Westman this Week

Rural Roundup for Nov. 13, 2025

Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 6 minute read Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

VIRDEN

A $1.6 million expansion project has crossed the finish line at the Virden Animal Hospital.

A ribbon cutting was held in late October. New medical equipment was added to the facility, as well as exam rooms, and three new operating rooms were outfitted.

A 20-year loan was signed with the Virden Veterinary Services District Board as well as veterinary partners. The board has a yearly budget of about $60,000. The board receives $6,000 yearly from nearby municipalities, $22,000 from the province, and charges customers a few dollars.

Advertisement

Advertise With Us

Weather

Jan. 29, 6 PM: -22°c Partly cloudy Jan. 30, 12 AM: -26°c Cloudy

Brandon MB

-17°C, Cloudy with wind

Full Forecast

Survivors Share Heartbreaking Stories to Help Teens Make Safer Choices on Manitoba Roads

Steven Sukkau, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Preview

Survivors Share Heartbreaking Stories to Help Teens Make Safer Choices on Manitoba Roads

Steven Sukkau, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

WINNIPEG — Two Manitobans whose lives were forever changed by dangerous driving are sharing their stories with young people across the province this month, as part of Manitoba Public Insurance’s annual Friends For Life speaker series.

Jon Tiessen was hit head-on by an impaired driver while driving home from watching a hockey game, an instant that changed the trajectory of his life. Sandra LaRose lost her teenage daughter to distracted driving. Now, both are on a mission to prevent others from suffering the same pain.

The two-week Friends For Life tour kicked off Nov. 3 and will reach 20 schools across Manitoba, including stops in Hamiota, Carberry, Powerview, Erickson and Winnipeg.

Jon, his sister Rosalie Finch, and Sandra will speak directly to students about how one choice behind the wheel can lead to lifelong consequences, highlighting three major contributing factors to deaths on Manitoba roads: speeding, impaired driving and distracted driving.

Read
Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

Survivors of impaired and distracted driving are sharing their powerful stories through Manitoba Public Insurance’s Friends For Life speaker series to urge Manitoba teens to make safer choices behind the wheel and prevent future tragedies on the province’s roads. (Photo courtesy Sandra LaRose Facebook page.)

Survivors of impaired and distracted driving are sharing their powerful stories through Manitoba Public Insurance’s Friends For Life speaker series to urge Manitoba teens to make safer choices behind the wheel and prevent future tragedies on the province’s roads. (Photo courtesy Sandra LaRose Facebook page.)

So close, but no Series’ title, for Blue Jays

Bruce Penton 5 minute read Preview

So close, but no Series’ title, for Blue Jays

Bruce Penton 5 minute read Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

If this year’s World Series could be narrowed down to a simple ‘Who killed the Toronto Blue Jays?’, let’s get right to the point and play a sports version of Clue. Open the little envelope and here’s what’s inside:

It was Hoffman.

In the ninth.

With a slider.

Read
Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Jeff Hoffman (23) delivers a pitch against the Los Angeles Dodgers during eighth inning Game 7 World Series playoff MLB baseball action in Toronto on Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Frank Gunn

Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Jeff Hoffman (23) delivers a pitch against the Los Angeles Dodgers during eighth inning Game 7 World Series playoff MLB baseball action in Toronto on Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Frank Gunn

Lymphedema Program Brings New Hope to Cancer Survivors in Prairie Mountain Health

Steven Sukkau, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Preview

Lymphedema Program Brings New Hope to Cancer Survivors in Prairie Mountain Health

Steven Sukkau, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

WINNIPEG — When Prairie Mountain Health received new funding in October 2024 to hire a part-time occupational therapist for lymphedema management, it marked the beginning of a quiet but powerful shift in cancer aftercare for patients in western Manitoba.

For years, cancer survivors experiencing lymphedema, a painful and often debilitating swelling caused by an abnormal buildup of protein-rich fluid, faced long waits or had to travel to Winnipeg for treatment. Many simply went without care.

Now, thanks to support from CancerCare Manitoba’s Centre of Hope, those services are available in Brandon.

