cql mag summer 2016 lr

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SUMMER 2016 INSIDE: Anthony Lemke’s Wellington Walkabout, Mustang Drive-in, Memory Junction and so much more. . . FREE - please take me home PRINCE EDWARD COUNTY AND QUINTE REGION

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County and Quinte Living Magazine Summer 2016

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Page 1: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

SUMMER 2016

INSIDE: Anthony Lemke’s Wellington Walkabout, Mustang Drive-in, Memory Junction and so much more. . .

FREE - please take me home

P R I N C E E D W A R D C O U N T Y A N D Q U I N T E R E G I O N

Page 2: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

•NEW revolutionary technique for receding gums (Pinhole Surgical Technique™ - P.S.T.)

•Latest Technology in Same Day Dentistry Now Available for Crowns, Bridges & Veneers•OralConsciousSedation•Orthodontics;Invisalign® clear braces –TheInvisibleWaytoStraightenYourTeeth!•LaserDentistry• Implants & Full-mouth Reconstruction•ToothColouredFillings•OneHourWhitening•Dentures•PreventiveGumDiseaseTherapy•RootCanalTherapy

• Same Day Emergency Service

Hours:

Monday - Thursday 8am-7pm Friday 8am-4pm

96 Division St., Trenton • 613-208-0807www.youmakemesmile.ca

Yourcompletedentistryinoneofficebackedbyawarm&caringteamAccepting New Patients

www.stlawrencepools.ca

As a Master Pools builder with the industry’s highest standards, our mission is to build you a “Family, Fun and Fitness” vacation that lasts all summer. These years are precious, so make these summer memories last a lifetime. Trends and technology change, but our unwavering commitment to quality, integrity, and service never has nor ever will. St. Lawrence Pools stands behind their customers with training, expertise and service.

Let us help you plan your dream backyard. You only get to live these years once, so make them count!

Facebook “f ” Logo CMYK / .ai Facebook “f ” Logo CMYK / .ai

St. Lawrence Pools carries a wide range of

products from top manufacturers of:

SWIMMING POOLS

HOT TUBS

PATIO FURNITURE

FITNESS EQUIPMENT

DOCKS

BILLIARDS

Quinte's Pool

& Patio Store

since 1971

KINGSTON613.389.5510

BELLEVILLE613.962.2545

BROCKVILLE613.342.5454

CORNWALL613.933.5510

Building the world’s finest poolsMember

®

EVERY SUMMER ADDS A CHAPTER TO THE STORY.

Page 3: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

•NEW revolutionary technique for receding gums (Pinhole Surgical Technique™ - P.S.T.)

•Latest Technology in Same Day Dentistry Now Available for Crowns, Bridges & Veneers•OralConsciousSedation•Orthodontics;Invisalign® clear braces –TheInvisibleWaytoStraightenYourTeeth!•LaserDentistry• Implants & Full-mouth Reconstruction•ToothColouredFillings•OneHourWhitening•Dentures•PreventiveGumDiseaseTherapy•RootCanalTherapy

• Same Day Emergency Service

Hours:

Monday - Thursday 8am-7pm Friday 8am-4pm

96 Division St., Trenton • 613-208-0807www.youmakemesmile.ca

Yourcompletedentistryinoneofficebackedbyawarm&caringteamAccepting New Patients

www.stlawrencepools.ca

As a Master Pools builder with the industry’s highest standards, our mission is to build you a “Family, Fun and Fitness” vacation that lasts all summer. These years are precious, so make these summer memories last a lifetime. Trends and technology change, but our unwavering commitment to quality, integrity, and service never has nor ever will. St. Lawrence Pools stands behind their customers with training, expertise and service.

Let us help you plan your dream backyard. You only get to live these years once, so make them count!

Facebook “f ” Logo CMYK / .ai Facebook “f ” Logo CMYK / .ai

St. Lawrence Pools carries a wide range of

products from top manufacturers of:

SWIMMING POOLS

HOT TUBS

PATIO FURNITURE

FITNESS EQUIPMENT

DOCKS

BILLIARDS

Quinte's Pool

& Patio Store

since 1971

KINGSTON613.389.5510

BELLEVILLE613.962.2545

BROCKVILLE613.342.5454

CORNWALL613.933.5510

Building the world’s finest poolsMember

®

EVERY SUMMER ADDS A CHAPTER TO THE STORY.

Page 4: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

4 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

10Clearwater designsby Michelle Hauser

18anthony lemke’s wellington walkaboutby Catherine Stutt

26memory JunCtionby Lindi Pierce

32mustang drive-in by Amy James

40Faith, love, and Friendship in the Countyby Michelle Hauser

42the mason’s moira lodge: 215 years to Celebrateby Kate Kneisel

50bay oF Quinte mutualsby Orland French

56tourist in your own town: tweed by Kelly S. Thompson

62signpostsSwamp College Roadby Lindi Pierce

66gravitasThe Festival Players’ Sarah Phillipsby Alan Gratias

IN THIS ISSUEEach issuE availablE onlinE at: www.countyandquinteliving.ca

PRINCE EDWARD COUNTY AND QUINTE REGION

ON THE COVERAnthony Lemke and his five-year-old son Dane enjoy a Wellington weekend. Photo byDaniel Vaughan

108059 Hw

y 7

(between Tw

eed & M

adoc)

Open daily 10 - 5

( Sundays 12 - 5 )

F rom early A

pril to Dec 24

(613) 478 - 5068

We w

ent all the way to A

frica and battled every ferocity

imaginable to bring som

e of its treasures home. B

ut you don’t have t o fuss w

ith all that… you can just mosey next door ...

ww

w.blackrivertradingcom

pany.ca

Hom

e to Canada’s best collection of sculpture...

Page 5: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

108059 Hw

y 7

(between Tw

eed & M

adoc)

Open daily 10 - 5

( Sundays 12 - 5 )

F rom early A

pril to Dec 24

(613) 478 - 5068

We w

ent all the way to A

frica and battled every ferocity

imaginable to bring som

e of its treasures home. B

ut you don’t have t o fuss w

ith all that… you can just mosey next door ...

ww

w.blackrivertradingcom

pany.ca

Hom

e to Canada’s best collection of sculpture...

Page 6: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

6 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

General ManaGer SeawayGavin Beer

[email protected]

editorCatherine Stutt

[email protected]

Photo editordaniel Vaughan

[email protected]

adVertiSinG exeCutiVeSMelissa hudgin, Sales Manager

613.966.2034 x [email protected]

orlinda Johnston 613.966.2034 x [email protected]

Michael Kelly 613.969.8896 x [email protected]

deSiGn & ProduCtionKathern Bly and Monica MctaggartSusan K. Bailey Marketing & design

[email protected]

ContriButinG writerSorland Frenchalan Gratias

Michelle hauseramy James

Kate Kneisellindi Pierce

Catherine StuttKelly S. thompson

ContriButinG PhotoGraPherSBrad denoonGerry Failbergalan Gratias

Catherine Stuttdaniel Vaughan

adMiniStration Sharon laCroix [email protected]

diStriButionPaul Mitchell 613.966.2034 x 508

County & Quinte living is published quarterly and is available free of charge through strategic partners, wineries, golf courses, real estate, and chamber of commerce offices, retail outlets, and advertiser locations. County & Quinte living may not be reproduced, in part or whole, in any form without prior written consent of the publisher. Views expressed by contributors are their own opinions and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of County & Quinte living. Subscription rate $25 a year. hSt included. County & Quinte living is a division of Metroland Media Group ltd.

Mail address: 250 Sidney Street,Belleville, on K8P 3Z3 613.966.2034

www.countyandquinteliving.ca

Find us on Facebook ©2016 Metroland Media Group ltd.

Printed in ontario Canada

PRINCE EDWARD COUNTY AND QUINTE REGION

Provence | Blackcurrant Vinegar | Dijon Mustard | Almond and Pear Chocolate | Smoked Olive Oil | Wellness Teas | Goose Cassoulet | Lobster Bisque | Grapefruit infused Olive Oil | Quince Vinegar | French Jacquard Kitchen Towels | Orange blossom Earl Grey Tea | Sea Salt Caramel Spread | Local Jams and Preserves | Organic Acacia Honey | Duck legs Confit | Blackcurrant Pepper | Chestnut spread | Candied Violets | Soft French Nougat | Provence fruit jellies | Raspberry Macarons | Champagne shortbread | Kampot Black Pepper | Honey Vinegar | Provence fish soup | Grape must mustard | Bourbon Vanilla beans | Lobster infused olive

oil |Star Anise Candies | Extra Virgin Olive Oil | Banyuls Vinegar | Tarragon Mustard | Herbes de Provence | Blackcurrant Vinegar | Dijon Mustard | Almond and Pear Chocolate | Smoked Olive Oil | Wellness Teas | Goose Cassoulet | Lobster Bisque | Grapefruit infused Olive Oil | Quince Vinegar | French Jacquard Kitchen Towels | Orange blossom Earl Grey Tea | Sea Salt Caramel Spread | Local Jams and Preserves | Organic Acacia Honey | Duck legs Confit | Blackcurrant Pepper | Chestnut spread | Candied Violets | Soft French Nougat | Provence fruit jellies | Raspberry Macarons | Champagne shortbread | Kampot Black Pepper | Honey Vinegar | Provence fish soup | Grape must mustard | Bourbon Vanilla beans | Lobster infused olive oil |Star Anise Candies | Extra Virgin Olive Oil | Banyuls Vinegar | Tarragon Mustard | Herbes de Provence | Blackcurrant Vinegar | Dijon Mustard | Almond and Pear Chocolate | Smoked Olive Oil | Wellness Teas | Goose Cassoulet | Lobster Bisque | Grapefruit infused Olive Oil | Quince Vinegar | French Jacquard Kitchen Towels | Orange blossom Earl Grey Tea | Sea Salt Caramel Spread | Local Jams and Preserves | Organic Acacia Honey | Duck legs Confit | Blackcurrant Pepper | Chestnut spread | Candied Violets | Soft French Nougat | Provence fruit jellies | Raspberry Macarons | Champagne shortbread | Kampot Black Pepper | Honey Vinegar | Provence fish soup | Grape must mustard | Bourbon Vanilla beans | Lobster infused olive oil |Star Anise Candies | Extra Virgin Olive Oil | Banyuls Vinegar | Tarragon Mustard | Herbes de Provence | Blackcurrant Vinegar | Dijon Mustard | Almond and Pear Chocolate | Smoked Olive Oil | Wellness Teas | Goose Cassoulet | Lobster Bisque | Grapefruit infused Olive Oil | Quince Vinegar | French Jacquard Kitchen Towels | Orange blossom Earl Grey Tea | Sea Salt Caramel Spread | Local Jams and Preserves | Organic Acacia Honey | Duck legs Confit | Blackcurrant Pepper | Chestnut spread | Candied Violets | Soft French Nougat | Provence fruit jellies | Raspberry Macarons | Champagne shortbread | Kampot Black Pepper | Honey Vinegar | Provence fish soup | Grape must mustard | Bourbon Vanilla beans | Lobster infused olive oil |Star Anise Candies | Extra Virgin Olive Oil | Banyuls Vinegar | Tarragon Mustard | Herbes de Provence | Blackcurrant Vinegar | Dijon Mustard | Almond and Pear Chocolate | Smoked Olive Oil | Wellness Teas | Goose Cassoulet | Lobster Bisque | Grapefruit infused Olive Oil | Quince Vinegar | French Jacquard Kitchen Towels | Orange blossom Earl Grey Tea | Sea Salt Caramel Spread | Local Jams and Preserves | Organic Acacia Honey | Duck legs Confit | Blackcurrant Pepper | Chestnut spread | Candied Violets | Soft French Nougat | Provence fruit jellies | Raspberry Macarons | Champagne shortbread | Kampot Black Pepper | Honey Vinegar | Provence fish soup | Grape must mustard | Bourbon Vanilla beans | Lobster infused olive oil |Star Anise Candies | Extra Virgin Olive Oil | Banyuls Vinegar | Tarragon Mustard | Herbes de Provence | Blackcurrant Vinegar | Dijon Mustard | Almond and Pear Chocolate | Smoked Olive Oil | Wellness Teas | Goose Cassoulet | Lobster Bisque | Grapefruit infused Olive Oil | Quince Vinegar | French Jacquard Kitchen Towels | Orange blossom Earl Grey Tea | Sea Salt Caramel Spread | Local Jams and Preserves | Organic Acacia Honey | Duck legs Confit | Blackcurrant Pepper | Chestnut spread | Candied Violets | Soft French Nougat | Provence fruit jellies | Raspberry Macarons | Champagne shortbread | Kampot Black Pepper | Honey Vinegar | Provence fish soup | Grape must mustard | Bourbon Vanilla beans | Lobster infused olive oil |Star Anise Candies | Extra Virgin Olive Oil | Banyuls Vinegar | Tarragon Mustard | Herbes de Provence | Blackcurrant Vinegar | Dijon Mustard | Almond and Pear Chocolate | Smoked Olive Oil | Wellness Teas | Goose Cassoulet | Lobster Bisque | Grapefruit infused Olive Oil | Quince Vinegar | French Jacquard Kitchen Towels | Orange blossom Earl Grey Tea | Sea Salt Caramel Spread | Local Jams and Preserves | Organic Acacia Honey | Duck legs Confit | Blackcurrant Pepper | Chestnut spread | Candied Violets | Soft French Nougat | Provence fruit

“where fine arts meet fine foods”

662 hwy 62, BloomfieldPRINCE EDWARD COUNTYwww.maison-depoivre.ca

GOURMET FOODBOUTIQUE

ART GALLERY

Page 7: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

7COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

Catherine Stutt, Editor, County and Quinte [email protected]

Editor’s Desk

from the

could be said, it has been said, there is a distinct possibility I was irrationally exuberant with

my tomato seeds this past spring. It has been said, many times, by my 11-year-old friend Emily, that I have issues with spheres. This is usually accompanied by a magnificently dramatic eye roll and occasional piece of artwork for our fridge.

