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Want more ‘Buy Canadian’ food? These companies are trying to help | CBC

Nearly 70 per cent of Canada’s agriculture and food imports come from the U.S., but does it have to be that way?

For The National, CBC’s Nick Purdon puts on a hair net to find out how three companies are pivoting to get more Canadian-made products on grocery store shelves.

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Saving humanity requires systemic change

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By David Suzuki

Like many human-created problems, climate change is resolvable. A range of solutions — encompassing technology, policy, incentives, education, science and more — can be employed to reduce, forestall or adapt to the damage created by fossil-fuelled global heating.

But it’s a bit like the arcade game Whac-A-Mole. You bop one mole and another pops up. We can reduce automobile sector emissions through polices and technologies that drive us from gas-burning to electric vehicles. We can regulate caps on industry emissions and engineer drought-resistant crops. We can invent ways to capture some carbon from the air. All are important, but they don’t solve the overall problem.

If we continue to adhere to economic and political systems that encourage waste and destruction, we’ll keep on whacking moles until the machine breaks. To truly address the climate crisis — and other human-caused catastrophes — we must change our ways of thinking and acting.

With atmospheric carbon dioxide levels higher than they’ve been for at least two million years, and global temperatures as warm or warmer than they’ve been for 125,000 years, we’re already experiencing accelerating consequences: less predictable and more extreme weather, raging wildfires, prolonged droughts, rapid sea level rise, water shortages, plant and animal extinctions, agricultural failures, spreading diseases, increased conflict and human migration, extreme heat and more. If we continue at this pace, scientists warn, “the economy and society will cease to function as we know it.”

A big part of the problem is that we measure “progress” by how quickly everything increases, from population to profit. We rely on “gross domestic product,” or GDP, which was never meant to be an all-encompassing system to measure and guide human activities.

United Nations secretary general António Guterres put it bluntly. “We must place true value on the environment and go beyond gross domestic product as a measure of human progress and wellbeing. Let us not forget that when we destroy a forest, we are creating GDP. When we overfish, we are creating GDP,” he told the Guardian after a recent meeting of global economists.

Moreover, much of the growth in wealth that GDP measures isn’t distributed equally. Throughout the world, many people are dying of starvation and lack of proper shelter, water and health care. And while large numbers work long hours and still struggle to afford food and housing even in relatively well off countries like Canada and the United States, the billionaire class is doing better than ever.

An Oxfam report finds that globally, “Billionaire wealth jumped by over 16 per cent in 2025, three times faster than the past five-year average, to $18.3 trillion — its highest level in history.” It’s increased by 81 per cent since 2020. Oxfam notes, “This comes as one in four people don’t regularly have enough to eat and nearly half the world’s population live in poverty.”

In some countries, especially the U.S., policies and regulations designed to protect people and the ecosystems we depend on are being overturned and support is being given to polluting industries, including coal — all for the benefit of the already obscenely rich.

This is unnecessary and unacceptable. The world can provide enough for everyone, but too many greedy people are hoarding wealth and resources and destroying natural life-support systems to accumulate more money and power.

“Moving beyond gross domestic product is about measuring the things that really matter to people and their communities,” Guterres said. “GDP tells us the cost of everything, and the value of nothing. Our world is not a gigantic corporation. Financial decisions should be based on more than a snapshot of profit and loss.”

A report published by Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, leading Indian economist Kaushik Basu and equity expert Nora Lustig argues that, in the face of the “triple planetary crisis of climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution,” the need for an economic transformation is urgent.

“If all the new income accrues to a few individuals, and the GDP grows, all citizens are expected to cheer,” Basu said. “This is feeding hyper-nationalism, inequality and polarisation.”

Going backwards, as the U.S. is doing, will seal our fate. We can continue with stopgap measures, but that will only slow our march to doom. We need rapid systemic change if we are to survive and thrive as a species.

David Suzuki is a scientist, broadcaster, author and co-founder of the David Suzuki Foundation. Written with David Suzuki Foundation Senior Writer and Editor Ian Hanington.

Learn more at davidsuzuki.org.

– END –

EXCERPT: The world can provide enough for everyone, but too many greedy people are hoarding wealth and resources and destroying natural life-support systems to accumulate more money and power.

TAGS: climate change, electric vehicles, extreme weather, economy, GDP, billionaires, health care,

REFERENCES:

Higher than they’ve been for at least two million years:

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/feb/11/point-of-no-return-hothouse-earth-global-heating-climate-tipping-points

Spreading diseases:

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2026/feb/18/tropical-disease-chikungunya-transmitted-europe-study

António Guterres put it bluntly:

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/feb/09/global-economy-transformed-humanity-future-un-chief-antonio-guterres

Oxfam report finds:

https://www.oxfam.org/en/press-releases/billionaire-wealth-jumps-three-times-faster-2025-highest-peak-ever-sparking

Are being overturned:

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/feb/12/trump-epa-rollback-pollution-regulation-endangerment-finding

Including coal:

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/feb/10/trump-anti-environment-agenda-pushback

Need for an economic transformation is urgent:

https://www.un.org/en/beyondGDP/documents

This Documentary Will Blow Your Mind: Insect World | Full Documentary | HD

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We’ve all got bug-bears about the insect world, they can be pretty annoying, buzzing, biting and being creepy — but without our invertebrate neighbours we’d be in serious trouble.

They clean up the planet for us, pollinate the plants we depend on and provide the bases of the food chain supporting all life including ourselves. With millions of years of fine-tuning, they are miniature marvels that the world just can’t live without … Insects are not creepy crawlies, they are veterans of life on Earth.

They keep our environment in check and put food on our tables. Perhaps we should see them as tiny, fascinating guardians or possibly even friends. They seem set to rule the world long after we’ve gone. The ultimate success story. They add beauty to the world and inspire our lives. Where would we be without them! Insects are worth celebrating.

🦁 Explore Terragonia – stunning wildlife documentaries from around the world! – https://bit.ly/terragonia

🦈 Insects may seem annoying, but they are essential to life on Earth, pollinating plants, cleaning the environment, and forming the foundation of the food chain. This documentary celebrates these tiny yet remarkable creatures, revealing their vital role and astonishing resilience.

Ontario’s March Thaw Crisis: Flood Risk Assessment, Snowmelt Timeline, and Emergency Preparedness

Last updated: March 3, 2026

Key Takeaways

  • 200mm of water is currently locked in snow across Ontario, creating significant flood potential as temperatures rise
  • The rapid March thaw is fueled by moisture from both Pacific and Atlantic weather systems, accelerating snowmelt rates
  • High-risk flood zones in the GTA include areas near the Humber, Don, Credit, and Rouge Rivers, plus neighborhoods with basement flooding history
  • Critical thaw periods occur March 10-15 and March 20-25 when temperatures consistently exceed 10°C
  • Homeowners should inspect sump pumps, clear drainage systems, and prepare emergency kits before peak melt begins
  • Toronto’s Basement Flooding Protection Program continues infrastructure upgrades, but individual property protection remains essential [1]
  • Real-time flood warnings are available through TRCA monitoring systems and municipal alert services [3]
  • Properties in low-lying areas and those affected during the July 2013 floods face elevated risk this season [2]

Quick Answer

Ontario’s extreme March thaw crisis in 2026 stems from 200mm of water equivalent locked in snow combined with moisture-rich weather systems from two oceans. GTA residents face elevated flood risk during two critical melt periods (March 10-15 and March 20-25) when rapid temperature increases overwhelm drainage systems. Homeowners in flood-prone areas should inspect basement protection systems, clear drainage pathways, and prepare emergency supplies now, while monitoring TRCA flood forecasts and municipal alerts for real-time updates.

Landscape format (1536x1024) detailed infographic showing Ontario snowmelt timeline from early March through April 2026, with temperature gr

What’s Causing Ontario’s Extreme March Thaw Crisis in 2026?

Ontario’s March thaw crisis results from an unusual combination of heavy winter snowpack and atmospheric moisture from both the Pacific and Atlantic oceans. This weather pattern creates conditions for rapid, intense snowmelt that can overwhelm municipal drainage infrastructure.

The province accumulated approximately 200mm of water equivalent in snow throughout the winter months. When temperatures rise quickly, this frozen water converts to runoff faster than storm sewers and natural waterways can handle. The dual-ocean moisture influence adds rain on top of snowmelt, compounding flood risks across the Greater Toronto Area.

Key contributing factors include:

  • Heavy snowfall accumulation from January through February 2026
  • Frozen ground conditions that prevent water absorption
  • Urban development reducing natural drainage capacity
  • Aging infrastructure in older GTA neighborhoods
  • Temperature swings from below freezing to above 10°C within days

This combination mirrors conditions from the devastating July 2013 flooding event that caused extensive property damage across Toronto [2]. However, spring thaws present unique challenges because frozen soil prevents infiltration, forcing all melt water into surface drainage systems.

When Will the Critical Snowmelt Periods Occur?

The most dangerous flood risk periods occur March 10-15 and March 20-25 when sustained temperatures above 10°C trigger rapid snowmelt across the GTA.

During these windows, daytime highs reaching 12-15°C combined with overnight lows staying above freezing create continuous melt conditions. Snow that accumulated over three months can disappear in less than two weeks, releasing massive water volumes into watersheds already stressed by winter ice buildup.

Timeline breakdown:

  • March 1-9: Initial melt begins, snow settles, minor drainage issues
  • March 10-15: First critical period with rapid daytime melt, nighttime refreezing risk
  • March 16-19: Brief temperature stabilization, partial drainage recovery
  • March 20-25: Peak flood risk as remaining snowpack melts completely
  • March 26-31: Residual drainage issues, ground saturation problems
  • April 1-15: Continued monitoring for rain-on-saturated-ground events

Choose the first critical period (March 10-15) if you live near rivers or ravines. Choose the second period (March 20-25) if your property has basement flooding history, because cumulative ground saturation peaks during this window.

Which GTA Areas Face the Highest Flood Risk?

Properties near major waterways and in low-lying neighborhoods face the most significant flood threats during Ontario’s extreme March thaw crisis.

The Toronto and Region Conservation Authority identifies high-risk zones along the Humber River, Don River, Credit River, and Rouge River watersheds [3]. These areas experience both overland flooding from swollen waterways and basement flooding from overwhelmed sewer systems.

High-risk neighborhoods include:

  • Humber River corridor: Weston, Baby Point, Lambton Mills
  • Don River valley: Riverdale, Thorncliffe Park, Don Mills
  • Credit River areas: Mississauga’s Port Credit and Streetsville
  • Rouge River zones: Scarborough’s Highland Creek and Rouge Park areas
  • Historical flood zones: Properties affected during 2013 events [2]
  • Low-lying areas: Basements below grade in older developments

Properties with previous basement flooding incidents face three times higher risk during rapid thaw events compared to homes without flooding history. If your home was built before 1980 and lacks backwater valve protection, assume elevated risk regardless of location.

Common mistake: Assuming flood insurance covers all water damage. Standard policies often exclude overland flooding and sewer backup without specific riders.

How Should GTA Residents Prepare for Flood Risks?

Start flood preparation immediately by inspecting basement protection systems, clearing drainage pathways, and assembling emergency supplies before the first critical melt period begins March 10.

Essential preparation steps:

  1. Test sump pump operation – Run water into the pit, verify pump activates, check battery backup if installed
  2. Inspect backwater valves – Ensure mechanisms move freely and seals remain intact
  3. Clear eavestroughs and downspouts – Remove ice, leaves, and debris blocking water flow
  4. Extend downspout drainage – Direct water at least 2 meters away from foundation
  5. Check window wells – Ensure covers are secure and drainage holes are clear
  6. Move valuables from basement – Relocate items to upper floors before March 10
  7. Prepare emergency kit – Assemble 72-hour supplies including water, food, flashlight, battery radio, and medications
  8. Document property condition – Take photos for insurance purposes before flooding occurs

For properties in high-risk zones, consider installing temporary flood barriers or sandbags around basement window wells and doors. Sandbags should be placed in pyramid formation with overlapping layers for maximum effectiveness.

Decision rule: If your basement has flooded before, assume it will flood again during extreme thaw events unless you’ve installed permanent protection systems (sump pump, backwater valve, foundation waterproofing).

