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New ‘life saving device’ installed at Welcome Centre

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The Rotary Club of Haliburton has invested approximately $6,000 to install a new Automated External Defibrillator (AED) at the community Welcome Centre in Head Lake Park.

Unlike the several other AEDs that are already sprinkled across various locations in Haliburton, this device is a little different, said Rotarian Ted Brandon.

“This safety station is sort of unique in that it can be mounted outdoors in the open. This unit is heated and ventilated and so can be outside 365 days a year,”

Brandon said. “It will be available for use 24 hours a day, seven days a week.”

All of the other AEDs in town are located indoors and are only available during a facility’s open hours.

Long-time Highlander Phil Carrol was instrumental in the effort to bring this new device to Haliburton.

He organized for a representative from Action First Aid to attend a Rotary meeting over the summer and explain the benefits of having an AED available to the community year-round.

“The young woman who came out told us how one of these devices actually saved her life,” Brandon said.

“It was just dumb luck that a fire truck happened to be close by where she went into cardiac arrest, and they brought her back with the defibrillator … What a powerful message, for her to tell her story. I think it really resonated with everyone.”

This new AED is simple to use, Carrol said, and has various “neat” features.

“If you take it out and open it up, it starts talking to you and it tells you exactly what to do, how to utilize it and what to do to the patient.

If the patient is not in cardiac arrest, it will know and it won’t operate,”

Carrol said. “You can’t charge it or operate it if the person doesn’t need it, so it’s really great that way.”

As soon as the storage station is opened up, the AED sends a message to emergency services and contacts in Haliburton.

While first responders will be notified the device has been activated,

Brandon said it was still important to call 911 if someone is in a state of emergency.

“Calling 911 is always the first step. Then get the defibrillator,” Brandon said.

“When you’re on the phone, the operator will actually stay with you and help you through the process.

They will be able to hear the defibrillator talking and will confirm to you what steps to take and when.”

Science helping to mitigate future flooding

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The County of Haliburton believes it will be well prepared the next time a 100-year storm rips through the community.

In September, regional staff partnered with representatives from the Ganaraska Conservation Authority and the Kawartha Lakes Conservation Authority to kick start a new bathymetry surveying project of the Gull and Burnt River watersheds.

The information will be used to improve flood protection practises in the area, said Steve Stone, the County’s director of planning.

The project is being funded by the federal government through its National Disaster Mitigation program, launched in 2015. The initiative is designed to reduce the impacts of natural disasters on Canadians through focused investments on significant recurring flood risks, while also advancing work to facilitate private residential insurance for overland flooding.

Stone said the County plans to use the approximately $175,000 it received from the feds to create new floodplain mapping for the reservoirs, lakes and connecting rivers that experience frequent flooding around the Highlands.

The idea is to avoid the sort of situation seen in 2017, when the Gull River burst its banks, flooding many riverside properties.

“We’re trying to introduce science into why these disasters are happening and, ultimately, come up with a mitigation plan for them,” Stone said

Project to wrap up December 1

There have been several funding intakes since the program was launched six years ago. The County initially applied for, and received funding in 2017. That money was used on LiDAR mapping of the watershed, which involved commissioning airplanes to fly in a straight line over certain areas of the County to form a digital map of the terrain below.

That terrestrial mapping project, as Stone calls it, is still ongoing. While it was expected to wrap up in 2019, the COVID-19 pandemic forced the County to put it on hold. Those involved in the work are only just now getting back to it, Stone said.

The bathymetry project is a second, separate intake that involves the use of SONAR technology to get an accurate read for what different waterbodies look like under the water line.

“We’ve basically broken this down into three phases – we’re going out, surveying in the water, looking at what the terrain looks like in the rivers and lakes in a few key areas. The Gull River is our primary focus right now, because of the flooding that’s happened there in the past,” Stone said. “The net result of all this survey work is that we’ll have data that the conservation authorities can plug into a model. Then, based on what we find in the water, and the features along the different rivers and lakes, they will be able to accurately figure out where the floodplain is, and based on rainfall, snowfall etc. accurately plot where this theoretical floodplain is within all the major rivers that cycle through Haliburton County.”

Stone noted this information will be used to direct public policy and assist in the decision- making process when proposals for new or existing developments along potential floodplains come before council.

