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Craig Smith with lunch by The Hustle Grab & Go star at our Local Live Lunch

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August 7th – 12 till 1:30 – Craig Smith – with lunch by The Hustle Grab & Go

LOCAL LIVE LUNCH

10 Wednesdays! 10 Concerts! 10 Menus!


Great food, a fun atmosphere and free performances by the area’s top-notch musicians, singers, and songwriters!

Each Wednesday throughout the summer, Local Live Lunch welcomes everyone to drop by our outdoor concert are at Sheffer Court, located at 186 Hurontario Street downtown.

You can purchase your lunch on site from a featured restaurant, sit back in comfy Muskoka-style chairs, relax and listen to great local, live music on the 95.1 Peak FM Stage! Local Live Lunch is a celebration of community spirit paired with culinary treats and music!

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Media Sponsors – The Peak FM 95.1 and mycollingwood.ca

Local-Live-Lunch

When the Frogs Fell Silent | Collingwood Climate Action Team

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By: Deborah M. Buehler

“What’s so special about the frogs around here anyhow?” he asked. “I hear they are poisonous. Why wouldn’t you want to be rid of them?” 

“They’re rare and bright yellow. The tourists love them.”

https://www.collingwoodclimateaction.com

Rick stepped out of the SUV. Thick tropical air covered him like a blanket. Within minutes, sweat darkened the crisp white of his shirt. 

He scanned the area. Mist rose from the forested hills. 

It’s so damned humid, he thought as he headed into the forest. I need gills to breathe.

The trail was narrow and enormous leaves grabbed at his arms and shoulders as he passed. With every step, his steel-toed boots stuck in the mud, and made wet sucking sounds as he struggled to free them. His lungs heaved with the exertion. 

He hated mud, but he knew that there was copper beneath it – billions of dollars of copper ore. This path would take him to the area where the open pit mine would be built.

His phone rang. Ian, his assistant, was on the other end. “There’s a local reporter on the line,” he said. “She’s a feisty one and the company needs you to do damage control.”

“Put her on,” Rick barked, but he smiled to himself as Ian put him on hold. He enjoyed talking to the locals. He liked their spunk, their tenacity in the face of tough living conditions—conditions his company could improve. Just this morning, he’d been talking to a local teacher about the new school the company would provide. They had also promised a medical clinic, to serve both the miners and the community. This was why it irked him when those bleeding-heart socialists back home insisted that mining companies were destroying local communities. What did they know? Had they visited these impoverished villages? Those idiots sitting at home writing op-eds didn’t have a clue. 

His phone came back to life. It was the reporter.

“Richard Umber, Sustainable Mining Incorporated,” he answered. After the expected pleasantries, she dug into him about how the mining road would open the town to drug dealers and the mine would poison the environment. Piece of cake. He launched into his spiel: the company was investing in security to keep the drug dealers out, they always hired locals to do an environmental assessment, they’d had success with environmental clean-up at other mine sites in Latin America.

By the time he hung up the phone, he had renewed energy to continue along the path. He emerged from the forest into a clearing where a young man stood holding a clipboard. He didn’t see any activities that indicated scientists onsite. 

“When is the environmental assessment starting?” he asked. He wanted it done as soon as possible. It would cost a good deal of money and would slow the work by months, but in the end, they’d approve the mine. They always did. 

The young man checked his clipboard. “The first team of biologists, the herpetologists, are coming in next week.”

Sweet Jesus, we’re starting with the frog people, Rick thought. Apparently, there were special frogs in the area that merited protection. “What’s so special about the frogs around here anyhow?” he asked. “I hear they are poisonous. Why wouldn’t you want to be rid of them?” 

“They’re rare and bright yellow. The tourists love them.” 

Rick looked at the steaming jungle again, hoping there weren’t any yellow frogs holed up near the mine site. “My company is injecting billions into this project,” he said. “That’s a fair bit more than the tourists contribute.” 

Rick’s phone chimed again.

“HR wants to know if they can move your five o’clock to four o’clock,” Ian said.

Hell no! I won’t be back that early and I can’t miss that meeting.” He walked several steps away from the man in the clearing. “We’ve got to talk about training for locals to drive heavy equipment. I can’t afford mistakes with my multi-million-dollar machines. 

