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Grads encouraged to be ‘difference makers’

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By Kirk Winter

Red Hawk graduates and their families gathered in front of their computer screens to take part in Haliburton Highlands Secondary School’s 2020-2021 virtual graduation June 29.

While students and staff would have preferred an in-person grad, the planning committee pulled out all the stops to make it a night to remember for students who have seen their final two years impacted by a global pandemic.

Principal Chris Boulay told the graduates, “Tonight you will accept one of the most important documents you may ever receive: your high school diploma. We celebrate your achievement and are witnesses to you being honoured. I know I speak on behalf of this entire school community when I say that I am very proud of this graduating class. Today is a moment that you will remember for ever, with you and loved ones all likely watching with pride celebrating the close of a chapter of over 13 years of school and the start of new opportunities, challenges and adventures.”

Boulay thanked donors who made prizes and awards available to graduates, “despite experiencing the harsh economic circumstances of the last two years.”

Boulay spoke of issues overcome by the class. “I want to reflect on the challenges you’ve faced, whether it be with friendships, relationships, loss, shortened sports seasons, a pandemic. I want you to reflect on how you have grown in many ways through these experiences, learning about social injustice and the looming importance of justice, equity, inclusion and diversity. I ask you to reflect on what you learned through these experiences – an appreciation of freedom and democracy, where we live and work, connected with each other in person … be grateful for human connections, for those who mean so much to you.”

Valedictorian Bence Suranyi, who will be attending University of Toronto next year to study computer engineering, told his 112 fellow graduates that when he first entered Grade 9 the school seemed so huge and alien, not knowing any of the teachers and very few of the other students and getting lost in “the maze that is HHSS.”

Suranyi continued, “We are going down very different paths. Whether you are going to post-secondary, doing an apprenticeship or going straight into the workforce we will all be parting ways to some degree after this graduation and that is sad to think about. But, going through four years of high school together cannot be discounted that simply because all the experiences that we have together are truly binding.”

The valedictorian reminded his friends “once a Hawk, always a Hawk. Remember that! We will soar!”

The honours and awards section of the program reflected the depth and breadth of programming offered at HHSS with dozens of students receiving recognition for winning individual subject awards, school letters, certifications in Specialist High Skills Major, extended French certificates, certificates in technological education or being a member of the honour society and achieving an 80 per cent average in their graduating year.

Megan Klose led the way with six individual awards plus the LieutenantGovernor’s Award for Community Service. Daniella Meraw followed a close second with five awards and the Governor General’s Academic Medal for the student graduating with the highest overall average. Emma James was recognized with five subject related awards, followed by Desi Davies with four, April Kovacs with three and Suranyi with three. Boulay issued a challenge at the conclusion of his remarks.

“We wish you productive and happy futures. Celebrate your accomplishments. In the world of Instagram and something called TikTok … leave your mark on the world. Do good, be strong, be a difference maker.”

New Foundation online 50/50 draw

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The HHHS Foundation has announced a new monthly online 50/50 lottery draw, with 50 per cent of funds raised going to a monthly winner and 50 per cent to support local hospital and health care facility equipment needs.

Executive director, Lisa Tompkins, said that through a digital technology platform, tickets will be available for purchase online at the Foundation lottery site hhhsf5050.ca beginning June 30 at 11:30 a.m.

She said tickets can be purchased for $20 for 100 ticket numbers, $10 for 20 ticket numbers, or $5 for five ticket numbers.

After buying their tickets, purchasers will receive a confirmation e-mailed with their 50/50 registered numbers from a random selection system. The amount of the 50/50 estimated take-home prize for the month will be displayed in real time on the site and will continue to grow as more people participate.

“Following nine successful years of our Cash for Care Lottery, we look forward to engaging with the community in this electronic format to continue to raise muchneeded funds for priority capital equipment for Haliburton Highlands Health Services,” Tompkins said.

Purchasers must be in Ontario at the time of purchase, and must be 18 years of age or older to participate. For the first draw, tickets will be available for purchase until 11:59 p.m. July 29, and the first monthly draw will take place on July 30 at 9 a.m., with the winner information posted on the hhhsf5050.ca website, as well as the Foundation’s social media platforms Facebook and Instagram

Virtanen leaves strong County tourism legacy

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The County of Haliburton will soon be on the hunt for a new director of tourism.

