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Original music and dance performance brings cultures together to celebrate Canada 150

In "Between the Water and the Sky", Jade Willoughby will perform a new solo dance performance accompanied by the Peterborough Symphony Orchestra string quartet and the indigenous a cappella group Unity. (Photo courtesy of Public Energy)

For the first time ever, Public Energy and the Peterborough Symphony Orchestra (PSO) have come together to create an original dance and music performance for Canada 150 celebrations in downtown Peterborough on Thursday, June 29th.

The live performance, entitled “Between the Water and the Sky”, recognizes and celebrates the contributions of indigenous culture to Canada. Along with the music performed by the PSO String Quartet, the performance features vocals by Unity and a dance performance by Jade Willoughby.

Unity is a four-woman indigenous a cappella group formed in Peterborough in 2006 by Barb Rivett, Joeann Argue, Brenda Maracle-O’Toole, and Heather Shpuniarsky. Since its inception, Unity has performed at a wide variety of venues.

Unity, a four-woman indigenous a cappella group formed in Peterborough, will be performing with the Peterborough Symphony Orchestra String Quartet and indigenous dancer and performer Jade Willoughby.
Unity, a four-woman indigenous a cappella group formed in Peterborough, will be performing with the Peterborough Symphony Orchestra String Quartet and indigenous dancer and performer Jade Willoughby.

They performed as special guests for the Ardoch Algonquin First Nation Legal Defense Fund, sharing the bill with Bruce Cockburn and Susan Aglukark among others. They were the featured performers at the Anishnaabemowin Teg Language Conference in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan in 2010. Each year they perform the Honour Song for the convocations at Trent University, and are known as the Trent University “house band” as they perform at many at major Trent events.

In “Between the Water and the Sky”, Unity will be performing “The Medicine Song” and “Ghost Dancer”.

Jade Willoughby is a Northern woodlands Ojibwe of Caribbean/Anglo descent. She was born in Thunder Bay and raised in Wygamig just outside of the reserve settlement of Whitesand First Nation. Willoughby is an international model and speaker who is currently currently exploring movement in response to sound, as a part of her journey to reclaim Anishinaabemowin, her linguistic and cultural heritage.

In “Between the Water and the Sky”, Willoughby will be performing a new solo dance composition.

Jade Willoughby, who has had a successful career as an international model, is now exploring movement in response to sound as a part of her journey to reclaim her Anishinaabemowin heritage. (Photo: Jade Willoughby)
Jade Willoughby, who has had a successful career as an international model, is now exploring movement in response to sound as a part of her journey to reclaim her Anishinaabemowin heritage. (Photo: Jade Willoughby)

The musical collaboration was composed by nationally renowned composer Christine Donkin, who was previously commissioned by the PSO and The Canadian Canoe Museum to create a new work, Canoe Legends, in honour of the organizations’ respective 50th and 20th anniversaries. It has been adapted for a chamber string quartet.

Made possible by the Community Fund for Canada 150 (a collaboration between the Community Foundation of Greater Peterborough, Community Foundations of Canada, and the Government of Canada) and sponsored by the Peterborough Downtown Business Improvement Area, “Between the Water and the Sky” will have its debut performance at 12 p.m. at Millennium Park on Thursday, June 29th. There will be two additional performances on June 29th, at 3 p.m. and 5 p.m., in front of Peterborough City Hall.

All the Canada 150 celebrations over four days in Peterborough are free. Some events are subject to last-minute changes, and other events are weather dependent. For more information and for last-minute updates on Peterborough’s Canada 150th celebration schedule, visit www.peterborough.ca/ptbo150, www.facebook.com/PTBO150, or @Ptbo150, and search for the hashtag #Ptbo150 on social media.

Peterborough’s Hunter Street West becomes a theatre during Canada 150 celebrations

A still from "Time-Scape", a film by Kerri Kennedy that will be screened at the "Visions/Old Land" exhibit on Hunter Street in downtown Peterborough on June 30. (Photo courtesy of Electric City Culture Council)

On Friday, June 30th, Electric City Culture Council (EC3) and Artspace are turning Hunter Street West in downtown Peterborough into a stage for “New Visions/Old Land”, an meida arts exhibition that celebrates Canada 150.

EC3 and Artspace asked artists in Peterborough to reimagine what the idea of Canada means to them, and to offer new visions of what it could or should be. Who are we? What does it mean to be Canadian? What is the role of the land and the landscape in shaping this definition? How can we trace an outline of the future in the fragments of the past?

“New Visions/Old Land”, a series of four original works in film or video with live music or sound by local musicians, recasts Canada’s past and invents alternative futures. The exhibition takes place in stores, office fronts, alleyways and tents along Hunter Street West between George Street and and Sam’s Deli from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The artists of "Visions/Old Land": Kerri Kennedy, Shannon Taylor, Meagan Christou, Joeann Argue, and Cara Mumford. (Photos courtesy of Electric City Culture Council)
The artists of “Visions/Old Land”: Kerri Kennedy, Shannon Taylor, Meagan Christou, Joeann Argue, and Cara Mumford. (Photos courtesy of Electric City Culture Council)

The four media art projects are:

  • “Time-Scape” by Kerri Kennedy (2017, 5 minutes, digital video), with live sound by Jake Ryan, every hour starting at 10 a.m. at CIBC (corner of George and Hunter St. W.)
  • “Boerner Divider” by Meagan Christou (2017, 5 minutes, 16mm film), with live sound by Andrew Savery-Whiteway, every hour starting at 10:15 a.m. in a tent on Hunter St. W.
  • “Land” by Shannon Taylor (2017, 5 minutes, digital video), with live sound by Benj Rowland, every hour starting at 10:30 a.m. at Meta4 Gallery (164 Hunter St. W.)
  • “I Remember… Stories from a 500-year Old Tree” by Joeann Argue and Cara Mumford (2017, 5 minutes, digital video), with live sound by Nick Ferrio, every hour starting at 10:45 a.m. at Hunter Street Books (164 Hunter St. W.)

Filmmaker and Trent University Professor Kelly Egan will curate the show.

During the exhibition, EC3 will be hosting a Canadian Culture Trivia Contest with prizes. Trent Radio 92.7 will be broadcasting live from a booth on Hunter Street West, and people can visit the booth or call in to participate in the trivia contest.

Seeds for Justice, the Art School of Peterborough, and the sidewalk chalk bridgade will also be there for giant puzzles, storytelling, free cake, popcorn, and more.

