• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary navigation
  • Skip to footer

Erica Hargreave

Bringing Stories to Life as a Speaker, & Digital & Immersive Media Strategist & Storyteller

  • Talks & Classes
    • Classes
  • Digital & Immersive Strategy
  • Blog
    • EdTech
    • Master's Work
    • Activities
    • Stories
  • Contact
  • Stay in Touch With Our E-Newsletters
  • Testimonials
  • Book A Talk
You are here: Home / Archives for Erica Hargreave

Erica Hargreave

The Green Chain: A Film Review

March 8, 2009 by Erica Hargreave 1 Comment

Full Disclosure: The Green Chain’s producers, Tony Wosk and Mark Leiren-Young are friends mine, but that does not mean that I’d automatically like their movie.  And to be honest I didn’t like it ….. I loved it!  I knew Mark was a good writer, but this isn’t just good writing, this is great writing.

If you don’t know what The Green Chain is about, here’s the synopses:

The Green Chain is a powerful, funny and thought-provoking film about the conflicts between people on both sides of the battle who love trees — and are willing to risk anything to protect their personal visions of the forest.

 

The Green Chain by emmerogers.

 

‘Powerful’ is the perfect descriptor for this film.  It really hit a chord for me and rang so true to many of my own experiences.  I’ve worked in the forestry industry, am a biologist and been an environmentalist, and I saw so much of the dialog and characters in myself and the people I met along the way. It’s uncanny how Mark writes them so perfectly. In my late teens, I was the kid that would have found it to be an adventure to live in the tree and as a biologist I would have been there for many of the reasons that the Raging Granny shared.  As I matured and spent more time in the smaller towns of BC, I discovered that my youthful ideals were a little naive.  It doesn’t matter that I now recognize that the story has more sides, to the forestry workers in the small towns I will always be seen as an educator and one time forestry researcher, and they’ll be too busy defending their right to log to hear me say, ‘I understand’.  My cousin will get into actual fights with me where I don’t say a single word, because in her mind I’m still that scrappy, tree hugging, granola eating, 19 year old, who’d still love to live in a tree (I’d be lying to say I’d never considered it).

I love the way in Mark’s account of this age old story, all the characters touch each others lives.  He does this so seamlessly, but so that it really pulls at the heart strings of our own connectivity, just like that of the ecosystem.  And the beauty is this isn’t just a story about logging.  This is a tale that speaks to many small towns and natural resource based industries. Speaking from the BC perspective, this story could just as easily be fish or rocks.

 

Photographed by Robert Shaer

 

Oh and I don’t think you have to be an uber science geek like myself to enjoy The Green Chain.  It is simply a good story and I’ll be the first to admit I am a critical audience.  I’m critical of science stories as I am a scientist and storyteller.  There’s nothing to be critical of here, it’s just a darn good story and accurate.  And unlike some science stories, it’s far from boring.  In fact, I will likely watch it numerous time, as I enjoyed it that much!

Go see it!  You still have time to make the late show!  It starts at 9:10 pm.

Failing that, the daily show times of The Green Chain at Fifth Avenue Cinema, between now to Thursday March 11th, are 1:30, 4:45, 7:10 and 9:10 pm.

Filed Under: Activities, Blog, News, Opinions, Random Thoughts, Stories Tagged With: documentary filmmaking, environment, films

Snow Etiquette for Vancouverites

January 27, 2009 by Erica Hargreave 8 Comments


 

Like a respectable Canadian gal, I love the snow!  It’s my version of winter magic. I love writing away and hearing the little girl next door as she steps out for the first time in the morning and exclaims in awe, ‘Oh look Daddy!!!  Isn’t it beautiful!!!’  I still feel like that little girl. So I am in a state of delight and awe this morning as I look outside and see the beautiful white stuff falling.

