Sunday, 05 February 2023 09:52

Parkland Acupuncture opens in Grandview

A new therapy service will be based out of Grandview and offering acupuncture services.

Parkland Acupuncture is operated by Steve Payne and opened up this month. Payne, his wife and children recently moved to Grandview from Australia to be closer to his in-laws, the Grextons.

More in this issue.

Published in Roblin Review News
Tagged under
Wednesday, 01 February 2023 12:03

Free provincial park access

The Manitoba government will once again offer free park entry for the entire month of February so Manitobans and visitors can take advantage of the many winter activities available in provincial parks, Environment, Climate and Parks Minister Jeff Wharton announced.
“In Manitoba’s provincial parks, winter is a season worth celebrating,” said Wharton. “Our government is pleased to make it easier for Manitobans to participate in invigorating, enjoyable winter experiences surrounded by our province’s natural beauty.”

Tagged under
Wednesday, 01 February 2023 12:01

Trappers’ Chair spills the tea

The 76th Annual Northern Manitoba Trappers’ Festival is quickly approaching with opening ceremonies taking place two weeks from today.
This year’s board of directors has been working diligently to ensure that the 2023 Festival is as exciting as last years event, and with no COVID restrictions in place, organizers are excited to be able to hold the events just like before the pandemic.
“Our board has been spending hundreds of hours preparing for all the usual Trappers’ Festival events,” 2023 Festival Chairperson Desarae Lambert commented. Lambert explained this year’s Festival will be full steam ahead and she hopes the community is as excited as the board is

Tagged under
Wednesday, 01 February 2023 11:59

Spiny Waterflea, Zebra Mussels detected in samples

The fisheries branch of Natural Resources and Northern Development released an update on Aquatic Invasive Species (AIS) for Foot Print and Cedar Lake recently. They have detected the Spiny Waterflea from five samples taken from Foot Print Lake during the 2022 open water season. The sample was confirmed in the laboratory in late November.
A total of 25 Spiny Waterfleas were found in five out of seven samples from Foot Print Lake. This detection indicates there could be an established or reproducing population of Spiny Waterflea in the lake.

Tagged under
Wednesday, 01 February 2023 11:58

OCN invests in affordable housing apartments

A joint partnership between the federal and provincial governments, and Opaskwayak Cree Nation (OCN) will provide affordable housing in Winnipeg for Indigenous students, elders and young families. The project is estimated to cost around $17.4 million, with the federal government contributing $15.6 million, OCN spending $1.8 million and the Province committed $105,000 through Efficiency Manitoba.

Published in Opasquia Times News
Tagged under
Wednesday, 01 February 2023 11:56

Council has many irons in the fire

The Town of The Pas Council met last week and has lots on the go, in terms of managing projects and operations for the community. Every week the Council makes a point of recognizing the efforts of organizations or events within the community for the work they do either on a certain project, event or situation.
“We wanted to throw out some recognition to our local RCMP and all the local members they brought in to help with an incident that resulted in loss of life. I’m sure it was a difficult situation with lots of long hours of work involved.