Kayla Bueckert joined the CancerCare team as the new occupational therapist shortly after the funding announcement and quickly undertook specialized training to become a certified lymphedema therapist. She integrated herself into the cancer care environment, taking on referrals from across the region and providing targeted therapy to patients experiencing swelling in the breast, limbs, head, or neck.

Read
Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

Kayla Bueckert, Occupational Therapist. (Photo courtesy Prairie Mountain Health)

Kayla Bueckert, Occupational Therapist. (Photo courtesy Prairie Mountain Health)

Expect a “vibrant” night when Jâca comes to town

Wendy King 5 minute read Preview

Expect a “vibrant” night when Jâca comes to town

Wendy King 5 minute read Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

Expect the unexpected when you encounter Jâca, a dynamic musical duo made up of guitar and clarinet coming to the Western Manitoba Centennial Auditorium on Nov. 23.

Award-winning Jâca (sounds like Zsa Zsa but with a K-sound in the middle) is made up of guitarist Jaxon Williams and clarinetist Wesley Ferreir.

The musically adventurous guitar/clarinet pairing is unusual. And so is their name, a reflection of their combined cultural roots and ties. An American, Jaxon Williams is connected to Spanish culture (his wife is Spanish) and spends part of the year in Spain and plays Spanish guitar. Wesley Ferreira’s family is Portuguese-Canadian. The word “jâca,” is from Portuguese. The phonetics of the word also come from Spanish. The name Jâca, like the music they play, is a cultural blend.

Both Jâca members come from musical roots. Williams’ mother teaches piano and children’s music classes.

Read
Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

Award-winning clarinet/guitar duo Jâca are bringing their eclectic musical style to the Western Manitoba Centennial Auditorium November 23. (Submitted)

Award-winning clarinet/guitar duo Jâca are bringing their eclectic musical style to the Western Manitoba Centennial Auditorium November 23. (Submitted)

Wheat Kings broadcaster is dedicated to a rare career

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 8 minute read Preview

Wheat Kings broadcaster is dedicated to a rare career

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 8 minute read Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

If you’ve ever scrubbed the radio during a Wheat Kings game, you’ve probably heard the voice of Rob Mahon.

The 32-year-old broadcaster is the voice of the Wheat Kings. When residents hear on their car radio that that “Mistelbacher fired a shot,” or “Ruzicka is the man between the pipes,” it’s Mahon making those calls as he stands in a booth at the Assiniboine Credit Union Place.

Mahon has been working in this role for the Wheat Kings for two years now. And it’s not a side-gig, it’s not a community hobby, the broadcasting role is a career job for the man — and work that he takes incredibly seriously.

At a glance, listeners can see a large part of Mahon’s job just by tuning into the show. It might seem straightforward (a guy is describing what happens on the ice. Big whoop, right?) but there is a lot that goes into the work that goes unseen.

Read
Thursday, Nov. 13, 2025

School bus collisions spur warnings

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative 3 minute read Preview

School bus collisions spur warnings

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative 3 minute read Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025

When the stop sign swings out and the lights on a school bus start flashing, drivers are required to stop immediately. But too often, they don’t, and it’s putting children’s lives at risk.

Over the past four years, there have been 451 collisions involving school buses in Manitoba, resulting in 105 injuries and endangering countless students on their way to and from school.

Manitoba Public Insurance (MPI) and the River East Transcona School Division (RETSD) recently joined forces to remind Manitobans that school bus safety is a shared responsibility.

“Most students will ride a bus during their school career, and it is so important that we do all we can to make sure that each and every one of them is safe while getting to and from school,” said Maria Campos, vice-president and chief customer and product officer with MPI.

Read
Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025

Minot optimistic despite drop in Canadian visitors

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 7 minute read Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025

The tourism department in Minot, N.D. is reporting a roughly 20 per cent decrease in Canadian tourism at the end of the year that was branded by “elbows up” messaging and anti-United States rhetoric.

