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CANCELLED | Strawberry Moon Festival | Milkbarn Sessions | June 22nd

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A night dedicated to celebrate Music, Art and Fashion under the Strawberry Moon

Saturday, June 22 – 236 Eleventh Line, Collingwood, ON, L9Y 5G6

Experience an unforgettable blend of music, art, and fashion at our event featuring amazing DJs who will keep you dancing all night long. Immerse yourself in live art installations that will inspire and awe.

Don’t miss out on the chance to showcase your unique style in our fashion-forward environment.

And that’s not all! We’re offering free camping so you can stay close to the action and enjoy every moment of this special night. Plus, we’re extending the end time so you can dance until the sun comes up.

To purchase tickets CLICK HERE

DJS
—————-
Aphotik (UK Bass/Dubstep)
Triptologist (Psy Techno/Trance)
Dauri Cems (Latin Infused Genre Bender)
Clay Dolan (Deep, Melodic House)
Nokturnal (Breaks, Bass & Beats)
Justin Marchello (Drum & Bass)
Code Blue (Tech House)
Limoncella (Global Groove)
Shawn C (Jackin & Classic House)
Stereotactic (Funky Beats & Basslines)
+ more to be announced

ARTISTS
—————-
Kyle Haight
+ more to be announced

VENDORS
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Vaiya (https://instagram.com/vaiya_official)
RhizaeCosm (https://instagram.com/rhizaecosm)
+ more to be announced

Save the date and join us for a night of music, art, and fashion under the Strawberry full moon. See you there! 

To purchase tickets CLICK HERE

The buzz on wild bees versus honeybees

By David Suzuki

For many people “bees” means “honeybees” — the prolific insects that flit from flower to flower, collecting nectar and pollen to take back to their hives. They’re important agricultural pollinators and produce honey and wax that humans gather and use. Their utility to people has heightened fears about “colony collapse disorder,” in which various suspected causes — fungi, mites, parasites, pollution, insecticides and starvation — have killed off unusually high numbers of colonies.

Still, honeybees have proliferated, thanks in part to the growing popularity of urban beekeeping. That may sound good, but it poses problems.

Honeybees, Apis mellifera, haven’t always lived in North America. They’re native to Europe, Africa and parts of Asia and were brought here by Europeans starting in the early 17th century. They weren’t put into widespread use as agricultural pollinators until the 20th century.

As the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation points out, “They became increasingly important with the advent of larger monocultures and the use of broad-spectrum insecticides. To fulfill the demand for crop pollination, millions of hives are managed in and trucked all over North America.”

Despite colony collapse, there are likely more honeybees on the planet now than ever before. As honeybee populations grow and spread from country to city, from backyards to gardens to rooftops, many of the estimated 3,600 native wild bee species in North America — including about 800 in Canada — aren’t faring so well. Most bees are solitary, nesting alone in crevices, hollow stems or underground burrows. None of the native species in Canada make honey. Unlike honeybees, solitary bees and bumblebees are vulnerable to habitat loss.

From shiny sweat bees to industrious mason bees, these native pollinators are quietly vanishing. A comprehensive study of bees in Montreal underscored this issue. From 2013 to 2020, as honeybee hives skyrocketed from 250 to nearly 3,000, native bee populations nosedived. Each hive can house up to 50,000 honeybees, leading to significant competition with solitary wild bees. This seesaw effect between hive expansion and native bee decline is a clear sign that our good intentions might be off track.

The research suggested beekeepers maintain a sustainable threshold of three honeybee hives per square kilometre to avoid crowding out native bees. In dense urban areas, this threshold is often exceeded, creating a highly competitive environment.

Looking at the bigger picture, we see that insect populations overall have declined globally by more than 45 per cent over the past 40 years. Insects are vital for pollinating plants, providing food for birds and other animals (including humans!) and recycling nature’s waste. It’s not just native bees that are declining, but also butterflies, moths and other key pollinators. In Canada, many butterfly and moth species are at serious risk, highlighting the urgent need to rethink our practices.

Honeybees are often at the centre of “save the bees” campaigns, but they’re not always the best pollinators, nor are they the most in need of conservation. Domesticated honeybees are, in many cases, outcompeting native wild bees.

We need to shift toward more inclusive urban pollinator strategies. Instead of adding more honeybee hives, let’s turn our cities into pollinator paradises by planting native wildflowers, creating habitat corridors and conducting citywide pollinator health assessments. The David Suzuki Foundation has a number of resources to help get things blooming, including LawnShare, the award-winning Butterflyway Project and Butterflies in My Backyard, or BIMBY.

This doesn’t mean abandoning honeybees; it just means balancing our enthusiasm for them with the needs of all pollinators. It’s time to rewild our urban spaces, making room for every bee. Swapping hives for habitats — think wildflower gardens and undisturbed nesting sites — is the way forward.

