An ode to Pacific Northwest radio

Through this last year and a half (exactly, as of today, since things seemed to shut down in our world on March 20th, 2020) our little family has leaned into one entertainment and information format: radio. We discovered the app Radio Garden, and have travelled the world aurally from our quarantine confines, exploring interesting radio stations from around the globe.
Radio has also been a connector to our beloved Pacific Northwest. The front deck of our Victoria, B.C. home looks across to Washington’s Olympic Peninsula – and on a clear day, we can also see a trio of mountains: Rainier, Adams and St. Helens – to the south. Our frequent trips to Seattle and beyond have been stymied by the land border closure and the stoppage of the Coho and Clipper and Anacortes ferries, but a handful of radio stations have kept us in touch with goings on south of the border in a manageable, digestible, and music-led format. Tuning into NPR on KNKX radio at 5 (and Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me on the weekends, segueing into jazz and blues programming) quickly replaced the overwhelm of early pandemic CNN.
But our constant pandemic refrain? “Alexa, please play KEXP.”
KEXP radio has long been a fave for us, and we are always sure to stop by their HQ at Seattle Centre to records at the on-site Light in the Attic with coffees in hand from La Marzocco Cafe. Since the pandemic began and our Pacific Northwest travel ceased (we haven’t left Vancouver Island since February 2020), we’ve tuned in far more than ever before and feel like we’ve made new friends with all the DJs.
Regular household shows include Johnny Horn’s Preaching the Blues, which sets the tone for Sunday mornings, and DJ Cheryl Waters’ weekday midday spins over WFH lunches together (always appreciating the double shots of Wolf Parade). And morning DJ John Richards’s empathetic, no-BS observations, combined with magical sessions – most notably the Lawn in the Morning LADIES’ cover of Arcade Fire’s Tunnels brought us to tears – connected us to the world in hopeful, real ways that even the most progressive of news outlets failed to do during the pandemic.
We’ve become ardent supporters – and sharers – of KEXP programming for its ability to bring to light issues, create community (across borders), and connect us to our beloved Pacific Northwest during the pandemic and beyond. We can’t wait to get back down to Seattle, drive around and tune in while reconnecting with the region. Until then, we’ll just keep on listening and enjoying from our home across the straight and sound.
The Bellingham Brewery Six Pack
Just an hour from Vancouver, Washington State’s northern capital beckons with some of the most interesting craft beer north of Portland.
Read more: http://vanmag.com/drinks/beer/the-bellingham-brewery-six-pack/
(Originally appeared in Vancouver Magazine, September 2, 2015)
Posted in Beer, PNW Places we ♥, Published Elsewhere
The Wild Luxury of Tofino
Cloistered in a tangle of towering evergreens and the sound of crashing surf,Tofino, B.C., doesn’t share its wonders easily. The trip from Vancouver is two hours by ferry, then another four by car, traversing highways, regional roads and, finally, a narrow necklace of pavement strung along mountains. But the payoff eclipses the journey, as the tourist influx—Tofino’s year-round population of 1,800 swells to 22,000 in the summer—will attest.
Read more: http://www.canadianliving.com/life/travel/the_wild_luxury_of_tofino_bc.php
Originally appeared in Canadian Living, July 2015.
Posted in PNW Places we ♥, Published Elsewhere
Natural Beauties

The great outdoors have always been enhanced by great base camps. Lucky for us, B.C. and Washington State are sprinkled with one-of-a-kind resorts that blend into their surrounding while still insisting on luxury for guests. Here are the best of the rustic luxury lot, all within a day’s drive of Vancouver.
Read more: http://www.brianjesselbmwjournal.com/bjmag_may2015.pdf (Pages 48-49)
(Originally appeared in Brian Jessel BMW Magazine, May 2015)
Posted in PNW Places we ♥, Published Elsewhere
Travel Portland: Where to Stay
For a city that takes taking it easy to a whole new level, Portland’s lodgings are surprisingly luxe, which is a welcome surprise for the weary visitor.
Read more: http://www.westernlivingmagazine.com/travel/travel-portland-where-to-stay/
Originally published in Western Living Magazine, March 2015
Posted in PNW Places we ♥
How the Ucluelet Nation is reinventing Tofino tourism on its own terms
It may be the Friday of the August long weekend—Vancouver Island’s busiest travel season—but you’d never know it standing out on the cedar deck of a months-old Wya Point Resort luxury lodge, trying to make out Ucluth Beach through the surreal blue-sky fog 200 metres below. Incredibly, even as traffic on the Port Alberni-Tofino highway is reaching its usual congestion, there’s still no one on this particular band of sand located between the Highway 4 junction and the town of Ucluelet. And to accentuate the point, a bear cub suddenly scampers by, and then another in hot pursuit. This in addition to the wheeling bald eagles who’ve been here since check-in.
(Originally published in BC Business, November 2014 issue)
Posted in PNW Places we ♥, Published Elsewhere
Seattle’s South Lake Union
South Lake Union, a buzzy, fast-rising horseshoe wrapping the bottom of the eponymous sparkling lake just north of downtown Seattle, is a slice of Silicon Valley in the Pacific Northwest. Which means an area once known for warehouses, rusty fishing vessels and the transient populace that prefers such environs is now home to Amazon.com’s new headquarters, various Microsoft campuses and the University of Washington Medicine complex. But where SLU differs from Menlo Park is the fact that it’s wrapped by urban Seattle, which means the play definitely outnumbers the work. The big freshwater lake in the heart of it all tends to put things in perspective.
Read more: http://www.bcliving.ca/travel/discover-seattle-south-lake-union
Originally published in BC Living, October 2014.
Posted in PNW Places we ♥, Published Elsewhere
A $1.8-Million Treehouse In Vancouver
We’re Vancouver latecomers. We’ve bumped around the Pacific Northwest (along with a couple of life-affirming – as in “it’s-affirmed-we-never want-to-live-in-the-east-again” – stints back to Toronto) and in doing so, missed out on getting into the Vancouver market when it was semi-affordable.
In our neighbourhood, an $800,000 house is a tear-down. So we bought a teensy townhouse, but still love to gawk at Vancouver real estate for fun, and once in a while a property comes up that actually seems worth the dough. This high-end treehouse-style abode in West Vancouver has the whole family stoked (and checking our lotto numbers) this morning.
Posted in PNW Places we ♥
Buzzword of the Month: Cascadia
‘The Pacific Northwest’ is so passé. There’s a fresh way to display regional affiliation—one that’s causing a brand war in B.C. and down the rest of the West Coast.
Read more: http://www.bcbusiness.ca/marketing-media/buzzword-of-the-month-cascadia
Originally appeared in BC Business, March 2013.
Posted in PNW Places we ♥


