Westman this Week

Westman this Week

Musician builds Afrobeats career in northern Manitoba

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

Babatunde Adewole opened up Instagram recently and saw a message that he had been tagged in a post. When he opened it, there was his picture alongside news that he had been nominated for Afrobeats Artist of the Year at the 2026 Western Canadian Music Awards.

“I was in my vehicle,” he recalled. “I was kind of shouting out loud, screaming. I was like, ‘Wow, this has actually come to pass.’”

For Adewole, who performs under the name SCUD, the nomination is a milestone in a seven-year effort to build an Afrobeats career from Thompson, a city of about 13,000 people 740 kilometres north of Winnipeg.

The Nigerian-born artist is one of two Manitoba nominees in the category, which was introduced in 2025 as the Western Canadian Music Awards moved to recognize the growing influence of Afrobeats.

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Westman this Week

Community safety officers settling into new building

By Renee Lilley Local Journalism Initiative 2 minute read Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

The City of Portage la Prairie has recently moved its community safety officers (CSOs) into a new, larger headquarters, a development local officials say signals a long-term commitment to community security.

The new facility is currently undergoing renovations, including fresh paint, during the official move. The building is now open to the public and offers significantly more space than the previous office, allowing for better operational security and employee amenities.

“This is a great move for the community safety officers to move over there because the building is substantially larger,” said Councillor Colin Doyle. “It just gives them all a little bit more space for, one, for confidentiality reasons, and because it is a secure facility now, as opposed to just an office you can walk into.”

The new location is at 14 Tupper Street South. Doyle added that the building will also provide functional upgrades for staff, including proper locker space and shower facilities.

Westman this Week

Quiet zone aims to make day camp more inclusive

By Steven Sukkau Local Journalism Initiative 2 minute read Yesterday at 2:01 AM CDT

A donation from the Kiwanis Club of Neepawa & Area will help create a new sensory-friendly space aimed at making local day camp programming more inclusive for children of all abilities.

The club recently contributed $750 toward the development of a Sensory-Friendly Quiet Zone at Neepawa’s day camp facility. The space is designed to provide children with a calm environment where they can take a break, regulate emotions, recharge and return to activities when they feel ready.

Neepawa CAO Colleen Synchyshyn said the room will include a variety of resources tailored to different sensory and self-regulation needs.

“The Sensory Friendly-Quiet Zone is designed to be a welcoming space where children can take a break, regulate, recharge and enjoy a calmer environment whenever they need it,” Synchyshyn said.

Westman this Week

Farmers turn to tech to thwart thieves

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 7 minute read Preview

Farmers turn to tech to thwart thieves

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 7 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

MACGREGOR — A number of farmers are bidding farewell to the days of unlocked homes and car keys stored in the car near MacGregor because of repeated theft targeting their rural properties.

A transformation has taken place in the rural community in the last 10 years, with technology such as live-feed cameras and alarms, lane monitors and GPS tags installed as a response to continuous thievery, several area farmers told the Sun in June. The security measures are a break from years past, and farmers are trying today to balance their ideals of country living with their increasing need for self-protection.

Heather Stone, a resident in the area, described the changing mood in an interview at her home.

“I think people are just more wary than they were before. There’s a wariness,” she said. “It’s just one of those things, where now you are suspicious. You just have this niggling doubt.”

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Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Westman this Week

Jays struggling during 50th anniversary

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Whether the Toronto Blue Jays win the World Series or miss the playoffs altogether, the 2026 season will be remembered for the significance of the team celebrating its 50th anniversary.

Only those of a certain age who were around to watch the Jays’ first-ever game back in April, 1977, will recall that instead of sunshine pouring into Exhibition Stadium, where the Jays played their first few seasons, a fluke spring snowfall soured the day. The average American ball fan whose image of a stereotypical Canadian is someone who resides in a cold country and perhaps lives in an igloo may have had those myths confirmed with video replays of that snowy day, April 7. A Zamboni was even needed to clear snow from the field. Normally, weather that extreme would have caused a postponement of an outdoor baseball game, but there had been so much hype about the Canadian expansion team playing its first game, it was full steam ahead.

The Blue Jays won the game 9-5 over the Chicago White Sox, as Doug Ault (career batting average .236 and 17 home runs), banged out two homers.

Wouldn’t it be grand if the Blue Jays celebrated their 50th year of existence with a World Series championship? Year 49 produced an American League East title, an AL championship and a near-miss in the World Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers, losing Game 7 in extra innings at home.

Westman this Week

Fun gifts for Father’s Day

By Wendy King 5 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

If you’ve ever wondered how the necktie became the “classic” Father’s Day gift, you’ve got Norman Birrell to thank.

Father’s Day was first inaugurated in the U.S. in 1910, and as things often do, the idea eventually migrated its way north.

In 1936, during the Great Depression, Toronto menswear retailer Norman Birrell, who sold a lot of neckties, saw an opportunity to market the day and prop up the summer sales slump. His enthusiastic promotion of the day as the chairman of the Toronto Father’s Day Committee, joined by other businessmen, helped to give the local economy a boost with sales and jobs while honouring dads for all they do.

