Westman this Week

Westman this Week

Pushback prompts public hearing over Nesbitt shop

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 6 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

MUNICIPALITY OF OAKLAND-WAWANESA — A council plan has roused considerable public pushback in Oakland-Wawanesa, with a suspended councillor and other residents headed to a second public hearing next month to debate council’s plan to spend up to $900,000 to build a new public works shop.

The Municipality of Oakland-Wawanesa introduced a bylaw last year to authorize borrowing and expenditure for the new shop. The plan would also require residents to pay a fee or “tax” on their property to help pay for the building.

The municipality held a public hearing, which drew written opposition from more than 25 property owners, requiring the Manitoba Municipal Board to host its own public hearing, which is scheduled for May 1.

According to a local resident who is protesting the bylaw, the municipality’s plans have been flawed and forced. Gord Smith, who lives in Oakland-Wawanesa, told the Sun in a recent interview that some locals feel they have been left out of the process.

Advertisement

Advertise With Us

Weather

Apr. 16, 6 PM: -3°c Cloudy with wind Apr. 17, 12 AM: -4°c Cloudy with wind

Brandon MB

-8°C, Cloudy with wind

Full Forecast

Rural Roundup — April 16, 2026

By Connor McDowell Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

MINNEDOSA

Minnedosa’s Daxton Brock took to the mat at the 2026 Manitoba Winter Games and came home with two medals.

The son of Stefan and Wendy Brock helped Team West win gold in the U16 mixed wrestling event. Brock also earned silver in the 78-kilogram male category.

Daxton and his teammates trained hard during the months leading up to the event, sometimes up to 13 hours on a weekend.

Ball or strike? Let the ‘robot ump’ decide

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

“Well, it’s one, two, three strikes you’re out at the ol’ ball game.”

Maybe. Maybe not. Let’s see what the ABS system says first before we send that batter back to the dugout.

Welcome to the 21st century. The computer age has become totally involved in our lives, so why not baseball, too?

Starting this season, Major League Baseball — after extensive testing in the minor leagues and spring training games — has officially adopted the Automated Ball-Strike (ABS) Challenge System. Each team gets two challenges per game against perceived bad calls by the umpire and if they’re successful, they get another one. Two botched challenges, however, and the team cannot challenge again.

A garbage container on the side of the road in Minnedosa in April. The town introduced garbage containers in 2025 for bags to be placed into, having previously collected garbage bags off the side of the road. The town CAO said she is hopeful the new collection method will decrease the number of crows and magpies in town.

A garbage container on the side of the road in Minnedosa in April. The town introduced garbage containers in 2025 for bags to be placed into, having previously collected garbage bags off the side of the road. The town CAO said she is hopeful the new collection method will decrease the number of crows and magpies in town.

Minnedosa crow shooting program extended

By Connor McDowell Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read Preview

Minnedosa crow shooting program extended

By Connor McDowell Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

The Town of Minnedosa council voted to continue its crow and magpie control efforts at its regular council meeting on Mar. 24.

Approved volunteers will be able to shoot crows and magpies within town limits in Minnedosa for another year using 12-gauge or smaller shotguns. The program will be in effect through to next spring.

The town has an abundance of magpies and crows, Minnedosa CAO Danniele Carriere told the Sun. The control program was introduced in 2007 by council, and was later modified to include magpies, which are also considered nuisance animals and community health hazards in the area.

Shotgun shooting for approved volunteers is permitted from dawn to dusk, except on Saturday when shooting must take place between 10 a.m. and dusk; and Sunday, when it must take place between 1 p.m. and dusk.

Read
2:01 AM CDT

Make soup a spring meal with small-batch stock-making

By Wendy King 3 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

Spring is finally here, and along with it a seasonal change to our at-home menus. And while the inclination might be to shift to nice cool salads, there’s no reason to completely give up on a nice bowl of soup made with chicken stock. Instead of preparing a huge pot that might last for a few meals, small-batch stock-making will let you enjoy the flavours and benefits of a single small pot with less effort than if you were filling your “winter-sized” stockpot.

Making stock in small, as-you-go batches has advantages. For a household of two to four people, it is made fresh and used up quickly. Prep time is reduced because you are using only a small amount of vegetables and other ingredients. Prepping and freezing ingredients for several small pots’ worth can be done in about 20 minutes.

One money-saving advantage is to pick up items like fresh, bulk chicken drumsticks. You can prep several small bags of chicken and vegetables all at once and divide it into small freezer bags. Five small bags of stock ingredients take up a fraction of the space that five one-litre containers of prepared stock would occupy in your freezer.

