THE CREEKS OF WEST VANCOUVER One of the interesting things about historical research is that there never seems to be any final answers. Just when one thinks one has something taped, some-one else comes up with a little nugget of information to open up a new avenue of investigation. If this is true for the researcher, it is even more true for the average citizen. An area of potential interest and concern can exist without his being aware of it. This was certainly true for your editor and the creeks of West Vancouver. He drove back and forth along Marine Drive without ever once being conscious of the fact that he was crossing creek after creek after creek. However, when he set about to prepare the walk through Dundarave, he had the creeks brought sharply to his attention. He had wanted to start the walk on Dundarave Pier, and found access to the pier impeded by a culvert being laid on the landward edge. When he asked, he was told that Marr Creek was being rerouted to put its egress on the east rather than on the west side of the pier. Marr Creek became a feature of the walk.