Toronto’s ongoing Basement Flooding Protection Program provides subsidies for some protection measures, but homeowners remain responsible for property-level defenses [1]. Learn more about community safety initiatives being implemented across Ontario.

What Emergency Resources Are Available During the Thaw?

The Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA) provides real-time flood forecasting and warning services throughout the March thaw period [3].

Residents can access flood monitoring resources through:

  • TRCA Flood Warning System: Real-time watershed monitoring and alerts at trca.ca
  • Toronto Water Emergency Line: 416-392-2800 for sewer backup and flooding issues
  • City of Toronto Alerts: Sign up for emergency notifications at toronto.ca/alerts
  • Ontario Storm Prediction Centre: Provincial weather warnings and flood watches
  • 311 Service: Report drainage problems, blocked catch basins, and infrastructure issues

The TRCA issues three alert levels during flood events: Water Safety Statement (minor flooding possible), Flood Watch (flooding is possible in specific areas), and Flood Warning (flooding is imminent or occurring). Each alert triggers specific municipal responses and public safety measures.

During active flooding:

  • Call 911 if you face immediate danger or need evacuation assistance
  • Contact Toronto Water (416-392-2800) for sewer backup in your home
  • Report street flooding to 311 to help crews prioritize responses
  • Monitor local news and municipal social media for road closures
  • Avoid driving through flooded areas (15cm of water can stall vehicles)

Edge case: If you lose power during flooding, your sump pump won’t function unless you have battery backup. Consider a water-powered backup pump as an alternative that operates without electricity.

How Do Municipal Systems Handle Extreme Snowmelt?

Toronto’s stormwater management system combines aging infrastructure with modern flood protection upgrades, but extreme melt events can still overwhelm capacity in vulnerable neighborhoods.

The city operates over 6,000 kilometers of storm sewers designed for typical spring runoff. However, when 200mm of water equivalent melts rapidly while frozen ground prevents absorption, even properly functioning systems reach their limits. This is why individual property protection remains critical regardless of municipal infrastructure quality [1].

Municipal flood management includes:

  • Storm sewer network with catch basins and underground pipes
  • Retention ponds that temporarily store excess water
  • Flood control dams on major rivers
  • Real-time monitoring of water levels and flow rates
  • Emergency response teams for infrastructure failures
  • Public communication systems for warnings and updates

Toronto’s Basement Flooding Protection Program continues upgrading critical infrastructure, but projects take years to complete [1]. Properties in areas awaiting upgrades must rely on property-level protection during this transition period.

Choose municipal services for street flooding and infrastructure problems. Choose property-level protection (sump pumps, backwater valves) for basement and foundation issues, because municipal systems can’t prevent water from entering individual homes.

For broader context on infrastructure challenges, see our coverage of major infrastructure projects across Canada.

What Should Homeowners Do If Flooding Occurs?

If water enters your basement during Ontario’s extreme March thaw crisis, prioritize safety first, then damage mitigation, and finally documentation for insurance claims.

Immediate flood response steps:

  1. Evacuate if water is rising rapidly – Don’t wait for official orders if you feel unsafe
  2. Turn off electricity – Shut off power at the breaker panel if you can do so safely from dry ground
  3. Avoid contact with flood water – Assume contamination from sewage and chemicals
  4. Don’t enter deep water – 15cm can knock you down; 60cm can float a car
  5. Call for help – Contact 911 for emergencies, Toronto Water for sewer backup
  6. Document damage – Take photos and videos before cleanup begins
  7. Contact insurance – Report claims within 24-48 hours per policy requirements

After water recedes:

  • Wait for official all-clear before returning to evacuated properties
  • Wear protective equipment (boots, gloves, mask) during cleanup
  • Remove standing water using pumps or wet vacuums
  • Discard porous materials (drywall, insulation, carpets) that contacted flood water
  • Dry the space completely within 48 hours to prevent mold
  • Hire certified restoration professionals for extensive damage

Common mistake: Starting cleanup before documenting damage. Insurance adjusters need photographic evidence of water levels and affected items before you begin repairs.

If flooding affects multiple properties in your area, municipal and provincial emergency services may establish assistance centers. Monitor local news for information about emergency housing, financial assistance, and recovery resources.

How Does Climate Change Affect Future Thaw Risks?

Ontario faces increasing flood risks from extreme weather events, including intense spring thaws, as climate patterns shift and precipitation becomes more variable.

The July 2013 flooding demonstrated how concentrated rainfall can overwhelm urban drainage systems [2]. Spring thaw events present similar challenges when rapid temperature swings release winter snowpack in compressed timeframes. Scientists project these volatile weather patterns will become more frequent as atmospheric conditions change.

Future risk factors include:

  • More frequent temperature extremes and rapid swings
  • Increased winter precipitation falling as snow in some years
  • Rain-on-snow events that accelerate melt rates
  • Longer periods of ground frost reducing infiltration
  • Urban expansion reducing natural drainage capacity

Homeowners in flood-prone areas should consider permanent protection measures rather than relying on seasonal preparations alone. Installing sump pumps with battery backup, backwater valves, and foundation waterproofing provides year-round protection against multiple flood scenarios.

Municipalities continue adapting infrastructure to handle more extreme events, but individual property protection remains the first line of defense [1]. For insights on environmental challenges, explore our coverage of climate action initiatives across the region.

FAQ

When is the highest flood risk during Ontario’s March thaw?
The peak flood risk occurs March 20-25 when cumulative snowmelt combines with ground saturation and potential rain events. Properties with basement flooding history face greatest danger during this window.

How much water is locked in Ontario’s current snowpack?
Approximately 200mm of water equivalent is frozen in snow across the province. When this melts rapidly during warm periods, it creates runoff volumes that can overwhelm drainage systems.

Do I need flood insurance for spring thaw events?
Standard home insurance often excludes overland flooding and sewer backup. Contact your insurer to add specific flood coverage riders before the thaw begins, as policies typically have waiting periods.

What’s the difference between a sump pump and backwater valve?
A sump pump removes groundwater seeping into your basement foundation. A backwater valve prevents sewage from backing up through your drains when municipal systems overflow. Both provide different but complementary protection.

How quickly can flooding occur during rapid snowmelt?
Basement flooding can begin within 2-4 hours during intense melt events, especially if storm sewers are already at capacity. Street flooding may occur even faster in low-lying areas near waterways.

Should I run my sump pump continuously during the thaw?
No. Sump pumps activate automatically when water reaches trigger levels. Continuous operation suggests a malfunction or overwhelming water volume requiring professional assessment.

What temperature triggers dangerous snowmelt rates?
Sustained temperatures above 10°C, especially when combined with rain, create the most dangerous melt conditions. Overnight temperatures staying above freezing prevent refreezing and maintain continuous melt.

Can I prevent all basement flooding with proper preparation?
Property-level protection significantly reduces risk but can’t guarantee complete prevention during extreme events. Combining sump pumps, backwater valves, proper grading, and emergency preparedness provides the best defense.

Where can I get sandbags for flood protection?
Some municipalities provide sandbags during flood emergencies, but supplies are limited. Hardware stores sell sandbags and sand, or you can fill your own using heavy-duty plastic bags and soil.

How long does the spring flood risk period last?
Primary flood risk extends from early March through mid-April, with peak danger during rapid melt periods. Rain events on saturated ground can trigger flooding into May.

What should I do if my sump pump fails during flooding?
Call a plumber immediately for emergency service. Meanwhile, use a wet vacuum or buckets to remove water manually. If water is rising rapidly, evacuate and call 911.

Are older Toronto neighborhoods at higher flood risk?
Yes. Neighborhoods built before 1980 often have aging infrastructure, combined sewers, and homes without modern flood protection. These areas face elevated risk during extreme thaw events [1].

Conclusion

Ontario’s extreme March thaw crisis in 2026 presents significant flood risks for GTA residents, particularly during critical melt periods March 10-15 and March 20-25. With 200mm of water locked in snow and moisture from two ocean systems fueling rapid temperature increases, homeowners must take proactive steps to protect their properties.

Take these actions immediately:

  • Inspect and test your sump pump and backwater valve before March 10
  • Clear all drainage systems including eavestroughs, downspouts, and window wells
  • Prepare a 72-hour emergency kit with essential supplies
  • Sign up for TRCA flood alerts and municipal emergency notifications
  • Move valuable items from basement storage to upper floors
  • Document your property condition with photos for insurance purposes
  • Review your insurance coverage and add flood protection if needed

Properties in high-risk zones near rivers, ravines, and historical flood areas require extra vigilance. Don’t wait for official warnings to begin preparations—by the time alerts are issued, flooding may already be underway.

The combination of heavy snowpack, frozen ground, and aging infrastructure creates conditions similar to the devastating 2013 floods [2]. However, informed homeowners who prepare early and monitor conditions throughout the thaw period can significantly reduce their flood risk and protect their families and property.

Stay informed through official channels, respond quickly to changing conditions, and remember that individual property protection remains your most reliable defense during extreme weather events. For additional emergency preparedness resources, visit community safety information and live storm tracking updates.

References

[1] Backgroundfile 261726 – https://www.toronto.ca/legdocs/mmis/2026/bu/bgrd/backgroundfile-261726.pdf

[2] Opinion Ontario Toronto July Flooding – https://thenarwhal.ca/opinion-ontario-toronto-july-flooding/

[3] Summer Safety – https://trca.ca/conservation/flood-risk-management/summer-safety/

[4] Published Plans And Annual Reports 2025 2026 Ministry Natural Resources – http://www.ontario.ca/page/published-plans-and-annual-reports-2025-2026-ministry-natural-resources


Content, illustrations, and third-party video appearing on GEORGIANBAYNEWS.COM may be generated or curated with AI assistance or reproduced pursuant to the fair dealing provisions of the Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-42. Attribution and hyperlinks to original sources are provided in acknowledgment of applicable intellectual property rights. Such referencing is intended to direct traffic to and support the original rights holders’ platforms.

SXY.com Newport Beach Open 2026 Preview: Key Matchups, Player Form Post-Mesa Cup, and Bold Predictions

Last updated: March 3, 2026

The professional pickleball season heats up as the SXY.com Newport Beach Open 2026 brings elite competition to California’s coast March 2-8. This fifth PPA Tour event of the year features returning champions, injury comebacks, and players riding momentum from recent victories—all competing at the prestigious Tennis Club at Newport Beach.

Key Takeaways

  • The SXY.com Newport Beach Open runs March 2-8, 2026 at the Tennis Club at Newport Beach, California
  • Alex Crum makes his 2026 debut after recovering from December 2025 meniscus surgery
  • Ben Johns competes in doubles only, skipping singles competition at this event
  • Live broadcast coverage begins Thursday, March 5 at 1pm ET on Pickleballtv with Round of 16 matches
  • Five professional divisions feature draws for Men’s Singles, Women’s Singles, Men’s Doubles, Women’s Doubles, and Mixed Doubles
  • Catherine Parenteau will not compete, creating opportunities for other women’s contenders
  • SXY serves as title sponsor through a multi-year partnership announced February 2026
  • The PPA Tour returns to Newport Beach for the first time since April 2023

Quick Answer

Landscape format (1536x1024) editorial image showing split-screen comparison of top men's and women's pickleball players in action poses at

The SXY.com Newport Beach Open 2026 Preview reveals a tournament shaped by recent form changes, key absences, and comeback stories. With Alex Crum returning from injury, Ben Johns focusing solely on doubles, and Catherine Parenteau sitting out, the championship picture looks wide open across all five professional divisions. Players who performed well at recent Mesa Cup events carry momentum into this coastal venue, where favorable weather and enthusiastic crowds create ideal conditions for upsets and breakthrough performances.

Who Are the Top Seeds at the SXY.com Newport Beach Open 2026?

The tournament’s top seeds reflect current PPA Tour rankings and recent performance trends across all five professional divisions. Seeding determines first-round matchups and potential championship paths, making bracket positioning crucial for title contenders.