He had more to worry about than damned frogs. 

***

A knock at the door startled Rick from sleep. Sunlight streamed through the open window and a cool breeze caressed his face. Outside, a spring peeper frog was calling.  It reminded him of childhood. He looked around, disoriented. Then the memory of the drive home from the airport returned. He’d fallen asleep in the den with his clothes on.

The knock came again. Insistent. 

Rick grunted and pulled himself up. 

“Hello, Sandra,” he said when he opened the door. His new neighbour stood on the step, holding a red sign whose white letters screamed, NO DILBIT IN THE PIPELINE. He suppressed an eye roll and thought, The bleeding-hearts are protesting another pipeline.

“Hi, Rick,” she replied. The sun made her red hair gleam. “I saw your car in the driveway.” 

And my nosy new neighbour is spying on me. He nodded at her then glanced at the sign. “You need something, Sandra?”

“Yes,” she said. “I came to warn you about a threat.”

“A pipeline eh?” he said. “You know I’m in the resource extraction business. I’m not sure I’ll be the most sympathetic ear.”

“Let’s give it a try,” she said. “This pipeline runs right under the ponds in the park over there. You can hear the frogs singing.” 

Sweet Jesus, not more frogs. “Sandra,” he said, “I’m not a ‘save the frogs’ person.”

“Maybe not,” she said. “But those frogs indicate a healthy water supply. Those ponds drain into the river, then into the lake, and eventually out of our taps. Do you care about that?” Her face flushed so that her skin began to resemble the colour of her hair. 

“I still don’t see the problem,” he said. “Why not use the pipeline if it’s already there? It’s clearly been working well for years.”

“The problem is the type of oil they’ll be putting through the pipeline,” Sandra said. “Diluted bitumen is more acidic than conventional crude. It’s more likely to damage the pipe and leak all over the place.”

“Oil spills are bad for business,” Rick said. “Valuable products are lost and it’s a public relations nightmare. I bet the companies have oil spill response capacity that’s beyond what the law requires.”

“This country has been gutting environmental laws for years,” she snorted. “The law requires next to nothing.” 

That’s rich, Rick thought. I have to worry about frogs in the tropics and the oil guys laughing at the bank in my own backyard. He pinched the skin between his eyebrows. It was well past time for a coffee. “Give me the sign Sandra,” he said. “I’ll do some research and I’ll put it on my lawn if I’m convinced there is any danger.”

***

The plane flew low over the frozen tundra. He gazed out the window and sighed. He’d gone from the steaming tropics to a frozen wasteland in less than a week. This sort of travel used to be fun, but now he just felt tired. 

“The runway at the site is still under a meter of snow,” the pilot announced as they dipped to land. “I’ll put us down at the nearest open airstrip. Your guide will meet you there.” 

After landing, Rick clambered down from the plane and saw a young Inuk standing near a snowmobile and a sleigh. 

 “Sila,” the kid said, walking over to Rick.

“Rick,” he said, holding out his gloved hand in greeting. The company was scoping a new iron ore mine and must have hired the kid. “This our ride?”

“Yeah.” The kid tossed Rick’s bag into the sleigh behind the snowmobile.

Rick shivered as the snowmobile slid over the ice of Hudson Bay. The wind felt like needles pricking every exposed bit of skin. He was happy for the full-face mask on the helmet. 

“In a few weeks’ time, this will be open water,” Sila yelled over the noise of the motor. It sure wasn’t now. Snowdrifts were piled up on the ice as if the waves of the bay had frozen solid. 

It was 10:00 p.m. when they reached the tiny field station, yet the sky was still bright. The camp’s cabins were surrounded by two-meter snowdrifts. No wonder he’d seen nothing from the air. 

Sila told him the place was a goose hunting station and that they’d rest there for the night. It was late May and the snow geese were on the move overhead. Sila shot one out of the sky just outside their cabin so they could have fresh meat for dinner. 

“Can everyone up here shoot like that?” Rick asked, impressed with the kid’s skill.

“Most,” Sila said. “It’s cheaper to shoot your own meat.”

Rick nodded. He’d read about the atrocious food prices in the north. Especially fresh foods like meat and produce, which needed to be flown in.

