July 3rd, 2025

Life

Careers

  • Business Beat: Youth entrepreneurs resilient, adaptable and optimistic

    Community Futures Entre-Corp supports all flavors of entrepreneurs, but the smile that crosses Entrepreneur Advisor Pat Guist’s face when she talks about youth entrepreneurs belies her otherwise diplomatic facade. She loves working with youth. And why not? Their infectious enthusiasm, limitless potential and glass-half-full attitude is refreshing. You may have noticed the increased number of [...] Read More »

    4 years ago
  • Insurance Understood: Backcountry camping anyone?

    I love camping. Specifically, ultralight backcountry camping. It requires attention to detail, takes me to wonderful places and provides balance in an otherwise hectic world. This summer I am taking my daughters out and want them to have great experiences too. Camping can differ a lot based what you want to experience. The same holds [...] Read More »

    4 years ago
  • Business Beat: The value of work-integrated learning

    Work-integrated learning is an internationally recognized strategy that places students into real-world work placements, exposing students to interactive learning experiences in their field of study and equipping them with the required employability skills to succeed in the workforce. These placements are an important element in developing the future workforce and include applied research projects, apprenticeships, [...] Read More »

    4 years ago
  • Business Beat: Entrepreneur leads business school

    The new leader of Medicine Hat College’s business programs is bringing experience in entrepreneurship, business leadership, and academia to the table. Timothy Spielman, Dean of Business and Continuing Studies, has lived in Alberta all his life but has had the opportunity to work around the globe and has spent significant segments of his career in [...] Read More »

    4 years ago
  • Business Beat: City now accepting applications for 2021 Development Incentive Program

    Invest Medicine Hat and the City of Medicine Hat are now accepting applications for the 2021 development incentive program. The City of Medicine Hat encourages development and redevelopment in the City and incentives are an effective way to stimulate investment and support desirable economic growth that would have not otherwise occurred. City council approved a [...] Read More »

    4 years ago

Cuisine

  • From Our Table: Turn up the heat to avoid food poisoning

    I know this is a food column but I’m going to share a little story with you that is not so appetizing. In fact, here’s a warning: This column may contain content some might find culinarily offensive. A few years ago I was out at a local restaurant. My succulent Caesar salad topped with grilled [...] Read More »

    5 years ago
  • From Our Table: Cool as a cucumber

    Summer is officially here! School is out, the warm summer sun is shining in the sky and summer storms have started. I love the thunderstorms but I could definitely do without the hail. I have a few pots and perennials looking somewhat sad with some shredded leaves and bent branches after last Thursday’s storm. At [...] Read More »

    6 years ago
  • From Our Table: Get proteins from a variety of sources

    So it’s going to be a challenge to follow the last column guest written by my youngest son Benjamin while I was struggling with a cold. Thank you so much to everyone who commented on how much they enjoyed it. And no I did not write the headline; my editor actually picked that one. And [...] Read More »

    6 years ago
  • From Our Table: Dietitians can help you unlock the potential of food

    March is Nutrition Month and the theme Unlock the Potential of Food is a continuation from last year’s theme so some of the simple yet key messages can be emphasized. The focus is on looking at the many benefits food has to offer in so many areas of our lives. It’s also an opportunity to [...] Read More »

    6 years ago
  • From Our Table: Recipes for a merry Christmas dinner

    Christmas season is in full swing with just seven sleeps until Christmas Day. I truly hope you are taking time to enjoy the seasonal celebrations. This time of year can be very busy and somewhat stressful. It is so important to stop and take a deep breath and really look around at the delightful decorations, [...] Read More »

    7 years ago

Health

  • All Psyched Up: Putting things in order

    December is usually a very busy month for me, but this year was probably the craziest yet! The fact that I have been working from home for nine months meant a lot of changes. My dining room table has become my office centre and each chair has specific filing bins with forms that I use. [...] Read More »

    5 years ago
  • Common Sense Health: It takes guts to have good health

    Why is it that some people eat to their heart’s content and never gain a pound, while others gain weight with a glance at the plate? As Bill Gates said, “Life is not fair. Get used to it.” But fair or unfair, is there a complex, unseen system that plays a role in weight management [...] Read More »

    5 years ago
  • What’s Up Doc?: How to lose weight during the pandemic

    Are you overweight or obese? Easy way to find out is by measuring your height and girth. Your girth should be half the size of your height. Studies have shown obesity is a significant factor for critical illness during COVID-19. Obesity was also an important factor for mortality in patients with COVID-19. This is most [...] Read More »

    5 years ago
  • No Nonsense Health: Are we drinking too much chardonnay?

