
Making new friends at Calvary Temple Youth Camp
Their story illustrates how a program designed to enrich children's lives can also be advantageous for parents, showing the wider impact of a summer getaway.
'I had classes at that time,' Tiffany said. 'So, while she was having fun, it gave me an opportunity to be able to focus more on getting assignments done. We also have my mother living with us.'
SUPPLIED
Eight-year-old Quirin Nolan is already looking forward to next year's summer camp.
Many families face financial barriers when considering summer camp for their children. The Sunshine Fund, which is facilitated by the Manitoba Camping Association, aims to address this, having supported 603 young Manitobans in attending camp in 2024. This year, 465 children have signed up, with several more expected and 31 camps to choose from.
'I was kind of a nervous wreck all week — first time being away from me,' the mother admitted with a chuckle. 'I thought maybe when she came back she would have missed me or told me that she didn't want to come back. Instead, she made new friends, and it was a great experience.'
Camp environments foster independence and build confidence, allowing children to develop new skills and create lasting friendships in a supportive setting. Tiffany said the support offered to her by Calvary Temple Youth Camp, including access to a phone for children who might turn homesick, helped put her nerves at ease.
Meanwhile, the camp provided the perfect atmosphere for her daughter to be a kid. Tiffany said Quirin took part in all kinds of activities throughout the week, including various water sports, and there was even a station where the girls could get their nails done.
It was through these stories that Tiffany recognized the significant value of such programs. She understood that for many families in Winnipeg, especially those balancing tight budgets and demanding schedules, access to valuable summer experiences remains a significant challenge.
She now advocates for other families in similar situations.
Every Second Friday
The latest on food and drink in Winnipeg and beyond from arts writers Ben Sigurdson and Eva Wasney.
'I would 100 per cent recommend it,' she said. 'We're so thankful and grateful for Sunshine Fund to allow my daughter to go and experience this.'
In today's economic climate, the cost of summer camp can be a significant hurdle. Tiffany pointed out how the Sunshine Fund helps bridge this gap, offering 'a great way for kids to have these great experiences without the financial stress.'
The positive impact on Quirin has been evident, and both mother and daughter are already looking forward to next year.
'I would definitely look into doing it again next year,' Tiffany said. 'Quirin wants to go next year, too.'
Jeff.Hamilton@freepress.mb.ca
Jeff HamiltonMultimedia producer
Jeff Hamilton is a sports and investigative reporter. Jeff joined the Free Press newsroom in April 2015, and has been covering the local sports scene since graduating from Carleton University's journalism program in 2012. Read more about Jeff.
Every piece of reporting Jeff produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.
Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.
Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
a day ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Reeling in annual economic benefits
If you're looking for Shu-Mon Mok outside of work, there's a good chance he's gone fishing. The Winnipeg resident has had a passion for the pastime ever since he cast his first line at age 12. 'I just saw kids doing it and wanted to do it,' Mok said. '(That) kicked off a very lifelong crazy obsession.' The 30-year-old business analyst is an avid participant in the Manitoba Master Angler program. Administered by Travel Manitoba, the program formally recognizes trophy fish caught within the province. This year marks 65 years since Travel Manitoba assumed responsibility for the program, which was started in 1958 by the Neepawa Game and Fish Association. The Crown corporation advertises it as the oldest and most established angler recognition program in North America and notes it links to the province's tourism industry and world-class angling opportunities. 'It's known as an amazing program worldwide,' said Josh McFaddin, a fishing consultant with Travel Manitoba. Participants submit a photo of their catch through the Master Angler app and, once their submission is verified, receive a certificate and a pin celebrating their achievement. There are 30 qualifying species. Because certain species are only found in certain parts of Manitoba, the program can motivate Manitobans and tourists alike to explore the province, officials said. That's the case for Mok. From Twin Lake in the Duck Mountains to Wasp Lake in the Whiteshell to Clearwater Lake northeast of The Pas, fishing has taken him all over Manitoba. 'It's the only reason I travel this entire province — just trying to catch these weird fish,' he said. Recreational fishing generates approximately $600 million in annual economic benefits in the province, per Travel Manitoba. The Master Angler program is important because it promotes tourism and the diversity of local fisheries, said Don Lamont, executive director of the Manitoba Lodges and Outfitters Association. 'Many of our lodges … promote the program,' Lamont said. 'It's a selling feature.' The program is appealing, he added, because it promotes accomplishment and recognition. 'People love to get recognized,' said Lamont, who has been involved with recreational fishing in the province since 1982. 'I think it's by far the most successful program of its kind anywhere in the world.' The program is also meant to promote conservation. In 1991, 65 per cent of registered entries were released back into the water, according to Travel Manitoba. Today, that number has grown to 92 per cent. The catch-and-release badge, awarded to those who choose to release a qualifying fish, promotes this conservation ethic. 'Taking care of the resource is the most important part because this (program) wouldn't exist if people were mistreating the resources,' McFaddin said. Monday Mornings The latest local business news and a lookahead to the coming week. In 2015, the Master Angler database had documented more than 250,000 trophy fish. Today, that number has grown to more than 481,000 registered entries. The program maintains an annual average of 10,000 entries. Mok said he's slowed down with his Master Angler pursuits in recent years, but one fish he hopes to catch someday is an Arctic grayling — a species in the salmon family found in the far reaches of northern Manitoba. As much as he's accomplished during 18 years of fishing, Mok said he still has a lot to learn. 'The sport humbles you all the time,' he said. 'You just try to figure out how you can improve your game next time.' Aaron EppReporter Aaron Epp reports on business for the Free Press. After freelancing for the paper for a decade, he joined the staff full-time in 2024. He was previously the associate editor at Canadian Mennonite. Read more about Aaron. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.