While the first phase is focused on populated areas around the Gull River – most notably the village of Minden – the second and third phase will focus on more outlying areas, covering the southern portion of the Gull River watershed. Stone expects all three phases to be wrapped up by Dec. 1.

Public consultation is expected to take place in late 2022 and early 2023, presenting the project’s findings, before being officially presented to County council and the four lower tier municipalities.

“This is the sort of thing that will lead to better mapping and better policies as it relates to development in and around our County’s rivers,” Stone said. “This is the sort of thing that will lead to better response (during extreme storm events). I guess you could say we’ll be more preventative, because we’ll know more and, hopefully, through our preventative measures we’ll end up mitigating some of the potential for severe damages in the future.”

Provincial taxpayers help pay for new hospital doors

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Haliburton’s hospital is getting new sliding doors courtesy of Ontario government taxpayers. MPP Laurie Scott was in Haliburton Oct. 12 to make the announcement alongside Haliburton Highlands Health Services (HHHS) president and CEO Carolyn Plummer.

Scott said the investment of $130,000 will fund the replacement of the existing automatic accessible main doors. Plummer said the doors have been in operation for more than 20 years and have exceeded their life expectancy. 

As a result, she said repairs are becoming more frequent, while at the same time parts are becoming more difficult to source as the doors and parts are becoming obsolete. She added the doors operate frequently every day and need to be reliable. 

She’s hopeful the work can be done in the spring. “This funding allows us to replace the well-used main entrance at our Haliburton site, supporting both security and accessibility,” Plummer said. “We appreciate the support of the Ministry of Health in our ongoing efforts to maintain our facilities.” Scott said, “throughout the pandemic, our local hospitals have gone above and beyond to provide exceptional care to patients and families in Haliburton County. This new funding will help improve operations and support capacity building to ensure residents of Haliburton and surrounding areas have access to quality health care.” 

She said the money is part of the government’s $182.6 million investment provided through the Health Infrastructure Renewal Fund and the Community Infrastructure Renewal Fund. 

She added it will ensure that patients can continue to access the care they need in safe, comfortable environments and that the local health care system is prepared to respond to any scenario as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to evolve. 

In a press release, the government said funding from the province allows its health care system partners to address urgent infrastructure renewal needs such as upgrades or replacements of roofs, windows, security systems, fire alarms and back-up generators. 

A total of $50 million from the Health Infrastructure Renewal Fund will be used by hospitals for urgent projects, including those that support the health system’s response to COVID-19, such as upgrading HVAC systems to enhance patient and staff safety, and improving infection prevention and control measures.

 In addition to this new funding, Scott said HHHS also received a two per cent increase to their estimated base and one-time funding for 2020-21. 

The press release further noted that HHHS received $1.329 million in funding in 2020-21 through the Health Infrastructure Renewal Fund and the Local Health Integration Network for critical infrastructure upgrades.

County ‘begs’ while ‘Muskoka millions’ flow

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Haliburton County has to “beg and scrape” for provincial money to support its watershed projects while ‘the Muskoka millions’ continue to flow, Algonquin Highlands Mayor Carol Moffatt told a township council meeting Oct. 7. 

During a Muskoka River Watershed communications committee meeting in late September, Moffatt, who sits on the committee because the watershed partly falls in Algonquin Highlands, said she learned about provincial government funding for work in the Muskoka watershed.

 She was referring to an April announcement in Gravenhurst that the Ontario government is investing more than $4.25 million on 16 projects to further protect that watershed. According to a Ministry of Environment, Conservation and Parks press release, the funding would help safeguard the region from environmental pressures, such as severe weather and flooding, while also improving the health of the watershed.

 Moffatt said one of the projects is a hydrology model for Muskoka. “I’ve been waving the angry flag for some time that Haliburton County is miles ahead in its integrated watershed management process and relationships and modelling, and we’ve had to beg and scrape for every cent and this is just some more money … the Muskoka millions,” she said.

 Moffatt added, “It’s frustrating that a neighbouring municipality continues to receive tremendous amounts of money to address problems that neighbouring communities and other jurisdictions across the province are facing.” 

