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Carla Hrycyna from St. Mary's Garden & Nursery shares quick tips on overseeding your lawn — when to do it, how to prep and what seed works best!
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CTV News
23 minutes ago
- CTV News
Humpback whale freed from fishing gear off Vancouver Island
Watch Rescue crews worked for hours to free a humpback whale that was entangled in fishing gear off the northern coast of Vancouver Island.


CBC
24 minutes ago
- CBC
Williams Lake First Nation searching for owner of jingle dress found in abandoned storage locker
Social Sharing The Williams Lake First Nation (WLFN) is trying to reunite a jingle dress with its owner, after it turned up in a local thrift store. Brandon Hoffman, the manager of marketing and communications with WLFN, said the dress, along with a blanket, were turned in to WLFN Kukwpi7 (Chief) Willie Sellars by the thrift store owner earlier this year. The shopkeeper had come into possession of the items after he purchased an abandoned storage locker, where he discovered the items in a suitcase. Sellars said the shop owner gifted the items to him, in hopes they could find the rightful owner. "He found the regalia and knew it was something that has a story, now we're a part of the story," Sellars said. Fortunately, the hand-off happened before the thrift shop burned down in March. "It was a pretty great shop. I'm a bit of a thrift store hound myself, so I was there all the time," Hoffman told CBC's Daybreak Kamloops host Shelley Joyce. Sellars brought the items to WLFN councillor Dancing Water Sandy, who makes regalia, Hoffman said. "She cleaned them all up as best as she could and gave them a smudging and a blessing to hope that they go off into the world and find their rightful owners." The jingle dress is a dark green colour with silver, white and yellow accents, a white fringe and, of course, bells attached, most of which are on the skirt. A large raven adorns the blanket, in black and white, with mother of pearl buttons sewn all around it. Following the smudging, Hoffman's team took photos of the dress, blanket and suitcase and posted them to social media. Soon after, they located the owner of the blanket: Nadine Brown of Bella Bella. "The blanket was gifted to me about 15 years ago," she said. "The design on the blanket was made specifically for me. It's a one-of-a-kind blanket." Brown lost the blanket about seven years ago when she loaned it to a friend who was going to make another one. When they lost contact, she thought her blanket was gone forever. But the owner of the dress remains a mystery, as Hoffman and the nation continue their search. "We've got some potential leads, but no solid hits yet," Hoffman said.


CBC
2 hours ago
- CBC
Unsure when Hydro repairs will finish, Pukatawagan asks for generators so evacuees can return home
Social Sharing An evacuated Manitoba First Nation left in the dark after wildfires knocked out power says the return of residents could be fast-tracked if the community was outfitted with generators — but the province's hydro provider says it's focusing on repairs instead. Pukatawagan's council had been in talks with Manitoba Hydro and the province to get generators, and temporarily supply electricity to the remote community while the Crown corporation restores the power infrastructure destroyed by out-of-control blazes earlier this summer, Deputy Chief Kelly Linklater told CBC News. Without generators, Linklater said it is unclear when Pukatawagan will get power back, which is needed to lift the evacuation order in the community — one of the longest-running in Manitoba this wildfire season — that could be expected to remain in place until mid-September. Peter Chura, a spokesperson for the Crown corporation, said Manitoba Hydro "understands the strain the community is under," but says crews will refrain from installing generators at this time. "We're confident that our efforts in our resources are best put toward repairing the damage and restoring the power," Chura told CBC News. For Linklater, "That's not acceptable … they are not looking at the best interest of the community," in the context of the ongoing evacuation from the community. "Is Manitoba Hydro going to be covering the cost for us, for their customers being out here?" Pukatawagan residents waiting to return home nearly 2 months after wildfires forced them out 20 days ago The fly-in community of Pukatawagan, also known as Mathias Colomb Cree Nation, is under one of the longest evacuation orders in Manitoba this wildfire season, dragging out for close to two months by the end of July. Pukatawagan leadership says it might still be weeks before residents can go back. Pukatawagan, also known as Mathias Colomb Cree Nation, had estimated residents could start returning in late August. Linklater said now that might not happen until the second week of September. "If they want us to assist us in getting our people back home, then of course they can do that," he said, referring to installing the generators. A spokesperson for the province said there are ongoing calls with communities to coordinate various levels of support, but it would be "premature" to comment on what role Manitoba could play in supporting the residents of Pukatawagan to go back home. "By focusing on repairing the damaged line, we will be able to re-energize the community more quickly," Manitoba Hydro said in a statement. Alternative used before Manitoba Hydro's decision came as a surprise to Linklater, who said the Crown corporation has used generators as an alternative in the past, and argues the cost of having evacuees displaced is greater than installing the devices. During the 2022 wildfire season, Manitoba Hydro installed two generators in Pukatawagan that were enough to power the remote community, sitting about 700 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg, for weeks until the infrastructure damaged by wildfires was rebuilt, Linklater said. With far more damage to hydro infrastructure this summer, installing generators might be harder, but Linklater said the level of damage heightens the need for generators, given the timeline for power restoration can run longer. "I don't know what the issue is, I don't know why you have to fix up the whole line before they start sending us back home," he said. "Their priorities are obviously not with Pukatawagan." Moving machinery of the size of a generator into an isolated community like Pukatawagan would demand logistics and resources that Hydro's spokesperson Chura says are best directed at the moment to move material into the First Nation to restore power. "There would be difficulty especially with the rail line having restrictions on right now moving that kind of equipment up into the community, which would come at the cost of any of the other material," he said. But residents have been out of their homes for more than two months already, and Linklater said any efforts that could help them come back home sooner should be seized. "We've been out since May 29 … people are getting lonely to be out," he said. "In a couple of weeks, school will be starting. If we don't get going home quickly, what are we going to do about the education of our kids?" The remote, fly-in First Nation was put under a mandatory evacuation order after an out-of-control wildfire spread to within about a kilometre of the community at the end of May. Residents were relocated throughout Manitoba, and as hotel vacancies started running low in the province, some went to Niagara Falls, Ont. The blaze that forced Pukatawagan out is no longer an imminent danger to the community, Linklater said. Manitoba Hydro has made progress in restoring damaged infrastructure — replacing or repairing around half of nearly 200 poles damaged — but wildfires have caused more damage along the transmission line, and much of the remaining work is in remote areas difficult to access. "Our crews moved in there in about the middle of July once rail access became available," Chura said. "But more damage from fire happened after that and we're just regaining access to those areas to assess the damage." The Crown corporation said there's still no timeline for when power might be restored in Pukatawagan. Air purifiers and preparation With heavy smoke from wildfires blanketing the First Nation, Pukatawagan has been looking into buying and installing air purifiers for residents. Linklater said Pukatawagan's council wants to outfit homes, office buildings, the school and nursing station with the devices before residents return, in hopes of preventing a new evacuation later on due to poor air quality. The First Nation is in talks to get funding from Indigenous Services Canada for support in the purchase of around 600 units, he said. CBC News reached out to the federal agency for comment. The acquisition of generators and air purifiers for Pukatawagan, along with training residents on fire suppression, is also about planning for future wildfire seasons, said Linklater. "We very much appreciate everybody's assistance in this emergency," he said. But Linklater says if the community put some of these preparation measures in place, in future wildfire seasons, "we don't have to be dependent on anybody to take care of us, we can take care of ourselves."