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Archive for January, 2017

If you love to sing but don’t feel you’re quite good enough to be on stage, you might want to check out “Shout Sister!” a unique approach to choral singing.

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What makes it unique? No auditions for one thing! Singing with the group is simply fun, including a wide variety of styles from pop to Motown, folk, country and blues.

You don’t even have to be able to read music because members learn from the recorded versions of songs. Experienced singers and inexperienced singers all find a refuge in the relaxed atmosphere, bonding with other sisters.

The choir was started in 2002 by Georgette Fry in Kingston. Georgette’s career spans 35 years. She is a veteran of the Canadian Music scene, a blues and jazz artist and a 1994 Juno nominee.

Georgette fiercely believed that music offers physical and psychological benefits and such benefits should be available to everyone. The development of the choir appealed to a wide range of women who enjoyed singing but who did not have formal training, could not read music, and who definitely did not want to have to audition for a choir. Women who would otherwise be robbed of an opportunity to sing with others suddenly had the chance to belong.

And now, 15 years later, Shout Sister! has 23 chapters across the province with the closest in Peterborough. The photo below is from the local chapter.

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The Shout Sister! website includes a large selection of videos where you can see and hear a cross section of the choirs in action. Listen to everything from Hallelujah, Song for a Winter’s Night, Strange Man, Fields of Gold, Have You Ever Seen the Rain…the range of music is amazing.  

Shout Sister! fosters community spirit and giving. Many of the performances help to raise money for local causes, particularly supporting organizations for women and children. They work hard to keep the arts alive by reaching out and inspiring others.

 

Contact Peterborough Shout Sisters!

Director:               Barbara Johnston

Choir Chair:         Sue Smith

Rehearsals:         Monday evenings from 7-9pm

Greenwood United Church

737 Donwood Drive

Peterborough Ontario

Contact Email:     members@shoutsisterchoir.ca

 

 

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How far would you have to travel to see a film festival with…

  • 59 documentaries from 25 countries, with 28 Canadian films, including 10 by local filmmakers.
  • 2 Oscar-shortlisted documentaries, 22 visiting filmmakers, live performances, community discussions, and several social events and visual displays
  • Performers from Circus Without Borders performing a live acrobatics.
  • Poetry readings, an album release, a performance by Unity, and a benefit for Standing Rock with local indigenous musicians and poets.
  • Discussions focused on homelessness, transgender youth, climate change, and Syria.

…Toronto? Los Angeles? New York?

No, you just have to travel to Peterborough January 26 to 29 to attend the 13th annual ReFrame Film Festival.

ReFrame’s Vision – “To build strong, sustainable, and engaged community audiences for film and art that explore and document issues of human rights and social justice, from the local to the global; to use film and art to provide educational opportunities and encourage activism and thoughtful debate.”

Local films premiering include:

  • Towns End,a documentary about the closing of the Douro General Store,
  • Oshkigmong: A Place Where I Belong, the story of Curve Lake First Nation,
  • Dreams of Electric City, a stop-motion, kaleidoscopic tour of Peterborough.

 

The five feature films require individual tickets. The films highlight a diverse range of topics from the impacts of the cargo shipping industry to an Iranian poetry festival and Mongolia’s first female eagle hunter in a dozen years to the desks of New York Times obituary writers.

Aaju Peter will be the keynote speaker. She is also the subject of Angry Inuk, a feature film which examines the struggle Inuit people face in maintaining their right to hunt seal.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F4tfmdv5Z7w

The seal is the lifeblood for Inuit. Celebrity environmentalists have tried to stop the seal hunt but a new generation of Inuit youth are fighting back through social media.

The Eagle Huntress is also a feature film, telling the story of a 13-year-old girl, Aisholpan, who becomes the first girl to train one of the fastest moving animals on earth – an Eagle. You can experience the journey of this young person who is undaunted by the seven foot wingspans and razor sharp talons of the eagle. Stunning cinematography completes the movie.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vfi5JS6HTH0

Tickets

Daytime passes, providing access to films before 7:30 p.m. are $30 per person, or $20 for students or low-income earners.

Tickets will be sold separately for the five evening films this year to guarantee seating for all ticket holders and reduce line ups. Tickets to evening shows are $10 each for daytime pass holders and $15 for those without a daytime pass. 

Tickets are available at Peterborough GreenUp Store on Aylmer St., Happenstance Books and Yarn in Lakefield or online at www.reframefestival.ca

 

 

 

 

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Most people enjoy sitting around a fire at this time of year. While many have gas fireplaces, quite a few of my friends and neighbours enjoy the warmth and beauty of a real wood fireplace.

Like any other activity, heating with wood can be done well – or it can be done badly. The good news is that hundreds of thousands of responsible home owners know how to burn wood well, helping them to enjoy the beauty and relaxation that a real fire promotes.

