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Bayfield Breeze, 2013-10-16, Page 1
5/31/2019 Week 43 Issue 224 BAYFIELDBREEZE Home Advertise Contact Archive s 4D PHMMA AV E IAN MATTHEW CSA 5I9565.5336 1111111 IIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIINII II r, �-, ROYAL LERAGE , ' H1DNl�A �IIIIIII Illllllll III'IIIIIIIIIII II m,�.—ft—�. �,....,. BAYFIELD BREEZE 11 — - rhp v page's own orth ,e news source SHARE KI V E) Oct. 16, 2013 Vol. 5 Week 43 Issue 224 WATERSHED PLAN UNVEILED AT Ainslie Willock, of Bayfield, a member of the Main ;;ayfield Watershed Plan Community Advisory Committee, and Bill Dowson, mayor of the Municipality of Bluewater, took part in the opening ceremony of the 40th Bannockburn Fall Hike on Oct. 6 to launch the new Main Bayfield Watershed Plan. (Submitted photo) Some rain fell but that didn't deter 120 people who took part in the 40th Bannockburn Fall Hike on Oct. 6. The event began with a short ceremony by a community advisory committee, from CHRISTMAS IN BAYFIELD Believe it or not, Christmas celebrations are right around the corner and the organizers behind the village Santa Claus Parade would like to invite both new and returning entries to the event held at 11 a.m. on Nov. 9. To register an entry please email BayfieldXmasParade@gmail.com. GARDEN CLUB Garden Club members will learn how to make holiday bows at their meeting to be held on Oct. 21. John Siertsema is coordinating a bow -making workshop with the Bayfield Agricultural Society (BAS). The bows that are made will be used to decorate the holiday wreaths that the BAS sells at their annual Christmas in Bayfield fundraising event. The meeting will be held at St. Andrew's United Church starting at 7:30 p.m. and all are welcome to attend. Refreshments will follow. TO V " H 1LL cc.villageofbayfiield.com/Members/BayfieldBreeze/Week431ssue224/tabid/637/Default.aspx 1/10 5/31/2019 Week 43 Issue 224 Participants are encouraged to dress up or dress Bayfield and area, to unveil the new plan for the Main Bayfield Watershed. The Bayfield Town Hall Heritage Society would like to up the water due to their extensive root systems and need for water. We can plant native invite people to ring in the New Year in black and The Main Bayfield Watershed includes the main stem of the Bayfield River, from Clinton to the white. mouth of the river in Bayfield, as well as Trick's Creek. Community residents worked on an Ernie King Music in Goderich, or by calling Kate at advisory committee for two years to create the management plan. The community plan sets a A "Black and White New Year's Celebration" will be goal to improve local water quality and quantity, and to increase forest cover, wetlands and held at the Bayfield Town Hall on Dec. 31 starting at streamside cover. The advisory committee wants to reduce Escherichia coli (E. coli) bacteria, 8:30 p.m. total phosphorus, and total suspended solids in local streams, the river, and the lake. Recommendations in the plan include establishing buffers and rain gardens, creating wetlands There will be dancing to the music of Starsoundz DJ. or berms, maintaining crop residue, following nutrient management plans, and planting Party favors, appetizers and a glass of champagne at windbreaks and trees on marginal land. midnight are included in the $25 per person. Cash Healthy Watershed Technician, Hope Brock, of Ausable Bayfield Conservation Authority bar. "There are simple things we can do to help Mother Nature improve water quality in our watershed," said Ainslie Willock, a member of the Main Bayfield Advisory Committee. "We can Participants are encouraged to dress up or dress plant trees such as willows and poplars in wet areas. They are extremely efficient at cleaning down in black and white to ring in 2014 with friends up the water due to their extensive root systems and need for water. We can plant native and family. flowers that require less watering. We can install and use rain barrels. We can leave green Tickets are now available at www.ticketscene.ca, buffer strips along creeks and watercourses." Ernie King Music in Goderich, or by calling Kate at She said other ways to improve the watershed include retiring marginal farmland and aiming to 519 565-4404 or Pat at 