And so here we are, with 90 years’ worth of necktie purchases under our belts, still celebrating devoted fathers.

Westman this Week

Spawning bed installed to boost fishing at Oak Lake

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Preview

Spawning bed installed to boost fishing at Oak Lake

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

OAK LAKE BEACH — The Souris River Watershed District has installed the first walleye spawning ground at Oak Lake in an effort to increase the survival rate of more than 1 million fry that are dumped into the lake each year.

The spawning ground, which is roughly 1,000 yards long, is a loose pile of stones that is meant to give walleye a structure to store their eggs. The district’s hope is that the project will improve fishing at the lake, which is already a big driver of tourism, RM of Sifton Coun. Scott Phillips told the Sun.

“Thousands and thousands of people come out here to fish. You look out there in the middle of summer and it’s like the City of Brandon,” Phillips said, gesturing out at Oak Lake. “If you build it they will come — and this is a gold mine, this Oak Lake Beach.”

The project cost just over $74,000 and was funded through the provincial government’s Fish and Wildlife Enhancement Fund.

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Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Westman this Week

‘Countdown’ project tracks demise of grain elevators

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 6 minute read Preview

‘Countdown’ project tracks demise of grain elevators

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 6 minute read Thursday, Jun. 11, 2026

The head researcher at the Manitoba Historical Society is tracking the remainder of grain elevators in Manitoba through a “countdown” project as he believes all antiquated elevators could be gone within 20 years.

The project records the dwindling state of Manitoba’s elevators as they are demolished, and offers an online map where the remaining grain elevators — a total of roughly 111, down from a peak of over 700 in Manitoba — can be found. Head researcher and webmaster of the society Gordon Goldsborough said the project is meant to capture transformation.

“It’s something I think speaks to a much bigger story, the story of rural depopulation,” he said. “I think that’s the story that this countdown kind of helps to illustrate, is the change in the landscape that is occurring right now.”

Goldsborough also researches and collects data about the elevator’s town, size, materials, patrons, staff and construction materials.

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Thursday, Jun. 11, 2026

Westman this Week

Canada welcomes the World Cup hoopla

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Preview

Canada welcomes the World Cup hoopla

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Thursday, Jun. 11, 2026

Canadian sports fans — no, Canadians, period — will have a tough time avoiding news and hoopla about the World Cup, which kicks off tomorrow in Toronto. Just don’t call it soccer — it’s ‘football’ everywhere in the world.

It is the world’s biggest sporting event by far, bigger than the Super Bowl, bigger than the Olympic Games, far bigger and more important than regional events such as the Stanley Cup playoffs or World Series.

Organized and run by FIFA — Fédération Internationale de Football Association — the World Cup features 48 teams split into 12 seeded groups of four. After round-robin play, the top two teams from each group, plus the eight best third-place teams, advance to the 32-team knockout stage.

Played in stadiums in Canada, Mexico and the United States, the 2026 version of the tournament is the first to be spread over three countries. Canada gets 13 games, seven in Vancouver and six in Toronto. The tournament will run over a five-week period, culminating with the championship game at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on July 19.

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Thursday, Jun. 11, 2026

Westman this Week

Bees are amazing creatures, honey

By Ken Kingdon 6 minute read Thursday, Jun. 11, 2026

Rae and I have been proud honeybee producers for over 25 years, off and on, and I can say with some confidence that my knowledge of bee management has barely increased over that time. Bees are a mystery.

For example, we had a hive that turned vicious this spring. In early May we opened up the hive, searching for the queen to ensure that she was healthy and laying eggs. The bees didn’t take kindly to our intrusion and basically found every possible way to access my bee hood and sting me. I have never been stung so many times.

Later, we determined that they were likely on the verge of running out of food. Who knew that bees could be “hangry”? The reason for the food shortage was that the hive’s queen bee was very healthy and able to lay lots of eggs this spring, which in turn meant that the hive was very active. With lots of bees in the hive but no sources of flowers due to the late spring, the hive had used up most of their honey stores, despite the fact that we fed them multiple times in the fall and again this spring.

Now that the dandelions are finally flowering, along with a staggering number of other plants that had obviously been waiting for 30 C temperatures, the bees are busy collecting fresh pollen and nectar and the hive is much better behaved. Thank goodness, as I was starting to take it personally.

Westman this Week

Photojournalism is about “the moment”

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read Preview

Photojournalism is about “the moment”

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read Thursday, Jun. 11, 2026

RIVERDALE MUNICIPALITY — To photograph wild foxes tumbling over each other for the Brandon Sun last month, photojournalist Tim Smith returned to a den, judged it was active for the year, and waited three hours for the kits to come out.

The resulting photos depicted baby red foxes emerging from their den, pinning each other, and embracing the changing season. Smith considers the photos nearly a throwaway, but the process still showcases the most important part of his work: being there when stories happen.

The distinguishing feature for photojournalism is that the work is bound by the moment, Smith said in a recent interview. Photojournalists cannot go back in time and snap a shot, nor can they capture stories, like wildlife transitioning into spring, from their living room.

