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Whistler and surroundings
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On
my way up to Victoria, I land in Vancouver,
British Columbia. In the airport I see a sign that says,
"You're only a 2 hour drive from Whistler." Heard a lot
about it--a spectacular drive sort of like Highway 1 on
the California coast, mountains coming down into the sea.
I'm going. Into a rental car.
I
arrive in Victoria 7/30, 10:30 at night. Beautiful seaside
town on Vancouver Island accessible only by ferry. Picked
up by Paul Smola in "La Bamba", a '66 Plymouth Fury convertible
that he and his son "PJ," nephew Connell, and friend Ryan
drove from Denver to Victoria in two days. ("These things
that I do, you too shall do and even greater.") 13-year-old
PJ and Connell sit on La Bamba's trunk trying out 13-year-old
pick-up lines on any and all females in the central hub
of Victoria (the intersection in front of the Empress Hotel,
a gargantuan gingerbread Victorian landmark, complete with
hordes of tourists, street performers, and other forms of
quaint, unthreatening Northern Canadian street life). I
hop in and La Bamba roars off, out of town and into the
coastal pine forest.

Paul
Smola building the labyrinth
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Paul is a personable,
cherub-faced veteran of last year's Victoria PAT III who
during the training spontaneously started fixing things
around the property, a peaceful seaside Catholic retreat
center run by the Sisters of St. Anne. And this year he
decided to come out a week before the PAT III and really
work on the place. He sent an email to former Victoria PAT
participants to round up some more help, and that's why
I'm here. Top of the list: building a labyrinth on the retreat
grounds.
(A
labyrinth is a maze-like structure that is used in a type
of walking meditation to open up to spiritual guidance.
You walk through it from the periphery to the center to
experience an inner centering that mirrors your outer movement.
It has been used in the Doctor of Spiritual Science class
and although it is centuries-old, it has become quite popular
in the last few years both in traditional religious settings
and in newer spiritual movements.)
Workers
include Paul, his son, nephew, friend Ryan, local MSIA-ers
Corrinne Kidd and Kevin McGinn, and yours truly. More are
expected later. We're off to an impressive start, laying
out bricks to form the concentric circles of the labyrinth.
Each brick has to be placed carefully so that we create
a flat surface on ground that is actually slightly sloped.
So we're piling up sand to compensate for the lay of the
land, tapping in each brick like medieval stonemasons (supervised
by Paul, whose business is construction and who claims to
know what he's doing) plus any kibitzer who happens to pass
by.

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Retreat Center in Victoria, Canada
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We stay in the simple
but comfortable rooms of the retreat center, our medieval
stonemason lifestyle balanced by the teens' excursions into
downtown Victoria in La Bamba. The nuns are sweet, loving,
and attentive, and take good care of us. A bald eagle flew
by my window this morning. It's August 1st, 5 days until
the PAT starts, and photos follow of the stages of progress
so far.
Day 2
Everything is progressing quite well. The labyrinth is starting
to look like a labyrinth. (We dumped a lot of sand today
and the levelling process is close to done so that the bricklaying
can get going in earnest.) Kevin McGinn is doing an unbelievable
job clearing trails. The 13-year-olds have found girlfriends
in town and are busy moussing their hair as we workers go
catatonic after a hard day. (They tried to convince Dad
to drive La Bamba into town so they could sit on the back
of it in front of the Empress Hotel and preen, but Dad,
too tired, told them to take a bus.)

Labyrinth
in progress
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The nuns ply us with
strawberry-rhubarb pie & homemade wines. There is a lot
of calculating and tape-measuring and re-measuring going
on with the labyrinth, as the facility's groundkeeper corrects
and refines Paul's interpretation of his design, and bricks
and sand are moved a few inches back, no, a quarter inch
down, no, a bit to the left to line up with the other side,
no, now it's not flush with the other line....I tell them
I'm here to take orders and enjoy the scenery. Reinforcements
come tomorrow, we hope.
Day 3
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10-point buck visiting labyrinth
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A very satisfying
day. We're getting to be much more adept bricklayers. At
least 60% done. Tapping in those bricks, putting down layers
of sand, then topsoil, and sod will come at the end. The
teens devloped a new way to pack down the dirt: boards taped
to shoes. Much of the heavy work is over, and work is getting
much more refined: the art of getting lines of bricks perfectly
even & level. Reinforcements arrived: Faith Murphy, Laila
Virding; more tomorrow, as the PAT approaches. A 10-point
buck visited us twice today.
Day 4

Completed
labyrinth
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Done! (Well, almost).
Laid in the final bricks today, so the structure is complete
and all we have to do is put down sod tomorrow and we're
done. A full day sitting in the dirt laying brick. The Sisters
will do a blessing on it tomorrow. We've got quite a crew
now --at least 10, as more people arrive for PAT III --
and many spent the day refinishing the Chapel's pews.