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Community Care Northumberland’s Easter cookie fundraiser generates $16,000 for Meals on Wheels program

Community Care Northumberland's Easter fundraiser, with cookies supplied by Roda's Kitchen in Cobourg, raised $16,000 to support the agency's Meals on Wheels program providing nutritious meals to seniors and adults with disabilities who are unable to prepare meals for themselves. With 800 boxes of cookies purchased by local residents, businesses, and organizations, the funds raised mean the organization will be able to deliver an additional 800 meals. (Photo: Community Care Northumberland)

Northumberland County residents in need will receive 800 more nutritious meals as a result of an Easter fundraiser for Community Care Northumberland (CCN).

CCN recently announced that its Easter cookies fundraiser broke records this year, selling 800 boxes of cookies, and is making a significant impact on the community.

Through the collaborative efforts of CCN, Roda’s Kitchen in Cobourg (which baked the cookies), “and the generous contributions of our community, $16,000 was raised — setting a new benchmark for support,” CCN said in a media release.

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“We are overwhelmed by the outpouring of support from our community, donors, volunteers, and the incredible team at Roda’s Kitchen,” said Trish Baird, CEO of CCN. “Together, we have ensured that 800 individual meals will reach residents in our community who have access to nutritious meals through Meals on Wheels.”

Meals on Wheels is a cornerstone program offered by CCN, providing food to seniors and adults with disabilities who are unable to prepare meals for themselves. The funds raised through the Easter cookies fundraiser will directly contribute to the continuity and expansion of this service, “ensuring that no one in our community goes hungry,” CCN noted.

“This achievement marks a significant milestone, demonstrating the power of collective action in addressing the needs of our community’s most vulnerable members.”

Community Care Northumberland's Meals on Wheels program delivers healthy and affordable meal options prepared locally and delivered several times per week by volunteers or staff members right to the client's door.  In 2022-2023, the program delivered 40,421 meals to 636 clients in Northumberland County. (Photos: Community Care Northumberland)
Community Care Northumberland’s Meals on Wheels program delivers healthy and affordable meal options prepared locally and delivered several times per week by volunteers or staff members right to the client’s door. In 2022-2023, the program delivered 40,421 meals to 636 clients in Northumberland County. (Photos: Community Care Northumberland)

Joel Scott, CCN’s director of donor relations and communications, told kawarthaNOW the success of the event this year was due to several strategies. CCN uses email marketing, social media posts, support and promotion from traditional media, and online community calendars to get the word out to the community.

“Our team does a lot of one-on-one promotion with their networks as well, and we promote the ‘why’ aspect heavily,” Scott said. “Meals on Wheels touches thousands of people in our community, and the work our team does goes a long way in building connections throughout the community. We focus heavily on those relationships and the community responds in kind.”

It helps that the cookies from Roda’s Kitchen are delicious, Scott added.

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CCN extends its “heartfelt gratitude to the entire Northumberland community for their unwavering support, and to Lucy at Roda’s Kitchen for her exceptional dedication to this cause,” said Sheri Birney, CCN’s manager of nutrition services.

“We also express our deepest appreciation to our dedicated staff and volunteers whose tireless efforts have made this amazing achievement possible. Together, we have made a tangible difference in the lives of those who need it most.”

Plans are already underway for next year’s event.

CCN’s Meals on Wheels program delivers healthy and affordable meal options to clients throughout Northumberland County. People can choose to receive hot meals, which are prepared locally and delivered several times per week at the noon hour, and/or frozen meals, which are easy to prepare and cater to several diet types.

All meals are delivered by CCN volunteers or staff members right to the client’s door. In 2022-2023, CCN’s Meals on Wheels program delivered 40,421 meals to 636 clients in the county.

Kawartha Lakes couple expands pandemic-era business by launching Bobcaygeon’s newest Italian eatery

Muster Point owners Kyle Wolsky and Danielle Malcolm opened their storefront location at 49 King Street East in downtown Bobcaygeon on April 12, 2024. The Lindsay couple launched their online charcuterie grazing box delivery business during the pandemic, and have now expanded with an Italian take-out and patio eatery. (Photo courtesy of Muster Point)

A Kawartha Lakes couple has expanded their pandemic-era online charcuterie business by launching Bobcaygeon’s newest Italian eatery.

Husband-and-wife team Kyle Wolsky and Danielle Malcolm opened the bricks-and-mortar location of Muster Point at 49 King Street East on Friday (April 12), offering hand-made focaccia sandwiches, take-home fresh pasta kits, barista coffee, smoothies, and the locally sourced charcuterie grazing boxes they originally launched online during the pandemic.

According to a media release, the couple welcomed hundreds of new and existing customers on their opening weekend, even selling out of all items early on Saturday.

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“The Kawartha Lakes community has welcomed us with open arms since we first opened,” says Wolsky in the release. “To see that support continue with this new evolution of Muster Point is really heart warming.”

Before becoming entrepreneurs, Wolsky and Malcolm spent 10 years travelling and working in various restaurants, pubs, cafes, and eateries in British Columbia and Australia, Wolsky’s native country before he became a Canadian resident over a decade ago.

The couple relocated to Malcolm’s hometown of Lindsay in 2020, launching Muster Point in December of that year to offer delivery of locally sourced charcuterie grazing boxes.

Located in the Old School House at 49 King Street East in downtown Bobcaygeon, Muster Point offers hand-made focaccia sandwiches, take-home fresh pasta kits, barista coffee, smoothies, and the locally sourced charcuterie grazing boxes owners Kyle Wolsky and Danielle Malcolm originally launched online during the pandemic. (Photo courtesy of Muster Point)
Located in the Old School House at 49 King Street East in downtown Bobcaygeon, Muster Point offers hand-made focaccia sandwiches, take-home fresh pasta kits, barista coffee, smoothies, and the locally sourced charcuterie grazing boxes owners Kyle Wolsky and Danielle Malcolm originally launched online during the pandemic. (Photo courtesy of Muster Point)

“Both Kyle and I have spent years in the hospitality industry across Canada, honing our craft so that one day, we could open our own business, pouring our creativity and love into food we really believe in,” says Malcolm, a cheese and charcuterie connoisseur.

“To be living that dream just four years after starting our business is amazing, and we are so grateful to the community for the unprecedented support they have shown us, growing Muster Point into something we are immensely proud of.”

The couple, who were married in 2022, spent over a month in Italy last year, where they toured a variety of cities and regions including Genoa, Naples, the Amalfi Coast, and Tuscany. They enrolled in culinary classes specialized to each area, including making fresh bread and pasta.

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“It’s so important to us that we make high-quality, delicious food, rooted in the traditions of each region,” Wolsky says. “It’s one thing to do your research and read about the things you’re making, but to learn from chefs to grandmas in Italy really took our knowledge to another level.”

