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What’s new from the Kawartha Chamber of Commerce & Tourism – September 27, 2017

"Colours Abound", a new exhibit of works by artists Steve Tracy and Julia Veenstra, opens at Gallery on the Lake in Buckhorn on Saturday, September 30th, with an opening reception from 1 to 4 p.m. where you can meet the artists. (Photo: The Gallery on the Lake / Facebook)

Learn Networking Skills! B.O.S.S. Workshop – October 25th

Speed networking

The Chamber’s next B.O.S.S. (Business Owners Sharing Solutions) workshop will focus on effective networking and how it can benefit your business.

Join the Chamber on Wednesday, October 25th, from 5 to 7 p.m. at Westwind Inn on the Lake, where Tonya Kraan of Strexer Harrop & Associates will discuss networking techniques with fellow Chamber Members, Scott Matheson of CIBC Lakefield, and Tom LaBranche of Village Pet Food & Supply. Following the discussion, attendees will have the opportunity to put their skills into action in a speed networking format.

Invite a colleague or fellow business professional to join you! The workshop is free for Chamber members (thanks to Professional Development Sponsor Lynn Woodcroft, Sales Representative, Royal LePage Frank Real Estate) and $10 for future members. Register now.

 

Tickets on Sale for Awards of Excellence Gala – November 3rd

Tickets are on sale now for the 18th Annual Awards of Excellence Gala on Friday, November 3 at Elmhirst's Resort in Keene. Elmhirst's Resort is offering special room rates for those booking with the Gala.
Tickets are on sale now for the 18th Annual Awards of Excellence Gala on Friday, November 3 at Elmhirst’s Resort in Keene. Elmhirst’s Resort is offering special room rates for those booking with the Gala.

Tickets are on sale for the 18th Annual Awards of Excellence Gala on Friday, November 3rd at Elmhirst’s Resort — the event always sell out! Tickets are $85+HST. Click here to reserve your tickets, and to view the menu for the evening.

A special room rate is available for those booking for the night of the Awards Gala. Call Elmhirst’s Resort at 705-295-4591 and mention you are booking for the Chamber Awards of Excellence Gala on November 3rd.

 

Ontario Chamber of Commerce Business Confidence Survey

The Ontario Chamber of Commerce invites you to complete their Business Confidence Survey. Data collected will provide powerful insights into the state of our province’s economy allowing the OCC to expand the Chamber Network’s influence with government.

Your participation will directly impact the direction of OCC policy work, communications strategy, and government relations. Click here to take the survey.

 

Financial Accountability Office of Ontario – Commentary on Proposed Minimum Wage Increases

The Financial Accountability Office of Ontario (FAO) released a commentary assessing the economic impact of Ontario’s proposed minimum wage increase.

Key points include:

  • Proposal to raise minimum wage to $15 per hour will dramatically increase the number of minimum wage workers from just over 500,000 currently to 1.6 million in 2019.
  • The FAO estimates that the higher minimum wage will raise total labour income (after adjusting for price inflation) by 1.3 per cent by 2019.1 However, the FAO estimates that just one-quarter of the higher labour income would directly benefit low-income families. Since the income gains would not be concentrated on low-income families, raising the minimum wage would be an inefficient policy tool for reducing overall poverty.
  • The higher minimum wage will increase payroll costs for Ontario businesses, leading to some job losses for lower income workers. At the same time, higher labour income and household spending will boost economic activity leading to some offsetting job gains.

Read the full commentary here.

 

Trent-Severn Waterway Trail Town Workshop – October 12th

Cycle Forward founder Amy Camp, who helped launch America's nationally recognized Trail Town Program in 2007 (photo: Tori Stipcak)
Cycle Forward founder Amy Camp, who helped launch America’s nationally recognized Trail Town Program in 2007 (photo: Tori Stipcak)

Kawarthas Northumberland, in partnership with the Kawartha Chamber, is pleased to present a Trent-Severn Waterway Trail Town Workshop, free of charge, on Thursday, October 12th. The workshop begins at 5:15 p.m. at the Lakefield Legion.

Join trail tourism expert Amy Camp of Cycle Forward for an interactive workshop for business owners seeking to increase tourism-related spending from visitors to the Trent-Severn Waterway, Trans Canada Trail and other Lakefield area attractions.

Attendees must register by October 9th to sarahp@rto8.com. Learn more.

 

Welcome New Chamber Member

Regency Retirement Lakefield
91 Concession Street, Lakefield, www.regencyretirement.ca, 705-651-2400

At the Regency we take pride in focusing on our residents and their independence, personal happiness and comfort, from our well-appointed accommodations, wonderful amenities, the many social activities and our friendly caring staff. Only at Regency will you find the luxury of our exclusive suites.

 

Works of Steve Tracy and Julia Veenstra will be on display at The Gallery on the Lake in Buckhorn beginning September 30. (Photo:  The Gallery on the Lake / Facebook)
Works of Steve Tracy and Julia Veenstra will be on display at The Gallery on the Lake in Buckhorn beginning September 30. (Photo: The Gallery on the Lake / Facebook)

The Gallery on the Lake is honored to present works of Steve Tracy and Julia Veenstra in a new exhibit entitled “Colours Abound”.

The exhibit opens September 30th and continues to November 3rd. The opening reception and meet the artists will be held on September 30th from 1 to 4 p.m.

“Colours Abound” is an exhibit that showcases these two artists and their exceptional ability to use colour. Panoramic light-filled canvasses of islands, waterways, and birches filled with brilliant fall leaves against blue and yellow skies will evoke emotion like never before. Viewers will look into the shadows and see light and colour they never knew existed in nature.

 

CFGP Launches Vital Conversations

The Community Foundation of Greater Peterborough (CFGP) is launching a new initiative this fall called 'Vital Conversations'. (Graphic: CFGP)
The Community Foundation of Greater Peterborough (CFGP) is launching a new initiative this fall called ‘Vital Conversations’. (Graphic: CFGP)

The Community Foundation of Greater Peterborough (CFGP) is launching a new initiative this fall called ‘Vital Conversations’ that will bring people together to talk about Greater Peterborough’s Vital Signs, support our community’s ability to work through big issues (even when we disagree), and crowd-source priorities for the Foundation’s 2018 grants.