Here’s how to prep freezer bags of ingredients for small-batch stock-making. Chicken drumsticks are an ideal size. You’ll need two drumsticks for each small bag of ingredients. Into each bag place two drumsticks, one peeled and chunked carrot, one cleaned and chunked stick of celery and one half of a peeled onion. (This is also a good time to use up any of these vegetables before the end of their shelf life.)

Therapy dogs bring comfort to hospitals and care homes

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative Reporter 3 minute read 2:00 AM CDT

Prairie Mountain Health is highlighting the role of its therapy dog program, which includes about 50 registered pet therapy teams providing visits in hospitals and personal care homes.

The program, co-ordinated through Prairie Mountain Health and St. John Ambulance, continues to receive positive feedback, officials say.

Therapy dogs in the program come in all sizes and breeds, but must meet strict standards, including being friendly, patient, confident and gentle, while remaining at ease in a variety of environments. The dogs must enjoy human interaction and be comfortable being handled by unfamiliar people, while their handlers serve as trained volunteers.

Volunteer Ngaire Abernethy and her certified therapy dog, Tai, have visited the Brandon Regional Health Centre since 2017. Abernethy, who has volunteered for more than 20 years, said interactions with therapy animals can help improve well-being.

Foodgrains Bank Manitoba regional representative Dale Friesen (far right) visits Pauline (centre), a farmer and former project participant in Embu, Kenya, who has continued the work that she learned during a Foodgrains Bank-funded agriculture and livelihoods project implemented by ACC&S, local partner of Canadian Baptist Ministries. (Photo by Nicola Skinner)

Foodgrains Bank Manitoba regional representative Dale Friesen (far right) visits Pauline (centre), a farmer and former project participant in Embu, Kenya, who has continued the work that she learned during a Foodgrains Bank-funded agriculture and livelihoods project implemented by ACC&S, local partner of Canadian Baptist Ministries. (Photo by Nicola Skinner)

Tour highlights hardship, hope in fight against hunger

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative 3 minute read Preview

Tour highlights hardship, hope in fight against hunger

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative 3 minute read Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026

A Manitoba representative with the Canadian Foodgrains Bank says global food insecurity continues to mirror economic pressures felt at home, but recent work in Kenya is offering signs of long-term hope.

Dale Friesen, the organization’s regional representative for Manitoba, travelled to Kenya in February as part of a learning tour examining food security initiatives supported by Canadian partners.

Friesen said many of the challenges facing families locally, including inflation and job insecurity, are also being experienced globally, often compounded by additional pressures.

“In many of these places, economic pressures and food insecurity are intensified by factors like climate change, violent conflict, and a lack of safety nets for families experiencing deep hardships,” he said.

Read
Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026

Approximately two members of the public were in attendance at the open house, aside from members of each participating organization. (Photo by Renee Lilley)

Approximately two members of the public were in attendance at the open house, aside from members of each participating organization. (Photo by Renee Lilley)

Public safety event reveals lack of engagement

By Renee Lilley Local Journalism Initiative 2 minute read Preview

Public safety event reveals lack of engagement

By Renee Lilley Local Journalism Initiative 2 minute read Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026

PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE — Local officials are expressing deep frustration following what they describe as “abysmal” attendance at a public safety open house intended to address crime and community policing in the city.

The event, held the evening of March 25 at Stride Place, was organized by the RCMP, the City of Portage la Prairie, and the Portage Community Revitalization Corporation (PCRC). It featured presentations from the local RCMP detachment and Community Safety Officers (CSOs), alongside volunteer groups that included the Bear Clan, the Citizens on Patrol Program (COPP) and Crime Stoppers.

Mayor Sharilyn Knox took to social media in an emotional video statement to address the lack of community engagement.

“I have to say that the attendance was abysmal,” Knox said. “We purposely do something to help inform or help people get involved in a solution, and nobody shows up. I honestly felt for the organizations that were there … none of them have easy jobs.”

Read
Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026

A new donor-funded echocardiography suite at the Boundary Trails Health Centre near Winkler is expected to improve access to cardiac testing for southern Manitoba patients while reducing the need to travel to Winnipeg. (Shared Health)

A new donor-funded echocardiography suite at the Boundary Trails Health Centre near Winkler is expected to improve access to cardiac testing for southern Manitoba patients while reducing the need to travel to Winnipeg. (Shared Health)

Rural hospital gets new cardiac testing suite

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative 2 minute read Preview

Rural hospital gets new cardiac testing suite

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative 2 minute read Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026

A new echocardiography suite has opened at the Boundary Trails Health Centre, improving access to cardiac testing for residents across southern Manitoba.