Published in Opasquia Times News
Tagged under
Tuesday, 31 January 2023 08:16

Church goes the distance with his sled dog team

Leon Church of Bowsman is a trainer who has spent the last few years conditioning his athletes and perfecting his lines so he could take them across Canada to participate in a considerable challenge. That challenge would be a 100-mile and 200-mile race in the Yukon and British Columbia, and the athletes would be a team of 12 husky/ labrador-mix dogs that Church would drive across Canada so that together they would make the incredible trek as a team of sled dogs and their musher.
“We’ve been developing a team that I feel comfortable taking travelling and racing, seeing what they can do up against other groups,” said Church. “I want to see how my dogs will do on the long trails and how things will go.”
Church has spent a few years growing his team. His oldest dog isn’t more than five years old, but through acquiring rescues and doing some selective breeding with the dogs he had, he was able to develop a team that he felt could go the distance.
“Last year, we did the Torch River Run, out of Christopher Lake, Sask.,” said Church. “It’s a 40 mile race two days in a row, so you run 40 miles one day and 40 miles the next.” That was Church’s first attempt at competitive sled dog racing, but this year brings additional challenges with a greater distance. The first race that Church will take part in at the end of this week is the Caledonia Classic in Fort St. James, B.C., from Feb. 3-5. This race will be 200 miles.
Church will follow it up on Feb. 11 with a 100-mile race in Whitehorse, Yukon at Yukon Quest. He noted that even though the second event had higher distances available, he wanted to take it easy on the second go around because he still wanted to participate in the Canadian Challenge that starts in Prince Albert, Sask. on Feb. 20. Church will be racing a team of 10 at each event, but will be bringing along two spare dogs in case he needs to change out his scratch list between races. “Each race is a little different,” said Church. “Each has mandatory rest amounts per race based on the distances you go.” He noted that the Caledonia Classic has a total of 14 hours worth of mandatory
rest periods divided between three checkpoints.
The mandatory rest periods ensure the health and safety of the dogs to make sure they can complete the whole thing. “I’m depending on my dogs to go about 50 miles in about six hours,” said Church, noting that training runs are currently running at an average pace of nine miles per hour.
“It’s very much a learning thing to see where we size up and find out what I can and can’t expect from them. I’m pretty confident in the group that we’ll have a good showing. “This has been something I’ve wanted to do for as long as I could remember,” Church continued. “This month coming up is a pretty big thing for me. The excitement level is high to get out there.” When Church started raising and training dogs to be sled dogs, he didn’t necessarily do it
in order to race them, as he felt it might have been a pipe dream. “That was the ultimate goal, but it didn’t seem like a possibility at the time,” he said. “The reason I got into it was because I’m a third generation trapper in the Porcupine Mountain and I don’t like relying on Ski-doos and machinery. I do a lot of things with hand tools and self-powered things, even boats in the summertime.
“I know that I can trust my dogs to get where we need to be no matter what. (Sled dog racing) is definitely a unique sport, but it’s one I really enjoyed since I got into it.” Church’s younger dogs have gotten used to the idea of being harnessed to the sled right from young, but serious training begins closer to when they were two years old, when they are more mature and able to focus on the task at hand.
Conditioning began in late summer, with Church getting his dogs to follow him on his quad, free running beside. Once the weather cooled down and the snow fell, then he could hitch them to the lines and incrementally get them running longer distances, just like any long-distance runner would. He conveniently has been able to run them up and down the Woody River located behind his acreage near Bowsman. “It’s very much how any other athlete would
go about training,” said Church. “Just consistent activity, good diet, good exercise and good rest. These guys have an unbreakable will to harness up and run. They love to go. No one wants to stay home when it’s time to go.”
Church also makes sure that he trains his dogs with an appropriately weighed down sled, to get them ready for the trail. During these competitive events, there is often mandatory gear to take, such as a sleeping bag, tent, first aid, boots and jackets for the dogs, an alcohol cooker to melt water, and the like, to ensure that the musher and the dogs are prepared for the long journey over the cold and remote terrain.
Church also makes good use of the Swan Valley Veterinary Clinic to check up on his team and double check that everyone is in good health for the big trip. “Some of the bigger races even have vet checks before and after the races as well,” said Church. “The dogs are very well monitored and safe.” In order to keep his athletes in tip-top shape, Church has also started making his own dog food, using meat and items from his garden to put together a product that he found to be more nutritious and more easily digestible by the dogs than the commercial dog food he had been feeding to them prior.
Of course, as is natural on any team, Church has to deal with the different personalities of the dogs and putting them in roles that they work best to create a better team overall. “The dogs all have their own way to be and even their own preferences of whether they want to be on the right side or the left side,” he said. “One of them can’t run or focus with anyone behind him, so he has to be at the back. “It’s like picking a hockey team. You monitor them to see who works well with each other and some don’t gel so you keep them apart. “The dynamic in my group is nice because everyone here has been together for three or four years,” Church continued. “Now that we’ve trained as much
as we have, when I get home from a run, instead of putting them away one at a time, I can just let them all go and they run around the yard doing their own thing. There’s no fights and everyone gets along. And, they come to me when I walk to their spot to give them food.
“It’s all a matter of how much time you put into them. If you really put the work in, they’ll reward you with the best behaviour you can imagine. It’s amazing what these dogs have been able to learn the last couple of years.”
Not all the dogs that Church has had were suited for his A-team, but he has made sure that those dogs were able to find alternative homes. Church also has enough dogs for him to train a second line, and then some so that he has a backup squad when it’s time to retire his stars.
At publication time, Church was packing up his dogs and gear and heading out onto the open road, hoping to come back with new experiences and stories to tell as he progresses further in his pursuit of sled dog racing.

