Arts and Culture

Help hoppers have a safe passage

Sammy, the pet salamander. Tiger salamanders are some of the local amphibians that have to cross Highway 3 to give birth each spring; Photo, Erin Perkins

With the recent warm weather and the coming spring rains, the second annual Gilpin Boothman’s Oxbow Amphibian Crossing Project is poised to take off.

On Wednesday, April 3 more than 40 people gathered in the basement of the Boundary Museum to see a presentation by biologist and project coordinator Jenny Coleshill.

Coleshill, along with the Boundary Habitat Stewards, the Granby Wilderness Society and the Christina Lake Stewardship Society, undertook this project for the first time last year.

Castlegar seed exchange - growing kiwi in the Koots?

Foodtree pupils learn how to tap trees and make syrup from indigenous trees

Foodtree Permaculture Education and the Castlegar Public Library are teaming up to help you get the garden of your dreams this season with Castlegar Seed Swap this Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

“Find new plant varieties you can grow for the first time! Maybe you’ve been seeking perfect plants to fill those empty spots in your rich garden canvas?,” said a press release issued for the event. “Come swap seeds and shop with some of our region’s most passionate gardeners! Enjoy trading your abundance of seed packets and home grown seeds. Trade and buy seeds with local gardeners or even seek a little garden advice and companionship!”

Foodtree collaborator Kate Wedemire, in an interview Wednesday, said Foodtree exists to help people learn about their own food sovereignty, and they even boast a four-acre demonstration farm in Crescent Valley (one could hear roosters crowing in the background during the telephone interview) where they focus on food Kootenay residents can grow in their own backyards .

Love, politics, spirituality, and poetry: Ghada Alatrash reads at the Rouge this Thursday

Love, politics, spirituality, and poetry: Ghada Alatrash reads at the Rouge this Thursday

This Thursday evening, Cranbrook-based author Ghada Alatrash brings her new book, So That the Poem Remains: Arabic Poems by Lebanese-American Youssef Abdul Samad to the former Rouge Gallery (and even more formerly, the Bank Of Montreal...) for an evening of music and poetry as Alatrash reads from her translations to musical accompaniment in the form of both Western and Arabic music. This week the Telegraph had an opportunity to speak with Alatrash in advance of her reading.

Castlegar United Way to close its doors

Castlegar United Way to close its doors

The region is slated to bid adieu to yet another non-profit organization – the Castlegar United Way – due to lack of volunteers and donours.

United Way president Nicole Beetstra said the almost-half-century-old charity will be closing its doors on May 31, with the official announcement coming at a general meeting on April 2.

Calling for participants in Columbia Basin Culture Tour

Calling for participants in Columbia Basin Culture Tour

Registrations are being accepted for artists/venues in the Columbia Basin to participate in the Columbia Basin Culture Tour (CBCT).

Kootenay Music Awards back for round two in May at Spiritbar

Kootenay Music Award founder Chad Hansen is optimistic Year two will be just as exciting as Year one. — submitted photo

The Kootenay Music Awards are returning this year after a raucous event last year at The Royal.

Title sponsor The Nelson Brewing Company has come on board and Black Press has partnered with KMA founder Chad Hansen to ensure the awards not only continue but flourish in the years to come as a fundraising opportunity for Kootenay Coop Radio.

Artists and fans alike will begin submitting there favourites from the past year or so in February. We will then via a panel of five judges short list that to the nominees.

Mir Lecture Series presents Wade Davis: The Wayfinders: Why ancient wisdom matters in the modern world

Mir Lecture Series presents Wade Davis: The Wayfinders: Why ancient wisdom matters in the modern world
The Mir Lecture Series and the Columbia Basin Trust present renowned anthropologist Wade Davis April 3 in Nelson.

Trail to lead, not just in Teck, but in Tech

Trail to lead, not just in Teck, but in Tech

The City of Trail may become a technological leader as early as this summer, according to city councillor Sean Mackinlay.

Reporting to council from the Governance and Operations Committee (GOC), Mackinlay said the Columbia Basin Broadband Corporation (CBBC) has now posted a Request for Proposal on BC Bid for the installation of the fibre optics through the downtown core.

“This will give the City of Trail a very competitive edge, especially for downtown businesses,” he said. “It will create a connectivity on par with New York, London, Hong Kong – any major city in the world.”

Seedy Sunday means it must be spring...

Lettuce seed growing in Rossland

“Seed is the source of life and the first link in the food chain.  Control over seed means a control over our lives, our food and our freedom.” Physicist and activist Vandana Shiva

It’s time to dust off the gardening equipment and start planning your crops for this year! Rossland REAL Food’s annual Seedy Sunday and Interact Bake Sale welcomes local seed growers from the West Kootenays on March 17 from 1 to 4 p.m. at Rossland Secondary School.

Element under fire once more after large event

Element under fire once more after large event

A request from the Element to be allowed to stay open an extra hour for a special event this Friday sparked a great deal of controversy regarding city emergency services at city council's regular meeting Monday night.

Councillor Sue Heaton-Sherstobitoff, vice chair of council's Public Safety Committee, brought up the two false fire alarms and rash of issues requiring police response at a Feb. 15 Element event as cause for concern.

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