Little Cafe bears Fruit

16 10 2007
Wheatberries Sechelt Location

Wheatberries Sechelt Location

Wheatberries amazing Cookies

Wheatberries amazing Cookies

While on a little trip back home to the Sunshine Coast I decided to check out a little cafe called Wheatberries Bakery. This cafe started as a bakery and is home to the best cookies in the entire world, it’s coffee doesn’t take a back seat either.

The Sechelt location has an open wood feel with sunflowers through out the cafe. There is large bay windows through out the cafe seating area and both indoor and outdoor area’s are bathed in natural light for most of the day.

The company started in the garage of the Mark & Jane Yellowley Robert’s Creek home in 1997 as just a bakery and had quite the following from the early beginnings. They opened their first location in Gibsons (circa 2002) to foster more growth beyond what their garage could handle. At this time they started the cafe portion.

The little bakery that could

The Sechelt Location has been operating for about three years and is centrally located right behind the cenotaph at the end of Cowrie Street.

The little family run company now has two locations in Gibsons, a year round small kiosk at the Langdale Ferry Terminal and the Sechelt Location. I don’t think their after world domination (aka like the big green machine) but it is so nice to get a good cup of coffee before catching the ferry.

Indoor of Wheatberries Sechelt

Indoor of Wheatberries Sechelt

The Coffee is supplied by Straight Coffee Traders of Wilson Creek another family run coastal enterprise and is organic fair trade and offers a wide variety of roasts to chose from. I had dry cappuccino which had beautiful velvet foam and was perfectly made. I couldn’t of ask for a better cup anywhere on the Lower Mainland.

The Sechelt location has wireless and was working the last time I was in town. ( March, 09 )

Langdale where the hell is Langdale?

Langdale’s claim to fame is the BC Ferries terminal to Vancouver and for the longest time if you ever missed a boat all you had to look forward to was three sparsely filled vending machines and a dullsville of waiting room for two hours.

Wheatberries Langdale Kiosk

Wheatberries Langdale Kiosk

Well more then a year ago now Wheatberries took over a former hot dog stand and turned it into a coffee Kiosk which they decided to keep open all year long.

Anything, ANYTHING is better then BC ferries coffee and when I missed the boat a couple of times last winter it was the saving grace of a long two hour wait.

Faces and Places

Where this blog was written: Wheatberries Bakery ( Sechelt )
Drink ordered: dry cappuccino
Discount of own to-go cup: 10 cents
Barista Knowledge: Fast
Barista Friendliness: Friendly
Website: None

Address: 5500 Wharf Street, Sechelt BC & Langdale Ferry Terminal


You can bump and grind just don’t ask for a sleeve

10 10 2007

For this review I decided to say a little closer to home, in fact this is the closest café to my house on The Drive.

Bump and Grind is a saucy joint that has been open for a couple of years on the northern most edge of the Drive. The café is run by Audrey and Joe ( Christine sold the cafe in May, 2008 ) who are business partners and can usually see most days behind the counter.

Bump and Grind cafe

Front of Bump and Grind

The surroundings of Bump and Grind give away that this is a little more counter culture then your usual fair. The café boasts a couch full of vocabulary one large table and a few smaller ones with art that changes on a monthly basis. The café has one of the most interesting art installations a while back where the entire café was covered in “2000 pages of handwritten study notes from a Doctoral Candidate” in political science. It was one of the best art displays in a coffee shop, I had ever seen.

DJ can now be seen in the cafe spinning vinyl on the turn tables in the back on the weekends and during the week Joe and Audrey seem to always have something funky playing in the shop.

There is wifi at the shop, but they had taken away all but one power plugins away due to abuse by some loitering customers.

If you just want to sit in a cafe for six hours and nurse one cup of tea go find a Waves.

Sleeves are for wimps

A while back I dropped in to ask if I could have a sleeve for my coffee, (I didn’t bring my own mug ) and it was a bit of a struggle to get one. Apparently Josh and Christine have something against sleeves of the world, Actually they are just trying to reduce the impact on our environment and they are pretty militant about it. But instead of just bitching about something they decided to do something about it.

At Bump and Grind if you want a sleeve you’ll have to pay a buck for one, and they’ll want you to keep it too. It is a cool concept and I wish them the best of luck with it.

Since selling the Cafe Audrey and Joe sell the Coffee Cuff

A little sauce with your coffee

What I really enjoy about the drive is the fact that you can a huge variety of people and viewpoints. I think it is what makes people come to the drive. Bump and Grind is no different. Just don’t ask for a sleeve. Josh and Christine sold the cafe to Audrey and Joe in May, 08. The coffee is still the same quality but is lacking the saucy and somewhat abusive attitude. Dam I will miss that.

Since purchasing the cafe last year Joe and Audrey have really captured the attention of coffee drinkers in Vancouver and it has become one of the top cafes in Vancouver, When some of the top Barista in the country go to Bump and Grind to enjoy an espresso you know they must be doing something right.

Faces and Places

Where this Blog was written: Bump and Grind
Drink ordered: 12oz Costa Rican Roast
Discount of own to-go cup: 10 cents
Barista Knowledge: Top notch
Barista Friendliness: Awesome
Café website : none

Address: 916 Commercial Drive, Vancouver, BC

Bump n Grind on Urbanspoon



We’re Back

6 10 2007

Hey thanks for sticking around, I have finished my second semester of New Media and design BCIT and it was one toughest hardest school semesters I have ever completed. It was an incredible amount of work and I survived.

Black Gold

BlackGold the Documentary

Recovering from the semester I decided to head down to my local video store Black Dog video and rented the documentary Black Gold. It follows the daily life of Tadesse Meskela who is the manager for the Oromia Coffee Farmers’ Co-operative Union in Ethiopia. It also shows the effect that the world coffee market is having on the lives of the coffee growers in the developing nations

I heard this documentary was good, and I had read a review in the Georgia Straight went it was released into the theatres but never got a chance to see it. I knew purchasing fair trade coffee gave me some good karma points and helped the farmers live a more sustainable life, but I had no idea how much it really the daily lives. Remember when you got a extra job or did some overtime to pay for that vacation or new ipod? Well these people just want to being able to feed and cloth their children. . . . This film just really put it into context for me.

I have read other reviews that say Black Gold doesn’t provide any real solutions to the problem. Well I beg to differ and I am going to do something about it too. I have started a new page of this blog, which will give a list fair trade coffee which shops serve them and who the roaster is.

Update: I have decided to take down my Fair Trade Coffee page as it never was fully realized what I wanted to be and I their is so much confusion on what fair trade actually is. I want this site to be a creditable source of information and have yet to fully investigate the fair trade practices. Thanks ~ Robert Dall.