Olympic Torch Relay @ BCIT

On Thursday, February 11, 2010, the Olympic Torch Relay continued on its 105th day, going through the Lower Mainland including Coquitlam and Burnaby. Now, being a student at BCIT, I was fortunate enough to be able to go outside and witness this Olympic hype. Until that day, I wasn’t even looking forward to the Olympic break.

Thankfully, my one and only break on Thursday was during the time the torch bearer, Joel Pineau (a BCIT student), would be set to pass BCIT. The crowds gathered and cheered, waving Canada and Coke flags alike, watching and waiting for Joel to come.

It looked as though the weather gods were on our side, because as the time came closer, the rain kept away. Umbrellas closed and views got better. Fast forward another 30 minutes, and the view of two torch bearers exchanging flames is visible from a distance (from my view on top of a small hill at least, and not pictured here unfortunately). 10 seconds later, Joel passes, waving at the crowd, who is cheering back at him.

I managed to get a somewhat shaky and not-so-great quality video from afar of the run.

Now that I’m free from the chains of school, I obviously have more time on my hands. And what have I done with my time so far? I watched the Opening Ceremony from the comfort of my own living room. I was stunned by everything during the ceremony. Until that will-be-infamous mechanical glitch with the last cauldron. Embarrassing much, Vancouver? I’ve seen all the Twitter posts about it, from how they handled it well to the fact that Canada invented insulin and not Viagra (@uranowski).

I was disappointed with that snafu. I will say though, that other than that, everything was well done. There were just a few minor things, like lip-syncing, canoe-guy and his shadow movements not matching up, tap dancing clicks not sounding at the correct time… but overall, I was very impressed. I can only hope now that the closing ceremony won’t have silly glitches like the ones in the opening ceremony.

I’ll hopefully be going around the city touring, checking out the sights and sounds, and snapping them photos. Needless to say, I’m now so glad I get a two-week break to recoup, watch the Olympics, and be proud to be a Vancouverite, and a Canadian. Despite our embarrassments.

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