519 565-2572. have "30 per cent of farm land covered in crops 100 per cent of the time." CHURCH ON THE WAY "We can make our water cleaner by slowing the water down before it reaches streams and rivers and to give the plants and sun time to clean the water and keep the soil on the land," she said. The Church on the Way will be hosting their second Victorious Ministry Through Christ (VMTC) "Living Healthy Watershed Technician, Hope Brock, of Ausable Bayfield Conservation Authority Fully" retreat at The Bayfield Lions' Community (ABCA), thanked the Fred A. and Barbara M. Erb Family Foundation for its $100,000 Building on the weekend of Nov. 8-9. contribution that made it possible to work with landowners and residents to conduct community-based planning at the local watershed scale, and other work to improve water VMTC is an international ministry serving in nine quality between 2011 and 2013. The Erb Family Foundation is a U.S. foundation dedicated to countries. According to the retreat brochure, they are nurturing environmentally healthy and culturally vibrant communities in metropolitan Detroit and a scripture based, Holy Spirit led ministry of healing supporting initiatives to restore the Great Lakes Basin. The Erb family has a long association and deliverance, bringing people into wholeness. with Bayfield. The retreat is for anyone looking to be refreshed and Anyone who wishes may obtain the watershed plan online, as a free download, at the website renewed spiritually. abca.on.ca. Type 'Main Bayfield' into the search box at the top of the home page, to find the The weekend will begin on the Friday evening from plan. To find out how you can help put the plan into action, call Brock at 519-235-2610 or toll - 6 -9 p.m. and continue on Saturday from 8:30 a.m. to free 1-888-286-2610 or e-mail hbrock@abca.on.ca. 6 p.m. The retreat will be an interactive workshop Following the presentation, hikers enjoyed the walk through Bannockburn Conservation Area with teaching and prayer, times of fellowship and and enjoyed free refreshments at the end of the trail including, cider, apples, and milk. Huron reflection. A qualified team of lay people and Fish and Game Club, McClymont Century Orchard, of Varna; Wellesley Apple Products and ordained leaders will facilitate the weekend. Huron County Dairy Producers donated the refreshments. There is no charge for the retreat but offerings will be "It was great to see members of the community join us in celebrating the 40th anniversary of accepted to cover expenses. Gifts of $20 or more will the Bannockburn Hike," said Denise Iszczuk, conservation education technician with ABCA. receive a tax-deductible receipt. "Many people have made this event a family tradition." Attendance at the first retreat held in the spring is "I've come to this event every year for forty years," one woman said at the event. helpful but not necessary to register. "That's the kind of dedication that will ensure this event and this conservation area will be For more information or to register please contact around for others to enjoy in the years to come," Iszczuk said. Helen Harvey, administrator for VMTC Canada, at 519 236-7871 or email hhough@hay.net. Hikers also learned about how they can protect soil, water, and living things. Staff members from ABCA were stationed throughout the trail to share updates about forests and wetlands, OPERATION CHRISTMAS water quality and quantity, stewardship and grants, research and monitoring, Watershed r� CHILD Report Cards, and geocaching. The hike has drawn thousands of visits over the years and some hikers recorded some It is the time of year when many local churches and thoughts and memories in a logbook. For some of those memories visit: schools start packing shoeboxes for Operation http://www.abca.on.ca/page.php?page=bannockburn-memories. Christmas Child a program organized by Samaritan's Purse Canada. MUNRO HONORED WITH NOBEL PRIZE Samaritan's Purse Canada is a non -denominational, FOR LITERATURE evangelical, Christian organization that has been cc.villageofbayfield.com/Members/BayfieldBreeze/Week431ssue224/tabid/637/Default.aspx 2/10 5/31/2019 Week 43 Issue 224 The county was all a buzz last week with the providing spiritual and physical