A still from "Boerner Divider" by Meagan Christou.  (Photos courtesy of Electric City Culture Council)
A still from “Boerner Divider” by Meagan Christou. (Photos courtesy of Electric City Culture Council)

If you’re interested in making your own film, EC3 is also offering a unique opportunity with a camera-less film production table. It’s a great way to learn about the history of moving images and the differences between video and celluloid, through “camera-less” 16mm filmmaking.

You can scratch, paint, stamp, and draw directly on provided 16mm film. Once your film is finished (and dried if needed), you can watch your creation projected live on Hunter Street West. This activity is open to all ages, and children are encouraged to participate.

You can also expect to see photographers in abundance during the exhibit. Throughout the four days of Canada 150 celebrations in Peterborough, volunteer photographers from the SPARK Photo Festival will be capturing the sights and sounds for a special Canada 150 exhibit in the future.

VIDEO: Techniques of Cameraless Filmmaking

All the Canada 150 celebrations over four days in Peterborough are free. Some events are subject to last-minute changes, and other events are weather dependent. For more information and for last-minute updates on Peterborough’s Canada 150th celebration schedule, visit www.peterborough.ca/ptbo150, www.facebook.com/PTBO150, or @Ptbo150, and search for the hashtag #Ptbo150 on social media.

Student artwork celebrates Canada’s 150th birthday

Students from Peterborough's St. Paul and Immaculate Conception Catholic Elementary Schools working on "Canada Walking Forward", an art exhibit of 150 clay footprints of the students' own feet decorated to answer the question "What does Canada mean to you?". The exhibit is one of four student art exhibits that will be on display during Peterborough's four-day Canada 150 celebration from June 29 to July 2. (Photo: Canada 150th Committee)

Four art exhibits created by local elementary school students will be on public display during Peterborough’s four-day Canada 150 celebrations from Thursday, June 29th to Sunday, July 2nd.

Peterborough’s “Celebrate at Home’ Canada 150th Committee, in partnership with the Peterborough Victoria Northumberland and Clarington Catholic District School Board, sponsored the Canada-themed art projects at a dozen schools across Peterborough.

“The committee wanted to make sure we engaged students and school communities so that their voices were included in this important celebration of our country in our city,” says Galen Eagle, the Canada 150th Committee Communications Chair. “The art exhibits will be a must-see and should give residents another great reason to celebrate at home.”

The Art School of Peterborough helped develop and facilitate the art projects in local schools over the last several month and students are busy putting the final touches on their work.

The students have already created hundreds of unique artworks that will be shown in local schools, and a selection of the works will from the four public art exhibits that will be display at the Silver Bean Café in Millennium Park, the Charlotte Mews Tunnel, Hunter Street, and on the path and stairs between the Peterborough Museum and Archives and the Peterborough Lift Lock.

In addition to the student art exhibits, the Canada 150th Committee announced a special photography project called “Sparking Memories.” Throughout the four days of Canada 150th celebrations in Peterborough, volunteer photographers from the SPARK Photo Festival will be capturing the sights and sounds for a special 150th exhibit in the future.

Students from St. Catherine Catholic Elementary School in Peterborough have created and colourfully painted 150 clay flowers representing provincial flowers from across Canada. The exhibit is one of four student art exhibits that will be on display during Peterborough's four-day Canada 150 celebration from June 29 to July 2. (Photo: Canada 150th Committee)
Students from St. Catherine Catholic Elementary School in Peterborough have created and colourfully painted 150 clay flowers representing provincial flowers from across Canada. The exhibit is one of four student art exhibits that will be on display during Peterborough’s four-day Canada 150 celebration from June 29 to July 2. (Photo: Canada 150th Committee)

Here are the four student exhibits that will be on public display:

Canada Growing Strong

Students from St. Catherine Catholic Elementary School have created and colourfully painted 150 clay flowers representing provincial flowers from across Canada. Displayed together, the flowers make a powerful statement about the beauty that unites our provinces coast-to-coast.

The exhibit runs from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily from June 29 to July 2 on the west side of the Silver Bean Café in Millennium Park,

 

Canada-mation

Students from St. Alphonsus Catholic Elementary School, St. Paul Catholic Elementary School Peterborough, and Chemong Public School have created Canada-themed claymation videos.

The videos will be projected on the Charlotte Mews tunnel in downtown Peterborough throughout the four days of celebrations.

 

Canada Assembled

In this interactive exhibit, students from St. Anne Catholic Elementary School have created large wooden puzzle pieces that can be assembled to create the Canada 150th logo.

The exhibit will be display from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Friday, June 30th on Hunter Street, when the road will be open to pedestrians only as part of downtown Peterborough’s Canada 150 celebrations.

 

Canada Walking Forward

Students from St. Paul Catholic Elementary School Peterborough and Immaculate Conception Catholic Elementary School have created and colourfully painted 150 clay footprints. The footprints are imprints of the students’ own feet and have been decorated to answer the question “What does Canada mean to you?”

The exhibit will be on display from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Sunday, July 2nd, along the path and stairs that connect the Peterborough Museum and Archives to the Peterborough Lift Lock grounds, as part of the day of heritage-related activities.

 

All the Canada 150 celebrations over four days in Peterborough are free. Some events are subject to last-minute changes, and other events are weather dependent. For more information and for last-minute updates on Peterborough’s Canada 150th celebration schedule, visit www.peterborough.ca/ptbo150, www.facebook.com/PTBO150, or @Ptbo150, and search for the hashtag #Ptbo150 on social media.

It’s going to be a sensational Canada Day in Peterborough

A very Canadian float in the 2010 Peterborough Canada Day Parade. Expect the floats at this year's parade, with the theme of Canada's 150th birthday, to be even more amazing. (Photo: Peterborough Canada Day Parade / Facebook)

This year’s Canada Day celebrations in Peterborough, on the 150th birthday of Confederation, are going to be spectacular.

The highlight of the day is the Canada Day parade, but there is a lot more happening on Saturday, July 1st than just the parade itself.

There will be lots of family activities at the pre-parade events at Confederation Park including face painting. (Photo: Peterborough Canada Day Parade / Facebook)
There will be lots of family activities at the pre-parade events at Confederation Park including face painting. (Photo: Peterborough Canada Day Parade / Facebook)

Pre-parade ceremonies and events being at 9 a.m. at Peterborough City Hall and the appropriately named Confederation Park. A pancake breakfast will be served from 9 to 11 a.m. by the East Peterborough Lion’s Club while live music will be performed by the Dixie Cats Band (9 to 9:30 a.m.), the Northern Roads Band (9:45 to 10:30 a.m.), and the Peterborough Pop Ensemble (10:45 to 11:30 a.m.).