Men’s Singles top contenders include established stars who have dominated early 2026 events. The absence of Ben Johns from singles competition opens opportunities for players ranked 2-8 to advance deeper into the bracket without facing the sport’s most dominant force.[1]

Women’s Singles features a reshuffled field without Catherine Parenteau, who is not competing at Newport Beach. This creates space for rising players to claim a title and boost their season rankings.[1]

Doubles divisions showcase established partnerships that have built chemistry through multiple tournaments. The Round of 16 draws released ahead of the tournament reveal which teams received favorable bracket positions and which face early tests.[1]

Choose this tournament if you want to see how top players adapt to venue-specific conditions—the Tennis Club at Newport Beach offers different court speeds and environmental factors compared to indoor facilities used earlier in the season.

What Key Matchups Should Fans Watch at Newport Beach?

Several first and second-round matchups carry championship implications based on recent head-to-head results and player form trajectories. The bracket structure creates potential quarterfinal and semifinal clashes between rivals who have split recent meetings.

Alex Crum’s opening matches deserve attention as he returns from lateral meniscus surgery performed in late 2025. His first competitive action since the injury comes Tuesday, March 4, making his early-round performance a key storyline.[1]

Doubles partnerships face chemistry tests against teams that have played more events together in 2026. New pairings or those reuniting after time apart must quickly find rhythm to advance past experienced duos.

Mixed doubles creates unique tactical battles where strategy often matters more than raw power. Watch for teams that effectively neutralize opponents’ strongest players through smart positioning and shot selection.

Common mistake: Overlooking lower-seeded players who peaked at recent Mesa Cup events. Form matters more than ranking when players arrive hot from recent victories.

How Has Player Form Changed Since the Mesa Cup?

Recent tournament results reveal momentum shifts that preview potential Newport Beach outcomes. Players who reached finals or won titles at Mesa Cup events carry confidence and match-sharpness advantages over those who exited early or skipped recent competition.

Winning streaks create psychological edges when players face opponents they recently defeated. Conversely, players seeking revenge for recent losses often bring extra motivation to rematches.

Match volume affects preparation differently for each player. Some thrive on continuous competition that keeps their timing sharp, while others benefit from rest periods between events. The gap since Mesa Cup (approximately 2-3 weeks based on typical PPA scheduling) suits players who needed recovery time.

Injury management becomes visible through performance patterns. Players who showed decreased mobility or altered shot selection at Mesa Cup may have used the break to address physical issues, arriving at Newport Beach healthier.

Decision rule: Favor players who won their most recent tournament or reached semifinals/finals over those who haven’t advanced past quarterfinals in their last three events.

What Makes Alex Crum’s 2026 Debut Significant?

Alex Crum makes his first 2026 PPA Tour appearance at Newport Beach after undergoing surgery to repair a torn lateral meniscus in late 2025. His return adds a proven champion back into championship conversations across multiple divisions.[1]

Surgical recovery timelines for lateral meniscus repairs typically require 3-4 months before returning to elite competition. Crum’s March debut suggests his surgery occurred in November or December 2025, giving him adequate healing time.

Rust factor versus fresh legs creates uncertainty around Crum’s early performance. While he may lack recent match experience compared to players who competed at Mesa Cup, he also avoided the physical wear from multiple tournaments.

Strategic event selection shows Crum chose Newport Beach specifically for his comeback. The venue’s outdoor courts and favorable weather conditions may have influenced this decision over indoor alternatives.

Edge case: If Crum shows any mobility limitations in his first matches, expect opponents to exploit court coverage weaknesses with angled shots and drop shots that force lateral movement.

Why Is Ben Johns Only Playing Doubles at Newport Beach?

Ben Johns limits his Newport Beach participation to doubles events, skipping singles competition despite being the sport’s top-ranked player. This strategic choice affects championship predictions across multiple divisions.[1]

Singles bracket opens dramatically without Johns, who has dominated men’s singles throughout his career. Players ranked 2-10 suddenly have realistic title paths that would normally require defeating Johns in semifinals or finals.

Doubles focus allows specialized preparation where Johns can concentrate energy on partnership dynamics rather than splitting attention between singles and doubles demands. This potentially makes his doubles teams even more dangerous.

Physical management strategy suggests Johns and his team are prioritizing longevity over individual event maximization. With five more PPA Tour events remaining in the 2025-2026 schedule, selective participation prevents overuse injuries.[7]

Choose doubles-only participation if you’re managing minor injuries, want to extend career longevity, or find doubles competition more financially rewarding through sponsorship and prize money combinations.

What Impact Does Catherine Parenteau’s Absence Create?

Catherine Parenteau’s decision not to compete at Newport Beach removes a perennial championship contender from women’s divisions. Her absence reshapes title predictions and creates advancement opportunities for other players.[1]

Women’s singles loses a top seed, moving other players up in bracket positioning. This affects first-round matchups and creates an easier path to finals for players who would have faced Parenteau in earlier rounds.

Doubles partnerships adjust if Parenteau typically partners with players who now need new teammates or compete with different partners than usual. Chemistry disruptions can create upset opportunities.

Ranking points redistribution means players who advance deep at Newport Beach gain ground on Parenteau in season standings, potentially affecting year-end championship positioning and tour card security.

Common mistake: Assuming Parenteau’s absence automatically benefits the next-highest-ranked player. Often, players ranked 5-8 benefit most from bracket reshuffling when a top-3 player withdraws.

How Does the Newport Beach Venue Affect Play?

The Tennis Club at Newport Beach offers specific environmental and surface conditions that favor certain playing styles over others. The PPA Tour last visited this venue in April 2023, making it relatively unfamiliar to newer tour players.[1]

Outdoor coastal conditions introduce wind variables that don’t exist at indoor venues. Players with heavy topspin and lower ball trajectories handle wind better than those who rely on high, soft shots.

Expected great weather should attract large, enthusiastic crowds that create energy advantages for players who feed off audience support.[1] Conversely, players who prefer quiet, controlled environments may struggle with crowd noise during crucial points.

Court surface characteristics at this specific facility affect ball bounce consistency and movement patterns. Players who competed here in 2023 carry familiarity advantages over those experiencing the venue for the first time.

Three-year gap since last visit means many current top players have never competed at this location. Adaptability becomes crucial during early matches as players learn court-specific quirks.

Decision rule: If wind speeds exceed 10 mph, favor players with compact swings and low ball trajectories over those who rely on high, looping shots.

What Are the Bold Predictions for Newport Beach 2026?

Based on recent form, bracket positioning, and venue factors, several outcome predictions carry higher confidence than others. These forecasts account for player momentum, matchup history, and strategic advantages specific to Newport Beach conditions.

Men’s Singles Prediction

A player ranked 3-6 wins the title with Ben Johns absent from singles competition. The champion will be someone who has reached at least one final in the previous three PPA events, showing consistent form rather than a one-tournament hot streak.

Women’s Singles Prediction

A first-time 2026 champion emerges with Catherine Parenteau not competing. Look for a player who performed well at Mesa Cup but fell short of winning, using that near-miss as motivation for breakthrough success.

Doubles Predictions

Established partnerships dominate over newly-formed teams, with at least two of the three doubles divisions (Men’s, Women’s, Mixed) won by partnerships that have played together for 6+ months. Chemistry and non-verbal communication matter more in doubles than individual skill.

Upset Alert

Alex Crum reaches finals in at least one division despite limited recent competition. His talent level and championship experience overcome rust factors, though he may drop one unexpected early-round match before finding rhythm.

Attendance Prediction

Record crowds for a Newport Beach event thanks to great weather, SXY’s promotional push as title sponsor, and the return to this venue after three years. Expect championship matches to feature standing-room-only attendance.[1][3]

Edge case: If unexpected rain or wind disrupts the schedule, indoor court experience becomes the differentiating factor, favoring players who competed at recent indoor venues over those who primarily play outdoor events.

How Can Fans Watch the SXY.com Newport Beach Open 2026?

Live broadcast coverage provides multiple viewing options for fans who cannot attend in person. The tournament’s media schedule ensures championship-level matches receive professional production and commentary.

Pickleballtv begins live coverage Thursday, March 5 at 1pm ET with Round of 16 matches across all divisions.[1] This streaming platform requires a subscription but offers the most comprehensive tournament coverage.

Championship matches receive premium production with multiple camera angles, instant replay, and expert commentary from former professional players and pickleball analysts.

Social media highlights appear on PPA Tour official accounts throughout the tournament, providing free access to key points and match summaries for fans following along remotely.

In-person attendance at the Tennis Club at Newport Beach allows fans to watch multiple courts simultaneously and choose which matches to follow. General admission and reserved seating options typically become available through the PPA Tour website.

Choose in-person attendance if you want to see rising players on outer courts who may not receive broadcast coverage but could become future champions.

Conclusion

The SXY.com Newport Beach Open 2026 arrives at a pivotal moment in the PPA Tour season, with player form crystallizing and championship contenders separating from the pack. Alex Crum’s return from injury, Ben Johns’ doubles-only participation, and Catherine Parenteau’s absence create a tournament landscape ripe for unexpected outcomes and breakthrough performances.

Fans should focus on Thursday’s Round of 16 matches when live coverage begins, as these contests often feature the most competitive matchups before top seeds assert dominance in later rounds. The venue’s outdoor conditions and three-year absence from the tour schedule add variables that reward adaptable players over those who rely on controlled indoor environments.

Next steps for fans:

  • Subscribe to Pickleballtv before March 5 to catch live Round of 16 coverage
  • Review the complete tournament draws to identify potential upset matchups
  • Follow PPA Tour social media for real-time updates on Alex Crum’s comeback performance
  • Check weather forecasts for Newport Beach to understand how conditions might affect play styles

For those interested in other professional pickleball action, consider exploring coverage of recent PPA Tour matchups to understand player form heading into Newport Beach.

The tournament runs through Sunday, March 8, with championship matches determining which players carry momentum into the final five events of the 2025-2026 PPA Tour season. Whether watching from home or attending in person, this event promises the high-level competition that has made professional pickleball one of America’s fastest-growing sports.


FAQ

When does the SXY.com Newport Beach Open 2026 take place?
The tournament runs March 2-8, 2026 at the Tennis Club at Newport Beach in Newport Beach, California, with live broadcast coverage beginning March 5.

Why isn’t Ben Johns playing singles at Newport Beach?
Ben Johns is competing only in doubles events at this tournament, though specific reasons for skipping singles have not been publicly disclosed. This strategic choice opens the men’s singles bracket significantly.

What happened to Alex Crum?
Alex Crum underwent surgery to repair a torn lateral meniscus in late 2025 and is making his 2026 PPA Tour debut at Newport Beach after several months of recovery.

How can I watch the tournament live?
Live coverage begins Thursday, March 5 at 1pm ET on Pickleballtv, starting with Round of 16 matches across all five professional divisions.

Is Catherine Parenteau competing at Newport Beach?
No, Catherine Parenteau is not competing in this tournament, which reshapes the women’s divisions and creates opportunities for other players.

What divisions are offered at the professional level?
The tournament features five professional divisions: Men’s Singles, Women’s Singles, Men’s Doubles, Women’s Doubles, and Mixed Doubles.

When was the PPA Tour last in Newport Beach?
The PPA Tour last visited Newport Beach in April 2023, making this a return to the venue after approximately three years.

What is SXY’s role in the tournament?
SXY serves as the title sponsor of the SXY Newport Beach Open through a multi-year strategic partnership with the PPA Tour announced in February 2026.

How many PPA Tour events remain after Newport Beach?
Five more events remain in the 2025-2026 PPA Tour schedule after Newport Beach, making this tournament crucial for season-long rankings.

What makes the Newport Beach venue unique?
The Tennis Club at Newport Beach offers outdoor coastal conditions with expected great weather, creating different playing conditions than indoor venues and potentially introducing wind variables.

Who are the favorites to win at Newport Beach?
With Ben Johns skipping singles and Catherine Parenteau absent, the favorites shift to players ranked 2-6 in their respective divisions who have shown strong recent form at Mesa Cup events.

Can I attend the tournament in person?
Yes, the Tennis Club at Newport Beach typically offers general admission and reserved seating options through the PPA Tour website, with great weather expected to attract large crowds.


