But, to be chosen she will need the support of friends, family and others to cast votes for her at the Inked Magazine website https://cover.inkedmag.com/ So what enticed the 45-year-old grandmother of three to take up the challenge of trying to become a cover girl for a tattoo magazine? Honestly, I just decided with how hard COVID has hit I figured why not. It was worth a shot, she told Yorkton This Week. So far things have been going pretty well for Fabrick, an aesthetician for 18 years, as she has made it to the Top-five in her section.
And, while the COVID-19 pandemic threw some bumps in the road, Guy has kept on giving concerts, albeit online, and recording. The new album Twin Fiddles has Guy teaming with Gordon Stobbe, the two managing to get the album out through the pandemic. So, how was it creating an album during a COVID pandemic? Well Guy explains that the recording was actually done just before things shutdown. The album Twin Fiddles 5” was recorded in December of 2019, pre-Covid with intentions to release in the summer of 2020, but with everything cancelled tours, workshops, music camps it made little sense to release the project then, he told Yorkton This Week.
Laura Weinbender of Canora has recently returned from a semester of university in Sweden. She is seen above in front of Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences. Top of page left, highland cattle on the farm she visited north of Uppsala, and right, Nyhaven in Copenhagen, Denmark. Photo by Submission Photo by Submission Photo by Submission
The SLU campus was situated on an old farm yard. The building in the picture is what used to be the old farmhouse, and the house style and color is what the traditional Swedish house looks like. Photo by Submission Last fall, when others students were packing their cars to return to university, Laura Weinbender was boarding an airplane for a trans-Atlantic flight to attend a semester of classes in Sweden.
Hailing from Poland, Tumbleweed evolved in many ways out of a life-long love of board games. “Some of my first memories involve playing Ludo, Draughts and Snakes & Ladders with my mom: I think I might have learned to play before I’ve learned to read,” Zapala said via email. “And, very early on I’ve decided I want to make games of my own. As a kid I made a lot of generic roll-and-move race games, then as a teen I started experimenting with Go variants, (one of the ancient classics), and chess variants. “Few of those attempts were even playable, and none was particularly interesting.”
Life in Canada’s north has proven to be something of a muse for Melissa Antony. Antony, who grew up at the Lake of the Prairies and attended high school in Yorkton, moved to Yellowknife, NT in November 2019. It was in Yellowknife Antony became involved in theDead North Film Festival, with the entry Frozen In Time . And now, Antony and new new husband are planning an expedition across Canada s north. “The goal of the expedition is to cross 1300km over three-months across one of the last great wilderness on horseback, northern BC, also known as the Serengeti of the North,” Antony told Yorkton This Week.