A unique conversation tool has been developed — the Vital Conversations Card Game — and for the month of October, CFGP is asking everyone who calls our community home to host their friends and neighbours for a meal and conversation, using the card game to facilitate the discussion.

To host a conversation, register online by filling out a short registration form.

 

Trent Lakes Public Meeting and ‘Name the Park’

Name the Park

Trent Lakes Community Improvement Plan Public Meeting

The Municipality of Trent Lakes Economic Development Committee is holding a Public Meeting to discuss the Community Improvement Plan and the development of a community park in Buckhorn.

This will be an informal meeting to offer suggestions and have questions answered. The meeting is taking place on Monday, October 2nd, 7-8 PM at St. Matthews Church, 1937 Lakehurst Road, Buckhorn.

Name the Park!

The Trent Lakes Economic Development Committee invites you to submit names for the new park in Buckhorn. The park will be situated on the shoreline of Buckhorn Lake, and the intent is to develop a focal point within Buckhorn for the public to enjoy.

Send your park name ideas to info@trentlakes.ca, or drop off or mail submissions to Trent Lakes Administration Building, 760 County Road 36, Trent Lakes, ON, K0M 1A0. Learn more.

 

Fall Events at the Buckhorn Community Centre

Autumn Dinner Theatre Tickets On Sale

The Buckhorn Community Centre (BCC) presents the Hall’s Bridge Players in four one-act plays November 3rd to 5th and 10th to 12th.

Dinner and comedy tickets are now on sale at the BCC for $40. Learn more.

Homes Needed for Holiday Home Tour

Preparations are underway for the 7th Holiday Home Tour in Buckhorn on Sunday, November 26th, and homes are needed!

For more information on becoming a tour home and what is involved, contact Linda Dill at jammiedill@yahoo.ca.

 

Upcoming Events

  • Lakefield Farmers’ Market – September 28th
  • Abuse Prevention of Older Adults Workshop – Buckhorn – September 28th
  • Bridgenorth Farmers’ Market – September 29th
  • Performing Arts Lakefield – Weston Silver Band Beatles Go Brass – September 29th

Performing Arts Lakefield

 

For more information about the businesses and events listed above, please visit the Kawartha Chamber of Commerce & Tourism website at kawarthachamber.ca.

All photos supplied by Kawartha Chamber of Commerce except where noted.

Shelter Shots fundraising calendar features hockey players with rescue animals

Retired Chicago Blackhawks forward and two-time Stanley Cup champion Bryan Bickell with his entry in the Peterborough Humane Society's 'Shelter Shots' fundraising calendar at a launch event at Ricky's All Day Grill on September 26, 2017. Bickell, who posed with his rescue pit bull Bailey in a photograph donated by Peter Nguyen, is one of several past and current NHL players and other sports figures who appear with their rescue cats and dogs in the $20 calendar, all sales of which will go directly to support the Humane Society's rescue efforts. (Photo: Paul Rellinger / kawarthaNOW)

Applying a fresh coat of paint to a well-worn fundraising method is destined to pay a huge dividend for the Peterborough Humane Society.

Shelter Shots, a 2018 calendar featuring portrait photographs of many past and some current professional hockey players posing with their rescue dogs or cats, is available now with every penny of the $20 cost of each calendar going to the Humane Society in support of rescue efforts.

On Tuesday (September 26) at Ricky’s All Day Grill, Susan Dunkley, Manager of Development and Outreach for the Humane Society, unveiled Shelter Shots with the help of two of the calendar’s featured personalities: retired Chicago Blackhawks forward and two-time Stanley Cup champion Bryan Bickell and TSN anchor Dan O’Toole of SportsCentre with Jay and Dan fame.

TSN anchor Dan O'Toole poses with his temporarily calm rescue cat Vira for 'Shelter Shots', the Peterborough Humane Society's fundraising calendar. (Photo: Mike Taylor)
TSN anchor Dan O’Toole poses with his temporarily calm rescue cat Vira for ‘Shelter Shots’, the Peterborough Humane Society’s fundraising calendar. (Photo: Mike Taylor)

“I’ve had pets all my life, growing up on a farm, and they’ve always been from the Humane Society,” said O’Toole, who graces the January page with his cat Vira, who was rescued from a shelter in Oregon by his girlfriend Erin. The photograph was taken by Mike Taylor, one of several photographers who donated their time and talent to the fundraising calendar.

Vira, according to O’Toole, is “a perfect example of what the Humane Society is around for. The photographer can attest to the fact a lot of people were almost harmed doing this. There were 12 people in the house and this cat is skittish to say the least. This was her one moment of calm that we captured.”

Bickell, meanwhile, posed for February with Bailey, a pit bull rescued 12 years ago “from a bad situation”, in a photograph taken by Peter Nguyen. Bickell’s involvement is an extension of the ongoing work of the Chicago-based Bryan and Amanda Bickell Foundation which helps rescue abused pit bulls.

Retired NHLer Bryan Bickell poses with his rescue dog Bailey in a photo for 'Shelter Shots', the Peterborough Humane Society's fundraising calendar. (Photo: Peter Nguyen)
Retired NHLer Bryan Bickell poses with his rescue dog Bailey in a photo for ‘Shelter Shots’, the Peterborough Humane Society’s fundraising calendar. (Photo: Peter Nguyen)

“I’ve had the luxury of being an athlete and being in the spotlight,” said Bickell of lending his fame to the cause. “My dog is a bit misunderstood because it’s a pit bull breed. She’s great with our kids, a three year old and one year old. She’s a protector, she watches out for them … like a nanny but in dog form.”

