UNRESERVED Auction, tools, generators, bikes, and lots of great home furnishings!

This week at Big Valley Auction we have a huge unreserved auction set up for viewing as of 9am Wednesday morning and live auction starts at 5pm. Featuring lots of great shop tools and several band saws, wood saws, hand tools, and so much more! even generators for the next big wind storm! Lots  of great bikes, and even a 1996 Acura 2.4TL, 4 Door, Automatic with leather! all this and so much more, you gotta see it to believe it!

At 6pm sharp we have a large amount of quality household furnishings, including gorgeous dining room suites, 3 piece reclining lazy boy living room set, pine harvest table, new mattresses, king, and single size, and so much more. Lots of great collectibles, fishing rods and reels, jewelry, electronics, its all here! Come early to view, there is lots to see!

 

As always, see you at the auction!

 

To view our catalog in pdf form click here

To view our searchable catalog click here

Massive home furnishings auction, UNRESERVED, Bikes galore

This week at Big Valley Auction we have a massive home furnishings auction set up for viewing tomorrow at 9am. Auction begins at 5pm sharp with nearly 300 lots of shop tools, garden supplies and equipment, lawnmowers, pallet lots and so much more. Nearly 50 bikes, and several very unique vintage bicycles as well! come see it to believe it….

At 6pm sharp we have one of the largest home furnishings auction we have had in a while. High quality well built items, including dining room and living room furniture, new and used, modern and vintage alike. Lots of great French provincial furniture as well, some very hard to find pieces. Everything must go in this unreserved (no minimum bid) auction!! come check us out, you will be glad you did!

 

see you at the auction!

to view our PDF catalogue click here

Mattresses, couches, bedroom sets, dining room sets and more! 700+ lots all with no reserves!

Another week is here and Big Valley Auction has another great auction for you to see this week.

At 5PM sharp we start at the farthest side of the auction warehouse with hundreds of great items including high quality tools, brand new lawn mowers and a generator. There is even a Ford Windstar in excellent condition with only 211,000 kms on it.

At 6PM we have an incredible assortment of items from brand new mattresses, limited edition artwork, antique and brand new furniture for every room in your home. High quality leather furniture, electronics and jewelry also sit among the hundreds of items up for bid; all with no reserves! Highest bidder takes everything they want.

Our doors open at 9AM for you all to come and preview all of the items up for auction this week. Come by and take a look.

Click HERE for our weekly catalogue with search features.

Click HERE for our traditional weekly catalogue.

70 Inch flat screen TV, bicycles, lawn equipment, brand new mattresses and more!

Hello everyone!

Big Valley Auction has put together another great auction that you will not want to miss out on. We’ve put together almost 700 lots of amazing items all to be sold with no reserve bids.

At 5PM sharp, we begin selling items at the farthest end of our warehouse. We’ve got hundreds of items from camping gear to building supplies and so much in between. There are several high quality bicycles, tools, sports equipment and more. This week we have a Honda Accord RX up on the block to be sold to the highest bidder.

At 6PM we begin selling on the furniture end of our warehouse. This week, you will find brand new mattresses still in packaging as well as bedroom furniture sets. There are several televisions up for auction including a 70 inch flat screen. There is limited edition artwork, fine pieces of jewellery, couches, kitchen appliances and so much more.

Doors open at 9AM for you to preview all that is included in this week’s auction. We look forward to seeing you tomorrow!

Click HERE for our weekly catalogue with search features

Click HERE for our traditional weekly catalogue

Another must see auction! – Brand new furniture, mattresses, artwork, furniture and more!

Big Valley auction has assembled another great auction for you all to come see this week. There are hundreds of items for you to see and bid on.

At 5PM sharp we will begin the night on the farthest side of our warehouse with over 200 items to be sold. Everything from high quality tools, building supplies, televisions and appliances. We will also be selling a 1994 Honda Civic in great condition and with only 189,000 kms.

At 6PM we will begin our furniture auction with hundreds of high quality items up for auction; all to be sold to the highest bidder. We have brand new mattresses still in packaging, king and queen size bed frames. There are also couch sets, dining room furniture and so much more.