The suite was made possible through a donation from the late Bill Lyne and his wife, Colleen Lyne, facilitated by the Boundary Trails Health Centre Foundation.

Shared Health said the new facility includes state-of-the-art equipment for non-invasive cardiac testing and is expected to support about 1,600 echocardiograms annually once fully staffed. The added capacity is aimed at reducing the need for patients to travel to Winnipeg for testing.

In a statement, the Lyne family said the couple had discussed making a meaningful contribution to their community prior to Bill Lyne’s death in 2021, and identified the need for local echocardiography services as a priority.

Read
Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026

Emily and Nelson Gould are seen with their six-year-old daughter. She graduated Kindergarten in March after struggling to learn the curriculum in public school and subsequently switching to homeschooling. Her parents met with a local homeschool supporter and advocate, Larissa MacDonald, for a consultation about whether homeschooling could work, and after the meeting they decided to move forward with it. Emily said her daughter is thriving now. (Emily Gould/Facebook)

Emily and Nelson Gould are seen with their six-year-old daughter. She graduated Kindergarten in March after struggling to learn the curriculum in public school and subsequently switching to homeschooling. Her parents met with a local homeschool supporter and advocate, Larissa MacDonald, for a consultation about whether homeschooling could work, and after the meeting they decided to move forward with it. Emily said her daughter is thriving now. (Emily Gould/Facebook)

Local mother takes up role as homeschool helpdesk

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 6 minute read Preview

Local mother takes up role as homeschool helpdesk

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 6 minute read Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026

A Minnedosa mother has become a helpdesk for Westman parents who are looking to homeschool their children.

Larissa MacDonald supports local parents for up to 16 hours per month in her spare time, forwarding information packages, answering online questions, and providing in-person consultations about her passion of homeschooling. In a recent interview with the Sun, MacDonald said she wants to make homeschooling more accessible.

“I would say it’s my ministry. It’s my passion. It’s what I love to do,” MacDonald said. “I love my children and spending time with them, and I want to enable others to do so as well.”

MacDonald is a mother of eight children, a board member of the Manitoba Association of Christian Home Schools, and an administrator for the local Facebook group, Westman Homeschool Connection. She said she often helps local parents find their way through a common set of questions.

Read
Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026

It’s officially spring: Masters week is here

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Preview

It’s officially spring: Masters week is here

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026

For many casual sports fans, this is the week they start paying attention to golf. It’s Masters Week at Augusta, Ga., and this year’s edition offers up a number of intriguing questions. Such as:

Considering the last two Players’ champions went on to win the Masters in the same year (Scottie Scheffler in 2024; Rory McIlroy in 2025), should the Green Jacket tailors seek Cameron Young’s measurements and get an early start?

Did the recent traffic accident suffered by Tiger Woods officially eliminate any chance that he would one day make a comeback at the Masters, where he has won five times?

Will a golfer playing in the Masters for the first time win in his debut, joining the late Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979 as the first player to do so since 1935?

Read
Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026

With snow melting, it’s to prepare your gardening tools

By Wendy King 5 minute read Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026

The snow is finally down to a few stubborn patches lurking in the shade and your green thumb is twitching … and that means gardening. April 14 is National Gardening Day — time to open up the gardening shed and re-acquaint yourself with the tools and containers you packed away last fall.

It’s a good idea to do an inventory of the supplies and tools you have and the condition they are in. Check gardening gloves and kneepads for wear and tear, and from there you can move on to your tools.

Bernie Whetter at The Green Spot Home & Garden shared some advice, dividing essential tools into four categories: long-handle, D-handle, hand tools and pruners.

Whetter starts with the long-handle tools.

Rashel Quill, a Brandon resident, learns how to peel a flesh layer from a moose hide. She is using a scraping bone tool, made from the leg of a moose. (Connor McDowell/The Brandon Sun)

Rashel Quill, a Brandon resident, learns how to peel a flesh layer from a moose hide. She is using a scraping bone tool, made from the leg of a moose. (Connor McDowell/The Brandon Sun)

Hands-on workshop teaches locals about tanning hides

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Preview

Hands-on workshop teaches locals about tanning hides

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026

RM OF CORNWALLIS — A Brandon resident said she was thrilled to participate in late March in a one-week hide camp hosted outside of Brandon because it gave her a chance to reconnect with her roots.

