Valley home values jump, but may not reflect market

Valley home values jump, but may not reflect market

Valley home values jump, but may not reflect market

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The property assessment notice that arrived in your mailbox this week may not reflect the real estate market, according to the Vancouver Island Real Estate Board (VIREB).

B.C. Assessment says the 2019 values reflect market movement and actual sales in any individual property owners neighborhood, in addition to the property’s amenities.

Assessor Tina Ireland say the majority of the Island’s residential homeowners can expect “increases up to 20 percent as compared to last year’s assessment.” BC Assessments estimate market value as of July 1 each year.

But in its annual year-end market review, the VIREB said the market has cooled off and pinned the price increase of single-family homes at 10 percent from December 2017.

In Comox, some homeowners have reported assessed value increases between 25 percent and 35 percent, even though BC Assessment said the average increase was 17 percent.

In Cumberland where average assessments rose 27 percent, the third highest on Vancouver Island, some individual properties must have increased by 35 percent or more.

Here’s how Comox Valley communities ranked in assessments:

Courtenay: Single-family homes increased an average of 17 percent, from $385,000 in 2017, to $450,000 in 2018.

Comox: Single-family homes increased an average of 17 percent, from $441,000 in 2017, to $517,000 in 2018.

Cumberland: Single-family homes increased an average of 27 percent, from $360,000 in 2017, to $460,000 in 2018.

Campbell River: Single-family homes increased an average of 16 percent, from $345,000 in 2017 to $401,000 in 2018.

The biggest assessment increase occurred in Sayward, where values jumped 44 percent to an average home value of $205,100. Tahsis increased by 30 percent to $99,600, followed by Ucluelet at 21 percent to $403,00 and Tofino at 19 percent to $767,000.

Parksville and Qualicum Beach had more modest value hikes, but still recorded double-digit increases of 11 percent and 13 percent respectively.

The VIREB annual review said, “Despite lower demand, however, year-over-year benchmark prices of single-family homes continue to rise board-wide, up 10 per cent from December 2017.”

The board said decreased demand and additional inventory has turned a sellars’ market into a balanced or near-balanced market. Single-family home sales dropped 19 percent from 2017.

 

PROPERTY ASSESSMENTS
VS. PROPERTY TAXES

“My assessment has gone up 40%, I can’t afford for my taxes to go up 40%!”

A common misconception is that a significant change in your assessed value will result in a proportionately significant change in your property taxes. The most important factor is not how much your assessed value has changed, but how your assessed value has changed relative to the average change for your property class in your municipality or taxing jurisdiction.

Learn more about how a change in your assessed value may impact your property taxes.

— B.C. Assessment

 

 

APPEALING YOUR
ASSESSED VALUE

Once property tax rates have been set by your local taxing authority, property owners are unable to appeal the tax rate. Property owners are able to appeal their assessed value, which forms one part of the property tax equation described above, to the Property Assessment Review Panel. The deadline for appealing your assessed value is the last working day in January each year, typically January 31st. You can visit our website to see more information on appealing your assessment.

— B.C. Assessment

 

Sponging up the rain, taxing impervious surfaces — what other communities are doing

Sponging up the rain, taxing impervious surfaces — what other communities are doing

Sponging up the rain, taxing impervious surfaces — what other communities are doing

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This is the sixth in a series of articles about how urban stormwater runoff has negatively impacted Comox Valley waterways, what local governments are doing to address the issues and what other communities have done.

 

Urban development in the Comox Valley has fundamentally altered the natural water balance. As impervious surfaces like roads, parking lots and buildings replaced vegetated land, the opportunity for rain water to soak into the ground or return to the atmosphere by evapotranspiration diminished.

To prevent flooding, Valley municipalities have relied on expensive engineered infrastructure, such as curb, getters and stormwater pipes, to divert rainwater into area creeks and streams, and sometimes directly into the K’omoks Estuary.

Along the way, that rain water has picked up oil, grease and engine coolants, copper from vehicle brakes, zinc from vehicle tires, animal feces and a variety of other contaminants that in some cases have killed all aquatic life in our waters and threatened public health.

Polluted stormwater regularly causes the Department of Fisheries and Oceans to ban shellfish harvesting in Baynes Sound (as it did in November), and for the Capital Regional District to declare waters at certain Victoria-area beaches a possible health risk (as it did on Dec. 29).

Municipalities around the world have moved toward systems that rely less on “grey” infrastructure and more on “green “infrastructure that attempts to mimic nature.