Emily may have a point, but I blame it on Seedy Saturday in Picton. And Trenton. And on Edible Antiques, Vicki’s Veggies, and Terra Edibles. Plus seed catalogues, and a very indulgent husband who loves a sandwich with a slice of tomato freshly picked, still warm from the garden.

There’s also the garden bling so easily available from Lee Valley, and that darned Epic tomatoes book by Craig LeHoullier, and of course, the Facebook community of fellow growers on Heirloom Tomatoes and Seeds. Then there’s Paul Battilana, whom many of you know as the winemaker at Casa-Dea, but to me he’s a garden mentor, casually mentioning varieties I have yet to meet. He does that on purpose.

There are many of us out there – you know who you are, Kathern Bly, designer by day, gardening instigator by night – who love the idea of growing honest food, and the County and Quinte region is a hotspot for those so afflicted. Karyn at Terra Edibles is a pioneer in heirloom vegetable and flower seeds. Her little shop in Foxboro is chock full of good ideas, from seeds to seedlings.

Vicki’s Veggies in Milford, a stone’s throw from Black River Cheese, is a mecca for

veg heads. Her Victoria Day seedling sale is a pilgrimage, and the customer names on boxes awaiting pick up are a who’s who of County cuisine.

Then there’s Edible Antiques. Forget the incredible selection of seeds. It’s worth a look just for the original artwork on the biodegradable paper she uses as packaging. Okay, buy some seeds, too, because Stacy kindly donated seeds which eventually were planted at the New Life Home garden in Consecon.

Last year, I successfully started 77 seeds (yes, I keep charts, and Dot, I know you’re laughing and adding to the eye roll collection) and since I only needed about 30 for our garden, gleefully gave the rest to friends and neighbours. This year, due to an experiment in straw bale gardening (a pox on you Joel Karsten for your excellent book straw bale Gardening complete) I needed more. Like maybe 10 more. Of course, a good gardener always plans for failure, so I started extra. Anyone need a couple hundred seedlings? Like 400? And some peppers? Lots of peppers. Peppers aren’t really spheres, are they, Emily?

It started innocently. First, get some seeds to look like tomato plants. Done. Now, narrow it to a theme, which this year was locally developed tomatoes, inspired by a listing for Bellstar, developed in 1981 at the Smithfield Experimental Farm on the border of Brighton and Quinte West. Then came Seedy Saturday, and Vicki mentioned Quinte (which she grew for me to test the viability of the seed), Trent, Bonny Best,

and Moira (which Karyn warned, accurately, were poor germinators). Seems this region’s canning history led to a lot of experimenting, and Darryl’s sandwich is the benefactor of generations of research.

One cannot live on local heirlooms alone. Well, one could, but one has a friend who is a retired biology teacher who prowls the area looking for interesting tomatoes. I’m trading my cousin Henrike’s aptly named pearl seedlings for OSU blue from Gary Bugg, who liberated a rotting tomato he noticed while he was driving through the County. He asked permission. Good gardeners have good manners.

Only heirloom tomato growers would see the potential in this pile of goo and seeds, but that’s what gardening is, along with fear, middle-of-the-night temperature monitoring, and the final stage of growing tomatoes from seed – begging friends and neighbours to adopt just a few – just one or two, or three – plants.

Maybe Emily’s right, but thankfully her Mom, Christy, agreed to host the fruits of my obsession. That’s what friends and tomatoes are for.

I’m off to garden. Have a great summer, make a BLT, and thanks for turning the page.

t

Page 8: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

8 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

accommodationsMaison Depoivre 6Williams Hotels IBCWexford House 21

automotive & utilityBayview Auto Sales BCBelleville Nissan 9 communityCity of Quinte West 17Downtown Brighton 25Glanmore 37Loyalist College 9PEC Studio Tour 45

food/dining/wineNice Ice Baby Ice Cream 23

home décor/giftsBlack River Trading Co. 5Divine Diamonds 61Ecstasy Gifts 60Practically Potty Studio 45The Birdhouse Nature Store 8Tugg’s Furniture Gallery 25

home improvement/designArmitage Fine Homes 54Briarwood Homes 49Chisholm Lumber 48Ducon Contractors & Homes Ltd. 46Fireplace Specialties 30FW Black Ltd 55Red Ball Radio 8Sage Design & Construction 13Sine’s Flooring 8St. Lawrence Pools 3The County Fireplace Company 59Three Hills Engineering 23

Vanderlaan Building Products Ltd 58VanVark Electric 44William Design Company 63

landscape/gardenCounty Arborists Inc. 20Dibbits Excavating and Landscaping Supply 53Lockyer’s Country Gardens 14Terra Vista Landscape Firm 36

professional services - dentalDr. Younes Dental Care IFC Riverside Dental Centre 31

professional services - financialBay of Quinte Mutual 52Cumberland Private Wealth 47State Farm 8

professional services - generalClearWater Design 15Ontario Coachway 23Susan K. Bailey Marketing & Design 46Vaughan Group 64Vision & Voice 62Unveiled Bridal Show 13

professional services - real estateChestnut Park Real Estate Ltd 65Royal LePage – Elizabeth Crombie 64

retirement communityWellings of Picton 17

adve

rtise

r’s in

dex

v Seed & Suetv Bird Feeders & Accessories

v Nest Boxes, Benchesv Bird Baths, Books, Gifts

v Garden Flags

Tel: 613-397-3230Toll Free: 1-877-480-7434

Email: [email protected]

Tues.-Sat: 9:30-5:00 • Sun: Noon-4:00

8 km N of Hwy 401 at exit 522

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State Farm branded policies are underwritten by Certas Home and Auto Insurance Company or

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trademarks owned by State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, used under licence by Certas Home and Auto Insurance

Company, and certain of its affiliates. 1201848 CN.1

Carey Webb, Agent18 Heber Street

Trenton, ON K8V 1M5Bus: 613-392-3384www.careywebb.com

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Page 9: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

9COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

Breanne BenchEsthetician and Spa Technician, Ste. Anne’s Spa

2012 ESTHETICS AND SPA MANAGEMENT GRAD

Page 10: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

10 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

A dreamer and a doer create...Clearwater Designs

Page 11: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

11COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

From their office overlooking the Bay of Quinte - sitting at custom-built, side-by-side desks - Ian Crerar and Michelle Laframboise, owners of ClearWater Design Canoes & Kayaks in Picton exemplify the successful marriage between a dreamer and a doer.

“I explained to Michelle we were going to get a machine and stuff is going to happen,” says Ian of the glimmer-in-his-eye stage of the business he and his wife have owned and operated for more than two decades. “She supports crazy ideas, I have and makes them come true.”

Ian is a visionary, which he defines as a person with, “No responsibilities, just good

ideas,” with a boyishly exuberant demeanour, “I’m only 14 up here,” he says, pointing to the top of his head, cruising into the office on a longboard skateboard (with a brown puff of fur named Eva, the family’s Yorkshire Terrier and Pomeranian mix, in hot pursuit) “I’m 65 everywhere else.”

Having foregone an Australian adventure so they could start their first business

Article by Michelle Hauser

Photography by Daniel Vaughan

Page 12: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

12 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

together, Ian and Michelle have been on an entrepreneurial track since the day they met. They dabbled with a couple of different business concepts until the genesis for ClearWater finally came about in 1995. It was,

“Partly out of spite” says Ian, recalling the moment that altered the course of their lives.

Ian grew up canoeing with his father in the Kawartha Lakes area, and loved boats, but he’d worked for another Canadian canoe and kayak manufacturer in the 1980s and when his former employer had a machine for sale, but refused to sell it to him; it was a game changer.

“I looked around and they were working on a product I had actually developed while I was there and I said, ‘Damnit! I’m going to do this on my own,’” Ian recalled.

Today, the ambitious innovators are at the top of their game: leaders in a globally-competitive industry who are committed to environmental stewardship and have never compromised their self-proclaimed ‘painfully patriotic’ core values. ClearWater is more than just a Prince Edward County success story; they are an example of Made in Canada at its very best.

Ian acknowledges competing globally is challenging, “The big manufacturers in the U.S. are making a lot of their stuff in China now and that has definitely put some pressure on us, but we have really good staff and a pretty efficient production scheme so it works well.”

One advantage they have over their overseas competition, Michelle says, is kayaks and canoes are too bulky to ship economically,

“You can only get about 80 kayaks in a container.” Another plus is seasonal sales which are heavily influenced by the weather,

“If the Victoria Day weekend is sunny and fantastic, all the dealers sell through a pile of their stock and the phone just explodes,” says Michelle. She self-identifies as the paper pusher in the partnership and takes the lead with communications, customer relationships, and production logistics.

“We do injection moulding ourselves, we do sewing ourselves - just about everything we possibly can do we do here or we do locally and not just for the patriotic angle but it makes us faster on our feet,” says Ian.

“If someone needs a purple such-and-such, it can be made by the end of the day. If we had

“We do injection moulding ourselves, we do sewing ourselves - just about

everything we possibly can do we do here or we do locally.”

Page 13: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

13COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

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Page 14: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

14 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

OPEN YEAR ROUND

to reorder more stuff from China, forget it. The summer would be over before we could react to anything.” ClearWater’s speed-to-marketplace competitive edge makes them a perfect fit for smaller dealers who shy away from the higher-risk proposition of committing to an entire container of Chinese boats they may, or may not, sell.

While Ian doesn’t like to come off as overly sanctimonious about the Made in Canada angle, there’s no denying the feel-better factor is yet another bonus for ClearWater. “If a retailer is competing with our product next door to a retailer who is selling made in China product, the question becomes, ‘Does it matter to you?’” It does, to many consumers. Sales in Ontario and Quebec are brisk and represent their bread-and-butter. They also ship coast-to-coast and have built relationships with distributors in Poland, Germany, and the U.S.

In 2004, with a thriving business and a growing family - their son and daughter are now 16 and 14 respectively - Ian and Michelle eventually exceeded the capacity of their first factory in Kingston and had to look for a new place to set up shop. “We looked from Trenton to Gananoque and then we found the listing for this building,” says Michelle. “It was pretty decrepit and needed a lot of work but we put in an offer.” They were also able to rebuild the house next door to the factory on County Road 15, completing the home-business-waterfront triangle. “We’ve loved it from the day we set foot here. You couldn’t invent a better spot.”

Ian and Michelle are quick to credit their local staff as major contributors to their success. All of the workers share a home-

cooked lunch and even the 40,000 square foot factory, with the buzzing of saws, buckets of plastics in a rainbow of colours, and large industrial ovens for cooking the kayaks – “Like a chocolate bunny in a hollow cavity mould,” says Ian - maintains a family atmosphere.