Our doors open at 9AM for you to come and preview everything we’ve got this week.

Click HERE for our weekly catalogue (PDF)

HUGE Must SEE Auction, top quality brand new bedroom furniture, all selling top the highest bidder!

This week at Big Valley Auction we have an amazing amount of quality items for your bidding pleasure… Featuring lots of great quality solid wood, real modern oak bedroom furniture, all brand new, and it all must sell to the highest bidder…. we have over 400 items on our main floor with everything from, living room and dining room furniture, brand new mattresses, in a variety of sizes, smalls, collectibles, vintage items, electronics and so much more. This week…. You TRULY need to see it, to be believe it…. all this and more starts to be sold off to the highest bidder at 6pm sharp!

At 5pm sharp we have another 300 lot tool and misc, auction. Featuring lots of great items for every shop or garage, woodworking to metal work, and everything in between. There are over 40 bicycles this week, some very unique, and some quality road and mountain bikes as well. Lawnmowers, garden supplies and tools, even a 12ft x 20 ft intex pool with all the goodies…. AND 2001 SAAB 9-3 2.0 LITRE TURBO, WITH LEATHER, POWER WINDOWS AND SUNROOF…..

see you at the auction!!!!

 

to view our catalog click here

It’s Time for an Adult Conversation About Canada’s Oilsands

In late May, Canada’s “energy leaders” met in Toronto for the Energy Council of Canada’s Canadian Energy Summit.

The theme of the summit? “Telling the Energy Story.”

The aim is to raise awareness and improve understanding of the many ways that the energy sector influences the economy, regional development, innovation and aboriginal partnerships across Canada,” a press release proclaimed. “We believe that improved understanding will lead to better-informed energy dialogue and energy decisions.”

Sounds nice and all, but there’s a catch: the various players in Canada’s energy debate are telling very different stories.

While industry emphasizes jobs and economic growth, environmentalists and First Nations focus on air and water contamination, climate change and aboriginal rights.

The problem for the energy sector isn’t “telling the story” — it’s the massive logic gap between their story and the very real concerns of the Canadian public.

Right now, Canada’s energy debate is like a dysfunctional family dinner, with drunk Uncle Ed blowing a gasket on one end, Aunty Hilda screaming back and everyone else staring down at their dinner plates wishing they’d stayed home.

On the one hand, you hear rhetoric about oilsands destroying the planet and needing to be “shut down” and on the other hand you hear oil execs talking about extracting as much bitumen as possible out of the ground ASAP.

Those extreme arguments are the ones that make everybody roll their eyes,” says Ken Chapman, former director of the Oil Sands Developers Group and proponent of triple-bottom line resource development.

And there’s about 20 per cent on one side and about 20 per cent on the other side and neither one of them will ever bridge that gap.”

Left watching the shouting match are the 60 per cent of Canadians who aren’t on either extreme, Chapman says.

The 60 per cent in the middle don’t know who to believe, don’t know who to trust and don’t know who to rely on,” he told DeSmog Canada.

Canada’s energy debate is stuck in what’s known as a “logic schism,” in which two sides talk past each other, impeding meaningful dialogue.

In a logic schism, a contest emerges in which opposing sides are debating different issues, seeking only information that supports their position and disconfirms their opponents’ arguments,” describes Andy Hoffman, a professor of sustainable enterprise at the University of Michigan.

Each side views the other with suspicion, even demonizing the other, leading to a strong resistance to any form of engagement, much less negotiation and concession.”

Instead of leading the way, the federal government has been part of the problem.

In October, Canada’s Minister of Natural Resources Greg Rickford spoke to a closed-door meeting of about 40 to 50 oil and gas executives, urging them to get outside the board room and pitch projects to the public to win the public relations battle over energy.

Enhance and expand your outreach. Communicate more effectively and clearly to Canadians with solid facts and evidence,” Rickford said, according to the documents revealed through an Access to Information Request.

Notably, Rickford mentioned nothing about improving performance in the oilsands — Canada’s fastest growing source of greenhouse gas emissions.

