Doug Zywina
Tragedy rocks community
A memorial has sprung up at the intersection in Gilbert Plains that was the site of a tragic accident which claimed the lives of four teenagers, last week.
On Mar. 29, at approximately 10:50 p.m., Dauphin RCMP received numerous calls about a motor vehicle collision involving a semi-trailer and a car at the junction of Hwy. 5 and PR 274.
Initial investigation determined that a car with five occupants was travelling northbound on PR 274 into the town of Gilbert Plains when it failed to stop at the stop sign.
A semi-trailer was travelling eastbound on Hwy. 5, and the car struck the trailer portion of the semi-trailer. Two 17-year-old males and one 18-year-old male, the driver, were pronounced dead at the scene. All were from the Dauphin area. An 18-year-old female from Carberry was transported to hospital, where she was pronounced dead. A 15-year-old female from the RM of Dauphin was transported to hospital with serious injuries, where she remains.
The 30-year-old male driver of the semi, from Saskatoon, was not physically injured in the collision.
The investigation continues with the assistance of a RCMP Forensic Collision Reconstructionist.
Provincial champs crowned
Joelle Brown and her team of Maureen Bonar, Natalie Claude Harding and Deb McCreanor of Charleswood built a 4-0 lead after three ends and hung on to win the Pharmasave Senior Women’s Curling Provincials in Dauphin, Monday afternoon, beating defending champion Terry Ursel of Neepawa, 5-3 in the final.
In the Strathcona Trust Men’s Provincials, Dave Boehmer and his team of Dale Lott, Sean Bracken and George Hacking of Petersfield erased a 5-1 deficit with two in the fifth and steals in the last three ends to beat defending champion Randy Neufeld of La Salle, 6-5, to win the provincial title.
Butch Mouck of Gilbert Plains, pictured above, qualified for playoffs, but lost in the crossover to Richard Muntain of the Granite Curling Club.
Kings looking to get back into the series
The Dauphin Kings find themselves in a hole after opening the best-of-seven quarterfinal series with the Swan Valley Stampeders with a pair of losses.
The Kings carried a 1-0 lead into the first period of game one, Friday in Swan River, but could not hold the lead in the third, giving up the tying goal less than five minutes in, before Swan Valley scored the winning goal with 1:08 remaining.
Kings coach and general manager Doug Hedley said the first 40 minutes of game one was really good for his team.
“We really shut down the middle, shut down their speed, controlled the neutral zone. (Carter) Zalischuk got a great goal on hard work and compete,” he said.
In the third period, the Kings forwards failed to protect the middle of the ice in the defensive zone resulting in a number of opportunities for the Stampeders.
“Sheff (goaltender Cole Sheffield) made some great saves and kept us in it,” Hedley said.
The winning goal came off a faceoff in the Kings end when a shot from Swan Valley defenceman Collin Jennings deflected in off of Justin Keck’s pants.
“But I was happy with the effort. We were really good for 40 minutes. It was a decent crowd there and there was a good atmosphere and the guys played very well,” Hedley said.
The Kings came out flying in the first period of game two on Saturday.
Dauphin outshot the Stampeders, 18-10 in the frame and carried a 2-1 lead into the second period.
They increased their advantage to 4-2, eight-and-a-half minutes into the second, before running into penalty trouble, resulting in Swan Valley scoring four power-play goals in the frame en route to a 5-4 lead entering the third.
After Jakob Brook tied the game at five, 8:17 into the third, Jennings completed a hat trick with 2:29 remaining to lift the Stampeders to a 6-5 victory and a two-games-to-none lead.
“We know we have team speed and when we play fast, we’re a tough team to beat,” Hedley said of the team’s start in game two. “Sometimes we just get to not stopping on pucks and getting on the wrong side of battles.”
Most of Swan Valley’s offence comes from the line of Keck, Trey Sauder and Jakob Jones, which combined for 85 goals and 195 points in the regular season.
When that line is on the ice, Hedley said teams have to be good in the D zone, be strong in the corners and protect the middle of the ice.