“Also, bears,” Sila added.

Rick stiffened. “You get polar bears here this early in the season?” 

“Yeah, sometimes.”

Rick squinted at the white horizon. Were there bears out there? “Can you show me how to shoot?”

Sila grunted but handed Rick the rifle. 

He held it up to his shoulder as Sila had done. “Like this?”

Sila shook his head. He pressed Rick’s collar bone. The butt of the rifle was touching the outer edge of it. “You shoot now, the kick will break this bone.” He repositioned the gun, showed Rick how to aim, then walked to a snow drift about 20 meters away and placed an old soup can on top. 

Rick closed one eye and focused on the notch at the rifle’s tip. He kept it centered on the can, took a deep breath, then pulled the trigger. It felt like someone had punched him in the shoulder, almost ripping it from its socket. The bullet hit the snow below the can. 

“Keep the gun snug against your body,” Sila advised.

Rick tried again, closing his right eye, and then sighting down the barrel. 

“You’re closing the wrong eye,” Sila said. “Close the left and sight with the right.”

“I can’t,” Rick said. “I’ve never been able to wink with my left, only the right.”

Sila laughed. “How ‘bout I keep the gun.” 

The next morning, they passed Sila’s town. Retired sled dogs lounged outside the cluster of low-slung buildings. The mining company was promising a new school and medical centre. 

“This is my wife, Aluki,” Sila said when a ruddy-faced woman emerged from a small house. Three kids peered out at Rick from around their mother’s legs. “And these are our children.”

Rick joined the family for tea and bannock. During the meal, the children grew bolder and shared stories with Rick through hand gestures and much giggling. Rick didn’t talk about the mine.  

Later, he and Sila stared out over the valley where the mine would be located. 

“Got any frogs here?” Rick joked.

“Maybe,” Sila replied. “Scientists were studying wood frogs south of here. They can freeze almost solid and still live. But I doubt they come this far north.”

“No need for an environmental assessment then?”

“Government scientists said your company makes sure things are safe. They don’t work on things like that anymore.” Sila looked Rick in the eyes as he continued. “I want a better job, same as anyone else, and so do others, but not at the cost of the land. We’re not stupid.” He motioned to a herd of caribou crossing the snow in the distance and then to the sky where ducks and geese were flying in formation as they returned to their breeding grounds. “These animals will need to move off when the mine comes in, but we’ll keep hunting them nearby and fishing the waters. We’ll still need them for food.” 

Rick said nothing. He looked out over the valley. From this height he could see for kilometers. Turquoise pools of pristine melt water contrasted with the white of the snow. 

He thought of Sila’s wife and kids. 

***

Rick maneuvered his SUV through the crowds. What the hell is going on? His quiet street was crawling with reporters. When he reached his house, he was amazed to find protesters in his yard. Sandra was standing nearby handing out signs.

“Sandra, what the hell?” Rick bellowed.

“The proposal to put dilbit into the pipeline was approved. People are protesting.”

“On my property?”

She shrugged. “They’re forming a human pipeline.” 

He watched as she joined the line of people lying on the ground. Their bodies snaked through his backyard and out into the park beyond.  

Rick stormed into the house. He couldn’t kick the protesters out with all those reporters around. He sat down at his desk, fully intending to go over his notes on the Arctic mine expedition. Instead he dug out the pamphlet Sandra had given him. 

There had been an oil spill down south. People living in the area experienced acute exposure to benzene. Worse, heavy metals in the oil poisoned the water supply. 

It had to be hyperbole. He picked up the phone and dialed Steve. They had been buddies in business school. After the requisite small talk, Rick said, “Your company will be running dilbit through the pipeline in my neighborhood.” 

“You sound concerned,” Steve said. “You, of all people, should see the benefit of using the existing pipeline. It will save a pile of cash and pipelines are the safest way to transport oil. Much safer than rail or truck.”

“I know, but isn’t dilbit corrosive? The pipe runs right through my backyard.”

“Oh, we’d take care of any spills,” Steve said. “We’ve had great success at our other pipeline sites in the South. We’ve learned from our mistakes …” He droned on. 

The lines were too familiar.

