Help A Family Get Their New Goalie Equipment Back Lost Off A Truck

On Saturday morning, a family on the way to an arena for a Liftlock Atom Hockey Tournament game lost a bag full of brand new goalie equipment when it fell off the back of their truck somewhere between Warkworth and Norwood (see map below). Call Shane at 705.924.2213 if you find it.

More info below via our friends at The Wolf's Facebook page...

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UPDATED POST: The Canal Is Open For Skating

UPDATE: February 9th -> Now that cold weather has returned, the green flag is back up at the Canal, the city has tweeted. So sharpen those skates!


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UPDATE: January 9th -> Due to all this rain coming down and the milder temperatures for the next couple days, the City of Peterborough has put the red flag back up. So no skating.

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ORIGINAL POST

Great news, the green flag is up at the canal—meaning it's safe for skating!

The City of Peterborough has confirmed to PTBOCanada that the ice has been deemed safe.

So double-axel your way over there with the family...

File photo: Evan Holt

File photo: Evan Holt

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PTBOCanada Featured Post: Walton Wood Farm Is About To Hit It Big On International Stage

PTBOCanada Featured Post: Walton Wood Farm Is About To Hit It Big On International Stage

Sponsored post by Walton Wood Farm

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Peterborough Church In A Theatre

A brand new church is coming to a theatre new you. Yes, Peterborough City Church is starting at The Market Hall on Sunday, January 10th.

It's a novel idea—opening a church and trying to grow a congregration in a downtown theatre at a time when churches are struggling.

The church will be run by Reverend Chad Trivett and his wife Sasha, and services will take place there every Sunday morning at 10 a.m.

Trivett, who has been pastor of two other churches in Ontario, also previously started a church in Tokyo, Japan. 

Learn more about Chad and Sasha below...

For more info on the church, click here

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Women's Business Network Donates $16,000 To YWCA Crossroads Shelter

The Women's Business Network Of Peterborough has donated $16,001.33 to the YWCA Crossroads Shelter to help local women and children who are victims of family violence receive healthy food, supplements and vitamins through the YWCA Crossroads Shelter’s Nutritional Well-Being program.

YWCA Executive Director Lynn Zimmer accepts cheque

YWCA Executive Director Lynn Zimmer accepts cheque

In addition to receiving healthy meals for themselves and their children, women benefiting from the Nutritional Well-Being program can learn about meal planning, food preparation and the principles of nutrition.

“For over 30 years, the Women’s Business Network has had a positive connection with the women and children who depend on Crossroads for safety and support," says Lynn Zimmer, Executive Director, YWCA Peterborough Haliburton.

Zimmer adds: "When families arrive at Crossroads, mothers are often malnourished even if their children seem healthy, and, at times, are too tired or too stressed to eat well. Often, it’s been a choice between feeding her kids or feeding herself. At Crossroads, she can relax and take care of herself. Our kitchen counsellor not only prepares delicious home cooked meals that mothers can afford on a low income, but also teaches cooking classes showing them about the right foods to eat for their health. Food becomes a comfort again, instead of another source of anxiety."

Since partnering with the YWCA, the WBN has donated a total of $252,100 to the YWCA Crossroads Shelter.

By raising $16,000 this year, the WBN Holiday Gala and Auction Fundraiser will provide 1,388 days of food and well-being for local women and children who are leaving an abusive situation and staying at the Shelter.

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This Beautiful Mirrored Mosaic Canoe Inspired By Kawarthas Is Coolest Thing Ever

This Beautiful Mirrored Mosaic Canoe Inspired By Kawarthas Is Coolest Thing Ever

OMG, this is magical

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Lakefield Entrepreneur Featured On Tyra Banks' FABLife Show

Lakefield Entrepreneur Featured On Tyra Banks' FABLife Show

Michelle Moore's designs have sold in 46 countries already

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PTBOCanada Featured Post: Pulse Physiotherapy Has Had Amazing First Year In Business

PTBOCanada Featured Post: Pulse Physiotherapy Has Had Amazing First Year In Business

Sponsored post by Pulse Physiotherapy

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Neil Young In Grade 1 At Omemee Public School

Neil Young spent many of his formative years in Omemee, Ontario near Peterborough—and a museum, Youngtown Rock & Roll Museum, dedicated to the rock legend was there for many years before relocating to nearby Lindsay.

An awesome photo (see below) was posted to the Vintage Peterborough, Lindsay and the Kawartha Region Facebook page of Young in a Grade 1 class photo at Omemee Public School (1951-52). Neil is standing in the back row, third from the left (with that distinct Neil Young facial expression).

Neil Young, third from left, standing in the back row

Neil Young, third from left, standing in the back row

Young's "Helpless"—with its lyrics "There is a town in North Ontario, with dream comfort, memory to spare"—was written as an ode to his Omemee childhood home.

© 2012 WMG

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Dispatch From Jordan: Peterborough's Michael VanDerHerBerg On What He Learned

Peterborough's Michael VanDerHerberg—who works at the New Canadians Centre as a Refugee Resettlement Coordinator—has spent the past week in Jordan, an Arab nation on the east bank of the Jordan River that borders Syria, Iraq, Saudia Arabia, Israel and Palestine.