Along with O’Toole and Bickell, also featured in Shelter Shots are:

  • Corey Perry of the Anaheim Ducks with his dogs Ace and Max.
  • Kevin Kaminski of the Washington Capitals with his dog Lady.
  • Matt Duchene of the Colorado Avalanche with his dog Paisley.
  • Korean professional hockey player Mike Swift with his dogs Leila and Lexi.
  • Justin Williams of the Carolina Hurricanes with his dog Drago.
  • NHL alumni Walt McKechnie, Ron Stackhouse, and Bernie Nicholls with dogs Boots and Stanley.
  • retired NHL player Kurtis Foster with four Humane Society kittens.
  • Tanner Pearson of the Los Angeles Kings with his dog Emma.
  • St. Louis Blues prospect Vince Dunn with his dog Rocky.
  • Toronto Maple Leaf goaltending legend Johnny Bower with Jasper, photographer Peter Nguyen’s rescue dog.

Besides Nguyen and Taylor, other photographers who donated their time and talent to the cause were Eleanor Dobbins, Brandon Eskra, Todd Gimblett, Illona Haus, Rob McKnight, Jessica Melnik, Bryan Reid, and Amanda Rowden.

“All the photos are very powerful in terms of the love these strong men are showing their creatures,” enthused Dunkley, noting 1,300 calendars are available for sale — a potential $26,000 windfall to support the Peterborough Humane Society’s rescue efforts.

The cover of 'Shelter Shots', a fundraising calendar for the Peterborough Humane Society  available for purchase now at the Peterborough Humane Society (385 Lansdowne Street East), Pet Supply Warehouse (621 The Parkway), and Sherbrooke Heights Animal Hospital (1625 Sherbrooke St. W.), or online at  online at www.peterboroughhumanesociety.ca. (Photo: Paul Rellinger / kawarthaNOW)
The cover of ‘Shelter Shots’, a fundraising calendar for the Peterborough Humane Society available for purchase now at the Peterborough Humane Society (385 Lansdowne Street East), Pet Supply Warehouse (621 The Parkway), and Sherbrooke Heights Animal Hospital (1625 Sherbrooke St. W.), or online at online at www.peterboroughhumanesociety.ca. (Photo: Paul Rellinger / kawarthaNOW)

Dunkley added that the generosity of project sponsors Pet Supply Warehouse, Connor Windows, and Ricky’s All Day Grill covered all production and related costs, meaning all proceeds from each sale will go the society.

In addition, other businesses and organization purchased placement on certain days of certain months, bringing in yet another revenue stream for the project.

“These aren’t just incredible athletes and sports figures who bring so much joy into our hearts and homes,” said Peterborough Humane Society Executive Director Andrew Fraser in a prepared statement. “These are inspiring heroes who have lent their time to and celebrity to generate the lifesaving funds and second chances at life our PHS animals so much deserves.”

Speaking to the involvement of hockey players, Dunkley explains her husband Darryl Porter’s network — he was a scout for the Los Angeles Kings who was earlier drafted as player but blew out his knee — made that decision a no-brainer.

“He has all these connections, so he reached out to guys,” said Dunkley, noting paper calendars are still popular with many people. “I like the calendar on my phone, but my eyes are old. It’s hard to see the whole month.”

Toronto Maple Leaf goaltending legend Johnny Bower with Jasper, a rescue dog owned by photographer Peter Nguyen, in a photo for 'Shelter Shots', the Peterborough Humane Society's fundraising calendar. (Photo: Peter Nguyen)
Toronto Maple Leaf goaltending legend Johnny Bower with Jasper, a rescue dog owned by photographer Peter Nguyen, in a photo for ‘Shelter Shots’, the Peterborough Humane Society’s fundraising calendar. (Photo: Peter Nguyen)

Looking ahead, she says models and their pets are lined up for six months of a planned 2019 calendar. But for now, the focus is on the inaugural edition of Shelter Shots with the hope it will sell out.

“Just in time for Christmas, you’d think I knew what I was doing,” laughed Dunkley.

The Shelter Shots fundraising calendar costs $20 and can be purchased in Peterborough at the Peterborough Humane Society (385 Lansdowne Street East), Pet Supply Warehouse (621 The Parkway), and Sherbrooke Heights Animal Hospital (1625 Sherbrooke St. W.). You can also purchase a calendar online at www.peterboroughhumanesociety.ca.

Three cases of mumps confirmed in Peterborough

The best way to prevent mumps is through the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) or measles-mumps-rubella-varicella (MMRV) vaccine, pictured here.

Peterborough Public Health has reported three confirmed cases of mumps in the Peterborough area.

“Mumps is circulating in our community, so we are asking residents to watch for symptoms and see their health care provider if they are feeling ill,” says Dr. Rosana Salvaterra, Medical Officer of Health. “It’s also important to follow good infection control practices to prevent its spread, such as ensuring you are vaccinated against mumps and not sharing objects like cups and eating utensils.”

There has been an increase in mumps cases and outbreaks this year in several parts of North America, including Ontario. While mumps has traditionally been a childhood disease, it has become more common among young adults, particularly among 18 to 35 year olds who may not have been sufficiently vaccinated as children.

The best way to prevent mumps is through the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) or measles-mumps-rubella-varicella (MMRV) vaccine. Since use of the MMR vaccine was approved in 1969, the number of reported cases of mumps has decreased by more than 99 per cent.

However, two doses of the vaccine are required for maximum effectiveness. Some people now in their 20s and 30s may have only received a single dose of the vaccine as children.

While people born before 1970 are considered immune to mumps, Peterborough Public Health advises that anyone born after 1970 who has not previously been diagnosed with mumps should be appropriately immunized with two doses of the vaccine.

Mumps is a highly contagious viral disease that passes easily from person to person. The most common symptom of mumps is swelling of the salivary glands, which can make the cheek or neck bulge out on one or both sides.

Other symptoms of mumps include fever, headache or earache, tiredness, sore muscles, dry mouth, or loss of appetite. Sometimes the virus can cause more serious complications like hearing loss, swelling of other glands, encephalitis, or meningitis. Pregnant women who get mumps during the first trimester may have a higher risk of miscarriage.

Symptoms can be mild or severe, and generally last seven to 10 days. Many people who get infected with the mumps virus experience very mild symptoms or not be sick at all. However, they can still spread the disease to others. So it is important for everyone to be vaccinated against mumps. A person with mumps can spread the infection from seven days before to five days after they develop symptoms.