“We have to be in the moment. If we miss it, we miss it,” Smith said in June, while driving down a country lane near the fox den. “Theres no guarantee that you’re going to get an amazing photo, but you put yourself in place so that that luck happens.”

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Thursday, Jun. 11, 2026

Westman this Week

Friesen makes mark with FarmerTitan

By Aaron Epp 4 minute read Preview

Friesen makes mark with FarmerTitan

By Aaron Epp 4 minute read Thursday, Jun. 4, 2026

WINNIPEG — Katie Friesen is used to playing games.

The Manitoban’s prowess on the volleyball court led to a scholarship to Florida International University in Miami, where she competed on the Division 1 school’s beach and indoor volleyball teams.

But seven years after graduation, Friesen is playing a different game.

The 29-year-old, who divides her time between Manitoba and Austin, Texas, is the founder of FarmerTitan. The platform allows farmers to manage their equipment and employees using QR codes and a mobile app.

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Thursday, Jun. 4, 2026

Westman this Week

Antique repairs are about memory and detail

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read Preview

Antique repairs are about memory and detail

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 5 minute read Thursday, Jun. 4, 2026

RM OF CORNWALLIS — The world of antique furniture restoration is all about detail and sentiment, and those values are reflected in the people who do the work and request it at a local shop outside Brandon.

On the one hand there’s Mike Stuart, a technical-looking fellow who refuses all but one type of glue when he’s working on a project. Stuart has spent much of his life focused on the ins and outs of wood furniture, staring, gluing, sanding, hammering — happily.

“I remember faces and I remember furniture,” he says from his quarters at the shop southeast of town. His workspace is strewn with gadgets, glue and confusing objects, which can all be explained as useful and necessary upon request.

Stuart has been reviving antiques for nearly 30 years with Persnickety Furniture Refinishers. He is one of three woodworkers on staff, who also work together with an upholsterer.

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Thursday, Jun. 4, 2026

Westman this Week

Not everyone loves CFL’s new look

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Preview

Not everyone loves CFL’s new look

By Bruce Penton 5 minute read Thursday, Jun. 4, 2026

The new-look Canadian Football League season kicks off this week and while some are applauding the significant rule changes made to the game since last year’s Grey Cup, not everyone is thrilled.

Commissioner Stewart Johnston, who took the helm about a year ago and is the architect, at least in the public’s eye, of these changes, said the new rules will help to speed up play and lead to more exciting touchdown drives and fewer boring field goals. More changes are in store for 2027, which include reduction of the field to 100 yards and moving the goalposts to the back of the end zone.

When the 2026 season kicks off June 4 in a game between Montreal and Hamilton, here are two major changes fans will see: A 35-second play clock; elimination of the one-point rouge if the ball is kicked through the end zone by way of a field-goal attempt, a punt or a kickoff (the rouge remains if the ball stays within the end zone and the returner takes a knee or is unable to advance the ball into the playing field).

The latter change means teams will no longer automatically get one point for a missed field goal, oftentimes the winning point in a tight game. That, says retired CFL referee Bud Ulrich, is an abomination.

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Thursday, Jun. 4, 2026

Westman this Week

Community pastures shift into gear for the summer

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 3 minute read Preview

Community pastures shift into gear for the summer

By Connor McDowell, Local Journalism Initiative 3 minute read Thursday, Jun. 4, 2026

RM OF NORTH CYPRESS LANGFORD — The cattle “summer vacation” period opened at the Langford Community Pasture last week, prompting hundreds of animals to be dropped off by their owners to graze for the summer season.

Pasture manager Patrick Robinson received roughly 160 cattle on the morning of May 27 at the pasture, which is tucked roughly four kilometres down two dirt roads off Highway 5 south of Neepawa.

The 17 C breezy morning turned to a sweaty 30 C in the early afternoon before multiple semi-loads of cattle had been accounted for, organized and released to graze.

The work at the corral included branding as well as tagging some cattle, herding them and counting them before releasing the animals out to the fields, where they will be stewarded until October.

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Thursday, Jun. 4, 2026

Westman this Week

First Filipino restaurant opens in Portage la Prairie

Renee Lilley, Local Journalism Initiative 2 minute read Thursday, Jun. 4, 2026

The opening of Portage la Prairie’s first Filipino restaurant is being celebrated as a milestone for cultural diversity and community integration in the Central Plains region.

Jeepney Portage la Prairie recently opened its doors at 177 Saskatchewan Ave., meeting a long-standing demand within the local immigrant population. The establishment represents the brand’s second location, expanding from its original roots in Winnipeg.

“As an immigrant, I came to Portage almost 10 years ago … and all I hear are comments of Filipinos here is how we wish we had a Filipino restaurant,” said co-owner Oliver Cabading.

Cabading, who also serves as the president of the local Filipino association, opened the business alongside two partners, one based in Winnipeg and another from Portage. Beyond offering a taste of home, the owners made it a priority to support local youth by structuring casual summer employment opportunities for students.

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