“And tonight, whether you agree with the penalties or not, we still took four or five in a row and one five-on-three that I think they sold pretty well. The bench pretty well called it. There was no hand up until the bench yelled, then the hand came up,” Hedley said, adding he liked the way the team pushed back in the third.
“I really liked our third period. We pushed back after giving up a two-goal lead and being down going into the last 20 minutes. I thought the team really show a push and resilience and tied the game up,” he said.
Even after Swan Valley took the lead late, the Kings still had some good opportunities to tie the game late.
Hedley knows the series is far from over, remembering last year’s series with Swan Valley, when the Stampeders won two games after Dauphin took a three-games-to-none lead.
“It’s not over until you win four. We were sitting here last year, up 2-0 and it ended up going six,” he said.
“You’ve got to get some goaltending. You’ve got to get big saves at the right time. And stay out of the penalty box. You can’t play on your heels and you can’t be killing penalties for eight, nine, 10 minutes in a row and expect to be on your toes all the time. We’ve just got to figure it out. Check with our feet and control our sticks and make sure we come back and push harder.”
Saying a prayer
Pine Creek First Nation, in partnership with Ebb and Flow First Nation, hosted a naming ceremony on the lot they own between McDonald’s and the Dollar Store, Mar. 20.
Those in attendance said a prayer by the sacred fire before throwing some tobacco into the flames.
An eight-lane gas bar, to be named Anishinabe Gas Bar, will be built on the site.
A feast was served following the ceremony.
Kemp-Drysdale looks to step back from Skate Dauphin
Since 2008, Donna Kemp-Drysdale has been teaching youngsters in Dauphin as young as two how to skate. But after 14 years at the helm of Skate Dauphin, she is looking to take a step back and let someone else takes the reins.
Kemp-Drysdale began her career as a junior coach in 1978 at the age of 11 in Brandon.
“And then I started coaching professionally in 1984 in Ste. Rose. So that’s what brought me to the Parkland,” she said, adding she began coaching in Dauphin in 2008. “So just after they moved into the new building. But I did spend a lot of time in the old DMCC as far as that goes. It was an incredible building. Had a great vibe happening in there,” Kemp-Drysdale said.
“Lots and lots of early morning skates in there that I would travel when I was working with some of the students from Dauphin when I was teaching in Ste. Rose.”
In 1982, Kemp-Drysdale became the Manitoba master clinic conductor for the Can Power Skate program.
“So my role at that point was I traveled all around Manitoba doing clinics for coaches to learn how to do power skating. So within that realm, I reached out to a lot of different people in different communities,” she said, adding she held some clinics in Saskatchewan, as well.
There are many different levels that Kemp-Drysdale enjoys about coaching.
“The reality is I’m not inventing the wheel. I’m passing on knowledge that I’ve gained and processed and then give over to the students. And the expectation is that they process that knowledge and they have to put it into their abilities,” she said. “For some kids, they soak it up like a sponge. Other kids, it just falls to the ice. And it’s not so much that they don’t want to learn, they just don’t translate it well. So everybody learns in so many different ways. And as a coach, it’s my responsibility to come up with ways that they’ll understand it.”
Get the full story in this week's Total Market Coverage Dauphin Herald!
Prokopowich to enter Manitoba Curling Hall of Fame
Sifton’s Peter Prokopowich will be entering the Manitoba Curling Hall of Fame this spring.
The induction dinner and ceremony, which will be held, May 7 in Brandon, will see the local curler inducted into the hall with the Kelly Robertson team, which also included Doug Armour and Bob Scales.
Curling out of the Neepawa Curling Club, the quartet won provincial senior men’s title won in 2011, 2012 and 2014, losing in the final in 2013.
They had a memorable run in 2011, winning the national title, which allowed them to represent Canada at the world’s in 2012, where they lost to Ireland’s John Jo Kenny in the final in an extra end.
“I was quite surprised. I really didn’t expect that. It came as a nice surprise,” he said of his reaction when he heard the news.
Prokopowich remember how well they all got along as a team.
“And that was the key to winning. Everybody was on the same page,” he said.