    Winston Churchill, Great Britain’s wartime Prime Minister, once remarked that, “he had gotten more out of alcohol than alcohol had taken out of him.” During the Nazi bombing of London perhaps an alcoholic drink eased his tension. But recent reports from Tufts University in Boston and the University of California, question the increased use of [...] Read More »

    5 years ago
  • Viva Vitality: Keep your children safe while en route

    October is Occupant Restraint Month, and with many sports such as hockey returning this season, safety guidelines have been developed to help prevent the risk of COVID-19 transmission. To save time, space, and be prepared, some parents may be dressing their children in their gear at home ahead of time. Although this may seem like [...] Read More »

    5 years ago

Local Life

  • Municipal Matters: High Voltage, Higher Dedication – A tribute to lineworkers

    Every July 10, we take time to recognize the people who help keep our communities running – our lineworkers. These are the individuals who work behind the scenes (and often high above or deep below ground) to make sure the power stays on, no matter the conditions. A typical day for a lineworker starts early. [...] Read More »

    18 hours ago
  • All Psyched up: Silence

    If there is truth to the old adage that “silence is golden,” why do we surround ourselves with noise and distraction? I have recently had a couple of clients who had lost most of their hearing. They were really looking forward to getting hearing aids, but the tables quickly turned. One woman was tormented by [...] Read More »

    6 days ago
  • Science Smarts: Recreate those explosive Canada Day fireworks with a little oil and water

    I know many of us will be celebrating Canada’s 158th birthday this long weekend. It is always an exciting time to share with family and friends. The best part of the celebration in my opinion is always the fireworks show! Just in case you cannot get out and enjoy a celebration for yourself, here is [...] Read More »

    6 days ago
  • By the Way: True confessions

    True confession. I watch a lot of mysteries on BritBox. Recently a character remarked: “The opposite of truth isn’t lies, it’s chaos.” That got me thinking about these rather chaotic times in world affairs. It’s hard to know who’s telling the truth – or if leaders present their own “truth” to disguise self-interest and hidden [...] Read More »

    6 days ago
  • Viva Vitality: Connections

    You are not alone in wanting more connection. In fact, 1 in 4 Canadians say they feel lonely often or always. Dr. Jeremy Nobel says, “Just like thirst is a signal you need hydration, loneliness is a signal you need human connection.” People are social creatures by nature and our relationships are important to our [...] Read More »

    7 days ago

Travel

  • Island hopping in Greece

    Is Hydra famous for its donkeys? Or, are the donkeys famous because they live on Hydra? Essentially, the answer is moot, as this Greek island (pronounced: EE-dra) has notoriously never succumbed to motorized vehicles. So, the only ways to get around this 64-square-kilometre paradise in the Aegean Sea is on your own two feet or [...] Read More »

    3 years ago
  • It’s always summer in Orange County

    Somewhere between Emerald Bay and Seal Rock we achieve ocean-kayaking nirvana. The sun is burning off the morning marine mist and we’re slicing through the smooth Pacific, at one with nature, counting ourselves lucky to be in this surreal Southern California setting. My son, Alex, and I are on La Vida Laguna’s two-hour Ocean Kayak [...] Read More »

    4 years ago
  • Big-city French flair in Montreal

    After being starved of travel for the past 17 months, we board an Air Canada jet and reclaim our joie de vivre in Montreal. This return to travel is as much a spiritual reawakening as it is the logistics of flight, hotel, activities, sightseeing, eating and drinking. My wife, Kerry, and I have desperately missed [...] Read More »

    4 years ago
  • Kayaking with seals in Victoria

    Harbour seals certainly know how to make an entrance. This particular playful, silver-and-black mottled marine mammal unexpectedly pops up to say hello just a flipper length away from the left side of my kayak. Harbour seals are a friendly and curious sort and love to gracefully follow paddlers and have some fun gawking at our [...] Read More »

    4 years ago
  • Bajan beauty abounds

    The Bajan Queen partied too hard. And now she’s at rest on the bottom of the Caribbean Sea. But, all is good. This 45-metre tugboat, which toiled for years at the port in Bridgetown, Barbados and finished out her above-water life as a tourist-party boat, was sunk deliberately in Carlisle Bay in 2001. Now, in [...] Read More »

    5 years ago