SPRING 2018
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PRINCE EDWARD COUNTY AND QUINTE REGION
ON THE COVER
Cover photo: Dan Tolj and Tammy Keller at Ivanleigh Farms in Smithfield. Photo by Daniel Vaughan
IN THIS ISSUE
Each issue available online at: www.countyandquinteliving.ca
8
26
44
by Catherine Stutt
The path not taken is the most fulfilling for these
by Cindy Duffy
Chris Braney’s County Roots
18
Dark Skies
Play among the stars at Lennox & Addington’s Dark Sky Viewing Area by Jennifer Shea
Dan & Tammy’s Ivanleigh Farms
Quinte Chiropodists. by Catherine Stutt
36
The grass is greener in the County
Willowlee Sod Farm by Catherine Stutt
4
COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SPRING 2018
Belleville’s Vantage Point Media House
54
CQL @ Home with Alan Gratias From the Farm Cooking School by Alan Gratias
53
Signposts Bongard Corner
by Lindi Pierce
58
Gravitas Michèle Hozer
by Alan Gratias
PRINCE EDWARD COUNTY AND QUINTE REGION
General Manager Seaway Adam Milliagan amilligan@metroland.com editor Catherine Stutt editor@xplornet.com Photo editor Daniel Vaughan daniel@vaughangroup.ca Advertising Executives Orlinda Johnston 613.966.2034 x 795015 orlinda.johnston@metroland.com
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County & Quinte Living is published quarterly and is available free of charge through strategic partners, wineries, golf courses, real estate, and chamber of commerce offices, retail outlets, and advertiser locations. County & Quinte Living may not be reproduced, in part or whole, in any form without prior written consent of the publisher. Views expressed by contributors are DOCKET # their own opinions and do not necessarily reflect the views or 129-301 opinions of County & Quinte Living. County & Quinte Living is a DOCKET # division of Metroland Media Group Ltd.
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Six degrees of Steve My Favourite Cousin Steve, was a paramedic for 35 years. I’ve known him for all my 55 years, I still don’t know how he ended up being a paramedic, although helping others is part of his DNA. He met the love of his life, Henrike, married early, started a family early, and one of my first memories is of my parents coming home from Steve and Henrike’s wedding, when I was four. I remember my father coming home after visiting the hospital, reporting the safe and healthy arrival of Kevin, their first child, with a full head of Steve’s red hair. All was well in the family. Alisa followed Kevin, and now there are four grandchildren. This is a family with three living generations responding to world crises. Steve served at Ground Zero just days after the towers fell. Alisa is a traumatologist and between dispatches volunteers at an organic farm in Prince Edward County. Her daughter Marita is currently building schools with the Salvation Army (and Alisa) in Guyana. It’s not the first tour for any of them. 6
COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SPRING 2018
When I started working at the OPP, I whom we also profiled. During a sixwas thrilled to learn we had a hotline week work trip/vacation, one of their to the ambulance base, about a half destinations is Lindi’s Crossing, an mile north of the detachment. I was 19, hour or so north of Teviot, where Paddy and in the middle of a barren February Ann (a world class town crier) and her midnight shift, I could lift the handset husband Rod live. My Favourite Cousin and My Favourite Cousin Steve would Steve and Henrike, his wife of 50 years answer. That is the kind of comfort he this month, visited there recently. Paddy bestows on people. Ann and Rod visited the Codrington When Darryl and I moved to Brighton, Farmers’ Market. Steve and Henrike love my Mom called one day and said Steve Brighton. Lindi and Den are hoping for and Henrike were visiting friends in a visit to Teviot, and since Den is from the area and he wanted to drop in. As Bracebridge, Lincolnshire, England, and a surprise. Which was kind of blown. took his family to Bracebridge, Ontario That’s Mom. Steve showed up at the when they visited, and where My door, that smile, that hug, and somehow Favourite Cousin Steve is a councillor, our hometown was part of our new and where Henrike, one of the most remarkable women I have ever met, is a town. talented artist, it all comes together. Last September, Steve and Henrike I cherish these incredible coincidences brought friends from New Zealand. and connections. They make the world They were on their way to Halifax smaller. And happier. And livable. Just from Bracebridge, via the Codrington ask Bill Murtha, whom we also profiled. Farmers’ Market and Amherst Island, He’ll tell you a thing or two about hoping for a stop at Ivanleigh Farms in connections. Oh yes, he will. He should Smithfield, since Ivanleigh has lots of meet my Favourite Cousin Steve and his New Zealand Kunekune pig breeding amazing wife Henrike. They’d all have lines. another story to tell. Paddy Ann and Rod, cattle farmers in Enough with the philosophizing. I New Zealand, visited with Justin and have tomato and pepper seeds to start. Jennifer Dorland, whom we profiled a Like relationships, they respond well to year ago, stopped by Dahlia May Flower Farm’s stall and met Melanie, whom we nurturing, and the results are worth it. profiled last spring, and Henrike spoke Thanks for turning the page. with Lynn VanderHerberg, whom we profiled in the Autumn 2017 issue. The artists had quite a talk. As I write this, our heritage writer Lindi Pierce is in New Zealand, with her husband Denis Curtis, who replicates vintage racing motorcycle chasses, and
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Chris from
Cold Creek
An old soul moves house and home to Niles Corners
Story by Catherine Stutt Photography by Daniel Vaughan On a nasty winter day, rife with weather warnings – the kind where the locals take the backroads rather than being part of a parking lot on the 401, Chris Braney isn’t thinking of snow. He’s Canadian, so of course, the requisite weather conversation occurs, along with questions about the road conditions, and polite concerns about traffic and caution, but his mind is on music and friends and his newly adopted Hillier community, where he knows in his heart he has always belonged. Growing up in the small neighbourhood of Highland Creek, he found solace in the rural community between Scarborough
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COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SPRING 2018
COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING spring 2018
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and Pickering. Working in an apple orchard when he was eight, he quickly recognized a tendency toward farms, falling in love with old barns.
After a while, a friend mentioned Prince Edward County’s excellent soil and weather, so conducive to a vineyard.The County was still a well-kept secret, so the response can be forgiven. “Where’s Prince Edward County,” Chris asked his friend. “I’d never heard of it.”
with a new roof, he sought advice from County legend Ernie Margetson on how best to proceed. While those discussions ensued, Chris turned his attention to the land.
“I’m an old soul,” Chris admitted. “I seek and appreciate the simplicity of life and connect with the land.” In his mid-teens, two pivotal events occurred. The federal government was expropriating land in advance of a planned Off he went, following a new lead. It took local airport, and more importantly, Chris one drive down Danforth Road to seal his fate. met Silvia when he was 16. “I saw the barns and fell in love. I had a dream The young couple spent dates exploring the and vision of trying to save something. Silvia charming abandoned farm buildings, and he tells me I’m the champion of lost causes, but I
“I knew what I was looking for in terms of soil,” he explained. “I wanted a nice slope, because pinot noir varietals like that for air flow and disease resistance. This has the north-south exposure, a gentle slope, and the soil is absolutely perfect.”
knew this one wasn’t lost. It spoke to me, and then I saw the sale sign. I was holding the peg to the barn door and I promised the barn I would bring it back.”
to Niagara if he could. “It was such a relief,” laughed Chris. “I was so happy. I called my Dad to tell him. When he and my fatherin-law first saw the farm, they questioned my sanity. The soil was horrible. Unless you’re planning to grow pinot noir. This is probably the only place in the New World identical to the Burgundian soil. It’s a magical spot. We have a true offering of Burgundian Chardonnay.”
fell in love with the architecture, the details, the feeling. He fell harder for Silvia, whom he credits with always encouraging him to follow his dreams. High school sweethearts, they married and are parents to Erin, 17 and Madeline, 20. In his 20s, Chris was elected as a schoolboard trustee. He is currently the Vice Chair of the Durham District School Board. Silvia is a teacher with a neighbouring board. During this time, Chris became passionate about wine and started looking for a way to bring these interests together. In the late1990s, he headed east, looking around Port Hope and Grafton, seeking the perfect soil, the perfect 10
farm. He looked for several years without connecting with the right property.
COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SPRING 2018
Chris bought the Niles Corners property before Silvia had a chance to see it, with her full encouragement. It included a large barn and another smaller barn, but no residence. Chris hoped to be able to build a new home in the style of the area’s original houses, or preferably, move a house that was already part of the community. That first year was for the barn and the land. Chris estimates the barn was built in 1892, and he was determined to save it. Protected
When the contractor came to plant the first vines, he arrived at dusk, and told Chris the soil was so good he’d take 10 truckloads back
It would be a while before Chris could enjoy that first vintage. He spent the first year reclaiming the property, getting it back to workable land. He exposed the topography around the barn and delighted in the
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discoveries. “I found an abandoned rail fence and used it at the front. The rails were more than 100 years old, and when I cut into them, the red cedar was vivid, just waiting.” He planted sugar maples and burr oaks, agreeing when his neighbour noted Chris was planting them for his grandchildren to enjoy. “That’s the point,” he smiled. “The farm is important to the community and I wanted a gathering place to continue for generations in the family. I want our daughters to experience the rural life and small-town living. The farm is a legacy.” Early in this project, Chris felt a reaction from the community. “We have terrific friends and neighbours, and they were happy 12
COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SPRING 2018
I was preserving the heritage of the property. I didn’t come to the County with the intention of changing it; I came to embrace the values I cherish. This is the kind of place where neighbours mean something. We help each other. It reminds me so much of growing up in Highland Creek.” The draw deepened. Friendships were forged, music was made, more vines were planted, including three more acres of pinot noir. Chris admits he doesn’t want to be a winemaker; he just loves growing things – grapes, friendships, legacies. He sells his grapes to Jonas Newman at nearby Hinterland Wine Company, who uses them for his sparkling rosé.
The grapes are grown with typical Braney flair, soothed and coaxed by the old jazz and Sinatra Chris plays over the vineyards. “Jonas tells me the vines love Sinatra,” assured Chris. Music is vital and natural to Chris, developed through centuries of family history and lore. Chris’ great grandparents settled in Lanark County, Ontario, immigrating from Ireland. They were known far and wide as the Marks Brothers Repertoire Kings, Vaudeville performers in the late 1800s and early 1900s. “People came from miles around to sit on their porch and listen to them perform.” Chris is part of a band at home – What the Funk – and it wasn’t long before the Niles Corners Band formed, with Ernie Margetson,
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Accessories Drew Dick, Steve Spicer, Geoff Heinricks (author of the County classic A Fool and Forty Acres) and CQL’s own Daniel Vaughan. Once in a while they are joined by Juno award winning Justin Rutledge, who shot a video at the barn. Each year, Chris hosts a corn roast, and he and the band perform for friends, family, and neighbours. His Irish roots run deep. One day, Chris decided, without any experience, to build a drystone wall. “It came naturally to me,” he recalled, with surprise. “I’ve always loved limestone, I’ve always been drawn to Ireland, and I started one morning. It was like I was in a trance; I felt like I’d been doing it all my life, yet there was no sense of time. When
Silvia called me for dinner, I wasn’t aware I’d been at it the entire day. When we finally visited Ireland, I felt such an attachment.” Even with the vineyards, the restored barn, the repurposed fence, and new wall, there was still a large element missing from the property. Cold Creek Vineyards was well underway, but the Braneys were still living in a converted shed when they visited. The property needed a house. Ernie and Chris talked over the years, and early on, Ernie asked Chris what style he wanted. Chris was adamant it fit the community and complement the property. They were standing at the top of the rise, and Chris pointed to the old Christ Church
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parsonage about 200 yards away, across the road. “That’s exactly what I want,” he said. Ernie, renowned in the area for his expertise with heritage homes and known for saving seemingly lost buildings, and moving more than a few, was looking for candidates, eventually finding a suitable building in Consecon. Before that was finalized, Lee Nurse moved in next door and introductions were quick. Chris soon learned the Nurse family needed 14
COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SPRING 2018
to remove the old parsonage to grow their robotic dairy farm. Lee asked if Chris had an interest. He did. “The exact house I’d wanted for seven years was now available. I called Ernie, who came over right away.” Ernie recalled how it all came together. “It was good karma, fate worked in our favour,” adding he was baptized in the former Christ Church, which was now part of Closson Chase, just up the road. Ernie had helped move it, making it accommodations for the
workers. “We moved the church in five pieces, and we oriented it the same way, with the stained glass catching the sunrise.” “In the past, buildings were moved with much greater frequency. There were no utility lines in the way, they didn’t need permits and police escorts. They’d just lift and roll it down the road. Moving this one was almost as easy, because it was such a short distance.” The parsonage was built circa 1850. Chris places it around 1857, and Ernie thinks it’s
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a bit older. An engineer with a degree in architecture, Ernie sees elements of an earlier design. “The Gothic gable was a post-1850 fad in vernacular architecture, but there are hints of Regency architecture. There were large garden doors at the front, going right to the floor, and lots of openings to the outside. It probably had a veranda at one point,” he mused, suggesting perhaps it was built in the 1840s, and may not have been originally owned by the church.
It is a proud house, 30 by 40 feet of timber frame construction in almost pristine condition. It boasted beautiful detail, although some original elements were missing. Ernie lauded the various owners over the years for their restraint. “The fenestration hadn’t been dramatically altered, and fortunately no one had modernized it to any significant degree.” The architectural salvage Chris accumulated over the years suddenly came into play. A large Gothic window had been removed, COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING spring 2018
15
and finding an original would be challenging and expensive, except Chris had one in his collection. It fit. Exactly. The house had beautiful trim, but some was missing. Finding an exact match would require a good deal of luck, and having it replicated would be expensive. Chris has some in his collection. On a whim, he tried it. It was a match. Exactly. It is a regal home, and livable, but it Chris promised it more. With Ernie’s help, it found it’s new home, and the neighbours say it looks happier there, it’s exterior painted Hawthorne yellow from the period, it’s presence overlooking the vineyards. “The story of saving it, keeping it close to it’s origins, looking out the front door to where it used to be. There is a narrative there that will go on,” noted Ernie.
from the cover, was Drew’s father, accepting an award when he was 17. This history, these connections, are integral to Chris. He is the first to say he has always been fortunate, surrounded by great family and friends, but his voice suggests something extra special is happening in Niles Corners. “The farm is a way to turn down the taps, to spend more time with family and community,” he said. “The more time I’m there, the more stories I hear about how the community embraced and supported each other during tough times. Even with all the changes in the County, it’s still a small community.”
Each year, Christ Church hosts a commemoration at the cemetery. Chris attended last year and spoke with many people, including the church historian. “He gave me copies of great old photos, including The interior restoration is well underway, one of the first family to ever live in the house. with help from Drew Dick, who like Ernie They’re smiling in the photo. That’s rare for has become one of Chris’ closest County a picture of that era. Maybe it’s the house. friends. Typical to the story, things fell into After that, more people came by, sharing their place, quite literally. Chris and Drew were connections with the parsonage.” removing plaster and lathe from the ceiling, The old home is invigorated, and the and hundreds of newspapers fell. A few days later, Drew went back on his own to continue property is following suit. Last year, Chris the job, and more papers fell, including one planted 100 apple trees for cider production that drifted right to his feet. Staring up at him, – 25 each of Empire, Spy, Golden Russet, and
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Spartan. “I grew up in apple country and I love the look of the orchard when it blossoms in the spring.” Neighbours have become used to Chris making a run to Wellington for supplies in his 1966 GMC, bought after he watched The Bridges of Madison County and fell in love with Clint Eastwood’s truck. When he learned it was a model from his birth year, he knew he had to find one. It goes well with his Royal Enfield motorcycle, similar to Steve McQueen’s in The Great Escape. Life in the County is a work in progress, with a solid five-year plan. Chris is still very committed to his work on the school board. “It’s like motherhood and apple pie,” he stressed. “I see my success and the things I have as a direct result of my public education. Schools are the last safety net we have across Canada.” While he hasn’t decided if he’ll run for re-election this year, he acknowledges Silvia has five years left to retirement, and then the family will move full time to the farm. “We want to be part of the community, not just live there. The sense of belonging, the warm welcome, the acceptance is more than I envisioned, more than anyone could ask. My heart and soul are already part of Prince Edward County,” smiled Chris.