Ian and Michelle readily brag about Terry, their safety guy and design engineer who once worked on the Avro Arrow. Now in his mid 80s, Terry has been with ClearWater for nearly a decade and is a key member of their product development team. “Whenever we have an interesting new project Terry will draw some pictures and work on a prototype for it,” says Michelle.

One such project has been ‘The Most Comfortable Chair in the World’ which is Ian’s brain-child, seeking to rid the world of the scourge of, “Traditional outdoor chaise lounge architecture that compresses your lower lumbar on the posterior side.” more colloquially known as, “Murder on the back.”

Using the same material and process as the canoes and kayaks - rotationally molded, polyethylene - the virtually indestructible lounger (which only comes in one colour, best described as sand) is a relaxing but quasi-medicinal chair which, “Decompresses your lower lumbar, raises your legs to the same height as your heart, and lowers your blood pressure.” It also has a remarkably comfortable arm rest, solving the perennial chaise lounge problem of what to do with one’s arms?

The man who, 21 years ago, told his wife, “Stuff is going to happen,” can shift gears into the science and specifics with tremendous fluidity. On the way back to the office, after

“Whenever we have an interesting new project terry will draw some pictures and work on a prototype for it...

one such project has been ‘The Most comfortable

chair in the World’ which is ian’s brain-child.”

Page 15: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

15COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

www.clearwaterdesignbots.com

Page 16: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

16 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

testing the lounger, when asked about the absence of industrial odor in the factory, Ian explains, “We use linear polyethylene and there is no catalyst for volatile organic compounds being emitted so it has almost no emissions.” Michelle is also very proud of ClearWater’s environmentally-friendly manufacturing process, “We have very little waste because all of the plastic scraps we cut away during the trim process are recycled and used in the molding of seats and small parts.”

Back in the office Michelle is looking at her computer and an inbox full of new mail. They are gearing up for their busiest time of year - March to September. Ian takes his seat across from her. They can look at the scenic bay, stare into each other’s eyes, or contemplate the piles of papers serving as a constant reminder that running a successful business is a ton of work.

In having revisited their origin story, Ian jovially reminds Michelle their trip to Australia is 25 years overdue. Michelle is unfazed, “We still get holidays,” she says,

referring to their joint passion for racing which has taken them to the Gaspé, Missouri, Alberta, and beyond. Ian is quick to point out that Michelle is the fastest North American woman rally car driver, and that even he can’t keep up with her. To this she gently demurs,

“We go about the same speed. Ian’s better at the shorter stage where you have to be on the ball right away, but for the longer endurance stage that’s where I come out a little bit ahead.” There seems to be no shortage of ways in which the two complement one another.

When asked if they are happy about having devoted their lives to canoes and kayaks, Michelle lets Ian answer, still with that youthful nonchalance, but a little more serious, “The thing is we could have made widgets or valves or something, but at the end of the day, we can actually toss a boat in the water and go paddling and say, yeah, this is what we do.”

“It is very satisfying. I could not have picked a better way to live.”

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Anthony Lemke’s Wellington Walkabout

There are a lot of demands on Anthony Lemke’s time these days. The full-time actor – an actor with a law degree he smiles – is at home in Wellington only on weekends during a hectic shooting schedule for his hit SyFy Channel series Dark Matter. He recently learned he’ll have to squeeze in time this summer to shoot The Kennedys: after camelot, a television miniseries starring Katie Holmes and Matthew Perry. Anthony is also an ambassador for Handicap International (HI), an organization close to his

heart, with a strong focus on helping victims of landmines, and people displaced by political conflict and natural disaster. Closer to home, he is partnering with his brother and best friend to develop retail properties in Wellington.

Right now, though, there’s a much higher priority – there’s a bumble bee waging war in his waterfront home – or at least that’s the battle assessment from his five-year-old son Dane, who insists the intruder is keeping him from his outside footwear.

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Gently explaining the plight from the bee’s perspective, Anthony convinced Dane to brave the boots and head out to play with his sisters Maggie, 9 and Lara, 7. The children were a huge factor in why Anthony and his wife Maria Gacesa decided to settle in Wellington. All three were born in Montreal, the family is completely bilingual, and until recently lived an urban lifestyle.

The children attend a French school near 8 Wing/CFB Trenton and having that opportunity was a key factor. “The trigger for the move was the French school on the base,” recalled Anthony. “The kids are Quebeckers, and their swimming, skating, and learning was all in French. We spoke English at home and it came as a shock to our daughter when she discovered she was an Anglophone,” he shares.

The different perspective found locally is a welcome change. “People think a large city offers diversity, and it does, but the neighbourhoods are mostly populated by the same type of people – similar educations, income, interests, and outlook. Here, through school, their friends and other parents at the school, skating, and living, we meet all manner of people from all walks of life. Here, we have a very broad demographic while in the city it is a very narrow slice.”

Anthony and Maria take particular joy with the military connection offered through school. “Our kids have friends whose parents are frequently absent because they’re supporting overseas missions. Through HI and their friends, our children are aware of what’s going on in Syria and other areas of conflict and disaster.”

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Long before Anthony’s connection with HI and 8 Wing, the Lemke family had a very personal awareness of the ravages of war. Anthony and Maria’s parents are from Europe. Anthony’s German father fled Poland with his family in advance of the Russians. They fled with what they could cart and carry, part of a wagon train. Anthony’s aunt broke her leg on the journey and the family had to break away to get treatment at a hospital in the south. It saved the family. The rest of the wagon train was bombed by the Russians.

Maria’s mother is of Serbian ethnicity and was born in a displaced person’s camp in Italy, where her parents fled after the Second World War.

When HI approached Anthony, he was unfamiliar with the organization. “That’s not unique to Canadians. Its focus is not on first world countries; it’s response is more to conflict zones and natural disaster areas, with an expansion to less well-functioning states where there is a mass displacement of people.”

After learning a bit about HI, Anthony felt a deep kinship. “This is my story. This is my family’s story, and Maria’s.”

So little of this is history; it’s headlines. “We hear the stories of migrants and accept 25,000 Syrians in Canada. We don’t hear about the millions left behind, and their stories before this effort. We don’t hear about wars ended but still a threat. During the Vietnam conflict, Laos was carpet-bombed. It is the most polluted country in the world in terms of unexploded ordinance. Now. Still. To this day.”

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This is not an actor reciting facts for his charity. Anthony visibly aches for these people, these countries. With limited time on a weekend home from shooting Dark Matter, he is focused on HI, on people in danger, not on promoting his show or his career. He is soft-spoken, direct, educated, and intense.

“People are injured or killed every single day from left over mines. HI and other agencies

are there demining, but there are so many. When a child loses a leg to a mine, HI is there until they are grown, providing artificial limbs and psychological help to the victim and the family”

In the beginning, the grassroots efforts by the co-founders arose from a year watching maimed victims seek help for their injuries. The doctors soon realized saving lives was

only part of the need. “An injured farmer who stepped on a landmine may have his life saved, but then what? He had no access to artificial limbs, no occupational rehabilitation. He was just one more farmer with one leg.”

HI uses local products and knowledge to help integrate victims back into a new life, and accompanies them long-term. “We walk beside them,” Anthony explains.

Photo courtesy Russ Martin

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“Actors in Canada are lucky when we work. We don’t make the money actors in the States make, we don’t make enough money for egos, so we have fun.”

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24 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

It’s a sunny gorgeous Saturday in Wellington, and Anthony takes a breath and realizes – thankfully – his hometown is at peace, and he recalls how quickly he and Maria fell in love with the village.

“We started our relationship with the area on a drive from Toronto to Ottawa and we noticed the Loyalist Parkway signs. We wondered what that was about, and detoured. We came around the bend, saw the lake, the sandbanks, and the cathedral of trees in Wellington. I remember saying to Maria this place was going to be part of our lives for a long time.”

They camped, they cottaged, and when Dane was born they found a perfect home. The owners were away for long stretches and loved the thought of a young family sharing the home in their absence. Sharing turned more permanent when Anthony and Maria bought the residence

and began planting very strong local roots.Just down the street, two modest

buildings were waiting, and Anthony convinced his brother and best friend to share his investment in the community. He shares a vision of a walkable village – off-street lanes and courtyards connecting businesses and greenspace away from traffic – and the new retail development at 305 Main Street is a great example. A less-than-aesthetically pleasing tired storefront is now an attractive retail five-plex, including Nice Ice Baby, Ideal Bike, Sybil Frank Gallery, and Pure Honey, which also offers yoga and massage space for Mindful Movements.

The building is board and batten, and continuing with the beach theme each store is painted a different complementing colour. “It’s very east coast inspired,” promises Anthony. “We don’t have the

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built stock of Picton with the red brick; we’re a beach community so we’ll play it up and turn it into a touchstone.”

Anthony is pleased some of the tenants are expanding their business to Wellington, including Ideal Bike and Nice Ice Baby, both anchored in Belleville. “They help to animate the main street and increase family attractions, which is a main goal with our development.”

Anthony is building on the strong foundation and charm that drew him to the village, including the diversity he admires.

“This is a beach community surrounded by agriculture; we have camping and we have wine tourists. We’ve been both, we loved being both.”

Recent additions helped the family’s transition, too. “Wellington has a good foothold with retirees and accommodations and both are solid markets. Certainly having the Devonshire as a neighbour helps,” he admits, adding the planned courtyard behind 305 and 303 Main will soon be linked to the famous hotspot. “It’s all part of the walkability of Wellington, and we’re so close to the Millennium Trail. Almost everything is within walking distance.”

The Devonshire was more than a commercial neighbour. “It was a comfort factor,” he recalls. “We lived in Toronto and Montreal in urban neighbourhoods. The Devonshire helped us feel like we were getting the best of both worlds – the urban life and the energy and openness of the village.”

He’s quick to note a stronger draw. “Those families who lived here for generations and make this a great place to visit and live had greater weight. There’s a rooted sense of belonging and place.”

The urban actor with the law degree smiles at some of the misconceptions, including the perception city friends have about his waterfront home. “However crazy real estate has gone in this area, the 600 square foot condo I rent in Toronto during shooting recently sold for more than I paid for this house and lot.”

This charming, gracious, and modest young man shattered another misconception, recalling when an American actor was on-set and remarked about how much fun it was. “Actors in Canada are lucky when we work. We don’t make the money actors in the States make, we don’t make enough money for egos, so we have fun.”

Anthony and Maria bring the joy with them. The two met – as theatre people often do – underemployed. In the late ’90s Maria worked in the music store at Roy Thomson Hall and Anthony was an usher. It was the last non-acting job he had, and the couple is finding a home in Wellington for their talents, including a Shakespeare camp for kids last summer.

This summer the couple is looking forward to Anthony wrapping Dark Matter for the season and returning to Wellington, enjoying the people and property and well-earned off-screen time with his family, but it’s a busy time.

There’s an upcoming trip with HI to Laos and of course, there’s a five-year-old boy who needs help making friends with a bumble bee.

Photo courtesy Russ Martin

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Time stops and the whistle still blows at

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There is a display case at Memory Junction, chock full of tiny tools and gadgets, personal and household items. A sign on the glass reads, ‘If you can name everything in this case, you’re older than you think!’ All of these items were once the newest-fangled inventions, and now they have slipped from use, and from the memory of all but the oldest among us. “It’s amazing in one century, the things that have come and gone,” muses Ralph Bangay, owner/curator, with his life’s partner Eugenia, of Memory Junction Museum in Brighton, Ontario.

Ralph’s lifelong passion is to preserve artifacts from Brighton and area history - railway, commercial, agricultural, architectural, and social - to share with the future. He calls Memory Junction, “A place of learning about the way we used to be and live.” He is pleased when people make personal connections with the collection, and appreciates the coincidences and memories that occur when they visit.

Collectors occasionally approach Ralph to purchase items from the museum. Ralph gets indignant as he recollects being called a hoarder by a spurned purchaser. “If I didn’t hoard them, they’d be all over the place! I collect them so other people can see them. If I sell it to you, then it’s only for you to see.”

Lest a reader who has never ventured to Memory Junction Museum should come away with a mental picture of a stuffy shoebox of a place, a trip south along Maplewood Avenue is in order. There’s a handmade sign and a chain across the entry, an interpretive panel, and straight ahead, an archetypal heritage railway station in locally-fired brick with crumbling white paint. But there’s more.

