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A Look Back at Our 2019

2019 has been a tremendous and successful year for us at the West Hillhurst Community Association (WHCA). Throughout this past year, we have seen the return of some of our favourite programming and events, as well as plenty of new opportunities to engage with families and community members in West Hillhurst. We’re always dreaming up new ways to make use of all of our great spaces here at the centre, from the gymnasium and ice arena, to the squash courts and weight room (as well as all of our other green space, rental rooms, and offices).

To showcase the growth we’ve experienced over the years, we assembled some of the numbers and figures from this past year into some helpful graphics to give community members an idea of the scope of the facility and insight into what the WHCA does throughout the year. Please take a look at the images below and let us know ways you think we can continue to improve in the coming years.

Halloween Trick-or-Treating Tips

A message from the Federation of Calgary Communities

Halloween can be a fun and exciting event for kids (and adults)! Below are some informative tips to increase neighbourhood safety on October 31.

Residents: 

  • Turn on outdoor lights and replace burnt-out bulbs. 
  • Clear a path from the road to your front door and remove any potential obstacles or tripping hazards. 
  • Keep your pets safe. Keep pets indoors and away from the unfamiliar (and spooky) guests at the front door. 
  • Beware of potential food allergies; consider alternative goodies. 
  • If you’re driving be cautious of Goblins, Ghouls and Ghosts out and about in your neighbourhood. 

Parents: 

  • Costumes should be short enough to avoid tripping; and be light coloured in order to be easily seen at night. Having your child wear reflective tape will also help them be better seen by drivers. 
  • Use non-toxic makeup to complete costumes instead of masks as masks can reduce visibility for your child. 
  • Create an easy to follow route with your children and teenagers. 
  • Travel in groups of three or four. Young children should be accompanied by a responsible adult. 
  • Practice crosswalk safety. Make your way up one side of the street and cross to the other side looking both ways, don’t criss-cross back and forth. 
  • Double-check you child’s goodie bags to ensure everything is safe to eat. 

Remember: 

Connect with neighbours! Halloween is a great time to familiarize and engage with your community!

Get First Aid Certified!

Do you require first aid training for your workplace? Maybe looking to add a new certification to your resume? Or perhaps you just want to be prepared for if the worst happens to your friends and family?

Let the West Hillhurst Community Association help you get first aid certified! August 17 & 18, we will be hosting Standard First Aid – CPR C & AED with a St. John’s Ambulance certified instructor. From 9am to 5pm, this 2-day course will teach you everything you need to know in order to save lives at work, home, or play. At the end of the course, you will write a quick test after demonstrating practical skills and receive your First Aid certification.

Due to a special deal, we are able to offer this course at only $120 to the general public – typically offered at $155. If you have a valid WHCA Family Membership, you can get an additional 10% off the cost of the course and enroll for only $108! That’s $47 off of what you would pay elsewhere for the exact same certification.

So join us August 17 & 18 and learn how to become a certified first aider.

REGISTER TODAY!

Child Safety & the WHCA

Safety should be a top priority at any age.

Get your kids in a safety-orientated mindset at an early age with child safety classes at the WHCA with certified instruction from Child Safe Canada.

Starting in May, we will have Home Alone Safety & the Babysitter Program for ages 6 and up.

Home Alone Safety prepares youths for all of the important steps for being on their own. This interactive safety course will provide them with the skills and confidence they need to be able to handle unsafe and uncomfortable situations they may encounter while you’re away. Some of the skills they will learn are:

  • first aid
  • fire safety
  • answering the door & phone
  • flooding toilets and plumbing
  • and more.

Home Alone Safety will be held on Sunday, May 26th at the WHCA. Registration is currently closed and enrollment is full for this class.

The Babysitter Program teaches youth ages 10+ who look to be future babysitters how to be safe while also building their self-esteem. Skills taught through this course include:

  • being a responsible babysitter
  • safety & injury prevention
  • handling emergencies
  • preparing meals
  • feeding & caring for babies,
  • and more.

The Babysitter Program will be held on Sunday, June 23rd at the WHCA. Registration is open and enrollment will close on June 4th, so register soon!

