Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label winter. Show all posts

Wednesday, 21 December 2016

Winter Solstice and Winter Fun!

Winter solstice marks the shortest day and the longest night of the year in the Northern Hemisphere. It occurs every year on December 21 or 22, also marking the first day of winter. 

Winter solstice will take place in the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo on Wednesday, December 21, 2016 at 3:44 am. This marks the precise time when earth is the most inclined away from the sun. 

Since we still have a few months of winter left, let's embrace it!  Visit the following links for activities to get you active and warm in the sub zero temperatures.

Ptarmigan Nordic Ski Club 


The Ptarmigan Nordic Ski Club is the official cross country ski club in Fort McMurray. Based out of the Doug Barnes Cabin, next to the ever popular Birchwood Trails, the ski club offers programming for various age groups and levels of experience. Visit www.ptarmigannordic.org/programs for more information. 

Vista Ridge Ski Hill

The Vista Ridge Ski Hill offers various trails and various activities for families to enjoy. Whether it’s going skiing/snowboarding/skating, relaxing in the chalet, or taking a fun run in the tube park, this place has options for everyone! Visit www.visitaridge.ab.ca for more information on their hours of operation.

Nominate your Neighbour Winter Lights Displays and Decorations 


If wintery sports aren’t your thing, enjoy the holiday season with your friends and family by visiting the festively decorated homes throughout the Wood Buffalo neighbourhoods. The Wood Buffalo Communities in Bloom committee has revealed their annual self-guided tour of recognized homes in the annual Nominate your Neighbour program. The map highlights the best of the best holiday lit homes selected by the residents of Wood Buffalo. To view the map, visit www.rmwb.ca/nyn

Tuesday, 15 November 2016

Winter BAM!



This past March, Honest Ed's - a famous Toronto discount department store, owned by the infamous Ed Mirvish - advertised a sale of all the store's iconic hand-painted signs.  The line-up snaked around the block.

Since opening in 1948, all of signage inside Honest Ed's is hand-painted by two full-time artists (the store is closing permanently in December 2016).  The signs - brightly painted and riddled with puns - are considered iconic design pieces by many. Here are just a few:




Though hand lettering is rarely seen in stores nowadays, there is still hope for the wonderful art of window displays - something we can soon enjoy as many retailers prepare their windows for the upcoming holiday season.  New York is famous for its many incredible window displays as you can see here: http://www.refinery29.com/best-nyc-holiday-window-displays#slide

In fact, the art of the window display will soon be more prominent right here in Fort McMurray. Until November 21, businesses have the opportunity to apply to get a Winter Wonderland-themed window painting of their own.  Based on a first-come, first-served basis, the windows will be painted by local residents and paid for Communities in Bloom, as part of the BAM! program.  All windows will be painted by December 3 - just in time for the Santa Claus parade!

Launched in 2014, BAM! was created by Wood Buffalo Communities in Bloom to encourage storefront beautification.  Visit rmwb.ca/bam for details and application forms!

Wednesday, 11 February 2015

WinterPLAY Guest Blog – Pioneers by Theresa Wells of McMurray Musings




“Why do we live here?” she says on a frosty morning as she climbs into the passenger seat. It is far below zero outside – about 20 degrees below, in fact – and I have neglected to warm up the car as much as I should have. The leather seats are cold, the windows are frosted over and the teenager is early-morning growly, the perfect trifecta of terror for the start to a cold winter day.

“I have a job here,” I reply, a bit growly myself as the darkness and never-ending bitter cold can gnaw away at you over time as you grow weary of the lack of sunlight and numb fingers.

“Not what I mean,” she snarls as if I am some sort of dunce stunned by the cold temperatures. “Why do PEOPLE live here? I mean who arrived up north and thought it was a good place to live?”

We sit as the car idles, both of us pondering the answer. It is a fair question, as one must think that the first arrivals to the prairies and northern Canada must have come in the summer months and the first winter must have come as a tremendous shock – although perhaps not, because snow and cold temperatures are not exclusive to Canada and are part of the heritage for many of us. Some of us who find our roots in Europe came from places that experience snow and cold and ice, and so our ancestors must have found winter in Canada comforting rather than frightening, a taste of the homeland they left behind.

When I was growing up my favourite books were the Laura Ingalls Wilder series. Her tales of life in the “big woods”, the story of pioneers on the American prairies, captured my imagination. There were stories of farming and fires and plagues of locusts and, yes, winter. I would sit in my warm Prairie house, a blizzard brewing outdoors, and read the words of an American girl who was one of the first to settle the Prairies in North America. I found the courage of her family astonishing, their bravery in the face of the challenges remarkable. I suppose, to some degree, I saw myself and my family, because while we lived in a Prairie city in a modern house instead of a sod hut and had cars instead of wagons and oxen, we too faced challenges like the cold winters. In some ways I felt like we were still pioneers.