aid to hurting people announcement that Author Alice Munro, of Clinton, around the world since 1970. on which ones might be possible. Family Health Team will be holding three Influenza ' renowned for her short stories, was recognized for the Clinics within the municipality with Bayfield's being 2013 Nobel Prize for Literature. The members of the Church on the Way in Bayfield the number of ribs cooked and music options will be explored. want to invite people not affiliated with a church or It is no secret that Mary Brown, of The Village school that might like to become involved in the Bookshop, is a fan of Alice. She was given the honor of project to receive an empty shoebox from them. speaking to Jill Deacon, host of CBC radio's Here and Instructions come with the box as to how to pack it Now about the announcement. and what to fill it with. Tax receipts are also available understanding of rural life through the fair, and stays financially viable. for donations. The national collection week is Munro is only the thirteenth woman and second scheduled for Nov. 18-24. Alice Munro Canadian to receive the award since its inception in the Dashwood Clinic on Oct. 26 from 9:30-11 a.m. 1901. To learn more or to receive a box please contact question what the needs are, phone Don at 519 263-2404, Larry Truman at 519 482-5506. "To say we are proud is an epic understatement," Brown wrote in her most recent The Village Those people receiving the shot are asked to wear a Bookshop newsletter. "Thank you, Alice Munro, from readers, from women, from Huron top with sleeves that will roll up easily and also bring County, from Canada. Well deserved and long overdue!" BAYFWLD GUIDING To hear the conversation between Deacon and Brown visit: CBC Got milk? Bayfield Guiding has the cookies to go with AUTHORS TO VILLAGE it. TY AW `� 7 BAYFIELD CO 1 1 FAIR 1 �L V�' Can't make it to a flu clinic this fall? Never fear, the Steven Galloway, Ann Ireland and Annabel Lyon are coming to Bayfield as part of the The chocolatey mint Girl Guide Cookies are back for NAME FOR 157 YEAR OLD EVENT a limited time this autumn. They are selling now for literary festival will be making a stop in the village on Oct. 27. The authors are from its roster of $5 a box and are available from Bayfield Guiding the best contemporary writers from around the globe. members. The 157 year-old fair has a new name — Bayfield Community Fair. The shots will be offered on a walk-in basis, Monday The members of the Bayfield Agricultural Society (BAS), at their last general meeting, took on Profits from the cookies are used to support the girls the task of choosing a name for their fair from six possibilities. In the end after narrowing the in their varied activities and to subsidize outings. choice to two and after a vote, the fair will be named the Bayfield Community Fair. The Want to reserve a box or two? Please call Melody at community whether rural, campgrounds, businesses, tourists, or village residents all contribute 519 565-2443 (Bayfield Village Inn). to the fair's success and its support. This is at least the third name change for the fair over its 157 years. BA Iff Ideas were expressed for options at the next fair. These were being investigated for their potential inclusion. Entertainment alternatives were also listed and volunteers are following up It is Flu shot season once again. The Bluewater Area on which ones might be possible. Family Health Team will be holding three Influenza Clinics within the municipality with Bayfield's being There was approval to continue a second year with the Ribs & Music Fest. There will be twice held on Oct. 23 at Trinity Anglican Church. the number of ribs cooked and music options will be explored. The church is located at 10 Keith Crescent and the The BASS is always looking for folks who have an interest in promoting the fair and the clinic will be open from 4-6 p.m. Bayfield Community. Directors are being sought to ensure the fair meets the needs of the community, continues to celebrate the competition associated with fairs, promotes greater Clinics will also be held in Dashwood and Zurich for understanding of rural life through the fair, and stays financially viable. those people who can't attend the