There will also be lots of activities for the kids, including the Tap Snap photo booth (9:30 to 11:30 a.m.), the Paddling Puppeteers (9:30 to 10:30 a.m.), and face painting by Face by 2 (9:30 a.m. to 12 p.m.).

The Children’s Bicycle Contest takes place in Confederation Park from 11 to 11:45 a.m. Children from five to 12 years old are invited to bring their decorated bikes to the contest and have some fun.

Kids can even ride their decorated bikes in the parade! And in case any bikes need some last-minute repairs, Peterborough Green Up and B!KE will be on hand with a repair stand.

Morello’s Your Independent Grocer will once again be donating Canada’s birthday cake, which will be available for all to sample between 10 and 10:30 a.m. We expect this year’s Canada 150 cake will be something to behold (and taste).

The 2013 Canada Day cake donated by Morello's Your Independent Grocer. We can't wait to see the Canada 150 birthday cake!  (Photo: Peterborough Canada Day Parade / Facebook)
The 2013 Canada Day cake donated by Morello’s Your Independent Grocer. We can’t wait to see the Canada 150 birthday cake! (Photo: Peterborough Canada Day Parade / Facebook)

From 11:30 to 11:50 a.m., local dignitaries will be delivering speeches, followed by the singing of “O Canada” at 11:55 a.m.

At 12 p.m., the Canada Day Parade begins. Presented and sponsored by Cogeco TV, the theme of this year’s parade is — of course — Canada’s 150th birthday. In honour of Canada’s 150th birthday, entry fees were waived for commercial floats so you can expect a bigger parade this year.

The parade will begin at Murray Street and proceed down George Street through downtown Peterborough to Morrow Park. (Parents of younger children who are riding their decorated bikes in the parade should accompany them on the parade route.)

And don’t forget: apart from the pre-parade events and the parade itself, there’s also the annual Multicultural Canada Day Festival taking place from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at Del Crary Park.

The festival features food and craft vendors, family activities, and henna and face painting from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., sports demonstrations from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m., and a stage show from 12 to 2:30 p.m.

The Canada Day celebrations then continue in the evening with a free concert by Canadian music icon Kim Mitchell at Peterborough Musicfest at Del Crary Park. He will take the stage at 8 p.m. and rock the park until around 9:30 p.m.

There will be a special Canada 150 fireworks display over Little Lake at Del Crary Park at around 9:45 p.m.
There will be a special Canada 150 fireworks display over Little Lake at Del Crary Park at around 9:45 p.m.

To cap off Peterborough’s celebrations of Canada’s 150th birthday, the Peterborough Rotary Club (with support from the New Canadians Centre) will present a special Canada 150 fireworks display at Del Crary Park at around 9:45 p.m.

All the Canada 150 celebrations over four days in Peterborough are free. Some events are subject to last-minute changes, and other events are weather dependent. For more information and for last-minute updates on Peterborough’s Canada 150th celebration schedule, visit www.peterborough.ca/ptbo150, www.facebook.com/PTBO150, or @Ptbo150, and search for the hashtag #Ptbo150 on social media.

Canada 150 celebrates diversity in Peterborough with Multicultural Canada Day

The all-day family-friendly Multicultural Canada Day Festival takes place on July 1st at Del Crary Park in downtown Peterborough. (Photo: New Canadians Centre)

When Canadians coast-to-coast-to-coast reflect on how their country is viewed beyond its borders, terms such as diversity, inclusive, and welcoming come to mind quickly for many.

Well they should. Since the 36 original Fathers of Confederation affixed their signatures to the document that brought Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick together to form Canada on July 1, 1867, this country’s doors have been laid open to those seeking fresh beginnings in a new home, both by choice and as refugees fleeing war, famine and other calamities in their respective homelands.

So it that when Peterborough’s Canada 150th Anniversary Celebrations Committee sat down to map out the city’s June 29 to July 2 Celebrate At Home festivities, it was a no-brainer to fully include the annual Multicultural Canada Day Festival in the mix.

First staged in 2004 with New Canadians Centre (NCC) as the sole organizer, the celebration of all things international has been well ahead of the local Canada Day party curve for some time, last year delighting some 11,000 people in Del Crary Park.

Around 11,000 people enjoyed last year's Multicultural Canada Day Festival in Peterborough. This year's festival, on Canada's 150th birthday, promises to be even bigger and better. (Photo: Ciprian Mazare / Facebook)
Around 11,000 people enjoyed last year’s Multicultural Canada Day Festival in Peterborough. This year’s festival, on Canada’s 150th birthday, promises to be even bigger and better. (Photo: Ciprian Mazare / Facebook)

On Friday (June 2) in Millennium Park, organizers rolled out a lively preview of this year’s 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. festival, highlighting its theme Bring People Together as well as two of the event’s enduring main attractions: international cuisine and live entertainment.

Chacho’s Bakery and Tre Ristorante — new food vendors this year — provided food samples while D’oh See Doughboyz — Curtis Driedger and Ken Brown with caller Ben Wolfe — pumped up its effort to lead Peterborough’s largest-ever square dance on the park’s Fred Anderson Stage.

“I think there’s something very magical about being in a space like Del Crary Park on a day like Canada Day with all your friends in the community,” said Yvonne Lai, NCC’s Director of Community Development, noting recent events south of the border surrounding immigration policies makes an inclusive event such as the festival even more poignant.

“In this community the response (to newcomers) has been overwhelmingly positive. We’ve seen more than 300 Syrian refugees welcomed, about 200 government-assisted and 100 through private sponsorships. The number of people that have stepped forward to help them is more than 400. We did a calculation of the number of hours of volunteer time people have put in. It’s about 40,000 hours. In light of people wanting to do something that has impact in the face of this global wave of negativity, Peterborough has been a shining example.

This year's Multicultural Canada Day Festival features cultural music and dancing performances representing Syria, India, Sri Lanka, Latin America, Africa, and the Caribbean.  (Photo: Ciprian Mazare / Facebook)
This year’s Multicultural Canada Day Festival features cultural music and dancing performances representing Syria, India, Sri Lanka, Latin America, Africa, and the Caribbean. (Photo: Ciprian Mazare / Facebook)

“I think people have an impression that Peterborough is one dimensional and it’s really not. Newcomers are everywhere in all walks of life, in the classroom, in the workplace, and they’re sharing the experience of being a Peterborough resident with you.”

In addition to food vendors serving up Thai, Greek, Greek, Caribbean, Bangladeshi and other international delicacies, the noon to 2:30 p.m. stage show will feature performances by Wshkiigomang Women’s Native Hand Drum Singers, Curve Lake drumming group IR-35, singer Serafin Lariviere performing music from his bilingual music project, the aforementioned D’oh See Doughboyz, a martial arts demonstration by Shifu Rupert Harvey, and a number of cultural music and dancing performances representing Syria, India, Sri Lanka, Latin America, Africa, and the Caribbean.