References

[1] Draws Released For Sxy Newport Beach Open – https://pickleball.com/news/draws-released-for-sxy-newport-beach-open
[2] Newport Beach Open – https://ppatour.com/tournament/2026/newport-beach-open/
[3] Sxy Announces Strategic Partnerships With Mlp Presented By Doordash Pickleball Central And The Carvana Ppa Tour – https://www.prweb.com/releases/sxy-announces-strategic-partnerships-with-mlp-presented-by-doordash-pickleball-central-and-the-carvana-ppa-tour-302684292.html
[4] Draw Reveal Sxy Newport Beach Open Presented By Joola – https://ppatour.com/draw-reveal-sxy-newport-beach-open-presented-by-joola/
[5] Sxy Com Newport Beach Open Preview – https://crownpickleball.store/blogs/news/sxy-com-newport-beach-open-preview

Content, illustrations, and third-party video appearing on GEORGIANBAYNEWS.COM may be generated or curated with AI assistance or reproduced pursuant to the fair dealing provisions of the Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-42. Attribution and hyperlinks to original sources are provided in acknowledgment of applicable intellectual property rights. Such referencing is intended to direct traffic to and support the original rights holders’ platforms.

Work Permit Crisis: One Million Canadian Work Permits Expiring in 2026—What International Workers Need to Know

Canada is heading into an immigration storm unlike anything it has faced before. According to data from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC), 1.4 million work permits are set to expire in 2026, with more than half lapsing by June 30 [1]. This is the work permit crisis: one million Canadian work permits expiring in 2026—what international workers need to know to protect their livelihoods, their families, and their futures in a country that once welcomed them with open arms.

The scale of this crisis is staggering. With only 380,000 permanent residence spots allocated for 2026, over one million workers face an impossible gap between their expiring legal status and any pathway to stay [1]. The ripple effects will touch every corner of the Canadian economy—from hospital wards to tech offices to food processing plants.


Key Takeaways

  • 📊 1.4 million Canadian work permits expire in 2026, with 315,000 in Q1 alone, creating an unprecedented bottleneck in the immigration system [1][2].
  • 🇮🇳 Indian nationals make up roughly 50% of affected workers, making this diaspora especially vulnerable [1].
  • ⚠️ A massive PR gap exists: Only 380,000 permanent residence spots are available against over one million expiring permits [1].
  • 🏥 Key industries at risk include food processing, healthcare, and technology, which depend heavily on temporary foreign workers [1].
  • 🛡️ Bridging open work permits tied to active PR applications are being recommended as a potential lifeline for affected workers [1].

Understanding the Scale of the Work Permit Crisis: One Million Canadian Work Permits Expiring in 2026—What International Workers Need to Know

Landscape format (1536x1024) editorial infographic-style image showing a timeline bar chart of Canadian work permit expirations across 2026

The Numbers Behind the Crisis

The sheer volume of expiring permits in 2026 is without precedent in Canadian history. Here is a breakdown of the timeline:

PeriodEstimated Permit Expiries
Q4 2025291,000
Q1 2026315,000
By June 30, 2026700,000+
Full Year 20261,400,000

Sources: IRCC data via VisaHQ [1] and Sunday Guardian Live [2]

Immigration consultant Kanwar Seirah, who obtained data directly from IRCC, described the situation as a “bottleneck” in the immigration system [2]. The pace is accelerating—Q1 2026 alone saw 315,000 expiries, up sharply from 291,000 in Q4 2025 [2].

“Canada has never faced such high numbers of people losing legal status simultaneously.”
— Kanwar Seirah, Immigration Consultant [2]

Who Is Most Affected?

Indian nationals account for approximately 50% of the affected workers [1]. Many arrived during the pandemic recovery period when Canada aggressively recruited temporary foreign workers to fill critical labor shortages. Now, these same workers face the prospect of forced departure or falling into undocumented status.

Other significantly impacted groups include workers from the Philippines, Nigeria, and various Latin American countries who entered through employer-specific work permits tied to the Temporary Foreign Worker Program (TFWP) and International Mobility Program (IMP).


The Permanent Residence Gap: Why the Math Doesn’t Work

At the heart of this crisis lies a fundamental mismatch. Ottawa’s 2026–28 Immigration Levels Plan allocates only 380,000 permanent residence spots for 2026 [1]. When measured against 1.4 million expiring work permits—plus study permit holders and asylum seekers—the shortfall is enormous.

Seirah’s estimate is sobering: by mid-2026, at least two million people could be living in Canada without legal status [2]. He called this figure “very conservative,” noting that it does not fully account for study permit expiries and rejected asylum claims [2].

The government has simultaneously slashed temporary resident targets dramatically:

  • 2025: 673,650 temporary residents
  • 2026: 385,000 temporary residents
  • 2027–2028: 370,000 temporary residents [3]

International study permit targets alone have been cut by 49 percent as part of Budget 2025 [3]. Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne defended the restrictions, stating that “Canadians understand that we have reached our capacity, or even exceeded our capacity, to welcome people to the country” [3].

This dramatic policy shift raises serious questions about how communities across Canada will adapt. Much like the paradigm shift needed to address climate change and biodiversity loss, immigration policy now demands bold, systemic rethinking rather than incremental fixes.


Industries on the Brink: Economic Fallout for Employers

The work permit crisis isn’t just a problem for workers—it threatens the backbone of several Canadian industries.

Sectors Facing the Highest Risk

  • 🏥 Healthcare: Hospitals and long-term care facilities, already short-staffed, rely heavily on internationally trained nurses, personal support workers, and lab technicians.
  • 🍎 Food Processing: Plants across Ontario, Alberta, and British Columbia depend on temporary foreign workers for production lines.
  • 💻 Technology: Startups and established tech firms recruited global talent to fill specialized roles in software development, AI, and cybersecurity.

Mass permit expiries will inject significant churn and training costs for employers who have invested years in onboarding these workers [1]. The disruption could be especially acute in smaller communities where a single employer may depend on dozens of permit holders.

For communities like those in the Georgian Bay region, economic disruptions of this magnitude can reshape local landscapes. Understanding how American consumers are hammered by tariffs offers a parallel example of how policy decisions create cascading economic consequences for everyday people.

Employers in communities seeking economic development may find their growth plans stalled if key workers lose legal status overnight.


The Human Cost: Life Without Status

What Happens When Workers Fall Through the Cracks?

The consequences of losing legal status extend far beyond employment. Workers without valid permits lose access to:

  • ❌ Provincial healthcare coverage
  • ❌ Legal employment protections
  • ❌ Banking and financial services
  • ❌ The ability to rent housing through legitimate channels
  • ❌ Any future immigration applications (in many cases)

Tent encampments of undocumented immigrants are already visible in the Greater Toronto Area, particularly in Brampton and Caledon [2]. Anecdotal reports describe out-of-status workers accepting cash payments and, in some cases, entering marriage-of-convenience schemes to maintain some foothold in the country [2].

This growing shadow population creates vulnerabilities that extend into broader public safety and community well-being. As our international correspondent has reported, global migration challenges require nuanced, informed coverage—not fear-based reactions.

The situation also echoes concerns about surveillance and privacy as governments balance enforcement with the rights of vulnerable populations.


Potential Solutions and What Workers Can Do Now

Government-Level Recommendations

Immigration experts and advocacy groups have proposed several measures:

  1. Bridging Open Work Permits (BOWPs): These permits, tied to active permanent residence applications, would allow workers whose permits expire after June 30 to continue working legally while their PR decisions are pending [1].
  2. Expanded Provincial Nominee Programs (PNPs): Provinces could be granted additional nomination slots to retain workers in high-demand sectors.
  3. Regularization Programs: A one-time pathway for long-term undocumented residents to apply for legal status, similar to programs in other countries.

What International Workers Should Do Right Now

ActionWhy It Matters
✅ Check your permit expiry dateKnow your exact timeline to plan ahead
✅ Apply for PR as early as possibleProcessing times are long; early applications are critical
✅ Consult a licensed immigration consultant or lawyerAvoid scams and get personalized advice
✅ Explore BOWP eligibilityThis may extend your legal work authorization
✅ Document your employment historyStrong work records support PR applications
✅ Stay informed on policy changesIRCC updates can open new pathways quickly

Activist groups like the Naujawan Support Network are mobilizing under the slogan “Good enough to work, good enough to stay,” demanding permanent residence pathways for temporary workers and students [2]. Workers are encouraged to connect with such organizations for support and collective advocacy.

For those navigating complex life changes, resources on finding calm through difficult transitions may offer some personal resilience strategies during this uncertain period.


What This Means for Canada’s Future

The work permit crisis of 2026 is not just an immigration issue—it is a labor market issue, a housing issue, a healthcare issue, and a human rights issue all rolled into one. Canada built its post-pandemic recovery on the backs of temporary foreign workers. Now, the system that brought them in has no clear plan to let them stay or leave with dignity.

The government’s stated justification—that housing, healthcare, and school capacity have been exceeded [3]—is understandable. But the solution cannot simply be to let over a million people lose legal status overnight. The economic, social, and humanitarian costs of inaction would far exceed the costs of thoughtful reform.

As communities invite public input on major decisions, the same spirit of civic engagement must extend to immigration policy. The voices of affected workers, employers, and communities deserve to be heard.


Conclusion

The work permit crisis—one million Canadian work permits expiring in 2026—demands urgent attention from policymakers, employers, and workers alike. With 1.4 million permits expiring and only 380,000 PR spots available, the math is clear: without intervention, Canada faces an unprecedented surge in undocumented residents and devastating disruptions to key industries.

Here are the actionable next steps:

  • 🔍 Workers: Check your permit status immediately, consult a licensed immigration professional, and apply for permanent residence or bridging permits as soon as possible.
  • 🏢 Employers: Advocate for expanded PR pathways and support your workers through the renewal process.
  • 🗳️ Citizens: Engage with your elected representatives to push for humane, practical immigration reform.

The clock is ticking. The decisions made in the next few months will shape Canada’s workforce, communities, and moral standing for years to come.


References

[1] 14 Million Canadian Work Permits Set To Expire In 2026 IRCC Data Show – https://www.visahq.com/news/2026-01-16/ca/14-million-canadian-work-permits-set-to-expire-in-2026-ircc-data-show/

[2] Why Are Millions Of Work Permits Expiring In Canada By 2026 – https://sundayguardianlive.com/world/why-are-millions-of-work-permits-expiring-in-canada-by-2026-163116/

[3] Budget Cuts International Student Permits By 65 Per Cent In 2026 – https://universityaffairs.ca/news/budget-cuts-international-student-permits-by-65-per-cent-in-2026/


Content, illustrations, and third-party video appearing on GEORGIANBAYNEWS.COM may be generated or curated with AI assistance or reproduced pursuant to the fair dealing provisions of the Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-42. Attribution and hyperlinks to original sources are provided in acknowledgment of applicable intellectual property rights. Such referencing is intended to direct traffic to and support the original rights holders’ platforms.

Ontario Online Gambling Help Calls Explode: New Research Spotlights Addiction Hotspots and Family Support Resources

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Last updated: March 3, 2026

Key Takeaways

  • Young men aged 15-24 experienced a 300%+ surge in gambling helpline contacts following Ontario’s online gambling market expansion in April 2022 [1][2]
  • Ontario’s regulated online gambling market generated $7.064 billion in lifetime revenue by 2026, with 85 different platforms now operating [3]
  • Men are twice as likely to develop gambling problems compared to women, with 56% of Canadian males reporting online gambling activity [3]
  • Free provincial helplines and family support services are available 24/7 through ConnexOntario (1-866-531-2600) and the Problem Gambling Helpline
  • Ontario residents placed $63.3 billion in total wagers during the 2023/24 period alone, highlighting the market’s explosive growth [3]
  • Online slots dominate player activity at 78%, while blackjack (45%) and roulette (38%) lead table game engagement [3]
  • Immediate help is available for players and families through counseling, self-exclusion programs, and financial recovery resources

Quick Answer

Landscape format (1536x1024) infographic showing dramatic upward trending line graph with '300%+ Surge' text overlay, young male silhouettes

Ontario online gambling help calls exploded after the province launched its regulated online market in April 2022, with young men aged 15-24 showing a staggering 300%+ increase in helpline contacts [1][2]. The surge coincides with record gambling revenue ($7.064 billion lifetime) and 85 competing platforms now operating across the province [3]. Free support resources including 24/7 helplines, family counseling, and self-exclusion programs are available to address this growing public health concern.