And we shouldn’t just focus on the many services bees provide for humans. As conservation biologist Sheila Colla writes in Canadian Geographic, “Our native bees have relationships with microorganisms, parasitoids, plants, birds and mammals that we have barely begun to understand. Just as with larger, charismatic animals like polar bears and white rhinos, the conservation value of native bees should not and cannot only be defined by what they can do for us.”

Let’s adapt our practices to ensure urban environments support all pollinators, not just honeybees. This is crucial for the health of our planet and the vibrant tapestry of life that sustains us all.

David Suzuki is a scientist, broadcaster, author and co-founder of the David Suzuki Foundation. Written with David Suzuki Foundation Rewilding Communities Program Manager Jode Roberts.

Learn more at davidsuzuki.org.

REFERENCES:

Colony collapse disorder:

https://www.epa.gov/pollinator-protection/colony-collapse-disorder

Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation points out:

https://www.xerces.org/blog/want-to-save-bees-focus-on-habitat-not-honey-bees

Comprehensive study of bees in Montreal:

https://peerj.com/articles/14699

45 per cent over the past 40 years:

https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2023989118

Many butterfly and moth species are at serious risk:

https://canadiangeographic.ca/articles/working-towards-a-wild-pollinator-strategy-for-canada

David Suzuki Foundation has a number of resources:

https://davidsuzuki.org/project/pollinators

LawnShare:

https://davidsuzuki.org/take-action/act-locally/lawnshare

Butterflyway Project:

https://davidsuzuki.org/take-action/act-locally/butterflyway

Butterflies in My Backyard:

https://davidsuzuki.org/take-action/volunteer/citizen-science/bimby

Sheila Colla writes:

https://canadiangeographic.ca/articles/the-truth-about-bees

CENTENNIAL CUP WIN EXTRA SPECIAL FOR COLLINGWOOD KIDS ON COLLINGWOOD BLUES’ ROSTER

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OJHL reporter Ron Valentine with Collingwood Blues Marcus Lougheed (right) and Dame Boose at the Centennial Cup postgame celebration in Oakville Sunday. (Photo by Jim Mason/OJHL Communications)

Reprinted with permission from the Ontario Junior Hockey League

By Ron Valentine

Sunday’s Centennial Cup championship had extra significance for two members of the Collingwood Blues.

Their team defeated Saskatchewan’s Melfort Mustangs 1-0 in the nationally televised championship game in Oakville Sunday.

Damen Boose and Marcus Lougheed are both Collingwood natives. They know how important the franchise is to the Simcoe County community, 

And as Lougheed said during the Blues’ run to a second straight Ontario Junior Hockey League  championship run this spring, they remember Collingwood before Jr. A hockey returned to town five years ago following an eight-year (2011-19) absence.

“It’s unexplainable. Playing in my home town is a dream come true. I wouldn’t change a thing,” Lougheed said during the OJHL’s Nutrfarms Championship Series. “After I heard Dave (Steele) was bringing the team back it was definitely one of my goals to make the team.

“After not having a team here when I was younger, It’s neat to see the kids here getting this experience now. When I was their age there were Barrie Colts games, but for them to see people who are older than you in your home town is really cool.”

Lougheed, 19, is an assistant captain of the club and he is in Year 3 with the team. He had a 50-point regular season and added 15 more in the OJHL playoffs. He has a commitment to NCAA Division I Lake Superior State University in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan. 

Boose had a goal and two assists going into the 2024 Centennial Cup tournament. He was part of the club that went to the national championship tournament in Portage-La-Prairie last year but only dressed for one game. He was a big point producer for  the Stayner Siskins with 113 in the regular season and playoffs. This time around the 18-year-old has taken a much more prominent role.

OAKVILLE, ON – MAY 19: Marcus Lougheed of the Collingwood Blues celebrates Jack Silverman’s goal during the second period of the Centennial Cup championship game at the Sixteen Mile Sports Complex. (Photo by Tim Bates / OJHL Images)

Both players are graduates of the Grey-Bruce Highlanders minor hockey system and the Siskins’ Jr. C program.

“It’s an indescribable feeling to lift the cup,” Lougheed told the OJHL on the ice in Oakville, moments after hoisting the coveted trophy in front of the large contingent of Collingwood fans in the stands. “It sure feels different than Portage last year, the guys put everything out there in this one as we have been doing all season. The Mustangs are a very tough team, they came at us from the start, they didn’t give us a lot of room but we got it done. It was tighter than some of the other games with so much at stake but we played our game and kept at it.”

Native son Damen is really happy for the local pair: “We have known each other since we were three years old, grew up together, played our minor hockey together and I couldn’t be happier right now.”