It also costs less. Curb, gutters and pipes create long-term, unfunded liabilities for taxpayers to repair and replace. The Comox Valley alone has hundreds of millions of dollars in unfunded infrastructure liabilities.

So, every community is looking for innovative stormwater solutions. Here are some of them.

Victoria

The City of Victoria introduced a stormwater utility in 2016 to accomplish two goals: one, to fund its ongoing expense of replacing and repairing stormwater pipes; and, two, to encourage property owners to manage their own rainwater where it falls.

Before 2016, Victoria included stormwater fees in property taxes and based the charge on a property’s assessed value. Now, property owners pay fees based on the amount of rainwater estimated to run off their property.

In other words, the more impervious surfaces that cover a property and the fewer source control measures implemented — rain gardens, pervious pavers, etc. — the more a homeowner will pay.

“The stormwater utility is a funding model similar to how we fund water and sanitary services,” Brianne Czypyha, the city’s stormwater management specialist, told Decafnation. “The city uses the stormwater utility because it’s a more equitable user-pay system that bases the fees on the impact a property has on the system.”

Czypyha said grey infrastructure will always be an integral part of managing runoff in the city, but integrating green infrastructure will help build capacity of the system and improve the quality of stormwater runoff discharged into the environment. Using source controls is voluntary, for now, but not using them will cost property owners more.

“While the direction we have chosen is to use incentives to encourage the use of green infrastructure, particularly for retrofitting existing buildings,” Czypyha said. “I definitely see value in requiring new developments to meet more stringent rainwater management requirements.”

Richmond, BC, also has a stormwater utility, and it’s a common practice throughout Washington, Oregon and California.


“We’re aware of the problem, so why would we wait for someone else to tell us to fix it?”


 

Capital Regional District

The municipalities of Saanich, Victoria and Oak Bay have signed on to a multi-jurisdictional, multi-stakeholder 100-year watershed management plan for Bowker Creek. The plan identifies places to daylight and naturalize the creek.

“The plan is to move Bowker Creek back to a more natural stream, as opportunities arise,” Glenn Harris told Decafnation. Harris is the CRD’s senior manager for environmental protection and the Bowker Creek Initiative spokesperson.

Bird life and bio-diversity around the creek is already coming back, Harris said, especially around Oak Bay High School where a $750,000 grant restored and naturalized the creek, increased native plantings and created a creek-focused curriculum at the school.

“It provides an opportunity to restore islands of nature within the urban environment,” he said.

 

Elsewhere in Canada

Kitchener, Ontario has taken a direct action approach to stormwater management. For more than a year, the city has required all new development to capture the first 12.5 millimetres of rain — about a half-inch — every time it rains.

The rule applies to subdivisions, commercial buildings and even city-owned roads. It means that except for major storm events, all rain water must be managed onsite, and no water would reach stormwater pipes or ponds.

Kitchener took the action ahead of anticipated new provincial stormwater regulations based on its own climate change study that predicted a 20 percent increase in rainfall.

“We’re aware of the problem, so why would we wait for someone else to tell us to fix it?,” the city’s stormwater manager Nick Gollan told a Kitchener newspaper. “We should be putting strategies in place to adapt to the changes that are taking place.”

The City of Langley has created a Department of Green Infrastructure Services. It has standardized rain gardens instead of traditional curbs and gutters on all non-arterial roads.

Since 2009, the City of Toronto has required green roofs on all commercial, institutional and residential developments with a minimum floor area of 2,000 square metres (appx. 21,500 square feet), this includes any additions to buildings that increase the floor area to the minium.

 

Outside of Canada

Portland, Oregon has been the acknowledged leader of stormwater management regulations for more than two decades. It started in 1993 with a downspout disconnection program.

But since 1999, Portland’s Sustainable Stormwater Management Plan has required source control on any new redeveloped properties that add more than 500 square feet of impervious surface. That means property owners must manage and treat all the runoff from impervious surfaces with green infrastructure — rain gardens, green roofs, soaker trenches, drywell, pervious pavers, etc. — and in some cases may be required to install underground treatment devices to remove pollutants.

Now, other cities are catching up.

The City of Philadelphia is in the seventh year of a 25-year project to “detain it (rainwater), not convey it.” The city has committed $2.4 billion to recreate in the urban streetscape the kinds of pervious places where, instead of running into surrounding waterways, rainfall and the contaminants it carries can once again soak into and be cleaned by the earth.