CAPP spokeswoman Chelsie Klassen told The Guardian that industry is taking Rickford’s advice and “embarking on a different level of engagement,” including “moving to a ground campaign model to activate industry supporters.”

Since then CAPP has opened an office in Vancouver to bolster its “Canada’s Energy Citizens” campaign.

CAPP is trying to spread the message that oilsands producers share values around developing the resource sustainably and transporting it safely, CAPP’s CEO Tim McMillan told the Vancouver Sun.

While there’s no doubt some truth in that statement, it overlooks the fact that CAPP has fought new greenhouse gas regulations and successfully lobbied to weaken Canada’s environmental laws — preventing Canada from “acting responsibly.”

It’s little wonder that a poll by Alberta  Oil Magazine found that fewer than one in 10 post-secondary graduates find oil and gas industry associations credible when it comes to carbon emissions.

So who can Canadians trust and how can we move beyond the dysfunctional dinner debate?

Everbody is trying to prove each other wrong on the facts and quite frankly this is now like religious belief. And it doesn’t matter what the facts are; it’s the belief systems that are dominating,” Chapman says.

What is open yet is the adult conversation, as opposed to the elementary school recess conversation.”

This week, well-known environmentalist Tzeporah Berman stepped into that “adult conversation” space with an op-ed in theToronto Star:

It’s time for a new, honest conversation in Canada. It’s time to recognize that the oilsands are, in fact, a technological marvel that took great Canadian ingenuity and acumen. It’s also time to acknowledge that when we began the exploration of the oilsands we did not know what we know today.

Finally, something most Canadians can actually agree on.

“We’re going to be in the fossil fuel business for a while,” Chapman said. “We have a responsibility to do it better. [The leadership] will have to emerge, but the leadership isn’t in two extremes.”

With the new NDP government in Alberta, Chapman sees an opportunity for a significant change.

There are calmer heads, cooler heads, deeper thinkers and people who understand complexity now dealing with the issue at the political level,” he said.

The first step is acknowledging that the issues in the oilsands can’t be solved with public relations. No advertising campaign, faux grassroots outreach effort or multi-million dollar messaging exercise is going to address growing greenhouse gas emissions, habitat destruction, air and water contamination and treaty violations.

Demonizing the oilsands as a planet-killing monstrosity also isn’t going to move us any closer to a responsible management regime.

The first step to recovery is acknowledging you have a problem — and what we have in in the oilsands is not a PR problem, it’s a performance problem due to a lack of regulation. And it’s high time Canadians got the conversation they deserve about how to do better.

David Suzuki: Premiers’ Energy Strategy Falls Short

On July 15, a state-of-the-art new pipeline near Fort McMurray, Alberta, ruptured, spilling five million litres of bitumen, sand and waste water over 16,000 square metres — one of the largest pipeline oil spills in Canadian history. Two days later, a train carrying crude oil from North Dakota derailed in Montana, spilling 160,000 litres and forcing evacuation of nearby homes.

At the same time, while forest fires raged across large swathes of Western Canada — thanks to hotter, dryer conditions and longer fire seasons driven in part by climate change — Canadian premiers met in St. John’s, Newfoundland, to release their national energy strategy.

The premiers’ Canadian Energy Strategy focuses on energy conservation and efficiency, clean energy and reducing greenhouse gas emissions to combat climate change. But details are vague and there’s no sense of urgency. We need a response like the U.S. reaction to Pearl Harbor or the Soviet Sputnik launch!

The premiers seemingly want it both ways. Despite its call to “Build on the ongoing efforts of individuals, businesses, governments and others to improve energy efficiency, lower the carbon footprint, and improve understanding of energy in Canada,” the strategy promotes fossil fuel business as usual, including expanded pipeline, oil sands and liquefied natural gas development, including more fracking.

The premiers’ plan is a non-binding framework, described as a “flexible, living document that will further enable provinces and territories to move forward and collaborate on common energy-related interests according to their unique strengths, challenges and priorities.” It doesn’t include specifics on how to revamp our energy production and distribution systems, but buys time until the next elections roll around.