The mumps virus can be spread in several different ways including direct contact (such as kissing an infected person), through the air (such as when an infected person coughs, sneezes, or talks), or by touching objects that were recently exposed to infected mucus or saliva (when someone else touches the same surface and rubs their eyes, mouth or nose).

While people who are vaccinated against mumps can still get the disease, they are likely to have a milder case than an unvaccinated person. There is no treatment for mumps.

Peterborough Public Health recommends that anyone who is not fully vaccinated see their healthcare provider or, if they don’t have one, to call the health unit at 705-743-1000, ext. 129 to get up to date and fully protected.

The vaccines are part of the publicly funded vaccine schedule and are offered free to all people in Ontario. The mumps vaccine is required for children to attend school in Ontario and for children attending a daycare centre, unless they have a valid exemption. Vaccination is also publicly funded for adults, if they have never had mumps or been vaccinated.

Indigenous artists take centre stage at Showplace in Peterborough for Voice of a Nation

Dancers Mayumi Lashbrook and Syreeta Hector in rehearsal for Igor Stravinsky's L'histoire du soldat, re-imagined by First Nations choreographer Aria Evans. The dance performance is part of the Voice of a Nation program, coming October 12 to Showplace Performance Centre in Peterborough. The program also features the Toronto Concert Orchestra, conducted by Maestro Kerry Stratton, performing orchestral songs of poems of Cree/Métis poet Marilyn Dumont written by Métis and French-Canadian composer Ian Cusson and sung by Métis Canadian mezzo-soprano Rebecca Cuddy, an original choral piece composed by Cusson and sung by the Peterborough Children's Chorus, and a screening of the documentary 'Twelve' by local filmmaker Lester Alfonso. (Photo: Aria Evans)

On Thursday, October 12th, at 7:30 p.m., the Toronto Concert Orchestra, Showplace Performance Centre, and Market Hall Performing Arts Centre are presenting the world premiere of “Voice of a Nation” at Showplace Performance Centre in Peterborough, an evening of performance that celebrates Canada’s rich and varied history through the bridging of Indigenous and European artistic traditions.

Inspired by Canada 150, Maestro Kerry Stratton and the Toronto Concert Orchestra have created a multi-disciplinary concert program — featuring orchestra, song, dance, spoken word, choir, and film — that writes a new chapter in our nation’s history by placing the work of innovative and emerging First Nations artists and multi-cultural youth centre stage.

Kerry Stratton, conductor and music director of the Toronto Concert Orchestra, will lead the orchestra's performance of orchestral songs of poems of Cree/Métis poet Marilyn Dumont, written by Métis and French-Canadian composer Ian Cusson and sung by Métis Canadian mezzo-soprano Rebecca Cuddy, as well Stravinsky's 'The Pulcinella Suite' choreographed by Aria Evans. (Photo: Toronto Concert Orchestra)
Kerry Stratton, conductor and music director of the Toronto Concert Orchestra, will lead the orchestra’s performance of orchestral songs of poems of Cree/Métis poet Marilyn Dumont, written by Métis and French-Canadian composer Ian Cusson and sung by Métis Canadian mezzo-soprano Rebecca Cuddy, as well Stravinsky’s ‘The Pulcinella Suite’ choreographed by Aria Evans. (Photo: Toronto Concert Orchestra)

Opening the Voice of a Nation program are orchestral songs of poems of Cree/Métis poet Marilyn Dumont, written by Métis and French-Canadian composer Ian Cusson and sung by Métis Canadian mezzo-soprano Rebecca Cuddy. This work explores the Canadian experience from a First Nations lens within the context of a largely European form.

Composer Cusson says it is uncommon to hear First Nations stories presented in the classical music context, but believes that “this bridging of traditions and cultures speaks to our current moment as a nation where the rich diversity of our history is being recognized, acknowledged and celebrated.”

The six poems are from Dumont’s award-winning collection A Really Good Brown Girl (published by Brick Books in 1996) and centre on the experience of Canada’s Aboriginal peoples, focusing particularly on the Métis experiences of ‘half-ness’ and existing in-between cultures.

Voice of a Nation features six poems by Cree/Métis poet Marilyn Dumont (pictured), set to orchestral song by Métis and French-Canadian composer Ian Cusson and sung by Métis Canadian mezzo-soprano Rebecca Cuddy. (Photo: Marilyn Dumont)
Voice of a Nation features six poems by Cree/Métis poet Marilyn Dumont (pictured), set to orchestral song by Métis and French-Canadian composer Ian Cusson and sung by Métis Canadian mezzo-soprano Rebecca Cuddy. (Photo: Marilyn Dumont)

The poems confront the often-disturbing history of Canada’s Aboriginal peoples including the disappearance of Aboriginal women (“Helen Betty Osborne”), issues of territorial expansion and government apathy (“Letter to Sir John A. MacDonald”), shame over not being deemed ‘respectable’ (“The Red & White”), and the use of language as a tool to control (“The Devil’s Language”). The tone of the poems range from ironic and scathing to tender and intimate.

Following the song cycle, “L’histoire du soldat” by Igor Stravinsky will be re-imagined by First Nations choreographer Aria Evans through a truly Canadian lens. Distilling traits of the Trickster, this piece explores the motif of shape-shifting in terms of contemporary curated identities. The dance work will be performed live during the concert with dancers Syreeta Hector, Mayumi Lashbrook, and Raelyn Metcalfe.

An original choral piece, Perspectives, composed by Cusson and sung by the Peterborough Children’s Chorus will close the concert program. The work’s title refers to the varied cultural backgrounds of the youth who, through a six-week-long workshop, explored, and made meaningful, their experiences of Canada.

“It is our hope that this project will be a catalyst,” Cusson says, “helping Canadians to better know the stories of our nation and inspiring the next generation with its rich and varied history.”