Berlin, Germany adopted a Sponge City Strategy in 2017 to mitigate both heat and flooding problems expected to intensify with climate change. The goal is to increase the amount of surfaces within the city that allow water to soak into the ground and release it gradually, rather than a sudden rush into waterways, and more urban vegetation that cools the air through evaporation.

The manager of Berlin’s project says, “The key is to avoid sealing up too much of the ground surface with concrete or tarmac. Wherever possible, we want water-permeable surfaces.”

Berlin’s strategy borrows the term “sponge city” from a 2013 Chinese initiative that proclaimed urban areas should act like sponges, based on the work of landscape architect Kongjian Yu.

Yu’s motto for rainwater management is: retain, adapt, slow down and reuse. Others have since modified that slogan as: sink it, slow it, reuse it and move it.

 

Educational opportunities

The best educators have long-ago incorporated curriculum about the environment and, more recently, about climate change.

More than 30 years ago, Barry Thornton, the former principal of Brooklyn Elementary School in Comox, was a pioneer in teaching young students about conservation and the environment in general. Thornton was a advocate for the restoration of Brooklyn Creek and initiated several fish habitat improvement projects near the school.

B.C. Adventure photo

He was also a co-founder of the schools Salmonids in the Classroom program that acquainted children with the life cycle of salmon and other aquatic life.

Today, students from elementary schools to high schools all over the globe are learning about the hydrological cycle, water balance and the need for better solutions to stormwater management. A quick search of the Internet brings up stormwater education programs from Kentucky to Rhode Island to Mississauga, Ontario.

The City of Mississauga has a stormwater outreach team that does presentations in K-12 classrooms that covers topics such as municipal stormwater management, water conservation, low-impact development and water quality and environmental health.

Students at Arcata High School in Humboldt County, Calif., recently started a project to create rain gardens around campus parking lots after an Environmental Science class found a high level of pollutants in the nearby Jolly Giant Creek.

In Kingston, Ontario, the city’s Fish and Frogs Forever program talks with local students about how polluted stormwater impacts local aquatic ecosystems and what they can do to reverse the negative effects.

 

What is the future?

Environmentalists and conservationists want improved stormwater regulations to happen quickly. But Brianne Cyzypyha, stormwater specialist at the City of Victoria, says that change in stormwater management is a multi-year, complex process, requiring involvement from many internal departments, and also feedback from experts and the public.

“In terms of the way forward, I see most municipalities as similar to a large ship changing course. It can be a bit of a slow process making changes to the old ways of doing business,” she said.

 

 

 

 

 

 

RELATED ARTICLES OF INTEREST

What to know more about the Sponge City concept?

This article describes modern stormwater management tools: sink it, slow it, reuse it and move it.

This article describes landscape architect Kongjian Yu who coined the term “sponge cities.”

This link takes you to Philadelphia’s guide for retrofitting properties to the city’s new stormwater regulations.

 

 

GLOSSARY OF STORMWATER TERMS

Bioswales — A stormwater conveyance system similar, but larger than a rain garden (see below).

Evaporation — As water is heated by the sun, surface molecules become sufficiently energized to break free of the attractive force binding them together, and then evaporate and rise as invisible vapour in the atmosphere.

Green infrastructure — Any natural or built system that provides ecological benefits and help to maintain pre-development hydrology. It encompasses natural features like streams, wetlands, forests and parks, as well as engineered systems that manage urban runoff.

Groundwater — Subterranean water is held in crack and pore spaces. Depending on the geology, the groundwater can flow to support streams. It can also be tapped by wells. Some groundwater is very old and may have been there for thousands of years.

Hydrologic cycle — The endless circulation of water. From the beginning of time when water first appeared, it has been constant in quantity and continuously in motions. The same water molecules have been transferred time and time again from the oceans and the land into the atmosphere by evaporation, dropped on the land as precipitation and transferred back to the sea by rivers and ground water.

Low-impact development (LID) — The systems and practices that use or mimic natural processes that result in the infiltration, evapotranspiration or use of stormwater in order to protect water quality and associated aquatic habitat.

Rain garden — A miniature wetland in a residential setting, lower than the adjacent grade to collect rainwater from roofs, driveways or streets, thus allowing infiltration into the ground.

Runoff — Excessive rain or snowmelt can produce overland flow to creeks and ditches. Runoff is visible flow of water in rivers, creeks and lakes as the water stored in the basin drains out.

Transpiration — Water vapour is also emitted from plant leaves by a process called transpiration. Ever day an actively growing plant transpires five to 10 times as much water as it can hold at once.