After eight years in the role, Amanda Virtanen is stepping down to pursue another opportunity.

County Warden Liz Danielsen said Virtanen will leave behind a strong legacy.

“Amanda has really made great strides in promoting tourism in Haliburton County in the time she’s been with us,” Danielsen said. “She’s worked hard with all the stakeholders and I think she’s done a lot to bring us all together in a single voice.”

Virtanen played a key role in multiple large-scale tourism projects. Those include multi-year initiatives such as the Haliburton Destination Development Plan, which required extensive collaboration and consultation with the tourism community.

She also assumed the role while the tourism and marketing landscapes were shifting.

“Amanda’s resignation is a tremendous loss for us,” wrote Haliburton County CAO Mike Rutter in an email. “She came to us at a time when industry trends in the way communities marketed themselves were changing dramatically, and Amanda has led us through that transition very effectively.”

Rutter said that the County tracks the success of marketing tactics and initiatives. According to those metrics, Virtanen’s work had a large impact on the desirability of Haliburton as a destination.

“Every sector of our community has benefited from that,” Rutter wrote. “We will certainly miss her contributions to the County management team, and I know the stakeholders who have come to rely on her advice and support will miss her as well.”

Virtanen declined comment

Fresh start for tourism stakeholder group

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The Haliburton Tourism Stakeholders Group is evolving, with a new name, mandate and leadership.

Emily Stonehouse and Randy Pielsticker are the new co-chairs of the Haliburton Tourism Action Committee (HaliTAC).

According to Stonehouse, HaliTAC will continue the work of the Tourism Stakeholders Group with a focus on providing insight and direction to County council and the County’s tourism department.

“We can evolve this into something that will really benefit the community,” Stonehouse said. “We always saw the benefits before — it always had this really great energy.”

The previous group provided monthly reports to the County’s Tourism Committee. Now, the independent committee is dissolved and tourism is discussed at the County’s Committee of the Whole meetings. That means HaliTAC won’t be officially connected to County council.

As the organization resumes meetings, HaliTAC will gather input from the County’s tourism community and provide delegations during County of Haliburton council meetings.

Previous chairs Barrie Martin and Bruce Ballentine passed on their positions to Pielsticker and Stonehouse. A prolonged hiatus of the group’s meetings due to COVID-19 gave them time to chart a path forward.

“It needed a refresh,” Pielsticker said. “As much as those meetings before were great, there were a lot of stakeholders who never attended. So, one of our goals for revitalizing this committee is eliminating the barriers to participation.”

Besides revising meeting schedules, annual leadership appointments and more, HaliTAC will tackle large initiatives, including the County’s Destination Management plan. They hope to offer perspectives on the plan which orients Haliburton County as a place “where residents and visitors celebrate the essence of Canada’s outdoor and creative spirit.”

By gathering tourism stakeholders — from restaurant owners, to fishing charters to watersports rentals — Stonehouse said they’ll be well equipped to brainstorm ways to improve and strengthen the industry.

“When you have all these great minds in one room, great things are bound to happen,” Stonehouse said. “We just wanted to continue to expand on that and support that.”

Through delegations, Stonehouse said she’s excited to be able to bring the concerns of the tourism community to County council.

“I want to take what they’re saying, and go into a meeting, and speak on behalf of all these people whose voices haven’t been heard in that space before,” said Stonehouse. That involves distilling the thoughts and needs of the community which arise during HaliTAC meetings.

Plans are underway to launch a community survey and connect with tourism partners – tour operators, rental agencies, restaurants and more ahead of preliminary meetings in the fall. They’ve started work planning a tourism summit to promote Haliburton as a destination.

“It is exciting to see discussions starting about getting the tourism stakeholders together again; the idea of a summit in Haliburton is quite exciting,” Warden Liz Danielsen said, after Pielsticker and Stonehouse presented their plans to council on June 9.

Councillors wary of conduct

Algonquin Highlands Mayor Carol Moffatt called previous member conduct “the elephant in the room.”

She explained how past committee members behaved disrespectfully towards County councillors and County tourism officials.