Memory Junction Museum is three acres spread out along active railway lines. Trains speed by; some whistle a greeting when they spot Ralph at work on the property. The station is surrounded by an outdoor museum of four buildings including an

Article by Lindi Pierce

Photography by Brad Denoon

Time stops and the whistle still blows at Memory Junction

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1880’s hop barn, freight and baggage sheds, and 14 pieces of railway history. The giant among these is the 110-ton steam locomotive, dating from 1906, one of only three remaining in its class. Were Ralph’s commitment to preserving history in any doubt, the story of the move would satisfy the most sceptical.

The 1998 acquisition of CN locomotive #2534 might just be Ralph Bangay’s career highlight. “We got it because we were the only ones who were going to save it, not melt it down.” Belleville City Council conceded the mouldering engine in Zwick’s Park was beyond their capacity to maintain. Moving the locomotive, coal tender, and boiler required three flatbeds, and many thousands of Ralph’s dollars. There were challenges with overhead clearance and road use. Friends and volunteers came out to reassemble, sand and paint; the project took several years. Lots of people thought he’d never manage it. “Wouldn’t do it again,” he concedes, then laughs mischievously.” Well maybe if somebody had a particularly good engine...”

Ralph has accumulated other iconic rolling stock including a weathered 1929 wooden

caboose, a 1930 boarding car, a 1913 box car, two steel CP cabooses and an 1898 velocipede. Three bright yellow speeders sit on tracks laid by volunteer labour. They are favourites of Ralph’s, tiny gasoline-powered vehicles that replaced the old wooden handcars used by railway maintenance workers.

These railway cars and heritage structures are not just pretty faces; each contains a mind-boggling collection of area historical artifacts and archival material. The steel-clad Morrow Building (Interpretation Centre) - its name still imprinted in the cement ramp

- is historically significant as the freight shed built in 1910 by J.H. Morrow, local Ford dealer, when his firm had automobile distribution rights for the area from Oshawa to Gananoque. Historic photos show crowds mobbing an arriving trainload of those fragile vehicles that foretold the end of passenger rail supremacy.

This is just the outside story. Inside is a seemingly endless collection of early 1800’s to 1950’s artifacts: lumbering and carpentry, blacksmithing, harness-making, shoe-making, tin-smithing, and ceramic house wiring

components. An array of glass bottles includes some from Brighton’s own Coca-Cola bottling plant. Cases of motoring memorabilia contain forgotten treasure: when was the last time you saw a Supertest roadmap or Dist-o-meter? A display of cancelled Standard Bank cheques date-stamped 1923 reminds Ralph of waiting in line at that bank with his mother, when he was four years old.

Don’t plan to write a history book, or hold a school reunion without a trip to Memory Junction’s boarding car archives. The former railway bunk car contains a vast collection of community photos, business calendars and receipts, death notices, and wartime correspondence. Ralph recalls a Brighton high school reunion decorating committee using his thousands of Northumberland County school pictures. “School pictures get people talking. In those days there was no money for cameras. I have copied pictures for so many visitors. Maybe they never had a picture of their brother.” The collection seems limitless: signs from the Presqu’ile Hotel, a sash and door factory and a doctor’s office, uniforms from the Hilton hockey club and a local war

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veteran, photos of a handsome young Ralph with school chums, and teenaged Eugenia playing baseball. Ralph’s saved it all. He knows the history and provenance of each article, and has some personal memories, too.

Only a visit can do justice to the faded red wooden caboose recreating the travelling office and living quarters of the train conductor, with the distinctive cupola from which he directed operations. The weathered green box car coupled to it tells Applefest country’s history, from job posters to barrel stencils, can labels to cider presses, peelers to pictures, creating connections for folks from Brighton farms and orchards.

Memory Junction’s main attraction, the iconic little brick Grand Trunk Railway station, was one of 32 built during the boosterish days of the new Grand Trunk Railway in 1857. It is one of nine remaining. Through its doors, across its platform, optimistic young soldiers marched off to the battlefields of two world wars, and war-weary immigrants arrived from Holland and Denmark in the 1950s. Fresh and canned produce from the area’s rich farms and orchards travelled the world

from Brighton station. Even the forensic evidence from the celebrated Dr. King murder case departed from here. For over a hundred years, the comings and goings of passengers created memories. Eugenia recalls sitting in the waiting room with her grandmother, wondering at the poster warning about war-time spying; how could a little girl understand ‘the walls have ears.’ At one time, 20 passenger trains stopped daily at Brighton; by 1965 there were none.

The rooms of the train station are now filled with railway memorabilia. Restored station agent’s and telegraph offices and two waiting rooms contain priceless memories of the way we used to think and live and travel.

The ladies’ waiting room houses a small gift shop with railway history books, a few toys, first day covers of a 2006 Memory Junction Museum stamp issue. Ralph and Eugenia count on donations and gift shop proceeds to pay the taxes, and keep Memory Junction functioning. The museum has always been privately run; the couple receives no financial support. Early on they decided they didn’t want the paperwork involved with applying

for grants. Eugenia had had enough of that during her career. The couple pays for the attraction sign on Highway 401. Yet Memory Junction Museum is an important tourism asset for the community.

It’s hard to remember the original idea was to find a place for Ralph’s stuff. And stuff there was. Ralph always had a fascination for history. As a kid, he began collecting junk.

“On my way home from school I would drop into the blacksmith shop, looking for ‘new’ old horseshoes.” They’re on display in the Morrow building today.

As an adult, Ralph joined his brother in the plumbing business, and, “Was in every attic and cellar and barn in the area. After the Second World War, people were throwing out really good history, in favour of new stuff. I collected museum quality material: War of 1812 pieces, the original 1854 survey of Brighton and Cramahe townships on linen with seals.”

Eugenia joins Ralph in telling the story. Their 66 years together show. Their words spill over each other, they interrupt, continue each

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other’s stories, supply missing names, toss out reminiscences, ask questions. Eugenia recalls a time when, “The basement was so full of stuff there was only room for Ralph’s chair.”

One day in 1993, Ralph was downtown when he heard that there were men and machinery on the site of the old Grand Trunk station, preparing for its demolition. The town had declined CN’s sale offer. Ralph raced to Toronto to begin negotiations that resulted in the purchase. “We thought we were buying the station, but got three acres! It grew from an old place to store an old collection. When we stood back and looked at it, we realized it was an instant Brighton and district museum,” reflects Eugenia. The museum opened ‘as is’ in 1994.

Personable Eugenia, freshly retired from 27 years at Canada Post, was thinking, “Now I can shop ‘til I drop. “ But as soon as Ralph began cleanup at the property, people started coming. “He needed me to talk to visitors about the idea, the stuff. I didn’t know too much, but I’m the bigger talker.” And she needed to be. She recalls, “People from out of town on buses, all excited, either born in Brighton or having some connection or memory.” Her joy was, “To see people happy, ooh and ahh at the collection.”

This was almost 20 busy years ago.The doors at Memory Junction were close

to closing in the Spring of 2015. Discouraged by yet another act of vandalism at the property, Ralph asked friend Anja Croes to take photos

of the damage for the police report. “I was within hours of putting a sign in the window to say goodbye to friends, and thanks,” Ralph recalls.

Anja won’t take credit, but somehow the Friends of Memory Junction and a Facebook page were born from the despair. Social media galvanized dedicated long-time volunteers and brought in new energy. A fundraising party in August, with Dot Connolly at the helm, raised over $3,000 for much-needed security lighting. A September work party organized by Kerry Boehme and Drew Macdonald attracted several hundred people. More are planned. Ralph and Eugenia were recognized for their work - and reminded how much they are loved - at Riding the Rails, the Brighton History Open House in February. Local media have been attentive. The Municipality of Brighton recently presented the couple with a Lifetime Achievement Award.

This summer Ralph and Eugenia plan to open Memory Junction three days a week, and by appointment. When asked about the future, Ralph acknowledges, “Everybody asks me that.” He responds stoically. “I keep on going and never think about it. Main thing is it stays open.”

Saving the past for the future. That’s what it’s all about. Something good will come of all this.

Full steam ahead.

Eugenia’s joy:“To see people

happy, ooh and ahh at

the collection.”

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Movies and Memories, the Makings of the...

The Mustang drive-in theatre, located off County Road 1 in Prince Edward County is best defined by its own vernacular, a cult classic. Combining the best of modern technology with throwback nostalgia, the Mustang offers customers movies with the chance to make some memories.

Paul Peterson and Nancy Hurst are 29-year veterans of the industry, owners and operators of the drive-in with a singular strategic

plan - fun. Actually, the whole proposition originated from a 1980s buzzword when the couple passed by and saw the theatre for sale. Paul recalls saying to Nancy, “Well, that would be cool.” Laughing he adds, “So we bought it and that was the extent of our business plan.”

Previous workers with the Children’s Aid Society in Kingston, the dynamic duo undertook their new passion with the same commitment to family and especially children.

The whole experience at the drive-in is centred upon having a good time – old-fashioned, family-fun, with all the current high-definition visuals and sound. From providing children their first opportunity to be out late at night, hanging from the playground equipment beneath the big screen, to visiting the canteen in search of Nancy’s homemade fudge, the children enjoy a freedom not easily found elsewhere.

Article by Amy James

Photography by Daniel Vaughan

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Mustang Drive-In Theatre

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The theatre is popular, even fashionable among locals, cultivating a fan base that extends for three generations. Yet, the group is neither eclectic nor exclusive. All are welcome, year after year, including surprised passers-by, who see the big screen from the road and cannot resist stopping in. Out-of-towners, who book the same campsite each year, come rain or shine, to enjoy a favourite pastime. With 5,000-plus followers, the Mustang is a must.

Paul opens the theatre on mic encouraging the requisite horn-honking as well as extending birthday wishes. His sarcasm is endearing and lighthearted, giving him a reputation far outside Prince Edward County. He boosts cars that have died in the yard and even shares the mic for marriage proposals. There have been moments of silence too, remembering customers who became friends over the years and have since passed on. Two memorial trees are set on the property. Not

drawing away from the fun but recognizing it, a legacy to the people who made the drive-in come alive. The trees are reminders of good times and promises of more to come.

Each May, the Mustang pulls open the gate and moviegoers drive in, stopping at the old City of Kingston bus to pay the fee. Each year, Paul takes note of largely empty vehicles and smiles recalling, “How they pull back blankets exclaiming, ‘we made it,’ and I say, ‘not quite’, and they make the walk of shame

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36 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

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back to the bus to pay.” There is no anger in the story, just humour, of kids coming of age, trying to sneak-in, almost like Paul would be disappointed if they didn’t try.

When the two purchased the theatre in 1989, the Mustang had been in existence since 1956; it never closed. Part of a chain of theatres, each was slowly sold off to independents, and Nancy and Paul became the lucky proprietors of the one in Prince Edward County.

Initially, the drive-in needed some attention. A riot the year previous left the theatre in need of both cosmetic repairs and an intensive clean-up. Paul states, “It took us a few years to change the nature of the place, to bring it back to the family-oriented drive-in we wanted, and we succeeded.” Nancy also recalls how once the family focus returned,

“We have almost had children born here. One client who comes regularly went into labour here, and we call their son our drive-in baby.”

With a minimalist marketing budget, the two put their time and energy into offering the best experience possible. Nancy works year-round to collect items for goodie bags, free to each child on pajama party nights. With no cost for the children, adults in pajamas also get a discounted price. Doggy bags are available too for canine friends. One year, a Frisbee giveaway showcased photos of clients with their Mustang Frisbees in New York and the Dominican Republic, even atop the Eiffel Tower. Now that is a hard-core fan base.

About 15 years into the operation, Paul and Nancy added a second screen, because they played Spiderman for six weeks, and had

customers who wanted to continue to watch Spiderman and those who wanted a different movie. Adding the second screen not only offers more movies for customers, but also provides people the opportunity to rent one for corporate events or local film festivals. It also shows Nancy and Paul listen to their customers and respond. Nancy states, “We had requests for a non-smoking section at the drive-in so we made one available.”

From splicing reels to splicing memories, Nancy and Paul offer a fun that cannot be counted in dollars today. The time to sit together, outdoors, share a moment of humour or horror, snuggle and kiss, to be close. To find each others hands in the popcorn, and remember.