And for the fitness-minded, interactive demonstrations of cricket, Tai Chi, para-sports, Jiu Jitsu and Zumba will return, being staged from 10 to noon.

Also back is the popular mock Canadian citizenship test as well as the popular Kids’ Zone, presented in collaboration with the Art Gallery of Peterborough.

With some 130 volunteers involved in staging the festival, there remains a need for more help. Visit www.nccpeterborough.ca to sign up.

Interactive demonstrations of cricket, the most popular sport in India, return to this year's Multicultural Canada Day Festival.  (Photo: Ciprian Mazare / Facebook)
Interactive demonstrations of cricket, the most popular sport in India, return to this year’s Multicultural Canada Day Festival. (Photo: Ciprian Mazare / Facebook)

Also scheduled for Canada Day proper is the Peterborough Canada Day Parade, Peterborough Musicfest with headliner Kim Mitchell, and the day-ending fireworks display over Little Lake presented by the city’s two Rotary clubs.

Terri Lynn Johnston of the City Recreation Division also spoke Friday, reminding all that while the parade starts at noon from City Hall, activities begin much earlier at 9:30 a.m., including a free pancake breakfast, live music, and the Decorated Bike Contest. She noted there’s still room for parade entries. To register, visit www.peterborough.ca.

And Rotary members promised an extra special fireworks display following Mitchell’s performance, all in keeping with the significance of Canada’s milestone 150th birthday.

Sponsoring this year’s Multicultural Canada Day Festival are Canadian Heritage, Ontario150, the City of Peterborough, Peterborough Community Savings, Darragh Moroney of RE/MAX, Ricart Promotions & Recognition, and Rocky Ridge Drinking Water with media sponsorship from Corus, CHEX TV, Fresh Radio, The Wolf, Energy 99.7, and Country 105.

The family-friendly festival will also feature indigenous culture, including performances by Wshkiigomang Women's Native Hand Drum Singers and Curve Lake drumming group IR-35. (Photo: Ciprian Mazare / Facebook)
The family-friendly festival will also feature indigenous culture, including performances by Wshkiigomang Women’s Native Hand Drum Singers and Curve Lake drumming group IR-35. (Photo: Ciprian Mazare / Facebook)

Eight years after community members came together in 1979 to sponsor refugees fleeing Vietnam’s Communist regime, the New Canadians Centre formed as a not-for-profit organization dedicated to supporting immigrants, refugees and other newcomers in the Peterborough and Northumberland regions.

With a mission to “empower immigrants and refugees to become full and equal members of Canadian society, and provide community leadership to ensure cultural integration in a welcoming community”, the centre has identified respect, diversity, partnerships and dedication as its values.

To that end, over the years since, centre staff and volunteers have strived to offer programs and nurture partnerships to better meet the language, educational, employment and settlement needs of new Canadians. Located at 221 Romaine Street in Peterborough (at Aylmer Street), the centre’s services and resources is a lifeline for some 800 new Canadians annually.

To find out more about the New Canadians Centre and for updates on the Multicultural Canada Day Festival, visit www.nccpeterborough.ca.

All the Canada 150 celebrations over four days in Peterborough are free. Some events are subject to last-minute changes, and other events are weather dependent. For more information and for last-minute updates on Peterborough’s Canada 150th celebration schedule, visit www.peterborough.ca/ptbo150, www.facebook.com/PTBO150, or @Ptbo150, and search for the hashtag #Ptbo150 on social media.

Kim Mitchell to help Peterborough rock Canada Day during Canada 150 celebrations

Iconic Canadian rocker Kim Mitchell returns to Peterborough MusicFest on July 1, 2017 as part of the Celebrate At Home Canada's 150th birthday celebrations in Peterborough (photo: The Feldman Agency)

Iconic Canadian rock artist Kim Mitchell will be performing at Peterborough Musicfest on Canada Day, Saturday, July 1st, 2017.

The 64-year-old Sarnia native will take to the Fred Anderson Stage in Del Crary Park as part of the ambitious four-day celebration, June 29th to July 2nd, themed “Celebrate At Home”. The concert will herald the opening of the 17-concert Musicfest season.

Anchoring the Celebrate At Home initiative is a $100,000 grant from the City of Peterborough, a portion of which made it possible to secure Mitchell for the Canada Day concert — his fourth Musicfest appearance. In 2012, his August 4th appearance was cut short by bad weather, but he returned on August 21st to play a full show before thousands of classic rock fans.

Sarnia native Kim Mitchell began his career in the mid 1970s fronting Max Webster and has since sold more than 1.5 million albums (photo: Kim Mitchell / Facebook)
Sarnia native Kim Mitchell began his career in the mid 1970s fronting Max Webster and has since sold more than 1.5 million albums (photo: Kim Mitchell / Facebook)

Mitchell is a musical artist widely revered for wearing his Canadian pride on his sleeve, and thus a perfect fit with the Celebrate At Home theme. In addition, with Mitchell’s extensive hit song catalogue, he’s guaranteed to draw a huge crowd.

Mitchell began his professional musical career in the mid 1970s fronting Max Webster, which released six studio albums from 1976 to 1981, recording hit singles such as “A Million Vacations” and “Paradise Skies”, and toured extensively.

VIDEO: “Go For Soda” – Kim Mitchell

However, his subsequent career as a solo artist brought him his greatest success in the form of three Juno Awards, including Male Vocalist of the Year in 1990, and a string of hit singles such as “Go For Soda”, “All We Are”, “Patio Lanterns”, “Easy To Tame”, “Rock And Roll Duty”, “Rockland Wonderland”, and “America”.

He also claimed Juno Awards for Most Promising Male Vocalist in 1983 and, four years later, for Album of the Year for Shakin’ Like A Human Being, his second solo album.

In total, Mitchell has sold more than 1.5 million albums. Most all of his recordings, with Max Webster and as a solo act, have attained gold or multi-platinum status. All along the way, Mitchell has toured extensively — a regimen that was put on hold this past January when he suffered a heart attack and had a stent put in.

VIDEO: “Patio Lanterns” – Kim Mitchell

“It made me realize that I have nothing to prove any more,” related Mitchell in a May 2016 interview with Jim Barber of MusicLifeMagazine.net.

“I play guitar and I am going to go up there on stage and enjoy myself and appreciate the fact that I get to go up on stage and play in front of people who like what I do. I don’t stress out about all the stuff around being a touring musician any more. I am where I am in my life and my career, so I am just going up there and relax and do my thing.”