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Lennox & Addington’s Dark Sky Viewing Area
The beauty of the night sky as it was meant to be seen Story by Jennifer Shea Photography by Cindy Conlin It seems there are increasingly more celestial events encouraging us to look up to the night sky. At the end of January, sky watchers were treated to a Blue Moon (second full moon in a month), a Blood Moon (total lunar eclipse) and a Supermoon, (when the moon is at the closest point to Earth in its orbit). The lunar event was promoted as a Super Blue Blood Moon, a rare event not seen in North America for more than 150 years. Terence Dickinson is a Yarker-based astronomy expert who has been watching, photographing, teaching, and writing about the night sky for 50 years. Ask him about these seemingly increasing celestial phenomena and he chuckles. “Media more and more are
latching on to these celestial events that seem to be of public interest. They do get people out to look, but they’re based on astrological mumbo-jumbo.” In fact, many of the recent events featured in the media are regular occurrences in the night sky. A Supermoon, for example, appears once every year. That doesn’t mean people shouldn’t take the time to look up at the night sky. Unfortunately, for a large part of the population, light pollution from highly populated areas prevents a clear look at the sky at night. “The light-pollutionfree night sky is now something that 80 per cent of the population of Canada has never properly seen,” said Terence. “Because they don’t know where to go; they don’t know what to look for.”
For sky watchers in the County and Quinte area, there is a solution – the Lennox & Addington County Dark Sky Viewing Area, the most southerly dark sky site in Ontario. Located a 30-minute drive north of Napanee on County Road 41, the Dark Sky Viewing Area (DSVA) offers a night sky experience similar to what was available a century ago. The site opened in 2012 and is available year-round with no admission charge. The DSVA attracts sky watchers from all over, including a large number from the Greater Toronto Area. “It’s as dark there (at the DSVA) and astronomically excellent as it is about three hours north of Toronto,” promised Terence. Terence discovered the site by accident in 2010 as he was driving on County Road 41 to Pembroke where he was teaching evening enrichment classes in astronomy at Algonquin College. At the time, the DSVA site was a gathering spot for construction equipment and materials for crews working on roadway reconstruction. “One time when I was driving back from Pembroke, I stopped about halfway,” recalled Terence. “It’s just a hamlet. I got out and it was a really nice night. I thought this would be a perfect spot because it’s just on the edge.” As he said this, Terence flipped through a large hardcover book, The Backyard Astronomer’s Guide, which he coauthored with Alan Dyer. He pointed to an illustration depicting light pollution over North America. The edge referred to by Terence is the most southerly spot north of Lake Ontario where true dark
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skies emerge and is the precise location of the DSVA. Armed with his ever-present enthusiasm for the night sky and his desire to share it with others, Terence approached Lennox & Addington County. He pitched the idea of a viewing area to Stephen Paul, Director of Community & Development Services, who embraced it almost immediately. “I’ve gone to places before where there’s a possibility of doing something and they don’t know what I’m talking about,” said Terence. “Whereas Stephen, right away, he understood the implications if you have something special within the County and you let people know it’s there and you spruce it up a little bit, it would be a good idea. At least that’s what I was telling him. We were about 15 minutes into it and he said, ‘Stop. I like it. I like the idea.’ They invested in making it a nice site for people to go in. They cleared the construction stuff and put a concrete pad in to put up telescopes.” Rob Plumley, Community Development Officer with Lennox & Addington County, described the site, “It’s a big concrete platform contoured with the land. We had a local designer help us with that. The lines in the concrete point to true north, which helps people setting up their telescopes. The interpretive signage tells why that location was chosen and a little bit about what to potentially look for.” The viewing platform accommodates about 40 people at a time and there are
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30 parking spots, with an expansion planned. Many visitors bring lawn chairs or blankets to be comfortable as they gaze upward. Individuals can set up their own telescopes if they have them, or they can take advantage of those set up by more experienced sky watchers. Terence was a frequent visitor to the DSVA in its early days and conducted guided tours of the night sky, pointing out celestial objects of interest to other sky watchers. After being diagnosed with Parkinson’s Disease, he had to cut back on many activities. He passed the night sky tour guide responsibilities to Joe Gilker and Tim Trentadue, two local amateur astronomers and astrophotographers with great interest and enthusiasm for the DSVA and the night sky in general. “In 2014, the DSVA had a photography contest,” said Joe. “I was taking photos all the time – mostly from the DSVA and from around the area. It was a Lennox & Addington County-wide photography contest. I entered a bunch of my photos and the judge of the contest was Terence Dickinson.” “He is indirectly the guy who got me into all this. I used to watch him back in the ’90s on the Discovery Channel; he had a weekly or bi-weekly appearance where he would talk about the night sky. I used to make it a point to watch his appearances on the show. Then eventually I stumbled across one of his books called NightWatch and I bought that. It was such a great book. I loved it so much. Shortly after, I went out and bought my telescope and started. I kept getting his books because I liked his style and his way of explaining things. Fast forward 15 years and he’s the guy who’s judging this photo contest. I ended up winning the contest.” When Joe received a call from Rob Plumley asking him to meet with him and Terence, Joe didn’t hesitate to accept the invitation. “Terence had been looking at my pictures online, reading through my blogs. They were looking for somebody to do monthly presentations at the DSVA and asked me if I would volunteer to do this. I thought about it for 30 seconds or so before accepting and I’ve been there since. I’m going on my third year.”
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Joe considers himself more of an astrophotographer than an astronomer, but taking effective pictures of the night sky involves knowing what he’s looking at, so he has learned a lot over the years and continues to learn. He thoroughly enjoys sharing his knowledge as a volunteer tour guide at the DSVA. “One of the most fun parts of doing it for me is seeing the sky with people who aren’t used to seeing it. Sometimes more than a
hundred people show up at that tiny little site and probably at least two-thirds of those people have either never seen this at all or haven’t seen it in decades.” Joe fondly recalls an East Indian family visiting the DSVA from Toronto. Four generations gathered to look at the night sky together, with the younger generation translating for the elders who did not speak English. “At the end of it, the elderly gentleman shakes my
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hand,” said Joe. “One of his grandkids is translating and saying his grandfather had been in Canada for about 40 years and had never seen skies like this since he was a little boy growing up in India. It was so nice to see that kind of reaction from someone.” The DSVA now hosts regular events during moonless weekends beginning in May and continuing through September. Two nights per month, visitors can watch a 90-minute, laser-guided tour of the
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The light-pollution-free night sky is now something that 80 per cent of the population of Canada has never properly seen.
visitors invited to come up to look for themselves.
night sky (check www.DarkSkyViewing. com for this year’s events). Joe and Tim set up their telescopes and show sky watchers what’s happening in the sky, using a laser pointer to highlight constellations, planets, and stars. The tours begin approximately one hour after sunset, with the first half focused on seasonal constellations – explaining how things move in the sky and highlighting any specific activities on that night. The second half is the telescope viewing with
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can see a great deal, and binoculars also work well. “People don’t think of looking up with binoculars at night, but binoculars are two small telescopes,” said Joe “In many cases, you actually see things better than with a telescope because you’re looking with both eyes so you’re getting your stereoscopic vision and there are so many things you can’t see with the naked eye that all of a sudden just pop right out with binoculars.”