Along with their new bricks-and-mortar location in the Old School House, Wolsky and Malcolm will continue to offer catering for events featuring “The Old Fashioned”, their vintage-inspired mobile food and bar trailer which could be seen at farmers’ markets across Kawartha Lakes last summer.

For more information on Muster Point, including the menu at the King Street East storefront, visit www.musterpoint.ca.

Along with their new bricks-and-mortar location in downtown Bobcyageon, Wolsky and Malcolm will continue to offer catering for events featuring "The Old Fashioned", their vintage-inspired mobile food and bar trailer which could be seen at farmers' markets across Kawartha Lakes last summer. (Photo courtesy of Muster Point)
Along with their new bricks-and-mortar location in downtown Bobcyageon, Wolsky and Malcolm will continue to offer catering for events featuring “The Old Fashioned”, their vintage-inspired mobile food and bar trailer which could be seen at farmers’ markets across Kawartha Lakes last summer. (Photo courtesy of Muster Point)

Organizers ‘thrilled with the turnout’ for clean-up of Armour Hill park in Peterborough

Nancy Cockburn and Jenn McCallum, co-founders of the Ashburnham Memorial Stewardship Group, pictured with garbage collected on Armour Hill in Peterborough on April 13, 2024. (Photo: John Hauser)

They came and they conquered the garbage and cigarette butts littering Armour Hill park in Peterborough.

The Ashburnham Memorial Stewardship Group (AMSG) is celebrating the successful April 13 spring clean-up of Armour Hill/Ashburnham Memorial Park on Hunter Street East.

“We were thrilled with the turnout for the sixth Armour Hill/Ashburnham Memorial Park clean-up on Saturday,” Jenn McCallum, AMSG co-founder, told kawarthaNOW.

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“About 60 volunteers cleaned up 38 bags of garbage, and cigarette butts were collected separately to be sent to TerraCycle for recycling,” McCallum shared.

“The volunteers included people of all ages, from toddlers to youth to seniors, and many volunteers also brought their pets to the event. With this number of people coming out, the clean-up was both thorough and quick.”

Armour Hill is the tallest drumlin within the Peterborough drumlin field and features a war memorial to commemorate World War I veterans.

John Hauser cleaning up garbage on Armour Hill in Peterborough on April 13, 2024. (Photo: Scott Adams)
John Hauser cleaning up garbage on Armour Hill in Peterborough on April 13, 2024. (Photo: Scott Adams)

It’s an “iconic” place in Peterborough, McCallum noted.

“Cleaning up the hill is important to show the park some love, because unfortunately, illegal garbage dumping is an ingrained and regular activity that happens within the park. Cleaning up this space shows stewardship and care for the park, both for its human and animal visitors,” McCallum said prior to the event.

The AMSG hosts two park clean-ups annually: one in April and one in November. Typically, 50 to 60 people participate in the clean-up endeavours.

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When asked what would be the best possible outcome for Armour Hill park, McCallum said, “in the future, and for the long term, we would love to see the parking lot at the top of Armour Hill changed to be a people-friendly space.

“Currently, as a large paved parking lot with no delineated parking spaces, it is a car-centric culture, where people come to enjoy the views and leave the garbage behind. We would love to see this space become a beautiful space that people come to enjoy, to picnic and see the views, while respecting the space and properly disposing of their garbage.”

The regular cleanups, which the AMSG has been hosting since November 2021, help keep the 14-acre urban forest safe and clean, AMSG noted.

Some of the garbage collected on Armour Hill in Peterborough on April 13, 2024. (Photo: Jenn McCallum)

This year’s events focus on community engagement, which will inform the development of a conceptual drawing of the top of Armour Hill as “an active transportation and community space.”

Armour Hill is a popular destination during the summer — largely because of its commanding views — and it’s also frequented during the winter months by those who toboggan.

For more information about Ashburnham Memorial Stewardship Group, including how to get involved, visit ashburnhamstewardship.com.

In their new solo show, Charlie Petch shares tales of survival and kindness as a witness to life on the street

Peterborough-born multidisciplinary artist Charlie Petch's new one-person play "No One's Special at the Hot Dog Cart" draws upon true stories from Petch's past to explore the negative perceptions around homelessness and mental health and to share de-escalation techniques during moments of crisis. As the final presentation of its 2023-24 season, Public Energy Performing Arts will present the play at Market Hall Performing Arts Centre in downtown Peterborough for one night only on April 24, 2024. (Photo: Nika Belianina)

Multidisciplinary artist Charlie Petch is coming home to Peterborough to perform their new one-person play No One’s Special at the Hot Dog Cart for one night only at Market Hall Performing Arts Centre at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, April 24th, as the final presentation of Public Energy Performing Arts’ 2023-24 season.

The play, which premiered in a sold-out run at Toronto’s Theatre Passe Muraille in March in a co-production with Erroneous Productions the Toronto Star called “a compassionate, moving piece of theatre,” draws on true stories from Petch’s past as a 911 operator, hospital bed allocater, emergency room clerk, street worker, and — as the play’s title implies — a hot dog vendor.

“Everything I needed to know about emergency health care, I learned as a teenage hot dog vendor in downtown Toronto,” Petch says in a line from the play.

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Through spoken word and musical storytelling, Petch shares tales of survival and kindness as a witness to life on the street, as well as the de-escalation techniques Petch has honed over the years.

“I think there would be much less fear if people knew how to stay safe when interacting with people who are having trouble with their emotions,” says Petch in a media release. “In reality, we also need to learn how to de-escalate ourselves.”

Inspired by Toronto street culture in the 1990s and the aforementioned de-escalation practices, Petch began writing No One’s Special at the Hot Dog Cart during the pandemic as an exploration of the negative perceptions around homelessness and mental health. As the pandemic continued and social and economic divides widened even more, that exploration became increasingly topical and urgent for the artist.

VIDEO: “No One’s Special At The Hot Dog Cart” trailer – Charlie Petch

“I am hoping that giving audiences tools and knowledge about emergency response procedures will help them interact with others better, and that will empower them to resist a system that tells us homeless people deserve police abuse, that street culture is heartless and not a community, and that poverty is a crime,” Petch explains.

No One’s Special at the Hot Dog Cart is directed by Autumn Smith — who will also be directing the world premiere of Alison Lawrence’s Onion Skins & Peach Fuzz: The Farmerettes at 4th Line Theatre in Millbrook in July — with dramturgy by Donna-Michelle St. Bernard, stage management by Flavia Martin, set design by Joel Richardson, and lighting design by Joel Richardson. Fully ASL interpreted, the show features Deaf performer Jaideep Goray from Phoenix The Fire.

Sold on a sliding pay-what-you-can scale from $5 to $50, tickets are available in person at the Market Hall box office (140 Charlotte St, Peterborough), by phone at 705-775-1503, or online at markethall.org.