“It’s great that the tourism stakeholder group reconvened, and recalibrated,” Moffatt said. “Amid the good work that previous group did, toward the end there was a tremendous amount of discord and bickering.”

Stonehouse said that besides terms of reference and a code of conduct, HaliTAC’s method of approaching council through delegations will decrease the discord or pressure on County staff.

“In the form of us doing these delegations there’s a middle ground, where Randy and I listen to people, we come and do the delegations, we talk to County council,” Stonehouse said. “That’s our attempt — to try and have this more formal presence at the County council as representatives of the tourism industry.”

Pielsticker, co-chair of the Tourism Stakeholders Group during the time period Moffat referred to, understood the concerns members expressed: the renewed HaliTAC, Pielsticker said, will play a role in ensuring those concerns are communicated respectfully.

Some issues included the use of the County’s tourism budget, on items and services certain tourism stakeholders felt were unneeded.

“I am not going to justify how they addressed their concerns — that was certainly unprofessional and uncalled for — but it doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be listening to their concerns,” he said.

Amanda Virtanen, Haliburton County’s former director of tourism, wrote in an email that “councillors look forward to the growth and evolution of HaliTAC and will be open to feedback that comes as a result of stakeholder discussions.”

Immersed in tourism

The pair say they’ll be an effective link between the tourism community and County council.

“We are up to our necks in tourism,” Stonehouse said with a laugh.

Pielsticker, assistant general manager at Sir Sam’s ski hill and mountain bike park, has more than 10 years of outdoor adventure experience leading cycling, mountaineering and paddling expeditions. He’s also vice-president of Adventure Haliburton, a collection of adventure tourism experience providers.

Stonehouse, a long-time Haliburton County resident, works for the custom experiential tourism company Yours Outdoors where she’s constantly in touch with many Haliburton County tourism operators. She also worked for the municipality of Minden Hills.

Stonehouse said it’s the passion and excitement of the industry in Haliburton County which makes her excited to consult and represent tourism stakeholders through HaliTAC.

“The people that live here have their heart here,” she said. “I really want them to be seen, heard, respected and listened to.”-

Community rallies after devastating house fire

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After an early morning fire destroyed their home June 22, a West Guilford family is grateful for an outpouring of community support.

Lezly-Ann Crosmaz-Brown and her son and nephew escaped their rental home as the roof was engulfed in flames. The fire caused an estimated $300,000 in damage.

As soon as the family was out of the house, neighbours and passerbys took action. Ryan Mitchell of Haliburton removed propane tanks and other accessible items from the porch and a neighbour, electrician Steve Churko, disconnected the house’s electricity.

“Everybody’s been so accommodating — I’m just so thankful,” Crosmaz-Brown said.

“I just got off the phone [with emergency services] and these two just swoop in; that was very comforting.”

After they heard the fire alarm, the family rushed out of the home. She heard her nephew, Walker Davis Brown, calling for her son Angus Gryphon Wowk. The eightyear-old took his cousin’s hand and quickly led the five-year-old out of the house. The family has been celebrating the child’s act of heroism.

“We’re all making sure to tell him how proud we are, because not everyone knows how to act in an emergency,” CrosmazBrown said.

After that, neighbours looked after the kids. Crosmaz-Brown stayed in the driveway as firefighters arrived to fight the blaze and her partner, Nick Wowk, rushed back from work. Her sister, Natalie Crosmaz-Brown, was not at home.

While the house can’t be salvaged, Crosmaz-Brown said the community of West Guilford and Haliburton County has been helping the family rebuild.

They are staying at Camp Medeba and a GoFundMe Campaign, started by Crosmaz-Brown’s mother, has raised nearly $7,000. A local church, the Haliburton Lions Club, Nesbitt Firewood and many other individuals have pitched in funds.

“This is going to help us clean the lot,” Crosmaz-Brown said. The family had renters’ insurance, but the family is responsible for removing their possessions.

Brandon Stamp, a friend and neighbour, held a fundraiser for the family through her business, Right Brained Mom. She raised more than $700 for the family. Her partner looked after the family’s kids while fire crews finished putting out the blaze.

“We were really happy to help them — it’s already such a hard time,” Stamp said, mentioning how resilient the family has been in the days following the fire.