Following the concert program, there will be a screening of the remarkably insightful documentary film Twelve by filmmaker Lester Alfonso, which explores the Canadian experience through the voices of 12 diverse subjects, each of whom moved to Canada — like the filmmaker himself — at the age of 12.

Métis Canadian mezzo-soprano Rebecca Cuddy will sing the orchestral songs of six poems of Cree/Métis poet Marilyn Dumont written by Métis and French-Canadian composer Ian Cusson. (Photo: Mark Fines Photography)
Métis Canadian mezzo-soprano Rebecca Cuddy will sing the orchestral songs of six poems of Cree/Métis poet Marilyn Dumont written by Métis and French-Canadian composer Ian Cusson. (Photo: Mark Fines Photography)

Tickets for Voice of A Nation are available now at the Showplace box office (290 George St. N., Peterborough), by phone at 705-742-7469 or toll free at 1-866-444-2154, or online at showplace.org. Tickets are $42 for adults and $22 for students.

In addition to the performers themselves, Voice of a Nation brings together a dynamic ensemble of artistic talent:

  • Maestro Kerry Stratton is the Conductor and Music Director of the Toronto Concert Orchestra. He also serves as Conductor for a varied schedule of performances and recordings with a long list of European and international orchestras, and hosts a popular classical music radio show.
  • Voice of a Nation composer Ian Cusson studied composition with Jake Heggie (San Francisco) and Samuel Dolin, piano with James Anagnoson at the Glenn Gould School, and completed a mentorship with Johannes Debus. He is an inaugural Carrefour Composer in Residence with the National Arts Centre Orchestra for 2017-2019, and an Associate Composer of the Canadian Music Centre.
  • Voice of a Nation director Michael Hidetoshi Mori is an award-winning stage director and the Artistic Director of Tapestry Opera in Toronto. He has won a Dora Mavor Moore award for outstanding direction, and been nominated for a Juno Award as a performer and music director.
Voice of a Nation features works by Métis and French-Canadian composer Ian Cusson and First Nations choreographer Aria Evans, and is directed by Michael Hidetoshi Mori.
Voice of a Nation features works by Métis and French-Canadian composer Ian Cusson and First Nations choreographer Aria Evans, and is directed by Michael Hidetoshi Mori.

Prior to the world premiere performance of Voice of a Nation in Peterborough, a collaborative Community Engagement Program will be offered.

A Canada 150 Panel, presented in association with the Chanie Wenjack School for Indigenous Studies at Trent University, will engage participating Voice of A Nation artists and local indigenous artists and intellectuals in conversation about the critical importance of art and performance to the shaping of national identities and the emergence of a post-colonial Canada.

David Newhouse, Director of the Chanie Wenjack School for Indigenous Studies at Trent, will moderate. The panel takes place at 8 p.m. on Tuesday, October 10th at Showplace Performance Centre and admission is pay what you can.

As part of the annual Pine Tree Talk lecture series sponsored by the Chanie Wenjack School for Indigenous Studies at Trent University, in partnership with Public Energy, Indigenous performance artists Brian Solomon and Aria Evans will speak on contemporary dance and curatorial practice, and its ability to tell the story of our lives and bring us together as a society.

The Pine Tree Talk takes place at 12 p.m. on Wednesday, October 11th at Nozhem: First Peoples Performance Space (Enweying Building at Gzowski College, Trent University) and admission is free.

This guest post was written by Susan Oliver, Voice of a Nation Peterborough Project Lead for Toronto Concert Orchestra.

Local yarn shop expands and adds renowned Brooklyn Tweed to its selection

Some of the skeins from renowned wool manufacturer and design house Brooklyn Tweed on display at Needles in the Hay in downtown Peterborough, which recently completed a renovation to display every knitter's dream: a "wall of yarn". Known for its yarns and top-quality detailed patterns, Brooklyn Tweed has chosen Needles in the Hay as a destination shop, only the third in Ontario. (Photo: Deanna Guttman)

Borrowing lyrics from the post-war Rogers and Hammerstein musical Oklahoma!, the yarn is “as high as an elephant’s eye!”

Needles in the Hay, the local yarn shop on Water Street in downtown Peterborough, is about to add a long-sought addition to its flock: the store is preparing to stock the famous Brooklyn Tweed woolen yarns, in a move that is exciting customers near and far.

Brooklyn Tweed has come to Peterborough! Pictured is the "Wallace Wrap" from Brooklyn Tweed's new 2017 Fall Collection. It can be made for men and women as a scarf or wrap, using either the Quarry (chunky, pictured) or Arbor (doubleknit) yarns. (Photo: Brooklyn Tweed)
Brooklyn Tweed has come to Peterborough! Pictured is the “Wallace Wrap” from Brooklyn Tweed’s new 2017 Fall Collection. It can be made for men and women as a scarf or wrap, using either the Quarry (chunky, pictured) or Arbor (doubleknit) yarns. (Photo: Brooklyn Tweed)

“We’ve been working on this plan for months,” says Needles in the Hay owner Deanna Guttman. “Brooklyn Tweed doesn’t want a retailer to just dip a toe in, so it took quite a bit of business planning to make this happen. I’m so excited about it.”

Deanna Guttman, owner and operator of Needles in the Hay on Water Street in downtown Peterborough, is celebrating her first anniversary of ownership by expanding her yarn shop to include the coveted Brooklyn Tweed woolen yarn line. (Photo: Jeanne Pengelly / kawarthaNOW)
Deanna Guttman, owner and operator of Needles in the Hay on Water Street in downtown Peterborough, is celebrating her first anniversary of ownership by expanding her yarn shop to include the coveted Brooklyn Tweed woolen yarn line. (Photo: Jeanne Pengelly / kawarthaNOW)

Guttman, who is also the fulltime executive director of the Peterborough Symphony Orchestra, bought the six-year-old yarn shop — dubbed “the preeminent destination for Kawartha’s knitting needs” — from store founder Bridget Allin in the summer of 2016.

“I wanted to continue with Bridget’s vision to provide high quality, good value natural-fiber yarns paired with experienced staff,” Guttman says. “Adding Brooklyn Tweed seemed like a natural choice.”