Ten Thousand Villages – Artisan Stories

This week, the WHCA would like to share with you a story given to us from our Member Benefits Partner, Ten Thousand Villages. It’s about an artisan in Burkina Faso, and was fantastically written by Rachel Boss, who is currently living in Burkina Faso, working with Mennonite Central Committee’s Serving and Learning Together (SALT) program and Ten Thousand Villages. “I work as an Artisan Advisor, which means that I learn from Burkinabé artisans, gaining a deeper understanding of their artistic practices, do art of my own, and serve as a connecting link between Ten Thousand Villages and the artisans who are behind the products from Burkina Faso which Villages sells. It’s the most amazing work — artisans are immensely creative people, and I’m inspired each day by the way they create!” Rachel says.

Maker Story: Issouf from Burkina Faso

“I learned how to do bronze with my father. When I was a young boy, he would hold me in his arms while he worked on his craft. It was an apprenticeship that existed between father and son.”

Issouf is an artisan working in Burkina Faso.

Issouf sits on a ragged wooden stool against a cement wall. He’s concentrated, sweat dripping onto his hands as he gently shapes the bee’s wax model. He takes great care to get the proportions right. The mother’s hands are perfectly positioned under the book she holds with a child poised on her lap. Issouf decides the child’s head looks a little small. He adds more wax. “Et viola”, he says with quiet satisfaction as he holds it up to show me.

Issouf and his team of around twelve artisans work to create lost wax bronze pieces for Ten Thousand Villages. “Everyone is happy here. We don’t get in fights, we have discussions. I seek to understand each person I work with, to really know them. We’re like a family.”

Lost wax bronze making is an intense process, and is one of the oldest known forms of bronze casting in the world, dating back to the 3rd millennium BC, having sustained little change since its inception.

Starting with a bee’s wax form, artisans sculpt their models and then cover them with banco, a mixture of donkey dung and mud which has been arduously pounded together with a pestle, the same material used to construct homes in Burkina and other nations around the world.

Adding two layers of banco over the wax, he creates a small hole which reveals only a portion of the wax model. After baking under the midday Sahelian sun for a few hours, Issouf will bake the hardened, now unrecognizable form once again, this time in white hot coals of what seems like an ever-burning fire. He’ll tend the coals, turning the pieces so that the wax leaves the model through the small hole completely.

Surely this iLost Wax Bronze Casting in Burkina Fasos a craft of patience, and endurance. Standing over a fire, in the sun, which at mid-day in Burkina can heat workshops to well over 100*F (39*C) without the addition of white-hot flames is not for the faint of heart (or for those who are prone to fainting in general).

After the wax is melted completely from the model, it’s time to heat the bronze. Various artisans have told me that bronze melts at around 1,200* C, or 2,300* F. Artisans use any recycled bronze they can find — bullet casings, bronze knobs from gas tanks, and old bits and pieces they’ve collected.Recycled bronze used by artisans in Burkina Faso

Carefully pouring the molten bronze into the stone-hard banco model, it’s left to sit for hours, sometimes days, to harden. Once cooled, the earthen model is broken by hammers and small chisels, revealing a rough, many times incomplete, bronze statue.

The abrupt edges of statues are smoothed with large metal files, and that’s when the pieces, borne from donkey dung and bullet casings, truly shine.

As a final touch, artisans add patina, breathing life and dimension into their pieces.

And then the process begins again.

Recycled bronze used by artisans in Burkina Faso

Because banco models must be broken away from the bronze that lies beneath, every lost-wax bronze statue is unique. After creating this piece, Issouf must start the process again from his chunk of beeswax.

A craft shaped by millenia of practice, Ten Thousand Villages has invested in preserving something that is at the heart of Burkinabé artisanal culture. And not only is the historical art form maintained, it’s celebrated when invested in. It’s given value and made accessible in the international market-place. By paying him a fair wage for the work he loves, Issouf takes great pride in his work and the life he lives. “With the work Ten Thousand Villages supplies, I have been able to save money, and eventually built my own house, the one you see here. I am proud of the work I do.”