Even Joe is surprised sometimes at the night sky events that occur. “The first one we did last year in May, we ended up with a surprise show of northern lights. I had never seen northern lights like that from this area before. Literally from before dark, we could see a green glow in the In the foreword of the third (and final) sky just as the sun was setting and right edition of Terence and Alan Dyer’s The until I left at 4 a.m., the sky was aglow. I Backyard Astronomer’s Guide, Robert was giving my presentation, but nobody Burnham, the former editor-in-chief of was really paying attention because they Astronomy magazine, writes, “If you, too, were looking at the northern lights. Even feel the tug of the stars, there’s no better I was horribly distracted by it. It was the place to begin than here.” excitement with people seeing it for the The same could be said of the Lennox first time. That excitement was palpable.” & Addington County Dark Sky Viewing Joe, Terence, and Rob all point out Area. special equipment is not required to enjoy night sky viewing. The naked eye
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Ivanleigh Farms
The unplanned steps of the Quinte chiropodists
Story by Catherine Stutt Photography by Daniel Vaughan Daniel Tolj had a plan. A good plan. A very solid life plan. It was sensible and logical. A plan to utilize his considerable skills in the medical field. He planned for this plan. He worked toward this plan. He is goal-oriented, and the plan was in reach.
his education at Philadelphia’s Temple University. He would earn his Doctor of Podiatric Medicine, and practice in large centres, aiming for Boston or Dallas, specializing in foot surgery.
From an early age, Daniel knew he wanted to become a medical professional, and took time to narrow the field while earning a Bachelor of Science. As a student at the University of Toronto, Daniel would commute to Union Station and walk north on Bay Street, taking note of the plethora of dentist offices. “There were enough dentists; I didn’t want to be lost in the crowd,” he said with his trademark smile.
Which begs the question. Why, as March came in like a lion, was Daniel Tolj walking along the lane at his hilltop farm in Smithfield, heading to the barn to check on spring lambs?
Degree in hand, he enrolled in Toronto’s Michener Institute – Canada’s English language chiropody school – and upon graduation, planned to continue
That was the plan for this focused, personable, brilliant city kid.
Tammy. She’s why. Tammy Keller was born and raised in the small village of Denbigh, three hours from the bright lights of Daniel’s Toronto. Her favourite childhood memories involve spending time with her grandmother Anna and hunting and fishing with her father. The family always had vegetable and fruit crops, and raised chickens, cattle, sheep, and pigs to feed
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the extended family. It was a way of life Tammy embraced, and she continues to draw inspiration from her 87-year-old grandmother who still farms, and whose gardens are still famous. Leaving the security of Denbigh was a step for Tammy, made easier by the 28
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urging of her family doctor Russell Scott, who became a friend and mentor. Dr. Scott invited Tammy to work at his Belleville practice, and then exposed her to different medical disciplines. She had options, and one overwhelming motivating factor – her father Dale had
Multiple Sclerosis. “I wanted a job where I had the financial security to do anything he needed and keep him in his home. He loved the outdoors, loved hunting and fishing and taught me that. When he was unable to renovate our home to make it accessible, we did the work while he told
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Daniel and Tammy thought it would be a nice weekend retreat, and maybe eventually they’d plant a few trees, have a vegetable garden, and eventually a few chickens for eggs and a couple of sheep to keep the grass under control.
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us what to do. He had so many talents, and he knew how to pass them along.” After a placement at a chiropody clinic, she found her path. “I really liked it, but it was never on my radar. Dr. Scott encouraged me to pursue a career in private health care, and this
checked all boxes. It was one of the few medical professions where the results could often be immediate. That was so rewarding.” After two-and-a-half years with Dr. Scott, Tammy enrolled at the Michener Institute. The outdoor girl from Denbigh
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admits Belleville was a big step, so living and studying in the shadow of Mt. Sinai Hospital in downtown Toronto was daunting, and the first few days were filled with once-in-a-lifetime moments.
Eventually, Tammy took Daniel to Denbigh to meet her parents. “Dad really like Daniel and knew he was right for me.” Daniel, who had brought a friend along for the weekend, was given a quick introduction to Tammy’s Tammy remembers the first day, upbringing. “Dad and I were up early, registering for class, seeing a young and he told me there was a partridge in man half a kilometre away, and a voice a tree and asked if I wanted to shoot it,” saying, “That’s who I’m going to marry.” recalled Tammy with a laugh. “Daniel She laughed it off as another weird city and his friend woke up pretty quickly. thing, and walked into class, and there Apparently, gun shots meant something was Daniel. That was the first day. The different to city kids. ” third day was September 11, 2001. “I thought the world was ending. I was Daniel and Tammy planned to start a already terrified of the bigness of the city practice together and Daniel knew there but knew I had to be there to achieve my was absolutely no way he was ever going goal. The residence was attached to the to convince Tammy to stay in Toronto. school and I didn’t go outside for three They visited Trenton, which was a months.” neutral halfway point, and both came Daniel and Tammy didn’t interact for up with the same place independently. a while – two years actually – and only “We knew we were in the right spot,” said then because they both volunteered Tammy. On March 5, 2005, they opened to do their internship in Ottawa, Quinte Foot Care at 82 Dundas Street unbeknownst to each other. Tammy in Trenton. Dr. Scott attended the grand couldn’t get out of Toronto quickly opening. He had closed his practice and enough. Even then, it was two months wanted an office to maintain his WSIB before they spoke. “I think we both work. For the next two years he worked knew we would be a distraction from out of Daniel and Tammy’s clinic, and it’s a time Tammy cherishes. our goal,” laughed Tammy.
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“Russell was a huge role model for me,” she acknowledged. “He was so much more than a doctor to his community. He served as coroner for decades, he was the mayor of Belleville, he was a developer and farmer and outdoorsman. He showed me I could do anything I wanted. He always loved animals and raised rare breeds, understanding they are important to our heritage.”
home base for a few years. With plans to head south still under consideration, somehow Daniel found himself heading north.
When they bought the building for the clinic, they knew it was a perfect for their plans – whichever route they took. An upstairs apartment served as
north and another coming home, if the weather is in his favour and there are no mechanical issues. He lives in the clinics, which are primarily nursing
The Nishnawabe Aski Nation oversees programs for First Nations in Northern Ontario, and Daniel and Tammy secured a contract to provide foot care to remote First Nations communities. Daniel, fresh from his urban life Tammy always knew she wanted to in Toronto, found himself flying to farm and prioritized it on her list. First Thunder Bay, then Sioux Lookout, then there was school, then establishing a to isolated communities, some as far successful career. Daniel shared that. north as Fort Severn on Hudson Bay, for The idea of a farm, though, that was a week at a time. not really on Daniel’s radar. Even with a He has made as many as 18 trips in a growing and well-respected practice, he year, and as few as six, has been delayed had not abandoned the idea of pursuing due to blizzards in the north while a Doctor of Podiatric Medicine at Tammy tended the farm back home. Temple. He typically spends a full day heading
Daniel enjoys the clinical work, and the cultural exposure. “There are language barriers, and although most residents speak English, some of the Elders have only limited English. Everyone is respectful of the visiting clinicians. I love going north. I love the change, the work, and the experience. It’s very different with a wide scope of practice. I see a lot more wounds, I do a lot more surgery, and it has helped me perfect the technique.” He appreciates the landscape, too, seeing the land open beneath him, and realizing in all that vastness, there is an incredible amount of life. Wildlife is still part of the communities, and Daniel is thankful he has been able to witness some of the traditional lifestyle and sense of community. “A successful hunt is followed by a huge celebration, and the harvest is shared among the entire community,” he explained. “Going north is the different pace I need. Even the travel days force downtime on me. We all need elbow room, and I find mine in the north,” Daniel said, perhaps a little surprised at that.
stations staffed around the clock by registered nurses. Physicians visit monthly, optometrists yearly. There are 49 communities on his roster, ranging from 300 to 3,000 residents. Some have road access, some are fly-in only.
Tammy has found her own escape – one that is quickly consuming every spare moment. In 2009, looking for a weekend retreat, the couple fell in love with a 115-acre farm with a run-down house in Smithfield, with a panoramic view of Brighton Bay. Daniel and Tammy thought it would be a nice weekend retreat, and maybe eventually they’d plant a few trees, have a vegetable garden, and eventually a few chickens for eggs and a couple of sheep to keep the grass under control.