 

 

What I do not like about the snow, however, is Vancouverites in it and their incessant whining about it.  Vancouver – the rest of the country complains about our citizens being cold and about us being unneighbourly.  Well I have a theory on this.  My theory is that in Vancouver our climate is very mild and unlike the rest of the country, we rarely get snow.  As such we have missed out on the snow bonding experience that the rest of the country gets.  We’ve missed out on meeting our neighbours as we shovel the walks and teaching our young people to help out the elderly neighbour across the street.  Well nows our chance.  Rather than grumbling – lets embrace the true beauty of the snow – the beauty of being neighbourly and building community.

 

He Might be Ancient .. by you.

 

Snow Etiquette for Vancouverites (inspired by a snowy afternoon tweets on twitter and encouragement of @hummingbird604 to make this a blog post):

1) Buy a snow shovel and don’t leave home without it.

2) Dress for the weather! Honestly people, this isn’t your first snow day of the year, you think you would have learnt by now.

3) Dress your kids for the weather – boots, hats, coats & mitts.

4) If you live in a townhouse or condo and there is only one caretaker, would it kill you to help a little with the shoveling.

5) Just because they’re calling for rain doesn’t mean you shouldn’t shovel. If the temperature drops the snow or slush will turn to ice.

6) Courtesy of @yoyomama_van If your tires slip day 1 in the snow, they will slip on day 10 too. Get all weather tires or leave your car at home

7) Courtesy of @kulpreetsingh If you can’t get sand or gravel, keep a bag of cat litter in your trunk in case of ice.

8) Courtesy of @WinnieYeo If you don’t have salt, gravel or kitty litter and are stuck, you can use the car’s floor mats. Just be careful they don’t shoot out from under your tires and hit someone.

9) Courtesy of @petequily If your wheels are spinning on ice, flooring it = more ice.

10) Courtesy of @CrunchyCarpets Leave early, look around, slow down and chillax!!

11) Courtesy of @CrunchyCarpets Please pick up dog poop..snow or no snow. It doesn’t disappear under the snow. It just becomes a poohsicle and when the snow disappears, a smelly, slimy mess for someone to step in.

12) If you’re going to open schools on a snowy day, then plow the staff parking lot. First school day of 2009, I just spent an hour digging cars out of an unplowed, iced over school parking lot.

13) Parents: Your precious little deers can walk a few feet through the snow. They are children, not witches and will not melt from touching ice crystals. Don’t drive your car into an iced school lot where cars are already stuck.  Thinking this should be common sense, but based on the number of parents I’ve seen do this, I feel it is worth noting.

14) If you see someone in need of help and you can help, then do help. And teach your children to do the same.  Teens kept walking by their teachers digging and pushing cars in the aforementioned lot and not one stopped to help.  Huge failure on societies part in my mind.

15) One of the joys of the snow is in building a sense of community by helping others. Don’t deprive your kids of that joy. Take them out (yes – even the little ones) and get them helping you to shovel the walks. Have them help an elderly neighbour. The small ones don’t need to be all that useful, but this will build a sense of social responsibility in them.

 

img_0405 by you.

 

Off to help the caretaker at my place by doing a bit more shovelling today.  Loving the fresh air and exercise!

Filed Under: Blog, Opinions, Random Thoughts Tagged With: building community, community, social responsibility, Vancouver

Wishing you a year filled with smiles!

December 25, 2008 by Erica Hargreave Leave a Comment

Year of Smiles 2 by you.

Photo by Jen Hong

Filed Under: Blog, Random Thoughts Tagged With: Ahimsa Kids, Ahimsa Media

Dreaming of a White Christmas

December 25, 2008 by Erica Hargreave 3 Comments

Frozen Tisle by erica.hargreave.

For the first time in my lifetime, it looks like Canada is being given the gift of a white Christmas across the entire country!!!!  Despite having to listen to masses of Vancouverites complain about this on twitter, I think it is a beautifully magical gift.  Thank you Merry Old Kris Kringle!  Snow slows us all down a little.  Rather than chasing about the countryside after that ‘perfect gift’, we stop running about and do what is really important, which is actually spending some quality time with the people we love.

The Golden Girls (and Guy) by erica.hargreave.