Brooklyn Tweed is a flagship American design house and yarn manufacturer that specializes in woolen yarn that is grown and manufactured domestically. It positions itself as a contemporary choice within the growing movement of traditional hand-knitting, providing exquisitely constructed patterns to accompany its selection of highly sought yarn.

In Canada, there are only seven other retail outlets, including two in Ontario, that carry Brooklyn Tweed. Needles in the Hay will become the third retail outlet in Ontario and the eighth in Canada.

It’s their sheep-to-skein philosophy that drew Guttman to Brooklyn Tweed, she says. The company prides itself on its practice of helping to sustain the tradition of U.S. textile production. While still rather young, Brooklyn Tweed has gathered momentum since its first 100% American-made wool yarn, Shelter, launched in 2010.

"Arbor" is a newer line from Brooklyn Tweed. As a "DK-weight workhorse" yarn, it features spun worsted for superior strength and stitch definition and dyed in a nuanced palette of 30 solid colors. Vistors to Needles in the Hay, a Brooklyn Tweed destination shop, will now be able to see the beauty of Arbor in person. (Photo: Brooklyn Tweed)
“Arbor” is a newer line from Brooklyn Tweed. As a “DK-weight workhorse” yarn, it features spun worsted for superior strength and stitch definition and dyed in a nuanced palette of 30 solid colors. Vistors to Needles in the Hay, a Brooklyn Tweed destination shop, will now be able to see the beauty of Arbor in person. (Photo: Brooklyn Tweed)

Now the company offers five wools in various weights. And Needles in the Hay will stock all five in plenty, Guttman says: 20 colours of Shelter, Loft, and Arbor, and seven colours in the Quarry and Vale lines.

The "Wallace Wrap" scarf version, for men and women, shown in Arbor DK, colorway Vintner, from the newest Brooklyn Tweed 2017 Fall Collection. Needles in the Hay is one of only three shops in Ontario to carry the Brooklyn Tweed line. (Photo: Brooklyn Tweed)
The “Wallace Wrap” scarf version, for men and women, shown in Arbor DK, colorway Vintner, from the newest Brooklyn Tweed 2017 Fall Collection. Needles in the Hay is one of only three shops in Ontario to carry the Brooklyn Tweed line. (Photo: Brooklyn Tweed)

Some of the 1,200 skeins she has on order will be displayed on a floor-to-ceiling cube wall that will replace the current six-foot high cubby shelf. The renovation is set for the last week of September — the shop will be closed from Sunday, September 24th to Friday, September 29th.

The launch of the newly renovated and stocked Needles in the Hay is set for Saturday, September 30th — just as the busiest knitting season of the year kicks off.

From 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on September 30th, Needles in the Hay will be giving away door prizes, providing a blocking demonstration, and hosting a sidewalk sale with a selection of yarns at 50 per cent off.

“I want people to come in and see an entire wall of yarn,” Guttman says, adding that arriving at a yarn shop to an “entire wall of yarn” is every knitter’s dream.

For many of the customers Guttman has come to know over the past year, Brooklyn Tweed will be a welcome addition.

“If they don’t already know it, they will fall in love with Brooklyn Tweed yarn and designs,” she says. “Our clientele are knitters who really care about where their yarn comes from, and design-wise, they want something a little challenging, something that pushes them a little. I’m really excited to share this with them.”


Guttman’s own knitting journey began only three years ago. Like many knitters, she learned the basic stitches from her mother, and the rest with the help from what is sometimes called a knitter’s best friend: YouTube.

“I love that knitting is meditative,” Guttman says. “I love that it’s a mix of creativity and logic, that it’s left brain and right brain.

It’s a great way to slow down after a busy day, to just reflect, recharge.”

And while some consider knitting a solo or independent endeavour, traditionally knitting has often been done in circles as a community-enriching activity.

That’s something Guttman fosters with a Tuesday evening knitting social called Purlez-Vous (7 to 9 p.m. each Tuesday evening at the store), with classes, and with what knitters lovingly refer to as “knit-a-longs” (KALs). Those are regularly advertised on the Needles in the Hay website at needlesinthehay.ca, and Guttman says there will be more coming once the Brooklyn Tweed renovation is complete.

As a hub for knitting socials, the store is a trove of tips and tricks for new and experienced knitters alike, Guttman says. It’s also a one-stop shop for any instruction or help a client may require on a specific project.

The team at Needles in the Hay (Grace Mahoney, owner Deanna Guttman, and Ethan Barclay-Ennew) are accomplished knitters and crocheters. They can provide expert advice from fibre arts to needle felting and wet felting, for customers with all levels of experience. (Photo: Needles in the Hay)
The team at Needles in the Hay (Grace Mahoney, owner Deanna Guttman, and Ethan Barclay-Ennew) are accomplished knitters and crocheters. They can provide expert advice from fibre arts to needle felting and wet felting, for customers with all levels of experience. (Photo: Needles in the Hay)

“We have a terrific balance of talent on our staff,” she says. Along with Guttman, Grace Mahoney provides artistic and technical help to crocheters and needle-felters, and Ethan Barclay-Ennew provides experience in knitting techniques, pattern realignment, and yarn choices.

“If you have questions about your project, or any project, you can lean on our knowledge,” Guttman says. “Knitters are special — it’s like we all speak a common language. Here, you’ll find someone who understands you.”

That reputation is serving Guttman well. In her first year, she doubled the stock in the shop and continues to grow the clientele.

“We have quite a following,” she says. “Knitters like to go on expeditions to find the best knitting shops. We find people will drive from Ottawa or Durham just to come into the shop. They say it’s worth the drive.

“So we’re already a bit of a destination store. Brooklyn Tweed is going to build on that.”

Needles in the Hay is located at 385 Water Street in downtown Peterborough. For more information, call 705-740-0667 or visit needlesinthehay.ca. You can also follow Needles in the Hay on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest, and Instagram.