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In addition to performing the play, Petch — a certified instructor in non-violent crisis intervention — will be hosting a workshop on de-escalation techniques from 1 to 3 p.m. on Saturday, April 27th at The Theatre On King. Sold on a sliding pay-what-you-can scale from $5 to $20, tickets are available at eventbrite.ca/e/873425006707 or by contacting Public Energy at admin@publicenergy.ca or 705-745-1788.

A self-described disabled/queer/transmasculine multidisciplinary artist, Petch was born in Peterborough. Their family moved to Toronto when Petch was only six, but Petch returned in 1992 at the age of 19 to attend Trent University’s cultural studies program, mainly because Trent was described as the “bisexual university.”

However, Petch soon dropped out to pursue a career in the arts, initially working at the Union Theatre — Peterborough’s former experimental theatre venue — where Petch won a play-writing contest with Napalm Queen, described as an early precursor to No One’s Special at the Hot Dog Cart. Petch also performed as a stripper in Janet Fiendel’s A Particular Class of Women, a role described as being well-suited to the bawdy side of their nature.

Charlie Petch draws upon past experiences in Toronto as a 911 operator, hospital bed allocator, emergency room clerk, street worker, and hot dog vendor in their new one-person play "No One's Special at the Hot Dog Cart." Public Energy Performing Arts will present the play at Market Hall Performing Arts Centre in downtown Peterborough for one night only on April 24, 2024. (Photo: Nika Belianina)
Charlie Petch draws upon past experiences in Toronto as a 911 operator, hospital bed allocator, emergency room clerk, street worker, and hot dog vendor in their new one-person play “No One’s Special at the Hot Dog Cart.” Public Energy Performing Arts will present the play at Market Hall Performing Arts Centre in downtown Peterborough for one night only on April 24, 2024. (Photo: Nika Belianina)

During this time, Petch was also learning the technical side of theatre, becoming the house technician at the Gordon Best Theatre when it first opened before landing a paid lighting gig at the Market Hall.

Also a musician, Petch performed in several bands, most notably Wine With Everything and the Silver Hearts, with the latter showcasing their unique talents on the musical saw.

While Petch left Peterborough again in 1996 to pursue an artistic career in Toronto, they have frequently returned to Peterborough to perform plays and poetry, including as a featured performer at the 2017 Canadian Festival of Spoken Word.

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Petch was the 2017 Poet of Honour for the speakNORTH national festival, winner of the Golden Beret lifetime achievement in spoken word with The League of Canadian Poets (2020), and founder of Hot Damn it’s a Queer Slam.

Their debut poetry collection Why I Was Late (Brick Books) was named “Best of 2021” by The Walrus and won the 2022 ReLit Award. Petch was also long-listed for the CBC Poetry Prize in 2021.

A touring performer, as well as a mentor and workshop facilitator, Petch’s film with Opera QTO, Medusa’s Children, premièred in 2022. Petch is the current writer in residence for Berton House.

Charlie Petch's new one-person play "No One's Special at the Hot Dog Cart" premiered in a sold-out run at Toronto's Theatre Passe Muraille in March in a co-production with Erroneous Productions the Toronto Star called "a compassionate, moving piece of theatre." As the final presentation of its 2023-24 season, Public Energy Performing Arts will present the play at Market Hall Performing Arts Centre in downtown Peterborough for one night only on April 24, 2024. (Photo: Nika Belianina)
Charlie Petch’s new one-person play “No One’s Special at the Hot Dog Cart” premiered in a sold-out run at Toronto’s Theatre Passe Muraille in March in a co-production with Erroneous Productions the Toronto Star called “a compassionate, moving piece of theatre.” As the final presentation of its 2023-24 season, Public Energy Performing Arts will present the play at Market Hall Performing Arts Centre in downtown Peterborough for one night only on April 24, 2024. (Photo: Nika Belianina)

 

kawarthaNOW is proud to be a long-time media sponsor of Public Energy Performing Arts.

Northumberland multidisciplinary arts show on April 20 to support local environmental initiatives

Artists (left to right) Whitney O'Hearn, Jakeb Daniel, Shannon Linton, and Katie Hoogendam are collaborating for "NatureNuture: An Evening of Art for the Earth" at the Old Camborne School north of Cobourg on April 20, 2024. Featuring nature-inspired visual art, film, spoken word, and music, the event is raising funds in support of the Northumberland Land Trust and the A Gift of Trees fundraiser at Ten Villages Cobourg. (Photo: Jordan Hoogendam)

There are many ways to acknowledge and appreciate Earth Day and this year a group of Northumberland County artists are coming together in one of the most beautiful ways with an evening of song and art in support of local environmental initiatives.

Through music, film, visual art, and spoken word, the Old Camborne School — at 3441 Albert’s Alley in Camborne about seven kilometres north of Cobourg — will be transformed into a space of fun and reflection at 7 p.m. on Saturday, April 20th during “NatureNurture: An Evening of Art for the Earth.”

Organized through sponsorship from Zon Engineering and an arts grant from Community Power Northumberland, NatureNurture tickets cost $20 per person and are available in advance at eventbrite.ca/e/860093190887. A small number of tickets will be available at the door for $20 cash or pay what you can.

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“We have always been looking for fun, interesting, and different ways to connect artistically that also speak to the things that are really important to us,” says Shannon Linton, who is the co-organizer of the event alongside poet, writer, and interdisciplinary artist Meredith Katie Hoogendam aka Merkat. “Our art often has a lot to do with the natural world or with climate and people’s experiences of bad situations, so this was a natural fit for us.”

Linton will be performing original songs and “meaningful” covers alongside Toronto vocalist Whitney O’Hearn and indie folk singer-songwriter Jakob Daniel of Cobourg. Called “Murmuration,” the musical pieces explore the common theme of connecting with community and earth for environmental change.

“It’s really focused on the idea of us as humans coming together to make ourselves safer and to make something beautiful the way birds do in murmuration,” says Linton.

Shannon Linton is a Northumberland singer-songwriter, climate activist, and classically trained vocalist. She will be performing original and cover songs at "NatureNurture: An Evening of Art for the Earth" at the Old Camborne School north of Cobourg on April 20, 2024. Proceeds from her EP merch and ticket sales will support the Northumberland Land Trust. (Photo courtesy of Shannon Linton)
Shannon Linton is a Northumberland singer-songwriter, climate activist, and classically trained vocalist. She will be performing original and cover songs at “NatureNurture: An Evening of Art for the Earth” at the Old Camborne School north of Cobourg on April 20, 2024. Proceeds from her EP merch and ticket sales will support the Northumberland Land Trust. (Photo courtesy of Shannon Linton)

For the “Hills Are Alive” segment of the evening, Hoogendam will be screening a short film, presenting her visual artwork, and using language to connect with the audience.

“(Hoogendam’s work) is about the innate dialogue that exists between humans and the natural world, and remembering or returning to actually having a connection to the natural world where it isn’t just something we use for our purpose, but something that we are in a full relationship with,” says Linton. “She sees the world and expresses herself in a way that I don’t know of any other artist that does, so I’m really excited for that piece of the evening.”