The kid from the city loves it, embracing the new opportunities and experiences, That was the plan. including landing in Fort Severn and After extensive renovations, the being told to stay inside because of the polar bears. Ultimately, he appreciates weekend getaway became home. The the opportunity to provide care where seven sheep grew to a larger flock of it is desperately needed. “Diabetic foot White Dorper sheep, co-pasturing with care is the major mandate, and diabetes four Sharplaninac livestock guardian occurs in First Nations people at five dogs, and the single most diverse herd of times the national average,” reported Kunekune pigs in the world. To Tammy, it was just a natural progression. She Daniel. always wanted a farm, loves working Daniel treats wounds, performs with animals, and with Dr. Scott’s regular maintenance and minor surgery, mentoring and guidance, looked to rare and assesses needs. At times, he’ll have heritage breeds. to make the call to medivac a patient Besides, Daniel wanted to plant fruit facing amputations. It’s remote, it’s the trees, so technically, it could be his Canadian frontier, and often hospitals idea. “We bought the farm and planted are many hours away.
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cherry trees, and I came across an ad for Mike is there most of the week, looking orchard pigs. Every orchard needs pigs,” after the animals. A retired transmission she laughed, knowing Daniel probably technician, his expertise with equipment and unstoppable work ethic are very isn’t going to buy this theory. More research quickly had Tammy much appreciated by his son and falling in love with the Kunekune breed. daughter-in-law. When Daniel is in the north, Mike is with Tammy at the farm, They are small, they graze without and there is immeasurable comfort there, rooting, they are an old breed from too. New Zealand. They are friendly, absent Tammy’s dream of a few animals has of aggression, and easily managed. The sows are naturally good mothers and grown into an internationally recognized the boars respectful and docile. They operation with the largest and greatest are perfectly suited for small farms, and variety of genetics on the planet. “It’s their meat is prized around the world developing very quickly, and the – lauded for its flavour, marbling, and opportunities presented are unbelievable,” texture. They were everything Tammy she said, glowing as she explained there wanted and more, because they were is a new colour recognized in the registry extremely rare in Canada – only two – the Ivanleigh blended belly band. bloodlines at the time – and quite new The coalition also resulted in the to North America. This was Tammy’s Kunekune Preservation Project, tracking chance to put her science to work to markers for the breed, from birth and improve the breed and fulfill her lifelong weaning weight to loin thickness and dream of farming. back fat. Tammy, naturally, is the director. They started with Martin from Alberta. Not content to simply develop the best He was to be half of a breeding pair, but Kunekune genetics in the world, Tammy his lady friend didn’t arrive. Tammy was driven to find ways to farm better. It turned to the United States Kunekune stared with the dogs, which are natural Pig Registry, sent an email, and heard deterrents for predators, including the back from its president, Lori Enright, coyotes who eye her sheep on a regular who has a Kunekune farm in California. basis. Imported from Serbia, Austria, With Lori’s help, Tammy found friends France, and Alberta, she is considering for Martin, who quickly became a breeding program for them. For now, comfortable in his new home. “He was they are an integral part of the herd, spoiled rotten,” Tammy and Daniel agree. guardians and friends. Martin soon had seven new friends. “I Seeking natural options, such as was still trying to figure out if this was providing grazing space, co-pasturing, for me,” she admitted. and sustainable and environmentallyIt was. Last year, Lori visited Ivanleigh friendly breeds caught the attention of Farms to examine Tammy’s herd. By the several agencies, who provided a stamp time she left, she and Tammy decided of approval after a thorough audit of the to rewrite the confirmation guidelines operation. Ivanleigh Farms is certified for the registry. Before long Tammy was Animal Welfare Approved (AWA), and the president of the American Kunekune raises Certified AWA Kunekune pigs and Pig Registry. Ivanleigh now has pigs Certified AWA and Certified Grassfed representing all 24 bloodlines in the by A Greener World White Dorper world, which is remarkable. In 1979, sheep. Ivanleigh is also certified predator there were only 18 Kunekune pigs left in friendly and wildlife friendly, the first in the world. Anywhere. Total. Now there Ontario and the second in Canada to are more than 200 at Ivanleigh Farms achieve that designation. “Animals raised alone, and the breed is healthy, regulated, outdoors on pasture are stronger, more and in high demand. resilient to disease, bright eyed, and alert – The farm and clinic are both full- just as they should be,” Tammy added. time vocations, and although Tammy High-welfare, pasture-based management has reduced her clinic hours slightly, is central to the ethos at Ivanleigh Farms. her commitment to the practice is “Our practices are neither conventional or unwavering. Time spent away from the standard, nor large-scale commercial. We farm is easier, knowing Daniel’s father take time and care to ensure the production 34
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of our products satisfy the needs of our livestock and ideals of our customers,” explained Tammy. “Striving to achieve the best, we always ensure our animals come first. We breed and raise our animals in a stress-free atmosphere and provide a natural environment so they carry out their normal instinctive animal activities. We are strict from the standpoint that our animals must be raised with the dignity, respect, and the high-welfare treatment they deserve while also caring for the environment and wildlife that surrounds us.”
Ivanleigh Farms choose to pursue AWA certification because they felt it was a way to validate and confirm their farming practices, “We do not always have the pleasure of knowing all our customers on a first name basis, although those who know us know how we operate,” says Tammy. “AWA certification opens a whole new world for potential customers to get to know us while having the peace of mind that our product and livestock are certified and raised according to the highest standard of care. After initially reviewing the AWA standards, we saw
many of the areas of focus were things we had implemented in our management program from its inception. It is the perfect fit for us.” Finding a perfect fit is a recurring theme at Ivanleigh. While Daniel thought city life and advanced research in his chosen field was his future, Tammy showed him a new path, and it’s one he acknowledges is the culmination of their families and their future. “We both grew up with fathers who sacrificed financially, spiritually, and
physically to help us,” noted Daniel. “We wouldn’t be here without them.” He knows, too, what the animals mean to Tammy. “I see the joy it brings to her, and that makes it my joy. I’m always going to be here for Tammy and her dream.” Daniel paused for a second, needing to share one more thought. “This isn’t what I planned, but I don’t think my life would be as complete and enjoyable had I followed my original path. This is enchanting; it’s fulfilling.” COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING spring 2018
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Willowlee Sod The grass is greener in the County
Story by Catherine Stutt Photography by Daniel Vaughan The diversity of Prince Edward County’s agrarian economy is evident as travellers cruise the historic roads, named for kings and queens and early settlers. Rednersville Road is home to orchards – many dormant, most still very much an ongoing enterprise. Loyalist Parkway is home to a significant percentage of the County’s newest agriculture – wineries, with patches of hops as a reminder of a crucial crop of the 1800s. There are fields of barley, thriving almost 130 years after the McKinley Tariff tacked a 48 per cent tax on the County’s exceptionally good grains. On Victoria Road, another prosperous crop grows alongside this historic route, on property owned by three generations of the same family. That’s a good start, in an area where fifth and sixth and seventh generations of the same family have tilled the land for more than two centuries. Although the Vanclief family has only called the County home for 73 years, it has made in an indelibly positive mark on the regional and national agriculture industry.
Kurt Vanclief, owner of Willowlee Sod Farms, appreciates his grandfather Clarence Vanclief ’s decision to relocate to what is now one of Canada’s most popular destinations. “He came from Coe Hill in 1945 and bought property on Victoria Road. I’m really grateful he chose this location. I’m fortunate it has good soil, stone-free fields, and good access to water, which is not always the case on the County,” said Kurt.
secured private financing and was able to keep a good piece in the family. My goal was to take a year off school, get the farm established, and finish my degree. I’m still waiting for that,” he smiled.
