Archives is very grateful to Suzanne for the donation of these
invaluable resources to our holdings. ”Your House/Our Home, Demolition
and Construction ,and Churches on Sundays are Suzanne Wilson’s
tribute to the people of North Vancouver who lived, worked and worshiped
in these buildings, and her gift to the community  where she raised her
family.“ This entire community is our home,” she says. “This is our history,
and it needs to be collected, preserved and shared.”


Links:
http://demolitionmama.blogspot.ca
http://churchesonsundays.blogspot.ca
http://www.nsnews.com/update-­‐nature-­‐on-­‐our-­‐doorstep-­‐1.2004981
http://www.northvanmuseum.ca
***************
Note: ( ) include words for clarification by SW.

Saturday, July 11, 2015

939 Shavington St., North Vancouver, B.C. Canada


Special Feature
Baby Robins' Diary
North Vancouver, B.C. Canada

We have lived in our house on Shavington St. in North Vancouver, Canada for over 40 years.  Each season I  hang a different wreath on our front door.  The wreath I hung there this  spring is made of  a circle of grape vine with white roses, leaves, and little white flowers-all artificial.

And as of Thursday June 18th a robin's nest!


Front Door Wreath


June 18, Thursday-I came home about 4 pm and went to unlock the front door, but something was different.  I looked at the front door wreath and found what was different; there was a robin's nest built in it.  And inside the robin's nest was one small blue egg.



June 18 the Egg

June 20, Saturday-By today the robin had laid 2 more eggs. I learned that robins lay one egg a day, usually to a total of 4, but our robin only laid 3.



June 20, Three Eggs

Day 1/July 6, Monday-The eggs have hatched and there are three fat pink worm like creatures in the nest.  They are wiggling and making a faint peeping sound.


Day 1/July 6

Day 2/July 7, Tuesday-Today the baby birds are all beak with black round dots where their eyes will be.  I have learned that their eyes open around day 5. A grey fuzz is forming on parts of their bodies.

Day 2/ July 7

When I came to take the photo the mother robin flew to the top bar of the front yard swing set to keep guard.


Day 2/July 7

Day 3/July 8, Wednesday-The birds seem to be sleeping, they are wiggling.

Day 3/July 8

Day 4/July 9, Thursday, 6:15 pm-I finally got a photo of the mother robin in the nest.



Day 4/July 9


6:30 pm-When she left the nest I photographed the babies.  They seemed to be sleeping, and I could see their bodies move as they breathed.  They have more grey fuzz on their bodies.




Day 4/July 9


Day 5/July 10, Friday-11:30 am-The photographer from the North Shore News got a picture of the mother robin in the nest.  The babies were sleeping.  



4:00 pm-In the photo I took the babies seem larger.  The 3 beaks are very distinctive.  But they are still asleep.  They seem to sleep a lot.






Day 5/July 10



(Note from Christine Lyon at the North Shore News: "I did speak to someone from the Wildlife Rescue Association of B.C. She said that robin chicks typically stay in the nest 14-16 days after hatching. At that point they will be fledglings and it could take up to two more weeks for them to learn how to fly. You might see them hopping around on the ground while they are learning to fly (good idea to keep the cat inside during this phase). She suspects the parents were drawn to your door wreath because it’s in a protected area away from crows.")



Day 6/July 11, Saturday-4:30 pm-The mother bird let me walk right up to in front of the door to take her photo in the nest. After I walked into the house she flew away, and I took the photo of the babies in the nest. They are bigger, breathing, and again sleeping. There is more brown/black down covering them and black striped areas seem to have appeared.




Day 6/July 11




Day 6/July 11



Day 7/July 12, Sunday-12:30 pm-Today for their photo the baby birds lined up with beaks in the same direction. They are developing wing feathers, note the black feathers with white stripes and dots. 




Day 7/July 12



Day 8, July 13-8 am, Alan's 75th Birthday! The babies actually look like birds, with feathers. And their eyes are open!



Day 8/July 13-8 am

Day 8/July 13-4pm

Day 9/July 14-10:30 am-Baby birds in wreath on front door with eyes wide open and blinking. Birds seem fully feathered, with remnants of grey down.

Day 9/ July 14-10:30 am

Day 10/July 15-10:00 am The mother bird flew away as I opened the side door. And here we have the three babies with eyes open, defined feathers, little down, and all beaks up.

Day 10/July 15-10:00 am

Day 11/July 16-9 am The baby robins in the front door wreath seem to be about 20 times the size they were when they were born. They are oozing out of their nest. I put a mat and blanket below the nest in case they fall out.

Day 11/July 16-9 am

12 noon  One of the baby robins was stretching its wings.  Can trying to fly be far off ?

Day 12/July 17, Friday 9:30 am The baby robins in the front door wreath growing and growing above the faux roses.

Day 12/July 17-9:30 am

Day 13/July 18, 8 am-One of the baby birds in the nest in the front door wreath no longer fits and had to perch on the side.

Day 13/July 18, 8 am

Day 13/July 18, 6 pm
Yesterday at 6 pm on Day 13 of the baby robins in the nest on the front door I took a photo with my flash. Two of the 3 babies flew out of the nest and started hopping around the front yard; one hopped up the front steps. One baby robin continued to sit in the nest. The mother robin chirped wildly from the top of the front yard tether ball pole. I went in the house and returned 30 min later to find the nest empty and the front yard quiet.

(Note: Baby Birds in front door nest. I have read that sometimes birds return to their last year's nest. We will hang the wreath on the front door again next spring and hope.)

Day 14, July 19-When I swept up under the empty nest today I found  lots of cherry pits.  There is a cherry tree across the street, so maybe that was one of the sources of food for the baby robins.

Baby Birds in wreath on front door hit the newspaper. See North Shore News Sunday, July 19, 2015, page A3.

North Shore News

******


Photos: Taken in June and July 2015  by SW.

Link 1: http://www.learner.org/jnorth/tm/robin/FAQBabies.html

Link 2: http://www.learner.org/jnorth/tm/robin/nestlings.html

***********
(Note 2017 Update from Suzanne Wilson Facebook entries.)

"April 14, 2017-The Birds are Back. Two years ago robins built a nest and hatched 4 eggs in the Spring wreath on our front door. (See blog post 7/11/15 at Churches on Sundays http://.www.churchesonsundays.blogspot.com.) In 1916 they took a year off. But this morning we heard scratching at the front door and found The Birds are Back. This time they built the nest at the top of the front door gold 50th Wedding Anniversary wreath that will hang there the whole year as we celebrate our 1967 wedding.

Golden Anniversary Wreath


"April 19, 2017-The Birds are Back! This morning we found two small blue eggs in the nest at the top of our front door 50th Wedding Anniversary wreath. The parents watched us from a nearby bush.

Blue Robin's Eggs


Proud Parents


"April 21, 2017-The Eggs Are Gone! What a shock. Yesterday we noticed that the top of the nest was messed up. This morning I climbed the ladder to take a peek at the two little blue eggs that were in the nest. and They Were Gone. Alan figures the crows got them. Bad crows! We are sad.
I guess we can take down the sign.

Empty Nest

Front Yard Warning Sign

Reference: 2017 Facebook-Suzanne Wilson