For Stamp, helping out was the natural response: “We helped them because they’re our neighbours and our friends,” she said.

Jen Coates, of West Guilford Shopping Centre, set up a donation box after hearing about the fire.

“West Guilford is an awesome community – every time we have a tragedy like that we try and support it as much as we can,” Coates said. So far, they’ve raised around $300.

For the past weeks, Crosmaz-Brown said she’s been researching the seven stages of grief as she and her family try to adjust to a new reality.

“It’s been a bit of a roller coaster — but I’m just in a safe place,” she said.

Not everything was lost: CrosmazBrown smiles as she recounts how firefighters saved special heirlooms: her son’s favourite stuffed animal, an old mural and jewelry boxes passed down from Crosmaz-Brown’s grandfather.

“We are always trying to see the silver linings of things,” CrosmazBrown said.

As summer arrives, she said the children have recovered from the shock well, and the family plans to take advantage of outdoor activities while they search for new housing options. They want to stay in West Guilford.

“West Guilford is a small town where everybody knows everybody,” Crosmaz-Brown said. “They’re not afraid to help each other.”

Donations to the family can be made through Gayle Ann Crosmaz’s fundraiser on Facebook: “Help Gayle’s personal emergency fundraiser.”

Three people face charges after stolen vehicles recovered in Dysart et al

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Haliburton Highlands OPP have arrested and charged three people after locating stolen vehicles in Dysart et al.

At 11:16 a.m. on June 27, Police were notified of a reported assault. After arriving at the Dysart et al address, they located three vehicles that had been reported stolen.

An OPP press release states that three people have now been arrested and charged with multiple offences as a result of the investigation.

A 35-year-old man from Toronto is charged with two counts of assault, three counts of assault with a weapon, possession of property obtained by crime and possession of a weapon for a dangerous purpose. A bail hearing is scheduled for July 2, 2021.

A 34-year-old man from Dysart et al Township and a 34-year-old woman from Newmarket have also each been charged with three counts of property obtained by crime and failure to comply with a release order.

The accused are scheduled to appear before the Ontario Court of Justice in Minden, on August 4, 2021.

The ‘loon whisperer’ of Salerno Lake

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Across Salerno Lake’s calm waters, it’s easy to spot Kevin Pepper.
He’s sporting a camo Blue Jays hat and a big grin; driving a small metal boat with blue pool noodle bumpers; hefting a camera with a camo-covered lens so large you need to hold it in both hands.
Most cottagers on the secluded lake – as well as thousands logging onto Facebook around the world – know exactly why he’s out on the water, at 7 a.m., on a Monday morning.He’s checking on the loons.
Over the years, Pepper has developed a world-wide reputation as a loon photographer, chronicling the lifecycles of Salerno loons through the lens of his camera.


From the moment they land on the lake in the spring until they fly south in the fall, Pepper follows their lives on the lake, snapping thousands of pictures along the way. And he has helped countless others experience the loons too in workshops that, until COVID-19, attracted photographers from Dallas to France.
On an early Monday morning, out on Salerno with The Highlander, Pepper explained how his love of loons began after he built a bunkie on the shores of the lake in 1996. His wife noticed the loons and over time, watching them pass the dock was a morning tradition.
“I would know their morning pass-throughs, and I would make sure I’d be down there when they went by – that’s how it kind of started,” said Pepper.


In 2014, he left a full-time corporate position and began living at the lake nine months a year.
“I drove home from work for the last time on Oct. 31,” Pepper said. “On Nov. 1, I was up in the morning, on my dock, with a cup of coffee, going to photograph loons by myself.”

International tours

Kevin Pepper captures loons with a variety of cameras — and often coaches photographers who’ve never picked up a proffesional-grade camera before. Photo by Sam Gillett

I was shocked because I

had never seen a loon

so close to me before.

It was quite an experience.

