Pro D Day Camp: Join us Friday, May 19th for a day of exploring art in nature. Inspiration can be found in abundance in Rossland's wild environment! This Pro-D Day's theme is about bringing our art to nature for inspiration and collecting nature to create and inspire our art. Come spend the day with fellow outdoors kids and artists alike as we find the nature of inspiration at
Selkirk College second-year Integrated Environmental Planning students will hold a public open house to present their Rossland OCP Action Plans. The event will be held on Tuesday, March 14, from 5 – 7 p.m. in the Lily May Room of the Rossland Miner’s Hall, 1765 Columbia Ave, Rossland. The meeting is an opportunity for citizens to familiarize themselves with the draft plans and
On December 3 - 4 this Saturday and Sunday in Rossland, the Rossland Arts Centre Society is hosting its fundraiser; the second annual Winter Artisan Market at the Rossland Miners' Hall. Art lovers and holiday shoppers can expect to find an incredible and unique assortment of hand-crafted art cards, soaps, linens, knits, pottery, glass and wood ornaments, candles, wreaths and
The Rossland Museum & Discovery Centre will be open late on August 17 for Night at the Museum - Student Showcase! Come learn what the RMDC students have been working on this summer, get a guided tour of our outdoor displays and get a behind the scenes look into our collections storage with our Collections Manager. The museum is open by donation, and students will be
(STEVE ARSTAD / iNFOnews.ca) March 14, 2021 - 8:00 AM High on a mountainside near Rossland lies the wreckage of a Second World War bomber that met its end on an early winter October morning while on its way to Penticton. The crash claimed the lives of two Penticton civilians and seven Royal Canadian Air Force servicemen who were familiar faces in the Peach City in the late 1940s. The Mitchell aircraft crashed 13 miles northwest of Rossland in 1947. It made headlines in the Okanagan twice – when it disappeared from radio contact on Oct. 18, 1947, and again in Oct. 1952, when the plane’s wreckage was discovered by a Kootenay hunter.