Kurt followed tradition, planting cash crops, growing market vegetables, raising livestock. It worked for a few years until the weather inspired him to make a change. The 1992 season was cold and wet. It was the When Clarence arrived, he year after Mount Pinatubo farmed in a more traditional erupted in the Philippines manner. He grew cash crops, and the North America was had some livestock, and grew under grey skies and constant fruits and vegetables. When rain for months. “Nothing his son Lyle took over the matured,” remembered Kurt farm, he did mostly the same, of this disastrous year. “I had scaling back when he entered to adjust the business, which federal politics, representing meant getting an off-farm job the riding of Prince Edward – to maintain it. My goal was Hastings. From 1988, when he to farm full-time. That wasn’t was first elected, to 2004 when going to happen immediately.” he retired from political life, He sought new revenue he held several portfolios in Jean Chrétien’s cabinet, most streams, working shifts at a relating directly to agriculture, local paper mill and operating ultimately serving as Minister the farm when he had time of Agriculture and Agri-Food off, and he did it with help. from 1997 to 2003. “My parents have always Following in his father been incredibly supportive, and grandfather’s footsteps, and the business grew and Kurt planned a career as a is successful because of my farmer, loving the land, and extended family.” appreciating the family farm. He was able to recover, and He attended the University by 1994 purchased the 100 of Guelph to study in its acres his parents sold several respected agricultural years earlier. “We looked for program, with plans to get ways to make is sustainable,” his degree, and continue the he explained. “We planted legacy. In 1988, Kurt learned cash crops, we did custom his parents were selling the harvesting for other farmers, farm. He was 19, had a year we plowed snow, and built up of university, and in 1989 clientele across the board.” He bought 160 acres on the north is proud to share, “We still side of the farm while the have the very first customer south side was sold out of the from 1988.” family. Kurt sought financing, By 2000, his dream came true. getting a real-life lesson in farming. “My parents couldn’t He gave notice at the paper afford to give me the farm or mill and walked away from hold a mortgage, so I had to a good job with predictable get financing, and no one in income and benefits. He took their right mind would give a another direction and planted 19-year-old kid money to by 35 acres of sod. From the first a farm. I was fortunate and harvest, the transition was
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inevitable. Sod was working. Sod was predictable, and the quality of Willowlee’s sod, along with the work ethic and customer service led to a constant demand. The company now has 400 acres of Kentucky Bluegrass, the most popular sod. Kurt recently introduced 18 acres of rhizomatous tall fescue and is one of only five licenced growers in Canada. “It’s a small niche market,” Kurt explained. Because it roots deeper, it consumes less water comparatively once it is established, and is sometimes specified on LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) projects. Kentucky Bluegrass is more common, and Kurt is conscious of growing it in a sustainable manner. In the mid-2000s, he presented an idea to the Nursery Sod Growers Association of Ontario for a green certification program. “We want to be responsible and sustainable, and we wanted independent verification of our process. In agriculture, land is the biggest asset, so the last thing I want to do is devalue that asset by applying chemicals or having a fuel spill. We want our customers and the public to feel good about our products, and we want their trust.”
At Willowlee, sustainability is paramount. “We build ponds for water retention, and we only water the sod about four or five weeks before harvest, if necessary. We manage our crops so we always have lush green grass available for our customers, but a lot of our sod is dormant,” explained Kurt. “Our Bluegrass is rated by the Turfgrass Water Conservation Alliance, and we are producing top varieties for reduced water consumption.” Quality service and products take a team effort and a longterm vision. “We look after our sod through soil quality, environmental awareness, watershed management, fuel storage, minimal fertilizer and herbicide use, and well trained dedicated employees.” Crops are planned well in advance. The 2018 harvest was planted in 2016, and the 2019 crop is already seeded. Crops take more than a year to mature to harvest, and seeding is done only from mid-August to midSeptember. Soil loss is minimal, about the same as a continuous corn crop, or three-eights of an inch per harvest. “Ten crops can take 25 or 30 years to harvest,” continued Kurt. “Once we have bare ground, we plant a cover
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crop to avoid wind and water erosion. When we harvest, we leave behind an immense mass of fibrous roots, which keeps the soil stable.” A typical harvest starts at 4 a.m. Landscapers – one of Willowlee’s biggest sectors – can call in orders up to 6 p.m. the day before and are guaranteed next day delivery. “They expect it first thing in the morning. They don’t want their workers standing around waiting for us. We respect that. We’re in the fields early and will have 1,700 rolls loaded by 5:30. We’ll hit Kingston by 7, and two hours later five customers will have their sod.” The average order is 400 to 600 rolls, some are as high as 2,000, and most days see the company harvest 6,000 rolls. “We cover from Port Hope to Gananoque. There are a lot of sod farms around Toronto and Ottawa. We’re in a small market in between and that caused us to diversity. We are somewhat unique in that regard, and we’re well-positioned, geographically,” he added. “New home construction is a In all these industrial applications, Kurt significant portion of our business, and and his team used a combination of it’s important for local economies. In hydroseeding and emulsions to stabilize the County, the wineries have created the soil and get roots established as a lot of interest. People are coming here quickly as possible. Once the ground to build their second and third homes, cover takes hold, they return with creating a lot of work for contractors. nutrients and fertilizer. That allows us to keep people employed The company helps municipalities, all year. Our key people have lots of sports fields, school boards, and opportunities, and we want to keep colleges with turf grass management them happy; keeping experienced staff plans, and upgrades. The new fields at is key to our growth,” he acknowledged, Albert College and Loyalist in Belleville adding a busy snow removal service and St. Lawrence College in Kingston keeps more than 30 workers employed are proud achievements for the during the winter. company. “They’re high profile in terms Although Willowlee is defined as a sod of use and location,” said Kurt. “Our farm, it has a much bigger scope. “Half work is pretty visible at times.” of our work is in seeding and erosion Offering solutions for many sectors control, and some of it is on high keeps the company growing. profile sites.” Kurt and the Willowlee “Our industry needs people to keep team worked with the Ministry of digging holes,” he simplified. “Whether Environment and Climate Change at the it’s remediating a contaminated site, Deloro Mine Site Cleanup Project on water and sewer work, ditches, road erosion control, where the team worked construction, or home building, getting to a high degree of specifications. On a ground cover established as soon as the Madawaska Mine Cleanup Project possible is important. ” in Bancroft, Willowlee helped develop plans pertaining to its area of expertise. The benefits of a healthy lawn are equally important in a residential They worked with a solar farm on setting. “There is more surface area on the side of hill in Northumberland an acre of lawn than on an acre of trees,” County, where erosion was imminent. 42
COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SPRING 2018
FRONT STREET
FARMERS’
MARKET OPEN MAY - OCTOBER
WEDNESDAYS & SATURDAYS Kurt explained. “Grass grows April to November; trees are in leaf from late May to October, and 2,500 square feet of healthy turf grass produces enough oxygen for a family of four. A healthy lawn produces a lot of benefits.”
growers is incredibly helpful and we have a network across North America. We can find a solution for a lot of challenges.” Kurt values relationships, particularly those with local contractors. “We have a lot of close personal relationships with our customers. We’re friends when the work is done.”
Working in the industry his entire adult life, Kurt credits networking for the level of service he offers his Looking over his fields on clients. He is a member of Victoria Road, over the land the Nursery Sod Growers his family has called home Association of Ontario, since the Second World War serving as president for ended, Kurt smiled. “We three of the nine years he see some beautiful homes, has been on the board, Turf beautiful spaces, and we Producers International, see the difference our work and Turfgrass Water makes to a property. We’re Conservation Alliance. just digging dirt; it’s not glorious or glamorous, but it “We learn so much from makes a huge difference.” other growers; we network and study how each other works, and we help each other with solutions for our clients,” said Kurt, recently returned from a tour of Florida turf farms. “The association with other
On this historic property, the sod isn’t Kurt’s favourite crop. “What I love growing most? Customer relationships.”
8:00 a.m.-1:00 p.m. Buy In-Season Produce, Flowers, Baked Goods, VQA Wines & Ciders, Crafts, Maple Syrup, Honey, Preserves and so much more!