Remember the hard-to-hear speaker posts, now sitting headless and acting as parking markers. Remember the old black and whites featuring giant insects and excessive screaming. Remember the puppet shows people made between the reels. Remember, that perhaps, not so much has changed. The annual tradition of loading into the car to see what’s playing, munching while the crickets chirp, sitting atop the tailgate or in lawn chairs. Turning into the radio station, hiding under blankets, planning what to buy at intermission.

Movies capture moments in time, as does the Mustang drive-in. The old reels line the walls of the canteen, alongside the retro Coca-Cola signs with the plastic letters. Popcorn and poutine, chocolate and candy, the drive-in offers the best greasy fare with sugary

treats, dinner or snacks, keeping moviegoers energized and entertained for any double feature.

People set out picnic tables, cook dinner out of the back of their car, and eat together, while watching the latest release. Children camp on the hoods and roofs of cars, transfixed by Nemo or Captain America. The old fire truck sits waiting for the imagination of small hands and feet to bring it back to its former glory, the same little people swinging from monkey bars, all while dressed in pajamas.

It is these memories, which seem to fade as quickly as the old carbon bulbs that Paul and Nancy bring back in full colour. The xenon bulb replacing the brown edges of our own childhood delights, bright as sunshine, reliving the best with our children and grandchildren. Living out memories and making new ones.

Yes, there are bugs - it is an outdoor movie theatre. Yes, when it rains the ground is soppy and wet. So pack insect spray and rubber boots because there are also gentle breezes and community. The relaxed atmosphere means on some nights you can change screens for the second movie. It means no one is going to check your car for outside food. It means the place is truly customer and family friendly. It means you can sit back and watch the stars, onscreen or off. Listening to the laughter and capturing summer, one frame, one memory, at a time.

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at h me with ’s Alan Gratias

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39COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

at h me with ’s Alan Gratias Billy and Kato“Not too early for a glass?” Billy greets us at his

house-cum-stage set in Cherry Valley. Joanie and I are invited for an early lunch on a rainy Saturday in May, a rare window into the hectic world of Billy Munnelly and Kato Wake, travel adventurers, pretension deflators, and art mentors. I wasn’t about to deny the creator of the well known Canadian wine guide on his home turf. billy’s best bottles was a bestseller through 22 editions ending in 2012, the same year he received a lifetime achievement award for promoting Ontario wines.

As we settle into the small art-filled living room, Billy serves us each a glass of his ‘breakfast sparkling,’ the generosity of which makes me understand the second of Billy’s bête noirs, after snobbery, the stingy pour. Outside there is the bustle of community life, the draw this weekend is the church auction around the bend. Because Cherry Valley with its English village streetscape, undulating pastures, and views of East Lake has not yet been voted one of the prettiest towns in Canada, it remains a secret. The shire capital Picton, the Sandbanks beaches, and Point Petre are minutes away. There is no doubt that Cherry Valley is the real deal - the genuine Comte profound - deep in the heart of Prince Edward County.

Kato, dressed in a light grey turtleneck sweater over black jeans, brings in four giant white speckled turkey eggs, gifts from a neighbour. As a painter and art teacher, Kato sees them as much as beautiful objects as ingredients for an omelette. Something she could use in her thrice weekly classes at Baxter Arts Centre in Bloomfield where she has become its public face. The couple got their start in Stratford - Kato in the visual arts and Billy as restaurateur and co-founder of Rundles.

As our glasses are replenished, the conversation turns to logistics. The focus these days is on planning their trips to Europe, this year to Ireland, Italy, and Portugal. travel adventures with billy and Kato, now in their fifth year, have gained an enthusiastic following bordering on cult devotion.

The trips reflect the style of the hosts, understated but full of surprises. The journeys are informal and small scale, featuring superb accommodations and food with generous pours at every stop. The best testimonials are the legion of repeat bookings. “I would follow them anywhere,” one client sighs.

We move to the intimate dining room next door even more overflowing with objets d’art, memorabilia, and Kato’s paintings. The long view out to the marsh and East Lake beyond is exhilarating, reinforcing

the principle that perspective is everything. Without sight lines, there is no soaring of the spirit. Kato serves ravioli stuffed with mushrooms over a bed of asparagus. Simply prepared, lavishly devoured. We sample several bottles as Billy outlines his approach to wine tasting.

“It’s all about emotional connection…how you feel at the moment,” he enthuses. “Wine pleasure is as much about what’s in your head as what’s in your glass.”

He gets animated, Billy does, and more Irish as he gets going on wine, food, music, and life. His trademark white chin tuft bobs over a yellow shirt and green pants. He is reputed to have the finest repertoire – The Munnelly Collection - of colourful trousers in the County. “Wine is a feeling experience,” he continues. “It’s all about heart. Wine is part drink, part desire, and part imagination.”

After Kato’s signature compote of ginger, yogourt, and stewed rhubarb, I corral my hosts outside in the rain, somewhat reluctantly, for a quick photo. Like most of what they do, their trips, their wine camps, their art, and their personalities, Billy and Kato are masters of the slow reveal. An incremental exposure to the whole. What you see at first is just a teaser. It is the journey through the stages that count.

Their house is no exception, from the road a simple abode with a vernacular wooden façade. On the other side, stunning vistas, garden terraces, and art installations - more movie set than homestead. A walkabout on their multiple decks overlooking the grasses of the fen show off a partnership hooked on colour, design, and the flow of space. An extraordinaire venue for performances, or solitude, or outdoor parties.

We stand on the threshold for one last photo in the drizzle. Billy and Kato are framed in the doorway with an oversized abstract collage behind them. “What recipe for a happy home life do you want to share,” I toss out to divert them from posing.

“Live close to good friends, spend half your life at the dinner table, open more wine than you need,” Billy jumps in.

“Love your home and listen to it,” Kato adds. “And lighting on dimmers and a partner who shares your recipe.”

Billy Munnelly and Kato Wake, co-creators, co-directors, co-producers of their life in Cherry Valley. Another play is being written, the players are being selected, and the music contemplated. Let the adventure begin.

Article and

photography by

Alan Gratias

N

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40 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

his is one of her final services at The Manor on Loyalist Parkway. The improvised altar is being set up and rumours The Reverend Dorothy Lancaster has sold her home in Bloomfield and is preparing to leave the County make their way around the room of faithful worshippers, about 20 in all.

The rumours are true, of course. The one-time Principal of the Havergal College Junior School (1977 to 1997) - who felt called to a second career as a priest in the pretty place she visited decades before - is indeed winding down and moving on.

For 17 years Dorothy Lancaster has served the Anglican Church’s ministry to seniors in nursing and retirement homes across Prince Edward County. For several hundred of the County’s most vulnerable residents - who have counted on her for faith, love, and friendship - it will indeed be a sad goodbye.

Dorothy inherited the seniors’ ministry from The Rev. Ted Goodyear. “When I came down here (she’d retired from Havergal, sold

her house in Cabbagetown and hadn’t decided what to do next) Ted told me he’d been praying for somebody to take over.” Of the timing, she says, it still blows her mind. Ted was dying of cancer, “He would come from having radiation one day and do a service the next day.”

In 1999, Dorothy, having graduated with a Masters of Divinity from Trinity College, was ordained wearing Ted’s stole by then-Bishop Peter Mason as a non-stipendiary (unpaid) priest. Together with a team of other clergy and volunteers, she would steadily grow the seniors’ outreach ministry to 10 services per month in different nursing and retirement home locations.

Born in Belfast, Northern Ireland before the Second World War, Dorothy Lancaster was

educated in Ireland and England, immigrated to Canada with her family and ultimately settled in the Port Credit area in 1958. “My early days were in the Presbyterian Church and then my parents made the big mistake of their lives: they sent me to an Anglican school, James Allen’s Girls’ School, in Dulwich, England.” In her ministry, Dorothy is sensitive to the fact most of the residents of these homes aren’t Anglican, so she does her best to be inclusive and inter-denominational.

Back at The Manor, in the common room turned church, the service has begun and the pair of love birds in the cage near the window has settled down - although two residents in the corner carry on a remarkably loud and distracting conversation that draws the ire of the small congregation. Dorothy remains composed, however, and later says,

“If you’re going to do services in nursing and retirement homes you’d better be prepared for interruptions.”

The vines of the County are frozen in the January wind as she reads from the Gospel

of John, ironically enough the story of the wedding of Cana, when the wine has run out. She preaches about the wine of unconditional love. As is her custom, she challenges those gathered to keep on giving, to not be undone by age or infirmity, “No matter how old we are, we can reach out, give that wine of love to those around us.”

Dorothy is passionate about the attitude of aging, and the power people have to shape it for the better, “Regardless of our age we have work to do. How are the young going to know how to grow old happily and productively if we don’t show them?”

Dorothy often encourages people in nursing homes to reflect on the power of storytelling, which is something they can pass on to their grandchildren and great-grandchildren. She

comes by this understanding honestly, having been profoundly influenced by her family legacy, “I think there was always in my life, stories of what people in the family had done. People on the margins were always important.”

Dorothy’s great-great-grandfather had worked to get children out of the mines and factories in England and her great-grandfather taught himself to speak Norwegian so he could minister to the Norwegian sailors. “His wife used to say to him, ‘James, come home with your overcoat,’ because he would see someone on the street without a coat and give it to them. He even gave away his shoes.” Her great granny Sarah’s funeral procession stretched for blocks, lined with people all wanting to tell her family stories about what Sarah had done for them. “I always had this feeling that life is about being fortunate enough to be able to give.”

When asked why she chose the less financially rewarding path of an unpaid priest, she says, without hesitation, “There were a lot of young people who needed jobs as parish

priests and I had a teacher’s pension. I could not take a job from a young person.”

Over the years, Dorothy has celebrated many joyful occasions with seniors in the County. There have been baptisms and even a couple of nursing home weddings, but she has also witnessed much suffering and loneliness,

“There are people who are visited very regularly and there are people who never have a visitor. They usually get flowers on Mother’s Day, but a visit would mean a lot more.”

Dorothy is not a fan of how our society warehouses seniors and she has a message to the community. “The greatest gift you can give to a person in a nursing or retirement home is the gift of your time, even if it’s only an occasional visit. People, I think, are sometimes afraid of the nursing homes,

Article by Michelle Hauser

Photography by Daniel Vaughan

Faith, Love, and Friendship in the County

T

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41COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

because it’s like the ghost of Christmas yet to come. Am I going to end up here?”

She also wants people to know some of the challenges experienced by staff in these facilities. “These people live with sickness and death and they become very attached to residents - some of whom are in nursing homes for more than 20 years. When they die, the caregivers are left to grieve as well.” Dorothy has frequently been called upon to help staff deal with grief and loss. It is disheartening that stories of abuse in nursing homes are what catch the public’s attention when the day-to-day reality is more often punctuated by generosity and compassion.

“At Christmas, the staff will do everything possible to get gifts for the people there. They know who doesn’t have family and who does and they make sure the people have a great Christmas.”

In spite of the bonds she has built up these past 17 years, however, it is the attachment to her own family, and the desire to live closer to them as she heads into the next phase of her life that is pulling her away from the County. Her son and daughter both live in the GTA and she has two grandchildren, Taylor, 25 and Charlotte, 11. “At Christmas, Charlotte was saying, ‘Oh Granny, it’s going to be so wonderful when you come to live in the city.’”

Dorothy’s doctor is less happy about the official retirement, saying the work is good for her. “It’s not just a matter of age, or of shoveling snow. I would like to do some things I can’t do when I’m here. I would like to be able to go to the symphony.” Dorothy says her father gave her an excellent example of how to age with courage and vision, “Dad would try anything new. I’m a bit like that. I’m always interested in what’s going on.”

Leaving the County, and all the people she’s come to know and love, will be difficult but unlike many of her peers in similar circumstances, Dorothy isn’t traumatized by the prospect of downsizing “The house is beautiful and I’ve enjoyed living here, but it’s only a house. You never really own anything. You’re just a caretaker for a while and then you pass it on to somebody else.”

The one-acre garden in Bloomfield is on her mind, though, as she looks out past the screened-in porch. One can only imagine how beautiful it is in the height of summer. “I’m a very keen gardener, and I’ll miss it, but you can look forward and think, there will be good things, or you can spend your days regretting what you’re no longer going to have. That would be terrible. That would be like a prison.”

The service at The Manor is nearing an end and Phil Robins, Dorothy’s friend and faithful pianist for many years, tells her there’s a special, off-season request: In the Garden. Phil plays the first few bars, familiar to anyone who’s spent even a little time in church, and the love birds decide they’re ready to sing along.