While Linton herself has always been conscious of individual things she can do for the planet, it was connecting with Hoogendam, O’Hearn, and other activists in a book club during the pandemic that “lit a fire in her” to become even more vocal in her climate activism.

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“Climate solutions require bigger action from government and corporations,” Linton says. “And that has now gone even further into having us think about how we can also create communities that care for one another, because climate change is here. We are not fixing all of it — we cannot fix all of it now. We’re too far gone in some ways, but we still need to be able to have meaningful and beautiful lives and help each other.”

Since the book club, Linton has been joining advocacy groups, volunteering, and is on the environment and climate committee in Hamilton Township.

“I live in paradise, in a beautiful, beautiful natural environment, and I want my two kids to be able to have a meaningful life that includes the natural world,” she says. “That includes community building with people and the connection to earth and to the natural world around this city that is so beautiful and life-giving.”

'Pregnant Pause' (acrylic on birch) by Katie Hoogendam aka Merkat is one of the visual artworks that will be on sale at "NatureNuture: An Evening of Art for the Earth" at the Old Camborne School north of Cobourg on April 20, 2024. Proceeds from the sale of Hoogendam's work will support A Gift of Trees, a fundraiser from Ten Thousand Villages Cobourg which will plant 10,000 trees equally by the Ganaraska Regional Conservation Authority and throughout the country through the non-profit organization Tree Canada. (Photos courtesy of Katie Hoogendam)
‘Pregnant Pause’ (acrylic on birch) by Katie Hoogendam aka Merkat is one of the visual artworks that will be on sale at “NatureNuture: An Evening of Art for the Earth” at the Old Camborne School north of Cobourg on April 20, 2024. Proceeds from the sale of Hoogendam’s work will support A Gift of Trees, a fundraiser from Ten Thousand Villages Cobourg which will plant 10,000 trees equally by the Ganaraska Regional Conservation Authority and throughout the country through the non-profit organization Tree Canada. (Photos courtesy of Katie Hoogendam)

As a climate activist, Linton ensures that even her merchandise as an artist is environmentally conscious. Not only are her T-shirts upcycled but, rather than selling CDs, for her EP about climate, In Spite of Everything, she chose to release a book of watercolour acrylic paintings from local artist Janita Wiersma to pair with each song. The book is similar to an album booklet, with the album itself available online.

“I think it’s wasteful to just create things for the purpose of getting people to buy them,” she says. “It’s a lot of plastic and a lot of waste, so this book is, to me, another piece of art and a beautiful contribution to the music, and not just a thing for people to buy.”

The proceeds from the merchandise, Hoogendam’s visual art pieces, and ticket sales will all go towards local non-profit organizations. Hoogerdam has chosen for her proceeds to be donated to A Gift of Trees, a fundraiser from Ten Villages Cobourg. The fundraiser’s goal is to plant 10,000 trees equally in the local area through the Ganaraska Regional Conservation Authority and across the country through Tree Canada.

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Linton’s donations will be supporting the work of the Northumberland Land Trust and the 14 properties the organization stewards.

“They are doing incredible work — all volunteer — to protect our natural landscape,” Linton explains. “They’re doing all this important work, and it flies under the radar. Rather than hoping the government will take care of everything, smaller groups doing their part are really important and what’s going to get us through.”

Though the April 20th show is the first of its kind, Linton remains hopeful that it might become a regular event that will continue to make audiences think about the climate in a fun and engaging way.

Toronto-based vocalist and mezzo-soprano Whitney O'Hearn and Cobourg singer-songwriter Jakeb Daniel will be performing alongside Shannon Linton at "NatureNuture: An Evening of Art for the Earth" at the Old Camborne School north of Cobourg on April 20, 2024. (Photos courtesy of the artists)
Toronto-based vocalist and mezzo-soprano Whitney O’Hearn and Cobourg singer-songwriter Jakeb Daniel will be performing alongside Shannon Linton at “NatureNuture: An Evening of Art for the Earth” at the Old Camborne School north of Cobourg on April 20, 2024. (Photos courtesy of the artists)

“I love to collaborate and we’re both very committed to continuing in advocacy, so I think it’s fair to say it will happen again,” she says. “But it would never look the same twice, because we’ll always have new ideas.”

For updates, visit the Facebook event page.

Those interesting in donating to the event can support the Northumberland Land Trust, A Gift of Trees at Ten Thousand Villages Cobourg, or email Linton at shannonlinton@hotmail.com.

Brighton driver facing charges after Sunday evening collision that injured three passengers

A passenger vehicle left County Road 2 west of Colborne on April 14, 2024 and ended up in a farmer's field. Three passengers were injured, including one who was airlifted to Toronto with life-threatening injuries. The vehicle's 46-year-old driver has been charged with impaired operation. (Photo: Northumberland OPP)

A Brighton driver is facing charges after a single-vehicle collision on County Road 2 west of Colborne on Sunday evening (April 14) that injured three passengers, including one who sustained life-threatening injuries.

At around 6:10 p.m., Northumberland Ontario Provincial Police (OPP), Northumberland Emergency Medical Services (EMS), and Alnwick-Haldimand Fire Department responded to a report of a passenger vehicle that left the road between Townline Road and Herron Road in the Township of Alnwick-Haldimand.

One of the vehicle’s passengers suffered life-threatening injuries as a result and was subsequently airlifted from the scene by Ornge Air Ambulance to a Toronto hospital for emergency medical treatment.

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Two other passengers were transported by ambulance to a local hospital, where one had minor injuries and the other was then transported to a Toronto hospital with serious but non-life-threatening injuries.

County Road 2 road was closed until around 2:45 a.m. on Monday while police investigated and documented the scene.

As a result of the investigation, the 46-year-old driver from Brighton was arrested and charged with operation while impaired – alcohol and drugs. The driver also received a 90-day administrative driver licence suspension and their vehicle was impounded for seven days.

encoreNOW – April 15, 2024

Left to right, top and bottom: The Fretless, Valdy, Jane Bunnett and Maqueque, The Canterbury Tales, Matthew Good, Charlie Petch, and the Capitol Theatre Red Carpet Gala. (kawarthaNOW collage)

encoreNOW is a bi-weekly column by Paul Rellinger where he features upcoming music, theatre, film, and performing arts events and news from across the Kawarthas.

This week, Paul highlights a Canadian folk/country music legend’s upcoming Bancroft performance, a fun take on The Canterbury Tales at Bobcaygeon’s Lakeview Arts Barn, the appearance of Juno Award-winning The Fretless at Lakefield’s Bryan Jones Theatre, Matthew Good in concert at Showplace, Charlie Petch’s No One’s Special At The Hot Dog Cart at Market Hall, Jane Bunnett and Maqueque’s Internationaj Jazz Day show in Peterborough, and the Red Carpet Gala Celebration at Port Hope’s Capitol Theatre.

