How to pull off a pandemic birthday: One canoe, five stops along False Creek and several gifts from afar - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 10, 2024, 11:56 PM | Calgary | 0.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

How to pull off a pandemic birthday: One canoe, five stops along False Creek and several gifts from afar

A Vancouver actor surprised his partner with a socially distanced birthday party, with her friends stationed at various points across False Creek.

A Vancouver actor surprised his partner with a socially distanced birthday party in mid-April

Adrian Glynn McMorran, left, took his partner, Marlene Ginader, on a surprise birthday canoe trip on April 17. The trip featured five stops along Vancouver's False Creek, with friends and gifts at the ready. (Submitted by Jon McMorran)

Marlene Ginader was convinced it was a stranger waving at her from Granville Islandas she and her partnercanoed across False Creek on a recent Sunday afternoon in April.

But as the boatgot closer, Ginaderrealized the person calling outwas her friend. Moments later, Ginader's friend tossed a pack ofM&Ms her way, a celebratory gesture to mark Ginader's 36th birthday.

The canoe trip planned by Ginader's partner, Adrian Glynn McMorran, suddenly began to make sense. This was a socially distancedbirthday party, with stops strategically planned at various point across the glittering Vancouver inlet.

"He fully surprised me," said Ginader, an actor and writer. "And I was pretty slow to catch on."

Their trip reflects the inventiveways people are safely celebrating birthdays amid rigid public health restrictions.

"When you have parameters that are imposed on you, it actually makes you be more creative," said McMorran, a 40-year-old actor and musician.

The couple started at Granville Island and made their way toward Science World. (Submitted by Jon McMorran)

The couple travelled eastward, with friends stationed at five points, including the Cambie Street Bridge and the pedestrian bridge at Olympic Village.

Onlookers watched with delight as friends gifted Ginader flowers and balloons. Some observers began to shout and sing Happy Birthday.

"I didn't realize how much of a spectacle we'd be," McMorran said. "We're in this boat, she's covered in flowers, she's kind of sitting there like a queen, not paddling, and there's balloons everywhere."

Planning the surprise

There were some logistical hurdles to overcome. McMorran texted friends the day before the surprise, giving them a rough timeframe to stand ready at their spot. But he wasn't sure how long they would chat with each group.

A hiccup inevitably came when two friends ran late. They had intended to hold up a 15-foot-long birthday banner, but instead found the couple at a later stop.

"They handed me a big pile of knotted letters and were like, just unscramble it," Ginader laughed.

Friends gifted Ginader flowers and balloons from afar. (Submitted by Jon McMorran)

The couple has a history of pulling off creative bashes.

For Marlene's first pandemic birthday, the couple hosted a DIY drive-thru, replete with a projector playing a black-and-white film. Friends watched the movie from their cars, while another friend playedpiano and improvisedthe film's soundtrack.

And for McMorran's 40th birthday last September, Ginader solicited letters from his friends and put together a book with handwritten messages.

"I pretty much had to live up to what she had done," McMorran said, "rather than the other way around."

By all accounts, the three-hour canoe ride exceeded her expectations.

"I was touched that everyone would show up and bother to do that and that he organized that," Ginader said.

"I was pretty warm and fuzzy for a few days."