Coun. Jennifer Dailloux commented, “I wonder if now is another moment to write a letter and say there are equity issues here. Cottage country across Ontario is vast and it isn’t just one region. We all have these same questions and we’ve said it before, but we’d like to say it again now.” In August 2018, Ontario announced a $5 million Muskoka Watershed Conservation and Management initiative.

 In August 2019, the MECP established the Muskoka Watershed Advisory Group. The Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry did release its Protecting People and Property: Ontario’s Flooding Strategy in March 2020 in Minden. However, there was no money specifically announced for Haliburton County.

 And while the County of Haliburton received $175,000 from the National Disaster Mitigation program to assist with flood prevention planning in 2017, that was federal money for LiDAR mapping of the Burnt and Gull River watersheds following significant flooding.

Moffatt, and Minden Hills Mayor Brent Devolin are County representatives on the Upper Trent Water Management Partnership.

 Moffatt said municipalities within the local watershed have forged relationships, including with the Coalition for Equitable Water Flow and the Trent Severn Waterway, and have expertise, yet she feels the County has been slighted. “In some ways [the two watersheds] have different battles, different hills to climb, but when they [the province] issue a press release that says, ‘The Muskoka region is one of Ontario’s crown jewels, and we want to ensure that we continue to protect its environment which is so important to the local economy and the great people who live there, said Premier Doug Ford … well I think there are a lot of other jurisdictions in Ontario that would like to receive that same largesse over and over.” 

Moffatt indicated it is a County of Haliburton issue and she would be talking to deputy mayor and County warden Liz Danielsen about raising it there in future.

 Haliburton-Kawartha Lakes-Brock MPP Laurie Scott said that in April 2021, the Ontario government announced an initial investment of over $4.25 million to fund 16 projects to address flooding and the watershed health of the Muskoka River Watershed as previously announced in 2018.

 However, she said, “our municipalities have been working hard to protect local waterways including a successful application through the Great Lakes Local Action Fund to create a sustainable, citizenbased model of benthos biomonitoring in the Haliburton, Peterborough and Kawartha Lakes areas to identify early indicators of lake issues. “This was one of the 44 community-based projects to receive $1.9 million in funding through the Great Lakes Local Action Fund. This fund supports local projects that protect and restore coastal, shoreline and near shore areas of the Great Lakes.” 

Scott added, “our government is committed to protecting and conserving our environment and we want to ensure that Ontario’s natural beauty can be enjoyed for generations to come. That is why we created the Made-in-Ontario Environment Plan outlining practical, sensible, and affordable solutions to some of our province’s most pressing environmental concerns.” 

Minden Lions celebrate Octoberfest

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The kegs won’t be flowing, but bratwursts, potato salad and coleslaw will all be on
offer at the Minden Lions Club’s first family-friendly Octoberfest celebration.

On Oct. 16, the Lions will be serving up German-style fare in their clubhouse. Guests can book one of two seatings, at 5
p.m. or 6:30 p.m. “We’re trying something new,” said Lions Dan Bingham, who is organizing the event.

“We thought October would be a good time to do it.” To comply with COVID-19 protocols,
everyone attending must be vaccinated, since the event falls under the same classification as a restaurant. They’re
also offering takeout. “The reason we’re doing the takeout we know some aren’t comfortable with the dine-in experience
yet,” he said.

All diners must book their table or takeout order by Oct. 14.

The dinner is the Lions’ first large-scale in-person fundraising event for over a year
and a half. “It’s been very frustrating,” Bingham said. He mentions other cornerstone events on
the Lions’ calendar such as Music on the Gull, which was canceled this year.

Funds from the Lions Club go towards multiple community initiatives, as well as helping out in times of need such as the town’s 2017 flood.
For Bingham, this event could act as a kick-start for fundraising as pandemic restrictions continue to allow more
in-person events.
“Because it’s been so long since we’ve done any fundraising, we wanted to get back in the groove,” he said.
To book a table or takeout order email mindenlions@lionsa16.com or call
705-286-6476

Planners launch second shoreline bylaw survey

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A shoreline in Haliburton County

In partnership with the County of Haliburton, planners have released a second survey polling residents on options for a draft shoreline protection bylaw. 

The survey focuses on specific aspects of the previous draft that consultants J.L Richards and Hutchinson Environmental Services Ltd. have identified as areas to clarify or improve in a new draft bylaw.

One element of the bylaw which has stirred debate is the previously proposed 30-metre setback. 