 

 

 

 

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These environment stories from 2018 could give us hope

These environment stories from 2018 could give us hope

Perseverance Creek  |  George Le Masurier photo

These environment stories from 2018 could give us hope

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Climate science reports released in 2018 all pointed to impending catastrophes unless humankind can pull off some miraculous reversal of climatological trends and its own bad behavior.

In just the last year, huge wildfires raged out of control, Antarctica lost three trillion more tonnes of ice, extreme heat waves warned of an eventual Hothouse Earth by 2040 and droughts and intense storms have become commonplace. Climate change could even cause a global beer shortage.

But not all the environment news in 2018 was depressing. There was good news to savor, some of it originating right here at home.

Comox Valley

The Comox Valley Lands Trust is purchasing a 55-acre parcel at the top of Morrison Creek, and announced plans to eventually acquire and conserve the waterway’s entire 550-acre headwaters. This is important for a variety of reasons: Morrison Creek has lively and thriving aquatic life, including several salmon species, it feeds the Puntledge River and the K’omoks Estuary and it’s the only stream in the valley whose headwaters remain intact (undeveloped) and pristine.

The Cumberland Forest Society is currently negotiating to preserve another 93 hectares (230 acres) of the Cumberland Forest, mostly wetlands and key riparian areas along Perseverance Creek. Since it formed in 2000, the society has conserved 110 hectares (271 acres).

Aerial view of some of the Morrison Creek headwaters — photo courtesy of the Comox Valley Lands Trust

On Dec. 19, the Comox Valley Lands Trust announced that Father Charles Brandt had signed a covenant to conserve his 27-acre Hermitage on the Oyster River. The covenant means the property “will be protected in perpetuity for the benefit of all things wild.” Brandt has told Decafnation he intends to donate his property to the Comox Valley Regional District as an undeveloped public park.

In a process mired in missteps and lawsuits, the CVRD finally denied an application by the 3L Development company that would have created more urban sprawl, increased long-term infrastructure liabilities for taxpayers and despoiled a critical area. But an outstanding lawsuit means this story isn’t over.

The Partnership for Water Sustainability in BC and the Brooklyn Creek Watershed Society completed an Ecological Accounting Process document, which shows the value of the waterway to the Town of Comox for stormwater conveyance. It’s the first EAP in BC on a creek flowing through multiple jurisdictions, and shows how all stakeholders must have a common goal in order to prevent the death of another fish-bearing stream.

Many of the candidates who sought public office this fall — and most who were elected — endorsed the passage of new development policies that permit and encourage infill development. This is important to minimize urban sprawl, and maximize utilization of existing infrastructure, thus preserving more rural areas and natural ecological systems.

Thanks to Breathe Clean Air Comox Valley, more people know the serious health hazards of poor air quality caused by particulates in smoke from wood burning devices. And local governments are responding with bands on wood burning devices in new homes and incentives to eliminate or upgrade existing ones.

Pacific Northwest

The sad sight of a mother orca carrying a dead calf around for weeks, as if to show humans what tragedies they are inflicting on the Earth’s other inhabitants, has sparked some positive change. Just not in BC, yet. Gov. Jay Inslee struck a task force that has recommended steps for orca recovery and the governor has earmarked over a billion dollars for the plan, which includes a ban on whale-watching tourism.

British Columbians got a sniff last summer of what climate change means for our future. One of the worst wildfire summers blanketed the south coast with smoke, haze and hazardous air quality. And with summers getting hotter and drier (it’s not just your imagination), wildfires will increase. It’s another step — albeit an unfortunate one — to wider spread public acknowledgement of climate change and the urgency of initiatives to maintain and improve our air quality.

The NDP government adopted a climate action plan this year calls for more electric vehicles and charging stations, requires all new buildings to be net-zero energy ready by 2032, diverts organic waste and other recyclables from landfills, while boosting the carbon tax and producing more hydroelectric power. It’s been criticized as being “just talk” and not going far enough, but the plan at least provides a blueprint for future climate action policies provincially and federally.

Global

Green energy is on the rise around the world. We had the largest annual increase in global renewable generation capacity in 2017 (most recent data), accounting for 70 percent of all additions to global power capacity. New solar photovoltaic capacity outsripped additions in coal, natural gas and nuclear power combined. As of 2016, renewable energy accounted for 18.2 percent of global total final energy consumption (most recent data), and modern renewables representing 10.4 percent.