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Venerable Valdy brings his musical storytelling magic to Bancroft

There are many ways you can spend $27 and change, but forking it over to experience the music and storytelling of a Canadian folk/pop music legend is a pretty tempting option.

Since launching his solo career in the early 1970s, Valdy — born Paul Valdemar Horsdal in Ottawa — has firmly established himself as one of the country’s most influential songwriters. That’s been verified via seven Juno Award nominations, with two award wins as Folk Singer of the Year and Folk Entertainer of the Year, and four gold albums.

VIDEO: “(Play Me A) Rock and Roll Song” – Valdy

Further to that, Valdy’s signature song, “(Play Me A) Rock and Roll Song” has been recorded by more than a few artists; his “A Good Song” was recorded under the title “I’m A Man” by the great Quincy Jones.

Still touring extensively at age 78, Valdy’s concert at the Bancroft Village Playhouse on Friday, April 19th is one of his 13 performances this month. Truth be known, there are few stages in this country that Valdy hasn’t stepped upon at some point in the past 50 years.

Tickets to Valdy’s 7 p.m. Tweed & Company Theatre-presented performance cost $27.50 plus tax at www.villageplayhouse.ca/valdy. As the date of this column, only a handful of tickets are left.

 

Chaucer’s epic work receives some fun treatment in Bobcaygeon

Written by Geoffrey Chaucer more than 600 years ago, The Canterbury Tales is a collection of 24 stories encompassing more than 17,000 lines of mostly verse, but some prose too.

Fortunately for them, 13 young actors with Globus Theatre’s Youth Winter Arts Program haven’t been called upon to memorize and deliver all those lines. Rather, on Friday, April 19th and Saturday, April 20th at the Lakeview Arts Barn on Pigeon Lake Road in Bobcaygeon, they’ll present a much more manageable take on the 14th-century work adapted for the stage by Lindsay Price.

Under the direction of Rebecca Anne Bloom, this group of travellers, making the trek from London to Canterbury to visit the shrine of Saint Thomas Beckett at Canterbury Cathedral, pass the time and miles by holding a storytelling contest. Bloom describes what ensues as being “very Monty Python-esque.”

Young actors with Globus Theatre's Youth Winter Arts Program will before a stage adaptation of "The Canterbury Tales" on April 19 and 20, 2024 at the Lakeview Arts Barn in Bobcaygeon. (Poster: Globus Theatre)
Young actors with Globus Theatre’s Youth Winter Arts Program will before a stage adaptation of “The Canterbury Tales” on April 19 and 20, 2024 at the Lakeview Arts Barn in Bobcaygeon. (Poster: Globus Theatre)

Showing their adaptability, the young actors portray a combined 30 characters. Costume changes abound, as does laughter and adventure and even some dance numbers. There’s a lot going on here.

Part of Globus Theatre’s School of Dramatic Art (SODA), the Youth Winter Arts Program began last year as a pilot program. Hats off to administrators of the Bobcaygeon Legacy C.H.E.S.T. fund, the support of which allows youth to participate in the program free of charge.

Tickets to either one of the 7 p.m. performances cost just $10 plus tax at www.globustheatre.com/soda-home or phone 705-738-2037 to order.

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The Fretless brings its awarded folk/roots strings talent to Lakefield

Since forming more than 40 years ago, Performing Arts Lakefield has stayed true to its goal of presenting an eclectic selection of world-class entertainment.

On Sunday, April 21st at Lakefield College School’s Bryan Jones Theatre, that mission will remain fulfilled when The Fretless, a Juno Award-winning folk/roots string quartet, headlines Performing Arts Lakefield’s second-last concert of the season.

VIDEO: “My Moon My Man” – The Fretless featuring Madeleine Roger

Since releasing its debut album in 2012, The Fretless has not only claimed Juno Award success — it won a statue in 2017 for Instrumental Album of the Year — but has also taken home a suitcase full of honours from the Canadian Folk Music Awards. That momentum continued in 2022 with a Juno Award nomination for 2022’s Open House that features several guest artists.

Performing Arts Lakefield has scored quite a coup in securing for its program a quartet that has performed in Cologne and Luxembourg, toured Europe six times, and even performed Down Under. It’s a given that Trent Freeman (fiddle/viola), Karrnnel Sawitsky (fiddle/viola), Ben Plotnick (fiddle/viola), and Eric Wright (cello) will deliver a performance that will stay for a long time with those who come out.

Joining The Fretless will be Winnipeg singer-songwriter Madeleine Roger, who will follow up her critically acclaimed debut album Cottonwood with her sophomore release Nerve this August.

Tickets to the 3 p.m. concert, at $40 ($15 for students) are available at performingartslakefield.org/tickets.

 

Alt-rocker Matthew Good remains a huge draw after all these years

There are many very good reasons to catch a concert at Showplace in downtown Peterborough, but for fans of Matthew Good’s work, initially as the front man of The Matthew Good Band and as a solo artist since then, that he’s going to be on that stage on April 23 is reason enough.

A native of Burnaby, BC, Good was lead singer and songwriter for The Matthew Good Band — still one of Canada’s most successful alt-rock bands — through the 1990s into the new millennium. When the band folded in 2002, Good went his own way and fashioned a remarkable second music life — one that brought him four Juno Awards garnered from 21 nominations in total.

VIDEO: “Men At The Door” – Matthew Good

Meanwhile, signature songs such as “Weapon,” “In A World Called Catastrophe,” “Alert Status Red,” “Born Losersm” and “Last Parade” continue to enjoy heavy radio airplay. His latest album, 2022’s Moving Walls, prompted one reviewer to opine that Good has filled “the shoes left vacant by Leonard Cohen.” That’s a pretty good endorsement.

At age 52, Good, whose lyrics have consistently given a voice to whom he sees as the under-represented, still has to plenty to say and we’re still more than willing to listen.

Note: Tickets to Good’s full-band concert, which will also feature guest Vilivant, an alt-rock singer-songwriter inspired by artists like Good back in the day, are sold out. But where there’s a will, there’s a way. Keep an eye on social media for tickets that will inevitably pop up. You might just get lucky.

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Hot dog cart experience has a story to tell courtesy of Public Energy

Spawned in 2003 from Peterborough New Dance that formed in 1994, Public Energy has brought to the stage more than 2,000 artists of various disciplines, mounted more than 500 events, and put more than 50,000 bums in the seats. If that’s not success, nothing is. Bill Kimball et al, take a bow.

Not resting on its laurels, the performing arts presenter is bringing an original work to Market Hall Performing Arts Centre on Wednesday, April 24th in the form of No One’s Special At The Hot Dog Cart — the final show of Public Energy’s 2023-24 season.