“I trust you Steve,” Rick said, “but in the end it is my land, right? I own the land.”

“Actually, the laws have changed,” Steve said. “You own the land on the surface. The pipeline and the land below the surface belong to us – and the dilbit is approved.”  

Rick put down the phone.

He went outside and planted Sandra’s red and white sign on his lawn. 

***

Rick’s head was pounding. When the phone rang, he thought his skull would burst. 

“Rick, it’s Ian.” The voice on the phone sounded excited. “The company’s sending me on the next trip to the tropics.”  

Now that the forest was gone and the mine was running well, Rick was finally off the hook. Good thing too. He’d been feeling under the weather lately – longer than lately. Sandra thought it was the pipeline. She had her house on the market and had been drinking bottled water for months. 

But surely Sandra was wrong. He was probably just dehydrated. 

He opened the tap. The water smelled sweet. 

Outside the spring was silent. There were no frogs to sing.

HeART of Red Gala | Campaign for My Friend’s House

Join us for an evening of beautiful art, food, drink and live music as we raise valuable funds for My Friend’s House! The HeART of Red Gala will support the Paint the Town Red Campaign for My Friend’s House and help close the fundraising gap they’re experiencing so they can continue offering programs and services to women and children who’ve experienced violence in South Georgian Bay! Side Launch Brewing

HeART

Featured artists include Kelly Gale, Sue & John Burton and Jason Alexander among many others! Peruse their work while you listen to the sweet sounds of Karla Crawford and enjoy a drink and some hor d’oeuvres!

Get your tickets today and help us spread the word about this exciting event in South Georgian Bay!

My Friend’s House received over 4500 calls to their 24/7 Crisis Line in 2023, so the need for their services in our area is great. They’re helping women build confidence, independence, improving mental health and addictions, working with children who’ve experienced abuse, providing legal advocacy and helping women find next stage housing. Their services are essential and need to continue. Thank you for supporting My Friend’s House through the HeART of Red Gala!

For tickets Click Here

#REAL | How an Idyllic Retirement Resort became a ‘Financial Prison’

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When retired policeman Geoff Gauci packed up his old life and moved to an over-50s gated community on Melbourne’s northern fringe, he pictured his next chapter as peaceful.

After spending 36 years investigating shoplifters, drug trafficking, burglary, fraud and deception, it was time for the quiet life. Seduced by promises of low maintenance and resort-style living at an affordable price, he bought into a Lifestyle Communities development at Wollert, impressed with its high-security cameras and boom gates that guarded a manufactured urban landscape of neat rows of uniform houses and perfectly manicured fake lawns.

It was a setting reminiscent of the Hollywood movie The Truman Show. “The way it was presented to me and my wife, I expected everything to be above board, knowing that I’m dealing with Lifestyle, a publicly listed company,” he says. “I did my homework, and I checked on them. And I would have assumed that everything was kosher.” But 18 months later, earlier this year, he and two other residents, Thom Meads and Steve Doudle, found themselves investigating the utopia they thought they’d bought into. “To me, it’s like I’m in a financial prison,” Gauci says. “I’ve got to bail myself out in order to get out, and it’s just wrong.” Adele Ferguson reports.

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The Woman Who Helps NBA Stars To Sleep | Dr Cheri Mah

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Quicker decision making and faster reaction times, here’s how you sleep like an Olympian

Dr Cheri Mah is a sleep scientist and Professor at the Stanford Sleep Medicine Centre, specialising in the relationship between sleep and performance in elite athletes.