The resident, Rashel Quill, attended a workshop put on by Seven Teachings Art Collective over spring break in the RM of Cornwallis. Quill was one of a few young women who learned how to flesh hides, scrape fur and prepare hides for conversion into various tools and products using methods shared by her ancestors.

“My people have been suppressed for so long, to learn about it again is going to keep us alive,” Quill told the Sun while holding the leg bone of a moose. “It’s just nice to be here.”

In the wooded space, under a warm spring sun on a bluebird day, Quill was being taught how to use the carved bone to “flesh” a moose hide. She wore designs that reflected her Indigenous heritage, while striking and tearing away a sinewy layer of tissue to prepare the hide for processing into products like moccasins. A bonfire roasted nearby, singing the nose of a moose, considered a delicacy to many First Nations people. The tongue of the moose was boiling over the same fire.

Read
Thursday, Apr. 9, 2026

Jays’ goal in ’26: Just one more step

Bruce Penton 5 minute read Thursday, Apr. 2, 2026

There’s only one way the Toronto Blue Jays can improve on their 2025 Major League Baseball season and fans don’t have to go to Google or Dan Shulman to find out the simple answer: Win the World Series.

Coming off a spectacular — and unexpected — season where they lost the Series to the L.A. Dodgers in the 11th inning of Game 7. Prior to the start of last year, the Jays were picked by most so-called experts to finish last in the American League East. After a slow start, they picked up steam and by mid-July, it was evident they were among two or three teams regarded as the class of the entire league.

This year, with pre-season expectations much loftier, can they maintain their winning ways and make it back to the Fall Classic?

Yes they can. Not only do the Blue Jays have most of their 2025 roster back for this season (except for infielder Bo Bichette, who signed as a free agent with the Mets), but management was aggressive in the trade and free-agent markets to fill a few holes. This spring, those so-called experts who had only bad things to say about the Jays this time last year, are crowing about the imminent repeat as American League champs. Canadian fans can only hope those experts aren’t as off-base as they were last year.

Private Albert Henry Detmold from Roblin, Man. (Supplied)

Private Albert Henry Detmold from Roblin, Man. (Supplied)

First World War soldier’s remains traced to Manitoba

Kevin Rollason 5 minute read Preview

First World War soldier’s remains traced to Manitoba

Kevin Rollason 5 minute read Thursday, Apr. 2, 2026

WINNIPEG — More than a century after he was killed by an enemy shell during the First World War in France, the remains of Roblin-area farmer Albert (Bert) Henry Detmold have been identified.

The 33-year-old private, who served with the 107th Overseas Battalion, was killed while digging a trench on the first day of the Battle of Hill 70 on Aug. 15, 1917.

Despite the efforts of the surviving members of the unit to find the dead and wounded, in the midst of enemy attacks that involved mustard gas, Detmold’s remains could not be found.

It wasn’t until August 2020 that a construction crew, doing excavation of a site intended for a new hospital, discovered his remains.

Read
Thursday, Apr. 2, 2026

Chelsea McKee-Trenchard, owner at Raven’s End Bookshop is also a fan of gothic horror. (Submitted)

Chelsea McKee-Trenchard, owner at Raven’s End Bookshop is also a fan of gothic horror. (Submitted)

Wendy King 5 minute read Preview

Wendy King 5 minute read Thursday, Apr. 2, 2026

Owner-run bookstores have become frighteningly rare these days, but Chelsea McKee-Trenchard, proprietor at Raven’s End Books: The Horror Bookshop didn’t let that scare her off.

In business in Winnipeg since 2024, she’s established her shop as one of only three bookstores in Canada dedicated to horror. Her clientele are located all over Manitoba and across the country.

McKee-Trenchard has paired up with Brandon-based Black Wheat Brewing to present a pop-up for Westman horror readers who might be challenged to find the scary stories they’re seeking. It gives those readers a chance to find out what’s new and shivery in print and to connect with others who may share similar tastes.

McKee-Trenchard bills Raven’s End Books as “Everything you need for your spooky, cozy read.” That says a lot about what she carries, about how broad the “horror” category really is, and how it could be defined by what the reader is looking for in a scary story.

Read
Thursday, Apr. 2, 2026

LOAD MORE WESTMAN THIS WEEK ARTICLES