What Caused the Explosion in Ontario Online Gambling Help Calls?

Ontario’s decision to fully regulate its online gambling market in April 2022 directly triggered the surge in help-seeking behavior. Before this date, only grey-market offshore operators served Ontario residents; after April 2022, 85 licensed casino and sportsbook platforms flooded the market with aggressive advertising and easy smartphone access [3].

The combination of increased availability, targeted marketing, and 24/7 mobile access created perfect conditions for problem gambling to escalate, particularly among vulnerable demographics. Young men aged 15-24 proved especially susceptible, recording a more than 300 percent rise in gambling helpline contacts within the first two years of market expansion [1][2].

Key factors driving the surge:

  • Market saturation: 50 parent companies now operate 85 different platforms competing for players [3]
  • Mobile-first design: Smartphone apps enable gambling anywhere, anytime
  • Sports betting integration: Live in-game wagering creates constant engagement opportunities
  • Bonus promotions: Welcome offers and loyalty rewards encourage frequent play
  • Normalized advertising: Mainstream media coverage positions gambling as entertainment rather than risk

Common mistake: Assuming regulation reduces harm. While Ontario’s framework provides consumer protections, the sheer scale of market expansion (129% growth over three years) outpaced harm-prevention efforts [3].

Who Are the Highest-Risk Groups for Online Gambling Addiction?

Young men aged 15-24 represent the most vulnerable demographic, but several overlapping groups show elevated risk profiles based on recent research.

High-risk populations identified:

GroupRisk FactorKey Statistics
Young men (15-24)300%+ helpline surgeHighest growth rate post-2022 [1][2]
Adult males (18-34)Gender vulnerabilityMen 2x more likely to develop problems [3]
Male gamblers overallHigher spending18% spend $100+ monthly vs 10% of women [3]
Online casino playersSlot game engagement78% regularly play slots (most addictive format) [3]
Sports bettorsLive wagering accessReal-time betting increases impulsive behavior

Why young men face extreme risk:

Young adult males combine several vulnerability factors: developing brain chemistry (impulse control not fully mature until age 25), higher testosterone levels linked to risk-taking, targeted sports betting marketing, and peer pressure within male social groups. The 56% male participation rate versus 43% female participation confirms this gender disparity [3].

Choose professional help if: You’re spending more than you can afford, lying about gambling activity, borrowing money to gamble, or feeling anxious when unable to play. For community support in Ontario, visit our county housing and support services page.

What Free Help Resources Are Available in Ontario Right Now?

Ontario provides comprehensive free support services for both players experiencing gambling problems and their affected family members.

Immediate helpline access:

  • ConnexOntario: 1-866-531-2600 (24/7, confidential)
  • Problem Gambling Helpline: 1-866-531-2600 (same number, specialized counselors)
  • Online chat support: Available through ConnexOntario website
  • Text support: Text “SUPPORT” to receive callback scheduling

Treatment and counseling services:

  • Individual therapy sessions (free, covered by provincial programs)
  • Group counseling for players and family members
  • Financial counseling to address gambling-related debt
  • Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) specifically for gambling disorders
  • Family therapy to repair relationships damaged by gambling

Self-exclusion programs:

Ontario’s self-exclusion registry allows players to ban themselves from all regulated gambling sites for periods ranging from six months to permanent exclusion. Once registered, operators must block account access and prevent marketing communications.

How to access services: Call ConnexOntario at 1-866-531-2600 to receive immediate referrals to local treatment providers. Services are free, confidential, and available in multiple languages. No health card required for initial consultation.

How Can Families Support Someone with a Gambling Problem?

Family members play a critical role in recovery, but they also need their own support to navigate the emotional and financial stress of a loved one’s gambling addiction.

Effective family support strategies:

  1. Educate yourself first: Understand that gambling addiction is a recognized mental health disorder, not a moral failing
  2. Set clear financial boundaries: Separate finances, remove access to joint accounts, and refuse to pay gambling debts
  3. Avoid enabling behaviors: Don’t lend money, make excuses, or cover up consequences
  4. Communicate without judgment: Express concern using “I feel” statements rather than accusations
  5. Encourage professional help: Offer to attend the first counseling session together
  6. Protect your own wellbeing: Attend family support groups and consider individual therapy

Family-specific resources in Ontario:

  • Gam-Anon meetings: Free support groups for family members (similar to Al-Anon for alcoholism)
  • Family counseling programs: Available through ConnexOntario referrals
  • Financial recovery assistance: Debt counseling services that understand gambling-specific challenges
  • Crisis intervention: Immediate support when gambling creates safety concerns

Common mistake: Taking over all financial responsibilities without the gambler’s participation in recovery. This creates dependency rather than accountability. Instead, require professional help enrollment as a condition of financial support.

For additional community resources, explore our grants and donations program which may assist families facing financial hardship.

What Warning Signs Indicate a Gambling Problem Is Developing?

Early detection significantly improves recovery outcomes, but gambling addiction often remains hidden until financial or relationship crises emerge.

Behavioral warning signs:

  • Spending increasing amounts of time and money gambling
  • Lying about gambling activities or losses
  • Gambling with money needed for bills or essentials
  • Borrowing money or selling possessions to fund gambling
  • Becoming irritable or restless when unable to gamble
  • Chasing losses (trying to win back money lost)
  • Neglecting work, school, or family responsibilities

Emotional indicators:

  • Mood swings tied to wins and losses
  • Anxiety or depression when not gambling
  • Secretiveness about phone or computer use
  • Defensive reactions when questioned about gambling
  • Loss of interest in previously enjoyed activities

Financial red flags:

  • Unexplained withdrawals or missing money
  • Maxed-out credit cards or new loans
  • Requests to borrow money without clear explanation
  • Unpaid bills despite adequate income
  • Selling valuables or taking cash advances

Physical symptoms:

  • Sleep disruption (staying up late to gamble)
  • Appetite changes
  • Stress-related health issues (headaches, digestive problems)
  • Neglected personal appearance

When to intervene: If you notice three or more warning signs persisting for several weeks, initiate a caring conversation and suggest calling ConnexOntario together at 1-866-531-2600.

How Does Ontario’s Online Gambling Market Compare to Other Provinces?

Ontario operates the only fully regulated private-operator online gambling market in Canada, creating a unique situation that drives both revenue and risk.

Ontario’s market characteristics:

  • 85 licensed platforms versus single provincial operators in other provinces [3]
  • $2.2 billion annual revenue (2023/24), representing 75% growth year-over-year [3]
  • Competitive advertising environment with multiple brands competing for players
  • Broader game selection including live dealer games, slots, and sports betting
  • Higher player engagement due to promotional competition between operators

Comparison with other provinces:

Most Canadian provinces operate single government-run platforms (like BCLC in British Columbia or Loto-Québec in Quebec). These monopoly models generate revenue but limit player choice and typically show lower engagement rates.

Ontario’s competitive model produced $63.3 billion in total wagers during 2023/24 alone, far exceeding other provincial markets [3]. However, this success comes with the documented surge in problem gambling help-seeking behavior, particularly among young men [1][2].

Edge case: Quebec is considering following Ontario’s competitive model, but early discussions emphasize stronger harm-prevention measures based on Ontario’s experience.

What Prevention Strategies Actually Work for Online Gambling Addiction?

Evidence-based prevention focuses on limiting access, reducing impulsive play, and building awareness before problems develop.

Proven individual prevention tools:

  • Deposit limits: Set daily, weekly, or monthly maximum deposits before starting play
  • Time limits: Use platform tools or phone apps to restrict gambling session length
  • Reality checks: Enable mandatory pop-up reminders showing time and money spent
  • Self-exclusion: Proactively ban yourself during high-risk periods (financial stress, relationship problems)
  • Account monitoring: Review transaction history weekly to maintain awareness

Platform-level safeguards:

All Ontario-licensed operators must offer responsible gambling tools including deposit limits, session timers, reality checks, and self-exclusion options. However, players must actively enable these features—they’re rarely set by default.

Preventive mindset strategies:

  • Treat gambling as entertainment expense, not income opportunity
  • Never gamble with borrowed money or funds needed for essentials
  • Avoid gambling when stressed, depressed, or under influence
  • Set strict loss limits before starting (and stick to them)
  • Take regular breaks (minimum 15 minutes every hour)

For young adults specifically: Delay starting online gambling until age 25 when brain development (particularly impulse control) is complete. The 300%+ surge in help-seeking among 15-24 year-olds demonstrates the vulnerability of developing brains to gambling addiction [1][2].

Choose prevention if: You’re considering starting online gambling or have family history of addiction. Call ConnexOntario at 1-866-531-2600 for preventive counseling before problems develop.

What Should You Do If You’ve Lost Control of Your Gambling?

Immediate action can prevent further financial and relationship damage while starting the recovery process.

Step-by-step crisis response:

  1. Stop gambling immediately: Self-exclude from all platforms today (call 1-866-531-2600 for registry enrollment)
  2. Assess financial damage: List all debts, missed payments, and available resources
  3. Secure your finances: Remove gambling apps, block gambling websites, give account access to trusted person
  4. Call for help: Contact ConnexOntario (1-866-531-2600) within 24 hours for counseling referral
  5. Tell someone you trust: Inform family member or close friend who can provide accountability
  6. Attend first counseling session: Schedule within one week while motivation is high
  7. Join support group: Attend Gamblers Anonymous or similar peer support within two weeks

Financial recovery steps:

  • Contact creditors immediately to explain situation and negotiate payment plans
  • Seek free financial counseling through ConnexOntario referrals
  • Consider Consumer Proposal or bankruptcy only as last resort (consult licensed insolvency trustee)
  • Develop realistic budget with accountability partner
  • Address underlying financial stress that may have triggered gambling

Recovery timeline expectations:

  • Week 1-2: Acute withdrawal (anxiety, irritability, strong urges)
  • Month 1-3: Establishing new routines, addressing financial crisis
  • Month 3-6: Building coping skills, repairing relationships
  • Month 6-12: Maintaining recovery, addressing underlying mental health issues
  • Year 1+: Long-term relapse prevention, rebuilding financial security

Relapse is common: Most people require multiple attempts before achieving sustained recovery. If you relapse, immediately re-engage with counseling rather than viewing it as failure.

For additional community support during recovery, consider connecting with local organizations through our community input initiatives.

FAQ

Q: Is online gambling addiction really increasing in Ontario?
Yes. Young men aged 15-24 showed a more than 300 percent increase in gambling helpline contacts after Ontario launched its regulated online market in April 2022 [1][2]. The market generated $7.064 billion in lifetime revenue by 2026, indicating massive growth in participation [3].

Q: Are gambling helplines actually confidential?
Absolutely. ConnexOntario (1-866-531-2600) provides completely confidential service with no caller identification, no health card required, and no information shared without your explicit consent. Counselors cannot trace your call or contact you unless you request follow-up.

Q: How much does gambling addiction treatment cost in Ontario?
Treatment is free. Ontario funds gambling addiction counseling, therapy, and support groups at no cost to residents. Call ConnexOntario at 1-866-531-2600 for referrals to free local services.

Q: Can I really ban myself from all online gambling sites?
Yes. Ontario’s self-exclusion registry blocks your access to all 85 regulated platforms operating in the province [3]. Once registered, operators must prevent account creation, close existing accounts, and stop all marketing. The ban can be set for six months, one year, two years, or permanent.

Q: What if my spouse is gambling away our savings?
Take immediate financial protection steps: separate bank accounts, remove joint account access, change direct deposit, and consult a family lawyer about asset protection. Then call ConnexOntario at 1-866-531-2600 for family counseling referrals and Gam-Anon support groups.

Q: Why are young men specifically at such high risk?
Young men combine multiple vulnerability factors: incomplete brain development (impulse control matures around age 25), higher testosterone linked to risk-taking, targeted sports betting marketing, and peer pressure. The 56% male participation rate versus 43% female confirms this gender disparity [3].