0:00 Intro 01:59 What do you do and why do you do it? 04:22 Who do you work with? 07:06 What are the misconceptions about sleep? 10:46 Study that increases performance by 12% 14:11 NBA players losing based on schedule 17:03 Players who slept more sprinted faster 18:49 Athletes who have changed their careers by focusing on sleep 22:05 Where to start getting better sleep? 23:18 Does sound/music hurt sleep quality? 24:39 Does temperature matter? 26:44 Food timing for better sleep 29:09 The food to eat before bed that will destroy your sleep 34:03 What to do for a racing mind? 35:34 What is the parasympathetic nervous system? 39:40 Emotional link to better sleep 41:44 Perception change on the importance of sleep 44:01 Cognitive performance and sleep 47:49 Sleep debt and how it works 52:22 Muscle memory and its connection to sleep 54:35 What’s a nappucino? 56:05 Do naps work? 57:39 Is the snooze button bad? 01:00:10 Are there different chronotypes? 01:02:46 Does school start too early for kids? 01:04:32 What parents should know 01:07:47 Sleeping travel tips 01:12:13 Sleeping drugs 01:16:01 Does sex before sleep hurt quality of sleep? 01:17:34 What is the most popular question Cheri Mah gets asked? 01:20:21 How common is sleep apnea? 01:22:17 What excuses do we hear for prioritizing sleep? 01:23:52 Sleep and injury proneness 01:25:35 Waking up early makes Steven hungry 01:27:32 Is waking up in the middle of the night normal? 01:29:15 How much does alcohol affect my sleep 01:30:10

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Captain Ship Shepherd shares the History of our Great Northern Exhibition

Our fair started out on property in Duntroon in 1855, later moving to Collingwood and since 1984, on Fairgrounds Road in Clearview Township. One of the Anniversary projects was establishing a plaque, at each of the locations with a brief History of the time spent at each. All this and more will be available for easy reading in the GNE History Book, researched and compiled by Marie Cruikshank, edited by Dan Needles and available for sale.

To mark it’s 150th anniversary, the Collingwood Agricultural Society published Come to the Fair a history of the GNE from its beginnings in 1855 to the present day.

The author is local writer and library archivist, Marie Cruickshank. After many hours searching through newspaper archives, correspondence and municipal records, Marie has written a lively and readable account of one of Canada’s oldest continuous fall fairs, from its humble beginnings in the fall celebrations held in Nottawasaga Township in pioneer days, through the Collingwood years (1883 to 1983), to the move in 1984 to new quarters in Clearview Township and the modern facilities it enjoys today.

GNE

It is an engaging story, featuring colourful characters, disastrous fires, keen municipal rivalries and spirited public debate as the volunteers strive to keep the organization dynamic and strong through world wars, depression and major social change. The GNE is the Oldest public service organization in the Collingwood and Clearview area, with a rich and varied history that mirrors the progress of the community around it.

The cover features a sketch by Collingwood artist Nick Hodgson of the magnificent Exhibition Hall that stood for only two years on the fairgrounds in Collingwood before it was reduced to ashes in a devastating fire in 1885.

MORE PHOTOS

“Come to the Fair”, by Marie Cruickshank, is now available from anyone on our ‘Contact‘ page.

Proceeds go to the Collingwood Agricultural Society.
Sponsors: Tri-Namic Printing and Dan Needles

Elon Musk: Neuralink and the Future of Humanity | Lex Fridman Podcast 

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Matthew MacDougall is Head Neurosurgeon at Neuralink. Bliss Chapman is Brain Interface Software Lead at Neuralink. Noland Arbaugh is the first human to have a Neuralink device implanted in his brain.

Source: Lex Fridman

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Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/elon-musk-and-…

EPISODE LINKS: Neuralink’s X: https://x.com/neuralink Neuralink’s Website: https://neuralink.com/ Elon’s X: https://x.com/elonmusk DJ’s X: https://x.com/djseo_ Matthew’s X: https://x.com/matthewmacdoug4 Bliss’s X: https://x.com/chapman_bliss Noland’s X: https://x.com/ModdedQuad xAI: https://x.com/xai Tesla: https://x.com/tesla Tesla Optimus: https://x.com/tesla_optimus Tesla AI: https://x.com/Tesla_AI

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OJHL’S 2024-25 REGULAR SEASON SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED

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24-team ‘League of Choice’ season runs from Sept. 5 to March 2

August 1, 2024, Mississauga, ON – The Ontario Junior Hockey League’s (OJHL) 2024-25 regular season schedule opens Thursday, Sept. 5, with two games, the league announced today.

The North York Rangers will host the Stouffville Spirit and the Toronto Patriots visit the Caledon Admirals on opening night.

The defending national Centennial Cup and OJHL Buckland Cup champion Collingwood Blues play their home opener the next night, Sept. 6, against the Mississauga Chargers. It’s one of eight games on the schedule that night.