Bayfield one. There is a special need to have a Director with an interest in horses to ensure that this part of The Zion Lutheran Church Hall will be the location for the fair has a voice when decisions are being made. Another special need is to have someone the Dashwood Clinic on Oct. 26 from 9:30-11 a.m. who is interested in grant writing to be part of the Friends of the Fair. To express an interest or The Zurich Medical Centre will also host a clinic on question what the needs are, phone Don at 519 263-2404, Oct. 29 from 4-6 p.m. Wreath making for the BAS is just around the corner. Anyone who is interested in helping or if Those people receiving the shot are asked to wear a they have evergreen branches available, are asked to contact Don Brodie at 519 263-2404. top with sleeves that will roll up easily and also bring their CHIP Health Card. PRENHER LITERARY FESTIVAL BRINGS AT 1M PHARMACY... AUTHORS TO VILLAGE Can't make it to a flu clinic this fall? Never fear, the Steven Galloway, Ann Ireland and Annabel Lyon are coming to Bayfield as part of the pharmacists at Pharmasave Michael's Pharmacy and International Festival of Authors Ontario (IFOA). The Ontario chapter of Canada's premier Bayfield can give the shot to anyone five years or literary festival will be making a stop in the village on Oct. 27. The authors are from its roster of older. the best contemporary writers from around the globe. The shots will be offered on a walk-in basis, Monday Now in its seventh year, the IFOA partners with libraries, bookstores, universities and to Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturdays, 10 a.m. to communities to present the best writers of contemporary literature across the province. Events 3 p.m. include readings, interviews, lectures, round table discussions and public book signings. cc.villageofbayfield.com/Members/BayfieldBreezelWeek431ssue224/tabid/637/Default.aspx 3/10 5/31/2019 Ann Ireland Week 43 Issue 224 The event will feature readings from all three authors and will be held at the Bayfield Town Hall starting at 2 p.m. Tickets are $10 and are available at The Village Bookshop or by calling 519 565-5600 or email, mbrown@thevillagebookshop.com. Tickets can also be purchased online at litontour.com or through the Harbourfront Centre Box Office at 416 973-4000. IFOA Bayfield is presented in partnership with IFOA Ontario, Lit on Tour, Friends of the Bayfield Library and The Village Bookshop. Each week until the event the Bayfield Breeze will feature a visiting author. This week we take a closer look at Ann Ireland. Ireland is the author of four novels, including The Instructor, Exile and A Certain Mr. Takahashi, which won the $50,000 Seal First Novel Award. She teaches creative writing courses at Ryerson University. A past president of PEN Canada, Ireland also served on the Authors' Committee of the Writers' Trust of Canada. She presents her latest novel, The Blue Guitar, about the International Classical Guitar Competition in Montreal. Careers can begin or end there, as scheming judges and contestants battle for glory on a stage where much more than beautiful music is performed. HISTORICAL SOCIETY TAKES PART IN GREAT STORM CENTENARY The Bayfield Historical Society (BHS) will be hosting a display of artifacts and stories related to "Broken Ships and the Great Lakes Storm of 1913" at the Water and Beyond Trade Show at the Goderich Legion Centre on Nov. 8-9. The Trade Show is one of the many events commemorating the 100th year anniversary of the Great Lakes Storm of 1913 and will run at the legion both days from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. BHS participation in the Trade Show is in place of the BHS regular monthly Speakers Series for late October. There are several remaining events, organized by the Great Lakes Storm of 1913 Remembrance Committee, including presentations each Thursday evening until Nov. 10 at the HCM and also a play about the Storm to be held at the Livery in Goderich from Oct. 31 to Nov. 10. Visit 1913Storm.ca for details. Bayfield Historical Society Director Barb Durand has created an attractive poster of a map detailing the shipwreck disasters that occurred during the Great Storm of November 1913. According to Historian Paul