14 signs you were born and raised in british columbia

B00Mer

Keep Calm and Carry On
Sep 6, 2008
44,800
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Rent Free in Your Head
www.getafteritmedia.com


1. You know the real seasons of BC.

Where’s the snow? There’s too much snow! Spring is here. Everything will flood! Will it ever stop raining? Where is summer? Why is it so hot? Droughts and fires! Where’s the rain? Why is summer leaving so soon? Still sunny in autumn! Where’s the snow?

2. You’re pissed off every time you see a new British Columbia license plate go by.

It will always be ‘Supernatural’ BC in your heart, not some lame corporate slogan brought in for the Vancouver Olympics. “Super Natural British Columbia” evoked awe and wonder. “Best Place On Earth” starts petty unproductive cockfights when you’d rather be hiking in the forest, climbing up a mountain, or kayaking along a misty temperate shoreline.

3. You are ‘Bear Aware’.

Bears are the slow uncle of the buffet table. This is proven time and again after numerous bear encounters while walking to the school bus stop. You stay out of their way, give them space, and it’ll all be ok. Oh, and never turn your back and run away making wounded animal noises (also known as screaming). Rookie mistake.

4. You’ve spent hours, even days, of summer vacations in the BC Ferries line-up on a two or three sailing wait.

Whether you’re going to Vancouver Island, ’Up The Coast’, or from there to the mainland, you have passed those few precious weeks when “it’s too hot out” with your *** literally stuck to a vinyl car seat in a BC Ferries parking lot waiting for the arrival of the Queen of Oak Bay, or the Spirit of Vancouver Island to pull into port (God help you if it wasn’t refurbished with a White Spot and an arcade). You peeled yourself off the seat to get an ice cream cone in downtown Horseshoe Bay only to have it melt onto your shoes. Tedium. Hot, sticky tedium.

5. You split firewood like a badass.

You probably learned axe / fire / knife safety in kindergarten.

6. You know there are actually no less than 15 words for rain.

There is mist, drizzle, sprinkling, smattering, spitting, dripping, a deluge, a downpour, a torrential downpour…

7. You know Gore-Tex is sexy.

Whether you’re rocking a high-end Lulu slicker, a “this is my lifestyle” MEC classic, or last year’s MEC from the thrift store (score!) you have rain protection. And don’t even get us started on fashionable rainboots.

8. Some of your best friends are mountains.

Sure, there’s always been the ever-popular twins, Whistler and Blackcomb, and maybe you rode up there (either you came from West Vancouver or South Granville and had a “winter chateau” in the family, or you shared a room with seven dudes and survived on pizza by the slice) but the rest of us knew the glory of Sun Peaks, Big White, Cypress, Grouse, Washington, Apex, Fernie, Revelstoke, and Silver Star.

9. You laughed so hard you cried when they tried to revoke Rebagliati’s gold medal in ‘98.

Ah yes, marijuana. The ultimate performance enhancing drug.

10. You can prepare salmon in no less than seven different ways.

Sweet, perfect BC salmon. Fresh grilled. Baked. Barbequed. Poached. Smoked and sliced. Chunked, Maple syruped. Flaked and caked. Raw and Sashimi’d. Breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

11. You spent much of your elementary years ducking under a desk.

Always preparing for “The Big One” that will eventually destroy the lower mainland. You spent a lot of that time wondering just how much protection this desk was actually offering you.

12. You own/ed Vancouver Grizzlies paraphernalia.

For six seasons we had the NBA. And then it was gone.

13. Some of your best memories are from the PNE.

Mini-donuts, the log slide, and of course, squealing your way down the Coaster.

14. You still get choked up when you see the We Are All Canucks billboards.

Whether you are one generation BC or nine, whether you love or hate (or both) them, whether you lit a car on fire in 2011 or not, whether your childhood idols were Bure, Linden, Naslund, Messier, Bertuzzi, the West Coast Express, the Sedins, or Louuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu, those billboards get you every time.

source: 14 signs you were born and raised in British Columbia

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Thread dedicated to Cliffy :lol:
 

Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
44,850
192
63
Nakusp, BC
15. You scurry for cover whenever you see strange, hot, big orange ball in the sky.
Those are Vancouverites. Here in the interior, that only happens in winter.
And Boomer, I have never been a Canucks or hockey fan, for that matter. Actually I can only relate to less than half of those things, but I know a lot of people who probably relate to all of them.

He was born and raised in Quebec.
But I have been here for 45 years which is about as long as you've been on the planet.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,295
11,385
113
Low Earth Orbit
Those are Vancouverites. Here in the interior, that only happens in winter.
And Boomer, I have never been a Canucks or hockey fan, for that matter. Actually I can only relate to less than half of those things, but I know a lot of people who probably relate to all of them.


But I have been here for 45 years which is about as long as you've been on the planet.

16. Live like a savage in the woods in an aluminum clad propane heated rectangular tipi on welfare for 45 years.
 

talloola

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 14, 2006
19,576
113
63
Vancouver Island
i relate to all of those items, warms my heart, i am a proud b.c.er, born and raised, wouldn't trade

this province for any other, although all of our country is nice. i travelled by train from halifax to

prince rupert, then took the ferry to port hardy, and back home, a wonderful experience.

loved the prairies, (it was early october, nice in between weather, just before the freeze), not sorry

i missed that. went to a habs gAme in montreal, have wanted to do that since i was a kid, they got trashed

by ottawa.
 

Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
21,155
149
63
17. You own 5 BRIC shares
18. Your favorite concert was at the Commodore Ballroom
19. You know who JP Patches was
20. You get a sinking feeling when you hear the name Cam Neely
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
75,301
547
113
Vernon, B.C.
17. You own 5 BRIC shares
18. Your favorite concert was at the Commodore Ballroom
19. You know who JP Patches was
20. You get a sinking feeling when you hear the name Cam Neely

The value of the BRIC shares must be up in the $millions by now. Bill Bennett (ex premier) should know!
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
36,362
4,337
113
Vancouver Island
Most of Boomer's list describes newbies that live in the city.
A real BCer was raised in a logging camp or on a fishboat could run a chainsaw and gut a salmon in under 30 seconds by the time they were 6. Calls gumboots westcoast sneakers.

Al the boys and most of the girls shave by the time they are 10.
 

Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
44,850
192
63
Nakusp, BC
Well picking salal is not as financially rewarding as picking pine mushrooms some do it .
I picked pine mushrooms for about twenty years until all the good spots were logged off and now it will probably take 500 to 1000 years before they come back in any quantity. They need old growth for the mycelium to mature.
 

Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
44,850
192
63
Nakusp, BC
When the duff if burned off in a prescribed burn and/or the land is scarified, it will take hundreds of years for the mycelium of a pine to make a come back. Although I live in a rare inland temperate rain forest. the climate is drying up because of extensive logging. On the coast the moisture comes of the ocean but this far inland a lot of it is generated by the ecosystems. Ocean moisture has to jump over the arid Okanagan to get here.