Nando Tedeschi

“When I say ‘loon up,’ you get your camera up’,” instructed Pepper. That’s what he tells all the tourists who come out to see the loons: the birds are quick, and learning when to snap the shot has earned him his reputation.
He and his nephews had started a tour company that led photography workshops around the globe, but as they got steadily busier, Pepper stepped back to focus on loons and workshops at Salerno.
In his spacious cottage that overlooks the lake, he’d host photographers of all skill levels: from a Nikon brand representative to hobbyists with iPhones.
Some years he would lead up to 25 tours in a season, acting as the cook, cleaner, entertainer and resident photography expert.

Nando Tedeschi is an avid photographer who found Pepper after looking around Canada for the best places to capture loon photos.
“I was shocked because I had never seen a loon so close to me before,” Tedeschi said in a phone interview. “It was quite an experience.”
Since 2015, Tedeschi has been making trips to Salerno to see the loons. He’s become friends with Pepper and recently, he bought a slice of lakefront property with plans to build a cottage.
Tedeschi’s experience on the lake mirrors that of many who hop in Pepper’s boat. After each trip to Salerno, they leave with much more than snapshots.
“A picture is a picture,” said Pepper, hefting his camera in the back of the boat. But the goal from any session he said is to “walk away with a memory.”

Saving the loons

Pepper swivels in the boat, pointing to a large loon that floats nearby. He says he’s learned how to pilot his boat in ways that ensure the loons aren’t threatened or harmed: in fact, he and his cross-lake friend Wendy will spend many weekend afternoons acting as an honour guard: sheltering loons from busy recreational boating traffic as they make their way across the lake to hunt and eat.
“That’s a tribute to Kevin,” said Tedeschi, mentioning how comfortable the loons seem to be with Pepper. “Kevin is passionate about the loons and their safety.”


The loons get to know his boat: one year while two parent loons were fending off attackers, a chick sought shelter right next to Pepper’s prop engine.
“I pride myself on that,” Pepper said. He chats about how many inexperienced – or careless – boaters don’t know how to drive safely around loons; a boat’s wake can damage nests. He’s even seen boats that seem to try and run them down.


While Pepper is a fierce protector of the loons – he won’t tell anyone where their nests are – he loves to share their lives with the lake’s seasonal and year-around residents.
The same loon who took shelter next to Pepper’s boat became a local celebrity. After uploading his photograph to the lake’s Facebook group, the community voted to give him a name.
Ever since, cottagers and lake visitors remember “Rider.” Everyone knew Rider,” Pepper said.
But like loons do every year, Rider became strong enough throughout the summer, and in the fall took flight – seeking warmth in the Carolinas.
In a small notebook, he keeps track of every part of the loon’s lifecycle – they arrived this year for the first time on April 4 at 10:44 a.m. That skillset has transferred into his workshops.

A loon rears out of the water in early June. Photo by Kevin Pepper.

Right out on the water

When guests arrive – often shaken from the drive on the cottage road that snakes over steep hills – he gets them right out on the water to get used to photographing in a boat.
In the morning, they set off as early as 5 a.m. to catch loons in the sunrise glow.
“I tell them to try for the non-postcard shot,” said Pepper. He explains how the details of a loon, like its velvet feathers or the way water flows from its beak, are the reasons he keeps finding new photos to shoot. Each day on the water he usually shoots more than 300 photographs.
And he doesn’t sell them: “It’s my way of giving back,” he said, with a wide grin. He chooses two a day to post on Facebook, to bid the lake goodnight and good morning. Each post receives hundreds of likes, comments and shares – many from people around the globe who follow Salerno loons through Pepper’s lens.
In 2020, the world came to a screeching halt.
Tourists couldn’t come to Haliburton County, and they certainly couldn’t cross borders or stay with Pepper to go out on the loon watch.
Many were frustrated, some even argued they should be allowed to quarantine up at his cottage: “a lot of people didn’t understand,” said Pepper.

His voice is hushed: a loon floats nearby, about 15 feet off the bow. “I’ll be honest,” said Pepper, his eyes on the loon as it floats serenely in the morning sun, “If I could never lead a workshop again, I wouldn’t be too torn up about it.”
Tours and photos have never been the only thing that matters, he said. What matters is the loons – the chance to observe their lives and share them with others.


“I’m still doing what I do,” he said. “So, people can see it, and follow me, and still be part of it.”