As the interview draws to a close, Dorothy shares a story about her and her dad, “He once said to me ‘You were always very religious, even as a child’ and I said, ‘Dad, don’t say that,

it makes me sound like a pious poop.’ That’s not who I am, but I’ve always felt this sense of something much greater to which we’re all yet attached. I’m a very imperfect person, but I’ve always been very conscious that God’s there for me.”

Of difficult journeys and sad goodbyes, Dorothy takes comfort in knowing, “God’s getting me through. I will come out in the light.”

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The Mason’s Moira Lodge: 215 years to celebrate

The Masonic Order – in keeping with its credo – has been “making good men better” in Hastings and Prince Edward counties (PEC) since 1801, when Captain John Walden Meyers presided as the first Worshipful Master over the first meeting of the Mason’s first Lodge, now named Moira Lodge. Belleville was still known as Meyer’s Creek and Lodge meetings were held on the second floor of Simpson’s Tavern, a log building that stood on the southeast corner of Dundas and Front Streets near the mouth of the Moira River.

The hamlet of Meyer’s Creek was a collection of log buildings, according to an accounting of the history of the Mason’s Moira Lodge compiled by H.S. Robbins. “The living conditions of the people at the time were extremely pioneer in style, living in log huts with bark roofs, eating pork, game, and maize (corn) for bread, and drinking much whiskey and beer. From these people came the men who formed the Lodge, and they apparently prospered and did well.”

That first meeting on March 10, 1801, “Was a very happy day, and it enlivened [participants’] dreams of the future”. These mainly United Empire Loyalist settlers of Thurlow Township, who were already members of Masonic Lodges before coming here, “Realized there were not organized churches, or other societies, and that they now had an organization in which they could secretly confer,

Article by Kate Kneisel

Photography by Daniel Vaughan

The masonic symbol explained

The universal symbol of

Freemasonry, the Square and

the compasses, which adorn

Belleville’s masonic Temple

at 132 Foster Avenue at

Dundas Street west, represent

masonic teachings: Tim, a

mason in the U.S. since 1998

who oversees an unofficial

website mASONSmArT

[www.masonsmart.com, which

does not represent opinions

of any masonic Grand Lodge]

explains that the Square

represents the obligation

to square our actions with

all mankind, i.e. to do unto

others as you would have

others do unto you, and the

compasses symbolize the need

to circumscribe our desires

and follow Aristotle’s advice of

“moderation in all things.

The letter “G” symbolizes

the science of geometry, which

helps unravel the mysteries

and wonders of nature, Gnosis

(Greek for knowledge), and God,

because belief in a supreme being

is a required to become a mason.

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44 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

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45COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

socialize, and organize to their mutual benefit and happiness.”

Simpson’s Tavern was destroyed by fire 11 years later - a historical plaque marks the location - and the “determined Lodge of Masons” have met in many locations in the 215 years that have passed have since their inaugural meeting. While the achievement of building their current Masonic Temple in 1950 was impressive, Masonic tradition holds that a Lodge is not necessarily a building, but the men who form it.

The Mason’s Grand Lodge of Canada website notes, “It is here [at Lodge] that Masonry teaches its lessons: kindness in the home, honesty in business, courtesy in society, fairness in work, concern for the unfortunate and respect for one another. As long-time Mason and past master of Moira Lodge, Hugh Brown, explained, “Masonry is a code to live by – it requires a commitment to do and be the best that one can in life.”

In the Lodge room, peace and harmony are required and all Masons are equal, regardless of their vocation in life. As members of an organization that welcomes men of any race, colour, and creed [i.e. religious belief ], Masons respect tolerance of other viewpoints.

Richard Verrall, who joined in the late 1960s at the age of 22, believes “Being a Mason has made me a better person. You’re always learning things – it teaches you to participate and the fellowship is a big part of it too. I have met so many good people. My wife never worried when I was going out to Lodge – we might have a beer after the meeting and then be on our way. Family comes first…that’s part of the Mason’s code.”

Like any fraternity, being a Mason gains immediate acceptance from fellow Masons, as Ralph Swan, now celebrating his 60th year of membership, explained, “When I had just joined the Masons and needed to get to Toronto for work, I met a member of another Lodge who saw my ring and asked what Lodge I was in.” After sharing some Lodge talk, the fellow Mason ended up giving Ralph a ride to Toronto and putting him up in his house for the night. “You run into those things from time to time – brotherhood is what it’s about for me.”

The arms of the fraternity have a long reach. Ralph, who was Moira Lodge Master during Canada’s centennial year celebrations in 1967, said, “It doesn’t matter where you go in the world – Germany, England, where ever you are, you can go to the Lodge.” Of course, gaining entry involves knowledge of the closely guarded handshakes and signs, he added with a smile. “It’s not a secret society, but it has its secrets.”

Vincent England, who joined as a newcomer to Belleville in the 1970s, described being at a large gathering of complete strangers and asking a man wearing a Masonic ring, ‘You have been to the East?’ That question along with a special Masonic sign was all it took. “We shook hands and instantly I was in with everybody. It’s like Rotary and other groups in that way, but it gives you a different perspective on life. The symbolism of Masonic traditions is really beautiful,” he added, referring especially to one particular charge - a Masonic teaching that is recited by new members - where “You’re in poverty and you have nothing, but you’re given the hand of friendship. It’s very moving.”

Many of the signs and symbols go back to the medieval stonemasons who traveled through Europe building cathedrals and castles, and needed ways to recognize each other and their degree of skill as working stonemasons. Today, the tools, traditions, and terminology of those stonemasons are used by Modern Freemasons as allegories for building temples in the hearts of men.

That may be what members cherish most about being part of the brotherhood – this knowledge is earned as a Mason’s rite of passage, and preserving these secrets is matter of personal honour.

“If you want to belong, you have to ask a Mason – we won’t ask you. And we hope what we do will make people want to belong,” said

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Page 48: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

48 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

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Ralph Swan. Masons support each other in times of need, as well as a wide range of many charities, locally and provincially. Bonnie English is a long time the Order of the Eastern Star (OES). This predominantly female group is open to female relatives of Masons (which is for men only) and Masons as well. Bonnie’s husband Doug is a Mason and currently Worthy Patron of the Eastern Star. Bonnie noted, “Every year the Eastern Star and the Masons give to selected local charities, including Camp Trillium, Quinte Healthcare’s Oncology unit, and the Alzheimer Society.”

Local Masonic Lodges also donate to the charitable Masonic Foundation of Ontario, which provides bursaries to Ontario college and university students who need financial help, assists hearing-impaired children, supports deafness research and autism services, funds alcohol and drug education programs, and raises money for prostate cancer awareness.

In addition, the MasoniCh.I.P. program is offered to parents – who are provided with an Amber Alert CD with information specific to their child to assist police in finding missing children. Thanks to the support of Ontario Masons, more than 42,000 kits have been distributed since 2007.

This year, Belleville’s Masons offered the MasoniCh.I.P. program in conjunction with their May 29 open house, held to celebrate the 215th birthday of Moira Lodge. The current Masonic Temple at 132 Foster Avenue has undergone extensive renovations and upgrades over the past five years, according to Hugh. “The improvements reflect the spirit and dedication of those who built it 65 years ago.” He estimates about 700 members

of the local Masonic Lodges, chapters, and concordant bodies currently meet there.

There is no doubt new members are welcome. “It’s a beautiful, well organized, democratic organization and it is very sad membership is dwindling,” observed Beth Moore, a 44-year member of the Eastern Star.

“When I first decided to get involved, I knew my husband [a Mason] was home taking care of our young children. It’s harder for young people these days, with so many competing interests. It’s a wonderful organization and does so much for so many – it’s about time it came out of the closet.”

Like the Masons, the Eastern Star meets monthly. Its chief role is fundraising with an emphasis on the fun – they hold teas, bake sales, bowlathons, even scrapbooking parties to support causes near and dear to the members’ hearts. Beth said, “When my husband and I lost our home due to fire, the Masons and Eastern Star really rallied around us – the Lodge will always be special to me. I have held an office in the Eastern Star almost every year.”

Occasionally, Eastern Star members cater events for the Masons, or for groups who rent the hall, which thanks to the extensive renovations, boosts new lighting, fresh paint, and a spacious stainless steel kitchen. In addition to the usual Christmas parties, wedding receptions, and celebrations of life, the Mason’s hall has been enjoyed by a diverse range of groups, from poker players to ballroom dancers to punk rockers celebrating Hallowe’en. And of course, the public is invited to regular fundraising events to see the Masons working in the kitchen, including pancake breakfasts, spaghetti dinners, and

every spring, a lobster dinner.Members are currently

working on creating a Lodge museum where Masonic artifacts will be on display

– perhaps including the key to the original Simpson’s Tavern and Captain John Meyers’ Masonic certificate and tie pin which are currently locked away.

As well, the Hastings County Historical Society is overseeing the preservation

and cataloguing of all available paper documents relating to Masonry in Belleville; the collection will be available to the public at the Belleville Public Library.

Hugh Brown, whose dedication to Masonry and to Moira Lodge is unmistakable, said,

“Anything that has the staying power that is Freemasonry must have benefits to offer each generation, no matter what fads prevail over the years.”

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Bay of Quinte Mutual...Protecting farmers for almost 150 years

You’d better be hungry when you attend the annual shareholders meeting of the Bay of Quinte Mutual Insurance Company. They lay on quite a buffet.

Mountains of roast beef. Piles of mashed potatoes. Rivers of gravy. A smorgasbord of salads. And a whole flotilla of homemade pies to round out your belly. Seconds, too, if you want them. On the invite to the meeting, they called this lunch. It was a full meal.

It’s very rural church basement supperish, except it was the annual meeting of a farmers’ mutual insurance company in Tyendinaga, east of Belleville.

Every year Bay of Quinte Mutual lays on a sumptuous lunch to draw its shareholders out to its annual meeting. This year, it was a depressing rainy day in March, and attendance was down. About 45 people showed up to taste the food and take in the company’s annual report and listen to guest speaker Jim Kennelly, a local historian, well versed in local history, paint a portrait of early days in Tyendinaga Township.

Policyholders in a mutual insurance company are automatically shareholders, invited to break bread with company officers once a year. The annual meeting is the company’s way of maintaining the essential bond between its shareholders and its nine-member board of directors. Produce of the farm is returned as a tribute to the loyal shareholders who have their roots in the agricultural community. They and their ancestors have been keeping the company prosperous since its founding in 1874.

It’s a matter of loyalty and company recognition, says Jeffery Howell, president of Bay of Quinte Mutual. “We serve our clients well. Of our 15,000 or so clients, maybe 500 have a claim in any given year. We’re right here in the County, or we have an adjuster near them, and we give them a personal touch you may not get from a larger company.”

Scott McDermott, an agent with R.J. Brown Insurance Brokers in Peterborough, says, “Bay of Quinte does an excellent job of looking at a property and analyzing the risk. They’ll look at each case on an individual basis, and sometimes they will send out someone to look at the property. It really gives the client a

sense of confidence in the company.”Grant Ketcheson can attest to the power

of personal contact. Grant, who lives near Madoc, has been a director of the Bay of Quinte board since 1992, and his father before that, from 1955 to 1991. “I can remember annual meetings of the company as far back as 1955. My dad used to get on the phone and call around to all the farmers to get them out to the meeting. Insurance is not the most exciting topic but it was a social thing as well.”

A phone call from a farmer friend was a lot more effective than an impersonal letter from a head office inviting you to an annual meeting in downtown Toronto.

Grant, who is also an adjuster with the company, acknowledges most people don’t have any idea who their insurer is. They know the name of their broker; they trust the broker to come up with a company that can meet their needs at a reasonable cost.

Grant says his father picked up Bay of Quinte coverage in the late ’40s; before that he was insuring through the brokerage now known as Burr Insurance Brokers in Belleville. Burr itself can claim some original contact

Article by Orland French

Photography by Daniel Vaughan

Bay of Quinte Mutual...Protecting farmers for almost 150 years

Page 51: Cql mag summer 2016 lr

with Bay of Quinte: the brokerage was the first to be employed by Bay of Quinte Mutual outside Prince Edward County to act as its agent.