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www.quintewest.ca COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING spring 2018
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Vantage Point Media’s
local talent
gains international
acclaim
Story by Cindy Duffy Photography by Daniel Vaughan
It could be said Vantage Point Media House was founded on fishing stories. For a little more than a decade the company has had a part in telling many other kinds of stories too – adventure stories, stories of people breaking world records, and even mythical stories. Their own story is one of a successful hometown business, doing very well from their modest location in downtown Belleville. The company is growing, even though the service they offer – state of the art video and film production from the shooting to post production phase – is usually associated with larger urban centres like Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, New York, or Los Angeles.
The company’s story began when Belleville native, Nick Pujic, an avid angler, was approached by cable television’s World Fishing Network to shoot some video. As co-owner of The Canadian Fly Fishing magazine at the time, Nick was already travelling the country to more remote areas taking photos for his magazine, so it made perfect sense for him to shoot some video for a television show at the same time. Thus, Flymax Films was born, eventually becoming the series Fly Nation and laying the foundation for what would become Vantage Point Media House. Senior producer Victor Cooper began working with Nick as an intern in the
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Loyalist College television and film in downtown Belleville to accommodate featuring legendary Bigfoot as one of its program. At first it was just the two of this new work. The new headquarters characters. Shooting had just wrapped them and they outsourced the editing. includes a reception area, offices, editing up and the set had yet to be torn down. Specializing in outdoor production, suites, and a new sound studio with 5.1 Victor and his wife Jodi Cooper, selfthe company now owns all their own surround sound and closed captioning described horror movie junkies, wrote equipment, including 8K Red cameras, services (closed captioning is now the screenplay, and Victor directed capable of 17 times the resolution of required in both the United States and and plays Bigfoot in the movie, which was shot locally and featured all local high definition. They also have aerial Canada for broadcast programming). cinematography ability, either using The new space will also accommodate actors. The only thing that wasn’t local drones or by shooting from helicopters, an entirely new venture. This winter VP in the movie was Victor’s suit, which and have a resident photographer, and Academy launched with three video and was custom made for him by a Hamilton six fulltime staff, most of them graduates film production workshops, offering special effects company. of the same Loyalist program as Victor. participants the chance for professional “The Woodsmen to date has been the “There is a lot of good talent coming out instruction and hands on experience most fun I have had at work, but maybe of Loyalist College and we’ve tapped into with their high-end equipment. period. It was just a ton of fun. We it,” said Victor. In the middle of the offices and editing spent eight days lost in the woods being As the business grew, Victor said the suites is an open area filled with what, tracked down by Bigfoot and came out decision was made to expand the sort of at first glance, appeared to be an art the other side unscathed.” work they do. A year ago, the company installation but as it turned out, the The couple wanted to produce a horror moved its operations to a larger space stage-like structure was actually the set movie without the computer-generated above Capers restaurant on Front Street from The Woodsmen, a short horror film images prevalent in today’s movies. “It’s 46
COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SPRING 2018
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neat to flex our muscles on something like this and show we have some pretty talented people locally,” he said. The Woodsmen was originally written as a full-length movie but that proved too costly, so they shortened it, and launched a very successful Kickstarter
crowd funding campaign last fall, raising enough money to produce the shorter version. Victor describes it as a passion project, but the hope is it will be picked up and maybe serialized. The Woodsmen is not the couple’s first foray into horror. They wrote, and Victor
directed Mercy: The Story of the Artist, a short horror film also staring Kirsten Wight which came out in 2015. In order to pursue these types of projects they formed a group called The Five Year Plan made up of Victor, Jodi, Kirsten Wight, and her husband
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PUT A SMILE ON YOUR BACKYARD Rob Howsam, also a Vantage Point producer. “It’s basically a creative group willing to spend some extra time or our off time creating these concepts then joining together with Vantage Point to actually pull them off.” There are obvious differences in making a documentary, a television series, or a movie, but for Victor the similarity is more important – all of them are about telling stories. “At Vantage Point we specialize in outdoor production. It’s what we are good at. Most of us here are hunters and anglers, so being outdoors isn’t new for us. We’ve spent a lot of time filming in the outdoors and it’s its own craft. To be able to deal with weather
or all the other things you may have to deal with when you’re out on a boat in the middle of a lake, in a tree stand in the middle of a forest, or on the back of a snowmobile when it’s 30 below, that’s our specialty. Within that I think the reason we’ve done so well is we are good at telling stories. That transitions into anything.” Specializing in outdoor production has meant a lot of travelling and adventures. The Vantage Point Media House website is filled with stories too numerous to mention. They have shot documentaries about sharks for Discovery Channel, and they were in the Nevada desert when Aerovelo’s Eta broke the human powered speed record three times in September of
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2015. Even their commercial work gets accolades with their HUK fishing gear advertisement winning the Videographer Award of Excellence for best product commercial in 2017.
At the end of the day Vantage Point Media House and the Bay of Quinte region have proven to be a good fit. They are close enough to international airports for all the travelling, there is a growing demand locally for their Although Vantage Point’s work takes services, and the popularity of events them around the globe, they are busy like The Belleville Downtown Docfest locally, too. The company has worked and Trenton’s Hollywood North film with Gray Brothers Films, Belleville festival suggest there may even be a General Hospital, and Quinte Craft growing local interest in the sort of work breweries. “There’s a lot going on here, Vantage Point Media House does. under the surface that most people don’t necessarily see. It’s a pretty busy little Finally, as Victor points out, the fishing town,” says Victor. is great. “We really like it here. We’re
FINE HOMES S H O W C
outdoors people, and it’s amazing to be able to leave the office and literally walk to the river and go fishing at lunch, or at the end of the day to still have enough sunlight to go sit in a tree stand and hunt. If you were living in the big city, you would have to take some time off to go do those things because just getting to them, there are just not enough hours in the day.”
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signposts Bongards Corners Story and photography by Lindi Pierce
Bongards Corners Bongards Corners sits at the intersection of County Road 7 and Bongards Crossroad, North Marysburgh, in Prince Edward County. Here a cluster of houses hints at a once-thriving community. Only a few locals recall when Bongards was a hub of commerce and industry, 19th century style.
office in the early 1900s. Beside that house stands a tilting two-storey board and batten shed which once housed a barrel factory. Barrels for shipping apples from David McCornock’s pioneer orchards were manufactured here; a shed next door housed the delicate work of apple-packing.
Ask Viola McCornock, born here in The plain red brick Wesleyan Methodist 1891. When Ola travelled to Picton for Church, centre of community life, was built her music, she took the steamer from in 1873 on land owned by Deacon Bongard. Bongards Landing, walking the mile from It served as the United Church from 1925 her father David’s home, down over the until 1961 when it was decommissioned, edge of the escarpment to the shore of and later demolished. A story persists: on Adolphus Reach. From this wharf, in 1879, the reverse of the date stone above the her future mother-in-law Mrs. Levi Pierce door workers found an 1869 tombstone recalled taking her Methodist Sunday inscription. The unused stone, a bargain, School class for an excursion on the steam had appealed to the thrifty Methodists. cruiser SS Reindeer. The church property still stands empty. The hamlet of Bongards Corners was established by Conrad Bongard, a Hessian who had fought for the British during the American Revolution. Son John cleared the lot at the corner and built a home, store, and post office. The house still stands, but is uninhabited.
Further east stands the stylish David McCornock house, where Ola and her siblings grew up. The photogenic redpainted board driveshed, target of many drive-by shootings, once housed brother Clair’s boatbuilding shed.
By 1863, Bongard senior established a steamboat landing at the foot of the government road, with storage sheds for grain, Waupoos cheese, and local apples awaiting shipment to Montreal and faraway England. Bongard’s wharf was a regular stop for passenger boats.
Bongards Corners children walked the two miles west to S.S.#3, a one-room stucco clad schoolhouse. From its unpainted belfry a ghostly bells rings to signal the end of play in the fields beyond. One of those children, great-grand-daughter of David McCornock, still runs the family farm at Bongards Corners.
