September/October 2010
Transcription
September/October 2010
Chronicle The RAMARA SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2010 8 An ancient call The common loon is estimated to be between 50 and 80 million years old Art attack 20 Seeds of hope 22 A fair to remember 24 Great grades pay off 32 Art lovers made more than 600 visits to the six points on the first Ramara ArtPark and Studio Tour in July A Ramara woman is part of a groundbreaking study of an alternative to traditional radiation therapy for cancer patients The 120th edition of the Ramona Fall Fair will be held Friday and Saturday, Sept. 17 and 18 Our cover Lagoon City photographer Gail Smith took this photo on Sept. 30, 2006, on a trip to Beausoleil Island near Port Severn. It has special meaning for us because it was the image we used on the original mock-up of the magazine. Smith shot it with a Canon EOS Digital Rebel XT at 1/250th of a second, f/11. ʻThe overcast conditions brought out the colour of the leaves against the grey rocks, which also framed the bay,ʼ she says. 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Handcrafted Wood and Stone deSigns Jim Brown www.handcraftedesigns.ca (705)833-1291 We live in Ramara The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Page 1 do the same?” One of the first things we heard when we started the In fact, Canada Post says, it magazine was that Ramara has is open to the notion of change, an identity crisis. That is probaand would be willing to talk bly true, just as it is for other about new addresses if it remunicipal entities formed ceived a formal request to do through amalgamation, such as so from the Township. Such a the sprawling City of Kawartha process is now under way in Lakes to the east of us. Collingwood. One Then there is the issue of manifes- Dann Oliver took the Ramara telephone listings. Until retation of Chronicle to Winnipeg in June. He is cently, one had to know this crisis, seen here on the grounds of the whether a Ramara resident was we heard, Manitoba legislature, with his arm listed under Orillia, Brechin or around a statue of Nellie McClung, was that Sebright in order to look the one of the Famous Five, whose mail adnumber up. But in August, the Supreme Court challenge led to dressed to women being legally recognized as Orillia and area phone book places came out with residents listed ʻpersonsʼ in Canada. Next time Darleen Cormier such as youʼre out of town, do what Dann alphabetically regardless of Lagoon City and Sebright, for does. Take the magazine with you where they live in the district. instance, would not get through and send us a photo like this one. A spokesperson for Yellow unless the destination included Pages Group says the change was made in the inthe correct Canada Post jurisdiction: Brechin and terests of clarity, to make listings “more searchable, Orillia respectively in the above examples. more useable.” We think it’s a good first step. Is that true? Well, yes and no. Canada Post says It’s all about boundaries: who sets them and why, that, technically, it does require the jurisdiction in a point addressed by correspondent Rae Fleming, the address, but in smaller markets like Ramara, who tries to sort things out a bit on Page 16 in his where local postal employees know the area, its piece about the communities of Washago, Sebright omission should not prevent mail delivery. and Gamebridge, all of which lie partly in Ramara To test the theory, The Chronicle posted several and partly elsewhere. pieces of mail to addresses in “Lagoon City, RaThrough all of this, of course, correspondent mara,” and just “Ramara,” with the correct postal Kevin Lehman is confused. He writes about his becodes but without the supposedly obligatory Orilfuddlement on Page 17. lia, Brechin, or in some cases, Beaverton. The mail Yes, it can be confusing, but no matter where you arrived promptly in each case. live in this township – Udney, Uptergrove, AtherNevertheless, people throughout the township ley, Longford Mills — you can always be, as bristle at having to use an address that does not, in Oliver describes himself, “a proud Ramaran.” fact, reflect where they live. As Ramara resident So sit back, relax and enjoy your read. Dann Oliver writes in a letter to The Chronicle, —Darleen Cormier “Why does a Crown Corporation get to tell me where I live?” Printed by Rose Printing in Orillia. Oliver, whose mailing address the post office Website by Downtown Computers in Orillia. says should include “RR# 7 Stn Main, Orillia,” would like to see consistency in the furtherance of community identity. “We pay our property taxes to Ramara, not Orillia,” he writes. “The voters’ lists show us living in Ramara, not Orillia. When Elections Canada knows where we live and makes it public knowledge, why can’t a Crown Corporation A Canadian iconʼs dark side St. Andrewʼs in Brechin Derailment remembered The old ice house A short history of our history A Senior Moment Kiteboarding on our shores Railway heritage Memories of MacKenzie Until all are fed Church fundraiser Where we are, sort of Gardening Road-trip fundraiser Planning issue drags on Mission to Kenya All-candidatesʼ meetings Brechin market Dog days Community Calendar Food feature 2 4 6 7 10 11 12 13 14 16 17 18 26 29 31 33 35 36 37 38 41 Darleen Cormier, Publisher Rob McCormick, Managing Editor Linda Keogh, Manager, Sales and Marketing This monthʼs contributors Beverley Baker, Suzan Bertrand, Rod Brazier,Doug Cooper, Adrienne Davies, Rae Fleming, Geoff Graham, Harry Hall. Alisa Herriman, David A. Homer, Larry Kirtley, Kevin Lehman, Bob Poyntz, Pam Poyntz, Howard Raper, Gail Smith, Louise St. Amour, Donna Wood. See The Ramara Chronicle online in full colour at www.ramarachronicle.com. For advertising rates, contact Linda Keogh, Manager, Sales and Marketing, at 705-437-2032, or email lkeogh2002@yahoo.ca. Investments, Insurance, Employee Benefits Planning First tm georgianbayfinancial.com Trevor Huff 705-329-4858 trevor@ georgianbayfinancial.com Kelly Schnurr 705-326-5830 kellyschnurr@ georgianbayfinancial.com Jed Levene 705-259-5334 jed@ georgianbayfinancial.com Book by local author takes unflinching look at famed broadcaster Page 2 Argyle resident and historian Rae Fleming’s biography of legendary journalist and broadcaster Peter Gzowski was published by Dundurn Press in late July. Fleming was interviewed by The Chronicle several weeks earlier. Why did you choose Peter Gzowski as a subject? I had listened to him for a long time because part of his career was during my days as a graduate student in Saskatoon, and when you are a graduate student, a lot of work is done at home. Then, in 1987, when I was caring for my mother, who was dying of cancer at home, I listened to Gzowski daily. When I was researching, I read ever so many letters from people who said he saved their sanity, usually mothers of young children who in the 1980s were forced to stay at home. I understood what they meant because of my circumstances. It was such a welcome voice. It was the distraction for three hours, and that was a long time, the whole morning. Your spirits were uplifted and what you were doing became less onerous. I had met Peter’s son, about a year after Peter had died in 2002, and I asked him whether any of his father’s writerly friends was writing a biography, and Peter Jr. checked and said no, and I said I think I’ll write. I didn’t need anyone’s authorization. I just wanted to make sure that Robert Fulford or Harry Bruce, two of his closest friends, weren‘t writing about him. I realized later why they never would have thought about a biography because they already knew how complicated their friend was. He was a terribly complicated man, and very difficult to write about, because there was this myth. Why do you think itʼs important to have a biography of Gzowski? I suppose because he was such a towering figure. If you made a list of the 10 best-known, most influential people in the 1980s, when he was at his peak, he would probably be on everyone’s list. I came across a story about a fundraiser in Edmonton. Peter had donated a signed book, and so had Pierre Trudeau. Peter’s work sold for twice as much as Trudeau’s. That’s how popular and wellliked he was. Peter just appealed to people with that persona. Why do you think he was so appealing? It was because we all like charming, gregarious people. We are drawn to attractive celebrities like moths to flames. In Peter’s case it was the voice that was good-looking. Peter himself was not good-looking in any classic sense. Some women, though, found him very attractive. When I asked what drew them to him, the focus was on the eyes. When you were talking to him his eyes would never move off you, and the eyes were one of his greatest features for charm- The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 ing. June Callwood said a man who listened to women without condescension in the 1970s and ’80s was special. But in private, Peter put women down. He put everybody down. In public, though, on the radio, he had great respect for almost everyone. Women believed, even on This Country in the Morning, that they had found a man who was sympathetic, but it was an invented persona. What kind of journalist was he? His early career was superb. As he became more famous, he lowered his standards, and in the end he was writing fluff for Canadian Living and that sort of thing. Anything he wrote attracted an audience, but his peak as a journalist was for Maclean’s and Saturday Night in the 1960s, and occasionally he would write a near-brilliant piece in later life. But he got, as I think we would all get if people are too indulgent, he got a little bit lazy and maybe tired as he got older. He aged very rapidly once he hit 60. He was an old man in his 60s because he hadn’t taken care of himself, and it could be the lack of energy, but I think a lot of it had to with the fact that he was a figure of adulation. A lot of the stories he wrote for Canadian Living were repeats. You could go back to Maclean’s and find a very good article and he would do it as a throw-off, much briefer in Canadian Living in the 1990s. He could have gone on and been a very good journalist all his life, but I think it was part of that personality, that he wanted something for greater appeal, and he made some mis-steps, for instance talk-show television. And I am sure he knew he couldn’t do it, but whenever he failed at something, he wanted to try again to see if he could be a success the next time. What about his work as a broadcaster? When he was at his peak he was a very good broadcaster on radio, because radio allows you to circle around a little more. On television, you don’t have time for that. On radio you can chat and appear to be very casual, but he always knew where he was headed. Peter at his height would take these politicians and writers and would get answers out of them that very few other people would. When he had the right person and the right subject, he was fine. He liked people who had his kind of charm and were intelligent and who had substance. Sometimes the substance wasn’t always there. Often, the interview became the important thing and the quality of the work behind it not so much. But that’s hard to judge, and I tried to be careful. Fortunately, a friend in Regina who’s a retired English prof went through everything and whenever she felt there was a put-down she said no, you’re not being fair to either Peter or the interviewee. When Peter was good he was very good. How will history judge him? I think history, on the whole, in spite of what I have revealed in the book, will leave him pretty high up. If you made a list of the 10 best broadcasters, he will always be there. The problem, of course, is how long will he be remembered? What impact did his politics have on his work? Peter could be frustrating to neo-conservatives. Peter Worthington said when Gzowski died, “Gzowski’s Canada was not my Canada.” I would argue that he was a strong, powerful voice for the left and left of centre. I think today it’s taken Stephen Harper a long time to even make those of us who were lulled by Gzowski even consider that there may be another way of running a country. If you took everyone who scanned his show, it was a million. If you took the hard-core listeners it was 200,000 to 300,000, but that’s probably all you need to perpetuate for some time beyond the death of Gzowski the idea that Canada’s identity is kind of tied up with the NDP and the left-liberals, and not with the conservatives. Peter hated people like Mulroney. I think Peter was an important voice in convincing us that we needed the state to look after the CBC and medicare, and that’s what differentiated us from the Americans. It’s not true, of course. The Americans had state-run facilities, too, and even more today. But I think Gzowski was very influential in that kind of long-term thinking. He did have this bias. He couldn’t understand, even on an intellectual basis, why anyone would say that the state should not be throwing millions of dollars at the CBC and then never questioning where the money is going. The critics of state-supported institutions were almost not allowed on his show. What drove Gzowski? He loved being famous, although he always denied that. He liked the attention, even though he was sometimes rude to people. He liked being known. He liked being good at what he did, and I don’t deny that he wanted to be the best there was, but he did want fame. (Continued on next page) ‘Out of great darkness comes brilliance’ The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 (Continued from previous page) You can even see that in the charity golf tournaments he held, and this is where I may be criticized. I suspected the reason for the Peter Gzowski Invitationals was at least 50 per cent because Peter liked being a celebrity. He would invite people to The Briars for these big tournaments or he would do them across the country. And up to the Briars would come Premier David Peterson in a helicopter, and all the Canadian stars of the day from ballet to music. I suspect Pierre Burton saw through all that. I don’t think he ever came to one. Pierre, of course, also liked to be famous, but not with Gzowski. It was like they were taking each other’s light away. There was unspoken competition for Mr. Canada. What other conclusions did you reach about him? I would say he was the sort of person who no one should have been required to live with. Especially his first two partners, one of whom he married, I think he mistreated them. I know with his wife it’s quite clear that he was unfaithful while she was having his children. He had a secret child with a woman with whom he had an ongoing affair that lasted until he died. I think what I have tried to argue is that sometimes out of great darkness comes brilliance. We can not understand genius without understanding that probably behind every genius there’s an enormous amount of doubt. I think that’s just normal. And the doubt can turn into something even worse, like medical depression, which Peter did suffer from at one point. I think you could have called Peter an alcoholic in his later days and when he went in to get himself cured of smoking, of course far too late in 2000, the clinic was for smoking and alcohol. He didn’t say he was in for alcohol, but there were hints he was being tended to for that, too. He got off drink- Page 3 The problem with the biography is that the biographer has the advantage of hindsight, and one tries not to judge. Gzowski author to speak at Ramara Library Rae Fleming (left), author of Peter Gzowski: A Biography, will speak and read from his book at the Ramara Centre Library on Tuesday, Oct. 19 from 2 to 3:30 p.m. Admission is free. For information contact the library at 325-5776. Flemingʼs book is available at Manticore Books in Orillia. It has been the subject of articles in Macleanʼs Magazine (Aug. 30), The Winnipeg Free Press and National Post (both on Aug. 21). ing and smoking, and then in the latter part of his life, the last year or so, he went back to both. He knew he was dying. There was this streak of self-pity in him all his life. I was related to someone who had that streak and it was almost as though this person had never grown beyond the age of 15. Someone who at 70 was still blaming other people, unable to come to terms and say maybe I’ll have to sort out my own problems, and that’s the way Peter was. If something failed, it was the producer’s fault. And at the end of his life it was his body’s fault for letting him down. He had to blame something and at the end of his life it was his body. I think there are more people even than we realize who kind of plateau at age 15, and will simply not take responsibility, just as a 15-year-old does not. With Peter, it was the same thing, and I think the producers knew that. One of his last executive producers said, “We really liked that boyish nature” because the curiosity was always there. But the downside was that the boy never grew up. He said later in life that he was always Holden Caulfield, and Caulfield we only see as the teenage rebel. Peter also thought of himself as a victim, and I suppose in Caulfield there is also the rebel-victim. How do you feel you treated Gzowski? I hope fairly, but I am sure that some of those who dote on him still will find that I have been a bit harsh. I think I have offered enough proof for anything that might be considered harsh, but we’ll see. In this small country, the CBC is still big, and there are people who are still protecting Peter Gzowski’s persona. What do you hope people will take from the book? The problem with the biography is that the biographer has the advantage of hindsight, and one tries not to judge. You shouldn’t judge the past by the present, and it’s very difficult not to sometimes. I wonder if reading biographies, especially this kind of biography, might help teach people to perhaps understand themselves a little better, to say, “I never thought of it before, but I also have somewhat of a dark side.” You always hope people will read and review your work, or even say nasty things about it, but even worse than being talked about is not being talked about. The worst thing would be if it gets published and it’s just forgotten. — Rob McCormick FREE BOAT REMOVAL www.ontarioboatwreckers.com We will pick up your old boat, motors, trailers and marine related parts and equipment you want removed, any size, power or sail, inboard or outboard. We remove damaged, abandoned and junk boats. We are a full service Marine Wreckers. Boats with operable trailers and motors are hauled for free. Others may be charged Call 705-333-5533 by the ton. Some exceptions Email info@ apply. Call to verify. ontarioboatwreckers.com Page 4 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Catholics settled in central Mara St. Andrew’s in Brechin designated as a parish in 1884 Photos and story by ROD BRAZIER While the first settlers came to what was then Mara Township in the 1820s, habitation began in earnest in the mid-1840s. British, Scottish and Irish immigrants in particular, many fleeing hardship at home, arrived in significant numbers along the eastern shore of Lake Simcoe. One characteristic shared by most of these people, in addition to a strong desire for a better life, was a deep religious faith. A survey of the township had been completed in 1836, and many immigrants took advantage of available land grants. As it happened, the Irish pioneers settled largely in the centre of the township, while the Scots and English settled in the north and south respectively. Thus the area along Lake Simcoe from a little south of Brechin to Uptergrove was almost entirely Irish and Catholic. For many years the spiritual needs of Catholics in Mara were served by priests based in Kingston, Whitby and Oshawa. When Brock was designated a parish in 1855, the care of the souls of Mara Catholics formed part of the mission of the parish priest, who made frequent trips into the area. As there were no churches in the township at the time, the priest would provide for people’s spiritual needs in designated homes or schoolhouses as available. In I857 the first Catholic parish in Mara Township was established at Uptergrove. Originally called the Mara church, it is now known as St. Columbkille’s. The village of Brechin was founded by James Patrick Foley, who arrived in 1860, and who named the community after his wife’s birthplace, Brechin, Scotland, near Edinburgh. As the community of Brechin developed, it became a mission of the Uptergrove parish. To serve a growing population, it was determined that a Catholic church was needed in Brechin. St. Andrew’s was consecrated in January 1869 to serve residents of Mara from the Talbot river in the south to the Seventh and Eighth concessions in the north, eastward to the East Sideroad (now Highway 169) and north again to the 11th Concession. In early days there would have been more than 120 families in the parish. In 1884, Brechin was designated as a parish distinct from Uptergrove, and was assigned its own parish priest. (Continued on next page) The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Materials for new church were local Page 5 (Continued from previous page) Between 1884 and 1888, a rectory and a school were added to the parish grounds. The funds for the school were donated by James Patrick Foley, who also established a perpetual endowment for the school. Foley Catholic School still bears the name of its benefactor. A parish hall was added in 1914. In 1924, it was decided to take down the old St. Andrew’s and build a new church. The first sod was turned on April 6, 1925, the cornerstone laid on June 14, and consecration by the Archbishop celebrated on Dec. 15, 1925. The red bricks of the original church were used for the inner wall of the new; virtually all other building materials — sand and gravel, lumber, limestone and field stone — were sourced locally. The exception was the fir shingles, which came from British Columbia, The construction of the current St. Andrew’s was a product of immense, devoted effort by virtually every member of the parish community. Parishioners, even some non-Catholics, gave generously and freely of their time and resources to build a church home for their faith. As the Catholics of St. Andrew’s continue their fundraising efforts to pay