It was quite an experience, Prokopowich said of the team’s success, noting 2011 was the first year they had curled together.
“We had lost our first game in the qualifier in the bonspiel and then went through to win the bonspiel,” he said. “And then we went on a run at provincials and nationals. To win Canada was an amazing year. People say representing your country, what a great feeling it is. And it really is to go to another country and represent (Canada). It was quite the experience. It was quite a run we had.”
Prokopowich knows quite a few of the other inductees and is looking forward to the evening.
He admits he keeps in touch with his former teammates on a regular basis.
“We don’t curl together anymore, but we touch base a few times a year,” he said.
Prokopowich considers himself lucky, having curled on a number of good teams over the years.
“And for some reason that team just clicked. I don’t even really know why, but things just worked out for us. It was kind of nice after all those years,” he said. “I consider myself very lucky. I got to play in bonspiels in Sifton and all the small surrounding towns and then to go on and represent Canada, you can’t ask for anything else.”
Kings, Stampeders set for quarterfinal rematch
The Dauphin Kings are set to face the Swan Valley Stampeders in a rematch of last year’s Manitoba Junior Hockey League quarterfinal series, which the Kings won in six games.
Dauphin ended the season with a 3-2 overtime loss to the Winkler Flyers, Saturday in Winkler. That came on the heels of a 6-2 victory over the Winnipeg Freeze, last Monday in Winnipeg.
The Kings dressed APs Marco Bodnarski, Havryil Simchuk and Madden Murray, while Roan Coe made his MJHL debut on the blueline.
Kings head coach and general manager Doug Hedley said it was a tough environment in front of a large crowd, noting the Flyers dressed their full lineup.
“I thought all our kids played real well. Roan Coe was good on the back ende, as was Marco Bodnarski. Simchuk and Murray all played very well,” he said, adding the Kings only dressed four 20-year-olds, including goaltender Dmytro Kubritskyi, who made 49 saves in the loss. “Like I said, it was a tough enviroment to play in and they responded really well. They didn’t look out of place at all and fit right in,” Hedley added.
Dauphin finishes the season in fourth place in the MGEU West Division with a 32-21-3-2 record. Their 69 points were two back of third-place Virden and three behind second-place OCN.
The Kings will now prepare to face the 36-16-5-1 Stampeders in the quarterfinals.
Dauphin won the season series, winning four of the six games. Five of the six contests were decided by one goal, with the Kings winning three times in overtime. The only game not decided by a goal was a 3-00 Swan Valley victory in the first game between the two teams, Sept. 23.
Hedley expects a long, tough series between the two rivals.
“I’m expecting a real battle. Obviously, they’re well coached and have a good hockey club. We just have to make sure we bring our A game,” he said. “Hopefully, everybody is healthy and 100 per cent and we get four lines rolling. I think we stack up very well against them.”
Hedley knows goaltending will be key to any team’s success and with Swan Valley’s Kobe Grant winning the Top Goaltender Award this season, the Kings will have to find ways to get to him.
“The biggest thing is second shots. Taking his eyes away as you can by sitting in front of him. We have to get to the paint. We have to get to the net. We have to make it difficult for him to see pucks,” Hedley said. “Do as much as we can to create traffic in front of him.”
The schedule for the series can be found below!
MGEU WEST – (1) Swan Valley Stampeders vs (4) Dauphin Kings
***If necessary
| Fri, Mar 24 | Dauphin Kings | at | Swan Valley Stampeders | 7:00 pm |
| Sat, Mar 25 | Swan Valley Stampeders | at | Dauphin Kings | 7:30 pm |
| Tue, Mar 28 | Dauphin Kings | at | Swan Valley Stampeders | 7:00 pm |
| Fri, Mar 31 | Swan Valley Stampeders | at | Dauphin Kings | 7:30 pm |
| Sat, Apr 1 | Dauphin Kings | at | Swan Valley Stampeders | 7:00 pm *** |
| Tue, Apr 4 | Swan Valley Stampeders | at | Dauphin Kings | 7:30 pm *** |
| Wed, Apr 5 | Dauphin Kings | at | Swan Valley Stampeders | 7:00 pm *** |
The Grounds: Gilbert Plains Country Club filling a need

A new multifunctional wedding venue has opened at the Gilbert Plains Country Club.