Snow pulls us together in another sense too – it causes strangers on the streets and subways to smile, laugh and talk with one another.  We remember to play and be young again as we are all taken in by the snows magic and have a snowball fight, make a snow angel or slide down a hill on a makeshift toboggan. We meet our neighbours as we dig our homes and our cars out of the snow.  We help our neighbours and for once the young actually remember to help the elderly.  And we pull together and share as we take on the hardships that snow poises on our lives.

Grunt by erica.hargreave.

I make fun of Vancouverites in snow, because they seem so overly dramatic about even the littlest bit of snow, but the reality is they live in a city thats unprepared for the snow – whether it is planes being able to take off from the airport or the many people that unlike myself don’t have a home or warm clothes and live on the streets in Vancouver.

Icy Seat by erica.hargreave.

Enjoy the snow this Christmas, but take a moment this holiday season and see if there is something you can do to help those less fortunate.  Whether it is donating warm clothes you no longer need, helping to bring safety and communication to others by donating old cell phones through campaigns like Fearless City, or spreading a bit of holiday joy with organizations like Beauty Nights.  And for those of you that are sitting in airports trying to get home to loved one, I do hope that you are indeed able to get to your destination.

Wishing you all a happy, safe holiday season filled with love, warmth and beauty!

Shoreline Decour by erica.hargreave.

Filed Under: Blog, Opinions, Random Thoughts Tagged With: Canada, twitter

My Holiday Present to You: Paper Making

December 18, 2008 by Erica Hargreave 4 Comments

At Ahimsa Media, we have a winter holiday tradition of posting an environmentally friendly activity that you can do with your families.  This is our present to the many wonderful people in our lives and that we meet throughout the year.  As the Ahimsa Media site is a little out of date and doesn’t reflect our current projects, I am posting this year’s holiday activity here, and will update to Ahimsa Media, as we update the site in the New Year.  This is not just from me, but from all of the wonderful guys and gals that work with me at Ahimsa Media.

Paper Making

Papiere by pusteblume.

Photo by pusteblume

Paper making has always been a favourite holiday past time of mine, is a great way to recycle used paper, makes great gifts and is just a fun way to pass the time with family and friends of any age. Although there are times when the mess I make in the living room would cause my Dad to disagree.  That mess comes naturally to me though.  I’m guessing that most of you can do this in a much tidier fashion.

Supplies

  • Recycled Paper
  • An Old Blender
  • Bowls
  • Ladles
  • Tupperware and Recyclable Plastic Containers (yogurt, ice cream containers…etc)
  • Assorted Sizes of Elastic Bands
  • Door Screen (can be purchased cheaply from a hardware store)
  • Old Newspaper
  • Old Towels
  • Dull Knife (a plastic one is good for kids)
  • Cookie Cutters (optional)
  • Flower Petals (optional)
  • Leaves (optional)
  • Seeds (optional)

 

The Paper Scrap Box- the beginning of our papermaking by AlaskaTeacher.
Photo by Angela

Making the Pulp

Eco Art Papermaking by hensever.
Photo by Benjamin Chan
  1. Separate the paper by colour.
  2. In a blender, place two handfuls of one colour of paper with at least two cups of water. Blend. **Note – do not over fill – or else your kitchen will be covered in pulp.**
  3. Add more paper and water as needed.
  4. If you are short a particular colour, you can add white paper to augment the coloured paper.
  5. Once you have a nice papery mud like consistency, your pulp is made!!!  Pour into a bowl.
  6. Make the next colour.
Eco Art Papermaking by hensever.
Photo by Benjamin Chan

Building the Screen

  1. Get a series of different shaped tupperware / recyclable containers and cut out door screen to cover the containers with at least 2 inches of overlap on all sides.
  2. Place screen over the open side of the container.
  3. Fasten screen to the container with an elastic band and pull screen taut.
  4. Presto!  One screen done.  Make more of different sizes and shapes.
paper making by amazing_podgirl.
Photo by Amazing Podgirl