Winnipeg Free Press
6 days ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Try out being a tourist at home — in Winnipeg
Opinion Many Canadians and Manitobans are rethinking their travel plans to the United States this summer. Rather than exploring the architecture and history of other places, we might take this opportunity to become tourists in our own city, rediscovering Winnipeg — a city that is often underappreciated, but one that is truly unique in Canada. A good starting point for exploration is Upper Fort Garry Heritage Provincial Park. Once the administrative hub of the fur trade and the site of the Louis Riel-led Red River Rebellion, this fort is often considered the birthplace of both Winnipeg and Manitoba. Visitors can connect to its history by walking through interpretive gardens that outline the ghosts of lost buildings or take in the dramatic public art wall that rises along the original fortifications. The land surrounding the fort was once part of the HBC Reserve, a 200-hectare tract that stretched north to present-day Notre Dame Avenue. After the Hudson's Bay Company surrendered Rupert's Land to the federal government, it retained this property, transforming it into Winnipeg's first planned neighbourhood. With Broadway as its central thoroughfare, streets were laid out, thousands of elm trees planted, and schools and churches were built to attract residential development. Many of Winnipeg's most prominent citizens moved in, building elegant homes along the tree-lined avenues. Brent Bellamy Photo The Union Bank Tower, Canada's first skyscraper, the tallest building in the country at its completion. One such citizen was Sir Hugh John Macdonald, a Manitoba premier and son of Canada's first prime minister. In 1895, he would build Dalnavert House, a red-brick mansion on Carlton Street, one of Winnipeg's first homes with electricity, indoor plumbing, and central heating. A century later, the Canadian Antiques Society hailed it as 'one of the finest examples of Victorian domestic architecture in North America.' Unfortunately, much of the beautiful historic neighbourhood has been replaced with parking lots and large modern buildings, but you can still find a few of the houses, apartments and churches hiding in their shadows, and Dalnavert is today a beautiful immersive museum. Walking through its doors allows one to imagine what the grand neighbourhood was once like, providing a glimpse into the way of life for early Winnipeggers. North of the HBC Reserve, a neighbourhood of muscular, stone buildings was also rising, the entrepreneurial centre of an optimistic young city. The Exchange District National Historic Site is today the most intact turn of the century commercial neighbourhood in Canada, standing as a physical record of Winnipeg's transformation from pioneer settlement to modern metropolis. Strolling through the Exchange on a warm summer day, it's easy to imagine a time when wooden sidewalks bustled with men wearing dark hats, ladies wearing long dresses, and the clip-clop sound of horse-drawn carriages filling the air. Stand at the corner of McDermot and Albert and you are surrounded by buildings that have witnessed much of our city's history. Their worn and uneven brick walls are eager to tell us their story. Taking the time to read their facades — the rhythm of arched windows, the detailed brickwork, the ornate cornices — you begin to unlock their quiet narrative. Walk under the shadows of Union Bank Tower at the bend in Main Street to appreciate what is Canada's first skyscraper, the tallest building in the country at its completion. A landmark of such significance would be nationally recognized if it had the boosterism of Toronto or Montreal. Brent Bellamy Photo Lower Fort Garry. An added layer of the Exchange District experience is to explore Canada's best collection of ghost signs, the layers of hand painted wall advertisements that are slowly fading into time. These ethereal pieces of the urban fabric tell the colourful story of the neighbourhood as a manufacturing centre, our once-thriving garment industry represented by companies such as Buffalo Cap and Neckwear, Patrick's Shoes and McGregor Hosiery. Today, the Exchange's yellow brick warehouses and terra cotta towers are filled with galleries, restaurants, theatres, and shops. Visitors can enjoy concerts or festivals, take tours, or simply wander through this 20-block National Historic Site — an urban treasure few cities possess. Across the river from the Exchange, another chapter of Winnipeg's unique story is brought to life. Once two cities — one English, one French — Winnipeg's dual identity is expressed through a small collection of historic buildings, with the city's best view of its modern skyline. Standing in the tranquil courtyard of St. Boniface Cathedral the circular opening that once held a stunning rose window tells the story of a young painter working in the attic on a mid-summer day in 1968. A cigarette carelessly flicked away would cause a fire that ripped through the largest and most imposing church in Western Canada. Within an hour, the two great towers at its front would collapse, tearing through the roof of the building, and through the heart of the Franco-Manitoban community. A beautiful modern church, designed by architect Étienne Gaboury, sits with grace and elegance withinthe ruins, creating an internal courtyard that provides a place to quietly reflect on both the sense of loss and the perseverance of a dynamic community that found such a thoughtful way to rebuild and move forward. Weekday Evenings Today's must-read stories and a roundup of the day's headlines, delivered