Tagged under
Tuesday, 31 January 2023 08:12

DEEP FREEZE

The Swan Valley entered the polar vortex last weekend, with temperatures getting as cold as -35.7C on Sunday (Jan. 29). Forecasts indicate that the cold snap is short lived, with weather returning to single digit temperatures by the upcoming weekend.

Tagged under
Tuesday, 31 January 2023 07:23

A cultural tradition

Dauphin Kings captain Owen Wareham, left, and OCN Blizzard captain Riley Zimmerman took part in the traditional Ukrainian greeting featuring the presentation of bread, salt and wheat prior to the game, Friday, during the annual Ukrainian Night.

A crowd of 1,994 fans took in the festivities, which included dance recitals by local Ukrainian dance groups, Boris Nowasad and the Melody Kings greeting fans as they entered Credit Union Place and the ever popular kielbasa toss and mattress races.

Fans were sent home happy after the Kings won the game, 5-2.

Tagged under

No team has been able to pull away in the Manitoba Junior Hockey League’s tight MGEU West Division.

With four straight wins, the Dauphin Kings are tied with the Waywayseecappo Wolverines and Swan Valley Stampeders atop the division with 51 points each, while the OCN Blizzard are just two points back and the Virden Oil Capitals are creeping up, sitting two back of OCN for the final playoff spot and only four points out of first place.

The Kings swept a weekend twinbill over the Blizzard, winning Friday’s Ukrainian Night game, 5-2, before scoring a 2-1 win, Sunday.

Kings head coach and general manager Doug Hedley pointed out the Kings have the most wins of any team in the division with 24.

“How crazy is that. Three at 51. One at 49. One at 47. Four points between first and out of the playoffs,” he said.

Friday’s Ukrainian Night contest provided the best atmosphere Hedley has ever seen at a Kings game.

“Sold out seats and standing room. It was really good,” he said.

After the first 10 minutes of Friday’s game, Hedley felt the Kings started using their speed to get pucks up ice.

“Before that, we were trying to beat somebody, carrying the puck instead of moving it up ice and then using our speed. After the (media) timeout, we settled in and got on our toes,” he said. “We were first to pucks a lot on the forecheck. And then created some great chances. Our power play was good on Friday. We had some net-front presence, unlike tonight (Sunday).”

Hedley was pleased with the patience the team showed in Sunday’s win.

“We weren’t giving up many chances. Our power play could have stepped up a little bit, especially in the second period, but they did in the third and we found a way to get it done,” he said.

Twenty-year-old goalie Dmytro Kubritskyi made his Kings debut, Friday, making 30 saves in the victory. Sunday’s starter, Cole Sheffield, picked up his third straight win in which he only allowed one goal.

“He’s definitely a guy that we’re happy with. And then what can you say about (Kubritskyi’s) first start. He was outstanding. He made some good saves and made it look easy,” Hedley said.

The Kings will face the Manitoba Junior Hockey League’s newest franchise, the Niverville Nighthawks, Friday in Dauphin at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday in Niverville at 3 p.m.

“They’re fighting for a playoff spot, as well. They’re seven ahead of the Blues,” Hedley said. “I know they’re a hard working team. They play very well, with good structure. They’re well coached. And we know they’re going to come at us hard. They’ve got some good talent there. It’s going to be a hard weekend.”

With so much video now available, teams are familiar with their opponents even without playing each other. So the Kings will familiarize themselves with Niverville and how they play.

“The biggest thing for us is to focus on what we do well. When we play fast, use our speed and separate guys from pucks and our back pressure with guys standing up, and just focusing on transition and using our speed to go on two-on-ones and odd man rushes, if we stay structured through the neutral zone, we’re a tough team to beat,” Hedley said.

Published in Dauphin Herald Sports
Tagged under
Page 138 of 188