“But it’s also going to serve the community as just being open for anyone to rent for whatever they might need or want,” said Easton Hedley, proprietor of The Grounds. “So we will have a ceremony site available. They’re going to be planting a bunch of trees and flowers and making it look very beautiful this spring.”
Hedley said it will take a few years to make the ceremony site feel like a park setting, which is the goal.
“But we’re pretty convinced that the wait will be worth it,” she said.
The community hall, which was built over the last couple of years, will be available for other events, such as retirement or birthday parties or meetings.
“Whatever you may want. We want to book that out and make it as busy as possible,” Hedley said.
Hedley pointed out the hall was originally built to host golf tournaments and golf-related events.
“But it started to take on a life of it’s own. And we took a look at it after it was built. And it was like, ‘how can we share this with more people? How can we generate more revenue that we can put back into the course? How can we use it more effectively’?” she said, adding she had gotten married last summer. “And getting married in the Parkland was quite difficult, because we don’t have any wedding venues. That is, a hall and a ceremony site available,” Hedley said. “And there is also nowhere within an hour that is a wedding venue that is also a golf course. So they thought that this is something that we could bring to people outside of Winnipeg, essentially,” she said.
Planning a wedding can be expensive, as well as time consuming. So The Grounds has partnered with more than 40 local vendors, such as makeup artists, photographers, hoteliers, Air BnBs, DJs and caterers.
“All the things you need to really make your wedding special and to make it go. So they’re offering their services to our couples for a monetary discount. And it’s also going to help our couples who book with us in they’re planning process, because they don’t have to sort everything out on their own,” Hedley said, adding there is no obligation to use their vendors as it is being offered as a service.
Anyone who wishes to make a booking can call Hedley at 204-648-5047 or email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
There is also an Instagram and Facebook page, both at The Grounds. There is already one confirmed booking for this September and interest in another wedding in 2024.
“So I’m hoping with some of this media, we’re going to be some more bookings and, hopefully, get this thing off the ground, because we really want to share the golf course with people. Gilbert Plains is beautiful and it’s kind of a hidden gem. So we really want to share it and bring people together in the Parkland,” Hedley said.
The ceremony site, located along side the driving range, includes wooden arches, which can be decorated however the couples want.
“There’s a horseshoe area that we’re going to make a little more private with trees and how we’re going to landscape that part. So it’s going to be your own private area close to the parking lot so people have easy access,” Hedley added. “Then you can walk right across the beautiful bridge right into your reception.”
Brewing up a future for downtown
A new brewing company calling Dauphin home will be opening soon.
Obsolete Brewing Co., will operate out of the former Acklands building at 26 2nd Ave. NW.
The idea sprang from the minds of Ryan Vanderheyden, Steven Sobering and Kevin Steinbachs.
“Really, we just talked about it over the course of having beers, really,” said Vanderheyden. “We just talked about how it would be nice if Dauphin had a brewery. And then, at that time, we weren’t thinking about creating one. Then a couple of months down the road, we saw a building available. We went into the building, said, ‘this would be a great place for our brewery,’ and then we started it from there.”
According to Sobering, Vanderheyden is passionate about micro-brewing and beer making in general and already has ties to some micro-breweries in the province.
Sobering has an eye towards tourism and feels a brewery would help attract tourists to the area.
The group found a small batch brewing system and brewed a lot of beer in case they had to brew their product themselves.
“We brewed a lot of beer. It was pretty good. During COVID time, we weren’t able to get together with a lot of people, so we had some small tastings and they went over really well,” Vanderheyden said. “And then we just went through all the steps of finding the right equipment that would fit our size of company that we were going for. And finding everybody to be part of the team that we would need to hire to fit out the building.”
Advertising through the Internet, the group hired Marco Bardelli, a brewer from Brazil, who moved to Dauphin with his wife and two children not long ago.