In the survey, JLR asks residents what elements of a property, including topography, existing site conditions and developments, should be considered when applying the bylaw. 

As well, the survey asks how people view a protection plan meshing with existing planning requirements such as the County’s official plan which states “the 30-meter shoreline preservation setback shall apply from the high watermark of a ‘body of water’ including lakes, rivers and streams.”

From Oct. 6-19, the eight-question survey can be accessed through the County of Haliburton’s website. 

Another survey, completed in August, focused on general feelings towards lake health and waterfront development. Among the 286 respondents, all indicated lake health was either extremely important, very important or somewhat important. 

The surveys are one part of a wider consultation strategy from JLR and HES. Ahead of presenting a draft bylaw to County Council at the end of October, the consultants met with stakeholders and received input from private residents through two virtual town hall meetings, also attended by County councillors.

You can complete the survey here.

Thanksgiving drive to support Food Centre

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With Thanksgiving right around the corner, one local lake association is once again putting out the call to raise money in support of the Minden Community Food Centre.

For the past 10 years, the Maple, Beech and Cameron Lakes Area Property Owners’ Association has been donating food and money to the food bank in Minden as a way of “giving back” during a time when, typically, demand for support and assistance in the Highlands is on the rise.

“The idea was a simple one – we are all fortunate to be able to cottage or live in this community, and not all the people that make the community what it is are equally fortunate,” said Andy Muirhead, president of the MBC lake association. “So, we decided let’s do something to make it just a bit easier for those in need of some help.”

Originally, the group encouraged its members to donate food items that could be delivered to the food bank. Muirhead said many seasonal residents would close their cottage up in the fall, and clear out their larders. Rather than transport all of that leftover food home, many decided to donate it.

When the pandemic hit in March 2020, Muirhead realized it wouldn’t be possible to host a traditional food drive – so he turned his focus to cash donations instead. Last year, the association raised around $1,500.

“Then we added an additional $1,000 onto that amount,” Muirhead said. “We decided early that we would match any donations coming in, up to a maximum of $1,000.”

The association will be doing a similar thing again this year. While Muirhead said he would be grateful for whatever donations his group receives, he would really like to push on and break the $3,000 mark this year.

All money received will go towards supporting programming at the Minden Community Food Centre. According to Joanne Barnes, manager of the facility, the food bank serves over 250 families annually.

Since the onset of the pandemic, the food bank has also distributed more than 1,150 emergency boxes to individuals that have never visited the facility before.

“Thanksgiving is not just a symbolically good time for helping out, it is also the beginning of the slower times here in the County,” Muirhead said. “With the tourists and cottagers heading off, jobs are scarcer, and times get a bit harder.”

He noted that while cash donations are being encouraged during this drive, the food bank is able to accept food donations directly at their facility.

Cash donations are being collected at St. Peter’s Church on Maple Lake. Muirhead said the association will be hosting an appreciation raffle for donations over $25.

To learn more about the Minden Community Food Centre, visit mindenfoodbank.org.

Huskies seek to improve on the road

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It was a weekend of mixed emotions for the Haliburton County Huskies as they kicked off their inaugural OJHL season, recording an opening night victory over the Lindsay Muskies on the road on Friday, before a sobering shutout defeat against the same opponents on home ice the very next night.

In what head coach and general manager Ryan Ramsay described as a monumental effort on Friday, the Huskies upset the hometown Muskies 3-2 in their season opener, imposing their will right from the first whistle and controlling large portions of the game. Forward Sam Solarino got the Huskies off to a perfect start, stabbing home at 11:40 in the opening period after a nice pass from Jack Staniland to score the organization’s very first goal.

The Muskies responded well, drawing a penalty from Joe Boice and levelling the score at 15:08 through Duncan Scullion. With the hometown crowd still celebrating, Huskies star forward Oliver Tarr took centre stage. Just 21 seconds after the Muskies tied the game, he ripped a shot past goaltender Fraser Ethan to restore the Huskies’ lead. Against the balance of play, Noah Pardy would again tie the game, scoring at 17:27 of the opening period.

