Reflections on Vancouver

Johnny and Janey in their Flying Machine.

Johnny and Janey in their Flying Machine.

I am hunched up in a seaplane over Vancouver sightseeing with two fretting sexagenarians from England with larval names: Johnny and Janey. We fly low over the water, gliding slowly, deliberately, like a pelican riding air currents searching for sardines. Janey squeezes her eyes shut every time the plane dips or rises and murmurs, “Oh my…oh my,” while Johnny’s large head bobs on his narrow neck like one of those ceramic dogs on a car dashboard. He leans over Janey trying to see things through steamy bifocals held in place by a strip of white athletic tape across the bridge of his scabrous nose.

A gust of wind shakes the little plane like a tree branch and Janey moans like a sick child, burying her face in Johnny’s shoulder. “It’s al’ right, lovey,” he says unconvincingly, patting her leg.

The plane’s engine, droning like a lawn mower, makes conversation difficult. To help us identify what we’re looking at, the pilot nods at the land forms and bodies of water beneath us, shouting out names as if they were train stops or fanciful destinations conjured up from some old children’s book like The Magical Land of Noom. I seem to recall that the nervous but intrepid voyageurs of that 1922 classic, written by the same odd illustrator who gave us Raggedy Ann and Andy, were named Johnny and Janey as well. Perhaps, I think a bit deliriously as we bank sharply to the left, my aged flying companions are the same little boy and girl from the book, now wizened and gray. Perhaps I have really climbed aboard Johnny and Janey’s amazing Flying Machine, and when we land, I will be led on a series of adventures, as were the fictitious Johnny and Janey, by Jingles the Magician, the Princess in the Green Jar, and the exuberant Mr. Tiptoe.

My thoughts are interrupted by the pilot as he bellows out the Vancouver locators beneath us, punctuating each one with a flourishing exclamation mark: “Deadman’s Island!… Lost Lagoon!…Lions Gate!…English Bay!…False Creek!”

Johnny, who has been scowling ever since our little pontoon bird lifted off from Coal Harbour, pokes his wife, who has opened her eyes just long enough to snap a couple of pictures of the Vancouver skyline with a disposable camers. “Water!” he yells.

She cups a hand behind her ear. “What’?”

“Water!” he screams, shaking his head. He starts laughing, uncontrollably. “Water, water, water!” he yells, slapping his hands on his legs for emphasis. Soon, Janey is laughing and chanting with him.

The pilot is perplexed, as am I. But not Janey. She knows exactly what her ol’ Johnny is talkin’ about. “That’s right,” she says as the sky unleashes a torrent of rain so furious that it is impossible to tell sky from sea. “Water…water everywhere. Up and down.” She chuckles and slaps her meaty things with both hands. “That’s what this city’s all about, isn’t it, Johnny? It’s all about water!”

Johnny chuckles and nods. And I realize, as we plop down into Coal Harbour in the midst of this February storm, that Johnny and Janey, crazy as they are, just may have a point.

Tags: ,

1 comment

  1. Sonia Rodriguez’s avatar

    Oi…Now we are in Vancouver…My goodness…your a whirlwind tour arnt you? I want to look up that book your talking about…seems interesting and maybe something I should keep in my minimal library for lil’visitors.

    Smiles

Comments are now closed.