Q: Do deposit limits actually prevent problem gambling?
Deposit limits are effective prevention tools when set before problems develop, but they’re less effective once addiction is established. Players with gambling disorders often create multiple accounts across different platforms to bypass limits. Self-exclusion provides stronger protection than limits alone.

Q: Is sports betting more addictive than casino games?
Both carry high addiction risk, but they attract different player profiles. Online slots (played by 78% of casino players) deliver rapid, repetitive rewards that strongly reinforce addictive behavior [3]. Sports betting creates emotional investment in outcomes and enables impulsive live wagering. Young men show particular vulnerability to sports betting.

Q: Can I get help if I’m under 18 and gambling illegally?
Yes. Helpline services are available regardless of age or legal status of gambling activity. Counselors focus on your wellbeing, not enforcement. If you’re under 19 (Ontario’s legal gambling age) and experiencing problems, call ConnexOntario at 1-866-531-2600 for confidential youth-specific support.

Q: What’s the success rate for gambling addiction treatment?
Success rates vary widely (30-60% maintain recovery after one year) depending on treatment engagement, social support, and co-occurring mental health issues. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) combined with peer support groups shows the strongest outcomes. Multiple treatment attempts are often necessary.

Q: Will my employer find out if I seek gambling addiction help?
No. Treatment is completely confidential unless you choose to disclose. However, if gambling has affected work performance, voluntary disclosure to your employer’s Employee Assistance Program (EAP) can provide additional support and potential job protection during treatment.

Q: How do I talk to my kids about online gambling risks?
Start conversations early (age 12-14), focus on brain development and impulse control, discuss advertising tactics, and establish clear family rules about gambling. Emphasize that 15-24 year-olds showed the highest surge in help-seeking (300%+), demonstrating young people’s particular vulnerability [1][2]. Model responsible attitudes toward risk and money management.

Conclusion

Ontario’s online gambling market expansion created unprecedented access to betting platforms while simultaneously triggering a public health crisis, particularly among young men aged 15-24 who experienced a 300%+ surge in helpline contacts [1][2]. The province’s 85 competing platforms generated $7.064 billion in lifetime revenue by 2026, but this commercial success came with documented increases in gambling addiction and family distress [3].

Take action today:

  • If you’re struggling: Call ConnexOntario at 1-866-531-2600 right now for immediate confidential support
  • If you’re concerned about someone: Educate yourself through free family counseling resources before attempting intervention
  • If you’re considering starting: Use prevention tools (deposit limits, time limits) from day one, or better yet, delay until age 25 when impulse control fully develops
  • If you’re in recovery: Connect with Gamblers Anonymous and maintain regular counseling to prevent relapse

The explosion in help calls demonstrates both the severity of Ontario’s gambling expansion and the willingness of people to seek support. Free, confidential, professional help is available 24/7—reaching out is the first step toward recovery for yourself or someone you love.

For additional community resources and support programs in the Georgian Bay area, explore our community support initiatives and local assistance programs.


References

[1] Watch – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wub-RXXQWOU
[2] Ontario Online Gambling Young Men Helpline Spike – https://rg.org/en-ca/news/gambling-industry/ontario-online-gambling-young-men-helpline-spike
[3] Gambling Statistics In Canada – https://readwrite.com/gambling/guides/gambling-statistics-in-canada/

Content, illustrations, and third-party video appearing on GEORGIANBAYNEWS.COM may be generated or curated with AI assistance or reproduced pursuant to the fair dealing provisions of the Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-42. Attribution and hyperlinks to original sources are provided in acknowledgment of applicable intellectual property rights. Such referencing is intended to direct traffic to and support the original rights holders’ platforms.

Carole Pope with Tim Welch & special guests Awake & Dreaming | Meaford Hall

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Fri. March 27
7:00 pm | $69.50

For Tickets, CLICK HERE

VIDEOS: youtube.com/@carolepope
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Carole Pope and Kevan Staples band was inducted into Canada’s Walk of Fame. On the Polaris Prize short list, Carole Pope is an agent provocateur pushing the boundaries of sexuality, sexual politics, and the status quo. Her work has been recognized with three Juno Awards, multiple independent music awards, a Genie Award. 4 gold, 1 platinum and 1 double platinum album. Her latest singles I Miss My Land and Play Fisty For Me are available everywhere.

Pope has toured with David Bowie and performed at Roskilde, World Pride, AGO, MOCCA, Fashion Cares 25 with Elton John, The Brooklyn Museum of Art, The AGO, Luminato, Joes Pub, Largo, The Viper Room, The Frostbite Festival, Reykjavik, Toronto, Los Angeles, Montreal, San Diego, San Francisco Prides, and the Michigan Womyn’s Festival. She appeared in SUCK a Vampire movie along with guest stars Moby, Iggy Pop, Alice Cooper and Henry Rollins. Pope has contributed music to film and television, including Love Lies Bleeding A24, Purgatory Jack, Transparent Season Two, Love or Whatever, Pretty Hard Cases, The L Word, General Idea Art AIDs and the fin de siècle The Trailer Park Boys Movie, Queer As Folk, The Five Senses, and Cruising. Rough Trade was inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of fame in 2020 and the Canadian Music Week Indy Hall of Fame in 2007.

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When The Forest Breathes by Suzanne Simard: Mycorrhizal Networks and Ecological Wisdom in Bestselling Author’s Fiction Debut

Last updated: March 3, 2026

Suzanne Simard’s new book When The Forest Breathes arrives on March 31, 2026, and it represents a significant expansion of the ideas that made her a household name in ecological science. While the title “When The Forest Breathes by Suzanne Simard: Mycorrhizal Networks and Ecological Wisdom in Bestselling Author’s Fiction Debut” captures the excitement around this release, a clarification is warranted: the book is classified as non-fiction, exploring forest renewal and resilience through the lens of Simard’s decades of research [1][2]. But the narrative approach she takes — weaving personal story, Indigenous wisdom, and scientific discovery into a cohesive arc about loss and regeneration — reads with the immersive quality of literary fiction. For readers who loved Finding the Mother Tree, this is the next chapter.

Key Takeaways

  • When The Forest Breathes releases March 31, 2026, in hardcover (336 pages, $39.00), large print, e-book, and audio formats [1][4]
  • The book builds on Simard’s pioneering research into mycorrhizal networks and the Mother Tree Project [2]
  • Literary Hub named it one of the most anticipated books of 2026 [2]
  • Simard integrates Indigenous stewardship practices with Western ecological science throughout the book [2]
  • The book addresses how protecting mother trees can reduce wildfire risk and support long-term forest health [2]
  • Simard’s previous book Finding the Mother Tree was a New York Times bestseller translated into 21 languages [2]
  • Her TED talks have reached over 10 million viewers worldwide [3]
  • The book is described as combining “reverence for the natural world” with “wisdom and warmth” [1]

Quick Answer

Detailed landscape format (1536x1024) illustration showing underground mycorrhizal network cross-section beneath a mature forest floor, with

When The Forest Breathes is Suzanne Simard’s second book, following her bestselling memoir Finding the Mother Tree. It focuses on forest renewal, ecological resilience, and the underground fungal networks that connect trees — themes drawn from her career as a Professor of Forest Ecology at the University of British Columbia [3]. The book blends rigorous science with narrative storytelling, making complex ecological concepts accessible to general readers while offering practical wisdom about forest stewardship in an era of climate change and industrial logging [1][2].


What Is When The Forest Breathes About?

The book examines how forests recover from damage — whether from wildfire, logging, or climate stress — and what humans can learn from that process. At its core, it’s about regeneration, both ecological and personal [1].

Simard draws on her field research in British Columbia’s forests to explain how trees share resources through underground fungal networks. These mycorrhizal connections allow older “mother trees” to nurture seedlings, distribute nutrients to struggling neighbors, and maintain the health of entire forest ecosystems [2].

georgian-bay-news-com-image

To purchase the book, CLICK HERE

Key themes include:

  • Forest connectivity: How trees communicate and cooperate through root-fungal partnerships
  • Wildfire resilience: Why protecting mother trees can reduce fire risk across landscapes [2]
  • Loss and renewal: Parallels between ecological regeneration and human resilience [1]
  • Indigenous knowledge: How traditional stewardship practices align with and sometimes predate Western scientific findings [2]

The book is not a dry academic text. Simard writes with emotional depth about the forests she has studied for decades, and the result is something that reads closer to narrative non-fiction than a typical science book. For anyone who finds rest and restoration through spending time in nature, this book provides the scientific foundation for why forests feel restorative.

How Do Mycorrhizal Networks Work in Simard’s Research?

Mycorrhizal networks are underground systems of fungal threads (called hyphae) that connect the roots of different trees and plants. Through these networks, trees exchange carbon, water, nutrients, and even chemical warning signals about pests.

Simard’s research, which began in the 1990s, was among the first to demonstrate that these networks are not random — they’re structured around hub trees, which she calls mother trees. These large, old trees serve as central nodes in the network, supporting dozens or even hundreds of younger trees around them [2][3].

Here’s a simplified breakdown of how the system works:

ComponentFunctionWhy It Matters
Fungal hyphaeThin threads that extend tree root systems by hundreds of timesAllow trees to access nutrients far beyond their own root reach
Mother treesLarge, established trees that act as network hubsDistribute resources to seedlings and stressed neighbors
Carbon transferSugars move from trees with excess to those in needKeeps weaker trees alive during drought or shade stress
Chemical signalsWarning compounds travel through the networkAllow neighboring trees to mount defenses before pests arrive
Nutrient sharingNitrogen and phosphorus move between speciesSupports biodiversity by helping different species coexist

This is the science that underpins When The Forest Breathes. Simard uses it to argue that forests are not collections of competing individuals but cooperative communities — and that understanding this cooperation is essential for effective forest management [2].

The concept echoes broader conversations about how ecosystems sustain themselves. Similar themes about biodiversity and ecological stewardship appear in discussions about community gardens and their role in local ecosystems.

Why Is This Book Considered a Narrative Expansion for Finding the Mother Tree Fans?

Finding the Mother Tree (2021) told Simard’s personal story alongside her scientific discoveries. It was part memoir, part science writing, and it resonated with millions of readers worldwide — becoming a New York Times bestseller translated into 21 languages [2].

When The Forest Breathes goes further. Rather than retelling her origin story, it focuses on what comes next: the practical and philosophical implications of her research for how we manage forests, respond to climate change, and think about resilience in our own lives [1].

The book is described as combining “reverence for the natural world” with “wisdom and warmth,” addressing themes of loss, regeneration, and resilience in both natural systems and human life [1].

Choose this book if:

  • You read Finding the Mother Tree and want deeper exploration of the science
  • You’re interested in how Indigenous ecological knowledge intersects with Western research
  • You want to understand forest management through a lens of cooperation rather than extraction
  • You’re looking for a science book that reads like a story

This may not be the right fit if:

  • You want a pure field guide or technical manual on mycology
  • You’re looking for fiction (despite the narrative quality, this is non-fiction)

The narrative approach Simard takes makes complex ecology accessible — similar to how David Suzuki has communicated environmental science to broad audiences for decades.

What Role Does Indigenous Knowledge Play in the Book?

Landscape format (1536x1024) editorial photograph style image of a Pacific Northwest old-growth forest with massive cedar and Douglas fir tr

A significant one. Simard has collaborated extensively with Indigenous knowledge holders in British Columbia, and When The Forest Breathes integrates their perspectives on forest stewardship alongside her scientific findings [2].

This isn’t a token inclusion. Many Indigenous communities have practiced forest management techniques — including selective harvesting, controlled burns, and protection of old-growth trees — for thousands of years. Simard’s research has, in many cases, provided Western scientific evidence for practices that Indigenous peoples already understood [2].

The book explores several areas where these knowledge systems converge:

  • Fire management: Indigenous controlled burning practices that reduce catastrophic wildfire risk
  • Old-growth protection: Traditional practices of leaving large trees standing, which aligns with Simard’s mother tree research
  • Relational ecology: Indigenous worldviews that treat forests as communities of beings rather than resources to extract
  • Intergenerational stewardship: Managing forests for future generations rather than short-term profit

This integration of knowledge systems is one of the features that earned the book its spot on Literary Hub’s most anticipated list for 2026 [2]. It also reflects a growing trend in environmental writing: recognizing that scientific discovery and traditional knowledge are complementary, not competing.