The "wall of yarn" at the newly renovated Needles in the Hay in downtown Peterborough. Owner Deanna Guttman is offering five wools from Brookyn Tweed in various weights and colours: 20 colours of Shelter, Loft, and Arbor, and seven colours in the Quarry and Vale lines. (Photo: Deanna Guttman)
The “wall of yarn” at the newly renovated Needles in the Hay in downtown Peterborough. Owner Deanna Guttman is offering five wools from Brookyn Tweed in various weights and colours: 20 colours of Shelter, Loft, and Arbor, and seven colours in the Quarry and Vale lines. (Photo: Deanna Guttman)

Local bakeries compete at Butter Tart Taste-Off in Peterborough

There were butter tarts galore at the 5th annual Kawarthas Northumberland Butter Tart Taste-Off, held on Saturday, September 23, 2017 at the Peterborough Farmers' Market in the Morrow Building. (Photo: Butter Tart Tour)

Doo Doo’s Bakery in Bailieboro, Quaker Oaks Farm in Sebright, Ste. Anne’s Bakery in Grafton, Baked4U in Peterborough, and Kawartha Shortbread in Fenelon Falls took the top honours at the 5th annual Butter Tart Taste-Off, held on Saturday (September 23) at the Peterborough Farmers’ Market in the Morrow Building.

Doo Doo’s Bakery took first place for the best plain butter tart, Quaker Oaks Farm for the best Canadiana butter tart, Ste. Anne’s Bakery for the best gluten-free butter tart, Baked4U for the best emerging baker, and Kawartha Shortbread for “best of the best”.

The Butter Tart Taste-Off was organized by the Kawarthas Northumberland Butter Tart Tour, Ontario’s largest food tour dedicated to butter tarts with more than 50 participating bakeries, restaurants, cafés, and resorts located across Kawarthas Northumberland. The tour operates year-round and is self-guided, allowing visitors to explore the region at their own pace.

Food Network Canada chef David Adjey presents Diane Rogers of Doo Doo's Bakery in Bailieboro with her first place trophy for the Best Plain Butter Tart. (Photo: Butter Tart Tour)
Food Network Canada chef David Adjey presents Diane Rogers of Doo Doo’s Bakery in Bailieboro with her first place trophy for the Best Plain Butter Tart. (Photo: Butter Tart Tour)

Bakeries in the Taste-Off competed in five different categories, with judges including local media personalities, culinary bloggers, politicians, and several judges chosen randomly from contests in the Butter Tart Tour social media community.

Food Network Canada chef David Adjey returned as a butter tart judge this year, and he also hosted an Iron-Chef-Style sous-chef show-down designed to discover the next great culinary talent from the region. The contestants were challenged to use local ingredients from the farmers’ market.

The sous-chefs from The Publican House in Peterborough and Ste. Anne’s Spa in Grafton tied for the win. The trophy will be shared, living at The Publican House for the first six months, and then at Ste. Anne’s Spa for the next six months.

“We are delighted with this year’s Butter Tart Taste-Off”, says Brenda Wood, Kawarthas Northumberland Butter Tart Tour Executive Director. “It was a great celebration of local food and local talent. It’s a real testament to how much Canadians love butter tarts and locally made, locally sourced culinary experiences.”

Here’s a list of all the winners at this year’s Butter Tart Taste-Off:

Best Plain Butter Tart

  • 1st: Doo Doo’s Bakery in Bailieboro
  • 2nd: Country Mart Homemade Baked Goods and Convenience in Buckhorn
  • 3rd: Betty’s Pies & Tarts in Cobourg

Best Canadiana Collection Butter Tart

Featuring tarts from the new Canadiana Collection celebrating Canada’s 150th.

  • 1st: “Mrs. Waldron’s Butter Tart” by Quaker Oaks Farm in Sebright
  • 2nd: “The Trudeau” by Baked4U in Peterborough
  • 3rd: The Stompin Tom by Doo Doo’s Bakery in Bailieboro

Best Gluten-Free Butter Tart

  • 1st: Ste. Anne’s Butter Tart by Ste. Anne’s Bakery in Grafton
  • 2nd: Featherly Pear Butter Tart by Ste. Anne’s Bakery in Grafton
  • 3rd: Maple gluten-free butter tart by Black Honey Dessert and Coffeehouse in Peterborough

Best Emerging Baker

For bakers who joined the tour in the last two years.

  • 1st: Pumpkin Butter Tart by Baked4U in Peterborough
  • 2nd: Maple Butter Tart by The Bakery Warkworth
  • 3rd: Maple Crunch by Arthur’s Pub in Cobourg.

Best of the Best

A delicious duel between past winners at the Taste-Off.

  • 1st: Maple Pecan by Kawartha Shortbread in Fenelon Falls
  • 2nd: Maple Butter Tart by Black Honey Dessert and Coffeehouse in Peterborough
  • 3rd: Pumpkin Butter Tart by Doo Doo’s Bakery in Bailieboro

An estimated 5,200 people attended the Butter Tart Taste-Off. In addition to the judging, many varieties of butter tarts were available to purchase.

For more information about the Kawarthas Northumberland Butter Tart Tour, visit www.buttertarttour.ca.

Serena Ryder coming to Showplace in Peterborough on December 15

Now an international superstar, Millbrook-raised Serena Ryder is performing at Showplace Performance Centre in Peterborough on December 15, 2017. (Photo: Richard Sibbald)

Juno award-winning musician and Millbrook native Serena Ryder will be performing at Showplace Performance Centre (290 George St. N., Peterborough) on Friday, December 15, 2017.

Showplace made the announcement today (September 25), after also announcing that Alan Doyle — best known as the lead singer for Great Big Sea — will performing at Showplace on Tuesday, February 20, 2018.

Tickets for Serena Ryder will cost $60 (plus service fees). Tickets for Alan Doyle will cost $50 (plus service fees) for floor seats or $40 (plus service fees) for balcony seats.

Tickets for both concerts go on sale on Friday, September 29th at 10 a.m. at the Showplace box office, by phone at 705-742-7469, or or online at www.showplace.org.

Former Great Big Sea frontman Alan Doyle will be performing at Showplace on Februrary 20, 2018.
Former Great Big Sea frontman Alan Doyle will be performing at Showplace on Februrary 20, 2018.