Carroll it is the most exact he has even seen. The posters are selling for 12"X8" posters are selling for $5 each and will be available at the Bayfield Archives on Oct. 12. The Bayfield Archives is open Wednesday and Saturday afternoons from 1-5 p.m. A 16"X20" version can be purchased at the Thursday night Great Lakes Storm Speakers Series at the HCM for $10 over the next four weeks. A. jVl l l I L StLto P R Lt. 1 SIAL -s Yom Integfity Everything! LAKE HURON ft'EAL TL-'S7i4 t. 1_IM!'fEL3 According to Pharmacist, Michael Ibrahim, people need to be monitored for about 20 minutes after they are given a shot to ensure they don't react to it so people should allocate their time accordingly. SKATING CLUB The Bayfield Skating Club will begin their new season on Oct. 22. Skaters will be on the ice in the Bayfield Arena on Tuesdays, 5:30-6:20 p.m. (Canskate) and 6:30-7:50 p.m. (Junior/Senior). Then on Thursdays the Junior/Senior bunch take the ice again from 4:30- 5:50 p.m. It is not too late to register for the skating club. Please contact Krista Jefferson at 519 482-5933 to learn more. I 101 1914,39 In accordance with agreements with some trail landowners, Bayfield's Woodland Trail will be closed from Oct. 9-21 during the autumn Wild Turkey hunt. According to the BRVTA members, this is a beautiful time to enjoy the many nature trails in this area and around Bayfield the following trails remain open for walkers of all ages: Sawmill Trail, Heritage Trail, Varna Nature Trails, Bannockburn and Naftel's Creek. The 2014 Bayfield calendar was released recently. The Bayfield Lions' Club sponsored the calendar this year working jointly with the Photography Club of Bayfield (PCoB). The calendar is now on sale for $10 at the Bayfield Archives, The Village Book Shop and at various stores throughout the village. The proceeds from the sale of calendars are shared equally between Lions and the volunteer organizations and merchants who sell the calendar. The Bayfield Lions' Club will use its share of the proceeds to fund its various projects in the community. Ben Lobb, IM. P. c �oPof •co.xe� wo...rtus• lw'leCOBBLE DESIGN wli Lunch. ant. DESIGN. GUILD LANDSCAPING SALES � INSTALLMON GARDEN CENTER 14199ABRONSON LINE ZURICH, ONTARIO 519 236 7373 / 519 565 72B cc.viIIageofbayfieId.com/Members/BayfieldBreezelWeek431ssue224/tabid/637/DefauIt.aspx 4/10 5/31/2019 REMEMBER ME? Week 43 Issue 224 There are countless photographs of people in the Bayfield Historical Society's Archives collection, but sadly their names were never recorded. In this section we will showcase an image with the hopes that one of our subscribers might be able to identify the individual(s) in the photo. Please email your information to the Editor's attention at the address listed near the bottom of the page in "Submissions" or you can email the archivist directly at bayarchives@tcc.on.ca or click on the image and make a comment on Flickr. You can view the entire Collection of Remember Me Photos: Volume 2 on Flickr as well. This week, the Bayfield Ever Young Club members are featured. How many of these active seniors can you remember? Make your comments... click on any image and it will take you to Flicks ISSUE 222 In Issue 222, we remember the Major (Rtd), the Reverend George Youmatoff, who died on Sept. 27 in his 96th year. He is shown here presiding over a Galilean Service held in the early 1970s. Audrey Middleton wrote in this week to offer a bit of clarification regarding the Galiliean Service pictures we have been sharing the last couple of issues. Apparently this picture wasn't taken at the home of Ross and Mabel Middleton but at the farm of Stewart and Grace Middleton. "The first one I think was held there in St. James', Middleton's special anniversary year, 1972. All our men grew beards for the occasion! And that is when Rev. Youmatoff stood on the boat to preach the sermon," said Audrey. She doesn't recall Rev. Youmatoff attempting such a feat at any other service. She also believes that the service was held at Ross and Mabel's only on one occasion (Issue 223 photo). ISSUE 223 In Issue 223, a picture of the crowd that gathered at the home of Ross and Mabel Middleton for a special Galilean Service in the early 