Andrew Campoli, head coach of the Blues: “It was such a tight game but as they have all season the guys came through. We knew it wasn’t going to be easy and it wasn’t. I’m so happy for Marcus and Damen, it’s especially big for them and something they will be remembered for by people in Collingwood for the rest of their lives.”

UPDATE: The Blues are hosting a Tailgate Celebration Saturday, May 25, from 12-4 p.m. at Collingwood’s Royal Canadian Legion.  Fans are invited to meet their national champions and enjoy live music and a barbecue presented by Nutrafarms, with proceeds going to Special Olympics.

-with files from Jim Mason/OJHL Communications

For more information on the Centennial Cup, go to: https://www.hockeycanada.ca/en-ca/national-championships/men/national-junior-a/2024

Reprinted with permission from the Ontario Junior Hockey League

BREAKING GOOD NEWS: Mountain Head Performs at the Collingwood Live & Original Concert Series

Amphitheatre Concert Series

The Collingwood Live & Original Music Initiative creates opportunities, such as the L&O Summer Concert Series, for musicians to connect, collaborate, and cultivate their craft. Spend an evening on the shores of Georgian Bay enjoying live music, performed by a diverse selection of established and emerging artists from across the province. Collingwood L&O Summer Concert Series is presented by the Town of Collingwood.

Mountain Head – July 13th – 7:00 PM

The enigmatic and reclusive Hannah Brothers stumbled upon a mysterious mountain in the heart of the Canadian wilderness, and what they found at the summit changed their lives forever. A shaman performed a ceremony that unlocked new depths of creativity and inspiration in the brothers, leading them to channel the spirits of Johnny Cash, Flavor Flav, and Billy Gibbons. Dressed in black denim and adorned with solid gold grills and long beards, Mountain Head emerged with a sound that blended psych-rock, alt-rock, and elements of electro-pop and jangle pop into a unique and potent sonic concoction.

Since that fateful day, Mountain Head has made a thunderous impact on the music scene as one of Canada’s most exciting and innovative independent acts. With millions of streams and multiple Top 40 billboard hits in Canada, the band has caught the attention of the Wu Tang Clan, who featured their cover of ‘Shimmy Shimmy Ya’ across all their social media platforms. Mountain Head has also been finishing music with legendary producer GGGarth Richardson and played a monstrous showcase in Hollywood for School Night.

Perhaps most impressive of all, Mountain Head continues to put on their annual charity boat-in show, drawing in excess of 1000 attendees and raising thousands of dollars and truckloads of food for the local community. Their impact has been felt far beyond their hometown, as evidenced by their recent opening slot for Nickelback at Toronto’s History for the Get Rollin album release party. With their infectious sound, look, and hooks, Mountain Head is poised to span the continent and globe, leaving a trail of mesmerized fans in their wake.

Side Launch Brewery’s Big 10th Anniversary Bash | Saturday, June 1

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It’s our 10th Birthday Party and you’re invited!

Saturday, June 1st & Sunday, June 2nd.

We will be transforming our parking lot into our festival grounds for the weekend! This is a FREE event for our community to come together and celebrate as one.

Please note that an Eventbrite “Reservation” does not guarantee you a table. We operate on a first-come-first-served basis.

RESERVE A SPOT CLICK HERE

What to Expect:

  • We’ll have live music going all weekend long on the outdoor stage with professional sound and lighting from the one and only Cass Audio!
  • Multiple food trucks will be here to satisfy all your cravings: Mamacita Tacoria, Dee’s Quite Cafe, Brgrz Inc, and Collingwood Ice Cream Company.
  • Lawn games and prize giveaways!
  • Giant, inflatable human foosball!
  • Bayonet Barbershop will be popping up in the taproom offering some fresh cuts!
  • Face painting and family fun.
  • A portion of our bar sales from the weekend will be donated in support of Home Horizon.

Live Music Schedule:

☀️Saturday, June 1st: 11am-12am☀️

Please note that set times are approximate

  • Lucca Mae: 12-1:30pm
  • Rob Watts Band: 2-4pm
  • The Beelays: 4:30-6:15pm
  • Moondoggy: 7-8:45pm

☀️Sunday, June 2nd: 12pm-9pm☀️

Please note that set times are approximate

  • The Strange Potatoes: 1-3pm
  • Glacial Erratic: 4-5:30pm

Stay tuned for more announcements along the way. 😉
We can’t wait to celebrate this special milestone moment with you!

How Dubai became a haven for criminals from around the world | 60 Minutes Australia

Aussie criminals are living like kings in the gangsters’ paradise of Dubai.

► WATCH Full Episodes on 9NOW: https://9now.app.link/uNP4qBkmN6

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It might sound strange, but the crime capital of Australia is currently Dubai. That’s because this glitzy mega city in the Persian Gulf has become home to nearly all of our biggest organized crime bosses. Their thinking in moving offshore is that they’re out of reach of federal and state policing authorities, but they might want to think again. As Nick McKenzie reports, an enormous leak of Dubai property records has revealed not only their residential addresses, but also how the city has become the perfect destination for crooks, and suspected criminals, from all around the world to do their dirty business.