Minot definitely saw impacts to tourism compared to a normal year, said Visit Minot executive director Stephanie Schoenrock. The impacts are seen through a variety of data, including border crossings, web traffic, visitation, hotel data and some cellphone metrics that the team tracks.

“It’s probably about what I would have expected,” Schoenrock told the Sun recently. “I would have expected somewhere between a 20 and 30 per cent reduction.”

The tourism director said there is a major reason that Minot was expected to be resilient this year. The city, which is southwest of Brandon, has decades of relationships built with Canadians in the area, and that seems to have played a role in keeping things level, she said.

Canada’s best ever, Brad Gushue, to retire

Byt Bruce Penton 5 minute read Preview

Canada’s best ever, Brad Gushue, to retire

Byt Bruce Penton 5 minute read Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025

Curling in Canada through the years has been dominated by players from Manitoba, Alberta, Ontario and Saskatchewan, but No. 1 on the all-time list of Canadian greats is from St. John’s, N.L.

Brad Gushue announced recently the 2025-26 season would be his last, but he needn’t worry about his legacy in the roaring game. He’s No. 1 all-time. Six Brier titles, a world championship, four silvers at the worlds, 15 Grand Slam titles and an Olympic gold medal will secure his spot as Canada’s best all time.

Putting Gushue at the mountaintop of Canadian curling skips is easy, but how do the rest of Canada’s ice kings rate?

Rankings are from 1980 through today, because the game has changed so much over the years. Today, the world’s best play the game on a full-time basis. Ice conditions are perfect, sweeping techniques have been perfected and the best curlers from around the world compete regularly against each other. (A shoutout to the legendary Ernie Richardson of Regina, who should be included on any list ranking the country’s best curlers, but he was from a bygone era. Other greats from that era were Hec Gervais and Matt Baldwin of Alberta, and Don Duguid and Ken Watson of Manitoba.)

Read
Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025

What is the ‘Last Post’ and where did it come from?

By Wendy King 5 minute read Preview

What is the ‘Last Post’ and where did it come from?

By Wendy King 5 minute read Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025

Canadians will soon gather across the country to remember and honour those who have paid the ultimate sacrifice in the military service of this country. Commemorative services will be held in venues large and small, and as the clock strikes eleven, the mournful strains of “Last Post” will be played.

The tune is evocative and instantly recognizable, certainly to anyone who has grown up in this country, or any Commonwealth country, and has likely heard it from childhood. Its association is immediate. What is this tune and where does it come from?

Gregory Kennedy is a professor and dean of arts at Brandon University. He is a published historian with a specialty in the history of early Canada, especially New France and the French Atlantic World. His most current book is “Lost in the Crowd: Acadian Soldiers of Canada’s First World War” (McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2024). He shares some insights.

“Music is a fundamental part of military culture. It has been for a long time,” Kennedy said.

Read
Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025

Speckled cow Nina comes through Brandon

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 2 minute read Preview

Speckled cow Nina comes through Brandon

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 2 minute read Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025

A special cow made her way through town last week as farmers gathered at Manitoba Ag Ex 2025.

Pjs Nina 86N, a cow of the white-and-black speckle park breed, stopped in from Alberta. Less than a year old, she was brought to Brandon as she gets ready to raise money for young cattle farmers across Canada.

P.J. and Susan Ruszkowski bred the cow on their farm in Prince Albert, Sask. They chose Nina to be part of a fundraising campaign in which the cow will join a herd of cattle somewhere in Canada, and the price paid for her will go the Canadian Junior Speckle Park Association.

“We’re just trying to support the youth,” P.J. said during Ag Ex. “Because without these young folks doing this here, we’re not here.”

Read
Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025

Rural Roundup — Nov. 6, 2025

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 6 minute read Preview

Rural Roundup — Nov. 6, 2025

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 6 minute read Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025

KILLARNEY

A billiards club has finished a lengthy interior renovation that improved bathrooms, removed asbestos features and installed equipment for temperature control.

The club had to get a hazmat team in to dispose of tiles that contained 1.5 per cent asbestos, club member Ole Larsen said. In place of the tiles, a new carpet has been installed.