1970s. cc.villageofbayfield.com/Members/BayfieldBreeze/Week431ssue224/tabid/637/Default.aspx 5/10 5/31/2019 Bayfield Mews ? i tst r Ezclugiue 55+ Ctsmmunity One Flexr Tawnhomrs 519 - 565 -4542 L wxnv.baylieldmews.ca 0 SHARE ® 1r ©,.. re ]31:]IIY �I l'i't'l optol?letr- c PHOTO STORY Week 43 Issue 224 SHEAR TALENT 11 PHOTOGRAPHY CLUB OF BAYFIELD VILLAGE VOTED MOST PHOTOGENIC BY FESTNAL Scenes from Fall Foto Fest 2013 ;01 Click to enable Adobe Flash Player PHOTOS BY FFF PARTICIPANTS On the weekend of Oct. 5-6, Bayfield was the gathering place for photographers from across Southwestern Ontario and beyond, when the Photography Club of Bayfield (PCoB) hosted their inaugural Bayfield Fall Foto Fest (FFF). The FFF attracted approximately 80 photographers on each day, leading to the event being sold -out several days in advance. Both days started at the Bayfield Town Hall with a keynote presentation by James Cowie, owner and founder of Photo Tour Trekkers (PTT), Canada's leading photographic adventure travel organization. The presentations showed the photographers in attendance how easy it is to capture the details once they have an understanding of observing their surroundings, together with simple techniques to use their surroundings to bring out their creative side. Attendees then broke into four simultaneous workshops held in various locations across the village covering a range of topics (Nature: Wide-angle & Macro; Water: Working with Light; The photographers then had two hours to lunch at the various establishments across Bayfield, and to take in Bayfield's shopping and other attractions before reassembling for afternoon photo walks themed to complement the morning workshops. Each group was joined by guides from local community groups: Bayfield River Valley Trail Association, Bayfield and Area Chamber of Commerce, Friends of the Bayfield River and the Bayfield Lions Club. In these photo walks, participants were able to put their newfound skills into action and learn more about particular aspects of Bayfield under the guidance of their respective workshop leader and community guides. Gary Lloyd -Rees, co -President of the PCoB, said, "One of our aims through this annual event is to develop Bayfield as a recognized photographic destination, it was great to see that a large proportion of our attendees were first or second time visitors to the Bayfield area. The feedback from the FFF participants on the event and the whole Bayfield experience: attractions, scenic beauty, restaurants and local hospitality have been overwhelmingly positive. Without reservation, the participants told us that they would be returning to Bayfield for next year's event and also spreading the word back in their hometowns and camera clubs." Each day concluded with a "mix and mingle" for all the photographers, hosts and guides at the Bayfield Town Hall. Lloyd -Rees added, "We could not have got the event off the ground without the partnership of PTT, the work of a host of local volunteers (both PCoB members and non-members) and the support of a large number of local community groups and businesses. It takes a "leap of faith" to support a new venture and we would like to sincerely thank all of our supporters for taking that leap with us." cc.villageofbayfield.com/Members/BayfieldBreeze/Week431ssue224/tabid/637/Default.aspx 6/10 5/31/2019 Week 43 Issue 224 Village Life: Telling a Story; Capturing the Image: Beyond the "Auto" Setting) led by "We are now in the process of wrapping up the photographic experts in their topics. 2013 event with a competition of images taken over the weekend. We have already booked our event dates for 2014 - Oct. 4-5 and have held our first planning meeting already. Our aim is to build upon our successful inaugural event and to make Year Two even bigger and better." Cowie, of PTT added, "What a great weekend in beautiful Bayfield for Fall Foto Fest. It was a pleasure to partner with the PCoB on such a successful event. Bayfield is a perfect location for this sort of festival; we had attendance from all over the region, and as far away as Michigan. "I would like to recognize the amazing sense of community I experienced - the efforts of all the volunteers, coupled with the support of local businesses and community groups, is