Making the Paper

  1. Place a small amount of pulp on the screen.
  2. Use a knife to spread the pulp out across the entire screen. I find this is done best in soft chopping motions. The thinner the pulp, the thinner the paper.
  3. Create designs on the pulp by using different colours, placing the cookie cutters on the screen and using them to create different coloured objects (by putting different coloured pulp in a thin layer inside the cookie cutter on the screen before removing the actual cookie cutter), and by placing leaves and flower petals on top of the pulp.
  4. Take two pieces of newspaper and fold into a size that will cover the container.
  5. Place folded paper on top of the pulp covered screen.
  6. Over a bowl, turn the container sideways, to allow the water to pour off whilst holding the newspaper firmly in place.
  7. Turn container upside down, whilst holding the newspaper in place.
  8. Carefully lift the container, leaving the pulp on the newspaper.
  9. Fold a second newspaper and cover the pulp.
  10. Fold newspaper bundle up in an old towel.
  11. If you want thin paper, place a heavy book on top of the bundle.
  12. Leave for 24 – 48 hours, then pull back the towel and newspaper to reveal your handmade paper.
Eco Art Papermaking by hensever.
Photo by Benjamin Chan

Ideas for the Kids:

  • Make extra thick paper on round yogurt containers to make paper ornaments for the tree.
  • Add seeds to the pulp and you can plant and water your paper when you are done with it.  I usually use wildflower seeds, place the paper in a sunny spot, sprinkle it with top soil and water it.

Hope you have as much fun with this as I do.  Don’t be afraid to comment or email, if you have a tip, a modification or a question.

Happy Holidays!

Erica

Filed Under: Activities, Blog Tagged With: craft, environmentally friendly, family activities

A Day to Remember

November 11, 2008 by Erica Hargreave 1 Comment

A Soldier Of World War II B&W by Mr Mo-Fo.
Photo by Mo Fo

I was fortunate enough yesterday to attend a Remembrance Day Ceremony put on by Delta Secondary School. I am always amazed at how the stories from World War I & II tear at my heartstrings despite, thankfully, never having lived through a World War.  It is for my freedom and the blessed life that I have that it is so important that we take time on the the 11th day of the 11th month to remember. To remember the men and women who sacrificed for all of us, who lost their lives and lived through unimagined horrors – horrors that those of us of the younger generations will hopefully never have to live through.  Yesterday’s service was done by kids younger than myself, but even though we didn’t hear from a veteran, they successfully brought the stories of the World Wars to live in my imagination.  It was very sobering.  They did an outstanding job!

Veteran - World War II Memorial by Scott Ableman.
Photo by Scott Ableman

As I reflect this year and realize that all around me it is the younger generations that are now telling the story, it hits me that part of the sad reality of this is that we are losing are veterans to old age, but I marvel at the beauty that those who did not live through the World Wars understand the importance of the stories and continue to tell them.

I am incredibly proud to know that today my little brother, Petey, is actually a dignitary at a Remembrance Day Ceremony laying down a wreath in memory of those veterans that we have lost.  I am equally as proud to see that one of my dear friends, Tony Towstego, has directed and produced his third documentary in tribute to Remembrance Day – Canada Remembers.  This documentary airs tonight on Vision TV at 8 pm PST and then again on Thursday November 13that 10 pm PST. I look forward to watching and hearing the voices of the veterans.

In flanders fields... by Spoker.
Photo by Christophe Indevast

Take a few minutes to stop and remember at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month.

Love and peace to you all,

Erica

Filed Under: Blog, Random Thoughts, Stories Tagged With: World War I, World War II

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

Connect with Erica!

  • Bluesky
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Flickr
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Mastodon
  • Pinterest
  • Threads
  • TikTok
  • YouTube

Representation

Ahimsa Media
info[at]ahimsamedia.com
604-785-3602

"Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember. Involve me and I learn." ~ Benjamin Franklin

BCIT College Courses

Building and Engaging Community (online)

BCIT Media Storytelling Courses
Social Media Storytelling (online)

© 2025 · Erica Hargreave