Two heat pumps have been installed in the building at a cost of around $6,000. The equipment doubles as air conditioners in the summer.

Read
Thursday, Nov. 6, 2025

Rural Roundup — Jan. 29, 2026

5 minute read 2:00 AM CST

KILLARNEY

Piles of sand and gravel are rising rapidly on nearby farmland — and raising eyebrows – as a future highway paving project begins to take shape.

This spring, the province will repair 25 kilometres of Highway 3, between Killareney and Cartwright; a good deal for a local farmer who was asked by the contractor to store gravel and sand on his property.

Kevin Archibald, who lives on Highway 3 near to the junction of Highway 18, said he was surprised when contractors asked to rent 10 acres of his land, describing the arrangement as “very lucrative, compared to crop land.”

by Wendy King 5 minute read 2:00 AM CST

The days are frozen and life feels a little uninspiring at the end of January. To perk things up and give yourself something to look forward to, why not start planning your annual holiday? Or maybe a dream trip? Or both? Since Jan. 27 is National Plan for Vacation Day, this is the ideal time to look ahead a season or two, or even a year or two.

Start with determining what vacation days you are entitled to and when. See where statutory holidays fall and decide if you can use them to extend your break. Have an easily accessible system to track and store research, notes and checklists.

If you’re planning a vacation close to home, get a budget in order that includes both fun and contingencies, and see that you have the right type of insurance. Arrange for someone to keep an eye on the house, and make sure you are tracking your packing.

For adventure that’s further afield, all of the above still applies. Travel abroad is an investment, both financially and personally. It can be a grand deposit into your lifelong memory bank.

Neepawa planning forum for homeownership

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Preview

Neepawa planning forum for homeownership

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read 2:00 AM CST

The Town of Neepawa is organizing an unusual program to educate residents about homeownership.

The municipality aims to host a second public forum this spring, following its first in November, to help residents explore pathways to homeownership, Marilyn Crewe, economic development officer for the town, told the Sun in a recent interview. The town is working with residents to accommodate population growth and support a large amount of newcomers.

“It is unusual, but I believe that education is key to making good decisions,” Crewe said. “Especially for our newcomers. Neepawa is like 50 per cent newcomer-Canadian, and they’ve never bought a house, they’ve never walked through a Canadian process for buying a home, and so that drives me to make sure that there’s as much education out there as possible.

The forum was created with newcomers in mind, however the education is general good practice for everybody and should probably be more common in other communities, Crewe said.

Read
2:00 AM CST

LEFT: The Town of Neepawa is focusing development on a section of land on its west side to accommodate rapid growth the city has received due to immigration. (Connor McDowell/Brandon Sun files) RIGHT: Marilyn Crewe, economic development officer at the Town of Neepawa. (Neepawa and Area Immigrant Settlement Services)

LEFT: The Town of Neepawa is focusing development on a section of land on its west side to accommodate rapid growth the city has received due to immigration. (Connor McDowell/Brandon Sun files) RIGHT: Marilyn Crewe, economic development officer at the Town of Neepawa. (Neepawa and Area Immigrant Settlement Services)

Officials recount night of Lake Manitoba rescue

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read 2:00 AM CST

A police officer and a military member who were involved in the rescue of three stranded fishers on Lake Manitoba earlier this month detailed the night as a collaboration that involved some help from the missing fishers.

RCAF member Capt. Zach Hotte was on the rescue plane, a CC-130H Hercules, on the morning of Jan. 10, flying 1,000 feet over Lake Manitoba when a flashing light caught the attention of his spotter. He said the light was cast by the stranded fishers who were signalling for help.

“The search and rescue technician who was sitting in the left window was able to spot them right away,” Hotte said in a recent interview with the Sun. “The second we got close, we had a light shining directly at the plane.”

Hotte said the fishers’ action of shining a blinking light at the plane made a real difference. The rescue team was dealing with reduced visibility due to snowfall, as well as darkness inherent to the overnight search.

LOAD MORE