For readers interested in how local communities engage with environmental stewardship, initiatives like LawnShare that create biodiverse habitats demonstrate similar principles at a neighborhood scale.

How Does the Book Address Climate Change and Wildfire?

Directly and practically. One of the book’s central arguments is that protecting mother trees can reduce wildfire risk and support long-term ecosystem health [2].

Here’s the logic: when old-growth forests are clear-cut, the mycorrhizal networks that sustain them are destroyed. The young trees planted afterward lack the underground support system that helps forests regulate moisture, share nutrients, and maintain structural diversity. These simplified, even-aged plantations are more vulnerable to drought, pest outbreaks, and catastrophic fire [2].

Simard’s research suggests a different approach:

  1. Retain mother trees during harvesting operations to preserve network connectivity
  2. Maintain species diversity rather than planting monocultures
  3. Protect old-growth stands as biological anchors for surrounding forests
  4. Allow natural regeneration where possible, supported by existing mycorrhizal networks
  5. Integrate Indigenous fire management practices to reduce fuel loads safely

These aren’t abstract proposals. They come from decades of field studies and the ongoing Mother Tree Project, which tests these strategies in real forest conditions across British Columbia [2].

The connection between environmental degradation and industrial practices is a theme that resonates across many sectors. Coverage of how industries have historically denied environmental impacts provides important context for understanding why Simard’s work has faced resistance from the logging industry.

What Are the Publication Details and How to Pre-Order?

DetailInformation
TitleWhen The Forest Breathes
AuthorSuzanne Simard
Release DateMarch 31, 2026 [1]
Pages336 [4]
FormatHardcover, large print, e-book, audio [1]
Hardcover Price$39.00 [4][5]
PublisherAvailable through major retailers

Pre-orders are currently available across all formats [1][3]. The audiobook format may be particularly appealing given Simard’s background as a compelling speaker — her TED talks have been viewed by over 10 million people [3].

For readers who prefer to support independent bookstores, the book is listed at retailers like Rizzoli Bookstore [4] and Coho Books [5].

How Does When The Forest Breathes Fit Into Broader Ecological Literature?

Simard’s work sits at the intersection of several trends in 2026 environmental writing:

  • Narrative science writing: Books that make complex research accessible through storytelling (in the tradition of Robin Wall Kimmerer’s Braiding Sweetgrass)
  • Two-eyed seeing: Works that hold Indigenous and Western scientific knowledge as equally valid ways of understanding the natural world
  • Climate solutions literature: Books that move beyond documenting problems to proposing actionable responses
  • Relational ecology: A growing body of work that emphasizes cooperation and interconnection in natural systems

What sets Simard apart is that she’s both the researcher and the storyteller. She’s not interpreting someone else’s science — she’s explaining her own discoveries, grounded in decades of fieldwork, and connecting them to larger questions about how humans relate to the natural world [2][3].

The book also arrives at a moment when public interest in forest ecology is high. Concerns about wildfire, deforestation, and carbon sequestration have made forest science relevant to policy discussions in ways it wasn’t a decade ago. For those interested in how environmental awareness connects to community action, beginner gardening guides offer a practical entry point into understanding soil health and plant interconnection at a personal scale.

Common Mistakes When Approaching This Book

Landscape format (1536x1024) conceptual illustration showing the intersection of Indigenous ecological knowledge and Western forest science,

  • Expecting a novel: Despite the narrative quality, this is non-fiction rooted in scientific research [1][2]
  • Assuming it repeats Finding the Mother Tree: The new book focuses on renewal and resilience rather than Simard’s personal origin story
  • Overlooking the Indigenous knowledge component: This is central to the book’s argument, not supplementary [2]
  • Reading it as anti-logging: Simard’s proposals are about better forest management, not eliminating timber harvesting
  • Skipping the science: The mycorrhizal network explanations are accessible and essential to understanding the book’s larger points

Conclusion

When The Forest Breathes represents the maturation of Suzanne Simard’s public-facing work. Where Finding the Mother Tree introduced millions of readers to the idea that forests are interconnected communities, this new book pushes those ideas toward practical application — how protecting mother trees reduces wildfire risk, how Indigenous stewardship practices align with cutting-edge ecology, and how understanding forest regeneration can inform human resilience [1][2].

Actionable next steps for interested readers:

  1. Pre-order the book in your preferred format before the March 31, 2026 release [1]
  2. Read or revisit Finding the Mother Tree for essential background on Simard’s research journey
  3. Watch Simard’s TED talks (available free online) for a visual introduction to mycorrhizal networks [3]
  4. Follow the Mother Tree Project for ongoing research updates from Simard’s team [2]
  5. Explore local forests with fresh eyes — look for old-growth trees and consider the underground networks that connect them

Whether you’re a longtime follower of Simard’s research or discovering her work for the first time, this book offers both the science and the story needed to understand why forests matter — and what we stand to lose if we don’t change how we manage them.


FAQ

When does When The Forest Breathes come out?
The book releases on March 31, 2026, with pre-orders available now in hardcover, large print, e-book, and audio formats [1][3].

How much does the hardcover cost?
The hardcover retails for $39.00 [4][5]. To purchase the book, CLICK HERE

Is this a fiction or non-fiction book?
It is non-fiction, exploring forest ecology, renewal, and resilience through narrative science writing [1][2].

Do I need to read Finding the Mother Tree first?
No, but it provides helpful context. Finding the Mother Tree covers Simard’s personal journey and early discoveries, while When The Forest Breathes focuses on renewal, resilience, and practical applications of her research.

What are mycorrhizal networks?
Underground systems of fungal threads that connect tree roots, allowing trees to share nutrients, water, and chemical signals. Simard’s research showed these networks are structured around hub “mother trees” [2][3].

Who is this book best suited for?
Readers interested in ecology, climate solutions, Indigenous knowledge, or narrative science writing. It’s accessible to general audiences — no science background required.

How long is the book?
336 pages in hardcover [4].

What is the Mother Tree Project?
An ongoing research initiative led by Simard that studies how protecting old-growth mother trees affects forest health, resilience, and regeneration in British Columbia [2].

Has the book received any early recognition?
Literary Hub named it one of the most anticipated books of 2026 [2].

Is there an audiobook version?
Yes, an audio edition will be available at release [1].

How does this book relate to climate change?
It argues that protecting mother trees and mycorrhizal networks can reduce wildfire risk, improve carbon sequestration, and build forest resilience against climate stress [2].


References

[1] When The Forest Breathes – https://suzannesimard.com/when-the-forest-breathes/
[2] Looking Ahead Dr Suzanne Simard’s When The Forest Breathes Coming March 31 2026 – https://mothertreeproject.org/2026/01/21/looking-ahead-dr-suzanne-simards-when-the-forest-breathes-coming-march-31-2026/
[3] Suzanne Simard – https://suzannesimard.com
[4] When Forest Breathes Renewal And Resilience Natural World – https://www.rizzolibookstore.com/product/when-forest-breathes-renewal-and-resilience-natural-world
[5] Coho Books listing – https://cohobooks.com/item/rC8Hn_GwKfQmiedAf2f8lA/lists/N2Ac0NFbZ3c/


Content, illustrations, and third-party video appearing on GEORGIANBAYNEWS.COM may be generated or curated with AI assistance or reproduced pursuant to the fair dealing provisions of the Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-42. Attribution and hyperlinks to original sources are provided in acknowledgment of applicable intellectual property rights. Such referencing is intended to direct traffic to and support the original rights holders’ platforms.

Climate-Resilient Perennials for Canada’s 2026 Extremes: Fast-Multiplying Varieties That Bounce Back

Last updated: March 3, 2026

Canada’s growing conditions have shifted measurably. Natural Resources Canada’s updated Plant Hardiness Zones map confirms that roughly 80% of Canadian land has warmed by half to a full zone since the last update in 2014 [1]. That warming brings longer summers but also sharper swings: late frosts, flash droughts, and intense rainfall events that flatten unprepared gardens. Climate-resilient perennials for Canada’s 2026 extremes: fast-multiplying varieties that bounce back are the practical answer for gardeners who want reliable colour and ground cover without replanting every spring.

This guide covers specific varieties tested across Canadian regions, planting schedules from the Maritimes to the Rockies, companion pairings that boost survival, and the soil practices that help these plants multiply quickly and recover from weather damage.

Key Takeaways

  • Canada’s hardiness zones have shifted: approximately 80% of land is now half to a full zone warmer, expanding the range of perennials that can survive winter [1].
  • Perennials capture carbon and protect soil better than annual crops and flowers, making them a climate-positive garden choice [2].
  • Fast-multiplying perennials like daylilies, Echinacea, Siberian iris, and native grasses can double their clump size in one to two seasons under good conditions.
  • Companion planting with deep-rooted and shallow-rooted species together improves drought tolerance and flood resilience.
  • No-till and mulch practices are critical for perennial survival through extreme weather [5].
  • Container gardening is a growing trend across Canada for 2026, offering flexibility when ground conditions are unpredictable [6].
  • Genetic research on hybrid trees in Canada is revealing how genome matching improves plant performance in warming climates [3].
  • Regional planting windows differ significantly: Maritimes gardeners plant two to three weeks later in spring than Southern Ontario gardeners.

Quick Answer

Landscape format (1536x1024) illustration showing a split-screen Canadian garden scene: left side depicts harsh winter with snow-covered dor

The best climate-resilient perennials for Canadian gardens in 2026 are varieties that tolerate both heat spikes and cold snaps, spread quickly through division or rhizomes, and require minimal chemical inputs. Top performers include Echinacea purpurea, Hemerocallis (daylilies), Rudbeckia, Monarda, Siberian iris, and native switchgrass. Plant them in spring (after last frost) or early fall (six weeks before first frost), use organic mulch, avoid tilling, and divide clumps every two to three years to accelerate coverage.


Why Are Canada’s Shifting Hardiness Zones Changing What Perennials Survive?

The short answer: warmer winters let more species survive, but wilder weather swings kill plants that aren’t genuinely tough.

Natural Resources Canada’s updated hardiness zone map shows a clear warming trend across the country [1]. A garden in the Georgian Bay region that was solidly Zone 5a a decade ago may now sit at Zone 5b or even Zone 6a. That sounds like good news, and it does mean gardeners can try species that previously wouldn’t overwinter. But the real challenge isn’t average temperature; it’s the extremes.

A January thaw followed by a sudden -30°C snap. A June heat dome pushing 38°C for a week. A 100mm rainfall event in August. These are the conditions that separate truly resilient perennials from ones that merely survive mild years.

What makes a perennial “climate-resilient” in practice:

  • Deep or extensive root systems that access moisture during drought and anchor the plant during floods
  • Crown hardiness that tolerates freeze-thaw cycles without rotting
  • Fast vegetative reproduction through rhizomes, stolons, or easy division, so damaged clumps recover quickly
  • Tolerance for variable soil moisture, from saturated spring conditions to dry summer stretches

Research in British Columbia is studying exactly this: how perennial-based farming systems perform under climate stress over multiple years [2]. The early findings confirm that perennial systems provide more stable outcomes than annuals because their established root networks buffer against weather variability.

For those interested in the broader push for environmental action in Canada, many Canadians are calling for stronger climate policy alongside personal gardening choices.

Which Fast-Multiplying Perennials Perform Best Across Canadian Regions?

The varieties below have proven track records in Canadian gardens and multiply quickly enough to fill beds within two to three seasons. Each tolerates the kind of weather extremes 2026 is delivering.

PerennialHardiness ZoneMultiplication MethodDrought ToleranceFlood ToleranceBest Region
Echinacea purpurea (Purple Coneflower)3–8Self-seeding + divisionHighModerateAll regions
Hemerocallis (Daylily)3–9Division (doubles in 1–2 years)HighModerateAll regions
Rudbeckia fulgida (Black-eyed Susan)3–9Self-seeding + rhizomesHighModerateAll regions
Monarda (Bee Balm)3–9Rhizome spreadingModerateModerateOntario, Maritimes
Iris sibirica (Siberian Iris)3–8Rhizome divisionModerateHighPrairies, Ontario
Panicum virgatum (Switchgrass)4–9Clump expansion + seedVery highVery highPrairies, Ontario
Sedum (Stonecrop)3–9Stem cuttings + divisionVery highLowRockies, Prairies
Nepeta (Catmint)3–8Division + layeringHighLowAll regions

Choose daylilies or Echinacea if the goal is fast, reliable coverage with minimal effort. Choose switchgrass if the site is prone to both drought and flooding. Choose sedum for rocky, well-drained slopes where water runs off quickly.