Hodgson tells of ‘wild ride’ dream NHL career

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Cody Hodgson said his favourite hockey memories may well be playing in his first National Hockey League game with the Vancouver Canucks in 2010 and then scoring his first goal the very next night.

“I think being able to play in the NHL in any capacity is something I can look back at and be proud of,” he said in an interview with The Highlander.

During his rookie season, the Canucks advanced to the Stanley Cup finals, missing out by one game as they lost game seven that year to the Boston Bruins.

Hodgson said, “it was a wild ride to the Stanley Cup finals with the Canucks. I was brand new so I got to see what it took to get to that position. It was an unfortunate ending, losing in game seven, but I will remember the excitement of the city and fans for a long time.”

On the way to the NHL, Hodgson said some highlights were playing for Canada in a few different international tournaments: at the World Under 18 and World Hockey Championships.

“Winning gold at both is something I’ll never forget.”

Another favourite memory is going to the OHL junior hockey finals with the Brampton Battalion.

According to the Hall of Fame committee, Hodgson learned to skate in front of his house on Lake Kashagawigamog. He was only four when he donned a Huskies jersey, just as his father and grandfather had done before him. The Tyke team boasted two players who would eventually play in the NHL, Hodgson and Matt Duchene.

He had a stellar junior career, playing four years with the Battalion, where he won the William Hanley Trophy (OHL’s most sportsmanlike player), the Red Tilson Trophy (OHL player of the year), and the CHL Player of the Year Award.

After his brief stint in Vancouver, Hodgson was traded to the Buffalo Sabres in 2012, notching 44 goals and 55 assists over three years despite nagging injuries. He signed with the Nashville Predators in 2015.

However, he announced his retirement in 2016 after being diagnosed with malignant hyperthermia. He stopped playing but stayed on in Nashville to work with the Predators Youth Hockey program.

Hodgson said despite the early end to his career, he doesn’t feel cheated.

“I feel that I was blessed to have played as long as I did. It was my dream, like a lot of Canadians, to play in the National Hockey League and I got to do that for six years. If I had known the dangers of playing as a child, the doctors probably wouldn’t have allowed me to play at all, so I’m thankful for the time I did get.”

He returns often to his home on Haliburton Lake, not far from the lumber operation his great-grandfather ran over 100 years ago, and where the Hodgson clan has gathered for four generations.

He told The Highlander it’s an honour to be named to the Hall.

“I feel very proud to come from a town of great athletes. Growing up I always aspired to be like them. I had many mentors from the area that without them I wouldn’t have been as successful in hockey. Growing up playing hockey for the Haliburton team and returning to train every off-season gave me a chance to see all the support that goes into athletics here, I’m very fortunate to be product of this and grateful.”

Disc golf set to fly at Abbey Gardens

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Laura Trach and her parents, Jane and Jim Trach, played a few holes of disc golf at Abbey Gardens’ new course last week.

While tossing the discs, and walking from tee to green – which in this case is a metal basket – Jean said their neighbours in Ottawa introduced them to the sport in October. They live on two acres and created their own little course and played all winter long. “For us, it’s a perfect cold weather exercise,” Jane said.

It provided plenty of walking, Jim added, and was easy to social distance during COVID.

Jane added that for her it was also something to do during endless lockdowns and stay-at-home orders when they weren’t socializing with anybody. She said it had also helped her fitness. When she began playing, she couldn’t reach her hands to the ground due to bad hips and arthritis but now she can bend over to pick up a disc.

“It’s fantastic,” added Laura, who is new to the sport.

Abbey Gardens is launching its new Innova Disc Golf course on Canada Day, Thursday, July 1. It’s located in the former gravel pit on the site.

It’s a partnership between Innova Disc Golf course designer and business development for Canada’s Darrel Bankes and the West Guilford establishment.

There’s been a disc golf course in Head Lake Park for years, so this is the second course of its kind in the County.

Bankes said the sport is “absolutely booming” and garnered a recent full-page spread in The Globe and Mail.

He said he was in the Highlands last fall on his way to a course in Huntsville when he ran into Thom Lambert.

“And he instantly dragged me over here to Abbey Gardens to meet the folks. So, then over the winter, we’ve been working on a partnership agreement … to install this course in a way that allows us to take on the responsibility of building, designing and installing the course,” he said.