for much-needed restorations recently undertaken, they are inspired by the legacy of those whose courage, faith and dedication are apparent in every corner of their beloved church, and aspire to ensure their spiritual home will be available to nourish generations to come. Rod Brazier, a Lagoon City photographer, writer and consultant, can be reached at rbrazier@learningful.com. $IFDLPVUPVS/&8MJOFPG 0VUEPPS$BCJOFUSZ Udney station met abrupt end Page 6 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Family member recalls the night a box car crashed through the floor of her bedroom By DOUG COOPER Community Correspondent Sunday, Oct. 28, 1962 had been a typical autumn day in the small community of Udney. None of the residents could have imagined as they prepared to turn in for the night, that an incident one concession to the north would lead to a night of confusion and turmoil, and would permanently alter the community. Just before 11 p.m., at the level crossing on the 11th Concession, a southbound train and an automobile collided. The impact knocked a set of wheels off the track. When the wheels hit a switch at the 10th Concession, more than 20 of the train’s 70 cars derailed, some crashing into and through the Udney station. The station at Udney was similar to train stations all over Ontario during the first half of the 20th century. What made it unusual was that it was also a family residence. In the late 1950s, the CNR had decommissioned the station, but it remained the home of Jack Wilson, his wife, Marie, and their six children. Jack, a section foreman for the railway, and his 20-year-old son Bill, a construction worker, were working away from home. Daughter Marilyn, then 17, had left home shortly before 11 p.m. to return to Toronto, where she was employed as a typist. Marie, a nurse’s aide, had completed her 3-to-11 p.m. shift at Soldiers’ Memorial Hospital and was on her way home. Daughters Isabel, 15, Jackie 12, and Sandra 2, were asleep in two upstairs bedrooms when the train came crashing into the building. It had been little Sandra’s birthday, and those family members who were at home that day had celebrated with cake. One can only imagine what must have gone through Marie’s mind as she approached the crossing that night to see twisted rail cars, her home destroyed and thinking that her children might be inside the building. “My mother had to crawl under the train to get to the house, because the wreckage was blocking the road,” Marilyn recalls. “I know from talking to Mom that the train crew, because they went past all the time, knew there was a family there and there were children, and they wanted to get them out of the house.” The collision had destroyed the first floor of the station, and a box car had jackknifed through the floor of the bedroom where Isabel was sleeping. “There was a terrifying explosion,” recalls Isabel Kean-Bumstead, one of the three sisters upstairs, now a Midhurst resident and retired secretary for the Simcoe County Health Unit. “I thought a war had started. I thought a bomb had dropped. I found myself on the floor because the box car came through the boys’ bedroom on the ground floor and came through the floor of my bedroom. “I could hear all the bricks rolling on the roof and clanging and banging with things settling, and The former train station at Udney. “Coming down the stairs we saw the wall that used to be in the living room wasnʼt there any more.” Udney derailment survivor Isabel Kean-Bumstead I couldn’t get myself oriented. All of this plaster dust was coming down.” Isabel credits a member of the crew with getting her moving. “As I was trying to pull myself together, this man, a member of the train’s crew, was out there yelling, ‘Get out of the house. If there’s anyone in the house, get out.’ That’s what made me get up and do something. I was dazed, and it was his voice that made me get up.” She made her way to the other second-floor bedroom where Jackie and Sandra were. “They were in a bedroom on the opposite side of the house. I went into Jackie’s bedroom and she was up, and there was a big hole in the wall. So I asked Jackie, ‘Where’s Sandy?’ So we checked and Sandy was sound asleep in the crib. She slept through the whole thing.” The children made their way down the wobbly stairs. “Coming down the stairs we saw the wall that used to be in the living room wasn’t there any more,” Isabel says. “We went into the kitchen. Jackie was carrying Sandy because I was trying to open the door out of Illustration by Doug Cooper the kitchen to get out, and it wouldn’t open. The men were out there by the door and I was saying, ‘I can’t open it. I’m going to go to the window.’ “They wanted to break the window beside the door, and I said, ‘Don’t break the window. The other one will open.’ So I made them walk all the way around the house to the other window. Why a broken window would have mattered, I don’t know. I must have been in shock.” As rescuers were helping the children through the window, Marie ran up the driveway. “I said, ‘Don’t worry, Mum. It’s OK. A train just hit the house,’” Isabel recalls. No one was injured. News stories of the day reported that the family dog had died, but Isabel says the pet was unharmed. The outcome could have been much different, though. “My brother Billy and his friend, Ross Murney, stayed in the lower bedroom that the box car went through. He was a good friend of Bill’s.” Both had been away at work that night. “It’s also a good thing I let the fire go out,” Isabel says. “We had wood stoves in the house and when I went to bed I didn’t put any more wood on the fire. I just let it go out early in the evening. If the fires had been going, there could have been a fire, too.” The driver of the automobile, one William McLaughlin, was taken to a Toronto hospital and later died, Isabel says. The station was demolished after the accident. Today there is nothing to mark the site of the Udney station or the accident that led to its demise. The building, that was so important to a way of life in the community, exists only in memories. Doug Cooper is a Washago artist and writer. He can be reached at dlcooper@sympatico.ca. The old ice house The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Page 7 By HARRY HALL Carden Field Naturalists My relatives’ trip to the cottage on Lake Dalrymple took two days by train and ox-cart It was not always easy getting to the cottage from the town of Markham. Not that long ago (in the 1870s), my relatives took a train to Udney and then an ox-cart (soon modernized to horses) to the end of the lake, with all their needs for several weeks. It was before those noisy, smelly, new inventions called automobiles. Yes, there was a railway station functioning in Udney until the 1950s but it was destroyed in 1962 when a train derailed and levelled it. Back then, cottage season ended on Labour Day. Who would ever have thought that we would be enjoying weekends at the lake in September and October? My relatives’ supplies would have included something for keeping food cool; in those days it was ice. A barge took them down the lake to “the camp,” a piece of summer property populated with tents for several years, until finally a cabin was built in the early 1900s, and eventually a cottage. After all there are only so many directions you can add on to a cabin. What used to be a two-day effort getting to the lake now takes two hours. As time passed and more people appeared, a road was built, and cars and trucks began to show up. Then came electricity, and finally a phone line — a party-line we called it — shared with 17 other people. Two long and one short ring and you could hear all those receivers lifting. Confidentiality was out of the question. Eventually, when people lived here permanently, an ice house became a necessity and it offered a chance for local farmers to make a little cash. For a cottage, ice was a staple since there were no refrigerators or freezers. The ice box was where you kept your perishables. The farmers cut the ice with long saws in the winter and stored it in sawdust, which was plentiful as a byproduct of the wood one had to cut for heat and cooking. Sawdust was often used for insulation in the walls of houses. To get ice, you rowed your boat, or later drove, to the nearest ice house and the farmer would take you back to a barn board shack in the shade of the bush, where he would sweep off the sawdust, slip on the tongs and carry the block to your transportation. When you arrived back at your cottage, if you Special to The Chronicle The Hall family in a 1911 photograph. A tent can be seen in the background, and a stringer of muskies in the foreground. did not have tongs it was always a challenge to get that slippery, wet, heavy lump into the ice box without dropping it. It would last a few days, depending on the weather. Then it was back to the farmer for another block. Cutting ice on Lake Simcoe actually became a significant source of work and income for a lot of local people in the winter. Carloads of ice were shipped to cities for many years until the commercial manufacture of ice became a reality. All cooking was done over open fires, until woodstoves became popular. Pies and cookies were special — even more delicious if maple syrup was added. Local entrepreneurial farmers began to show up with eggs, milk, vegetables, homemade bread preserves, honey and even pickles. We had to go across the lake to get maple syrup, and there was always a pitcher on the table at every meal. It was another staple. The Bird House Nature Company Supplies and Gifts for Nature Lovers 108 Mississaga St. East., Orillia, opposite the Mariposa Market (705) 329-3939 Water for drinking purposes was at first obtained at a spring across the lake, not too far from the syrup man. Before long, a well was dug and a long handled pump was in place. Pumping water was good exercise and a guess as to how many pumps one had to make before the water began to flow could make it fun. Meat was readily available. The lake was full of fish and it was impossible not to catch something. Bait was easy to catch also — lots of frogs in the reeds along the shore, and there were leeches under the rocks. Minnow traps took only a few minutes to fill up. An old chewed-up wooden “plug” would be used rarely prior to the “double buffalo” spinners, which were the favourite lure for lunge (muskies) at that time. Pickerel and bass were mainstays. Catfish was really sweet, with virtually no bones. Believe it or not, there were no pike then. There was no radio, no TV, nor electronic games. There were, however, cards, puzzles, and checkers. Our imaginations kept us constantly busy exploring: catching butterflies, frogs, clams and minnows. We climbed trees and built forts, had bonfires with hot dogs and marshmallows and did a lot of fishing. Big Hughie, that gigantic muskie, is still out there. He is probably 130 years old now, but we know he is still there and we’ll catch him one day. We’ll put him back, too. It just wouldn’t be right to end his days. It was a simpler life in a simpler time. In many ways I miss it. Harry Hall is a founding member of the Carden Field Naturalists. An ancient call Page 8 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 The common loon is estimated to be between 50 and 80 million years old Larry Kirtley Avian Affairs By DAVID A. HOMER There are a lot of people in this country who are not bird watchers, or “birders.” But everyone, including the youngest, knows at least one bird. Perhaps there is no other bird as recognizable as the common loon. Its likeness graces the Canadian $1 coin; it is the national bird of Canada, the official bird of Ontario; thousands of Ontario car license plates carry its image, and it is certainly an iconic symbol of Ontario’s cottage country. Gavia Immer, its scientific name, has been considered sacred in many parts of the world and it has been woven into the very fabric of many cultures. The familiar “call of the loon” has been heard echoing across our lakes for millions of years, perhaps longer than any other bird, as it is estimated to be between 50 and 80 million years old. That’s why you find loons at the very beginning of most bird field guides. It is very difficult to distinguish males from females. Males tend to be just a little larger. They do tend to mate for life, but only spend the summers together. They winter along the eastern seaboard or even on the Great Lakes when couples go their separate ways. They meet up again on their home lake, where they spend the summer months. When they do return, the males stake out their territory and, if they are going to breed, get down to business, which takes place on the shore. Loons don’t necessarily breed every year. They may breed for two or three successive years, then take a year off. As their legs are positioned far back on the body to facilitate swimming and diving, loons are not well suited for walking, so the nests are build on small bogs or on an island where they can easily maneuver to it from the water. They are not great nest builders. Nest materials consist of dried grasses or reeds just flattened down to afford some protection for the eggs. Loons lay one or two olive-brown, splotched eggs, which are incubated by both parents for about 30 days. As soon as the chicks dry after hatching, they are coaxed into the water. The nest is then abandoned. The adults keep the young very close to them in the first few weeks, even providing rides on their backs to keep them warm and to protect the young birds from hungry pike, muskies and turtles. The adults feed them small minnows and gradually increase the size of the fish or crayfish as they grow. The parents bring the young close to shore to teach them to dive and fish. At first, it is a humorous event to watch as the young bird, like a cork, pops up to the surface soon after its shallow dive. As summer fades at this time of year, the adults wander farther from the young bird, leaving it on its own for hours at a time. By the end of October both parents leave for the migration south. The young are left to fend for themselves, many times not leaving the lake until it is almost covered in ice. Sometimes, a young bird doesn’t get out in time and will die frozen into the ice. Those that get David A. Homer out before the ice sets in migrate singly or in small groups. They move quite quickly to the wintering location, flying at speeds of up to 100 miles an hour. The juvenile birds will stay in the wintering location until they are about four years old. Only then will they return to the location where they were raised. Finding a lake location and a mate is a very difficult and time-consuming challenge. Male birds are very aggressive, and frequently a young bird will attack an older male bird in its territory, killing or drowning it and then taking over its mate. Many lakes will have two or three breeding pair, but have four or five juvenile birds “standing by in the wings” waiting the opportunity to take over a good territory and/or a mate. Loons face many threats, including high water levels that swamp a nest, waves from high powered boats, predation from raccoons and other birds, acid rain, which destroys life in the lake, and botulism from toxin-infected fish. In the words of the great American naturalist Aldo Leopold, “The Lord did well when he put the loon and his music in the land.” May it ever be so. David A. Homer is the past president of the Carden Field Naturalists. He can be reached at DavidAHomer@xplornet.com. The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Page 9 Photos by David A. Homer Strong on the environment Ward 2 Councillor John OʼDonnell has served on Ramara Township Council for 10 years. During the last term he was Chairman of Environmental Services. In that time, Ramara has received more than $1 million in funding. Projects include: $660,000 for installation of water meters throughout all Township-serviced areas More than $250,000 in stewardship grants for Ramara residents $192,000 to take 13 septic systems off Lake Simcoe and put them on sewers Also, $165,000 in further funding is available through Lake Simcoe Region Conservation Authority for stewardship programs in and around Ramara creeks for such projects as septic upgrades, shoreline restoration, tree planting, etc. RE-ELECT John OʼDonnell, Ward 2 Over the next term, I will continue to diligently pursue all the grant monies possible for our residents under new and upcoming Provincial programs. I would appreciate your support when you vote on Oct. 25. A short history of our history Page 10 By ADRIENNE DAVIES Community Correspondent The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Where did our history go? Surely during the 100-plus years of our existence as a municipality there must be scores of printed records of land holdings, taxes, births and deaths. So where are they? To understand what happened to our historical documents, you must have some idea of our history and political affiliations. It has been an interesting road to where we are now. When Rama and Mara first came into being, they were part of the large area known as York. All municipal records were archived in county buildings in the City of York. In the mid-1800s, Rama and Mara joined the townships that made up the new Ontario County, whose county offices, land registry and courthouse were in Whitby. On Jan. 1, 1974, Durham Region was formed and townships north of the Trent River/Canal, namely Mara and Rama, joined Simcoe County, whose seat is in Midhurst, Springwater Township. Whitby continues in its official capacity for the Region of Durham. In 1994, with amalgamation of the townships into Ramara, municipal records from Rama were sent to Midhurst, but a lot of historical records remained in the area at the Orillia Public Library. (Due to lack of space, there are no records kept in our municipal offices in Brechin.) When churches close, their records go to the diocese or the presbytery; organizations like the Orangemen and the Shriners keep their own records, as do railways. To understand what happened to our historical documents, you must have some idea of our history and political affiliations. It has been an interesting road to where we are now. So, there you have it. If you are looking for something specific, you have several avenues to explore. The Internet is a wonderful tool for searchers of history. The Ramara Historical Society has a website (www.ramarahistoricalsociety.net) on which one can find photos, documents, cemetery records and written histories, all pertaining to Ramara and its families. A sister site for Carden is online as well. At www.simcoe.ca, a viewer can click on the culture and information tab to find a list of materials stored at Simcoe County Archives. Some of the material has been digitized, but a trip to the reading room next to the Simcoe County Museum will give you physical access to many documents and records, including the Tweedsmuir histories kept by local Women’s Institutes. The Orillia Museum of Art and History site www.orilliamuseum.org lists articles and documents which one can access for a fee. The records for Durham Region and the old Ontario County are a little more difficult to find, requiring some Strong Auto & Marine for all your servicing needs 22985 Lakeridge Road PORT BOLSTER Call Todd at (705) 437-4291 digging on the part of the researcher. What should you do if you are on the other end of the problem, not looking for answers, but wondering what to do with the papers you found in your aunt’s attic, or the account books passed down from your great-grandfather? If you want to keep the documents for yourself or your family, but are willing to share their contents with others, the Ramara Historical Society can scan them and post them on the website for all to view, thereby preserving your documents in digital form for posterity, while you get to keep your own history. Consider limiting the handling of your originals and making an attempt to preserve them. There is an archival spray which may retard the aging process and locally, Lahay’s, Under Construction, and The Shadowbox all have acid- and lignin-free paper for mounting documents. Unfortunately, this type of paper is a relatively new development; all old papers have acid in them, and grow ever more fragile with age. When the Ramara Centre was built, a room was to be designated a history room, but the costs of display and storage cabinets were prohibitive. The Historical Society has been fundraising to obtain a space for your donations. We are eagerly anticipating the new Township building in Brechin, especially as the Historical Society has been consulted about possible storage and display space. There are private collectors who have a connection with the Society and who would be happy to store items until such time as we have an official space for them. The Orillia Museum of Art and History solicits material from a 15-mile radius around Orillia, and the bylaws of the Simcoe County Archives allow them to collect papers, “especially of an original nature that document the history of the County.” Our preference, and hopefully yours, is that our history remain in Ramara, so that future generations will not have the same trouble uncovering it as we now do. Adrienne Davies is the secretary of the Ramara Historical Society. She can be reached at bamdavies@yahoo.ca. The society meets the third Thursday of each month at 7:30 p.m. at the Ramara Centre. They followed the trees The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Page 11 Pine-stump fences and cedar rails are among the remnants of the local logging industry My father-in-law, Frederick C. Baker, was born in 1906 in a log home on the shores of the Head River. His family were pioneers in the Sebright area in the mid 1800s. The family oral history tells that Fred’s maternal grandfather, Robert Young, was the first white settler in the Sebright area and that he lived there for several years before discovering the lake that bears his name, Young’s Lake. A Senior Moment By BEVERLEY BAKER Grandfather Young did not start out as a lumberman. His occupation was to ride what was locally referred to as The Pony Express. He travelled on horseback from the County Town of Whitby, bringing the mail to the Atherley area. As a sideline, he often carried small items for sale to the families along the