At the top of the hill, in 1872, son Deacon built his fine house of 10,000 bricks said to have been brought from Picton by horse and wagon. The large frame home opposite served as post and telegraph
Credit: The McCornocks from Ireland, by Clara E. Thompson COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING spring 2018
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at h
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me with
COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SPRING 2018
’s Alan Gratias
Brian Richard andand Cynthia Vida Photos courtesy Alan Gratias
We are in explorer mode as Joanie and I set out to Willow Hall on the Burr Road on a winter’s night that holds the promise of spring. Exploring, because I had recently sold my own Cressy House and wanted to reconnoitre other possible home sites in the County. We have been invited to a Banish January Blues dinner at the home of Cynthia Peters and her husband Brian Ford. She, of From the Farm Cooking School fame, and he of financial wizardry reputation. We leave early to allow for running some of the back roads in Ameliasburgh to scout possible rehabilitation projects for ourselves. Cynthia has promised a Jamaican food theme in anticipation of warmer weather, and knowing the delicacies that wait, we want to arrive hungry and on time. From the Farm Cooking School is reputed to have the finest table in the County. The handsome red brick farm house, Willow Hill, stately in its classic Ontario gabled silhouette, sits nicely off the Burr Road, separated by a drystone wall Brian built himself. A wraparound galleria gives the home a look of rural gentility. Brian and Cynthia are house proud and everything about the property reads loved and looked after. It is one of those homes, English country style, that reveals itself slowly with room after room of surprising depth and design flourish. Surrounded by fields and undulating pastures, the home reeks of serenity. The original section of the heritage home, built of board and batten, was built by Lemuel Pearsall in the 1830s as a homestead for his family and their hop growing business. In the 1850s a red brick centre hall addition was added to the front of the house. Brian and Cynthia made Willow Hill their own in 2004. If you live anywhere in the County you are a neighbour and think nothing
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When asked the secrets of a successful marriage... “Sharing laughter every day, and respecting each other’s differences.” 56
COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING SPRING 2018
of traversing several townships for good food and good company. Cynthia greets us in a chic black dress and red sandals – her nod to our Caribbean aspirations. The other guests arrive, Jonathan and Corrine from Milford, James and Suzanne from the Quaker Road, and Judith from Waupoos, as Brian prepares champagne and pineapple cocktails at what I like to think of as the longest bar in the Quinte – a 20-foot counter rescued from a general store in Napanee. As a previous visitor to Willow Hill I ask for an immediate tour of the kitchen, which is traditional and modern at the same time. Bursting with bubbling pots and primitive antiques like old butter churns and a Mennonite wood bake oven, the worksite is anchored by a professional gas range and shelves overflowing with books and recipes, including copies of Cynthia’s own The Art of Herbs cookbook. As a food writer and critic, Cynthia is a regular contributor to numerous publications and websites. A back-to-the-wall pine cupboard with a collection of Royal Doulton coffee sets inherited from Brian’s family stands proudly in the corner. Cynthia started her From the Farm Cooking School when she and Brian first moved to the County. Building on her experience as founder of The Spice Sisters, a personal chef business in Toronto, the school focuses on small groups in her kitchen learning the art of seasonal cooking using fresh local ingredients. From the Farm is a sort of gateway for city dwellers seeking culinary adventures in the County, and typically includes tours of local farms, producers, and wineries.
and Young partner, Brian, a chartered accountant, reinvented himself as a business-risk-services gun-for-hire, most recently as CFO of a public life sciences company based in Montreal. Nowadays he hangs out his shingle as Petersford Consulting and is often seen at the Belleville train station commuting to Toronto. Well past the scallop and shrimp cake second course and into the braised oxtail with pearl onions main course, James, who has known our hosts the longest, stands to toast Brian and Cynthia. “I live in the rear-view mirror,” he says by way of introducing the story of how he first met the couple 20 years earlier at a Crescent School reunion where he was the long time academic director. Throughout the evening guests pepper Cynthia with questions about the preparation of the Caribbean dinner menu which never strays far from the limelight. Especially the dessert - a banana cake with butter rum sauce under a scoop of coconut and pineapple ice cream. We all shift into the living room where Cynthia takes up the keys at the baby grand piano. Brian, who has been tending the fire all night, throws extra logs into the open hearth. We are engulfed by wave of apple scented warmth. We all join the lyrics to Carole King’s Will You Love Me Tomorrow, some more lustily than others. In full throat, James announces, “Food is great but music essential.” Jonathan, Irish to the core, starts dancing in a syncopated rhythm somewhere between Riverdance and Bruno Mars. Fresh snow has started to fall. On the way out, I ask our hosts what secrets of a successful marriage they would like to share.
Brian assembles the guests around the harvest dining table as Cynthia serves red lentil and carrot soup with “Sharing laughter every day,” Cynthia curried sweet potato and phyllo bundles. offers. “And respecting each other’s He welcomes us by recounting the story differences.” of how he wooed Cynthia while living in “Good five-year planning,” Brian adds. Toronto. He is very much the romantic “And let it evolve.” at heart. Turns out they are both accomplished piano players and they As I bid adieu, he adds, “We aren’t so played their favourite pieces to each good at short term planning like what other over the line on their first phone we’re having for lunch.” conversation. His Gershwin, hers Carole King. After a 30-year career as an Ernst COUNTY & QUINTE LIVING spring 2018
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S a i ta rg ’s Gravitas Quotient is a measure of o n e ’s r e s e r v e s o f i n n e r w i s d o m .
MichèIe Hozer answers 16 Gravitas Questions with Alan Gratias Name one universal rule of friendship? Laughter.
Photo by Val Carey
G r av i ta s Q u o t i e n T
What are you going to do about growing old? Develop as many laugh lines as possible. Photo by Russell Walker
What makes your heart stand still? Newborns from all species (including snakes). And on the flip side those who are dying. The wonder of life and death. If you knew the truth, how would you reveal it? In a film. We all hope there will be one more time. One more time for what? One more time to do it better. Name one secret you do not want to discover before you die? How they put the caramel in the Caramilk. What are you fatally attracted to? A good story. Give one example of life’s absurdities? Reality television. Why do we sometimes crave chaos? I am not sure if I am attracted to chaos as much as chaos is attracted to me. How do you stay clear of the rocks and shoals? Hire the best navigator around. When they say, ‘Follow the fear,’ what fear are you following? Fear of being exposed as a fraud. What is your favourite recipe for unhappiness? Being a control freak. What takes you down the rabbit hole? Starting a new film. How can we escape the trap line of our own obsessions? Not to take yourself too seriously. If we come into this world with sealed orders, what are your orders? Finding the shining light in people and reflecting it back. How are you different from the way others perceive you? I am prone to giggle fits.
About MichèIe
With two films on the Oscar short list, Emmy-nominated, and Gemini-winning Michèle Hozer has been working as a filmmaker and editor since 1987. Her work has received accolades from the most prestigious film festivals in the world, including the Sundance Film Festival and the International Documentary Film Festival in Amsterdam. Shake Hands with the Devil won the 2007 Emmy for Best Documentary and the Audience Award at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival. Promise to the Dead picked up her first International Emmy nomination as an editor. Her directorial debut with Genius Within: The Inner Life of Glenn Gould won the coveted spot on the Academy Award short list as well a Gemini for Best Biography. In 2012, Michèle was awarded The Allan King Award for Excellence in Documentary for West Wind: The Vision of Tom Thomson. In 2015, Michèle completed her first solo feature length documentary in the combined roles of director, editor, and producer for Sugar Coated probing the role of sugar in a global healthcare epidemic. Sugar Coated was honoured with The Donald Britain at the 2016 Canadian Screen Awards. Michèle has just completed the feature length doc Sponsorland for TV Ontario on a Syrian refuge family with 11 children resettling in Prince Edward County. She and her husband Russell Walker have recently purchased a waterfront farm in Waupoos after years of badgering by Russell. I asked her about her secret of a successful marriage. “Daily walks together with our lab Molly and Friday night date night at home with wine and cheese.” By Alan Gratias
Discover your Gravitas Quotient at www.gravitasthegame.com
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