what really Click to enable Adobe Flash Player made this a successful weekend. I thank you and applaud your hard work as do all the attendees of the event. Looking forward to Fall Foto Fest 2014 - PTT has committed once again to be part of the event and we look forward to continuing a great partnership with the PCOB and the community of Bayfield." Further information on the 2013 or 2014 events can be obtained by contacting the PCoB at bayfieldpc@gmail.com. The photographers' prospective... BAYFIFu) Brwrzr BAYIFIELD rovik OPTIMIST PIXIIATED — IMAGE OF THE WEEK lid Feeding f� S cWig 344TT MBI I�Rtl_ �'' 57999-aa5Y6'�51-5959 i$tI� cc.viIIageofbayfieId.com/Members/BayfieldBreezelWeek431ssue224/tabid/637/DefauIt.aspx 7/10 5/31/2019 Week 43 Issue 224 Reflections on the Fall Foto Fest by Gary Lloyd -Rees Email your photo in Jpeg format to bayfield.breeze@villageofbayfield.com with the subject line Subscriber Photo of the Week. or ... Upload your photo to Flickr. I am looking for the Bayfield that is a delight to the eye — please share photos with a touch of whimsy, beauty, humor or a sense of fun. If you are to include people in your photos be sure to have their permission to publish their picture on-line and also send in their names and where they are from. Any images that include minors should have the parent's permission for publication prior to submission. And don't forget to tell me who took the photo for proper credit to be issued ] THE Vi�'/T 2018-17 SEASON r10 HAVdTIUALU 519-236-4381 so fr IV cc.villageofbayfield.com/Members/BayfieldBreezelWeek431ssue224/tabid/637/Default.aspx 8/10 5/31/2019 Melody Falconer -Pounder Week 43 Issue 224 SUBMISSIONS I'm beginning to wonder just how many wedding rings have been swallowed by the sands of Lake Huron over the years as this week I received another request for help in locating a treasured band of white gold lost on the beach. "The ring is my husband's wedding band. It is white gold, with a hammered metal look, and an engraving on the inside that says, 'I belong with you'," wrote the woman. (See photo) Her husband lost it Labour Day weekend in the water down by the Bayfield Marina. She describes the location as follows, "When you come off Lonc Hill Road and park and go left on the beach, away from the pier, there are a few houses along the beach and we were sitting in front of the last house (grey house with white trim and a Canada flag in front of it.) It was there in the water that he lost it." An unfortunate wave came and knocked him, he hit his hand off a rock and that sent the ring into the water. The couple has returned to Bayfield several times since searching for the ring but to no avail. They are hoping our readership might be able to help. Finding the ring would certainly be a wonderful way to celebrate their upcoming wedding anniversary. Anyone with information is asked to email me at the address below and I will relay the information to the couple. They are offerering a reward for its return. - Melody Ideas and contributions to the Bayfield Breeze are always welcome. Deadlines for submissions are Sundays at 4 p.m. Please email me at bayfield.breeze@villageofbayfield.com or call 519-565-2443. -F _l B,ItAWIEILD BREEZE 0 SHARE "�.,, cc.villageofbayfield.com/Members/BayfieldBreezelWeek431ssue224/tabid/637/Default.aspx 9/10 5/31/2019 5 1 C N uv r 0 R BAYFIELD BREEZE 1. CLICK HERE Founding Members ........................................................................................................... Goderich Honda Tuckersmith Communications Co-operative Ltd. Bayfield Foodland Outside Projects Brad's Automotive Copyright 2018, The Bayfield Breeze Login Week 43 Issue 224 Bayfield Garage Pharmasave Michael's Pharmacy The Dock's Restaurant Ian Mathew CA Royal LePage Heartland Realty Brokerge Credits: Writer, editor, photographer: Melody Falconer -Pounder Web publisher/Graphic Designer: Dennis Pal Advertising Sales: Mike Dixon Logo Design: Kyle Vanderburgh, Goderich Print Shop Special thanks to the Bayfield and Area Chamber of Commerce Breeze Committee: Ian Matthew, Roger Lewington, Mike Dixon, John Pounder, Dennis Pal, Melody Falconer -Pounder cc.villageofbayfield.com/Members/BayfieldBreeze/Week431ssue224/tabid/637/Default.aspx 10/10