The Importance of Protecting Your Personal Information

Every year there are more incidents of people’s personal information being stolen and used for nefarious purposes. Perhaps directly related, every year it gets more difficult to protect our personal information from getting into the wrong hands. If you’re the type of person that throws away corporate documents without shredding or tosses mail into the…

The Importance of Recycling

  Have you ever watched someone throw a recyclable into an ordinary trashcan and gotten an eye twitch out of anger? No matter how much we may wish it, not everyone cares about the environment the way we wish they would. Next time someone doesn’t respect the blue bin, you’ll be armed with enough facts…

Hundreds of 'perfectly good boots' trashed at Yellowknife dump, people snatch them up

A heap of black, yellow and orange boots at the Yellowknife dump caused a buzz among local residents — so much so that seemingly, within a week of being thrown out, most of the boots had found new homes. Longtime Yellowknifer Walt Humphries first noticed the pile of boots last Friday. “These ones haven’t been used much,” said Humphries, a writer, artist and prospector who’s lived in Yellowknife for over 40 years. “They’re perfectly good boots, there’s nothing wrong with them.” He said he saw close to a hundred pairs of steel-toed miners boots from the brand Viking Footwear — the kind of boots that Humphries says he’s been using “all my years up in Yellowknife.” A brand new pair goes for well over $100 online, noted Humphries. Humphries said he saw a pile of steel-toed miners boots from the brand Viking Footwear. They retail for well over $100 online. By Friday, there were only a few pairs left, mostly in larger sizes.

New Waterford basketball team slip makes America's Funniest Home Videos final 3

They fall like dominoes.One by one, all 12 players on the Breton Education Centre boys basketball team hit a wet patch in the corner of the gymnasium and slide to the floor, piling onto one another in a jumble of flailing limbs, before scrambling back to their feet to continue their pre-game lap of the court. That’s the slapstick moment that Grade 9 student Aaron McMullin caught on video during this February’s New Waterford Coal Bowl Classic in Nova Scotia. The moment, beginning at 17 seconds into the video, became a highlight of the tournament, and one that few in the gym that day will soon forget — especially since it will soon be widely broadcast on television.  “I think it was just the fact that nobody really expected it, but when the first three people went down, everybody knew something was up,” said McMullin. Grade 10 student and BEC Bears shooting guard Aaron MacLean was the second-last player to hit the court. It was his first Coal Bowl and he was excited to do the traditional run around the gym. “I ran out high-fiving all the kids, then I saw 10 guys fall right before me, so I started kind of laughing,” he said. “So I tried to kind of run around them, and it was worse than ice. As soon as I touched it, I was one of the last ones, and I went flying.” MacLean was among the last to fall.

Mint's newest coin showcases famous Falcon Lake UFO encounter in Manitoba

One could be forgiven for describing the mint’s newest coin as rather otherworldly.The Royal Canadian Mint’s newest offering features Manitoba’s most famous UFO encounter, which happened in 1967 when Stefan Michalak went looking for precious metals near Falcon Lake. “I was very surprised, frankly. They called me out of the blue and said ‘I have this idea,'” said Stefan’s son, Stan Michalak.  “It’s not every day the mint calls and says, ‘Hey, we’re going to do a coin.'” Stefan, whom his son says was a “rock nut,” was searching for gold, silver and other precious metals and gems in Whiteshell Provincial Park one May long weekend in 1967. At about noon, two craft appeared in the sky, he said, and one landed about 50 metres away from Stefan on a flat rocky area. The other craft left, but the first stayed, said Stefan. He observed it from the bush for about half an hour before approaching it. “In his mind, he reasoned, ‘This must be some sort of a military experimental craft. They’ve landed here by mistake or maybe out of need. Maybe they’re in trouble,'” said Stan. “‘I’ll offer to help them out.'” When Stefan approached the craft, which he later described as saucer-shaped and made of a stainless steel material, he touched it and the heat melted the fingertips of his heavy gloves. There was an opening he put his head through, said Stan, but he didn’t enter. The craft then expelled a cloud of gas and lifted off, knocking Stefan off his feet, setting his shirt aflame and leaving a distinct pattern of burns on his chest. There will be only 4,000 of the collectors coins minted.

Newfoundlander finds homegrown solution for BBQ brush health hazard

Jason Janes really loves to barbecue.He can be found behind one of the three outside grills at his home in the Humber Valley on Newfoundland’s west coast a few times a week, and he keeps things sizzling all year long. “I love things that are low and slow,” he said, describing his favourite dish — pulled pork with smoked macaroni and cheese. Janes says grooves will naturally form over time to match people’s barbecue grates.

Five Calgary city councillors talk about their real names

Calgarians might be surprised to learn that five city councillors do not use their real names.It’s a curious thing, given that in politics your name often becomes part of your brand.  Are these elected officials not being true to themselves? Or are they just going with what’s practical, comfortable or familiar? It’s not your everyday question but I recently asked them:  Councillor, what’s your real name? Without further ado, let’s meet these councillors.  Councillor Harnirjodh Chahal ​ Coun. George Chahal chose his first name as a child.

Distressed seabird rallies after dinner and a warm bed in Newfoundland home

When Antje Springman and Dennis Minty spotted something huddled under the honeysuckle shrub outside their home along a river bank in Conception Bay North, they thought it was one of their chickens in distress.Springman went out to investigate and discovered a very different type of bird — a Great Cormorant, a black seabird about the size of a goose, commonly called a shag in Newfoundland and Labrador. “It has a very long neck and about a three-foot wingspan and a very long five-inch bill with a pretty sharp hook on the end, so I called out to Dennis to go and get me some welder’s gloves,” said Springman. Antje Springman and Dennis Minty share a love of animals. They care for a dog, cat, chickens and sheep on their property and often help animals in need.

Watch as a Saskatchewan woman saves the day for a perplexed porcupine

A Saskatchewan woman’s helping hand — or window scraper — has gone viral this week, with a video showing her assist a beleaguered porcupine garnering more than 1.2 million views on Facebook. Raelene Prieb lives between Yorkton and Melville. She was on her way home on Monday when she spotted a porcupine in a turtle-like state, on its back and unable to get up.  Prieb told CBC Radio’s The Morning Edition she knew right away she needed to give the clumsy creature a hand. “I’m going to have to help him, clearly. He’s having a really bad Monday,” she said. Rather than pick the prickly rodent up with her hands, she instead grabbed her window scraper. The porcupine grabbed on and managed to roll over. When the porcupine was upright, it looked at the snowbank, which had presumably felled it. It attempted to scale it. “I didn’t know if I should kinda push him up [the snowbank],” Prieb said. “I didn’t really want to touch him.” The critter’s attempt did not go well and it tumbled back onto its backside. Prieb once again helped it up, then used the same scraper to clear a path through the snowbank, allowing the animal to finally get on its merry way. When Prieb got home, she uploaded the video to her Facebook profile unedited, unaware that the settings for the video were set to public. The video blew up. At one point, she excitedly told her daughter that it had more than 5,000 views. It has since eclipsed 1.2 million. As for why she thinks the video is so popular, she said people are drawn to a feel-good story. “People need to see compassion and mercy and grace out there,” Prieb said.