way, like a country pedlar. It was his custom to break his journey with an overnight stay with a family near Uxbridge. Eventually, he married the daughter of the house, one Elizabeth Ann Smith, and brought her to live in Sebright. Lumbering was the business of the day, so Young became a lumberman. He saw an opportunity to take advantage of the lumber being harvested and he built a sawmill in the village. After the trees had been cut, more settlers moved into the area to begin farming. Here was another opportunity, so Young established a cheese factory to use up the excess milk. While I could find no document to support it, the family’s oral history suggests it was Young who, in the late 1870s, donated the land on which the Sebright Church and its neighbouring cemetery are located. His gravestone is to be found in that cemetery. Around the turn of the century, one of Grandfather Young’s daughters, Mary Alberta, married another member of the brotherhood of lumbermen, Charles Baker. Baker was a “timber cruiser,” a specialist in the field of lumbering. It was his task to go out by canoe and assess the po- Special to The Chronicle Frederick Baker in the late 1980s. tential of new areas for harvest. One of his favourite stories was of finding an area along the Head River where there was a single magnificent black cherry tree. The land was for sale, so he made the purchase, cut down the tree, took it to Orillia and sold it to Rolland Boat Works to be used for one of the beautiful wooden boats that were built there. The profit from the lumber in that one tree was enough to pay for the land on which it had grown. Charles and Min, as she was called, lived in a log home near the Head River bridge. They raised a family of three boys and three girls. Their son Fred was the only one who followed in the footsteps of his father and grandfather to become a lumberjack. Fred had attended the oneroom school in Sebright, where his duties included carrying wood for the furnace and carrying water from the nearby spring for drinking. With only one teacher for all grades, it was also the duty of the older students to coach the little ones with their reading and arithmetic. Only a few years later, Fred went to work in the bush. Lumbering was a hard and dangerous NU-TECH WINDOWS AND DOORS 705-437-3639 Roger LeBlanc Distributor Visit our showroom at 31298 Lake Ridge Road, Port Bolster life. Not only did these youngsters have to learn to use the risky tools of their trade, but they found that there were horses to be handled, falling trees to be avoided and, perhaps most perilous of all, riding the logs that were floated down the river, dodging hazards, breaking up log jams and always avoiding what they termed “widow makers” of one sort or another. At the end of the season, when the young men came out of the bush with high spirits and full pockets, there were rivalries with the town boys and hijinx that are perhaps better left to our imagination. After a few years of life as a lumberjack, Fred decided to head for the city for a change. There he met the love of his life, Caroline Hudson. Carrie was born in London, England and had recently emigrated to Toronto with her family. They were married in 1927 and started a family of four boys. Fred’s heart never left the country. He loved the outdoors, fishing, hunting and spending time in the familiar woods. Carrie was a city girl who for years complained that they never went anywhere on holiday except “Sebright, Sebright, Sebright!” Their young sons shared their father’s views and enjoyed carefree, barefoot summers with their grandparents— in Sebright. One of those boys, my husband, now nearly 80 himself, can still remember those summers and the huge piles of sawdust left from his great grandfather’s sawmill. Nowadays we can still see remnants of the logging industry in the pine-stump fences and cedar rails in the area. Near the end of the Second World War, the family moved back to Sebright and lived for a year in a log house without electricity or indoor plumbing. That was not Carrie’s best year. The boys, however, thought it was great. They attended the same one-room school that their father had attended and one of their duties was still to carry water from the spring. That spring still flows today, but it now bears a sign saying that it is contaminated and unfit for drinking None of the boys continued in the lumbering tradition, but Fred never lost his love for the joys of nature. He was a gentleman of the old school, one who always removed his hat indoors and, if ever one of the boys use an expletive or any rough language, they’d hear a sharp rebuke: “Watch your language. There’s ladies present!” Fred was a wise man, quiet and well-read. He was a great confidant and if he ever gave advice, it was carefully reasoned and spoken with kindness. He often asked me when I was going to write my book. I know he wanted me to write of the family history but I was young and busy and impressed with academia’s insistence upon empirical evidence and documentary proof. How sad that I wasted the opportunity to record the tales and recollections that this wonderful man could have shared. Ramara resident and writer Beverley Baker can be reached at bev.baker@sympatico.ca. When it blows, they go Page 12 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Lagoon City’s public beach a hotspot for kiteboarders On the Canada Day weekend the wind was high and the waves moderate with few whitecaps; not the best day for swimming, perhaps, but perfect for kiteboarding. Also called kitesurfing, this water-surface sport has enjoyed a steady increase in popularity over the last few years, particularly in Ramara. The waters off the public beach in Lagoon City are reported to offer ideal conditions. Experienced kiteboarder Jeanette Abernethy, of Orillia, says the Lagoon City beaches are best because they are shallow for some distance, allowing the kiteboarders to get their kites aloft before starting to surf. An onshore wind of 10 to 25 knots is preferred. When the winds hit 15 knots, phone calls and emails are exchanged and a hardcore group of addicted kiteboarders heads for the beach. There are about 20 of these “Charlie Browners,” as they are called in their jargon, who show up at Lagoon City on an ideal kiteboarding day. Many run their own businesses and so find it easier than most to take time off to enjoy their sport. Abernethy jokes that she has a 15-knot rule: “When it’s blowin,’ I’m goin’!” Kitesurfing equipment includes a kite, board, bar, helmet, personal floatation device (PFD), harness, booties, wetsuit/drysuit, knife, whistle and gloves. Most of the kiteboarders have more than one By BOB and PAM POYNTZ Community Correspondents The beachgoers just sit back, enjoy the show and take pictures. kite and more than one board, so they can adjust to the wind speeds (smaller kites for higher wind speeds). Getting outfitted can cost $2,000 to $3,000, but experts recommend that money also be spent on proper instruction. There are a number of instructors in the area, one being Dan Medisky of Orillia. Abernethy says that any difficulty she has encountered on the water she has been “able to deal with calmly, thanks to lessons.” Great physical strength is not necessary to enjoy kitesurfing. There is a harness around the waist and the arms are used mostly to steer the kite. Enthusiasts well into their 60s have been seen at the Lagoon City beach. Kiteboarding etiquette requires respect for other Bob Poyntz beach users. Not that there’s much occasion for conflict; when conditions are ideal for kiteboarding, they are usually not so much for swimming or boating, so the beachgoers just sit back, enjoy the show and take pictures. As of late August, there had been only one “kitemare” on the water, the boarders said, when someone got too close to shore and had his kite tangle in the trees. He was able to disconnect himself without further mishap, but the remnants of this kite can still be seen in a tree off the Lagoon City beach. Kiteboarders follow safety rules covering issues such as kite height and clearance. And because kiteboards are also considered sailing vessels, some standard sailing rules also apply. Kiteboarding starts shortly after ice is out and continues well into the fall, but the sport doesn’t end then. Some kiteboarders continue on ice. This winter sport requires a bit more caution and safety equipment. Next time it’s not a perfect beach day and it’s windy, head for the Lagoon City beach to watch the spectacle. There’s no guarantee that the kiteboarders will be there, but it’s quite the sight to behold if they are. Remember to bring your camera. You might catch a kiteboarder airborne! Bob and Pam Poyntz are volunteers and Lagoon City residents. They can be reached at poyntz@rogers.com. The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Ties that bind Page 13 Cecil Byers has been collecting life-sized railway memorabilia since the 1970s Cecil Byers at the Ellesmere Junction Railway Museum in July. It goes back to the dream of high school buddies John Smith and Cecil Byers, who shared a life-long interest in trains and railways. The Smith farm, at 4100 Sideroad 20 in Ramara Township, is where you will find Ellesmere Junction Railway Museum. CPR and CN lines once went right through the Smith property, but were abandoned in 1937 and ’64 respectively. Smith represented his family’s third generation on the farm. As a railway buff, he wanted a locomotive, and thought he might even get a caboose some day. In the early 1970s, Smith and Byers had an opportunity to acquire one of the old wooden cabooses being retired by CN in favour of steel models, but when they went to see them in London, On., they discovered they were in terrible shape and not repairable. Their dream continued until 1978, when a caboose finally became available. It was on the property of family friend Ken Thompson near Sparrow Lake. “Ken’s father was a retired railroad conductor,” Byers recalls. “He had first choice, so he got this beautiful caboose. Ken had it there since 1971. But his wife never really went along with the idea of a caboose on the lawn, and eventually talked him into getting rid of it. When we couldn’t get one from London, that’s the one we ended up with.” In 1979, Byers met David Walmsley, a railway welder, at a derailment in Rathurn. “It wasn’t a very big derailment,” Byers says. By LOUISE St. AMOUR Community Correspondent “I told him we had a caboose with two parts missing, and asked him if he could get them. He brought them by the next week and installed them. Then he asked if he could live in the caboose.” As a railway employee and lifelong buff, Walmsley, now a dealer in vintage railway equipment, was chiefly responsible for the acquisition of the cars that sit at the museum today, Byers says. “With his knowledge of the railroad and what was available, we got the other cars,” Byers says. “He was a genius as a welder he could make anything.” One of the things he made was a rig that allowed rail cars to be towed. “He got a set of tandem wheels off a highway trailer and set them on the back of the cars and that’s how we moved them.” In 1982, a locomotive became available. “It was going to be made into a cutaway and put into the Ontario Science Centre, but that didn’t happen. They ended up using a smaller locomotive.” The locomotive remained on the Ramara property until it was recently sold to the Niagara Falls Museum in Fort Erie. “I lost my dear friend John to diabetes in 1999,” says Byers, “but I am still part owner (with Rob McCormick Walmsley) of nine acres of this abandoned railway.” Cecil has continued to collect model trains and railway memorabilia. “My dad always wanted to be an engineer but he had to work the farm and I followed the tradition” says Byers. “I never was a CN employee, although I did receive two cheques for yard work that I did for them”. Byers also collects phonographs that actually work. The oldest is a 1910 Edison floor model called the Laboratory, the newest being a Zellers replica of the Victor 4 (like the one on the Grammy awards). When asked what he will start collecting next, Cecil replied that he thinks that’s it for collecting. The museum, which now houses five railway cars, a tool shed and a building from the 1920s that was converted into a “station,” is not open for public viewing, but groups who make arrangements can have access to the property. The CN Pensioners’ Association has held its annual event here every July for the last seven years. “This is the most underrated attraction around” says Charlie Surgenor, president of the Barrie group. Pensioners enjoyed a trip down memory lane, great food and entertainment by Common Ground. Cecil was presented with an antique clock out of the Barrie station. Maybe he will start collecting clocks next. Groups interested in scheduling an event at the Ellesmere Junction Railway Museum should call Byers at 326-6783. Ramara artist and writer Louise St. Amour can be reached at louise_stamour@sympatico.ca. Memories of Mackenzie Page 14 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 An important reminder of a man who was once among the best known of Canadians By RAE FLEMING Community Correspondent On the last Sunday in June, scores of history buffs, many of them members of the Kirkfield and District Historical Society and the Beaverton Thorah Eldon Historical Society, gathered in the Kirkfield Presbyterian Church to hear historian Carl Mills give an illustrated lecture on the 100th anniversary of the first solo flights over Toronto and Montreal. The pilot in question was Count Jacques de Lesseps, son of Count Ferdinand de Lesseps, whose best known legacy is the Suez Canal. Not long after the flight over Toronto, the Count was invited to join William Mackenzie, his wife and family on their private yacht, “Wawinet.” The next year, the Count and Grace Mackenzie, the youngest of the Mackenzie children, were married in LonMabel Griffin photo album don, England. While Sir William Mackenzie Jacques flew for the French Air Force during the Great War, Grace was a nurse in Paris. They were both decorated by the French government. Their four children were born in the French capital. Among the audience in Kirkfield that Sunday in June was one of Jacques and Grace’s granddaughters, who also happens to be a great-granddaughter of Sir Sam Hughes, whose big house in Lindsay was grievously destroyed several years ago. When Grace and Jacques were married, the bride’s father was known in Canada and internationally as the personification of success. Knighted in 1911, Sir William Mackenzie was president of the Canadian Northern Railway, one of three Canadian transcontinental railways. He was also president of the Toronto Street Railway, the TTC of its day; the Winnipeg Electric Railway; and Brazilian Traction, which, from its Toronto headquarters, operated the transportation, hydro power, gas and telephone systems of Rio de Janiero and Sao Paulo. One of Mackenzie’s companies brought the first electric power from Niagara Falls to Toronto, about six years before Adam Beck and Ontario Hydro did the same thing. While the urban transportation and electrical companies were always profitable, the transcontinental railway, no longer able to pay its debts during the Great War, was taken over by the Canadian government, which created the Canadian National Railways, a company that also absorbed the failing Grand Trunk Railway and several other smaller railway companies built during the optimism of pre-War Canada. At one time the Mackenzies owned “Benvenuto,” a stone mansion at the top of Avenue Road hill in Toronto. Benvenuto is gone — torn Photos by ROD BRAZIER Today, few people have heard of Sir William Mackenzie, except for the present inn in Kirkfield that bears his name. down by the city of Toronto during the Great Depression, a few years after it had taken it over for non-payment of taxes. On its site sits today an upscale condo, also called Benvenuto. The magnificent Kirkfield Inn, built by Lady Mackenzie as an alcohol-free hotel, was destroyed by fire in 1925. Early in the 20th century, on the north shore of Balsam Lake, the Mackenzies built a Valhalla of a summer home. Its many bedrooms boasted en suite bathrooms. The building survived in good shape until the 1970s, when it was pilfered by members of the Age of Aquarius, as well as by cottagers whose greed exceeded their respect for history and esthetics. Eventually the summer home was replaced by a large A-frame log home. The Wawinet, the luxurious yacht that introduced the Count to his future wife, now rests on the bottom of Georgian Bay. (Continued on next page) Design typical of English country houses The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Page 15 (Continued from previous page) Today, few people have heard of Sir William Mackenzie, except for the present inn in Kirkfield that bears his name. Located across Nelson Street from the church where Carl Mills spoke on June 27, the inn was once the Kirkfield home of William and Margaret Mackenzie and their nine children: three boys and six girls, including Grace, born in 1889. Its architectural style, called alternatively Queen Anne or Elizabethan, was typical of English country houses of the 1870s and ’80s. When Mackenzie died in 1923, his will bequeathed the Kirkfield property to his son Joe, who, in 1927, sold it for $1 to the Sisters of St. Joseph, who used it as a convent and school. One of the convent’s graduates is actress Nonnie Griffin, whose grandmother, Mabel, was the oldest daughter of William and Margaret Mackenzie. Nonnie was in the audience on June 27. By 1977 the Sisters of St. Joseph could no longer afford to operate the large house, so they sold it to the Macdonald-Ross family, who operated a museum and guest house until the Johnsons bought the house in the early 1980s. In 1992 Paul and Joan Scott were driving by the house one evening when they noticed a power-of-sale sign. They decided on the spot to buy it. With energy and enthusiasm, and, of course, much money, they renovated the building, opened up the third floor, reinforced the sagging veranda and ran a successful bed and breakfast. Paul even wrote a book about the experience, A Decade of Memories. In 2002 the Scotts sold the inn to Jeremy Pierpoint and Sharon Arnaud, who have placed their own stamp on it. The inn now evokes the Edwardian age, which preferred cleaner lines and lighter colours than the preceding Victorian age. Its interior looks much like photographs of the house that appeared in a country living magazine about 1910. Except for the sweeping veranda, added early in the 20th century, and the 1930s addition, used as classrooms, on the west side of the house, the exterior looks much the same today as it did when house was opened in 1888. Some of the original trees, of course, have grown large; others have died; and new ones planted. Lady Mackenzie had her gardeners plant Norway Pines, a few of which continue to grace the property. A storm in July 1995 damaged many towering trees. Ever enterprising, the following year the Scotts supervised a chainsaw-carving contest, with the result that the property now features about half a dozen attractive wood sculptures including a large statue of Sir William himself. Today, the inn’s 13 bedrooms, pool room, library and large living and dining rooms host weddings, conferences, retreats and overnight B&B guests. The bedrooms can sleep up to 36 guests, and the inn can handle and feed large wedding parties. In the spa, brides may opt for body rubs and facials in order to look their best for the ceremony and the honeymoon. After eight years of operating the inn, and, at the same time, upgrading the building to meet new fire codes, Jeremy and Sharon have created, a few minutes’ drive from the township of Ramara and only a couple of hours from Toronto, one of the most outstanding inns in this part of Ontario. No doubt the Sir William Mackenzie Inn will continue to serve as the most important reminder of a forgotten man who was born in Kirkfield in 1849, and who, by the time his youngest daughter married Count Jacques de Lesseps, was one of the best known of Canadians. Rae Fleming is an Argyle historian and biographer. He can be reached at rb.fleming@bell.net. WE HELP YOUR BUSINESS START, GROW AND SUCCEED. Business loans for start-up, expansion or working capital. Business Information and Guidance Business Resource Library Business Registration CALL US TODAY: 705-325-4903twww.orilliacdc.com CDC Success Story: Dan Burke of TMS Promotional Wear & Products, Ramara. With the support of the Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario Soul food Page 16 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Dropping In By DONNA WOOD Free dinners at Dalrymple United Church build community, one chicken pot pie at a time Minutes passed as I stood in front of my closet. It wasn’t so much a fashion dilemma as a moral one: What to wear to a free dinner? I was going to Lake Dalrymple United Church for a meal that began at 6 p.m. and was to continue “until all are fed.” I chose a pleasant outfit that had seen better times. It said “Waste not; want not.” I thought it hit the right note. Still feeling a bit guilty about the idea of noshing for nothing, I pulled my car into the parking lot at the prescribed time and immediately noticed that the side entrance double doors were swung wide open, like a big, welcoming hug. I began to relax, and prepared to meet my (dinner) maker. Any reluctance about freeloading was buried by the sight of a homey, handmade, multi-coloured sign posted just inside: “Welcome,” it said. “Dinner Served in Lower Level.” Down the stairs, upbeat music played on a CD player, and the sound of happy women’s voices from the kitchen further embraced me and drew me in. This was going to be fun. And I was getting hungry. Every third Friday of the month since January, with support from their church council, Sebright residents Michell McGrath, 47, and Bonnie Long, 54, former Brownie leaders and friends for more than 25 years, prepare and host these delightful dinners. They plan the menu, shop, cook, serve, clean up and, oh yes, they sing. At every dinner, just before the guests pile up their plates, the girls dish out a bit of entertainment. On this night, Bonnie and Michell belted out that ol’ time Bible favourite, I Cannot