Until then (c. 1932) the company had been operating solely within the County. Not that the shareholders were reluctant to expand; it just takes time in the County. The question arose at the first annual meeting in February 1875, only a few months after the company was formed. Fifty-seven years later they got around to expansion.

Today, Bay of Quinte’s client field covers much of eastern Ontario, from the eastern edge of the GTA and Peterborough in the west to Gananoque in the east, and as far north as Renfrew in the Ottawa Valley. Within that area it faces direct competition from other mutuals: HTM Insurance Company in Cobourg, L&A Mutual Insurance in Napanee, Amherst Island Insurance Company (the smallest of the lot), Lanark Mutual Insurance Company in Perth, Farmers Mutual Insurance Company in Lindsay, and Grenville Mutual Insurance Company in Kemptville.

It’s a thriving company but the first annual report may have been a bit discomfiting. Bay

of Quinte Mutual began to sell policies in the fall of 1874, and by year’s end had issued 115 policies insuring $117,165 in property. The total amount of premiums sold was $2,791.93 but the amount of cash collected was only $280.80. After expenses, the total amount of cash in the company account was $28.22. Maybe that’s why shareholders started nervously looking for business outside the County.

Over the next 142 years the company became substantially more solvent. The balance sheet at the end of 2015 showed assets of $60,656,440 against liabilities of $26,769,664 for a net surplus of $33,886,776. This is its resource for protection of policyholders. That has a little more breathing room than $28.22.

Of course, the mutuals don’t rely only on their own resources. In a bad year they could go bankrupt. They’re backed up by each other and larger reinsurers. Insurers need insurers.

While Bay of Quinte Mutual was founded 142 years ago, Prince Edward County’s association with the concept of farm mutuals goes back to 1836. That was when John Philips Roblin of the County stood in the Legislature

of Upper Canada and proposed a piece of legislation that would benefit thousands of farmers for decades to come. Along with John Alexander Wilkinson of Essex riding, Mr. Roblin introduced a bill to allow the creation of farmers’ mutual insurance companies. The Roblin name is still plentifully spread throughout Prince Edward County, and the Roblins of the area can take some pride in the achievement of their namesake.

It was not an exciting piece of legislation, to be sure – unless you were a farmer. What is offered was some measure of security against the most likely source of instant disaster ¬– fire.

Farming carried high fire risks. In the barn, spontaneous combustion, kicked-over lanterns and careless smoking were the chief culprits. In the home, fire hazards abounded: long skirts swirling around fireplaces and long sleeves dangling into candles, open flames everywhere for light and heat, beds lined with dry straw and cedar bows.

Help was not always close at hand. The nearest neighbour might be a mile away, where the only signal reaching them was a plume of smoke during the day or an eerie glow in the

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52 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

13379 Loyalist Parkway, Picton, ON K0K 2T0

613-476-4719 or [email protected]

FOR ALL YOUR FARM, HOME & COMMERCIAL NEEDS.

EST. 1874

Jeff Bedore, Kelly Reynolds & Hope Dyer, Agents

sky at night. Firefighting equipment was no more than an array of buckets; the source of water might be a well or a pond.

But nothing could devastate a farm building faster than a bolt of lightning. The only defence was a properly installed lightning rod, invented by Benjamin Franklin in 1749.

Nothing is quite so quick to destroy a farm as fire. When a farmer loses his barn, he loses property, he loses sustenance, he loses potential income, and he loses the operational centre of his livelihood. If his house burns, he loses shelter for his family.

Large insurance companies, no welfare systems they, understood the risks very well and refused to provide coverage. Or if they did, rates were so high insurance was out of reach.

Farm mutuals were essentially societies of farmers banding together, throwing their money into a pot and insuring each other under the close regulation of government. Their company names reflected their specific interest: Bay of Quinte was originally known as The Bay of Quinte Agricultural Mutual Fire Insurance Company.

Times change. Today’s mutual companies offer a wide range of insurance, and they are no longer restricted to farms. At Bay of Quinte, says Jeff, farming operations today represent only about 15 per cent of the company’s business. Consequently, many mutuals have dropped the reference to farms and fire in their title. For instance, the Hamilton Township Farmers Mutual Fire Insurance Company had a name that rolled off the tongue, and rolled and rolled. Today

that same company in Cobourg has given itself a short and snappy modern title: HTM Insurance Company.

It’s part of self-preservation. Keep up or go under. Some companies have folded, others have merged, but 180 years after the Roblin legislation was introduced, there are still more than 40 farmers’ mutuals in Ontario. Most of them have been around for more than a century.

What they insure has also changed. Barns and farmhouses, yes, but there are other items pertinent to the County. Vineyards and wineries, for example. Docks and boats, because of the huge shoreline around the peninsula. Wind turbines and solar panels, if they are part of a farm operation, but not the large commercial installations. Jeff says Bay of Quinte was the first farmers mutual to

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53COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

PUT A SMILE ON YOUR BACKYARDStop by our yard for some exciting landscaping ideas! Or visit us at...

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54 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

• CUSTOM DESIGNS• PASSIVE SOLAR

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Kevin Armitage: 613.885.3200 [email protected]

ARMITAGE FINE HOMESPRINCE EDWARD COUNTY

to view homes for sale visit: armitagefinehomes.com

offer insurance on solar panels. There’s more demand, too, for coverage of seasonal cottage rentals, as that business grows in the County.

Having a rural base means the company can also offer a knowledge of matters beyond the understanding of larger companies. Jeff discussed the case of a potential client who was refused coverage by a large well-known company because his house was more than 100 years old. “That’s cookie-cutter coverage,” he said. “The company cuts out all the riskier elements of coverage, and then offers lower prices. If you don’t meet the conditions, you don’t get coverage.” Rural companies also understand the issues of external wood furnaces and septic systems, risk subjects that large companies don’t want to touch.

Insurance companies sometimes get a bad rap for not paying claims, but Grant says that’s not the case at Bay of Quinte. “Paying claims is what we do. Our job is to get people back in business. That’s what we’re here for.”

He says there is nothing like human contact to minimize stress for a client who has

suffered a loss. Six of the company’s directors are also adjusters, so they are in constant contact with clients. “It gives us a unique view of both sides of the coin. Sometimes you think you have the answer but when you have to talk to people who have lost their house, you get a different story.”

Like other insurance companies, Bay of Quinte has invested in modern technology. Still, one old-fashioned principle still stands: a real live person answers the phone at the office. “It’s important for people who are stressed to hear a personal voice,” says Grant.

On the other hand, the smaller mutuals sometimes don’t offer coverage on certain items in their neighbourhood. Vehicles, for instance. “We offered auto insurance for about five years, but we got out of it,” said Jeffrey.

“There’s too much political intervention in auto insurance.”

Drones, too. Insurance might be offered on personal drones for hobby usage, but not for commercial purposes. That comes under aviation insurance.

Or large multi-million-dollar houses. There might be a few in Bay of Quinte’s coverage field, but the company won’t touch them. There’s too much exposure.

In fact, recent increases in the numbers of total-loss fires have baffled insurance officials. Bay of Quinte Mutual had more total-loss fires in 2015 than in any year since the company was founded in 1874. The company calls 2015

“The Year of the Fire”. The trend has continued into 2016.

Of the 60 fire losses recorded by the company last year, 18 were significant fires costing more than $300,000 each. The common cause was carelessness; the leading specific causes were improper disposal of ashes from a wood-burning device, careless smoking, and inattention to stoves while cooking.

If you have a policy with Bay of Quinte Mutual, you can discuss this with a director over next year’s annual meeting lunch, cooked by a careful chef.

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Tourist in Your Own Town visitsTWEED

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57COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

visits

The small town of Tweed, Ontario, just 20 minutes north of Belleville, is a tidy diamond in the rough. Surrounded by local farmland, Tweed rises from Stoco Lake, paying tribute to historic Loyalist days gone by, but still a provider of countless farm-fresh food options. Nestled into Hastings County, the community of approximately 6,000 people isn’t a motoring metropolis, but instead is like stepping back in time, when the pace was slower and people stopped to appreciate the finer details of everyday life. Tweed is a town that invites visitors to come stay a while, unwind, and explore the local offerings in a friendly and unfussy locale.

Established in the 1830s, Tweed is loved by many, including international bestselling author, Michael Ondaatje, who has a holiday house in the area and is known to be seen about town. Tweed is also the site of the first Canadian all-female municipal council, making it a step ahead of its time. “For business, Tweed is a beautiful town, situated on a river and lake amidst farmland and forests,” said Paul Dederer, owner of a local art gallery. The town is also home to an annual Elvis festival, and Our Backyard Feast to Farm festival, a delight for any foodie seeking local flavour provided by nearby farms. With art, history, and relaxing retreats nearby, Tweed should be on your next list of must-sees.

Start your trip at North America’s tiniest jailhouse turned info centre. At the entrance of town is a pint-sized limestone jailhouse, complete with bars on the windows that harken to days where a stint in jail would have required sleeping standing up. Today the jail houses the information centre, where visitors can learn about the latest events, excursions, and places to stay in the bedroom community of Tweed. It’s the perfect blend of history and education wrapped up in one tiny building! After your visit, while strolling through the downtown area, pay attention to the adorable painted fire hydrants that add an artistic appeal to purposeful items. The mini murals were painted by participants in the Canada World Youth program, with kids from across Canada and Pakistan involved in the project.

For those who love the writing, painting, and performances, Tweed is a refuge for art-loving visitors. Thanks to several thriving galleries and art

TweedArticle byKelly S. Thompson

Photography by Daniel Vaughan

Tweed in iTs TwilighTArT, beAuTy And nATure in Tweed

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58 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

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DEALER INFORMATION

QUALITY WINDOWS & DOORSGREAT SERVICE. EXCEPTIONAL VALUE.

©2016 North Star Manufacturing (London) Ltd. All rights reserved.

CLIENT

SIZE

Metroland – One-Quarter-V(5.145” x 5.71”)

North Star Windows & DoorsJOB DESCRIPTION

Co-op Print Advertising

– Overall

PRODUCTION NOTES

This ad scales at 88.67% to fi t a 4 column broadsheet size (4 column x 71 agates = 284 lines = 4.5625” x 5.06”)

COLOUR

CMYK

DATE TIME DESIGNER ACCOUNT REP

April 7/16 5:30 cf SL/NG

DOCKET #

129-301

519.439.8080 866.439.8080 TMD.CATHE MARKETING DEPARTMENT 457 King Street London, Ontario, Canada N6B 1S8

REVISIONS

FNL

VERSION

A-5

North Star has earned an enviable reputation for producing high-quality and energy effi cient windows and doors.Tested and certifi ed by both the Canadian Standards Association and American Architectural Manufacturers Association, all of North Star’s windows and doors not only meet or exceed all industry standards, they meet our own high standards. And we back them with a transferable, limited lifetime warranty to prove it.

A QUALITY GUARANTEE THATLASTS A LIFETIME

shows, shops and centres, there’s an artistic medium for everyone.

The Marble Arts Centre is one artistic entity. A former United Church, the Tweed Arts Council purchased the Marble Arts Centre in 2008. The organization installed lighting, sound, and visual projection equipment to make it the perfect location to take in a show and has become a hub of artistic appreciation. On top of the events and plays that take place there, it has also become a meeting facility available for rent, hosting weddings, gallery displays, and more. Most important of the events at the Marble Arts Centre are performances put on by the IANA Theatre Company, which puts on spectacular productions that brim with local talent. Fundraisers, comedies, dramas, and more are all on offer, with a new range of shows put on each season.

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59COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

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The Tweed Arts Council is at least partly responsible for the arts presence in the area. Their diligent work helped bring local projects to light, like coordinating with the elementary students to produce countless decorated buses that now dot the fence of the Boldrick’s bus yard. “For every dollar spent on the arts, the return to the community is 3.8 times,” said Don Herbertson, Co-Chair and Treasurer of the Tweed Arts Council. Don notes that partial dues are owed to the high level of volunteerism in the area, including youth theatre projects every spring and fall and the Art in the Park event, where local artisans sell and display their wares along with musical entertainment and food. www.tweedartscouncil.ca

Tweed exists in a bubble of natural beauty. Aligned so closely with Algonquin Park, Tweed is a natural haven that sits just shy of one of the most popular areas in Ontario but without the tourism bustle that can put

off some visitors. A visit to Vanderwater Conservation Area is an example of stunning outdoor ranges. At Vanderwater, hikers seeking to explore their 15 kilometres of trails will be impressed by the rushing Moira River, which bursts over limestone boulders and makes for a relaxing spot for a picnic. This beatific locale shouldn’t be missed on sweltering summer days where spray from rushing water offers a relaxing place to fish, stroll, or snack.