Good practices include:

  • Harvesting wood sustainably
  • Burning it cleanly and efficiently
  • Using it to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

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I came upon a Canadian group called Wood Heat Organization Inc. (http://www.woodheat.org/), “a nonprofit, nongovernmental agency dedicated to the responsible use of wood as a home heating fuel.”

Here are some of their favourite reasons for heating with wood:

  • It’s a renewable energy resource
  • Because trees recycle carbon dioxide, wood burning just warms you, not the globe.
  • No more freezing in the dark when the power goes out
  • Heat from a fire warms you like the rays of the sun
  • A fire is romantic
  • It’s cheaper to burn wood so you save some money
  • You’ll invest in your community if you buy firewood locally and support your neighbours

Unfortunately, Kawartha Lakes Fire Service deals with an increasing number of wood burning related fires during the winter months. Promoting safe fire burning is critical to protect your family and your home.

They want to spread the word on wood burning safety and offer the following advice:

Wood burning stoves

  • Use heating equipment that has the label of a recognized testing laboratory.
  • All heaters need space. Keep things that can burn such as paper, bedding or furniture at least 1 meter (3 feet) away from heating equipment.
  • Install stove, chimney connectors and chimneys following the manufacturer’s instructions or have a professional do the installation.
  • Start fires with newspaper, kindling or fire starters. Never use a flammable liquid such as lighter fluid, kerosene or gasoline.
  • In wood stoves, burn only dry seasoned wood. In pellet stoves, burn only dry seasoned wood pellets.
  • Keep the doors of your wood stove closed unless loading or stoking the live fire.
  • Embers in the ashes can remain hot for several days, do not vacuum them or place them in combustible containers.  Place ashes in a tightly covered metal container and keep the ash container at least 3 meters (10 feet) away from the home and any other nearby buildings. Douse and saturate the ashes with water.
  • Supervise children whenever a wood or oil stove or other space heater is being used. Use a sturdy metal screen to prevent contact burns, which are more common than flame burns.
  • Have a 1 meter (3 feet) “kid-free zone” around open fires and space heaters.

 

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Fireplaces

  • Have a sturdy metal screen on a fireplace.
  • Only dry, seasoned wood should be used in fireplaces. Not only is it cleaner for the environment, it also creates less buildup in the chimney.
  • If you use artificial logs use them according to manufacturer’s recommendations. Never burn more than one log at a time.
  • Chimneys and vents need to be cleaned at least once a year or as necessary.

Source: http://www.city.kawarthalakes.on.ca/news/kawartha-lakes-fire-service-reminds-residents-of-wood-burning-safety

I got a chuckle out of this Zen Proverb…

“Before enlightenment; chop wood, carry water. After enlightenment; chop wood, carry water.”  

Stay safe with your wood burning stove or fireplace!

 

 

 

 

 

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If you are looking for a new job in 2017 it might be worth considering the businesses who employ the most people. I was surprised to learn there are actually 144 employers in Peterborough who employ 40 or more people.

The biggest employer weighs in with 2,410 employees. Not surprising, it’s the Peterborough Regional Health Centre (PRHC).

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The PRHC is a state-of-the-art regional hospital with a proud local history, spanning more than a 100 years. The hospital serves a population of 300,000 people in Peterborough and the surrounding region. It has a capacity of 494 beds and has one of the busiest Emergency Departments in Ontario.

The second largest employer is the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board with 1,500 employees from the Peterborough-area schools and the school boards’ head offices.

Tied for third and fourth with 1,163 employees is the City of Peterborough and Trent University.

The listing provides a candid view of the local economy in the Peterborough area. And the Mayor of the City of Peterborough, Daryl Bennett indicates the area is a welcome place for individuals, students, families and businesses:

“With our impressive network of schools, healthcare centres, shops and services and thriving arts community, Peterborough is the perfect place for people to grow up and to grow old. With our strong creative economy and access to global markets, it is also the perfect place to grow a business.”  

You can see the full list of the 144 largest employers in Peterborough at http://www.mykawartha.com/news-story/6412481-meet-the-top-144-employers-in-peterborough/

Peterborough Economic Development outlines the main sectors that drive the local economy:

  • Aerospace
  • Water Technologies
  • Advanced Manufacturing
  • Tourism
  • Agriculture
  • Nuclear Energy

The area has what is called a “Creative Economy”, an economy that is driven by both knowledge and innovation. Thomas Edison was certainly an innovative thinker as he founded General Electric Canada in Peterborough over 100 years ago.

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The Regional Economic Profile for Peterborough and the Kawarthas provides a detailed overview of the local business community. You can download the full report at

http://peterboroughed.ca/wp-content/uploads/ped-community-profile.pdf

 

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