Come to the Banquet. By the refrain, with unabashed enthusiasm, I was tapping my big-city toe and clapping my hands along with the rest of the appreciative guests. At song’s end, with happy faces aglow in candle light (the hydro had gone out just before dinner) we got our instructions: “Whatever you can see, go eat it.” The food was fresh and delicious. We shovelled down home-made chicken pot pie, rice, potatoes, garden greens, melon slices, cookies and ice cream. Generous helpings from generous people. Leftovers go to the Living For Jesus Kitchen Mission in Orillia. Bonnie admitted that she and Michell are Aquarians, which explains to her and to the cosmos that “we both don’t mind leaving things until the last minute.” Early in the morning, over the phone, they agree on that night’s menu. What they do not already have on hand, Michell will go out and buy. Bonnie, meanwhile, is at her happiest cooking, and loves to cook for a crowd. “The more mouths to feed, the happier I am,” she beams. The pair rely mostly on word of mouth to advertise their repasts. The guest count typically David A. Homer Bonnie Long (left) and Michell McGrath in the kitchen at Lake Dalrymple United Church. ranges from 18 to 25. When I was there in July, there were more than 30. The room had about a dozen cheery tables, brightly decorated with cream cloths and vased yellow daisies (fleur du jour). The decor is themed every month by the talents of volunteer Pat Morton, who adds just the right ambiance to an otherwise functional church basement. The diners were varied: young couples with small, beautifully mannered children, adult couples with happy-to-see-you-again aging parents, and lots in between those hallmark stages. It was truly an esprit du corps affair. Which brings me to the meat of the matter. Why? In the fall of 2009, amid the downsizing of the three local congregations of Sebright, Sadowa and Dalrymple into the Sebright Pastoral Charge at Lake Dalrymple, Michell and Bonnie, in consultation with their church council, did some soul searching. Would the amalgamation also diminish the feeling of community? As more and more people went off to work shifts for the local OPP or Casino Rama, would there be a further erosion of neighbourhoods as well? When do we see our neighbours? Do we even know our neighbours? What will bring people together? The answer, of course, was food. Free food. Free food that tastes good. So in an effort to build and restore their vanishing community, and keep the church central to it, Bonnie and Michell, already active in their church, took it upon themselves to be ministers of food and beverage. As they do at any good house party, people con- gregate in the kitchen, and Michell and Bonnie want people to congregate in their kitchen at Dalrymple United Church. Otherwise, “It just becomes a building that people drive by going to work,” laments Michell. While the church subsidizes the cost of the suppers, it still takes a commitment and a generosity of spirit. In holding their dinners, Bonnie and Michell are determined to build their community one chicken pot pie at time. While the meal is free, you will find a completely optional donations basket at the entrance. Bonnie and Michell have discovered that people want to give something back after being treated to such a feel-good evening, so the ladies came up with a charity a month. They pick something global one month, something local the next. The choice of charity doesn’t matter. “It really doesn’t make any difference,” Bonnie says. “The currency of giving has no exchange rate.” Michell knew most of the people in the room as neighbours or family of neighbours, but says they want to cast a wider communal net. “We do this to bring neighbours and neighbourhoods together,” she says. “Please come back and bring your friends.” As one guest shouted out, “Free food? Do I have to buy a time-share?” No. Just be prepared to enjoy yourself. You will absolutely meet some characters as you stand in the buffet line, and you will absolutely leave full and fulfilled. Ramara resident and writer Donna Wood can be reached at donna_wood@rogers.com. Prints on sale as fundraiser The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Page 17 Proceeds from sale of painting by local artist to benefit St. Andrew’s Catholic Church Prints of an acrylic painting of St. AnStephen said. “We were talking about doing differdrew’s Catholic Church in Brechin, ent areas within the township, so we painted by a local artist, will be sold as could perhaps put something together a fundraiser for the church. in the future to try to promote the hisDoug Cooper, of Washago, was comtory of the community,” Stephen said. missioned to do the winter scene two “We’re trying to work on other things years ago by long-time St. Andrew’s for the future, for the south end, and we parishioners Dave Stephen and his wife, have some ideas. The Victoria Hotel Laurie. might be one we get Doug to do next, Cooper exhibited 20-by-24-inch but we wanted to do St. Andrew’s first painting at the two-day Ramara ArtPark because we feel this church helps repand Studio Tour in July. resent the south end.” “I could have sold it about 20 times,” Stephen called the church “a symbol he said. of the community. It doesn’t just repreSt. Andrew’s is trying to raise more sent the Catholic faith. Everybody is than $300,000 to help pay for repairs proud of this church. It’s a place of that were recently made to the church. refuge, a place of peace, and anybody One hundred numbered prints will be who goes by it respects what it is. Rob McCormick available in two sizes: 15 by 18 inches “The amount of work that went into and 20 by 24 inches. The smaller prints Washago artist Doug Cooper (left) and St. Andrewʼs parishioner Dave the stonework is incredible. If you just will cost $75, and the larger prints $115. Stephen display Cooperʼs original painting in the church. look at it and see how much time and “The prints are all on archival paper effort people took to build it, you are building. Stephen and Laurie also commissioned just in awe of the dedication of a person’s faith to and archival ink, so they will last as long if not Cooper to paint the former mill in Washago and the Trenouth Bridge at Rama First Nations. Those go out and do this.” longer than the painting,” Cooper says. To order prints, call Laurie Stephen at 484paintings have been completed. The St. Andrew’s painting is part of a collec5333, Calvin Readman at 484-5834 or Dave The collection would serve as an artistic repretion of works that Stephen, the Township’s manReadman at 484-0243. sentation of Ramara, featuring historic buildings ager of environmental services, hopes will some and other structures throughout the township, day hang in the new Township administration — Rob McCormick Mayor Bill Duffy Re-elect Looking to the future My priorities for the next four-year term of council: Job creation through partnerships with the federal government and Rama First Nation. Revenue generation through an increase in Ramaraʼs per-tonne aggregate payment, currently just six cents for every tonne of aggregate transported out of the Township. Improving haul routes so we are not negatively affected by out-of-township aggregate trucks. Continued pursuit of funding to provide water and sewer services for all properties between Simcoe Road and the Third Concession. Improving drainage outlets into Lake Simcoe, in conjunction with the Lake Simcoe Region Conservation Authority, to eliminate health risks associated with stagnant water. Continued road improvements throughout the Township. Ensuring that Simcoe County and the Province resolve their dispute over the Countyʼs official plan, so development along the Rama Road Corridor can begin. On October 25, vote for four more years of progress Letʼs stay in touch (705) 326-3915 You are here...I think Page 18 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 There is no postal jurisdiction of Ramara, and according to 411, it doesn’t exist “Why can’t we receive mail addressed to Ramara?” I sometimes hear residents of Ramara muttering to themselves. We pay taxes to Ramara, they say, yet we must use addresses such as Brechin, Longford Mills, and, horror of horrors, Orillia! Furthermore, some of these Ramara folk add, when people are looking for us in the telephone directory, they often don’t know in what exchange to look. How on earth, they sometimes add, will visitors find us if our address is not “Ramara?” By RAE FLEMING How and when did this confusing state of affairs come about? The simple answer is, “A long time ago.” In the 1770s and ’80s, during and after the American Revolution, tens of thousands of Loyalists, among them many soldiers, left the 13 rebellious colonies in favour of British North America, which, more or less, became Canada in 1867. They fled mainly to the Maritimes, to the Montreal area, to eastern Ontario, to the Niagara Peninsula and to the area around today’s Windsor. For settlement purposes, maps were necessary. Loyalists needed to locate their new land. In 1791, Southern Ontario was severed from the old Province of Quebec to create Upper Canada. The new province was divided into seven large districts, from the Eastern District along the Ottawa River, to the Western District along the St. Clair, with the London, Home, Newcastle, Midland and Johnstown districts in between. The land on which Ramara sits today was located in the Home District, a huge land mass that included the Grand River, the town of York (now Toronto), and land all around Lake Simcoe. On the eastern flank of what would become Ramara was the Newcastle District, which stretched northward from Lake Ontario to the Nipissing River. Gradually the more northerly lands were surveyed into townships, lots and concessions. A map of 1852, published in W.H. Smith’s Canada: past, present and future, shows the townships of Mara and Rama as the most northerly townships of York County, which had been carved out of the Home District. Once settlers began to clear the land, villages with mills, stores and post offices were founded in the two townships. Often the first business was a grist mill. A saw mill, a general store, a church or two, a livery and blacksmith began to serve the farming communities nearby. Post offices were established, often inside the general stores. Washago’s post office was founded in 1868. While settlers often named the village in the Rob McCormick The Talbot River (above), is the border between Ramara and Durham. In this photo, Ramara is on the left. early stages of development, the Post Office Department in Ottawa had the final say. Young’s Settlement became Sebright in 1873 when Rama’s second post office opened there. Mills were located, of necessity, on water, beside dams and waterfalls. It didn’t matter that the falls was on or near the boundary between one district or another. In fact, sometimes, as in Gamebridge and Washago, the water that operated the mills created the boundaries of the new townships. I doubt if any resident of Sebright was concerned that the village straddled two townships and two counties. In the 19th century, most people identified with their village, which was, in most cases, also their post office and shopping centre. By 1890, Ontario County had “separated” from York County. Rama and Mara townships were now the most northerly parts of the new county, which included Pickering and Whitby townships in the south. Sebright still straddled two jurisdictions, Ontario County and the new Victoria Country, which, in 1867, had been carved from the old Peterborough County. By 1890 most of the villages of Ramara had a small post office. Even though property taxes were levied by either Mara or Rama, the mailing addresses for those tax notices were never “Mara” or “Rama,” though there was a post office in a small settlement called Rama, located near the First Nations Reserve. In 1890, residents of Rama Township picked up their mail at general stores in Rathurn., Sebright, Longford Mills, Washago, Cooper’s Falls, Fawkham and Sadowa. In a few cases of what might have been absentee landlords, according to the business directory of 1890, a few residents of Rama picked up their mail in Toronto, Hamilton and Fenelon Falls. In 1890 post offices serving Mara Township were located at Brechin, Orillia, Fawn, Uptergrove, Evansvale, Bolsover, Gamebridge, Beaverton and Millington. Sebright and Rathurn. served both Mara and Rama. Toronto was listed as the mailing address of one Mara landowner, and Lindsay, Greenbank, Newmarket and Winnipeg for others. It could be that William Burns of Mara was living and working in the booming Manitoba capital while renting his farm in Mara. (Continued on next page) Villages lost post offices around 1970 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 (Continued from previous page) And what about the Chippewas of Rama First Nation, who, since 1836, when they began to assemble the eight parcels of land that today form the reserve of 2,350 acres, have never had a post office? Even Casino Rama, one of the most prominent entertainment venues of Southern Ontario, receives its mail via the Orillia Post Office. Around 1970, when the Post Office Department decided to centralize offices, most villages lost their post offices. At the same time, new communities, Lagoon City and Bayshore Village, for example, were created, and, though they have never had their own post offices, they soon developed their own identities. In 1994 Rama and Mara were amalgamated to create Ramara. A few years later, the City of Kawartha Lakes (CKL) was created from the old Victoria County, which means that Sebright today straddles CKL and Ramara, which is now part of Simcoe County. Meantime, both Washago and Gamebridge went through similar boundary name changes. Today, Gamebridge unceremoniously straddles Ramara and Brock Townships, Brock being the most northerly part of the Region of Durham, the successor to Ontario County. Washago is in Ramara as well as Severn Township and, according to a real estate agent I talked to recently, it even reaches into Muskoka. Years ago, when Wilf Hart was clerk of Rama, his office was in Washago, in the Severn Township side of the town. Apparently no one in Rama objected. Today the three straddling communities worry that their split identities, which mean that their votes are usually split too, diminish their power to put in office the candidate of their choice, and, later, to influence elected candidates. And we haven’t even got to the problem of telephone exchanges and polling cards. According to 411, Ramara does not exist. Cell phones can create their own complications. Sometimes cell phone companies refuse to recognize the correct postal address. “Could you give me another address?,” one man was asked by Rogers. Or was it Bell? “I could,” he answered, “but it wouldn’t be where I live.” Elections Ontario and Elections Canada, the two bodies that create voters’ lists and mail us Page 19 poll cards that tell us where to vote, also find Ramara and most parts of rural Canada a tad difficult. But we won’t get into that imbroglio. So what about a new post office called “Ramara”? And what to do with those three straddling communities Would residents of Severn and Brock Townships, as well as those living in the CKL, be forced to “repatriate?” Maybe we should revert to the old-fashioned way of locating people, one that Dan Needles satirizes in Wingfield Farm. Forget about numbers and street names. Simply identify people by the nearest geographic feature or building. “You’ll come to an old feed mill,” old timers used to say. “It’s not there anymore, but you turn left anyway at where it used to be.” And so on. Where is here indeed? By KEVIN LEHMAN Maple Avenue in Longford Mills. Janice further explained that I was renting property that was actually on Chippewas of Rama First Nation land, and was therefore not considered a resident of Ramara. I was crushed. Lynn and I eventually found a beautiful Cape Cod home on a quiet street in Washago. While Washago proper is in Severn Township, our street is on the Ramara side of the community. Our phone number starts with 689, just like all the others in the area. Finally, I was a Ramaran. In Washago. A 689er. Then my sister sent me an email asking for my phone number because Washago wasn’t in the phone book. That had to be wrong because I knew we existed, but I checked and she was correct. Neither Washago nor Ramara are in the phone book. I called another new friend, Marian Davey, a fellow 689er in neighboring Ramona. That’s part of Ramara, too. She said we were in the book, but you had to look under Severn Bridge. Of course, she was right. But I don’t want to be listed under Severn Bridge. I live in Washago. In Ramara. Tylenol helps. Not much, but some. I like living in Ramara, but it can be a bit confusing Community Correspondent I wasn’t always this confused. But then I didn’t always live in Ramara North. I had been volunteering at the Ramara Library for a couple of years but living in Orillia. My wife, Lynn, and I decided to move to Ramara to be closer to her work and my volunteer interests. We rented a house in Longford Mills while we looked around for a place of our own. That is where my bafflement began. In fall 2006, I jumped into the Ramara municipal elections with both feet, assisting my friend, Leila Sheriff, another Ramaran, in her unsuccessful bid to be councillor for Ward 1. You are welcome, Leila. During the campaign, we received a copy of the voters’ list, and I eagerly thumbed through it, looking for my name as a first-time Ramara voter. I was disappointed not to find it. Believing that I was eligible, I called the Township offices and spoke to Janice McKinnon, at that time the assistant Clerk of the Township. Janice is a nice lady who is now the Clerk. She patiently explained that the reason I was not on the Ramara voting list was because I did not live in Ramara. That had to be wrong, I thought, and to clear up her confusion, I reiterated that I lived at 6835 Argyle historian Rae Flemingʼs biography of Peter Gzowski was published in late July. He can be reached at rb.fleming@bell.net. Volunteer and Washago resident Kevin Lehman can be reached at jkev0721@yahoo.com. Orillia & Areaʼs Finest Collision Repair Workmanship LIFETIME Guarantee in Writing 325-4804 Page 20 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Art attack Photos by Rob McCormick Clockwise, from top: Visitors browse at the Brechin Ball Park during the first Ramara ArtPark and Studio Tour in July; artists Maureen Haines and Sheila MacDonald Ross display their work at Mac Donald Rossʼs studio in Washago; an art lover checks out the work of Suzan Bertrand in the ball park; Lois Brennan displays a painting she won in a draw at Studio 37 By the Falls near Gambebridge, where Louise St. Amour and Micheline Beaulieu collaborated on the piece; visitors look at a display in the Legion; and quilter Maryleah Palero (seated) welcomes guests to her Uptergrove-area home and studio. First Ramara ArtPark and Studio tour records 600 visits Art lovers made more than 600 visits to the six points on the first Ramara ArtPark and Studio Tour in July. The tour, held on the weekend of July 3 and 4, brought together more than 20 local artists who sold more than $3,000 worth of work over the two days. “We were very pleased with the turnout,” said Darleen Cormier, publisher of The Ramara Chronicle, which organized the event. “It was the first time so many Ramara artists have been brought together for one show,” she said. “We were especially pleased to be able to showcase artists at points throughout the township.” Three artists opened their studios in the Washago, Uptergrove, and Gamebridge areas. St. Columbkille Catholic Church was open for tours, and artists also displayed their work at the Brechin Ball Park and Brechin/Mara Legion. The tour, which was free to the artists and public, was produced with no budget. “We wanted to see what would happen if we just put all these artists together and gave people a chance to view their work over a couple of days,” Cormier said. “We think it really got people travelling around the township that weekend.” Cormier said next year’s tour is planned for July 2 and 3, and expects the number of participating artists will grow. “We have already heard from several Ramara artists who missed this year’s show and want to be in it next year,” Cormier said. “We think it is bound to get bigger and better.” — Rob McCormick The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Page 21 Art on Severn raises $2,500 Rob McCormick The work of 14 artists was on display during the third annual Art on the Severn Juried Art Show and Sale July 10 and 11 at the Washago Community Centre. About 250 people attended the two-day Art on the Severn Juried Art Show and Sale at the Washago Community centre on July 10 and 11. The third annual show, featuring the work of 14 artists, raised about $2,500 for the centre through artists’ fees, the show’s 30 per cent of sales and through donations. “It was a good show, our biggest yet,” Brooks said. In previous years the show has drawn “eight or nine” artists, Brooks said. Ten of this year’s 14 were new to the show, she said. Brooks thanked the show’s team of about 25 volunteers, as well as Casino Rama and Meridian Credit Union for grants of $1,200 and $750 respectively to help promote the show. “It was a constant flow of people. We estimate about 250 came through for the weekend,” Brooks said. In addition to total sales of about $1,800, several artists got good leads on future work, she said. “I know two of the artists have paintings ordered, so commissions definitely played a role,” she said. — Rob McCormick Your choice for both rooftop and ground-mounted solar PV projects Offices Brechin: 1-888-775-7977 Blackstock: 905-826-3104 Pontypool: 905-826-3102 Ramara YOU HA HAVE VE A CHOICE. It is time to choose professional leadership that is open and accessible to all citizens of this township. r It is time for this municipal government to build solid working relationships with our neighbours. f It is time to look ahead and plot our course in a thoughtful, fiscally responsible way. marybax. marybax.ca It is time to choose to balance development with conservation. Seeds of hope Page 22 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Ramara woman part of