“I am all about customer service. People are coming out to hear certain songs and hear me playing them. But they have been morphing and going through some changes. So Go For A Soda sounds a little different the way we play it on a given night. And we will start to jam out on some of the songs and be a little freer with the arrangements. I like to give people what they want.”

VIDEO: “Lager & Ale” – Kim Mitchell

And giving people what they want is what Mitchell will do on Canada Day next year. That, he says, remains his proudest accomplishment in a music career that has featured many benchmarks.

“Being able to take people to a special place through our performance and music. When that happens, I’ve accomplished what I set out to do.”

All the Canada 150 celebrations over four days in Peterborough are free. Some events are subject to last-minute changes, and other events are weather dependent. For more information and for last-minute updates on Peterborough’s Canada 150th celebration schedule, visit www.peterborough.ca/ptbo150, www.facebook.com/PTBO150, or @Ptbo150, and search for the hashtag #Ptbo150 on social media.

Heritage Day on July 2 extends Peterborough’s Canada 150 celebrations

Peterborough is extending its Canada 150 celebrations with a heritage celebration at the Peterborough Museum and Archives and the Peterborough Lift Lock on Sunday, July 2. (Photo: Peterborough Museum and Archives)

After three very full days of partying culminating on Canada Day, will Peterborough be willing embrace a hangover of historical proportions?

That’s certainly the hope of Peterborough Museum and Archives administrator Jon Oldham who, with his colleagues at a number of local heritage-related facilities and organizations, has helped organize Heritage Day, an ambitious celebration of all things heritage for Sunday, July 2nd atop Armour Hill and near the Liftlock Visitors’ Centre.

Sponsored by Shaw Direct Satellite TV, the full-day event is the final piece of the Celebrate At Home puzzle — now a four-day celebration of Canada’s 150th birthday featuring a number of music performances, visual art displays, and children’s activities in downtown Peterborough, as well as the annual Peterborough Canada Day Parade and the Multicultural Canada Day event in Del Crary Park.

Heritage Day begins at 10 a.m. with a free pancake breakfast provided by the East Peterborough Lions Club.

Until 4 p.m., crafts, games, activities and displays will abound with military re-enactments by members of the drill teams of Norwood District and East Northumberland high schools. As well, representatives of Lang Pioneer Village and Hutchison House, dressed in period costumes, will interact with the public.

Representatives of Lang Pioneer Village and Hutchison House, dressed in period costumes, will interact with visitors. (Photo: Hutchison House)
Representatives of Lang Pioneer Village and Hutchison House, dressed in period costumes, will interact with visitors. (Photo: Hutchison House)

And, in keeping with the decidedly musical theme of the entire Celebrate At Home celebration, there will be live performances by Mayhemingways, Dan Fewings, Steafan and Saskia, and The Paddling Puppeteers — Glen Caradus and Phil Stephenson.

In addition, there will be horse-drawn wagon rides provided by High View Farm Commercial Horses, as well as guided tours in a Voyageur canoe and free cruises to the top of the Peterborough Liftlock for a unique view of Peterborough — courtesy of The Canadian Canoe Museum and Liftlock Cruise Lines.

The museum will also be opening its entire collection storage area to the public.

“It’s an opportunity to share all of our historical artifacts,” Oldham says, “instead of just the one per cent that is on display at any given time.”

On Heritage Day, the Peterborough Museum and Archives will be opening its entire collection with the public. (Photo: Peterborough Museum and Archives)
On Heritage Day, the Peterborough Museum and Archives will be opening its entire collection with the public. (Photo: Peterborough Museum and Archives)

And on July 1st, the museum will open a new exhibition titled “Made In Canada — Really!”

Continuing until October 1st, the museum-produced exhibition will feature dozens of artifacts that were made in Canada. Oldham explains:

“There are going to be artifacts that nobody is going to be surprised that are there, from GE and Quaker Oats, but there’s a lot of industries that operated in Peterborough that produced items that we might recognize but didn’t realize were made in Canada let alone in Peterborough. People will learn a few things. You always learn something new at the museum.”

Oldham is excited over the prospect of the day’s activities bringing a number of first-time visitors to the museum, which, along with Lang Pioneer Village, is celebrating its 50th birthday this year.

The Canadian Canoe Museum will be offering guided tours in its Voyageur canoe through the Peterborough Lift Lock. (Photo: The Canadian Canoe Museum)
The Canadian Canoe Museum will be offering guided tours in its Voyageur canoe through the Peterborough Lift Lock. (Photo: The Canadian Canoe Museum)

“We’re not tourists in our own town as often as we’d like to be until family and friends come visit,” he says.

Free parking will be available at King George Public School and the Armour Hill Parking Lot (at the top of Armour Hill). To make travel between the two sites less stressful, a free shuttle bus service will operate between the museum, the Liftlock Visitors’ Centre and King George Public School at Armour Road and Hunter Street East.

All the Canada 150 celebrations over four days in Peterborough are free. Some events are subject to last-minute changes, and other events are weather dependent. For more information and for last-minute updates on Peterborough’s Canada 150th celebration schedule, visit www.peterborough.ca/ptbo150, www.facebook.com/PTBO150, or @Ptbo150, and search for the hashtag #Ptbo150 on social media.

Celebrate Canada 150 Plus in Peterborough County all year long

Editorial and photos supplied by Peterborough County.

2017 is a full year of celebrating Canada’s sesquicentennial! We are celebrating the 150th birthday of Confederation, alongside our First Nation communities who will be celebrating 150 years plus all year long.

Here in the Greater Peterborough Area, Peterborough County, our eight townships, our First Nation Communities, the City of Peterborough, and the Trent-Severn Waterway have come together to create a unique Peterborough County Canada 150 Passport.

Our passport highlights the many community events taking place throughout the area and will guide residents and visitors to explore our many diverse communities.

Canada 150 Passport

The passports are available at all Township offices, The Peterborough County Courthouse, Lang Pioneer Village Museum, First Nation Administrative offices, and at events held throughout the region during 2017.

Bring this passport to a participating event and have it stamped. Once you obtain five event stamps, drop off the included contact form to be eligible to win a prize at the end of the year.

Thanks to the many businesses that have already donated prices. Thank you also to the Peterborough CFDC and to the Community Foundation of Greater Peterborough for their investment in this project.

To learn more about our Canada 150 Plus events, visit www.ptbocounty.ca.

County of Peterborough Canada 150+ Geocaching Coin

County of Peterborough Canada 150+ Geocaching Coin

Geocaching is a modern-day treasure hunt that is an outdoor recreational activity for the whole family, armed with a Global Positioning System (GPS) or mobile device to hide and seek containers — called “geocaches” or “caches” — at specific locations marked by coordinates.