MIchael was there to gain firsthand knowledge of the refugee crisis. Below are photos and a dispatch he wrote for PTBOCanada.com about his time there....

Champs-Élysées, a commercial street at Za'atari Refugee Camp which contains hundreds of small shops such as cellphone stores, dress shops and falafel stands.

Champs-Élysées, a commercial street at Za'atari Refugee Camp which contains hundreds of small shops such as cellphone stores, dress shops and falafel stands.

WHAT I LEARNED IN JORDAN —By Michael VanDerHerberg

Jordan is a generous host country to Syrian refugees, and seemingly, the last bastion of peace and stability in the Middle East. It was described to me that the nation is walking a fine line, and more like a tightrope a kilometre off the ground. 

They have taken in so many refugees over the years including Palestinian, Iraqi, and now Syrian people, but their generosity must be limited by their resources, particularly water. I had an interesting conversation with Yosra Albakkar—a Trent Masters’ graduate—at the Swedish Embassy who indicated gently to me that water can’t be invented. It is a finite resource. And while wealthier nations could possibly afford desalination from the Red Sea or Mediterranean, Jordan is not in that position.

Photo of Za'atari Refugee Camp (Zaatari). Population of the camp is 79,250, about the population of Peterborough

Photo of Za'atari Refugee Camp (Zaatari). Population of the camp is 79,250, about the population of Peterborough

From a Canadian perspective, with our thousands of lakes and rivers, this is hard to fathom. Keep in mind though that Curve Lake First Nation does not have clean drinking water from the tap. While here, Yosra also challenged me that the displacement of peoples in the Middle East was not that dissimilar from our Indian Reserves.

It is good to understand that Jordan has done exceptionally well in keeping their borders relatively secure, even providing transportation from the borders as people flee their homes because of violence and civil unrest.

Above left: Some of the caravans within which people live at the refugee camp. Above right: communal bathrooms

Above left: Some of the caravans within which people live at the refugee camp. Above right: communal bathrooms

I won’t wade into the politics of the Syrian conflict, only to say that it is very complicated and that we receive only certain versions of it.  Further adding to the complication were the recent executions in Saudi Arabia and the subsequent riots at the Saudi embassy in Iran. There are layers upon layers of history behind those two actions. It seems like it never stops and there is a significant sense of unrest in people who are peacefully attempting to live out their daily lives. “I don’t feel at peace, no, I don’t at all,” was a shocking quote from someone who has made every attempt at living at peace here. 

There are simple people living good lives who are being wrapped up into conflict that they don’t wish for at all. When it becomes too dangerous for their families, they flee to Jordan, to Lebanon, to Turkey, to Greece, and even beyond farther into Europe. If they have money, which many of them do, they can go further. If not, they can only make it so far.

Many reside in refugee camps in Jordan but the majority do not. Of the roughly 650,000 Syrian refugees in Jordan, only 15 percent live in camps like Zaatari where I visited. 

Many would love the chance to be resettled to come to Canada, while many are willing to wait it out to return home. This is understandable, they are Syrian. Syria is their home. How would you respond if this happened to you? The conflict in Syria will likely not end quickly, some say not in the next five years, some say not in the next ten. 

For those in the Zaatari, there are varying degrees of hope and hopelessness when waiting for peace, or at least stability, to return.  While at Zaatari, home to roughly 79,250 people, I conversed at length with two men. One was quite hesitant about coming to Canada and the other was ready to move tomorrow. Among other reasons, the second was ready to move because his brother-in-law had just left that morning to be resettled in Canada with his family. 

The walk from the main road towards the Za'atari refugee camp in Al Mafraq, Jordan.

The walk from the main road towards the Za'atari refugee camp in Al Mafraq, Jordan.

Through discussions at the Canadian Council for Refugees conference I attended in November, and reaffirmed through my travels I here, I would offer that family reunification for Syrian refugees is likely the best method to healthy integration for a few reasons:

· Family in Canada can explain to those away what life is like here in a cultural context that is familiar to them

· It is generally what both families long for; those left behind are waiting to be called and those in Canada can feel guilty and fearful for their families left behind

·  It promotes a community connection where the likelihood of Syrian families staying and building lives up in Peterborough, or other communities, is strengthened

Outside Zaatari refugee camp

Outside Zaatari refugee camp

My encouragement to the Peterborough community is to get involved in sponsorship, and if you are starting now, then to connect with a sponsoring group that already has family in Peterborough to see if they have extended family interested in coming as well. The other is to learn, to have conversations with Syrian refugees that have already arrived, and to resist the temptation to boil complex problems down into simple rhetoric. Like Jordan, Peterborough can be a generous and welcoming community.

If you are interested in giving financially, may I suggest you look up the following: New Canadians Centre Peterborough, Lifeline Syria, Medair,  UNHCR, and one of the many sponsoring groups that are forming and raising money to settle a Syrian family for their first year here in Canada. 

I am looking forward to my return to @Ptbo_Canada / #Ptbo / Peterborough, my home.

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