VIDEO: “No One’s Special At The Hot Dog Cart” trailer – Charlie Petch

Written and performed by award-winning playwright, author, and spoken word performer Charlie Petch — a former Peterborough resident now based in Toronto — and directed by Adam Lazarus, it’s a collection of true stories from the past as experienced by a 9-1-1 operator, hospital bed allocator, emergency room clerk, and street worker.

Sharing their personal account of working hot dog stands in Toronto, Petch, as a witness to life on the street, shares tales rooted in survival and kindness.

“Everything I needed to know about emergency response, I learned as a teenage hot dog vendor in downtown Toronto,” Petch says during the performance.

No One’s Special At The Hot Dog Cart had its world premiere in March at Toronto’s Theatre Passe Muraille. It’s gritty and honest in a tell-it-like-it-is way, with its depictions of violence, strong language, and sexual content. But Public Energy has never been afraid to push the boundaries and that remains something that audiences have appreciated most over the years.

As with all Public Energy shows, tickets to the 7:30 p.m. performance are sold on a sliding pay-as-you-can scale ranging from just $5 to $50 at markethall.org.

 

International Jazz Day Peterborough welcomes Jane Bunnett and Maqueque

With International Jazz Day again be marked April 30, local fans of the genre, and those looking for an introduction, have the opportunity to celebrate early when Jane Bunnett and Maqueque headline at Market Hall in downtown Peterborough on Friday, April 26th.

In securing this concert, the local Jazz Day organizing committee has scored huge. A five-time Juno Award recipient with three Grammy nominations as a side dish, the soprano saxophonist and flautist has received for her work, among other honours, the Order of Canada, the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal and the Premier’s Award for Excellence. The Toronto born Bunnett’s fireplace mantle is pretty full.

VIDEO: “Tomorrow” – Jane Bunnett & Maqueque

Fronting the all-female Cuban band Maqueque for this show, Bunnett is continuing her mission of mentoring and recording young and brilliant Cuban female musicians.

So far that has paid a huge dividend in the form of Maqueque appearances at major jazz festivals in Newport and Monterey as well as a Grammy nomination for 2016’s Oddara, with 2023’s Playing With Fire the band’s newest release.

This isn’t your grandfather’s jazz. It’s over-the-top energetic and vibrant, attracting new audiences while satisfying a hunger for something new for longtime fans of the genre. As a bonus, Peterborough’s very own Carling Stephen and Rob Phillips are taking a break from their regular Black Horse stage to open the 7:30 p.m. concert. Tickets cost $36 online at markethall.org.

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Port Hope’s Capitol Theatre celebrates upcoming season with gala event

Celebration will be the order of day on Saturday, April 27th at Port Hope’s Capitol Theatre as the venue pull out all the stops a sneak preview gala of its upcoming new season.

You’ll read more about future shows in kawarthaNOW as they near, but the Red Carpet Gala Celebration is the focus now and rightly so.

Hosted by audience-engaging Layne The Auctionista, the big night out features musical performances by the likes of Melissa Payne, Jimmy Bowskill, and Blue Rodeo’s Greg Keelor, a sampling of the theatre’s Billboard In Concert series, an early look at set designs for four upcoming summer shows, an auction of props and costumes from previous productions, and strawberries and champagne.

VIDEO: “Share The Love” – Greg Keelor

That’s a lot and, at $100 for a ticket, a lot costs a few bucks but keep in mind this is a fundraiser for the historic theatre that has, over centuries, been a community hub as much as it has been an entertainment venue.

So dress up in your finest and join the 6 p.m. party. A fun time awaits. For tickets, visit capitoltheatre.com.

 

Encore

Washboard Hank and Reverend Ken reprise their musical novelty act from the 1970s at the Stone Hall in Havelock on April 28, 2024. (Facebook photo)
Washboard Hank and Reverend Ken reprise their musical novelty act from the 1970s at the Stone Hall in Havelock on April 28, 2024. (Facebook photo)
  • While she didn’t return home from St. John’s, Newfoundland with a coveted statue from the recent Canadian Folk Music Awards, Amelia “Irish Millie” Shadgett says the experience alone was worth the long trip with her dad and acoustic guitar accompanist Murray. Social media lit up with tons of messages of support for Millie both before and after the awards. Many are disappointed her third nomination as Young Performer of the Year remains a nomination but the consensus is, and rightly so, that her time is coming, maybe as soon as next year’s awards ceremony in Ottawa.
  • Patrons of the Black Horse are breathing a huge sigh of relief over the place that live music still has a home at the George Street pub. When former owners Desmond and Maria Vandenberg listed the property for sale last summer, there was a fear the eventual buyer would put a stop to the music in favour of something different. Not to worry. New owner Sajen Ganeshalingam has maintained the status quo, clearly recognizing the value in doing so in a city where live music venues have closed with alarming frequency since before he pandemic. Good on him. If it ain’t broke, don’t mess with it, right?
  • For four decades now, “Washboard” Hank Fisher and “Reverend” Ken Ramsden have done their thing off and on, performing their unique brand of music, from classical to bluegrass gospel to everything in between. The term “treasure” is often overused but these guys are uniquely ours, their ambassadorship on behalf of the Peterborough music scene having been extended across Canada. On Sunday, April 28th from 2 to 4 p.m. at Stone Hall on the 6th Line of Belmont in Havelock, the pair will do their thing. Tickets cost $20 advance at universe.com/shs0428.

After 120 years, volunteer organization supporting Lindsay hospital has decided to dissolve

In 1968, Ross Memorial Hospital Auxiliary president Mrs. A.B. Patterson pins a tag on Lindsay mayor John Eakins as part of the auxiliary's "Tag Days" fundraiser first held in 1957. Since then, Tag Days grew to become one of the auxiliary's biggest fundraisers, supporting various equipment needs across the hospital. On April 11, 2024, auxiliary members voted to dissolve the 120-year old organization. (Photo: Ross Memorial Hospital / Facebook)

After 120 years, the volunteer organization supporting Ross Memorial Hospital in Lindsay has decided to dissolve.

During a special meeting at the hospital on Thursday (April 11), members of the Ross Memorial Hospital Auxiliary voted unanimously in favour of dissolving the organization.

The hospital will take on the responsibility of providing administrative support for its volunteers.

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At Thursday’s meeting, auxiliary president Anne Botond shared some of the challenges that precipitated the decision to dissolve.

Those included the 2019 dissolution of the Hospital Auxiliaries Association of Ontario (HAAO), which was founded in 1910 and provided guidance and professional advice to hospital auxiliaries across the province. HHAO decided to dissolve due to the rapidly declining number of hospital auxiliaries in Ontario. Other hospital auxiliaries that have recently disbanded include those for the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario, Walkerton Hospital, and West Parry Sound Health Centre.

For 2022-23, the Ross Memorial Hospital Auxiliary created a new board structure with responsibilities for each role on the board in the attempt to attract candidates with talents and professional expertise that could benefit the auxiliary, but those efforts were unsuccessful.