“Perennial crops show promise for climate resilience because they capture carbon and protect farms against loss of soil quality, drought, and other impacts of climate variability.” — Organic BC [2]

This principle applies equally to ornamental gardens. Every perennial bed that replaces annual plantings reduces the need for yearly soil disturbance and chemical inputs.

What Planting Schedules Work for Each Region in 2026?

Timing varies by region, and the shifted hardiness zones mean some traditional dates need adjusting. Below are updated planting windows based on current conditions.

Maritimes (New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, PEI, Newfoundland)

  • Spring planting: Mid-May to early June (soil temperature consistently above 10°C)
  • Fall planting: Late August to mid-September
  • Key risk: Late spring frost into early June; heavy fall rain saturating clay soils
  • Best approach: Raised beds or mounded planting for drainage; mulch heavily before winter

Ontario and Quebec

  • Spring planting: Late April to mid-May (Southern Ontario); mid-May to early June (Northern Ontario)
  • Fall planting: September to early October
  • Key risk: Summer heat domes, ice storms, and freeze-thaw cycles in shoulder seasons
  • Best approach: Deep mulch (10–15 cm) for winter insulation; companion planting for shade during heat events

Gardeners in the Georgian Bay area can find community events and local connections through celebrations and festivals that often include garden tours and plant swaps.

Prairies (Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta)

  • Spring planting: Mid-May to early June
  • Fall planting: Late August to mid-September (earlier than other regions due to early frost)
  • Key risk: Extreme cold snaps (-40°C possible), summer drought, hail
  • Best approach: Choose Zone 3 varieties minimum; use snow fencing to trap insulating snow cover over beds

British Columbia and the Rockies

  • Spring planting: March to April (coastal BC); May to June (interior and mountain regions)
  • Fall planting: September to October (coastal); August to September (interior)
  • Key risk: Atmospheric rivers causing flooding (coastal), wildfire smoke reducing photosynthesis, drought (interior)
  • Best approach: Flood-tolerant species near waterways; drought-tolerant species on slopes

BC is also home to a multi-year research project on perennial farming for climate resilience that is generating data gardeners can use [2].

How Do Companion Pairings Improve Perennial Survival?

Pairing perennials with complementary root depths, bloom times, and moisture needs creates a community of plants that supports each other through extreme conditions.

Three proven companion groupings for Canadian gardens:

  1. The Drought-Proof Trio: Switchgrass (deep roots, tall) + Echinacea (medium height, taproot) + Sedum (ground cover, shallow roots). This combination covers three soil layers, shades the ground to reduce moisture loss, and attracts pollinators throughout summer.

  2. The Flood-Tolerant Border: Siberian iris (tolerates wet feet) + Monarda (moderate moisture) + Nepeta (drier edges). Plant the iris at the lowest point, Monarda in the middle, and catmint at the highest. Water naturally drains through the grouping.

  3. The Four-Season Screen: Switchgrass or Karl Foerster grass (winter structure) + Daylilies (summer bloom) + Rudbeckia (late summer to fall) + Crocus or Galanthus bulbs (early spring). This grouping provides visual interest year-round and ensures roots are active in the soil across all seasons.

Including native plants in these groupings is especially important. As the Indigenous Climate Hub notes, gardens that incorporate native species and avoid chemical pesticides are more resilient to climate disruption [5]. Native pollinators also prefer native plant species, creating a feedback loop that strengthens the garden ecosystem. Understanding the difference between wild native bees and managed honeybees can help gardeners design pollinator-friendly plantings.

What Soil Practices Help Climate-Resilient Perennials Multiply Faster?

Healthy soil is the single biggest factor in how quickly perennials establish and spread. The practices below are backed by research and field experience.

Step-by-step soil preparation for new perennial beds:

  1. Skip the rototiller. Minimizing tillage preserves soil structure, mycorrhizal networks, and earthworm populations. Cut existing vegetation low, cover with cardboard, and top with 15 cm of compost [5].
  2. Test soil pH and drainage. Most perennials on the list above prefer slightly acidic to neutral soil (pH 6.0–7.0). If drainage is poor, build up rather than dig down.
  3. Apply organic mulch 8–10 cm deep around new plantings. Use shredded leaves, wood chips, or straw. Avoid dyed mulch or rubber mulch.
  4. Skip synthetic fertilizers. Perennials fed with slow-release organic matter (compost, aged manure) develop stronger root systems than those pushed with synthetic nitrogen [5].
  5. Inoculate with mycorrhizal fungi at planting time. These beneficial fungi extend root reach by up to 100 times, dramatically improving drought tolerance.

Common mistake: Over-watering new perennials. Most climate-resilient varieties develop deeper roots when they experience mild drought stress after establishment. Water deeply once a week rather than lightly every day.

Research from Canadian institutions is also uncovering how plants signal between leaves and roots to optimize growth with fewer inputs [4]. Within the next decade, these discoveries may produce cultivars that establish even faster.

Can Container Gardening Work for Climate-Resilient Perennials?

Yes, and it’s becoming increasingly popular across Canada in 2026 [6]. Containers offer a practical solution when ground conditions are unpredictable, whether due to flooding, contaminated soil, or rental situations.

Best perennials for Canadian containers:

  • Compact Echinacea varieties (e.g., ‘PowWow Wild Berry’): Zone 3 hardy, blooms first year
  • Dwarf daylilies (e.g., ‘Stella de Oro’): Continuous bloom, easy division
  • Sedum (e.g., ‘Autumn Joy’): Nearly indestructible in pots
  • Ornamental grasses (e.g., ‘Little Bluestem’): Native, drought-tolerant, provides winter interest

Key container tips for overwintering:

  • Use pots at least 45 cm (18 inches) in diameter to insulate roots
  • Group pots together against a south-facing wall for winter
  • Wrap pots in burlap or bubble wrap in Zones 3–4
  • Choose varieties rated two zones hardier than the local zone (container roots get colder than in-ground roots)

The container gardening trend in Canada for 2026 also includes pairing perennials with annuals like Supertunia petunias for immediate colour while the perennials establish [6].

What Does Genetic Research Mean for Future Climate-Resilient Plants?

Cutting-edge plant genetics is already influencing which varieties perform best, and the pipeline of improved cultivars is growing.

Penn State researchers studying 574 hybrid trees across the Pacific Northwest (from Alaska to Montana) found that trees whose chloroplast and nuclear genomes matched showed significantly better photosynthetic efficiency [3]. When these genomes were mismatched, the trees converted sunlight to energy less effectively, and the problem worsened in warmer environments [3].

This matters for perennial gardeners because the same principle applies to ornamental and food plants. Breeding programs that account for genome matching can produce varieties that:

  • Photosynthesize more efficiently during heat stress
  • Recover faster after cold damage
  • Grow more vigorously with less fertilizer

Canadian researchers are also working on crops that perform better with fewer inputs by decoding the signals plants send from leaves to roots [4]. While the focus is on agricultural crops like wheat and barley, the underlying science applies to ornamental perennials too.

For gardeners today, the practical takeaway is: choose locally bred or locally adapted cultivars whenever possible. Plants sourced from Canadian nurseries that grow their own stock are more likely to have the right genetic combinations for Canadian conditions than imports from warmer climates.

Those interested in how Canada is investing in large-scale infrastructure for climate adaptation can see similar forward-thinking applied at the national level.

How Does Voting and Policy Affect the Future of Resilient Gardening?

Individual garden choices matter, but so does the policy environment. Municipal bylaws on pesticide use, provincial support for native plant nurseries, and federal climate adaptation funding all shape what’s available and affordable for gardeners. Canadians who care about resilient landscapes can make their voices heard at the ballot box and through community advocacy for green infrastructure.


FAQ

Q: What is the hardiest fast-multiplying perennial for Zone 3?
A: Hemerocallis (daylily) is rated to Zone 3 and can double its clump size in one to two growing seasons through division. Echinacea purpurea is equally hardy and self-seeds readily.

Q: How often should climate-resilient perennials be divided?
A: Every two to three years for most fast-multiplying varieties. Division keeps plants vigorous, prevents centre die-out, and provides free plants for expanding the garden.

Q: Can perennials survive a flash flood?
A: Siberian iris and switchgrass tolerate temporary flooding well. Most other perennials survive brief flooding (24–48 hours) if soil drainage is adequate afterward. Prolonged waterlogging kills most perennials through root rot.

Q: Do climate-resilient perennials need fertilizer?
A: Generally no, if the soil is amended with compost annually. Synthetic fertilizers can actually reduce root depth and make plants more vulnerable to drought [5].

Q: Is it too late to plant perennials in fall?
A: Plant at least six weeks before the first hard frost so roots can establish. In most of Canada, this means planting by mid-September at the latest (earlier on the Prairies).

Q: How do perennials help fight climate change?
A: Perennial root systems capture and store carbon in the soil, reduce erosion, and eliminate the need for annual tilling, which releases stored carbon [2].

Q: Are native perennials better than cultivated varieties?
A: Native species generally support local ecosystems better (pollinators, birds, soil microbes) and are adapted to regional conditions. Cultivated varieties of native species offer the best of both worlds: local adaptation with improved garden performance.

Q: Can I grow climate-resilient perennials in containers through a Canadian winter?
A: Yes, but choose varieties rated two zones hardier than the local zone, use large pots (45 cm minimum), and insulate pots with burlap or group them against a sheltered wall.

Q: What’s the biggest mistake gardeners make with perennials?
A: Overwatering and over-fertilizing. Both produce weak, shallow root systems that fail during the first serious drought or cold snap.

Q: How do I know if my hardiness zone has changed?
A: Check Natural Resources Canada’s updated Plant Hardiness Zones map, last revised to reflect warming trends through 2026 [1].


Conclusion

Climate-resilient perennials for Canada’s 2026 extremes: fast-multiplying varieties that bounce back are not a luxury. They’re a practical response to a measurable shift in growing conditions across the country. The hardiness zones have moved, the weather has become less predictable, and gardens built on annuals or tender perennials are increasingly unreliable.

Actionable next steps:

  1. Check the updated hardiness zone for your specific location using Natural Resources Canada’s current map.
  2. Pick three to five varieties from the table above that match your zone, soil type, and site conditions.
  3. Prepare soil without tilling: cardboard, compost, and organic mulch.
  4. Plant in companion groupings rather than monoculture rows for better resilience.
  5. Divide and share every two to three years to expand coverage and strengthen plants.
  6. Avoid synthetic fertilizers and pesticides to build deep root systems and healthy soil biology.

The perennials that thrive in 2026 won’t just survive the next heat dome or ice storm. They’ll spread, fill in, and come back stronger, which is exactly what a Canadian garden needs right now.


References

[1] Shifting Seasons Climate Change Affecting Plants – https://www.oursafetynet.org/2026/02/26/shifting-seasons-climate-change-affecting-plants/

[2] Project Overview: Agroecological Transitions for Climate Resilience in BC – https://organicbc.org/project-overview-agroecological-transitions-for-climate-resilience-in-bc/

[3] Genetic Teamwork: Secret to Climate-Resilient Trees – https://phys.org/news/2025-12-genetic-teamwork-secret-climate-resilient.html

[4] Climate-Resilient Crops Can Do More with Less – https://www.innovation.ca/projects-results/research-stories/climate-resilient-crops-can-do-more-less

[5] Gardens and Climate Change: How Growing a Resilient Garden Helps Fight Global Warming – https://indigenousclimatehub.ca/2020/07/gardens-and-climate-change-how-growing-a-resilient-garden-helps-fight-global-warming/

[6] 6 Inspiring Trends Shaping Canadian Gardening 2026 – https://www.provenwinners.com/learn/finding-right-plant/6-inspiring-trends-shaping-canadian-gardening-2026


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