As I sit in the car waiting for the windows to defrost I reflect back on the Christmas we spent in London, landing just two hours before they closed Heathrow due to the snow that year. While thousands across England were stranded in airports and train stations in a country not accustomed to such heavy snowfall, we found ourselves to be Canadians in a sort of paradise, a city known for its history and grandeur but this time coated in a blanket of thick white snow. I thought back to the doormen at our hotel on The Strand who would apologize for “the bother” every time we stepped outdoors, their gloved hands making a sweeping gesture towards the snow and our laughter as we replied “But we are Canadians” and their smiles in return, assuring us that in that case they had ordered the snow just so we would feel at home in their country. We watched an entire city become transformed and transfixed by the snow, businessmen in shiny suits and slippery shoes lobbing snow balls at each other in Covent Gardens and snowmen popping up in the centre of busy city streets. London, always magical by nature, became almost mystical as the snow, both a bother and a blessing, drifted down from the heavens above.

I awake from my reverie as we drive towards our final destination. It is still dark when we arrive, although the temperature has begun to mellow. We begin to unload, the two of us burdened down with bags and boots and we trudge towards the bright lights of the building ahead.
She is trailing behind me a bit, skis in one hand and her ski boots in the other. As we arrive at the top of the chair lift at Vista Ridge she drops the skis on the snow and anxiously begins to tug off her Doc Martens, motioning for me to hand over her ski poles.

“I don’t have any idea why we live here,” she says just before she snaps her ski goggles down over her eyes and glides off on her first run of the day, a young adult who began downhill skiing at the age of four and who now tackles double black diamond mountain runs with ease. I watch as she swishes down the hill, her colourful ski jacket slowly disappearing into the softly drifting snow. I know we will be there for hours, me in the ski lodge drinking huge amounts of coffee, watching the snow, writing a bit and waiting for her to drop in for visits, her hair damp with sweat and melted snow and her cheeks bright red.


And while she is out on the gentle slopes of our own ski hill in Wood Buffalo, executing graceful turns as she skis the day away, I will spend my day chuckling quietly at her question about our choice of place to reside. It may not be a tropical paradise and it may spend a good part of every year blanketed in snow and ice – and that is exactly why we live here. It is because we are still pioneers at heart, braving the snow and cold, even if it is from behind our ski goggles and with our ski poles in our gloved hands as we quietly glide down snow covered hills, surrounded by dense boreal forest and under the broad expanse of the northern sky, dotted with twinkling stars in the crisp and cold morning air.

Tuesday, 16 December 2014

Winter Cities Shake Up 2015

This coming January, Edmonton will take its place on the world stage of winter cities as host of the Winter Cities Shake-Up - an international conference on making winter way cooler!  

The Winter Cities Shake-Up (www.wintercitiesconference.com) is an international conference on all the ways we can improve the quality of life in winter cities. It’s an opportunity to share best practices, think outside the box, and network with delegates and speakers from winter cities around the world. The conference will take place January 28 – 30, 2015. It’s also a great occasion to showcase Edmonton’s leading edge winter initiatives: from cold-climate construction to urban planning, and from internationally recognized winter festivals to our city’s award winning WinterCity Strategy. 


What is the Winter Cities Shake-Up?
Winter Cities Shake-Up 2015 is a conference for people who live in winter cities and want to improve their communities’ quality of life year-round, but especially in the winter. For three days in January 2015, international experts in many areas, including designers, artists, and civic leaders, will gather in Edmonton, Canada to present findings and share experiences in one of three areas:

  • Winter Fun - there are lots of outdoor activities that can bring in all types of people - even those who think they'd rather hibernate in winter. Find out how to program inviting, accessible activities and try some of them out yourself. 
  • Winter Design - explore how we can plan and design our cities so that streets and public places are warmer, more fun and easier to get around in during winter months. 
  • Winter Business - from companies that are finding great economic value in locating to a winter city, to how people are marketing the cold season as one of their community's greatest assets, discover how winter economies can hold great untapped potential for urban centres.


When and Where is the Winter Cities Shake-Up?
January 28-30, 2015 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada at the Shaw Conference Centre

Who Should Attend the Winter Cities Shake-Up?
Anyone interested in winter urban life. Urban planners and designers, community members, architects, artists, entrepreneurs, government, business people, academics; this is an interdisciplinary conference that takes a holistic approach to all the great things winter has to offer. We've invited more than 400 guests from many different countries, and have speakers coming from Finland, Denmark, Japan, the United States and Canada. If you live in Edmonton and want to take in just some of the conference, you can register for one or two days only. 
To register for the conference, go to: http://www.wintercitiesconference.com/registration-accomodation/.

For more information on the following components, please visit the corresponding links:

  • Edmonton’s WinterCity Strategy:                http://www.wintercitiesconference.com/about/   
  • Program:                                                     http://www.wintercitiesconference.com/program/ 
  • Registration & Accommodation:                http://www.wintercitiesconference.com/registration- accomodation/ 
  • Sponsorship Opportunities:                         http://www.wintercitiesconference.com/sponsors/