From Isolation to Safe Socialization
/Life may have changed this spring, but residents are still able to interact with each other, connect with family, and engage in new activities.
Read MoreLife may have changed this spring, but residents are still able to interact with each other, connect with family, and engage in new activities.
Read MoreStudies show that being kind and even observing kindness can create a ripple effect of happiness. Most recently, we have witnessed a ‘snowball’ effect of kind acts pouring in from the community and surrounding areas.
Read More“It was a very good life growing up on the farm; we were a very close knit family. It wasn’t uncommon to have a pile of kids playing ball in our yard and mom dishing out homemade ice cream.”
Read MoreWho are these people? Who comes and spends their days working in a retirement home, especially when there is a pandemic occurring? They are the ones who love to help others.
Read MoreToday, people around the world are adjusting to having their daily routines altered in unprecedented ways. COVID-19 is an unfolding tragedy; but at the same time, it will unleash the real miracle of the human spirit.
Read MoreGroove is in the heart when it comes to music and dance! It doesn’t matter what age you are or what your mental state is, when a good beat comes on, the feet begin to tap and the music lifts the heart!
Read MoreSome things have stood the test of time; love is one of them! Wilf and Alta Schneider made a commitment to spend all their tomorrows together on August 26, 1950.
Read MoreThe Ginters’ were a hard working family, with mom preparing meals over a wood stove, and the kids and pops tending the dairy cows.
Read MoreThe transition from your home to a Retirement setting is not always easy, but like the old saying goes, “when you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.”
Read MoreWhy wait, come now, while you are still able to actively participate in your life! Come and thrive with all of us
Read MoreHe was a shy guy in school but always participated in the sports. When I asked Ken of his first girlfriend, he blushed and replied, “Her name was Norah Husband…”
Read MoreMaxine has many fond memories of her childhood growing up on the farm. Her closest neighbours lived a mile or so away. Her playmates were the baby calves, colts, runt pigs, kittens and puppies that inhabited the farm.
Read MoreIt was August, 1942 and the heat of the sun created unbearable hot temperatures below deck, making it hard to breathe. He describes the atmosphere as unbearable. Eventually they settled into the sea voyage with a mixture of excitement, curiosity and apprehension.
Read MoreSteve and about half a dozen of the other grade 12 boys were determined that they would be conscripted, so they decided to apply for military duty.
Read MoreHazel Thompson was born to Stan and Nellie Parkinson in a little mission hospital located in a small community known as Southbank near the Shore of Francois Lake.
Read MoreWhat is fun anyway? This may be an odd question, but it’s worth taking seriously. Fun can mean different things to different people; however, the bottom line is that having fun lightens your heart.
Read MoreGlen Maw was born on the very site that Heaton Place occupies today. Glen was born on August 25, 1927 to Arthur Maw and Ruby Crawford. His mother’s family, the Crawfords, also have a long history in Spallumcheen, hence Crawford Road.
Read More“I’m 99 years old, and I have nothing to hide. My dad brought me up to tell the truth,” were Paul’s first words to me. When I asked Paul where he grew up, he chuckled and answered, ‘I think I am still growing up!’
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