Do you see what I see?

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8 x 24, oil on canvas, framed.

This piece comes in a floater frame with hardware to hang. Dimensions with the frame are 10 x 26 x 2 1/4”.

PLEASE NOTE: Shipping on all original pieces will be sent to the buyer once the exact total is calculated by the shipping method (Canada Post).

Local pick up and drop off is available, dependent on where the piece sits (with Van or at Art Gallery Kimberley).

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8 x 24, oil on canvas, framed.

This piece comes in a floater frame with hardware to hang. Dimensions with the frame are 10 x 26 x 2 1/4”.

PLEASE NOTE: Shipping on all original pieces will be sent to the buyer once the exact total is calculated by the shipping method (Canada Post).

Local pick up and drop off is available, dependent on where the piece sits (with Van or at Art Gallery Kimberley).

8 x 24, oil on canvas, framed.

This piece comes in a floater frame with hardware to hang. Dimensions with the frame are 10 x 26 x 2 1/4”.

PLEASE NOTE: Shipping on all original pieces will be sent to the buyer once the exact total is calculated by the shipping method (Canada Post).

Local pick up and drop off is available, dependent on where the piece sits (with Van or at Art Gallery Kimberley).

For anyone who skis Fernie, you’ve probably heard of the run, Corner Pocket. Maybe you skied it, or maybe you looked up at it from Lizard Bowl. Well, when your kids ski Fernie, this run becomes part of their conversations.
When you first put your kids on skis, they start at the magic carpet. It may seem to take a long time when you’re doing the back-breaking grunt work at the carpet, but the kids, they move to the hook quickly. And then the chairlifts. And when they ride their first chairlift, well, that’s something! Slaying their first green run on those tiny little legs, direct from the chairlift, without any tears…well, that’s really big.
That’s hot chocolate and marshmallows big.
Eventually, they realize that runs are colour coded. Green runs are quite an accomplishment, and they’re happy to ski them…for a season. Then they hear friends or siblings talking about the blue runs, and guess what? The wee little ones don’t want to be left behind.
It makes them want it.
And once they do a blue run, that’s pretty good for a little while too. It’s good until they get wind that after blue, there are black runs. And before you know it, greens are for little kids, and they’re not little anymore. They start aiming for the black runs. They become so proficient on skis that they start to want bigger and better. And when they hear their Moms and Dads talk about face shots in Corner Pocket, they start to ask, “Think I can do Corner Pocket?” “Can you take me to Corner Pocket?” “I think I’m ready for Corner Pocket.”
By now they’ve got the green, blue, and black badges, and they want the off-piste…but not any off-piste…they want the one everyone is talking about…in our household, Corner Pocket is a rite of passage. There’s no need for hot chocolates and marshmallows anymore because that’s not what motivates them. Instead, a race back to Whitepass to do it again is all it takes.
Last season, she had her sights on it, so our youngest skied Corner Pocket. Tear, flick…it marks the end of an era (I can’t keep up anymore!).
This piece is special. 
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