Brooklyn Creek flows into Comox Bay — George Le Masurier photo

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development thinks that global economic growth has peaked. They worry about the slowdown, but it’s good news for the planet. That’s the view of the new Degrowth movement, a theory that first world countries should plan for economic contraction in order to achieve a just and sustainable world.

Carbon emissions are declining, according to BP’s statistical review of world energy. Ukraine showed the greatest decline in 2017 of around 10 percent, due to dramatic reduction in coal usage. Unfortunately, Canada was one of the worst nations (22nd). Canada actually increased emissions by 3.4 percent, contributing the ninth largest share of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere behind China, the US and Japan.

Community-based renewable energy projects lead the way in reducing greenhouse gases both in Canada and around the world. Scotland’s Community and Renewable Energy Scheme (CARES) provides communities, businesses and other organizations advice and funding to create local and community energy projects. And, even the province of Alberta has a Community Generation Program for small-scale ventures into wind, biomass, hydro and solar.

And here’s a video that shows more reasons for hope. The question is, are we moving fast enough? And what more could we do?

 

 

 

 

 

SOURCE LINKS
FOR THIS STORY

 

International Panel on Climate Change
Click here

Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society
Click here

Global Carbon Project
Click here

National Climate Assessment
Click here

Renewables 2018 Global Status Report
Click here

Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
High uncertainty weighing on global growth
Click here

Degrowth
Click here

BP statistical review of World Energy 2018
Click here

Community-based renewable energy projects
Click here and here

The story of 2018 was climate change
Click here

 

 

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The Week: Was this the Year of Women in Comox Valley politics?

The Week: Was this the Year of Women in Comox Valley politics?

       Illustrating the power and importance of human touch  |  George Le Masurier photo

The Week: Was this the Year of Women in Comox Valley politics?

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What was the most important occurrence this year in the Comox Valley? Was this the Year of Women in politics? You can certainly make a case that it was. More women ran for public office and were elected than the prior year in all branches of Comox Valley local government.

The School District 71 Board of Education leads the way with six women and one male board member. Cumberland has a 4:1 ratio and Comox is 4:3. Lagging the field are Courtenay at 2:5. and the Comox Valley Regional District rural areas at 1:3.

Was this the Year of the Progressive movement? You could make a case for that, too. Courtenay council certainly shifted toward progressive thinking by rejecting former Mayor Larry Jangula and the many former councillors and mayors who tried to make a comeback out of retirement.

Was this the Year of Youth in local politics? Comox Town Council certainly got younger with three new councillors (all women) in their 30s, and first-time councillor Patrick McKenna trimed a year or two off both Hugh McKinnon and Marg Grant, incumbents did not seek re-election.

Courtenay dropped a couple of years, too, by replacing Jangula and Erik Eriksson. Cumberland stayed about the same, but new CVRD rural area directors Arzeena Hamir and Daniel Arbour are younger than their predecessors.

Was this the Year of Grassroots Activism? That’s a difficult one because the Comox Valley has a long history of engaged citizens fighting for perceived just causes. So maybe the strong and successful opposition to a water bottling operation in the Merville area and a 1,000 home subdivision in the Puntledge Triangle are just continuations of a long tradition.

Was this the Year of Legal Marijuana? We don’t think so. Canadians have been unabashedly consuming cannabis in various forms for years. But becoming the first G7 nation to legalize recreational use of marijuana is significant, and primarily for a reason that directly involves the Comox Valley.

Legalization means that scientists can finally officially study the cannabis plant and its effects on human consumers. And Canada’s leading cannabis scientist is Jonathan Page, who grew up here, and he is building the world’s first laboratory dedicated to the breeding and genetics of cannabis in his home community.

What was the highlight of the year for you?

¶  Several hundred people jumped into the somewhat colder water off Goose Spit on Boxing Day for the annual Polar Bear Swim. But, was the water really that cold? Actually, water in the Strait of Georgia fluctuates only about 3 or 4 degrees Centigrade between summer and winter. So, it’s not really that much colder in December than it was in July.

Some Cumberland folks — incited by Meagan Coursons — have been talking about a New Years Day swim in Comox Lake. That would likely be colder than Goose Spit, especially if they jumped in at the mouth of the Cruikshank River.

That’s pretty much what Magali Cote did before Christmas. The commercial diver started at the west end of the lake and swam to the Cumberland boat ramp. So, she passed by the mouth of the Cruikshank flowing with icy glacier water. Cote was wearing thermal diving gear, but still ….

