This past Friday, Andrew and I took the day off, so that we could visit the Mennonite Heritage Archives, which is located on the campus of Canadian Mennonite University.
Some of my earliest memories are of a sea of blue flowers swaying in the breeze as I rode my bicycle along the gravel road that bordered my father’s flax field.
The issue of human trafficking has become more prominent in recent years as awareness of its reality has grown.
Mennonite Village Photography, produced by the Mennonite Historic Arts Committee (MHAC), is an exhibit like no other.
Each February, since at least 1980, has been recognized as a month to promote both the importance and love of reading.
For a long time, I didn’t believe that planned obsolescence was a thing.
Now that the snow has come and it feels like winter, we might as well talk about winter hardiness. We are often asked if we sell plants that are not comfortable with our lower temperatures.
The General Store at Mennonite Heritage Village is now fully winterized! It has wall-to-wall and ceiling insulation, beautifully stained wood walls and a cold climate heat pump.
It has only been a few months since the NDP formed government in Manitoba and already they seem to be interfering in the operations of Manitoba Hydro, the province’s largest and most important crown corporation.
For a long time, I didn’t believe that planned obsolescence was a thing. Recently, I read that it was a thing, as early as the 1920s, albeit not by that name.