groundbreaking study of alternative to traditional radiation therapy By ROB McCORMICK Managing Editor A Ramara woman is part of a North American study that could, in future, change the way radiation treatment is administerd to as many as a third of breast-cancer patients. Suzan Bertrand, of Lagoon City, is among 420 patients in the study of permanent breast seed implants as an alternative to standard external beam radiation treatment, which is typically delivered over a period of weeks and is associated with uncomfortable side effects such as skin reddening, peeling and swelling of the breast. The seeds, which were developed in the 1970s and have been widely used to deliver radiation in the treatment of prostate cancer since the 1980s, are implanted in the breast at the surgical site. The technique, called brachytherapy, is less invasive and more convenient for the patient, and avoids the prolonged surface irritation of standard beam treatment. The clinical trial Bertrand is part of is a continuation of a smaller study conducted on 67 breastcancer patients from 2004 to 2007, said Dr. Jean Phillippe Pignol, of the Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre’s Odette Cancer Centre Toronto. Pignol, a radiation oncologist, led the world’s first breast cancer treatment using these brachytherapy seeds of palladium. Brachytherapy was already being used in the treatment of prostate cancer, and Pignol and his colleagues were the first to translate and perform brachytherapy for the treatment of early-stage breast cancer. Pignol, the principal investigator, says the current study, which began in December, involves patients being treated at Sunnybrook in Toronto, and in Pittsburgh, San Diego, Cincinnati, Calgary and Edmonton. “We figured out (in the smaller study) that the seeds have just a third of the toxicity associated with the normal treatment,” Pignol said in a July interview. “As of today, we do not have a single local recurrence in the same breast. So it was more efficient than expected.” Pignol expects that, as a direct result of the current study, the permanent breast seed implant will be the preferred form of radiation treatment in eligible breast-cancer patients in about 10 years. “This is a pioneering study,” he said. “The first ever. Eventually we hope that the 67 patients who participated in the initial study will help thousands of women down the road. We believe that in the near future, it is possible that one patient out of three will benefit from this technique. We recently conducted a study with women diagnosed with invasive ductal carcinoma, another type of breast cancer, and the results show the partial breast irradiation technique using the seeds compared favourably with standard beam therapy, and with fewer side effects.” Radiation treatment is most often administered Rob McCormick Suzan Bertrand, left, serves a customer at the Ramara Farm and Country Market in July. “I know now that the fact of cancer will be with me forever. I have talked to other people who have gone through cancer and they say no, you will never get beyond this. Itʼs a turning point in the road where youʼll never go back, and youʼll never feel the same again.” Breast-cancer survivor Suzan Bertrand to cancer patients after surgery, to prevent local recurrence. For Bertrand, the standard external administration would have meant seven weeks of daily treatment in Barrie. Brachytherapy involves a one-hour procedure to implant the seeds, with a followup consultation two months later. As part of the study, Bertrand will have annual mammograms and consultations for the next 10 years. Bertrand’s cancer was discovered in January, when she went to Orillia for a routine breast screening, “my first ever.” Two days later she got a phone call. A biopsy followed, her cancer was confirmed in February and on March 2 the tumour was removed in a lumpectomy. “Because it was stage one cancer, I didn’t have to have chemotherapy,” she says. Later in March, Bertrand was referred to Pignol by Dr. Christiaan Stevens, a radiation oncologist at Royal Victoria Hospital in Barrie, who thought her type of cancer might make her eligible for the palladium seed implants. For Bertrand, brachytherapy has made her lifealtering encounter with cancer less traumatic. “I wasn’t frightened of standard radiation the way I was frightened of chemotherapy and surgery,” she said. “I just thought it was going to be inconvenient, but I was not afraid. I was just going to grin and bear it. If I’d had to go to Barrie I just would have scheduled my life around it for seven weeks.” But by being able to avoid that process, “you get your life back,” Bertrand says. “I know now that the fact of cancer will be with me forever. I have talked to other people who have gone through cancer and they say no, you will never get beyond this. It’s a turning point in the road where you’ll never go back, and you’ll never feel the same again. “You’ll always feel vulnerable and be faced with your own mortality. It’s a real slap in the face. So the constant going back and forth to radiation treatment weeks on end would just have reinforced that and driven it home. (Continued on next page) ‘Excited, proud’ to be part of study The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Page 23 (Continued from previous page) “I’m sure all cancer patients suffer a bit from depression afterwards. I should be elated because it’s done and over with, but I think there’s a shock wave after surgery, and I’m kind of fighting that depression from time to time. Having to go through radiation treatment every day for seven weeks would definitely have made it a lot worse. Brachytherapy gave me back a sense of normalcy.” When the seeds were implanted, Bertrand was given a card to present in the event she travelled, because the radiation her body would trigger airport security systems. The seeds, which remain in the breast, release about 50 per cent of their radiation in the first 17 days. In about three months, they no longer trigger a response from a Geiger counter. Bertrand, 54, says she still experiences fatigue, but as her stamina increases, she looks forward to resuming her normally busy life. The wife and mother of one grown son is an active gardener, and sells baked goods at the Saturday Farm and Country Market in Brechin. She is also a graphic artist who writes and illustrates The Chronicle’s Gardening column. “I wasn’t able to garden this year because of the energy level and the pain. It’s your pectoral muscle that’s involved and it’s a lot of bending over. So I haven’t really been able to get down and digging, as I love to do. “I would have to say the implant did give me some additional pain. I was recovering very well from the surgery and now I am recovering again from the implanting of the seeds. But now it’s feeling pretty good, and less painful. I believe I would have been a lot more sore from standard radiation treatment.” Bertrand says she is “excited and proud” to be part of the study. “I feel like a guinea pig, able to contribute to cancer research in a way that I could never have done financially. I’m also excited to be part of a new technology, a new technique, which I could not have afforded if I had to pay for this out of pocket. “The inconvenience of seeing a doctor once a year is not an inconvenience to me at all. In fact it’s very reassuring. Nobody is going to be more closely watched for cancer than I am. That’s a secure feeling, so I really don’t mind taking a trip to Toronto once a year. I am happy about it and don’t find it too invasive or foresee any side effects I’ll have to deal with in the long term, but you never know. “A positive attitude is the best thing you can have in a medical condition. If your are letting the cancer rule your life and your thinking, I think it empowers the disease. This treatment has enabled me to put cancer out of my mind for short periods. You’ll never forget that entirely, but it’s not dominating your life, your very waking thought. “I think everybody is going to hope that they can have brachytherapy, that they are eligible, because it’s definitely an easier way to deal with something terrible in your life. ” Rob McCormick can be reached at ramara.chronicle@rogers.com. Provincial champions Howard Raper Engineers’ report rejects plan to dry out and dredge lagoons The Brechin/Mara Legion Branch Ladies Dart Team won the Legionʼs Ontario Championship in Chelmsford, near Sudbury, on June 26. From left are Beryl Wilson, Marilyn Clough, Heather Shier and Ashley Shier. By ROB McCORMICK Managing Editor There are “all kinds of issues” with a plan to dry out and dredge the 10 kilometres of lagoons in Lagoon City, says an engineer whose company presented a report to the Lagoon City Parks and Waterways Commission in August. “You don’t need to dredge the whole lagoon, ” said Tim Collingwood, manager of the Orillia branch of C.C. Tatham & Associates Ltd., the Township’s engineering firm. “You’re wasting your time and money. You need to identify the areas that need to be done and put into place a program with little bit more quality control.” His company can put such a program in place, he said. The plan to “de-water” and excavate the lagoons in winter was proposed in January by Atlantis Marine Construction of Collingwood. Fish and aquatic life would be removed and returned to the lagoons when they were filled again. The estimated cost of the project, designed to provide a 15-to-20-year solution to the dredging problem and weed control for at least 10 years, was $1.5 million. The Tatham report, prepared at the request of the commission, cited several areas of concern with the Atlantis plan. “Shorewalls would most likely move and may fail given the resulting change in loading when canals (and surrounding ground) are dewatered,” it stated. The required damming of the municipal drain at the north end of Gondola Lagoon is “not reasonable,” the report stated, also concluding that “Fisheries impacts could be significant and mitigation would be difficult.” The report recommends that the commission “develop a long-range plan for dredging the lagoons using conventional methods,” and said Tatham “would be pleased” to attend a meeting to “discuss how the project might be advanced properly.” The commission currently spends about $100,000 a year on dredging the lagoons with a backhoe on a barge. It is also considering the use of a self contained dredging unit, worth between $500,000 and $600,000, that breaks up the bottom with an auger and pumps it into a trailing container. The commission decided at its Aug. 12 meeting to contact manufacturers of such units in Oakville and Buffalo, N.Y. Simply Special Originals We cater to the lady better than 35 Classic Ladiesʼ Wear A wide selection of Canadian designers, exclusive to this market (705) 689-6603 Come visit Pat Warwick in beautiful downtown Washago Page 24 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 A fair to remember Don’t forget to mark your calendar for the 120th Ramona Fall Fair, Sept. 17 and 18 By ROB McCORMICK Managing Editor A team competes in the horse pull at last yearʼs Ramona Fall Fair The 120th edition of the Ramona Fall Fair will be held Friday and Saturday, Sept. 17 and 18, kicking off at 6:30 p.m. Friday with the annual horseshoe tournament. “Friday night is a bit more of an adult event with the tournament and the beverage tent,” said Glenn Spriggs, media co-ordinator for Ramona Hall, which organizes the fair. “It’s a progressive tournament with two-person teams based on elimination and cash prizes for first, second and third place,” he said. “There will be a couple of hundred dollars in prize giveaways and, there’s also a grand trophy,” Spriggs said. “It’s fun little memento because it’s a one-of-a-kind trophy. It’s home-made with an actual horseshoe on it. The winners get their name put on it and it stays in Ramona Hall.” The tournament, which has been running for about 10 years, drew almost 30 teams last year. Saturday is Family Day, full of events including a woodsmen’s competition, a free bouncy castle, nail-driving and husband-calling contests, a spelling bee, silent auction, petting zoo and the fair’s signature horse pull, which runs from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. New this year will be a family pumpkin-carving contest. “Pumpkins are provided by Ramona Hall and they will be judged with cash prizes for first, second and third,” Spriggs said. “That’s exciting, to be able to add a new family component to the fair,” he said. And of course, there will be lots to eat. “Burgers, onion rings, split pea soup and meat pies,” Spriggs said, “and the vendors will be selling candy floss and slushy cones and everything else you’d expect.” Judging of the exhibits will also take place Saturday. “We are expecting about 50 livestock entries and close to 1,000 other entries in various categories, and it would be fair to assume that 90 per cent of them would be Ramara entries.” The livestock competitions “are a huge part of the fair,” Spriggs said. “We pay sanctioned judges for all the judging that gets done with the goats, sheep, cows and poultry.” Hi-Way Public Storage Indoor Storage from 5ʼx7ʼ to 10ʼx32 Outside storage for cars, RVs, boats, etc. 484-5370 Fully fenced lot with an electronic gate and surveillance cameras Boat repairs, winterizing and shrinkwrapping available on site In the Brechin Business Park Barb Beal The judges will also consider entries in categories including children and adult crafts, needlework, baking, jams and jellies, vegetables and flowers. About 25 vendors are expected, Spriggs said, selling “everything from arts and crafts to Christmas gift ideas and food.” Official opening ceremonies will be held at noon, with remarks from dignitaries. Admission to the fair is $5 per person, with lots of free parking, Spriggs said, About 700 people attended last year’s fair. For more information call Spriggs at (705) 6898881, or Eileen Cronk at (705) 689-6101. Severn Bridge Fall Fair Sept. 11 Rob McCormick can be reached at ramara. chronicle@rogers.com. The Severn Bridge Fall Fair is expected to draw about 800 to 900 people to the 137th annual gathering on Saturday, Sept. 11. “It’s a small, family fair with a little something for everyone,” says Isabell McTaggart, treasurer of the Severn Bridge Agricultural Society, which organizes the fair. Events begin at 9 a.m. and include a bake sale, a parade, opening ceremonies, entertainment, a baby contest, horse show, spelling bee, corn roast and raffle draws. About $6,000 to $7,000 in prizes will be awarded, with the fair expected to draw between 200 and 300 exhibitors and competitors. The fair will be held at the Severn Bridge Fairgrounds on Southwood Road in Severn Bridge. Admission is $5 for adults, $3 for students in grades 9 to 12, and children are admitted free. For further information call McTaggart at (705) 689-5519. — Rob McCormick We really were Number One The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Page 25 By ADRIENNE DAVIES Community Correspondent When that last day finally came in June, who could have dreamed that only two months later we would be eager to start classes again? When the promise of long lazy days filled with outdoor fun beckoned, who would have believed that freedom would pall and we would look forward to lessons and, possibly, a new teacher? But here we were, happy to meet up with the friends we had missed over the summer and to initiate all of our little siblings into the mysteries of school. And, yes, we had a new teacher (a man, of all things!), fresh from Normal School and ready to teach and be taught. The first thing he had to learn was that the most important event of our school year was looming on the horizon. Only two weeks away was the Ramona Fair, a grand celebration of the township’s best in produce and flowers, livestock and art, and we, as one of the six schools in Rama Township, were to participate. One of our classmates was sure to win a prize for penmanship or drawing, and quite a few from our school were good spellers and would surely do well in the bee. We had students with “the gift of gab” who might do well in the public speaking contest, too. It would be a triumph to see a trophy displayed in our classroom. But there was one area in which a prize had usually eluded us: Each school had to march around the parade grounds, carrying their banner, and then stop in front of the judges and perform a yell. This would show to all the world how well-disciplined and dignified we could be and how well we could follow instructions. Once Mr. Huffman, our new teacher, realized the importance of this event, we practised marching every day, two by two in a long snake around the school yard, trying to match our steps with those of the bigger and littler kids. Around and around we went, until we had achieved some semblance of cohesive movement. Now that we were fairly confident in our movements, there was the yell to be considered. Not too long out of high school himself, Mr. Huffman suggested we all ask our older brothers and sisters to recommend something they had heard from cheerleaders at football games in town. At our house the overused and the trite were considered and discarded and somehow, our Dad got involved with the problem. Tongue-in-cheek, he came up with a Illustration by Suzan Bertrand rhyme which we dutifully delivered to school the next day. Lo and behold, Mr. Huffman liked it! So we memorized and practised until we were fairly certain that we could shout in unison and all be heard. Finally, we were ready for the excitement of the day itself, and we rode with our dad to Ramona, sitting in the back of the truck as we traveled down the dusty September roads. And the fair itself fulfilled its thrilling promise with livestock filling the pens for judging, and teams of horses with braided tails and manes showing their strength. Inside the building were the best vegetables and fruits on display, and well as flowers and baking. Some of our friends had nurtured a calf or piglet to become a definite ribbon-winner or had cosseted three special tomatoes or dahlias in hopes of a prize. In my busy family, unused to the finer points of rural life, we often found ourselves standing at the displays wondering why we hadn’t entered our own handwork. We knew there was no chance of displaying vegetables — in our family we ate them all — but our grandmother knit beautiful sweaters for us all and our mom was a whiz at crochet. All of us girls could sew and embroider and bake, but we hadn’t thought of preparing an item for the fair when the halcyon days of summer beckoned. Well, never mind, we knew lots of the winners and were proud of our association. Finally, the school competition was next and we hurried to line up in the way we had practised, having to fill some holes where a classmate or two were missing, but, in general, keeping to the pattern of tallest to smallest. The other schools did the same and we filled the field with our double lines of students. As SS #1, we were in the unenviable position of going first. At the signal, we started, proudly led by the biggest students holding our banner. We marched in unison, stopped in front of the judges with very little pushing and shoving and were set to impress everyone with our vocal prowess. And, here it was, out loud, and best as we could shout it: Hickory Dickory, Chelsea bun, We’re the kids from Number One We go to school just for fun If you want a fight we sure can run Hickory Dickory, Chelsea bun. Silence, then some guffaws. The judges didn’t know how to react. When the other schools followed with their precise movements and more conventional words we knew our goose was cooked. Well, we didn’t win, again, but we sure were happy to be the talk of the fair. Adrienne Davies is the secretary of the Ramara Historical Society. She can be reached at bamdavies@yahoo.ca. The society meets the third Thursday of each month at 7:30 p.m. at the Ramara Centre. Military History Day Help us kick off Legion Week on Saturday, Sept. 18 at the Brechin Legion Branch 488. The day will include displays of military uniforms, artifacts, vehicles and historical memorabilia. The event will run from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. and there is no charge for admission. You will be able to buy lunch served by the Legion. Anyone wishing to set up a display or wanting more information can contact Carl Black at 705-326-3984. You say tomato Page 26 There was a time in July when I was so eager to get at my tomatoes that they were lucky if I let them turn red. (Fried green tomatoes are a favourite in my household.) Come September they come in by the bucketful and out of my ears. Every year at this time I ask myself why I planted so many tomatoes and vehemently vow to cut back next spring. However, when February rolls around I’m congratulating myself on having the forethought to plan for such an abundant harvest. In the steamy kitchen, chopping boards and paring knives litter the work surface. With withered, wrinkled fingers you toil away at putting up this year’s crop. Processing your tomatoes is admittedly labour intensive, but the winter rewards will prove well worth the effort. There are several ways to handle the task, and I recommend that you employ each of them in order to broaden your culinary possibilities. Drying: This method has to be performed early enough in the season to take advantage of the remaining summer sunshine. It’s a slow, lazy way because there is no need for blanching and peeling. Depending on weather conditions, drying could take from four days to two weeks. Use a screen, possibly from one of your windows if they pop out easily. Give it a good cleaning and lay it flat on top of some brick legs in the sunniest spot you have. Place four bricks in the corners to secure it against wind. Simply slice tomatoes in half and place cut side up on the screen. Sprinkle lightly with salt and cover with cheesecloth without letting the cloth touch the tomatoes. You will need to bring the contraption in for the night to avoid dew and marauding critters. Once dried, store some of them in a zip bag. Others can be put into a jar with olive oil and kept in the refrigerator. Freezing: If you plant a crop garden, you really should own a freezer. This is by far the simplest method of putting up any vegetable. Sometimes you will be faced with only a few really ripe specimens that will not wait. If you just can’t face another toasted tomato sandwich, freezing will prevent any produce from going to waste. Use the following blanch-and-peel method to prepare tomatoes for all types of processing. Bring a generous pot of water to the boil. Prepare an ice bath nearby and have a large kitchen spider utensil at the ready. Things will happen fast now. Tomatoes should be plunged into the boiling water for 40 seconds, then rudely submerged in the ice water to stop cooking. The shock will force the skin to split. Slip the skins off your tomatoes and take out the stem ends. At this point, The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Gardening By SUZAN BERTRAND Processing your tomatoes is admittedly labour intensive, but the winter rewards will prove well worth the effort. you can decide to quarter, chop or just leave them whole. Now you simply load up your freezer bag, squeeze the excess air out, seal and freeze. Don’t get carried away with thrift by using inferior ziplock bags. After all this work, you’d be pretty angry at yourself if freezer burn ruined your cache of summer bounty. Canning: There is hardly a more gratifying sight than a pantry shelf lined with sparkling jars of your own preserves. Canning will bring out your inner pioneer, so don the gingham apron and let’s get to it. Cleanliness is next to godliness and essential to canning. Use the sterilize cycle on your dishwasher to treat jars, lids and all utensils that will have contact with the tomatoes. Into each sterile pint jar, pour one tablespoon of lemon juice. Pack the peeled tomatoes in, squishing them down to release some liquid. With a rubber spatula, release any air trapped in the jar. Continue packing until there is a half-inch of head room left. Put the lid and sealing ring in place and tighten with your fingertips. A vacuum will seal the jar, not brute force. Submerge the jars in boil- Illustration by Suzan Bertrand ing water for 40 minutes, retrieve them from the water bath, line them up on the counter and admire your work. After a short wait you’ll hear the satisfying sound of the lids popping down. As a reward for all your hard work, and because you’re now so adept at putting up preserves, I’m going to divulge the secret recipe for my Granny’s Chili Sauce. 