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The Ross Memorial Hospital Auxiliary was formed in 1904 as the Ladies’ Auxiliary, reflecting the fact that the volunteers at the hospital were all women. By 1953, the auxiliary had 100 members and changed its name to the Women’s Hospital Auxiliary (“Women’s” was dropped in 1972), with membership rising to 340 members — including 19 men — by 1993.

Over the 120-year history of the auxiliary, members have made and donated items to the hospital, collected donations from the community, and helped raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for hospital equipment.

Today, the auxiliary has around 125 volunteers who operate the hospital’s Reflection’s Café and Gift Shop, the information desk at the main entrance, and support patient care and family members throughout the hospital. They also bestow a bursary to hospital team members to support advanced educational opportunities named in honour of former longtime volunteer Pat Angiers.

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Despite the dissolution of the auxiliary, volunteers will maintain all those roles, with the hospital itself providing the administrative assistance required to support continued volunteering at the hospital.

“Volunteers are an integral part of the Ross family,” said Kelly Isfan, president and CEO of Ross Memorial Hospital. “We are proud of our storied auxiliary history and feel the best way to celebrate it is to provide the necessary support and resources required for the continuation of a robust volunteer program at our hospital. Volunteers will remain embedded in the exceptional care our community relies on.”

“This change in governance structure will alleviate administrative pressures and allow volunteers to focus on the part of the role they’re most passionate about: supporting patients and families, team members, and helping raise funds to purchase equipment our hospital and community needs,” Botond said. “The board looks forward to a seamless transition that facilitates continued volunteer engagement.”

Adults can be a kid again and support Five Counties Children’s Centre at upcoming summer fundraiser

Five Counties Children Centre will host its third annual signature fundraising event, the backyard summer social, on June 22, 2024 in Peterborough. Adults can be a kid again for the afternoon, enjoying games and activities including a petting zoo. Proceeds from the event will support high-priority and high-demand services like speech therapy and occupational therapy for children with special needs in Peterborough, Northumberland, Haliburton, Hastings, and Kawartha Lakes. (Photo courtesy of Five Counties Children's Centre)

Adults can throw an axe, joust, and pet animals during an upcoming fundraiser for Five Counties Children’s Centre.

The organization — which supports children with special needs in Peterborough, Northumberland, Haliburton, Hastings, and Kawartha Lakes — invites community members to attend its backyard summer social event for a chance to “be a kid again.”

Five Counties Children’s Centre’s summer social is back for its third instalment and runs from 1 to 4 p.m. on Saturday, June 22. The centre’s signature fundraising event takes place at Five Counties’ Peterborough location at 872 Dutton Road.

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Each ticket purchased to the backyard summer social includes food from a variety of local vendors, one drink ticket, live music, access to all activities and games, and a chance to win great prizes.

“The added benefit is that by joining us to celebrate the start of summer, it lets you be a kid again — at least for the afternoon — with the proceeds of your ticket going directly to support treatment for our kids and their families,” said Lyn Giles, director of fund development at Five Counties, in a media release.

Tickets to the backyard summer social are $125 each. A ticket purchase includes a $75 charitable tax receipt.

Five Counties Children Centre's backyard summer social on June 22, 2024 in Peterborough will feature catered food and treats, live music, a live auction and door prizes, and fun activities for adults including axe throwing, a petting zoo, inflatable jousting, old-fashioned picnic games, and more. (Photo courtesy of Five Counties Children's Centre)
Five Counties Children Centre’s backyard summer social on June 22, 2024 in Peterborough will feature catered food and treats, live music, a live auction and door prizes, and fun activities for adults including axe throwing, a petting zoo, inflatable jousting, old-fashioned picnic games, and more. (Photo courtesy of Five Counties Children’s Centre)

In each of the past two years, the backyard summer social has raised more than $40,000, Five Counties noted. Money raised goes directly to Five Counties’ “Building Abilities for Life” campaign, which funds high-priority and high-demand services like speech therapy and occupational therapy in an effort to reduce long wait times.

Anyone who buys a ticket before May 20 will be entered into a draw to win a FujiFilm Instax Mini 12 instant camera. A winner will be selected and notified during the week of May 21.

Seven local Canadian Tire stores — two in Peterborough and one each in Lindsay, Cobourg, Campbellford, Fenelon Falls and Minden — are the event’s lead sponsor.

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“The backyard summer social is a fun way to welcome the start of summer, while supporting the incredibly important work being done by Five Counties,” said Ralph Moulton, owner of Canadian Tire Peterborough South.

“Canadian Tire is pleased to be able to assist a great community event and organization like Five Counties, which does such great work in our own backyard.”

The backyard summer social takes place in the outdoor backyard space created almost five years ago at the Five Counties site in Peterborough. Used for outdoor treatment and therapy for kids and clients, the backyard space will be transformed for this event.

Circus performers at Five Counties Children Centre's 2023 backyard summer social. Taking place in Peterborough on June 22, 2024, this year's event will once again raise funds to support high-priority and high-demand services like speech therapy and occupational therapy for children with special needs in Peterborough, Northumberland, Haliburton, Hastings, and Kawartha Lakes.
Circus performers at Five Counties Children Centre’s 2023 backyard summer social. Taking place in Peterborough on June 22, 2024, this year’s event will once again raise funds to support high-priority and high-demand services like speech therapy and occupational therapy for children with special needs in Peterborough, Northumberland, Haliburton, Hastings, and Kawartha Lakes.
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“Our backyard summer social is an adults-only gala event that lets you swap out the tux, gown and heels for T-shirt, shorts and sandals, all the while supporting a great cause,” Giles added. “The backyard summer social promises to be an entertaining, high-end experience with equally high-end impact.”

The social features food from La Mesita, Gangers of Cheese, and Hanoi House, sweet treats from Central Smith and the Kawartha Butter Tart Factory, musical performances by Nicholas Campbell and the Boogie Time Ramblers, a live auction, and door prizes.

Activities include axe throwing, a petting zoo, inflatable jousting, old-fashioned picnic games and more.

Tickets are available online or through Five Counties by emailing development@fivecounties.on.ca or calling 1-888-779-9916 ext. 300.

Peterborough children’s author Erica Richmond to launch ‘Pixie and the Fox’ at Take Cover Books on May 10

Peterborough children's author and Open Sky Stories founder Erica Richmond is celebrating the release of the second book in her Pixie series, "Pixie and the Fox," with a launch party and reading on May 10, 2024 at independent bookstore Take Cover Books in Peterborough's East City. The book is illustrated by Peterborough-based artist Brooklin Holbrough. (Photo courtesy of Erica Richmond)

A lover of independent bookstores, Peterborough author Erica Richmond would choose nowhere else but Peterborough’s Take Cover Books to celebrate the release of her latest children’s book, Pixie and the Fox.