In celebration of Canada 150 Plus, 18 new caches have been created with two in each of our townships (Asphodel-Norwood, Cavan Monaghan, Douro-Dummer, Havelock-Belmont-Methuen, North Kawartha, Otonabee-South Monaghan, Selwyn, and Trent Lakes) and two First Nations (Curve Lake and Hiawatha), and the three townships in the City of Peterborough.

Each geocache tells a story about our local history in the place where that history happened. Visitors are invited to learn more about the people, resources, creativity, and communities that have developed throughout our diverse region. The geocache containers range from small lunch containers to larger ammunition boxes and are hidden in urban and forested areas alike. Each of the containers in this series contain small tradeable items. All you need to do to claim one is to leave something of equal or greater value for the next person to claim.

The first 250 people who get to at least one geocache in each community can complete the Travel Diary posted on the PKT Geocaching page to claim a limited edition trackable geocoin.

Geocaching is a great way to get outside and active with family, friends, or pets as the weather warms up, but it can be done year-round. All you need to play is a free account on geocaching.com and a GPS signal on a handheld receiver or smartphone. To learn more about how to start geocaching, please visit www.geocaching.com/guide/.

For more information about the Peterborough & the Kawarthas Canada 150plus Geocaching Adventure or to download your Travel Diary to start playing, please visit thekawarthas.ca/experience/geocaching/.

Traditional County Fair at Lang Pioneer Village Museum on Sunday, September 24, 2017

Traditional County Fair at Lang Pioneer Village Museum  on Sunday, September 24, 2017

We invite you to join Peterborough County, our eight townships, and our two First Nation communities and the City of Peterborough to celebrate Canada 150 Plus and the 50th anniversary of Lang Pioneer Village Museum on Sunday, September 24th for a Traditional County Fair, with a modern twist, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Come for a ride on the Ferris Wheel, enjoy some yummy cotton candy, popcorn and a sno-cone, and experience 150 years of the greater Peterborough area with friends and family in one location.

We’ll have lots of entertainment on the main stage from each of our communities and a number of traditional games you can try your hand at. How good are you at the three-legged race? Who can throw a hay bale the farthest? When is the last time you were in a sack race? Now is your chance to do it again.

This day is extra special as we will be officially opening the new Peterborough County Agricultural Heritage Building. This building will become the latest addition to Lang Pioneer Village Museum with its mission to preserve, promote and authentically recreate the rural history of Peterborough County. Peterborough County exists today, largely due to our agricultural roots. Towns, villages and hamlets were formed over 150 years ago to serve the needs of the agricultural residents in the area.

The Peterborough County Agricultural Heritage Building at Lang Pioneer Village Museum will pay homage to the families, farms and advancements that have assisted in creating a culture of ambitious and dedicated agricultural leaders, well respected by their peers throughout the community, the province and the world.

We are excited to be part of the City of Peterborough’s Heritage Day “Celebrate at Home” event being held at the Peterborough Museum and Archives and the Peterborough Lift Lock on Sunday, July 2nd. Lang Pioneer Village Museum will be re-enacting the Fenian Raid along with much more and we look forward to showing and sharing our rural heritage.

We live in a great Country, Province, and County and we hope you all will take this year to start to do more exploring and celebrating at home!

KNosh News – June 2017

The first strawberries of the 2017 season from McLean Berry Farm. Pre-picked berries are available now, and you can pick your own soon. (Photo: McLean Berry Farm)

This month, Eva Fisher shares some good news about this year’s strawberry crop from McLean Berry Farm, discovers a choose-your-own dining adventure from Table + Loft, celebrates food festival season with Campbellford’s Incredible Edibles Festival, and showcases Fresh Dreams, a new restaurant in downtown Peterborough with Spanish and Swiss influences.


2017 shaping up to be a “picture perfect” year for strawberries

“It’s looking like the best strawberry season in a lot of years.”

Erin McLean of McLean Berry Farm (2191 16 Line, Lakefield, 705-657-2134) is optimistic about this year’s harvest.

“We’re really excited about how well they’re doing right now and how many blossoms and berries are out there.”

Erin says that the berries have been growing slowly but surely, which is the best case scenario for a long growing season.

Slow-growing berries make for a longer season, and Erin McLean is optimistic about this year's berry season. (Photo: McLean Berry Farm)
Slow-growing berries make for a longer season, and Erin McLean is optimistic about this year’s berry season. (Photo: McLean Berry Farm)

“Everyone is so anxious for the taste of a real strawberry again, but actually having them ripen slowly as they’re doing right now means that strawberry season will go on longer and we can enjoy them for longer.”

Still, Erin understands the anticipation.

“There’s nothing like a strawberry that’s still warm and it’s been ripened by the sun and it’s juicy and it drips down your chin. There’s just nothing like that flavour of real genuine strawberry.”

So what could go wrong? According to Erin, “strawberries don’t like too much heat or too much rain. They don’t like extremes in any direction. The weather is always our biggest challenge.” Moderate temperatures between 15 and 25 degrees are ideal.

“Right now it is looking like a picture perfect strawberry season, so we’re just hoping the weather cooperates and keeps it that way.”

McLean’s Berry Farm is selling their first pre-picked berries this week. Pick your own berries usually start four to seven days after pre-picked, depending on how the berries are ripening (so it could be later this week or next week).

 

Curate your own incredible dining experience with Table + Loft

Table offers pizza, sandwiches and tapas, or go upstairs to Loft for innovative experiential dining. (Photo: Table + Loft)
Table offers pizza, sandwiches and tapas, or go upstairs to Loft for innovative experiential dining. (Photo: Table + Loft)

What if you could curate your own evening of experiential dining? Spend an evening with the flavours of Italy, explore the world of barbecue, or develop your own theme, something new and different and exciting?

Table + Loft (59 Walton Street, Port Hope, 905-885-9800) will allow you to do just that with their new loft space, opening in July.

Executive Chef Darryl Davy has an eclectic culinary background. He has worked in a variety of restaurants in Port Hope and further afield. This past winter he helped to open the Quartermaster Eatery, a steakhouse in Revelstoke, B.C. He has also cooked at Black Beans Steakhouse and Lounge and Trattoria Gusto, both in Port Hope, and at Rubbs Barbecue Bistro in Campbellford.

At Loft, the customer will consult with Darryl to create a fine dining experience around almost any theme. Darryl asks the customer about their preferences and runs with it, or as he puts it, “and then we hit it out of the park.”