14 large ripe tomatoes, peeled and quartered 6 large onions, finely chopped 1 bunch of celery, finely chopped 2 jars of applesauce, 24 oz. each 2 teaspoon each of cinnamon, ground cloves and salt 2 ½ cups of brown sugar 2 cups of white sugar Combine all ingredients in a large kettle. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat to simmer, stir and simmer, then simmer and stir some more until thickened to jam-like consistency (about three hours). Spoon the chili sauce into hot sterilized jars. Process the jars in a hot water bath for 35 minutes. Yield: 12 pints. Lagoon City resident Suzan Bertrand is president of the Flower Buds Garden Club. She can be reached at suzanb@rogers.com. The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Draw to raise funds for library summer reading program Page 27 The Ramara Library Quilting Club is raffling three prizes in a draw to be held Oct. 22. All funds raised go to support the libraryʼs summer reading program. First prize is the queensized Paths to Pieces handmade quilt (at right). Second prize is a handcrafted angel doll and third prize is $35. Tickets are $2 each or three for $5 and can be purchased at either branch of the Ramara Public Library. Call 325-5776 for further information. At right, with the firstprize quilt, are quilting club members (back row, from left) Val Tuff, Janet Daniel, Lori Harrington, Joyce Hird; front row from left are Adrienne Davies, Marion Hisey, Vera Sommers, Mary Oliver. The tomato a much-beleaguered fruit Special to The Chronicle They don’t make ‘em like they used to: big, lumpy and ugly. With their irregular shape and surprising colours, heirloom tomatoes traditionally hold a special place in a gardener’s heart. Consensus insists that they taste better than modern varieties, but has their taste got anything to do with the preservation of heritage? Scientists say that an heirloom’s taste has less to do with its genes than its conditions. For one thing, they are allowed to produce a normal number of fruit. Modern tinkering has encouraged varieties to set close to 100 tomatoes per plant, sacrificing taste for productivity. Secondly, any tomato that’s left to come to maturity on the vine is going to be superior to those that are plucked in their tender youth. Even those sold commercially as “vine ripened” are harvested as soon as the first trace of blush threatens the green. Instead of living up to their robust reputation, you may be surprised to discover that heirloom tomatoes suffer the effects of inbreeding. Their constitution is feeble. DNA analysis reveals an inferior defence against disease, along with a basi- Detlor Mobile Marine detlorservices@bell.net www.detlorservices.com 1-888-218-4435 cally undiversified makeup. Only 10 mutant genes are shared by all who call themselves heirlooms. Science tells us that under the skin, they are all the same. Experience tells us they are simply delicious. Controversy has been the constant companion of the tomato throughout its journey to modern times. To set the record straight on an item of debate that still rages today, the tomato is not a vegetable, but rather a fruit. More specifically, it’s a berry because it has edible seeds. If you’re wondering where this marvellous food came from, you’ll be disappointed to know that the Mother Tomato has never been found. Genetically speaking, the current tomato goes back more than a million years, but what came before is still unknown. The Aztecs (those agricultural hot-shots) take credit for domesticating Solanum lycopersicum in Vera Cruz, Mexico. The fruit they grew was similar in size to our cherry tomatoes and yellow in maturity. They called this little marvel tomatl, which means “the swelling fruit.” Misnomers plagued the poor tomato on its jour- ney through Europe after Christopher Columbus brought it back to Spain in the 15th century. French botanist Tournefort provided the Latin botanical name, Lycopersicon esculentum, to the tomato. It translates to “wolfpeach.” Thought to be poisonous, it was used for decorative purposes only. Eventually, by risking his life and eating one, some brave Spaniard proved that tomatoes were safe and delicious. Gastronomy has never looked back. The Italians later called it the “golden apple;” and the French, the “apple of love,” but that was not until the ban by the Church of Rome was lifted. The Pope called it the “devil’s fruit” and proclaimed the consumption of tomatoes to be a sinful indulgence. So, how did an unassuming berry from the Andes overcome so many obstacles to become a staple of kitchen repertoires everywhere? By the sheer perseverance of its deliciousness, I’d say. As the humorist Lewis Grizzard said, “It’s difficult to think anything but pleasant thoughts while eating a home-grown tomato.” — Suzan Bertrand Winter Storage Available In Fully Fenced Yard With Surveillance Cameras Full Mechanical Services Engine Winterization Shrink Wrap Change requires total approach Page 28 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Mind, body and spirit all have to be involved for most people to achieve desired results Six years of consulting have taught me more than what was in my nutrition texts. While in school, I was sure I could help everyone if I just applied the science I had learned. When early applications of my newfound knowledge got results, I was sure I had all the answers. A year later, when I started working more with the public, I was faced with some challenges. I learned that for most people to achieve their desired results, it took more than just healthy dietary guidelines. In fact, permanent results largely rely on permanent changes. And permanent changes, including, eating healthy, losing weight and reducing blood pressure, all required a total mind, body and spirit approach. You cannot get healthy if you think unhealthy thoughts. You cannot feel healthy if you feed your body life-robbing foods. And you cannot reach any goal without motivation. The thoughts you think will affect when and how you reach your goals. Thinking that you will never lose weight, or that you cannot control your eating patterns, will become your truth if you let it. Thinking that you can lose weight and that you can eat healthy, nourishing foods daily will get you results, all because you allowed it to become possible. The same goes for the body. We live in a society that greatly mistreats the one and only body we have while here on earth. We mistreat our body with substance abuse (alcohol, recreational drugs, over-the counter medications and over-prescribed medications). We want to feel better, but rely on substances to mask our symptoms. Why not work on health and have no symptoms to By ALISA HERRIMAN treat? We live in toxic environments, breathing in smoggy air in the summer, and cleaning everything in our homes with chemicals. We put toxins on our food and cover our body with them. Have you ever read the ingredients of your shampoo or laundry soap? These chemicals are applied to our skin, the largest organ of absorption, every day. Did you know the chemicals applied to food grow up through the roots into every fibre of the plant? Or that they kill the beneficial microbes in the soil that help nourish the plant, resulting in nutrient deficient, chemical laden plants? Don’t get me started on the processed foods so many of us eat. These are all life robbing foods, foods that rob our bodies of valuable nutrients and are directly related to diseases such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease. In order to live in a healthy body you need to provide it with life giving foods every day. Feed it organic fruits and vegetables, organic dairy and alternatives. Enjoy local beef, chicken and turkey. Support your local farmers and buy the freshest eggs and meat you can find. Include raw nuts and seeds such as almonds, sunflower seeds, pumpkin seeds, and include legumes as often as possible by putting them in your casseroles or by topping your salads with them. Supporting organic farming means you are supporting environmentally responsible farming methods and your body is receiving all the nutrition Mother Nature intended us to have. When you purchase organic foods you are essentially voting for healthy food with your dollars. But if we want to achieve a health related goal we also need to include the mind, by thinking positive thoughts and acknowledging that you can make any necessary changes. So how does spirit help get you results? I believe our spirit is what gives us our drive. In order to live a healthier lifestyle, we need to be motivated to make such changes. If we are constantly busy and just cannot find the time to prepare healthy foods, perhaps we are out of balance. Finding a healthy balance between obligations and what makes us happy is an important part of making permanent lifestyle changes. In order to achieve permanent results I have learned that my clients need to focus on more than just their diet. You need to be mindful of your thoughts and actions (mind), include health promoting foods (body) and find balance and motivation (spirit). If you can incorporate all three aspects into your healthy lifestyle you are guaranteed success. I wish you health. Ramara resident Alisa Herriman is a registered nutritionist and the owner of Nutrinity Health Services in Orillia. She can be reached at nutrinityhealth@hotmail.com. Volunteers honoured Special to The Chronicle Former members of the Brechin Community Centre Board Margaret McBain (10 years, left) and Darlene Young (15 years, right), stand with Ward 2 councillor John OʼDonnel (left) and Simcoe North MPP Garfield Dunlop. Five Ramara residents were given Ontario Volunteer Service Awards for years of service in June, including McBain, Young, Joseph Spichtig (40 years), of the Udney Community Centre Board; David Coleman (20 years), Veterans of the Vietnam War; and Joe Brulotte (10 years), present member of the Brechin Community Centre Board Jolly’s Towing and Storage • Lockouts • Boosting • Roadside assistance available 24/7 Highway 12, Brechin 705-484-5800 Rallying ’round Big Brothers, Sisters The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Page 29 Car dealership owner and Ramara resident Mike Davenport hits the road for charity Mike Davenport will be taking it to the streets for charity when he hits the road in his 2002 Subaru WRX in the 2010 Targa Newfoundland, an annual 2,200-kilometre rally in St. John’s in September. Davenport, a Ramara resident and owner of Davenport Subaru in Orillia, will drive the WRX with navigator Shawn Monette. It’s the second time Davenport has participated in the rally. In 2008, Davenport took part in the race and raised $12,700 for the Simcoe-Muskoka Regional Cancer Centre in Barrie. This year he’s raising money for Big Brothers Big Sisters of Orillia. Davenport issued a local “Rally for the Kids” challenge, which had raised more than $8,500 in July, when he held a media conference to unveil the car he’d be driving in the Sept. 11-18 race. Davenport also issued a challenge to the Capital Subaru dealership in St. John’s. The losing dealership will write a cheque for $1,000 to the winning dealership’s chosen charity. Anyone wishing to donate can do so by calling Davenport Subaru at 329-4277 or Big Brothers Big Sisters at 325-3151. For more information on the race, go to www.targanewfoundland.com. —Chronicle Staff Why wouldn’t you buy a used car from this man? xxxxxxxxxxx 2006 Toyota Signna 2008 Subaru Tribeca Ltd. 49,500 km, $17,500 plus HST 72,000 km, $27,500 plus HST 2008 Honda Ridgeline LX 2006 Chevy Equinox 64,000 km, $23,500 plus HST 88,000 km, $12,500 plus HST A proud community supporter since 1995 www.davenportsubaru.com 385 West St. S., Orillia 705-329-4277 Hospital board to hold first Ramara forum Page 30 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 By ROB McCORMICK Managing Editor The Orillia Soldiers’ Memorial Hospital board of directors will hold its next community roundtable in Ramara on Monday, Nov. 1, the first such meeting held outside of Orillia. “The hospital serves a much bigger area than just the city,” said board chairman John Cameron. “We thought we would be more likely to get representative samples of people outside the city if we actually go out into the area ourselves.” Two to four roundtables have been held each year for the last three years, Cameron said, drawing anywhere from a handful to about 30 members of the public. “It is very much an informal dialogue,” he said. “We use it to sometimes test reaction to some of the things we have been working on, but certainly we want to hear from the public. We want to hear if there are concerns out there about things people think we should be working on.” The Ramara meeting will take place at 7 p.m. at the Lagoon City Community Centre, 84 Laguna Parkway, in Lagoon City. Questions will be taken and the public is encouraged to raise issues of concern, Cameron said. “We probably will have something specific we would like to talk about, but it’s a way off,” he said. “Our budget is going to be formalizing about that time, so that’s something that I’m sure will come up. Each meeting, I’d say, has had a different theme.” Information collected at the forums is taken back to senior staff and/or the full hospital board, Cameron said. “Senior staff are not normally there, so the first thing that happens is that there would be discussion with the staff about what we had learned,” he said. “If it was a board matter, then the committee dealing with whatever the issue is would take that information into its deliberations about which way we were going to go.” The forums are just another way the hospital tries to stay in touch with the public, Cameron said. “We feel accountable to the community for the work we do and the direction we try to get the hospital to go in as a board,” he said. “Annually, we have our general meeting where we interact with the public and we get to hear what they think of the progress we’ve made, but that’s a fairly formal structure, and it only takes place once a year. “So rather than rely solely on that, we want to have other ways we can get feedback on what we’re doing. The community roundtables have been very useful, and there always seems to be a specific topic of interest we can go into in depth about. I think it also provides an opportunity for us to identify a topic we would like to interact with the public about. You don’t really want to get to an AGM and find out you’re totally off base and that the public wants to vote down what you are recommending.” Warm gifts for a cold day Special to The Chronicle On Aug. 3, Maureen Fraser Purdie, on behalf of the Lagoon City Ladies Club, presented 15 lap rugs to patients on Orillia Soldiersʼ Memorial Hospitalʼs complex continuing care unit. With Fraser Purdie (back right) are (from left) patient Kevin Egan, OSMH board member Carol Nass, and patients Lilah Reil and John Karreman. Anyone wishing to make a donation of wool to assist in the lap-rug production is asked to contact Maureen Fraser Purdie at 705-484-5377. TWO EXCITING OPPORTUNITIES FOR HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONALS The Mara Medical Centre Board (the “Board”), in conjunction with the Township of Ramara (the “Township”), is endeavoring to launch a Ramara Family Health Team in the Medical Centre located at 3242 Ramara Road 47, Brechin. The Township has been identified as an under-serviced area and the Board is offering two opportunities to entice health care professionals to come to Brechin. OPPORTUNITY #1 The Board will provide rental incentives in exchange for timeline commitments to health care professionals who are willing to set up their practice in the Mara Medical Centre. The Mara Medical Centre is currently equipped with basic office furniture and medical equipment required to set up practice. However, the Board is willing to expand and upgrade the current equipment inventory through the assistance of a successful applicant(s). OPPORTUNITY #2 The Board envisions a Nurse Practitioner-Led Clinic (NPLC) with the benefits of inter-professional teams of health care providers including nurse practitioners, registered nurses, collaborating family physicians and a range of other health care professionals, each working to their full scope of practice. Other health care professionals could include, but are not limited to, chiropractors, message therapists, nutritionists/dieticians, foot care, etc. If you would like further information regarding the above opportunities, please feel free to contact Cathy Wainman (see below). Periodically, the government offers funding to assist in the establishment of a NPLC. The application process is extremely vigorous and the competition for funds strong. The Board and Township want to make a comprehensive case for our local requirement. It has been proposed to set up an Ad Hoc Working Committee to explore options, gather data, build linkages and prepare applications for funding a NPLC. If you are a Health Care Professional or concerned citizen and would like to participate on such a project, please submit your resume and qualifications to: The Mara Medical Centre Board c/o The Township of Ramara Att: Cathy Wainman, Medical Board Secretary P.O. Box 130 Brechin, ON L0K 1B0 Phone: (705)484-5374 Ext. 242 Email: cwainman@ramara.ca Planning issue drags on The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Page 31 Dispute between County and Province blamed for holding up Rama Road development By ROB McCORMICK Managing Editor An ongoing planning dispute between Simcoe County and the Province that is blamed for holding up development of the Rama Road corridor in Ramara is taking “far too long” to resolve, says a senior County planner. The disagreement centres on a discrepancy between population projections by the Province and those contained in the County’s official plan. An Ontario Municipal Board pre-hearing into the issue had been scheduled for Sept. 24 at the County’s offices in Midhurst, but was cancelled in August. Instead, the Province continues to consider the County’s request to appoint a facilitator in efforts to avoid a full-blown OMB hearing. In August, County planning officials said they hoped a decision would be made “sooner rather than later,” but could not say whether it would be within weeks or months. At The Chronicle’s late-August deadline, the Township’s new admin building to cost less Construction of the new Township administration building will cost about $400,000 less than the original estimate of $3.1 million. As of the The Chronicle’s deadline in late August, the contract was expected to go to Reinders Shouthpark and Associates in Barrie, who submitted a low bid of $2,726,380. “We have closed tenders and we are hoping to have it finalized by council Aug. 30, so we are right on schedule.” said Rick Bates, the Township’s chief administrative officer. Work is expected to be completed by fall 2011. The Reinders bid is for construction of the building only. Additional expenses such as architects’ fees, the security system and furnishings are expected to push the cost of the completed facility to about $4 million. “There’s still a pile of stuff to do,” Bates said. Bates attributed the low bid, which he said came as a bit of a surprise, to competition in the construction sector. “We know that there isn’t a lot of building going on, so we thought we would be under,” he said, “but we certainly didn’t expect to be that much under.” The 14,363-square-foot, single-storey building will be almost double the square footage of the current municipal building. The planning department will move to the new building, leaving the current planning building to environmental services, the department that handles water and waste water management. — Rob McCormick issue was in the hands of a new minister, Bob Chiarelli, after a cabinet shuffle split the former Ministry of Infrastructure and Energy. In a written response to questions from The Chronicle, a ministry spokesperson said Chiarelli, the infrastructure minister, “will be brought up to speed