Join Us on Pink Shirt Day 2019

Next Wednesday – February 27th – is Pink Shirt Day!

What is Pink Shirt Day? It’s a national day to support bullying prevention awareness, education, and programs. This years Pink Shirt Day theme is “Choose Kindness.”

If you’d like to join the WHCA in participating in Pink Shirt Day 2019, wear a pink shirt on Wednesday February 27th and join the conversation using the hashtags #ChooseKindness, #PinkShirtDay, #EndBullyingAB, and #StandTogether. Also, make a little extra effort to show some kindness and compassion to those around you! Join us in making this day a special and fun day for the West Hillhurst community!

If you’d like to learn more about Pink Shirt Day 2019 and other ways you can get involved & show your support, visit pinkshirtday.ca

Science in the Cinema: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

Calgary is a vibrant city with more arts and culture than most think.  There is never shortage of new and annual events to attend.  Join the Science in the Cinema: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button for an extraordinary explanation of the film in terms that the general public will understand.  As found on the Avenue Calgary website, “What’s better than a free movie screening? A free movie screening with real-life scientists in attendance who can answer your burning questions. For this edition, members of the Arnie Charbonneau Cancer Institute will host a screening of The Curious Case of Benjamin Button and discuss the relationship between genetics and aging. ”

Dates: November 21, 2018

Times: 6 p.m. doors; 6:30 p.m. showtime

Cost: Free

The Plaza Theatre, 1133 Kensington Rd. N.W., 403-283-2222, go.ucalgary.ca

 

Plan to attend this amazing FREE event and learn some new and interesting concepts.  For more information, please contact go.ucalgary.ca

Legalization of Cannabis & WHCA

On Wednesday October 17, 2018, Canada legalizes use of recreational marijuana.

The West Hillhurst Community Association (WHCA) wants to remind our community members and users of the facility that the law prohibits the use of the marijuana in public spaces and properties. 

WHCA restricts the use of the substance when on the property or in the building. Please respect these guidelines as we want to be sure the public has the safest and warmest experience while at the West Hillhurst Community Association.

For the security and safety of all patrons and minors that use the facility on a daily basis, we ask everyone to respect these policies.

For more information about the new law, how it may affect you or additional information, check out the Government of Canada website here.

Autumnal Equinox

Summer came and went like a tropical storm.  School is back in session and that means the inevitable is happening.  Fall arrives  this year on Saturday September 22, 2018 at exactly 8:44 p.m. UTC.



Take some time and enjoy the last bit of summer weather and heat.  Prepare to watch the trees turn into their vibrant colours and the smells when the leaves fall.  We can all hope that summer lasts longer, however, they days are only getting short.

Want to learn a bit more about the Equinox?  Check out the information below:

Autumnal Equinox

  1. See under equinox(def 1).
  2. Also called autumnal pointthe position of the sun at the time of the autumnal equinox.

Equinox

[ee-kwuh-noks, ek-wuh-]
noun
  1. the time when the sun crosses the plane of the earth’s equator, making night and day of approximatelyequal length all over the earth and occurring about March 21 (vernal equinox or spring equinox) andSeptember 22 (autumnal equinox).
  2. either of the equinoctial points.

Pride Day Parade

As found on the Calgary Pride website, “It’s the most colourful event of the year!

“2018 brings forth the 28th iteration of the annual Calgary Pride Parade – the signature event that colours all of downtown Calgary with rainbows and smiles! Originally a small march of LGBT Calgarians, some of whom wore masks and bags over their faces to protect from persecution, the event has grown in leaps and bounds to become the second biggest parade in Calgary.

“Today, Calgary Pride welcomes non profit organizations, businesses big and small, politicians, political parties, churches, unions, and more, all to come together and celebrate Calgary’s diversity. This incredible gathering of inclusive and diverse organizations draws tens of thousands of spectators each year, and showcases the diversity of Calgary’s community.”

PLEASE NOTE THAT THE PARADE START TIME HAS CHANGED TO 11:00AM