In what was a more tentative second period, devoid of many real scoring chances, the eventual game winner came from the unlikeliest of sources, with Huskies defenseman Will Gourgouvelis following up on a rebound at 13:59 to score his very first junior goal. “I saw Steve Li start bustling down the wing and I saw a bit of an opening, so I just turned on the jets and got to the net,” Gourgouvelis said of his goal. “It was pretty exciting for me to get that first goal, but even better that we got the win.”

A frantic, yet scoreless third period meant the Huskies were able to celebrate a win in what was their first ever OJHL game. Gourgouvelis said it was a special night for many of the Huskies players, many of whom were hitting the ice in an official game for the first time in 18 months. “Hockey is kind of our escape, and when COVID hit it prevented us from connecting with others, so getting back on the ice felt unreal tonight,” Gourgouvelis said.

Ramsay commended his team for the way they fought throughout the contest, not giving the older Muskies an inch during an enthralling game. “It was a tight fought battle out there on the ice, and the boys worked really hard from the first minute to the last. I’ve been preaching all along that we need to have a level of competitiveness, and we need to play with speed – I thought we did both of those things well [on Friday],” Ramsay said.

As impressed as he was with his team’s effort on Friday, Ramsay pulled no punches when breaking down the team’s performance the following night. In front of a packed crowd at the SG Nesbitt Memorial Arena on Saturday, with more than 200 area residents in attendance, the Huskies fell to a 4-0 defeat. After a scoreless opening period, the Muskies Killian Rowlee broke the deadlock at 13:22 of the second period.

The away side would go on to add three more goals in the third period without reply, leaving the Huskies, and coach Ramsay, to reflect on a hefty loss. “I think we got outworked, we got outplayed. There’s no beating around the bush, we didn’t play a very good hockey game,” Ramsay said of his team’s performance on Saturday. “You’re going to lose hockey games at this level, and we’re fine with losing hockey games when you run into a good goalie, or you get some bad bounces, but it’s just not acceptable to lose when the effort level isn’t there.” Following that game, the Huskies made a move to improve their forward corps, signing 18-year-old left winger Nicholas Athanasakos.

The forward was most recently signed with the Prince George Spruce Kings out of the British Columbia Hockey League. The team has a couple of road games coming up, against the Wellington Dukes this coming Friday, and the North York Rangers on Sunday. The Huskies are next at home at SG Nesbitt Memorial Arena on Oct. 16 when they take on the Cobourg Cougars.

This reporter was hurtin’ in Haliburton

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Two days before the annual 8 Hours of Hurtin’ in Haliburton race, I realized I had made some grave miscalculations.

The first was agreeing to organizer Marc Sinclair’s generous offer of a complimentary press entry to the now infamous gravel race around a section of Haliburton Forest trail.

The second? I had no clue what gravel racing was. There’s also the small fact I had never been in a cycling race, let alone one as long as my usual workday.

After frantically buying the bike shorts with the most posterior padding I could find, I googled “gravel racing” to find a whole world of tire specifications, carbon fiber racing cycles worth three times the price of my car and as many colour options of skin-tight lycra attire as there are Haliburton residents.

But as a reporter, my job is to find out the facts. Chase the story. Pursue truth, no matter the obstacles.

So I showed up with running shoes, a second-hand skateboarding helmet, a mountain bike and a hastily-bought bottle of Gatorade.

Bike racers drink Gatorade, right?

Under the sunny skies and swaying trees of The Haliburton Forest, I chatted with a couple of racers who were tinkering with their cycles or fuelling up on some strange sort of edible energy gel I had presumed only could exist in Star Trek.

As my solo men’s class rolled off the starting gate, I took up last place as the sunglasses and smooth-helmeted crowd sped off upfront. The trail, I soon found out, is beautiful. It curves around still lakes, flowing rivers, imposing pines and firs, steep rock faces and rustic cottages. There are also hills. Near the end of the first lap, my journalistic training had alerted me to the fact that yes, the event was aptly named. I was indeed … hurtin’.

Near the end of the second, my thighs made me feel incredibly empathetic for the experience of a tenderized T-bone steak.

Eight hours pass quickly.

Whether gulping down electrolyte powder, pedaling backwards to get help for a downed cyclist, reciting the entirety of U2’s discography or expanding my curse word vocabulary on each hill climb, I kept myself occupied.

Despite passing me so fast I appeared to be pedaling in place, nearly every rider offered encouragement as vibrant lycra-clad bottoms disappeared up the trail.

