Coquitlam 蟹座

蟹座
July 1, 1891
This date is recognized as the birthday because it's when the District of Coquitlam was officially incorporated, giving a formal identity to this growing Fraser Valley community.
場所
Coquitlam 今週のバイブ
今週、この場所に影響を与えているエネルギーを発見
以前のバイブ
過去の週間エネルギーと宇宙の影響を探る
個性プロファイル
To understand Coquitlam, incorporated on the first day of July, 1891, you must look at the slope of the land. This is a city built on an incline, rising from the silty banks of the Fraser River up to the jagged peaks of Eagle Mountain and Burke Mountain. Its name, derived from the hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ word Kwikwetlem, means "small red salmon," referring to the sockeye that once choked the river. That ancient biological rhythm sits beneath the modern pavement, a reminder of the raw, natural abundance that first drew settlers here.
While many local municipalities feel purely British in their colonial roots, Coquitlam holds a unique francophone heartbeat. The arrival of French-Canadian mill workers in 1909 established Maillardville, creating a cultural enclave that persists today with the Festival du Bois. This gives the city a distinct texture-a mix of rough-and-tumble lumber town grit and a persistent, spirited joie de vivre.
For most of the 20th century, Coquitlam was the "bedroom" of the region-quiet, suburban, and safe. But the modern city has shed its pajamas. The arrival of the SkyTrain and the vertical explosion around the town center has turned it into an urban contender. Yet, the spirit of 1891 remains: it is a place of wood and water, where the suburbs are constantly encroached upon by the bears coming down from the mountains and the fog rolling off the river.
タグ
神秘的な魂
Archetype: The Protective Fortress. The Mountain's echo. The Salmon's Memory.
Born on Canada Day under the sign of Cancer, Coquitlam is the Crab of the valley. Cancers are cardinal water signs, ruled by the Moon, governing the concepts of home, ancestry, and emotional depth. Coquitlam is fiercely domestic. It is a city of cul-de-sacs and single-family homes, protecting its residents within a hard outer shell of zoning laws and geography.
The water connection is literal-the Fraser and Coquitlam rivers define its borders. But the Cancerian trait of holding onto the past is also evident. While other cities demolish history, Coquitlam clings to its Maillardville heritage with sentimental ferocity. The sign's "crabby" nature shows up in the terrain; this isn't an easy, flat city. It requires effort to navigate the steep hills, just as a Cancer requires effort to get past their defensive walls.
If Coquitlam were a person: She is a tough, grand-motherly figure with a thick French-Canadian accent and forearms strong from chopping wood. She welcomes you into her kitchen with aggressive hospitality, forcing you to eat three helpings of tourtière, but she watches the street out the window with suspicious eyes. She is fiercely protective of her family and her property lines. She loves antiques and remembers every slight anyone has ever done to her since 1950. She can be moody-sunny and warm one minute, cold and foggy the next. She doesn't care about being the coolest person in the room; she cares about being the one who owns the house and holds the deed. She is the matriarch who keeps the family history in a photo album and isn't afraid to hit a bear with a broom if it gets too close to her garden.