The King Rebellion, who relocated to York Region from Brantford during the offseason, will play their inaugural home opener at the new $86 million Zancor Centre Sept. 22.

The regular OJHL season will end March 2 with six games.

The OJHL is divided into East and West conferences again this season with the top eight teams in each conference qualifying for the playoffs.  

Click the link for the full 2024-25 OJHL regular season schedule:

https://www.ojhl.ca/stats/schedule/all-teams/26/9?league=1

Highlights of the 2024-25 schedule include:

  • The OJHL’s annual Governors’ Showcase will be held at the Gale Centre in Niagara Falls, ON Sept. 23-25. The four-arena complex that opened in 2010 is the home of the OJHL’s Niagara Falls Canucks. One of the largest junior showcases in North America, the event attracts more than 150 scouts from all levels of the game each season.
  • The OJHL’s annual All-Star and Prospects program will have a new look this season.  The OJHL will be partnering with the Central Canada Hockey League (CCHL) to present the ‘Battle of Ontario’ Nov. 12-13 in Smiths Falls, Ontario. Each league’s All-Stars and Prospects will face off against each other in front of scouts and spectators during the three-day competition. 
  • The league will be introducing a new event in the 2024-2025 season, which will provide additional exposure for 20-year-old players within the OJHL.  A team composed of the top 20-year-olds in the OJHL will play an exhibition series against two teams in the OUA.  The OJHL 20-year-old team will first face the Toronto Metropolitan University Bold at the Mattamy Athletic Centre in Toronto Jan. 4, 2025, and then Ontario Tech Ridgebacks at Campus Ice Centre in Oshawa Jan. 5, 2025.

The playoff schedule includes:

  • Round 1, March 7-20
  • Round 2, March 21-April 3
  • Round 3, April 4-17
  • Championship Series, April 18- May 1

You can watch all games at www.flohockey.tv/

Live scoring is available on the OJHL’s website: ojhl.ca

The OJHL champions will qualify for the 2025 Centennial Cup, scheduled to take place from May 8-18, 2025.

About the OJHL – “ League of Choice”

The Ontario Junior Hockey League is the largest Junior ‘A’ league operating under the auspices of the Canadian Junior Hockey League with 24 member clubs. The OJHL is the home of the 2024 Centennial Cup champion Collingwood Blues. A proud member of the CJHL and Ontario Hockey Association, the OJHL was originally named the Ontario Provincial Junior ‘A’ Hockey League and it was formed out of the Central Junior ‘B’ Hockey League in 1993-94. With a long and storied history of developing players for the next level, including U SPORTS, the NCAA, CHL, minor pro ranks and the NHL, the OJHL had more than 45 NCAA Division I scholarship commitments this past season.

For more information on the Ontario Junior Hockey League, please visit www.ojhl.ca

Join us at Meaford Summerfest, a vibrant celebration of the season’s best!

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Nestled in the picturesque town of Meaford, our festival offers a perfect blend of community spirit, exciting activities, and breathtaking scenery.

Whether you’re a local resident or a visitor, there’s something for everyone to enjoy.

Summerfest kicks off on Friday August 2nd at 6:00 PM with festivities and an outdoor screening of Back to The Future in Market Square beside Meaford Hall.

The weekend continues with Canine Watersports (dog diving competitions), street vendors, the Jeep Invasion at the harbour, Doors of Meaford visual artists painting live, a beer tent, Saturday night live music and street dance.

For many the highlight of the weekend is the Epic Poutine-off Competition, with 13 restaurants facing off to win the coveted poutine trophy!

Meaford-Summerfest

Join in the fun during the long weekend. For updates and more visit https://www.facebook.com/meaforddowntown or

Perfecting the Pickleball Volley & Your Paddle Position with Catherine Parenteau

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Welcome to Episode 5 of the Catherine Parenteau Soft Game course!

Selkirk pro Catherine Parenteau takes you through your pickleball volley, the best paddle position to execute a perfect volley, and when you should choose the pickleball volley over a dink.

Download the Selkirk TV app today to stay up to date with the latest pickleball content, including highlights, news coverage, instructional videos, and much more. ➡️ https://slkrk.co/xbyh4e