every evening. Next door, the Saint-Boniface Museum continues the celebration of that community, housed in the former Grey Nuns Convent built in 1846, a gracious two-storey hipped roof structure that is the largest oak log building in North America. Brent Bellamy Photo Upper Fort Garry Moving north, an exploration can go even further back in time to reveal the stories of the earliest settlers in the west — from Seven Oaks House, the oldest home on the Canadian Prairies, and its neighbour, Inkster's General Store from 1831, the oldest building in Winnipeg, to the settler homesteads along River Road and St. Andrew's, the oldest church in Western Canada. As a bookend to the interpretive gardens that hold the memory of a lost fort in Downtown Winnipeg, the real thing still sits along the Red River just north of the city limits. Despite a junior high field trip being the last time most of us have visited Lower Fort Garry, the oldest intact fur-trading post in North America and the location of the signing of Treaty One deserves to be given a profile of international prominence. Wandering the grounds, listening to the interpreters, and absorbing the history of an original, perfectly preserved two-century-old fur-trading fort is an experience that cannot be had anywhere else in the country. Winnipeg is a city that is rarely thought of as a tourist destination, but the stories told through its architecture are unique in Canada. Taking the time to be tourists in our own city might help us more deeply understand ourselves and invite others to join us on that journey. Brent Bellamy is creative director at Number Ten Architectural Group. Dalnavert House on Carlton Street, one of Winnipeg's first homes with electricity, indoor plumbing, and central heating. The courtyard of St. Boniface Cathedral. Brent Bellamy Photos Winnipge's Exchange District shows off the layers of hand painted wall advertisements that are slowly fading into time. Brent BellamyColumnist Brent Bellamy is creative director for Number Ten Architectural Group. Read full biography Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.


Winnipeg Free Press
26-07-2025
- Winnipeg Free Press
Making new friends at Calvary Temple Youth Camp
For eight-year-old Quirin Nolan, a week at summer camp meant new experiences and lasting memories. For her mother, Tiffany, a dedicated student pursuing her degree in social work, the same week gave her the time and space to focus on her studies. Their story illustrates how a program designed to enrich children's lives can also be advantageous for parents, showing the wider impact of a summer getaway. 'I had classes at that time,' Tiffany said. 'So, while she was having fun, it gave me an opportunity to be able to focus more on getting assignments done. We also have my mother living with us.' SUPPLIED Eight-year-old Quirin Nolan is already looking forward to next year's summer camp. Many families face financial barriers when considering summer camp for their children. The Sunshine Fund, which is facilitated by the Manitoba Camping Association, aims to address this, having supported 603 young Manitobans in attending camp in 2024. This year, 465 children have signed up, with several more expected and 31 camps to choose from. 'I was kind of a nervous wreck all week — first time being away from me,' the mother admitted with a chuckle. 'I thought maybe when she came back she would have missed me or told me that she didn't want to come back. Instead, she made new friends, and it was a great experience.' Camp environments foster independence and build confidence, allowing children to develop new skills and create lasting friendships in a supportive setting. Tiffany said the support offered to her by Calvary Temple Youth Camp, including access to a phone for children who might turn homesick, helped put her nerves at ease. Meanwhile, the camp provided the perfect atmosphere for her daughter to be a kid. Tiffany said Quirin took part in all kinds of activities throughout the week, including various water sports, and there was even a station where the girls could get their nails done. It was through these stories that Tiffany recognized the significant value of such programs. She understood that for many families in Winnipeg, especially those balancing tight budgets and demanding schedules, access to valuable summer experiences remains a significant challenge. She now advocates for other families in similar situations. Every Second Friday The latest on food and drink in Winnipeg and beyond from arts writers Ben Sigurdson and Eva Wasney. 'I would 100 per cent recommend it,' she said. 'We're so thankful and grateful for Sunshine Fund to allow my daughter to go and experience this.' In today's economic climate, the cost of summer camp can be a significant hurdle. Tiffany pointed out how the Sunshine Fund helps bridge this gap, offering 'a great way for kids to have these great experiences without the financial stress.' The positive impact on Quirin has been evident, and both mother and daughter are already looking forward to next year. 'I would definitely look into doing it again next year,' Tiffany said. 'Quirin wants to go next year, too.' Jeff HamiltonMultimedia producer Jeff Hamilton is a sports and investigative reporter. Jeff joined the Free Press newsroom in April 2015, and has been covering the local sports scene since graduating from Carleton University's journalism program in 2012. Read more about Jeff. Every piece of reporting Jeff produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates. Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber. Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.