Table + Loft's on-site bakery offers bread, pastries, and desserts made from scratch. (Photo: Table + Loft)
Table + Loft’s on-site bakery offers bread, pastries, and desserts made from scratch. (Photo: Table + Loft)

When I asked about his favourite thing to cook, Darryl admitted “I don’t have one! I like to cook in general. What I enjoy the most, to be honest with you, is this sort of concept where somebody tells us what they want and what their favourite thing is and then we create what we hope will be their new favourite thing.”

The downstairs Table space is a more traditional restaurant, with tapas, sandwiches, and pizzas on the menu. They also have an on site bakery where they make all of their breads, pastries, gluten cakes and more, which you can enjoy on site or take away with you.

Darryl says they don’t take any short cuts.

“From scratch cooking is what we do best. We don’t take anything out of boxes, everything is made on site here.”

 

Incredible Edibles Festival shows off Campbellford’s great taste

 The organizers of Campbellford's Incredible Edibles Festival. This year's festival takes place on Saturday, July 8 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (Photo: The Incredible Edibles Festival)
The organizers of Campbellford’s Incredible Edibles Festival. This year’s festival takes place on Saturday, July 8 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (Photo: The Incredible Edibles Festival)

“If you eat, you’re in!”

That’s the catchphrase for Campbellford’s Incredible Edibles Festival, held on Saturday, July 8th from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in downtown Campbellford along the Trent Canal. With 23 vendors attending, there will be something for everyone, including a goat fashion show!

The festival was originally devised by Jackie Igleheart and three of her friends. They enjoyed the local farmer’s market, but they wanted to create another option for people who love local food. Jackie said that they had all moved to Campbellford from elsewhere and wanted to get connected to the farming and food community.

“Where could we go to get fresh produce if the market isn’t open, and where can we go to buy local beef and pork? We decided that if we felt like this, then other people must too.”

VIDEO: Haute Goat at 2016 Incredible Edibles Festival in Campbellford

The third annual festival drew approximately 4,000 people to Campbellford last year.

This year’s new vendors include Centre & Main Chocolate Company, Loon Kombucha, and Big B’s Barbecue. Big B’s Barbecue is known for their organic hotdogs and sausages.

Returning vendors will include Entomo Farms, known for their culinary crickets, Church-key Brewery, and Haute Goat, which will offer salted goat milk caramels and goat butter fudge.

The day before the festival, you can choose to go on a farm tour. The excursion includes breakfast and lunch, with visits to three local farms. Jackie says that tickets sell out quickly.

To learn more, visit www.incredibleediblesfestival.com

 

Fresh Dreams offers fresh and authentic Spanish cuisine, with a hint of Swiss interactive

At Fresh Dreams, Mediterranean tapas meet Swiss interactive dishes like Raclette and Fondue Bourguignonne. (Photo: Fresh Dreams)
At Fresh Dreams, Mediterranean tapas meet Swiss interactive dishes like Raclette and Fondue Bourguignonne. (Photo: Fresh Dreams)

Alvaro de la Guardia and Monica Silva of Fresh Dreams (373 Queen Street, Peterborough, 705-559-7731) have opened a new restaurant in the space formerly occupied by Electric City Gardens.

Chef Monica specializes in homemade Mediterranean and Spanish cuisine. Her husband Alvaro describes it as “all fresh, homemade and just made for you. Nothing industrial, as much local products as possible as well as Spanish products and all of Monica’s love.”

Fresh Dreams has reinvented itself at the former home of the Electric City Gardens, on Queen Street between Hunter and Simcoe in downtown Peterborough. (Photo: Fresh Dreams)
Fresh Dreams has reinvented itself at the former home of the Electric City Gardens, on Queen Street between Hunter and Simcoe in downtown Peterborough. (Photo: Fresh Dreams)

In addition to their regular menu, which offers a selection of soups, salads, tapas and clay pots, Fresh Dreams offers paellas on Wednesdays and Saturdays. They have also introduced Swiss interactive dishes: cheese Raclettes and Fondue Bourguignonne, offered by reservation only.

The patio has been refurnished as a Spanish terrace, and when the weather allows guests can relax there on sofas. It’s the perfect place to enjoy Fresh Dreams’ incredible service.

“Free samples are a constant — call them tapas — and are aimed to expand our clients’ palate,” explains Alvaro.

Everything at Fresh Dreams has been curated to create a relaxed Mediterranean atmosphere, and Alvaro says that they welcome guests to bring some friends and use it as an opportunity to reconnect.

“Our menu and dishes are designed to be shared. No hurries at closing time. We won’t sweep your feet at 9 pm nor turn off the air conditioning, the lights, nor the music. And we won’t bring the bill until you ask for it. You are under no pressure.”

Starter Company Plus is a game changer for entrepreneurs

The grant recipients for the first intake of Starter Company Plus, an entrepreneurship program offered through the Peterborough & the Kawarthas Business Advisory Centre, at a showcase event at Showplace Performance Centre in Peterborough on June 7, 2017. The second intake of the program is now under way and closes at the end of June. (Photo: Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development)

As she guides her business towards new levels of success, Nancy Nickle is calling upon recently acquired “game changer” skills now firmly entrenched in her entrepreneurial toolbox.

“I can’t believe how much I learned,” says Nickle, the owner of Birchview Design, a local firm offering residential, commercial, and cottage design services. “The financial side, the planning ahead side, the marketing side — it was an eye opener.”

Along with 14 other small business owners, Nickle is a recent participant of the first intake of Starter Company Plus, a new Government of Ontario entrepreneurship program offered locally through Peterborough & the Kawarthas Business Advisory Centre.

In addition, she’s one of seven of those initial participants sharing $26,000 worth of grants offered through the program. The program launched just this past March in communities throughout Ontario.

Nancy Nickle, owner of Birchview Design, speaks at the Starter Company Plus showcase event on June 7, 2017. Along with 14 other small business owners, Nickle is a recent participant of the first intake of the program, and she's one of seven participants sharing $26,000 worth of grants offered through the program. (Photo: Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development)
Nancy Nickle, owner of Birchview Design, speaks at the Starter Company Plus showcase event on June 7, 2017. Along with 14 other small business owners, Nickle is a recent participant of the first intake of the program, and she’s one of seven participants sharing $26,000 worth of grants offered through the program. (Photo: Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development)

“I implemented changes — big ones — while I was in the program and right after, and it’s just changing everything for me,” Nickle says.

Her enthusiasm for Starter Company Plus is music to the ears of Program Coordinator, Madeleine Hurrell. With another intake now underway, Hurrell is well aware that such success stories are the program’s most effective calling card.