Because it is a pay-to-play course, it will generate revenue for Abbey Gardens’ programming.

They will be offering day passes and season passes for the course, which functions just like a golf course with different aesthetics and activities. It is a full 18-hole course with a short and long layout. It begins in the former gravel pit and then goes into the forest. The course is 6,000 feet in length.

Board member Brenda Smith said Bankes met with Heather Reid, who brought the idea to the board. They in turn met with Innova Disc Golf and toured a course, “and we thought it would be fantastic to use the pit for something physical.”

Abbey Gardens director of operations, Ashley McAllister, said there’s been a huge interest already, even prior to opening. For the kick-off event, they are partnering with Haliburton Highlands Brewing and the Food Hub so visitors can experience the site.

Adult day passes will be $10 for the day, and children $5 including one disc. It is dog-friendly on-leash. The course can also be used for hiking. It will be a four-season offering. People can book at the hub or online.

“For us, it’s a great fundraising opportunity and it’s a great way to do something at this time [during a pandemic],” McAllister said. She added it’s allowing access to parts of the property they haven’t used before.

“We don’t really have something like this up here, especially the course that Darrell’s designed, so for people to come for a hike, explore the property, get outside, have that safe social distancing and try a new sport.”

See more on the Abbey Gardens website, abbeygardens.ca or at innovadiscs.com

Stellar snowmobile season in Haliburton County

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By Kirk Winter

The Haliburton County Snowmobile Association’s (HCSA) 49th annual general meeting turned into a celebration of all things sledding May 29.

It also served as an opportunity for politicians to recognize the considerable economic benefit the activity creates in Haliburton County.

HCSA President Craig Bowker said the 2020-2021 winter “had been a year of exceptional highlights and some association records were broken.”

John Enright, the club’s first vice president, listed many achievements.

He also told The Highlander at the end of the season, that “we killed it. The association saw a 17 per cent increase in membership over the winter of 2019- 2020 and delivered more grooming hours compared to previous years. There were also fewer equipment issues.”

“It was awesome,” Enright said. “The snow came late. We had a very strong finish and no January thaw.”

Enright told the AGM the club’s social media presence grew in leaps and bounds. The HCSA website had close to 75,000 visits this season from people looking for updated trail conditions. Followers on the association’s Facebook page grew by 25 per cent year over year.

Other association presentations touched on higher numbers of volunteers turning out for different projects: everything from brushing trails to posting signs to marking lake trails with more than 800 stakes. The Peter Overington Bridge crossing the Beech River had a $54,000 facelift and a portion of the main trail linking Minden to the HCSA’s 370-kilometre network was rerouted. Currently, the HCSA has a bucket list of over more than a dozen trail projects planned for the future.

The awards portion of the meeting saw second vice president Neil Vanderstoop named volunteer of the year for coordinating trail signage and other roles. Cole Finlay was named groomer operator of the year for his work as groomer coordinator. Tom Nicholson and Liz Jesseman received long service awards. Jim Richert and Enright will be inducted into the wall of fame. Many other volunteers were mentioned for their tireless efforts, including: Scott and Sherri Patterson, Marc Benoit, Carrie Reid, Fred Heinzler, Scott Doan, Elmo Lymburner and Christine Webster and family.

County of Haliburton Warden Liz Danielson told association members she appreciated attending the meeting “because of the tremendous contribution that snowmobiling makes to the Haliburton economy. That fact needs to be recognized more often and County council appreciates the work the association does.”

Dysart et al Mayor Andrea Roberts told the HCSA she valued the economic impact of snowmobiling, but asked the association what they were doing to mitigate the effects of climate change within their sport as winters continue to warm. The HCSA promised to respond in the near future.

Dysart et al Deputy Mayor Patrick Kennedy shared good news with the club saying the Haliburton Visitors’ Centre will be open for the coming season providing washrooms and running water. Kennedy also thanked the HCSA for its help in addressing illegal road usage and speeding issues created by some snowmobilers.

Directors for the coming season are: Bowker, Nicholson, Ted Roberts, Finlay, Noah Black, Enright, Margo Ross, Vanderstoop, and Marc Joanis. The directors elected a president and other members of the executive the week of June 7.