The 34-year-old Ryder last performed at Showplace in March 2013, as a fundraiser for Peterborough Musicfest, the annual summer concert series in Del Crary Park. She last performed in Peterborough when opening the 30th season season of Musicfest on June 25, 2016.

The Toronto-born musician was raised in Millbrook, just southwest of Peterborough, where her family still lives.

By the age of eight, she was singing covers at local legion halls and motels. She started writing her own songs at the age of 11 and, at 13, began playing guitar. At 15, she was performing folk tunes publicly with her piano teacher.

VIDEO: “Electric Love” – Serena Ryder

She moved to Peterborough at the age of 17, where she attended Peterborough Collegiate and Vocational School (PCVS). She started performing as a singer-songerwiter, both solo as well as with local bands such as Thousand Foot Krutch and Three Days Grace.

In 1999, she released her first full-length CD Falling Out, followed by Unlikely Emergency in 2005 (producing the song “Just Another Day” which received considerable play on Canadian radio) and If Your Memory Serves You Well (a collection of 12 covers of notable Canadian songs and three originals) in 2006.

She won the Juno Award for Best New Artist of the Year in 2008, the same year she released her next record Is It O.K.. That record won Ryder the Juno Award for Adult Alternative Album of the Year in 2009 and included the single “Little Bit of Red”, which won Ryder another Juno in 2010 for Best Video of the Year.

VIDEO: “Got Your Number” – Serena Ryder

Ryder achieved international superstardom following the release of her fifth album Harmony in 2012. That record produced the breakout hits “Stompa” and “What I Wouldn’t Do”.

“Stompa” was featured in an episode of ABC television’s hit series Grey’s Anatomy, which helped bring her music to the attention of an American audience.

The song, which Ryder subsequently performed on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno in July 2013, reached the top of the charts in both Canada and the U.S. and is certified four times platinum.

VIDEO: “Stompa” – Serena Ryder

In March 2014, Ryder co-hosted the Juno Awards, where she also won Songwriter of the Year and Artist of the Year (beating out Celine Dion, Drake, Michael Bublé, and Robin Thicke).

In June 2016, Ryder released the single “Got Your Number” from her latest record, the 17-song album Utopia, which dropped in May 2017 along with the EP Electric Love.

Also in 2016, Ryder was inducted into the Peterborough Pathway of Fame.

VIDEO: “What I Wouldn’t Do” – Serena Ryder

Bobcaygeon man charged under one-metre law after car hits cyclist

A 77-year-old Bobcaygeon man has been charged under Ontario’s one-metre rule after his vehicle collided with a bicycle on Friday, September 22 on Kawartha Lakes Road 8, just west of Bobcaygeon.

The involved driver and several witnesses remained on the scene after the collision.

A 51-year-old female cyclist sustained non-life threatening injuries and was transported to a local hospital.

Following a police investigation, Douglas Parker, 77, of Bobcaygeon has been charged with Fail to Leave One Metre While Passing Bicycle contrary to section 148(6.1) of the Highway Traffic Act.

Often referred to as the “one-metre rule”, the law passed in September 2015 requires drivers of motor vehicles when passing a cyclist to maintain a minimum distance of one metre between their vehicle and the cyclist.

The penalty is a fine in the range of $60 to $500 and an additional two demerit points on the driver’s record.

City of Kawartha Lakes police chief retiring next August

Chief John Hagarty of the City of Kawartha Lakes Police Service (Photo: City of Kawartha Lakes Police Service)

John Hagarty, Chief of Police of the City of Kawartha Lakes Police Service (KLPS), is retiring in August 2018.

Hagarty made the announcement this morning (September 25) at a meeting of the Police Services Board.

Hagarty became Chief of Police at KLPS in November 2005. He was previously Deputy Chief at the Stratford Police Service for more than three years.

This article has been corrected for a misspelling of Chief Hargarty’s surname.

Neil Young spotted in downtown Peterborough

Neil Young at soundcheck for the Farm Aid Concert held Saturday, September 16 in Pennsylvania. The legendary performer, who spent his childhood years in nearby Omemee, is being inducted into Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame on September 23, 2017.

Keep your eyes open: iconic musician Neil Young was spotted walking around downtown Peterborough on Friday, September 22nd.

While several people have said they saw him, we don’t have any pictures (yet) to prove it. Presumably, most people were too surprised to take a photo.

One is Evangeline Gentle, who says she didn’t realize she was sharing the patio with him at The Only Cafe.

“I was too engulfed in a book to realize I was sharing a patio with Neil Young,” she writes on Facebook. “He was at The Only for lunch and when he left the bartender was like ‘you missed Neil Young’.”

Apparently he also got a latte at Black Honey and then strolled down Hunter Street.

“My friend and her husband saw him,” writes Rhonda Caley Lustic on Facebook. “They were on a patio having lunch and he was walking by.”

“My friend saw him and Darryl Hannah at Joanne’s Place,” Dana Smith-Hetherton adds.

VIDEO: Neil Young in Omemee (posted on September 23, 2017)

It makes sense Young, who lives in northern California, was in the area. After all, he spent his childhood years in nearby Omemee and has visited the town (where his father Scott Young lived until he passed away) several times (including last week as the video he posted on Facebook and Twitter shows).

He has also shown up unexpectedly in Peterborough before, most famously in 1998 when he bought a vintage 1959 Martin acoustic guitar from the since-closed Ed’s Music on Park Street in Peterborough.

Young was probably in the area in advance of his induction into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame — along with Bruce Cockburn (who is performing a sold-out concert at Showplace in Peterborough on Monday, September 25th), Beau Dommage, and Stéphane Venne — at Massey Hall in Toronto, which took place on Saturday, September 23rd. Earlier this month, Young released Hitchhiker, a studio LP recorded on August 11, 1976 featuring 10 songs that Young recorded accompanied by acoustic guitar or piano.

Neil Young. (Photo: Christopher Wahl)
Neil Young. (Photo: Christopher Wahl)

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