“Entrepreneurs are very good at what they do but business has a lot of other elements and sometimes that can be a challenge,” says Hurrell. “Starter Company Plus helps with that side of things so entrepreneurs can do what they do best.”

“You can find something online very easily, but discussing and going through that information with someone who can synthesize it — especially the jargon if you’re not familiar with certain business terms — is invaluable.”

Starter Company Plus is for both aspiring and experienced entrepreneurs who are at least 18 years old, not in full-time education, and are launching a new business or want to expand an existing business that’s been operating for five years or less.

Starter Company Plus participant and grant recipient Nancy Nickle's company Birchview Design offers residential, commercial, and cottage design services.  (Photo: Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development)
Starter Company Plus participant and grant recipient Nancy Nickle’s company Birchview Design offers residential, commercial, and cottage design services. (Photo: Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development)

“It grew out of our previous iteration, the Starter Company program,” Hurrell explains. “That was a fantastic program, but it was only for young people aged 18 to 29.”

According to Cara Walsh, Corporate Communications Coordinator at Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development, Starter Company Plus was also inspired by B.L.A.S.T. (Business, Launch, Assistance, Support and Training), a 2016 pilot program geared to older entrepreneurs over the age of 30.

“At its core, Starter Company Plus is a training program,” adds Hurrell. “We take in 15 entrepreneurs per intake and those 15 entrepreneurs go through five weeks of training.

“They all complete a formalized business plan and they also complete a business pitch. They get all that wonderful training but they also compete for funding — pitching for one of seven grants available.”

Anna Eidt and Erin Watson, owners of Watson & Lou, speak at the Starter Company Plus showcase event on June 7, 2017.  Eidt and Watson also participated in the first Starter Company Plus program intake and secured grant funding. (Photo: Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development)
Anna Eidt and Erin Watson, owners of Watson & Lou, speak at the Starter Company Plus showcase event on June 7, 2017. Eidt and Watson also participated in the first Starter Company Plus program intake and secured grant funding. (Photo: Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development)

Erin Watson and Anna Eidt, owners of Watson & Lou (a shared studio space and locally curated goods boutique to be located in downtown Peterborough), also participated in the first program intake and secured grant funding.

The two met just last year through another entrepreneurial initiative led by Startup Peterborough (which is also administered by Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development) in collaboration with the Peterborough Downtown Business Improvement Area.

“We both entered the Win This Space competition, got to the top five and, from that, ended up meeting and deciding to partner,” explains Watson.

Watson says she and her partner met with Hurrell and Sandy Greenberg, Business Advisory Centre Lead, through Win This Space. The two were very supportive and encouraged them to enroll in Starter Company Plus.

“Anna and I had very strong business plans separately,” she says. “Starter Company Plus allowed us to collaborate and really hash out both of our ideas into one brilliant idea. Starter Company Plus hand held us through the partnership and everything that we needed to hash out.

“Going into a partnership blind can be a little scary. We both come from very different backgrounds, so it allowed us to recognize our strengths and weaknesses as a team and where we can fill in for one another.”

According to Hurrell, there were 55 applicants for the first intake. Of the 15 successful applicants who pitched their business plan, seven were awarded anywhere from $2,000 to $5,000 in funding.

Starter Company Plus participants and grant recipients Anna Eidt and Erin Watson's company Watson & Lou is a shared studio space and locally curated goods boutique to be located in downtown Peterborough. (Photo: Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development)
Starter Company Plus participants and grant recipients Anna Eidt and Erin Watson’s company Watson & Lou is a shared studio space and locally curated goods boutique to be located in downtown Peterborough. (Photo: Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development)

Along with Birchview Design and Watson & Lou, the other entrepreneurs who received funding through Starter Company Plus were Ship Shape Service (Kelli Coons), Fawcett Architectural (Brian Fawcett), Q & G Unique Wood Designs (Paula Blackburn and Anthony Andrews), Renew Medi Spa (Roxanne McDonald-Brown) and Then and Now Goods (MJ Weightman) were also grant recipients.

Walsh says the response to the first intake, while a great result, isn’t surprising.

“Fifty percent of businesses in Peterborough and the Kawarthas are owner operated,” she notes.

“We have this culture of entrepreneurship being supported not only by Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development but also our community partners like the Innovation Cluster, Community Futures Peterborough, and the Chambers of Commerce. There’s solid support in place for entrepreneurs to be a success.

“I always find the energy when you meet entrepreneurs to be wonderful. They have such a confidence as they go down their path. They come in with lots of ideas, but Starter Company Plus lets them hone in on what they really want.”

“They all have enthusiasm for what they’re doing, especially the start-ups,” Hurrell adds. “That enthusiasm is contagious, especially when they start with just an idea or concept and we then watch them develop their website or even make their first sale. They’re not talking what ifs anymore — the business exists.”

The second intake for Starter Company Plus is now under way and will close at the end of June. Before applying, entrepreneurs are required to attend a “Starting Point” session, with the next one scheduled for Monday, June 26th from 2:30 to 4 p.m. at the Greater Peterborough Chamber of Commerce (175 George St. N. Peterborough). Advance registration isn’t required.

“Attending Starting Point is mandatory,” Hurrell notes. “It allows us to meet you and learn more about your business. We talk about the program in detail and give out the application forms.”

Entrepreneurs who don’t make the cut can re-apply for a future intake. A third intake will be held in September 2017, with three more rounds of intakes scheduled for 2018.

Another benefit of Starter Company Plus for entrepreneurs is the opportunity for networking and sense of community the program creates.  (Photo: Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development)
Another benefit of Starter Company Plus for entrepreneurs is the opportunity for networking and sense of community the program creates. (Photo: Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development)

Another benefit of Starter Company Plus for entrepreneurs is the opportunity for networking and sense of community the program creates.

“The participants are so supportive of each other,” Walsh says. “They attended five weeks of workshops together. They sat and talked through each other’s businesses. They become champions of one another.

“There are a lot of misconceptions as to what it means to be an entrepreneur,” adds Hurrell. “It is a lot of work. Are you willing to put that work in? You have to run the business; don’t let it run you.”

Both Nickle and Watson certainly get that.

“It’s a lot of work but I wouldn’t want to be doing anything different,” Nickle says. “You know what it’s like to try and do something different at age 55? I hit the ground running and I haven’t looked back.”

Watson agrees.

“I’ve always had a little bit of creative flair but I never really knew how to implement it,” she says. “Starter Company Plus helped me realize my strengths as an entrepreneur, or at least the potential to be an entrepreneur.

“It’s always been a dream of mine to own my own company — and now I’m realizing it.”

For more information on Starter Company Plus, visit peterboroughed.ca/small-business/starter-company-plus/ or call 705-743-0777.

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