“He’s replaced us for the brewing, which is probably beneficial to everybody involved. He’s a great brewer that has 12 years of craft brewing experience that will help us out starting up,” Vanderheyden said, adding Bardelli was able to correct some of the things the ownership group was doing. “We didn’t even know what we were doing wrong,” Sobering said.
“Even the equipment fit out, after ordering all our equipment, he did confirm we made the right choices in the size of equipment. But after going through the initial set up, he produced a massive list, like, ‘okay, now you also need this.’ I don’t even think we knew enough to know what we needed. It would have been a real trial and error, whereas now, we can hit the ground running, which is going to be a big benefit.”
The group purchased the lot right next door where Kelleher Ford used to be located and they plan to use that for parking, as well as a patio area, where patrons can sit.
The group, Vanderheyden said, envisions their area of the city as a craft district. The brewery is across the street from a bakery and meat shop, it is within walking distance of the Watson Art Centre and Vermillion Park.
“So people can walk in this area. So we hope we can encourage people to park in our area, come in, have a beer, go shopping at Prairie Supply Co., get some baking goods, a steak for the weekend and they can go home,” he said. “So we’re hoping to create a walking culture in the downtown here, where people can shop and see all the things that we have down here.”
Planning for the brewery began in 2020.
“We incorporated in November 2020,” Vanderheyden said.
Using their small brewing system, Bardelli has already manufactured more than 20 beer recipes. Because it is a small system, the beer does not last because of the tastings the group does.
“I think we have five or six at any given time for tastings. We’ve been touring people through here constantly, just different groups,” Sobering said.
The plan is to have a core line of six to eight different beer recipes, with as many as 20 available for tastings.
“We shifted the business model to be a tourist brewery. We can have a multitude of beers, so that everytime you come here, there will be something new to experience,” Sobering said, adding this will allow them to source local ingredients. There are also plans to produce non-alcoholic beers. “Our brewer makes kombucha, home-made lemonades, gingerale, the list actually goes on,” Vanderheyden said.
“We want the space not to feel like a lounge for people just to come to drink. We want it to be like a family friendly space, so kids can come and get that craft soda. They actually get to experience the new sodas, as well. And their parents can have a beer.”
They also plan to serve coffee.
Currently, the group is waiting for an electrical panel to be constructed. Once they receive that, there will be a bit of a process to get licensed at the provincial level.
“But we do hope to be manufacturing by April or May and maybe a grand opening by June,” Vanderheyden said.
Sobering said the production side of the business will be completed fast, so they can make beer in cans and kegs.
“So we can supply the liquor stores to sell over the counter or kegs in restaurants. But the tasting room will take a little longer, because it’s a different type of occupancy,” he said.
While there will be a learning curve when it comes to distribution, the plan is to provide their product in as many liquor stores as they can, while providing kegs to restaurants.
“And then selling out of the taproom. The best way to get the beer will be to come to the taproom. It will be the freshest. It will be the most variety,” Vanderheyden said.
Short-term there will not be many staff working at the brewery, but as the company grows, so too, will the number of staff needed.
Sobering noted all three partners in the brewery are community-minded.
“We’re all very invested in Dauphin’s prosperity and want to make Dauphin and great place to live. We want to attract some of those visitors, just that little extra step to come to Dauphin,” he said. “If we can sell our beer throughout the province and bring those revenues back here, we can just keep putting it back into the business and back into the community and keep adding more amenities. I think that was one thing all three of us are very committed to.”
Sobering has not heard any negativity around the project, adding people are positive about it.
“People are really excited about it,” he said. “I definitely think it’s going to be a real asset. It might mark a point in time where it’s before-and-after. We kind of want to see ourselves as what we do for Dauphin and this part of the city is what Lakehouse did for Clear Lake when they upgraded. Sometimes it just takes that catalyst, that first step to create that snowball effect. And we’re really hopeful that it’s going to be a hit.”
Can I have your autograph?
Following the game, Mar. 3, fans who collected the Dauphin Kings hockey cards had the opportunity to get them autographed by the entire team.
The collectibles were handed out to fans at the game that evening.