It was a race, but also a community event, and one that felt incredibly open to a newbie like myself. One kind racer, after a chat about leg cramps, tossed me two Gatorades and a bag of candy. “Electrolytes are the key,” he said.

It felt competitive, sure, but also like everyone was riding their own race; just doing it together. “That’s the thing,” said Sinclair before the race. “You make [the race] what you want it to be.”

Strategic gravel grinding

Some riders completed seven or eight laps. Adam Hill cruised to first place in the men’s division, riding 216 kilometres.

For Hill or Haliburton local Nick Emsley, who placed second, this race was small potatoes: both are friendly competitors on marathon rides that can stretch up to 24 hours or intense short cycles jostling neck and neck with other riders.

“Shorter distance stuff, sometimes it’s more competitive but you go home and you find you didn’t do as well as you thought,” Hill said, after he crossed the finish, hardly breaking a sweat. He pointed to the field of riders packing up next to the finish line.

“But everyone who’s here right now has ridden their bike for eight hours. That’s a huge accomplishment.”

For Emsley, “when you get to the strategic part of it, the racing, it’s completely different,” than short races or mountain biking, which is his forte.

Emsley talked about drafting other riders, overtaking competitors and measuring your speed.

“You have to learn yourself and learn your body. When you train, all the hours you put in, you have to learn about yourself.” That’s what he’s spent years doing, as he pursues a mountain bike career that’s taken him to races across Canada and beyond.

For me? I finished off the day with more than one carbonated beverage and what must have been the most delicious hamburger in all of history.

I’ll spare you the details about my postrace condition but a basic understanding of human anatomy and bike seat ergonomics might give you a hint.

But will I be signing up for next year’s race?

In a heartbeat.

Naturalizing death in Agnes Jamieson exhibit

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“We live in a culture that is not very comfortable with death,” said Barbara Brown, standing in a small room tucked inside the Agnes Jamieson Art Gallery in Minden.

Beside the photographer stands her collaborator, sculptor Cynthia O’Brien: around them the white walls are covered with small square photos and molded shapes, each representing a patient of longterm care homes who has passed away. Visitors are invited to write the names of their own deceased loved ones on scraps of paper and then slot them into niches around the room.

It’s just one part of their exhibit, Returning, a show in which both artists explore the beauty and sadness in death as they process their time working in longterm care homes.

“We worked in large facilities, 450 beds,” Brown said. “People died every day, but there was no conversation about it. There’s a taboo to dying.”

Returning plants that conversation in the natural world with photographs, clay sculptures; even dirt mounds shaped and hollowed out. In one three-dimensional work, So Below As Above, bone-coloured roots suspend a photo of a forest floor spread with dead leaves, clay shoots of new growth break the surface: death and life intermingled.

Many of the pieces, said O’Brien, are “imbued” with the memories of the people she got to know while working in long-term care. Aside from her work as a caregiver, her clay sculptures have been collected internationally.

“I think they’d be very happy that they’re there. They’re living on through me and through the pieces. I think that’s a good thing,” she said.

The show was first exhibited in 2018 at the Karsh-Masson Gallery in Ottawa. The two artists were co-workers when they realized the possibility of artistic collaboration. “We were talking about the projects we were working on artistically and found there were a lot of overlaps and what we were doing was based on our experience in long-term care,” said Brown. She has exhibited widely across Canada and taken multiple artist residencies as far afield as India.

“We were also interested in flowers, growing things, and how that nature-based idea is in both our work,” added O’Brien.

In the main room of the gallery, photos capturing the deep browns and rich greens contrast jagged roots of red, black and white. It’s a discussion of decay and growth, said Brown, as well as how memories of lost loved ones stay with us.

“There is beauty in all things. and even though we see something as sad, there is peace in that as well,” she said.

O’Brien worked in a care home during the COVID-19 pandemic. For her, it’s been encouraging to see people finally valuing, and noticing, the work and issues of care in the industry.

“The people I worked with are mothers and fathers. and we’re all going there too. They deserve respect and I think everyone should be directing their energies towards that,” she said. “There is a beautiful thing engaging in someone’s life to that degree, to be a part of their community.”

That sense of beauty, in all its pain and complexity, is what Returning explores. The show runs until November 27.