¶  Our favorite scientific study of 2018 was done at the University of Colorado in Boulder. Researchers found that when women subjected to mild pain held hands with their male partner, the intensity of the pain diminished by 34 percent. We’re not sure why they only used mixed-sex couples. Brain scans showed the couple’s brain waves became synchronized while holding hands, and to a greater degree when pain was applied.

The lead researcher said the study “illustrates the power and importance of human touch.”

 

 

 

 

 

2018 TOP MOVIES

Roma — Alfonso Cuaron
Hereditary — Ari Aster
First Reformed — Paul Schrader
Eighth Grade — Bo Burnham
Support the Girls — Andrew Bujalski
Amazing Grace — Sydney Pollack
The Rider — Chloé Zhao
Cold War — Pawel Pawlikowski
The Old Man & the Gun — David Lowery
Zama — Lucrecia Martel

— YEARENDLISTS.COM

 

 

2018 TOP ALBUMS

Cardi B — Invasion of Privacy
Kacey Musgraves — Golden Hour
Camila Cabello — Camila
Pistol Annies — Interstate Gospel
Ariana Grande — Sweetener
Travis Scott — AstroWorld
Pusha T — Daytona
Lady Gaga & Bradley Cooper — A Star is Born
Kurt Vile — Bottle It In
Drake — Scorpion

— Rolling Stone

 

 

2018 TV SHOWS

Better Call Saul
Legion
The Americans
Killing Eve
The Good Place
The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel
The Handmaid’s Tale
Sharp Objects
Patrick Melrose
Barry

— David Bianculli, NPR’s Fresh Air

 

 

Taking the Polar Bear plunge at Goose Spit on Boxing Day

Taking the Polar Bear plunge at Goose Spit on Boxing Day

Photo by George Le Masurier

Taking the Polar Bear plunge at Goose Spit on Boxing Day

By

Brave souls dove into cold waters on the leeward side of Goose Spit Wednesday (Boxing Day) for the 42nd annual Polar Bear Swim. Several hundred joined in the fun. Fun? Apparently, according to the Comox Recreation Centre organizers. Here’s a gallery of photos to relive the event from the warmth of your living room.

 

POLAR BEARS HAVE TO SWIM LONGER, AND MORE OFTEN

Melting ice in the Beaufort Sea is forcing polar bears to swim long distances, without food or rest for days at a time, with increasing frequency, according to a five-year study that sheds light onto yet another consequence of climate change in the North.

A group of researchers at the University of Alberta monitored polar bears in the Beaufort Sea, north of Alaska and the Yukon, and Hudson Bay from 2007 to 2012.

They found that as sea ice melted, female adult bears and younger bears of both genders were paddling distances greater than 30 miles more often in order to find pieces of ice large enough for them to rest on.

“If you went back in time, even to the 1980s, bears in the Beaufort Sea probably never saw 50 kilometers [30 miles] of open water, and that’s the low end of the analysis,” said researcher Andrew Derocher, a professor of biological sciences at the University of Alberta.

-VICE News

 

HERE’S THE REALLY SCARY PLACES TO SWIM IN THE WORLD

Victoria Falls, Zambia — A natural swimming hole at the top of the falls, a 100-foot drop.

Hanakapiai Beach, Hawaii — High surfs, strong rip currents and high tides have claimed many lives here

Volusia County, Florida — New Smyrna Beach is known as the Shark Bite Capital of the World. Nuff said.

River Nile, Egypt — If water falls, rip currents and sharks aren’t scary enough for you, take a dip in the muddy waters of the Nile, where a half-million crocodiles lurk among the piranha-like Tiger Fish.

— Destinationtips.com

 

IF YOU DIDN’T THINK GOOSE SPIT WAS COLD, TRY THIS!

Plunge into water at near-freezing temperatures, and your body goes into extreme distress. Your skin screams signals of pain. You can’t breathe, because your chest is cramping up. Talking is nearly impossible. Your heart is pounding. Fear mounts — as it should. Without any protection, you may lose consciousness in under 15 minutes. You’ll be dead within an hour.

Or … you can start racing! That’s the idea behind the Open Scandinavian Championship in Winter Swimming, which takes place every year in a 25-meter pool cut out of a frozen lake in a small Swedish town only about 100 miles from the Arctic Circle. Nearly 400 swimmers traveled there in February for the privilege and thrill of competing in this unique sport with as many health benefits as risks, it seems.

It’s the health benefits of the cold — both physical and emotional — that inspired this winter swimming race in the first place.

Health benefits?

— KIMT.com