Fresh off the exhibit of her Mail Art Stories Project last month, Richmond — who is also the founder of Open Sky Stories, a writing community for which she hosts writing groups and workshops — will be at the Hunter Street bookstore at 7 p.m. on Friday, May 10th and will read from her new book at 8 p.m.

“I would love to have people there and enjoying this space because their shop is lovely,” says Richmond. “I’m so happy to have them in town to find some connection through books and stories and just enjoy everyone’s company.”

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The self-published Pixie and the Fox tells the story of, not surprisingly, a pixie who meets a fox. After the fox tells the pixie how much he loves her light, laughter, and sparkle, the pixie follows him on his adventures until she apprehensively enters a cave. When the fox leaves her, taking away that light, laughter, and sparkle with him, she is left on her own without the things that made her special.

“She has to look deep within herself and remember the things that make her who she is, and how to get them back and find her way out of the cave,” says Richmond.

Illustrated by Peterborough-based artist Brooklin Holbrough, the story is the second in the Pixie series, which follows the character as she learns to understand and tackle complex feelings and experiences. Just as the first book in the series, 2020’s Pixie and the Bees, was based on Richmond’s experience living with anxiety, the second book is also “based a lot” on her own life.

“I wouldn’t say that the fox is one specific person in my life, but it’s (based on) experiences that I’ve had of losing myself a little bit and experiencing relationships that are less than healthy,” she says. “And then having to dig in, remembering who you are and remembering your worth, and finding your way back from that.”

The second book in Erica Richmond's Pixie series with illustrations by Peterborough-based artist Brooklin Holbrough, "Pixie and the Fox" tells the story of a pixie who gets swept away on adventures by a fox she just met. When she goes into a cave, and the fox begins to take away all the things that made her special, she has to find a way to remind herself who she is and find her way home. (Photos courtesy of Erica Richmond)
The second book in Erica Richmond’s Pixie series with illustrations by Peterborough-based artist Brooklin Holbrough, “Pixie and the Fox” tells the story of a pixie who gets swept away on adventures by a fox she just met. When she goes into a cave, and the fox begins to take away all the things that made her special, she has to find a way to remind herself who she is and find her way home. (Photos courtesy of Erica Richmond)

Though it’s the second in the series to be published, Richmond actually wrote Pixie and the Fox about six years ago. As with all the personal and “healing” writing she does, she needed to wait for the “right time” and to be in the right place before releasing it.

“I’m in a different place right now where I’m able to talk about things that I might have shied away from before,” she says. “It feels like I can have these conversations with people, and I really want to have these conversations and talk to people because this is a huge issue that we’re talking about a lot more than ever before.”

While the books are designed for children with Holbrough’s whimsical illustrations and Richmond’s easy-to-follow writing, the Pixie stories and the messages within them are universally valuable to adults as well. In fact, when first writing the books, Richmond hadn’t even envisioned them as being for children.

“I try to make it very accessible and use a lot of the patterns that are in children’s books, which I find makes it lighter than it would otherwise,” she says. “It’s more possible for other people to read it too, as with any type of media.”

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Richmond says her stories are also a great way to introduce children to serious subject matter, without actually naming anxiety, mental health, “invisible illnesses,” or toxic relationships. She has heard feedback from parents of children who connected with the stories, and loves being able to have conversations around them when she’s attending events.

“These books really are just the beginning of the conversation and just a way that we can share a connection,” Richmond says. “Kids of all ages run into relationship difficulties. Relationships aren’t easy, whether it’s with friend groups or parents or family members or, as you get older, romantic relationships. This is the same, but it’s told through a pixie and a fox.”

While Richmond is looking forward to the in-person launch of Pixie and the Fox at her local bookstore, she is already a regular at Take Cover Books. As a small business owner herself, she says she goes out of her way to support independent bookstores whenever she can.

“Take Cover Books is very supportive of local authors with so many events and the big stores and Amazon just don’t do that,” she says, urging her readers to buy from local small businesses. “People who decide to own an independent bookstore are doing it because they just love books and I think that’s amazing, and I want to support them as much as I can.”

Erica Richmond's latest book "Pixie and the Fox" is the second book in the Pixie series to be published, even though Richmond actually wrote it before the first book in the series. While the process of writing is always "healing" for her, Richmond only releases a book when she is ready to do so. (Photo courtesy of Erica Richmond)
Erica Richmond’s latest book “Pixie and the Fox” is the second book in the Pixie series to be published, even though Richmond actually wrote it before the first book in the series. While the process of writing is always “healing” for her, Richmond only releases a book when she is ready to do so. (Photo courtesy of Erica Richmond)

Beyond the book launch, Richmond has more speaking engagements and author readings already scheduled throughout the end of the month and the rest of the year.

“When I first decided to publish Pixie and the Fox last summer, I realized I’ve always wanted to do more speaking events and talking to people,” she says, noting that she developed a keynote for that purpose. “It introduces a lot of the concepts that I write about and the style of writing that I have.”

Among others, she has speaking engagements at Peterborough’s Keith Wightman School, the Peterborough Public Library, The Word on the Street Toronto Book and Magazine Festival, and even has an event in her hometown library in Dresden.

“My mom was the head librarian when I was growing up, so it feels really special to be going back there to do an author engagement event,” she says.

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While she doesn’t know what lies ahead for her beloved heroine, Richmond is certain we haven’t seen the end of Pixie.

“I love the genre, and I find writing it is just absolutely the most healing thing ever for me,” she says. “I find a lot of comfort in writing the story. The key with it is to write it as a way of healing, but then I try not to share things into the world until I feel ready that this story can come out.”

In the meantime, Richmond is in the process of another healing journey. She is writing a collection of essays which focus on her life over the past 10 years, chronicling her grief in losing the father of her children to suicide after having separated from him six years prior.

Andrew and Sean Fitzpatrick are the owners of Take Cover Books in Peterborough's East City, an independent bookstore that regularly hosts community events including author readings. Peterborough children's author and Open Sky Stories founder Erica Richmond will be launching her book "Pixie and the Fox" at the Hunter Street East bookstore on May 10, 2024. (Photo: Rebecca Anne Bloom Photography)
Andrew and Sean Fitzpatrick are the owners of Take Cover Books in Peterborough’s East City, an independent bookstore that regularly hosts community events including author readings. Peterborough children’s author and Open Sky Stories founder Erica Richmond will be launching her book “Pixie and the Fox” at the Hunter Street East bookstore on May 10, 2024. (Photo: Rebecca Anne Bloom Photography)

“I feel my experience is a bit unique and I’ve written a lot about it, but I’m getting more intentional about it and I’m writing a lot of essays that will be put together as one collection,” Richmond says.

As with Richmond’s other projects, Peterborough will be ready for anything she releases into the world whenever she is ready to do so.

For more information about Richmond and her work, visit openskystories.com. For more information about Take Cover Books and upcoming events, including the Pixie and the Fox book launch, visit takecoverbooks.ca.

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