MORE VIDEOS like this one

   • EXPOSED: Organised crime networks tar…  

   • Criminals making hundreds of millions…  

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ABOUT 60 Minutes Australia

For over forty years, 60 Minutes Australia have been telling Australians the world’s greatest stories. Tales that changed history, our nation and our lives. Reporters Liz Hayes, Tara Brown, Amelia Adams, Adam Hegarty, Dimity Clancey and Nick McKenzie look past the headlines because there is always a bigger picture. Sundays are for 60 Minutes Australia.

Ben Johns v Quang Duong at the Vizzy Atlanta Open Presented by Acrytech

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Watch the Men’s Singles Quarter Finals match: (2) Ben Johns vs (9) Quang Duong at the Vizzy Atlanta Open Presented by Acrytech

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The Very Popular Collingwood Downtown Farmers’ Market Opens This Saturday

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Local vendors feature a wide range of organic vegetables and fruit, baking, meats and cheeses, flowers and trees, jams and preserves, handcrafted items and more.

The Market operates each Saturday morning in the heart of Collingwood’s historic downtown from May 18th until Thanksgiving Weekend, October 12th.

Located in the municipal parking lot at the corner of Second and Pine Streets and is open from 8:00 am to 1:00 pm

This is a recurring event

Repeating every week.

Upcoming dates:

  • May 18, 2024
  • May 25, 2024
  • June 1, 2024
  • June 8, 2024
  • June 15, 2024
  • June 22, 2024
  • June 29, 2024
  • July 6, 2024
  • July 13, 2024
  • July 20, 2024

Kymm Buckham appointed Chief Administrative Officer (CAO) | The Municipality of Meaford

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“We are thrilled to welcome Kymm Buckham,” said Mayor Kentner. “With her exceptional qualifications, we are confident Ms. Buckham will play a pivotal role in advancing the goals of the Municipality”.

The Municipality of Meaford is delighted to announce the appointment of Kymm Buckham as the new Chief Administrative Officer (CAO), effective Wednesday, May 15, 2024. With an extensive background in leadership and change management and a passion for community development, Ms. Buckham brings a wealth of experience and innovative direction to our Municipality. 

Kymm Buckham brings years of project management, strategic oversight, and fiscal accountability experience in the private and public sectors. Her proven track record of fostering collaboration, guiding project management and driving operational excellence positions her as an invaluable asset to Meaford.

“We are thrilled to welcome Kymm Buckham,” said Mayor Kentner. “With her exceptional qualifications, we are confident Ms. Buckham will play a pivotal role in advancing the goals of the Municipality”.

In addition to welcoming Kymm Buckham, the Municipality of Meaford extends its heartfelt gratitude to Interim CAO Matt Smith for his exemplary service during the transition period. Mr. Smith’s leadership, strong organizational commitment and efforts have been instrumental in maintaining the smooth operation of the Municipality during the CAO recruitment phase.

“Matt Smith is an invaluable member of our team, stepping into the role of Interim CAO with professionalism and dedication” stated Mayor Kentner. “We are immensely grateful for his leadership and guidance”.

Elon Musk Gives Biggest Tesla FSD Update Yet | FARZAD

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If you like this content I would greatly appreciate your shares!

The latest Full Self-Driving (FSD) update from Tesla has been a game-changer in the realm of autonomous driving technology. With each iteration, Tesla continues to push the boundaries of what’s possible in terms of vehicle autonomy, and this update is no exception.

One of the most significant enhancements in this update is the refinement of Tesla’s neural network, which serves as the brain of its Autopilot system. Through machine learning and data gathered from Tesla vehicles worldwide, the neural network has become more adept at recognizing and responding to various driving scenarios, including complex city environments, busy intersections, and challenging weather conditions.

If you like this content I would greatly appreciate your likes and shares!

I worked at Tesla starting in July of 2017 as an Operations Analyst out of the Bethlehem, PA distribution center facility and left as a Program Manager based out of Austin, TX as of September 2021. I spent most of my time in the distribution and supply chain organizations. Before Tesla, I was a Director of Business Intelligence and Pricing at the largest Pet Food & Supply distributor in the US, Phillips Pet Food & Supplies based out of Easton, PA. My wife and I also owned a small business in Bethlehem, PA between 2016 and 2019. I have been a shareholder of Tesla since 2012 and currently own Tesla stock. Nothing I say constitutes as investment or financial advice. My thoughts are my own and are not representative of everyone who currently works, or has worked at Tesla.

www.farzadmesbahi.com

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Twitter @farzyness