on this issue. No decision has been made at the present time.” The Province’s 2006 Places to Grow Plan allows for the population of Simcoe County’s 16 municipalities and the separate cities of Barrie and Orillia to increase to 667,000 from he current 423,000 by 2031. The County says the province’s forecast is too low, and is projecting a population of 707,000 in the same time period. The County has been asking for the appointment of a facilitator since 2009. “It has taken longer than I had hoped,” said Bruce Hoppe, Simcoe’s manager of development planning. “I wouldn’t say inordinate necessarily, but it’s certainly not normal. It has taken far too long.” The issue is blocking provincial approval of Sim- coe’s official plan, which the County passed in 2008. Ramara’s official plan, necessary for development on Rama Road to move ahead, can not be approved until the Simcoe plan is accepted. The impasse is “absolutely” delaying development, Hoppe said. “It definitely is holding up quite a few processes throughout the County, including the Rama Road corridor,” he said. The spokesperson for the newly-split infrastructure ministry would not estimate when a decision would be made. “The ministry wouldn’t be able to speculate on this. (The facilitator) is brought in on a wide variety of issues and situations. There is no set time that it may take.” The Ramara Road corridor is a potentially lucrative a six-kilometre stretch between Atherley and Casino Rama that the Township would like to see populated with hotels, restaurants, retail centres and other tourist attractions. Township officials have described development along the corridor as “the future of the Township” because of the tax revenue it would generate, and have expressed frustration at the lack of progress. Lions sell tickets for draw Howard Raper Brechin and District Lions Club President Bob White and member George Giles sold tickets on a fundraising draw at the Ultramar gas station on Highway 12 July 3. Winners of the Sept. 6 draw receive gift cards valued at $500, $250 or $100 from the Brechin Foodland grocery store. Proceeds go to local non-profit projects and charities. For more information, call White at 484-5567. We carry everything native Moccasins, crafts, art, jewelry and a fully stocked walk-in humidor. Two kilometres past the casino on your right. Remember, if the sign doesnʼt say Rama Moccasin and Smoke, you are in the wrong place, 6413 Rama Rd. Rama, Ont. L0K 1T0 phone: 705-325-5041 www.ramashop.com Page 32 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 The Harbour Inn Restaurant and Banquet Facility Brechin teenager wins $28,900 in scholarships Lisa Harrington with parents Lori and Bert. Rob McCormick Waterloo student, future pharmacist gets financial kickstart By ROB McCORMICK Managing Editor Great grades pay off. Just ask Lisa Harrington. And her parents. Harrington, an 18-year-old Brechin resident, graduated from Patrick Fogarty Catholic Secondary School in Orillia with an overall average of 96 per cent. Her sterling academic record, however, is more than a source of pride. It has led to scholarships and bursaries totaling $28,900 for the young woman who heads off to Waterloo University this fall in pursuit of a career as a pharmacist. Over the summer she was named the recipient of the annual $10,000 Reid Family Scholarship from Orillia Solders’ Memorial Hospital for students in Orillia and area entering into a field of health study. She was also one of 10 students in Canada to receive a $10,000 scholarship from her employer, Sobeys. She has worked part time at the Foodland grocery store in Brechin for about two years. Harrington will receive $2,500 a year through each of those two scholarships, renewable for the next four years, if she maintains a satisfactory academic record. Harrington also received a $3,000 chemistry award and another $4,000 in scholarships and bursaries from Waterloo University. She won her high school’s $300 physics award and a $1,000 award from Orillia orthodontists Bruce MacGregor and David Stirling. As well, she received $500 from the Orillia branch of the Canadian Federation of University Women, and a $100 bursary from the CWL at St. Andrew’s Catholic Church in Brechin. With Lisa headed for six years of study, her parents, Lori, the inter-library loans manager for the Ramara Public Library, and Bert, a beef farmer, are grateful for the financial assistance. “Tuition for pharmacy school is $15,000 to $16,000 a year, so it’s going to be expensive,” Lori says. “We are obviously very proud of Lisa, and thrilled with her success. She has worked very hard to obtain this achievement, maintaining such high marks all throughout her school career, in addition to working part-time since the age of 13, first at Harbour Inn and then at Brechin Foodland. Lisa has always loved learning, and we have been blessed to have a daughter like her.” Pharmacy, Lisa says, was a natural choice for her. “I always like working with people,” she says, “and I really like the math and sciences, so I thought that would really be a good fit. Because I am with the Sobeys program, I will probably work at a Sobeys pharmacy, but I wouldn’t be opposed to a hospital.” “Pharmacists often work at more than one place,” says Lori. “A lot of them work at two locations, and spread themselves around, so there is that possibility, too.” But that’s in the future. For now, Lisa will just keep doing what she does best: working hard for marks that pay dividends. • Now open for Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner, 9 a.m.-10 p.m. • Patio now open • Fresh seafood • New wood burning stove for Gourmet Pizza (Take out available) Friday Live Entertainment Daily Patio Specials 4 p.m. — 6 p.m. 1 Poplar Crescent, Lagoon City, Brechin, ON., Call 705-484-5759 for reservations ‘Being the change’ in Kenya The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Page 33 Ramara students take part in three-week project to help build school in African village The phrase “Be the Change” resounded in the minds and hearts of 22 students from Patrick Fogarty Catholic Secondary School in Orillia as they boarded their plane from Pearson International in Toronto to Kenya on May 22. By KEVIN LEHMAN Community Correspondent Their motto was adopted from a teaching of Mahatma Ghandi, who said, “You must be the change you wish to see in the world.” These young people, accompanied by six adults, were headed to this foreign land in order to bring change to the world. Little did they know how much it would change them. The mission of the group, which lasted three weeks, was several-fold: to interact with the 500 students at the primary school in Pimbiniet, assist with digging of an irrigation ditch in that village and to help construct a new school at the neighboring village of Enelerai. The new school will be a boarding high school that will house up to 600 students. The group also brought 30 hockey bags full of school and music supplies and sporting goods. The mission was organized in conjunction with Free the Children, the children’s charity founded in 1995 by children’s rights advocate Craig Kielburger. Among the students and staff accompanying them were five Ramara residents: school viceprincipal Carolyn Healy, her son J. J., and students Ga Eun Lee, Michelle Gordon and Rachel McAllister. The costs of the mission were covered through fundraising by the students and the school. Events included a gala formal dance, an auction, and school functions such as school dinners. A sponsorship booklet was produced and there was support from local businesses. The effort raised more than $30,000. From their first “jambo” (hello in Swahili) to the last “kwaheri” (goodbye), everyone on the trip had eye-opening and soul-inspiring experiences. “Just getting there was an adventure,” said Carolyn Healy, recalling the 20-hour trip. “Our flight date was right when the ash from the volcano in Iceland was interfering with travel, so we had to fly way north of the normal path and come back down to Heathrow in England.” From Heathrow, the group flew to Nairobi in Kenya, then took a two-hour lorry ride to their final destination. J. J. Healy felt that he had found a culture that knows how to live, at peace. He sees the Kenya mission as a once-in-a-lifetime experience, one that has enriched him and for which he is grateful to have had. One scene stood out for him. “We were digging a ditch; hard, back-breaking work, sweating in our T-shirts and shorts and probably feeling sorry that it was so hot. Then a Kenyan woman came by. She was robed in traditional Special to The Chronicle Students from Patrick Fogarty Catholic High School in Orillia entertain their counterparts in Kenya. clothing, heavy and hot. She had fashioned a band for her head that was supporting the wood that she was dragging.” J. J. saw how happy she was to be working and it made him realize that these people were happy with what they had and knew how to live in the moment. There was agreement among those on the mission that women represent the future of progress in Kenya, a patriarchal society where polygamy still exists. The “mamas” as they are called, want to see Kenya change. In order to affect that change they espouse the four pillars of wisdom: water, education, health and alternative income. The first three are obvious in an arid land on the east coast of Africa, but the idea of alternative income is that it affords more freedom to the Kenyan family to advance and grow and maybe send a child to high school. The alternative income comes from the mama, who would band with other women to earn extra money. Fathers are mostly farmers. The big changes the mamas would like to see are in the furthering of education and the cessation of the practice of female circumcision, still predominant throughout the country. Peace, and being in the moment. Two statements that were common among those who made this trip. Also common was the feeling of wanting to return, some to see the finished school that they had helped to build. Carolyn Healy sums it up: “I went to poverty to find peace.” Twenty two young people and the six adults who accompanied them brought back memories and impressions that will live in their hearts and minds forever. Volunteer and Washago resident Kevin Lehman can be reached at jkev0721@yahoo.com. Page 34 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Fire Dept. to get 95-ft. aerial One bridge opens, but another closes Rob McCormick Alexei and Tatiana Nikolaev, of Newmarket, drive over the Lakeshore Road swing bridge, which opened Aug. 13 after being closed for two years. After repeated delays, The Lakeshore Road Swing Bridge 50 on Ramara Road 47 opened in August, two years after it was closed for safety reasons. But just days after the Lakeshore Road project was completed by Parks Canada, the Champlain Bridge over the Talbot River to the south was closed for reconstruction on Aug. 15. The cost of the $900,000 project is being split evenly between Durham Region and Simcoe County. Work on the Champlain Bridge is expected to be completed by early December, depending on the weather, said Wendy Houlberg, the project manager. The Champlain project could not begin until Parks Canada finished the swing bridge because “there are a bunch of homes that are landlocked between the two bridges,” she said. Houlberg expects the project will finish on time. “I don’t foresee any problem,” she said. — Rob McCormick The Couchiching Conservancy is looking for volunteers to take part in three “bio-blitzes” in Ramara Township. “These are intensive one-day inventories, where we will aim to record all of the plant and animal species in a given area, paying particular attention to species at risk,” said the conservancy’s stewardship co-ordinator, Sarah Hodgkiss. Volunteers will attend a workshop to learn about species-at-risk legislation and identification prior to conducting an inventory along with ex- perts in bird, reptile and amphibian and plant identification. Some skills in wildlife and plant identification would be useful, Hodgkiss said, but “we will be holding workshops with local experts to educate volunteers about species identification prior to the events.” The workshops and bio-blitzes will take place in September, with dates to be determined, she said. For information, contact Hodgkiss at shodgkiss@ couchconservancy.ca. Volunteers sought for Ramara species inventories Mike OʼDonnell (705) 484-0005 TYRE SALES INSURANCE CLAIMS COLLISION & REFINISHING MECHANICAL REPAIRS Highway 12, Brechin The Ramara Fire and Rescue Service will take delivery of a 95-foot aerial unit some time in 2011, after Township council approved the $700,000 purchase in July. The unit, which includes a platform for rescue work, provides “an elevated level of safety” for firefighters and those they rescue, said Tony Stong, the Township’s fire administrator. He said the new aerial tower will allow firefighters to work more safely and efficiently at larger structures, and to reach areas not accessible with the department’s 70-foot unit, such as chimneys on the lagoon side of condos in Lagoon City. The smaller unit will be moved to the Atherley station from Brechin when the taller aerial arrives. The unit, purchased from Fort Garry Fire Trucks in Winnipeg, is being assembled in Ohio. Bayshore art show Between eight and a dozen artists, artisans and authors in Bayshore Village will hold their second annual Creative Arts Show and Sale on Saturday Oct. 16, from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. in the Hayloft at 1 Hayloft Lane. Artists will display china plates, watercolours, oils, acrylics, floral design, ceramics, woodworking and other media. Rick Gadziola, author of three novels in the Jake Morgan mystery series, and Noel Cooper, author of two books in the religious education field, will participate. The public is welcome and admission is free. For further information, call Patricia Beecham at 484-0221 or email to beecoop@ cottagecountry.net. Thanksgiving pow wow The 25th Anniversary Rama First Nation Thanksgiving Pow Wow, a celebration featuring native dancing and singing from all over North America, will be held at the Mask Arena on Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 9 and 10. Saturday’s hours are 1 to 9 p.m., with grand entries at 1 and 7 p.m. Sunday’s hours are 12:30 to 6 p.m., with a grand entry at 12:30 p.m. The event will also feature native cuisine, vendors selling handmade crafts and a fine-arts exhibition. Admission is $10 for adults, $5 for children seven to 12, free for children six and under, seniors and veterans. Contact Robin Harrington at 3253611, ext. 1298, for more information. Terry Fox events planned Ramara volunteer firefighters will hold a carwash, barbecue and corn roast to raise funds for the Terry Fox Foundation on Saturday, Sept. 4 at the Brechin Fire Hall on Highway 12. The event runs from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Meanwhile, organizers of the 24th annual Lagoon City Terry Fox Run will hold a pancake breakfast at the Legion in Brechin on Sunday, Sept. 12, from 9 to 11 a.m. Admission is by donation. This year there will be two local runs. On Saturday, Sept. 18, there will be a short evening run with three and five-kilometre routes. Registration is at 6 p.m. at the Lagoon City Community Centre at 84 Laguna Parkway. The race will begin at 7 p.m. The main run will be Sunday, Sept. 19, with routes of three, five and 10 kilometres. Registration starts at 10 a.m. at the community centre. The run starts at noon. For more information call Scott or Shannon O’Donnell at 426-9177. The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Page 35 All-candidates’ meetings planned Bill Duffy Mary Bax Basil Clarke Bill White Marilyn Brooks Chamber of Commerce invites public to submit questions ROB McCORMICK Managing Editor The Ramara Chamber of Commerce will host two all-candidates’ meetings leading up to the Oct. 25 municipal election. The sessions will be held on Tuesday, Oct. 5 at the Mara/Brechin Legion and Thursday, Oct. 7 at Ramona Hall, from 7 to 9 p.m. each night. All council and school-board candidates are invited. The meetings will follow a question-and-answer format. Candidates will be asked pre-determined questions by a three-person panel moderated by Darleen Cormier, publisher of The Ramara Chronicle. At The Chronicle’s deadline in late August, the panellists had not been named. The chamber is accepting suggestions for questions at info@ramarachamber.com. The deadline for submissions is Sept. 17. The Lagoon City Community Association will also host a meeting on Saturday, Sept. 18 at the Lagoon Mews plaza as an example. “Here’s a mews, the retail or commerce centre of Lagoon City, that is virtually empty, which is an eyesore,” he said. “So how do we put retailers in that mews, or knock it down and do something with it? It’s certainly not an attraction right now. “I think an initiative needs to be undertaken to come up with a plan. I want to be on a steering committee that discusses what we can do.” — Rob McCormick RiverNorth Suites An elegant retreat in the Kawarthas. By the day or week. Erika Neher John Appleby Roy King City Community Centre, 84 Laguna Parkway, from 1:30 to 4 p.m. The association has invited Ward 5, mayoral and deputy mayoral candidates to answer written questions from members of the audience. Candidates have until Sept. 10 to enter the race. At The Chronicle’s deadline, 11 council candidates had filed nomination papers. Incumbent Bill Duffy was opposed by Mary Bax Bill Kahler Jim Hopson for the mayor’s seat. Deputy Mayor Basil Clarke was unopposed. Ward 1 Councillor Bill White faced a challenge from Marilyn Brooks. CORPORATION In Ward 2, Councillor John O’Donnell was unopposed, as was Ward 3 Councillor Erika OF THE Neher. In Ward 4, Roy King was running TOWNSHIP against incumbent John Appleby. Ward 5 was being contested by Councillor Bill Kahler and OF RAMARA Jim Hopson. ELECTORS On election night, results will be posted as they come in and winners announced at the LeNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on the 1st gion in Brechin. day of September, 2010 the preliminary list of Candidate seeks Ward 5 seat Jim Hopson, a long-time Lagoon City resident, will run against Councillor Bill Kahler for the Ward 5 seat on Ramara Township council. Hopson, 56, an audio engineer, music company owner and food-and-beverage consultant, filed his nomination papers in late July. He says his top priority is to see development in Lagoon City. “I’ve lived in Lagoon City for 23 years, and I think the community is stalled,” he said, pointing to the nearly empty Laguna Shores John OʼDonnell rive rnorthsuites. com electors will be posted in the following locations: The Ramara Centre, Brechin Public Library, Municipal Office and Building Planning and Environmental (BPE) Office. In addition to these lists there is a new service available to check your voting status this year. Electors will be able to check their status online at the Township of Ramara website as of September 7, 2010. www.ramara.ca ALL ELECTORS SHOULD EXAMINE THE LIST to ensure their name and relevant information are correctly shown. Due to construction of the new Township Administration Centre applications for additions, corrections or deletions from the list are available at the Municipal BUILDING/PLANNING, ENVIRONMENTAL (BPE) OFFICE, 2115 HIGHWAY#12, BRECHIN, ONTARIO. REVISIONS OF THE LIST shall be undertaken at the above location between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. each weekday from Tuesday, September 7, 2010 through Friday, October 22, 2010 and between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. on Monday, October 25, 2010. The last day for filing forms requesting removal of another person’s name from the list is Friday, September 10, 2010 from 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Janice McKinnon, CMO Clerk Township of Ramara Page 36 The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Brechin market extends season Rob McCormick Shoppers browse at the Farm and Country Market at the Brechin Ball Park in July. To be held Saturdays through Thanksgiving at ball park The Brechin Farm and Country Market, which began May 22 and was to have ended on Labour Day, will be extended until Oct. 9, the Saturday of the Thanksgiving weekend. By late July, the market had grown to include about half a dozen regular vendors, and was attracting about 200 people every Saturday, said Bob Poyntz, chairman of the Brechin Community Centre Board, which organizes the event. “It’s growing and becoming more popular as it becomes better known,” Poyntz said. More vendors are expected as local produce becomes available, he said. Vendors selling early produce, baked goods, preserves, jewellery and new-age products are reporting strong, steady sales, Poyntz said. “We have established through sales and traffic that there is a real demand for a market in Brechin,” he said. “The more vendors we get, the more we think that demand will grow.” Vendors are not charged a fee to sell their goods, and the Township of Ramara has waived the vendor permit fees it normally charges. The market runs from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Vendors can set up from 7 a.m. on, and are asked to bring their own tables, chairs and canopies. Interested vendors are invited to contact Poyntz at 484-2116 (poyntz@rogers.com), or Darleen Cormier, board secretary, at 484-1576 (ramara. chronicle@rogers.com). — Chronicle Staff ‘Farm gate’ produce available in Ramara Rob McCormick Deb Barnes of Harvest House Organics. Here are some places in or near Ramara where you can buy locally-grown produce in season: Ramara Farm and Country Market: Saturdays, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., Brechin Ball Park. Harvest House Organics: 91 Day Drive, off Ramara Road 46, near Lake Dalyrmple. Pesticide-free produce. Open Thursday to Sunday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. through Thanksgiving weekend. Customers can also call to place orders. (705) 833-1289. Mikeʼs Autobody and Tyre: Highway 12, Brechin. Corn only, from the farm of Mark and Kathy Wainman in Ramara, through September. Seven days a week. “Same hours as the liquor store.” says owner Mike OʼDonnell. Wainman corn is also available on the “honour system” at a stand on the Eighth Concession between Bayshore and Val Harbour. Hewittʼs Farm Market: Next to Leskaʼs Delictatesin and Meats, Highway 12 near Uptergrove. Seven days a week, 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., May 24 until Haloween. Peggyʼs Sweet Corn and Produce: At the Ultramar station on Highway 12 at County Road 169. Weekdays noon to 5 p.m., weekends 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Harbour Inn & Resort Club – Vacation Ownership Check our website for excellent room rates – www.harbourinnresort.com On site: Restaurant, indoor pool, sauna, hot tub, whirlpool, tennis Tel: (705) 484-5366 Email: harbourinn.lc@rogers.com O i R i d l h b hi l l i T l (705) 484 5366 E il h b i l @ A dog’s life at the Bed and Biscuit The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Local dog owners looking for canine accommodations have another option in Ramara. Divine K-9 Bed and Biscuit, a boarding, breeding and spa facility, has opened on Concession 7 and Highway 12. Owner Luanna Petrynec purchased the kennel earlier this year from Allen and Diana Robinson, who had operated it as The Robinson Boarding Kennels since 1990. The Robinsons sold the business and retired in May as Ramara’s canine control officers, positions they held since 1998. Petrynec, 45, comes to Ramara from Japan, where she taught English at a private girls’ high school for 15 years. A medical problem was responsible for abruptly ending her career as a teacher. “Unfortunately, I developed a spinal chord tumour and lost the use of my small-motor skills,” she says. “I can’t write well, and if you can’t write, you can’t teach. So a time came for a change in career and I thought, ‘Well, what can I do?’ I had always had a great passion for animals, especially dogs, so I decided to start breeding dogs in Japan.” About a year ago, Petrynec began breeding the shiba inu, a small Japanese breed, along with border collies. “I felt it was time for me and my daughter to come back to Canada, and family encouraged us to be closer,” she says. “I was looking for properties and one day my Page 37 Rob McCormick Luanna Petrynec with some of her own dogs at Divine K-9 Bed and Biscuit. agent sent me a listing for this one, and right away I knew it was what I wanted,” she says. Petrynec arrived in Ramara in late May, four months after she made the decision to leave Japan. New canine control officers take over The dog days (and nights) have begun for Ramara’s new canine officers. Mark Cronk, 26, and Erica Loutskou, 34, assumed their duties in late May. They took over the Township’s shelter after the retirement of Allen and Diana Robinson, Ramara’s canine control officers for 12 years. Cronk, a Ramona native, has had dogs all his life, and owns two four-year-old Labrador retrievers. “My dad has always had sporting dogs and we’ve maintained a kennel licence here in the township for longer than I have been around.” The Cronk family raises foxhounds and has been active in shows and trials over the years, he said. Loutskou, of Beaverton, has worked in the animal control field with the Toronto Animal Service in Toronto and as a canine control officer in Brock Township. “I enjoy the field and love working with the people and animals,” she says. Much of the officers’ time is spent looking for stray, lost or unlicenced dogs. “We patrol pretty well the whole township on a daily basis, looking for dogs running at large,” Cronk says. “We bring them back to the shelter, and figure out if they are licenced. If they are, it makes it easier for us to get them back to their owners.” An owner whose dog is picked up does face some costs; an impound fee of $30 and a transportation fee of $10. If a dog is not licenced the owner must pay another $50 fee consisting of a $34 late penalty and $16 for the licence itself. “It only costs $16 to licence your dog if you do it in January or February,” Cronk says, “so it pays Rob McCormick Canine control officers Erica Loutskou and Mark Cronk, with Cronkʼs two Labs, Tucker (left) and Bailey, at the Ramara shelter. for owners to get the licence on time.” The officers, on call 24/7, are responsible for running the adoption program for the no-kill shelter. “If a dog is not claimed, we hold it for five days and then they go up for adoption,” Cronk says. “If a dog is not adopted, we’ll work with rescue groups, and we’ll hold the dog until a suitable home is found.” The Ramara shelter can be reached at 327-8567. — Rob McCormick “My family knew this area really well because my brother often goes to the Fern Resort,” she says. “When this listing came up, I thought the property was really pretty, but they jumped on the area and said ‘That’s a really excellent area to live,’ so here we are.” Petrynec has plans for her newly-opened facility, which can accommodate up to about 30 dogs. Among them, she would like to introduce the local market to the shiba inu, the most popular dog in its native Japan. “The breed is really well known in the U.S., but in Canada, few people seem to know about them,” she says. “It’s extremely loyal, very loving, very clean. It’s protective, but tiny (about 17 to 23 pounds). It’s like getting a big dog in a little package. In Japan they are really the number one dog that most people want to own. I guess it’s because of their size and cleanliness, with housing being a lot smaller there than it is here in general. I have met a few people here who know about them. My market will likely be here and in the U.S. They are wonderful dogs, extremely intelligent.” In addition to breeding and boarding, she would eventually like to show both the shibu inu and border collies, and also has plans for a “doggie day care.” She offers basic services such as bathing, nail-trimming and some training. Clients can reach her at (705) 484-5067, or at www.divinek-9bedandbiscuit.ca. —Rob McCormick Home of the handyman Washago Home Hardware 3375 Muskoka Street, Washago, 705-689-2611 Page 38 Community calendar The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 By HOWARD RAPER Ramara and area events — all welcome Weekly events Monday Computer lessons with Kevin Lehman: Beginning Monday, Sept. 20 for five weeks at the Ramara Centre Library, 10 to 11 a.m. Intermediate classes from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Call the library at 325-5776 or 484-0476. Bid Euchre: Carden Recreation Centre (258 Lake Dalrymple Road), 7 p.m. Call S. Brulotte at 484-5712. Hosted by the Dalrymple Countryside Seniors. Line dancing: Sunshine Seniors Line Dancing Club at Heritage United Church, Washago, from 1:30 pm. Cost $3. Call 325-0680. Tuesday Euchre: Sunshine Seniors Euchre Club at Heritage United Church, Washago, from 7 p.m. Call Eric at (705) 689-1033. Wednesday Carden Carvers: Carden Recreation Centre (258 Lake Dalrymple Road), 7 p.m. Call W. Bowes at 833-2046. Thursday Toddler programs (ages 3 - 5): Little Counters, 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. starting Sept. 16. Ramara Centre Library. No charge. Call 325-5776. Lunch at the Legion: Soups, sandwiches, weekly hot meal special. Eat in or take out, 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Brechin Legion, 484-5393. Friday Toddler Programs (ages 3 - 5): RPL Rascals, 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. starting Sept. 17 at the Ramara Centre Library. No charge. Call 325-5776. Lunch at the Legion: Soups, sandwiches, weekly hot meal special. Eat in or take out, 11a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Brechin Legion. Call 4845393. Friday Night Family Fun Dart League: Brechin Legion Starting on Sept. 9. Cost is $2 per night which covers the cost of a windup dinner in early December. Children invited accompanied by parents or guardians. Non-competitive. Call 484-5393. Saturday Crown and Anchor Meat Roll: From 4 to 6 p.m. at the Brechin Legion. Spin the Crown and Anchor wheel to win packages of meat, $2 a spin. Nadir Jamal Pharmacy • Blister packaging • Peronal counselling on your medications Competitive pricing Shop locally and save (705) 484-0074 Brechin Mon. to Fri., 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Sat., 10 a.m.-1 p.m. New Washago Rotary president Special to The Chronicle Janet Stead has been elected president of the Rotary Club of Washago and Area – Centennial. Outgoing president Doug Cooper handed over the presidential chain of office to Stead, a Washago resident and owner of CTC Computer Training, at the clubʼs annual Presidentʼs Night on June 28. Stead was elected by the club members to serve as their president from July 1 to June 30, 2011. The changeover ceremony was performed by Rotary District 7010 Past Governor Tom Bennett of Peterborough. During Cooperʼs year as president, the club raised about $20,000 for local and international service initiatives, more than in any of its previous five years of operation. Stead will serve as the clubʼs sixth president. Saturday, Sept. 4 Carwash, barbecue and corn roast: Ramara volunteer firefighters will be raising funds for the Terry Fox Foundation at the Brechin Fire Hall, Highway 12 and the bypass from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Call Scott or Shannon OʼDonnell at (705)426-9177. Tuesday, Sept. 7 Dalrymple Countryside Seniors: Meet at the Carden Recreation Centre (258 Dalrymple Road) at 1 p.m. Call Bill Collins at (705) 8332600. Wednesday, Sept. 8 Fashions for Fall at Washago: Sneak preview of Fashions for Fall. Wine and cheese, desert and coffee, door prizes. 7 p.m.Tickets $25. Proceeds to Washago Community Centre. For tickets call Darlene (705) 689-6636, Dorn (705) 689-5591 or Pat (705) 689-6603. Carden Field Naturalists: Joint meeting with Simcoe County Naturalists Club at the Carden Recreation Centre, 258 Dalrymple Road, 7 p.m. Topic will be “Bumblebees,” presented by Sheila Colla of York University. Call D. Homer at (705) 833-2571. Lug-a-mug event. Thursday, Sept. 9 Fashions for Fall at Washago (night two): Sneak preview of Fashions for Fall. Wine and cheese, desert and coffee, door prizes. 7 p.m.Tickets $25. Proceeds to Washago Community Centre. For tickets call Darlene (705) 689-6636, Dorn (705) 689-5591 or Pat (705) 689-6603. Saturday, Sept. 11 137th Severn Bridge Fall Fair: Events begin at 9 a.m. Bake sale, parade, opening ceremonies, entertainment, baby contest, horse show, spelling bee, corn roast, raffle draws, more. Severn Bridge Fairgrounds on Southwood Road in Severn Bridge. Admission $5 for adults, $3 for students in grades 1 to 12, younger children admitted free. Call Isabell McTaggart at (705) 689-5519. Afternoon Tea and Apron Display: At Dalrymple United Church (272 Lake Dalrymple Road) from 1 to 4 p.m. Hosted by Sebright Pastoral Charge. Admission $10 per person. Call Pat Morton at (705) 833-2140. Lions Club euchre: 8 p.m.,Brechin Legion. Refreshments available. Call Bob White at 4845567. Sunday, Sept. 12 Terry Fox pancake breakfast: 9 a.m. to 12:30 pm. Donations appreciated, all proceeds to the Terry Fox Foundation. Brechin Legion. Call Scott or Shannon OʼDonnell at (705) 426-9177. Atherley United Church Anniversary Service: 11 a.m. Theme is Through the Years in Song and Story. Luncheon to follow. No service at the Brechin United Church that day. For information about events or for advance tickets, please contact Holly at 705-327-7320. Tuesday, Sept.14 Tween Wii Nites (ages 10 - 14): Ramara Centre Library from 6 to 7:30 p.m. No charge. Call (705) 325-5776. Wednesday, Sept. 15 Digital photography basics: Ramara Centre Library from 1:30 to 3 p.m. No charge. Call (705) 325-5776. Thursday, Sept. 16 Beef barbeque: Heritage United Church, Washago. Two sittings, 5 and 6:30 p.m. Cost: $15 for adults, $6 for children six to 12, preschoolers free. For reservations call Marly at 689 2461 or Sandi at 689-8901. Friday, Sept. 17 Free Community Dinner: Dalrymple United Church (272 Lake Dalrymple Road). From 6 p.m. until all are served. Call (705) 833-2223. Ramona Fall Fair Annual Horseshoe Tournament: Beverage tent. 6:30 p.m. at Ramona Fairgrounds. Call Glenn Spriggs (705) 6898881 or Eileen Cronk (705)689-6101. (Continued on next page) Community calendar The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Page 39 Art show: Artists, artisans and authors at the second anSaturday, Sept. 18 nual Bayshore Village CreAll candidates meeting: Lagoon ative Arts Show, 10 a.m. to 5 City Community Association p.m. in the Hayloft at 1 Hayloft hosts meeting for Ward 5, mayLane. Free admission. Call oral and deputy-mayoral candiPatricia Beecham at 484-0221 dates. Lagoon City Community or email beecoop@cottageCentre, Laguna Parkway, 1:30 to country.net. 4 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 17 Legion Week open house: 10 Carden fiddle jam session: a.m. to 4 p.m. Displays of military Carden Recreation Centre, uniforms, artifacts, military vehi1:30 to 5 p.m. Call Leigh at cles. Free admission. Lunch and 325-0009. Refreshments refreshments available. Call Carl available. Black at 326-3984 for informaConcert: OPP Choir performs tion. at Washago Community CenRamona Fall Fair, 120th editre. Tickets $10. Light refreshtion: Ramona Fairgrounds. Howard Raper ments. Call 689-6424. Woodsmenʼs competition, free Breakfast: Washago Commubouncy castle, petting zoo, naildriving and husband-calling con- More than 100 meals were served at the Brechin/Mara Royal Canadian Legionʼs nity Centre. 8 a.m. to noon. tests, horse pull, food, beverage steak and strawberry supper on Saturday, June 26. The dinner was a fundraiser for Adults $6. Children $3. Tuesday, Oct. 19 tent, more. Vendors. Opening the Legion. Author visit/book reading: ceremonies at noon. Admission Centennial Park, Washago. Participants will Rae Fleming, author of Peter Gzowski: A Bi$5 per person. Call Glenn Spriggs (705) 689travel by bicycle to conservancy-managed ography. At the Ramara Centre Library, 2 to 8881 or Eileen Cronk (705) 689-6101 Terry Fox Run: Lagoon City Community Cen- properties in the Washago area. Short course 3:30 p.m. No charge. Celebrating Ontario and long courses. Draw prizes. Gather at tre, 84 Laguna Parkway. Night run Saturday Public Library Week, Oct. 19 to 23. (Amnesty 8:30 a.m., start time 9 a.m. Registration fee evening for those unable to attend Sundayʼs Week: Return overdue material to either $10 per person. For information go to run. Registration 6 p.m., run at 7 p.m. For info, branch with no fines.) Call 325-5776. www.conservancyadventure.eventbrite.com, pledge forms call Scott or Shannon OʼDonnell Wednesday, Oct. 20 call Gayle at 326-1620 or send an email to at 426-9177 Genealogy for Beginners: Ramara Public Ligayle@couchconservancy.ca. Sunday, Sept. 19 brary adult programming, Ramara Centre LiTuesday, Oct. 5 Breakfast: Washago Community Centre, 8 brary, 2 to 4 p.m. No charge. Call 325-5776. Dalrymple Countryside Seniors: Meet at a.m. to noon. Adults $6, children $3. Patron-initiated library loan launch: 2:30 Carden Recreation Centre (258 Lake DalrymTerry Fox Run: Lagoon City Community Cenp.m. Celebrating Ontario Public Library Week. ple Road) at 1 p.m. Call Bill Collins, 833-2600. tre. Three, five and 10-km routes. Registration Call 325-5776. Ramara Chamber of Commerce all candiat 10 a.m. with noon start. For info and pledge Friday, Oct. 22 dates meeting: Brechin Legion. 7 to 9 p.m. forms call Scott or Shannon OʼDonnell at 426Tenth annual Day for Seniors: 9 a.m. to 2 Municipal candidates discuss local issues. 9177. p.m. at ODAS Park, 4500 Fairgrounds Rd., Thursday, Oct. 7 Carden fiddle jam session: Carden RecreSevern Township. Hosted by Garfield Dunlop ation Centre (258 Lake Dalrymple Road), 1:30 Ramara Chamber of Commerce all candiMPP, Simcoe North. Exhibits, guest speakers, to 5 p.m. All are welcome. Call Leigh at 325dates meeting: Ramona Hall. 7 to 9 p.m. Mudoor prizes, complimentary lunch and refresh0009. Refreshments available. nicipal candidates discuss local issues. ments. Call 326-3246 for information. Wednesday, Sept. 22 Saturday, Oct. 9, Sunday Oct. 10 Saturday, Oct. 23 Potluck lunch, speaker: Noon. Murray GorPow wow: Chippewas of Rama First Nation ing speaks on Biking across Canada. Hosted Ramona Hall 12th annual Fall Bazaar: 25th Anniversary Thanksgiving Pow Wow at by the Sunshine Seniors at Heritage Church Baking, crafts, draws, lunch, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. the MASK Arena. See story on Page 34 for Hall, Washago. Call Margot at 689-1277. Ramona Hall, Fairgrounds Road, three miles details. Saturday, Sept. 25 east of Washago. Watch for signs. Call Eileen, Tuesday, Oct. 12 Roast beef dinner with homemade pies: At 705-689-6101. Tween Wii Nites (ages 10 – 14): Ramara the Atherley United Church, Sittings at 5 and Wednesday, Oct. 27 Centre Library, 6 to 7:30 p.m. No charge. Call 6:30 p. m. Advanced tickets $15 per Curiosity auction: 1:30 pm. Hosted by Sun325-5776. person. For tickets, call Holly, 327-7320. shine Seniors at the Heritage Church Hall, Skateboard park public meeting: Meeting to Turkey dinner: Carden Recreation Centre, 6 discuss the possibility of constructing a skate3332 Muskoka St., Washago. Call Margot at p. m. Hosted by Dalrymple United Church board park in Brechin. 7 p.m., Brechin/Mara 689-1277. Women. For tickets call Karen Popp at 833Legion. Call Shannon OʼDonnell, (705) 345ʻSpookʼhetti dinner: Atherley United Church, 2774 or Joyce Townes at 833-2265. 9177. $12 per person. For tickets call 327-7320. Saturday, Oct. 2 Wednesday. Oct. 13 Sittings at 5 and 6:30 p.m. Fall Colours Walk-a-thon: Dalrymple United Carden Field Naturalists meeting: Carden Saturday, Oct. 30 Church, 10 a.m. in support of Sebright PasRecreation Centre (258 Lake Dalrymple Friends of the Library snack bar: 9 a.m. to 1 toral Charge or pastoral charge of choice. Call Road), 7 p.m. Call David Homer at 833-2571. p.m. In conjunction with the fall craft sale at the church office at 833-2223. Friday, Oct.15 Digital Photo Scavenger Hunt: Sponsored the Ramara Centre on Highway 12. Free Community Dinner: At Dalrymple by the Rotary Club of Washago and Area. Brechin United Church Turkey Dinner: SitUnited Church (272 Lake Dalrymple Road) 6 Cost is $75 for team of 3 or 4. Grand prize is tings at 5 and 6:30 p.m. Advanced tickets $13 p.m. until all are served. Call 833- 2223. $500. 8:30 a.m. start. Slideshow, barbecue for adults, $5 for children six to 12. Take out Saturday, Oct. 16 and presentation. Visit www.washagorotary.ca available. For tickets call 484-5398. Christmas in October bazaar and lunchand follow the link for information. Who says thereʼs nothing to do in Ramara? Lions Club Euchre: 8 p.m. Clubroom, Brechin eon: Carden Recreation Centre, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Hosted by Sebright United Pastoral Send your events listing to Howard Raper Legion. Refreshments available. Call Bob Charge and the Carden Recreation Centre. White, 484-5567. at ramaraevents@yahoo.ca. Listings for Vendors welcome. Call Pat Morton at 833Sunday, Oct. 3 the November/December issue must be re2140. Conservancy Cycling Adventure: Washago ceived by Oct. 10. (Continued from previous page) Digging in Spicy mixture boosts flavour of meat, fish The Ramara Chronicle, September/October 2010 Rob McCormick Boneless, skinless chicken breasts coated with Geoffʼs Blackening Spice Mix, ready to go on the grill. Macs The new Macs are downtown... downtown... are starting at $649 $649* starting * Pric es ar ober 200 9, ar ubject tto o cchange, hange, and do not inc lude Prices aree a ass of Oct October 2009, aree ssubject include ttaxes axes or ship ping. TM and © 200 9 Ap ple Inc eser servved. shipping. 2009 Apple Inc.. A Allll rights rreserved. 15 yyears 15 ears eexperience xperience in Computer C omputer Sa Sales les & Ser Service vice DOWN TOWN COMPUTERS 53 53 Mississaga Mississaga St. St. E. Orillia, Orillia, ON L3V 1V4 705-326-7682 Downtown is as far as you have to go! 705-326-7682 www.downtowncomputers.ca www.downtowncomputers.ca Page 41 Fare Share This versatile seasoning mixture is a huge hit every year at our condo’s Labour Day weekend barbecue. I use it on grilled, boneless chicken breasts, but it complements any meat or fish. The mixture is more of a formula than a recipe. The numbers in the ingredient list (right) could represent teaspoons, tablespoons or some other unit of measurement, depending on how much you want to make. The ratio is the important thing. All the spices and herbs you need are available at your local supermarket. You won’t have to go searching for exotic, expensive ingredients. You don’t have to barbecue, either. Any meat or fish you sautee will also benefit. Don’t be concerned if the spice blackens during cooking. Add the oregano and thyme to a coffee grinder and grind. Then add all the other ingredients and mix well. Store in a plastic self-seal bag in a By GEOFF GRAHAM Geoffʼs Blackening Spice Mix • Ground white pepper 1 • Ground black pepper 1 • Garlic powder 6 • Onion powder 6 • Oregano 6 • Thyme 6 • Kosher salt 2 • Cayenne ¼ (or more to taste) • Paprika 12 • Smoked paprika (optional) dry, dark cupboard. If you cook on the barbecue, you may wish to reduce the paprika by three parts and substitute smoked paprika. Geoff Graham is a Lagoon City retiree, golfer and home chef. He can be reached at geoffgraham@ rogers.com. Simcoe Shores Golf Club Share a favourite recipe by sending it to ramara.chronicle@rogers.com. Selected recipes and home chefs will be featured in the Fare Share column. New Owners New Management New Direction Come see the improvements Join us Mondays after 3 p.m. for golf and wings. Just $25! Join us Thursdays after 3 p.m. for couples night out, Nine, Wine and Dine. Golf, pasta dinner, glass wine. Just $25! Join us Fridays for All Day Golf with cart. Just $38! ALL other days, mention this ad and receive $5 off green fees. Also visit: www.simcoeshoresgolf.ca For tee times call: 705 426 4222 A proud community supporter since 1995 www.davenportsubaru.com 385 West St. S., Orillia 705-329-4277 Get out more with the all-new 2011 Subaru Outback Not only does it have the nimble ride and fuel economy of a car, it also features our legendary symmetrical full-time all-wheel drive, more cargo space and higher ground clearance. The Japanese engineered Outback. Itʼll take you to the most remote places. That is, if you can put down the TV remote. Motor Trend’s 2010 Sport/Utility of the year, well equipped from only $28,995 plus $1,525 for freight and PDI, plus GST, PST
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