Exploring the intersection of people, their homes and communities.
  • Kid at Jane's Walk

    If I were a kid at Jane’s Walk Burritt’s Rapids…

    If I were a kid at Jane’s Walk Burritt’s Rapids, this is what I would do: 1.  Attend the family-friendly Jane’s Walk ‘n Talk called: Disappearing Habitat: Killing the Goose That Laid the Golden Egg.  John McKenzie has a natural history museum in his workshop and there’s lots to see and touch (Sunday) 2.  Take a paddle up…

    READ MORE →

  • Wild Turkeys Make Good Potluck Dishes

    As part of the village-wide “Jane’s Walk” festival, we’re having a community potluck this Sunday, May 3rd from noon to 1:30pm at the Burritt’s Rapids Community Hall. Call Paul/Joanne at (613) 859-9116 to register # of attendees and dish (savoury/sweet) ********** John told me he’d be at the blind before 5:00am, so I wasn’t surprised to…

    READ MORE →

  • Jane's Walk Burritt's Rapids

    Jane’s Walk Burritt’s Rapids May 2 & 3, 2015

    Click here for the complete schedule of events & activities Please note the change: The car collection will only be in the village on Saturday ******* The title and tagline of our press release reads: Rural Burritt’s Rapids Joins Jane’s Walk Ottawa      ~ Why should urbanites have all the fun? I point this out not…

    READ MORE →

  • Joyce Frances Devlin

    Joyce Frances Devlin: Painter & A Painted House

    As part of the Jane’s Walk Burritt’s Rapids community festival, Ms. Devlin will be exhibiting select pieces in the main gallery space of the Burritt’s Rapids Community Hall on May 2nd & May 3rd, 2015. ********* If I had any sense, I would pound a wooden stake into my front lawn, attach a five kilometre length of string, and scribe…

    READ MORE →

  • Domtar E.B. Eddy

    Everything Changes: Shooting the Domtar Lands

    Since mid-winter, I’ve had the pleasure of photographing the Domtar lands with a team of volunteers from the Workers History Museum in Ottawa. Windmill Development Group, Inc. is poised to re-develop the land which has been home to pulp and paper giants E.B. Eddy and Domtar since 1891. Because of the placement of the buildings, there isn’t much…

    READ MORE →

  • Marie Watt

    Marie Watt: Piecing Together A Story

    It was my first community sewing circle. I couldn’t have chosen a better introduction than the one I received from Marie Watt, a Portland, Oregon-based artist whose storied circles bring creative ideas to life. A half-dozen tables bisected the Great Hall of the National Galley of Canada, arranged beneath the canopy of glass and steel that frames the finest views in Ottawa. …

    READ MORE →

  • Pocket Loot

    If you’re planning on poppin’ some tags at your local thrift shop anytime soon you might want to consider this: A few years ago I was shopping for coats at the Coquitlam Value Village. On I tried one, then another, and another until I finally stuck my hands in the pockets. Out came a fiver, followed by a tenner which practically paid…

    READ MORE →

  • Community project

    So You Want to Lead a Community Project?

    You have a ‘good idea’ and want to start a community project. Good for you. Or maybe not. Here are ten things you need to know to keep the ‘unity’ in ‘community.’ I’m going to assume that you already know that leading a project in your neighbourhood is a yin-yang experience: equal parts pleasure and pain, cooperating with strangers and…

    READ MORE →

  • An Acre of Time

    LeBreton Flats: An Acre of Time

    Dear Phil: It was my pleasure to meet you for coffee and finally put my hands on An Acre of Time, a history of LeBreton Flats. I wasn’t kidding when I said I discovered you in the most random of ways, a mention buried in the comments section of a review of a book of historical maps of…

    READ MORE →

  • Food Hub: Wendy’s Country Market

    Wendy Banks, Rick Trudeau and their daughter Leigha are sixth- and seventh-generation farmers on their family property in Lyndhurst, Ontario. Wendy and her siblings grew up steeped in the value of land and food, her father, Neil, believing that one day there would be a shortage of both. While his hands worked the soil in the present, he and his wife, Gail, amassed a thousand…

    READ MORE →