For those looking for more action, take a kayak, canoe, or boat out to Butternut Island in Stoco Lake, which offers stunning scenery and a chance to explore local wildlife. If neither of these options stirs your fancy, check out some of the local farms for fresh produce, eggs, and meat directly from the healthiest source, all while learning about local farming practices, crops, and where our food comes from. www.twp.tweed.on.ca/parks

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ecpapercrafts.com630 Shannonville Rd.

Shannonville, ON K0K 3A0613-968-4271

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There are many pleasant B&Bs offering local flavour full of insight into the inner workings of the town. Black River Retreat goes above and beyond. “Catering to just one couple at a time, we are able to create a private and peaceful getaway that allows our guests to enjoy romantic tranquility with the one they love, while pampering them with luxurious surroundings and delicious dining,” said Trevor Telford, owner of Black River Retreat.

Central to the Black River Retreat experience is the town, which Trevor feels is vital to the getaway escape. “When looking for a location to build a couples resort, I stumbled upon Tweed and immediately fell

in love with the breathtakingly beautiful natural landscape of rocks, water, and trees.” With an abundance of wildlife and a humble locale to call home, visitors flock to the escape, even those who live just three minutes away.

Continuing the trend of artistic promotion, many local businesses make their home in the arts. Proudly promoting the latest and greatest in artistic merit, Tweed houses Quinn’s on Tweed, a gallery that boasts countless local artisans in the historical 1880s limestone and brick building. Exploring the 30 painters and more than 45 artisans is like stepping into a painted dream. Paul Dederer, owner of the gallery, opened it in 2011. “It is rare to find an elegant, superbly built, magnificent building like Quinn’s of Tweed in its original condition,” said Paul.

“At Quinn’s we strive to make our visitors feel welcome, to feel at ease and to know that this isn’t a stuffy place where they’ll feel out of place.”

For another unique artistic flavour, visit Black River Trading Company, which houses

some of the most stunning sculptures and home wares. Winding through the aisle is like making friends with countless wooden artifacts all carved with the greatest care by local and distant artists. There are also stone sculptures to grace gardens and other unique finds that add something special to that drab corner of your living room. There are many handcrafted items from all over the world just waiting for the perfect owner.

If the arts don’t pique your interest, then make the most of Tweed by indulging in some of the general store type shops, like the Old Cheese Factory. www.quinnsoftweed.cawww.blackrivertradingcompany.ca

Undoubtedly, thanks to the location near one of Canada’s oldest cities, Tweed thrives with historical flavour, evident on every street corner. Worth visiting are the many churches in the area, including St. John’s United Church, a stunning limestone treasure that sports a beautiful bell, which rang continuously for one hour to mark the end of the Second World War. The bell also had the previous purpose of serving as the Tweed fire bell. Of course, don’t miss St. Carthagh’s Roman Catholic Church, which lords over the town and offers spectacular views of the lake from its perch on top of the hill.

For an excellewnt source of historical information, visit the Tweed and Area Heritage Centre, a self-professed, “One-stop introduction to the heritage, past and present, natural and built, of the community and region.” By paying a drop-in fee of $5, visitors can access information, documents, and other historical data about the local area, giving further insight into the ways the Loyalists forged the community.

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SUMMER STYLE ESSENTIALS

Quinte Mall613.966.6161

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62 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

Even the most peculiar road names become commonplace after awhile, and their origins are forgotten. People adapt to them in the everyday business of finding their way around. So it is with Swamp College Road in Prince Edward County.

Swamp College Road is a three kilometer stretch in Hillier township, between historic Danforth Road and Belleville-bound County Road 2. A scattering of 19th century barns and farmhouses, expanses of efficient modern fields, a well-established equestrian centre, and a proliferation of bright blue solar arrays border the road. An S-bend and a dip in the road introduces a scenic swampland with tall trees and a winding creek, spring marsh marigolds, and frogs.

Swamp College Road is the sort of place people write songs about. In 2010, its enigmatic name prompted a nomination to CBC’s Song Quest, a contest pairing songwriters with ballad-worthy Canadian locations. Local singer-songwriter David Simmonds occasionally performs his own philosophical homage to the swamp college.

Local history go-to people were unable to provide any clues as to the origin of the road’s odd name. There was never a college, even an agricultural research station, which would have made sense in this farming county. Another theory emerged after judicious online travel. Ithaca, New York and Upper Arlington, Ohio each boasted country schools dubbed Swamp College.

A conversation with Sandra Karaz at Hadherway Farms gleaned recollections from Sandra’s 80-something mother. She remembers a one-room school just west of the swamp. It was first called ‘the school in the swamp’ but the name evolved to Swamp College. A charming cottage now occupies the slight rise where the school sat. Locals recall the foundation and steps remaining on the property for some time.

The Quinte area is fortunate to have well-run archives and museums preserving our local history. Questions find answers there. Peggy Ritchie of Quinte Educational Museum and Archives (QEMA) in Ameliasburgh was able to corroborate Sandra’s mother’s story, and to share a tangible link with the past along Swamp College Road.

Peggy provided copies of two undated letters on the subject printed in the Picton Gazette. Warren McFaul, still in the area, confirmed the name change. A completely different attribution was offered by respected local historian, the late David R. Taylor, who blamed a Toronto journalist for coining the name after a night of listening to professorial croaking from the swamp’s many frogs.

QEMA yielded definitive proof of the existence of Swamp College school. A 1920’s photo shows teacher Miss Huyck, and 24 scholars squinting at the photographer in front of the plain frame schoolhouse along Swamp College Road. The photograph was loaned by John Watt and printed in the March 11, 1977 edition of the Gazette.

signpostsSwamp College Road

article and photographyby lindi Pierce

swamp College road

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63COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

celebrates...Hospice Quinte#hospicequintegala Full coverage on facebook

The Invisible Ribbon Gala. #The Invisible Ribbon Galaand...

Above: Tim and Judy McKinney with Linda and Peter Kempenaar

Above: Jennifer Keiver enjoys a light moment with her husband, 8 Wing/CFB Trenton Commander Colonel Colin Keiver. Later in the month, Jennifer her dance partner Ryan Williams won Quinte’s Dancing with the Stars.

Photography by Gerry Fraiberg

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64 COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

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65COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SUmmEr 2016

$659,000. Classic “Arts & Crafts” beauty in heart of Picton! Gracious centre-hall plan feature exquisite

wood trim, distinctive stained glass, and generous spaces. 4 bedrooms,

library, and unforgettable reception rooms! Updated mechanicals and

recent salt water plunge pool. Outstanding outbuildings!

$979,000. Private estate property on with 534’ of Lake Ontario waterfront! 3 levels of fully-renovated living space, large

outdoor terraces & patios. Lower level could be completely separate living quarters. Perfect for multi-

generational situation!

$995,000. Spectacular family retreat on sheltered cove in PEC! Stunning

6-year old house on 2+ acres, features 4 bedroom suites, amazing

family room and huge waterside porch. Property can be run as a marina with 31 boats slips, 8

moorings & clubhouse. Opportunity!

$999,000. Spectacular stone executive on 7+ acres. Minutes

from Belleville! Total privacy & expansive water views. Sprawling

lawns, ideal for pool! 4+1 bedrooms, family room, den, huge

principal rooms & recreational spaces. Don’t miss this value!

$995,000. Exquisitely situated on more than 1,000’ of East Lake waterfront!

Gracious bungalow, charming cottage, and much-admired roadside stone barn. Outstanding opportunity for 2 families

or multi-generational situation. 36.5 acres and your own private inlet

minutes to Sandbanks!

$959,000. One of the County’s oldest houses (circa 1820) with additions in 1850’s & 1870’s – now completely

renovated. Geothermal heating. Views over nature-rich Pleasant Bay. Glorious mature gardens, naturalized areas, and striking alleé of flowering crab apple trees. Not to be missed!

LAURIE SAM MONICA

GRUER SIMONE KLINGENBERG Sales Representative Sales Representative Sales Representative

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$439,000. Bring your binoculars! Spectacular views over the marsh out to West Lake! Two expansive levels of living space provide 4 bedrooms

and 4 bathrooms, large family kitchen and generous entertaining spaces. Wonderful family home,

weekend property or rental income opportunity!

$2,600,000. Recognized as one of the top 25 small hotels in Canada. Built in

1878, The Merrill Inn is located on Picton’s Main Street and offers 13

rooms with private ensuites, 50-seat restaurant, gift shop, parking for 24.

Outstanding opportunity!

$896,000. Much-admired County landmark! Impeccably restored

Colonial Revival classic featured in “The Settler’s Dream” and other

publications. 5 bedrooms, 5 bathrooms, exquisite period detail,

two staircases and splendid entrance hall. Unique opportunity!

$1,495,000. Much-admired Waupoos farm on 80 acres right on Lake Ontario! Beautifully-

renovated 1867 red brick farmhouse, handsome barn plus a

charming cottage at shoreline. Incomparable family retreat!

$1,569,000. Spectacular “seaside shingle” home right on Lake

Ontario! Much admired executive home on 2.8 acres with lake views

from almost every room. 4 bedrooms, media room, library and 2 family rooms. Wraparound verandah

for lazy summer afternoons.

$549,000. The impeccably-executed modern home sits on a lush,

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Sa itarg’SG r a v i t a s Q u o t i e n tG r a v i t a s Q u o t i e n t i s a m e a s u r e o f o n e ’ s r e s e r v e s o f i n n e r w i s d o m .

Name one universal rule of friendship.Make new friends but keep the old. One is silver and the other gold.

What are you going to do about growing old?Pretend it’s not happening. Get enough sleep.

What makes your heart stand still?Birds. The swoop of a bird of prey, the hop hop of a chickadee, the skitter of a shorebird. It always feels like I’m witnessing a gift

If you knew the truth, how would you reveal it?I’m pretty horrible at keeping secrets. I don’t know how I’d manage not to share.

We all hope there will be one more time. One more time for what?One more hug.

If you were going to launch a new prohibition, what would you outlaw?Busyness.

How would you like to rewire your brain?Less fear. More love.

If you were to ask for divine intervention, what would it be for?See # 7

What are you fatally attracted to? Chocolate. Though I hope it’s not fatal.

How do you stay clear of the rocks and shoals?Careful planning. And when that fails, quick reflexes.

What do you wish you understood about the workings of the universe? Quantum anything.

How do we get to the authentic self?Quietly.

If you were in charge of the world for one day, what would you change?For one day? And the change only lasted that day? Everyone in the world has a delicious meal, and friendly company, and a comfortable place to rest.

What takes you down the rabbit hole?Rabbits.

When do you release your inner quirkiness?When dancing.

If we come into this world with sealed orders, what are your orders?Water often, walk daily, will do better in partial shade.

About Sarah

sarah Phillips answers 16 Gravitas questions with alan Gratias

Discover your Gravitas Quotient at www.gravitasthegame.com

Photo courtesy Catherine Stutt

By Alan Gratias

Sarah Phillips was born in Peterborough, Ontario and grew up throughout the southern part of the province but Prince Edward County has been a constant since the earliest days. Her family traveled to Sandbanks (or Outlet, as they called it then) every summer since she was born. She always came back. In 2003, the County became home.

An alumnus of the Directing program at the National Theatre School, Sarah found herself working in nearly every theatre space in Toronto, and many more across the country. After a decade of freelance directing and running an award-winning independent theatre company in the ‘big city’, teaching in various post-secondary drama programs, and starting a family, the lure of the rural paradise drew her east. She took up the reins of Festival Players of Prince Edward County in 2007 as Artistic Director, bringing outstanding all-Canadian professional summer theatre to enthusiastic audiences from near and far.

This year is the 10th anniversary of The Festival Players of Prince Edward County. Sarah is unequivocal in her enthusiasm. “Walking with my kids on the beach, enjoying fresh produce in season, being part of an awesome community, and being able to bring great theatre to the people – it’s pretty much the best thing going.”

As Saitarg’s Last Word, I ask Sarah what has she learned from life so far that she might characterize as a ‘universal truth’? The Director has a ready answer.

“Everyone has a story. Just tell it.”

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