Although the language about climate change and clean energy is important, the strategy remains stuck in the fossil fuel era. As Climate Action Network Canada executive director Louise Comeau said in a news release, “Governments discriminate against smoking and toxics in food and consumer products. What’s needed now is discriminatory policy against fossil fuels if we are going to drastically reduce the carbon pollution putting our health and well-being at risk.”

Fossil fuel development has spurred economic development, created jobs and provided many other benefits, but the risks now outweigh those benefits. The costs in dollars and lives of pollution, habitat and wildlife degradation, pipeline and railcar spills, and climate change — all getting worse as populations grow, energy needs increase and fossil fuel reserves become increasingly scarce and difficult to exploit — have become unsustainable.

Even job creation is no longer a reason to continue our mad rush to expand development and export of oil sands bitumen, fracked gas and coal. Many fossil fuel reserves are now seen as stranded assets that will continue to decline in value as the world shifts to clean energy and the scramble to exploit resources gluts the market. The Climate Action Network points out that Clean Energy Canada’s 2015 report on renewable energy trends showed that “global investors moved USD$295 billion in 2014 into renewable energy-generation projects — an increase of 17 percent over 2013.”

Yet, many of our leaders are still pinning their hopes on rapid oil sands expansion, massive increases in fracking for liquefied natural gas and new and expanded pipelines across the country — with benefits flowing more to industry than citizens.

It’s refreshing to see provincial premiers at least recognizing the threat of climate change and the need to address it through conservation, efficiency and clean technology, but we need a far greater shift to keep the problems we’ve created from getting worse. There are many benefits to doing so, including more and better jobs, a stronger economy, healthier citizens and reduced health-care costs, and greater preservation of our rich natural heritage.

The recent spate of pipeline and railcar oil spills, along with disasters like the 2010 Deepwater Horizon explosion in the Gulf of Mexico, are the result of rapid expansion of fossil fuel development, as industry and governments race to get the dirty products to market before demand dries up.

Canada’s premiers should take these issues seriously and commit to a faster shift from fossil fuels as they continue to develop their energy strategy. They must also stress the importance of having similar, stronger action from the federal government — and so should we all.

Written with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Senior Editor Ian Hanington.

Learn more at www.davidsuzuki.org.

Huge unreserved auction – Modern furnishings, brand new mattresses, dining and bedroom sets.

This week at Big Valley Auction we are hosting another huge unreserved auction featuring some of the best quality furniture we’ve ever had. Stunning leather 3 piece sectional sofa with matching ottoman, king and queen size bed frames along with brand new still sealed mattresses. We’ve also got several dining room sets with matching china cabinets as well as lots of great collectibles and china alike, from one of a kind pieces of jewellry, to designer prints and artwork, decorative vases, and so much more. Everything will be sold to the highest bidder with no reserve bids starting at 6PM.

At 5 oclock sharp we have another 250+ lot tool auction, with lots of great tools, including hand and electric pieces, equipment, appliances, and lots of great outdoor yard equipment! Big Valley also has a 1998 Honda Civic in great condition with only 204,000 kms.

Doors open at 9AM for you to come preview all of the great items we have.

See you at the auction!

Click HERE for our catalogue with search options

Click HERE for our traditional weekly catalogue

Brand new bedroom sets, electronics, furniture, tools and more! All with no reserve bids.

Big Valley has assembled another great auction for everyone this week to come and see. There are brand new bedroom sets including bed frames (both king and queen size), mattresses, dressers and night stands. There is also furniture for every other room in your house including the backyard.

At 5PM sharp we begin our sale on the farthest side of the warehouse selling over 300 items including high quality tools, out door furniture, bicycles and more. At around 7PM we will sell off a 1994 Oldsmobile Cutlas in great condition with only 156,000 KM’s.

At 6PM we begin our second auction of the evening selling off over 475 items all to the highest bidder with no reserve bids. There are couches, television sets, bedroom furniture, mattresses, kitchen appliances and furniture.

Our doors open at 9AM for all customers to come and preview all that is up for auction.

Click HERE for our traditional weekly catalogue (PDF)