Posts tagged ‘Carleton Place ON’

The Good Food Tour presents “Bites on Bridge Street “

 

 

See, hear, smell, and taste all that Carleton Place has to offer. You’ll walk along beautiful Bridge Street, stopping to sample great food and drink at six local establishments.

The Bites on Bridge Street tour is our newest tour. Carleton Place is growing by leaps and bounds and Bridge Street has developed a very vibrant and diverse restaurant scene. We’ll start at one end of Bridge Street at the Stalwart Brewing Company trying their great thirst quenching beers paired with chacuterie from the local Beckwith Butcher.

From there we will walk through beautiful downtown Carleton Place and visit some of the wonderful restaurants on Bridge Street.

We’ll meet at the Roy Brown Museum & Visitor Centre and start with East Indian delicacies at Sagar Indian Cuisine, followed by a refreshing craft beer at the Stalwart Brewing Company carefully paired with charcuterie from the Beckwith Butcher.

Next up is the Chesswood Restaurant followed by French Bistro fare of chef Ian’s choice at Black Tartan Kitchen.  We’ll have one of Petra’s dessert specialities at the well loved The Good Food Company, and finish up at the upscale Smith & Barrel Pub.

 

Cost: $65 / person + ticketing fee

The tour starts at the Roy Brown Museum and Information Centre at 170 Bridge Street, Carleton Place. Free parking is available behind the Information Centre and on nearby side streets.

 

Date : July 5, 2018 from 12pm to 3pm (Thursdays & Saturdays @ 1:00 pm (May to October))

Event location : Stalwart Brewing Company, 10 High St, Carleton Place, ON K7C 4S2, Canada

Contact : https://thegoodfoodtour.com/regular-tours-section

Canada Day 2018 in Carleton Place

 

 

Join us for a full day of entertainment and fun as we celebrate Canada Day along the Mississippi River. Festivities begin at 12:00pm and include: air bouncers live entertainment, petting zoo, live demonstrations and more!

Celebrations commence in Riverside Park and include lots of children’s activities and entertainment for all ages. The day is topped off with the best fireworks in Lanark County, if not the Valley! Fireworks display over the Mississippi River starting at 9:45pm.

 

Date : July 1, 2018

Event location : Riverside Park, 175 John Street, Carleton Place, ON

Contact : 613-257-1704 or http://carletonplace.ca/

Happy Canada Day!

 

On July 1, 1867, Canada became a self-governing dominion of Great Britain and a federation of four provinces: Nova Scotia; New Brunswick; Ontario; and Quebec. The anniversary of this date was called Dominion Day until 1982. Since 1983, July 1 has been officially known as Canada Day.

In many towns and cities, municipal governments organize a range of events, often outdoors. These include pancake breakfasts, parades, concerts, carnivals, festivals, firework displays and citizenship ceremonies for new Canadian citizens. The celebrations often have a patriotic mood. Canada’s national flag is widely displayed and a lot of people paint their faces red and white, which are Canada’s national colors. The celebrations in Ottawa, which is Canada’s capital city, are particularly exuberant.

History

On July 1, 1867, the British North Americas Act created the Dominion of Canada as a federation of four provinces. This event is known as the confederation of Canada. The four original provinces were created from the former British colonies of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and the Province of Canada, which was divided into the provinces of Quebec and Ontario. Canada’s boundaries have been extended since 1867. The country now consists of 10 provinces and three territories.

As the anniversary of Confederation, Dominion Day, and later Canada Day, was the date set for a number of important events, such as the first national radio network hookup by the Canadian National Railway (1927); the inauguration of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation’s cross-country television broadcast, with Governor General Vincent Massey’s Dominion Day speech from Parliament Hill (1958); the flooding of the Saint Lawrence Seaway (1958); the first colour television transmission in Canada (1966); the inauguration of the Order of Canada (1967); and the establishment of “O Canada” as the country’s national anthem (1980). Other events fell on the same day coincidentally, such as the first day of the Battle of the Somme in 1916—shortly after which Newfoundland recognized July 1 as Memorial Day to commemorate the Newfoundland Regiment’s heavy losses during the battle—and the enactment of the Chinese Immigration Act in 1923—leading Chinese-Canadians to refer to July 1 as Humiliation Day and boycott Dominion Day celebrations until the act was repealed in 1947.

Symbol

Canada’s national flag is seen on Canada Day. This consists of two vertical red rectangles separated by a white square. The white square contains a red image of a maple leaf. Canada’s national colors are red and white and are used in many ways on Canada Day. Some people wear red and white clothing and others paint their faces in these colors.

 

Date :
Sunday, July 1, 2018

Carleton Place Community Labyrinth

 

Summer Solstice Walk. The Carleton Place Community Labyrinth will be holding a Summer Solstice Walk on June 21st, 2018.

Carleton Place Community Labyrinth is located at 267 Edmund Street, on the property behind the Carleton Place and Beckwith Heritage Museum.

This public property is maintained by the Town of Carleton Place.  There is no admission fee and the labyrinth is open to the public 7 days a week, 24 hours a day.  Washrooms are located in the Museum (summer hours, Monday to Saturday 10 am to 4 pm, Sunday 1 pm to 4 pm).

 

Date : Thursday, June 21, 2018 at 7pm

Event location : Carleton Place Community Labyrinth – Corner of George & Baines Streets, Carleton Place, Ontario

Contact : Christine Hume at 613-859-2136or visit http://carletonplacecommunitylabyrinth.blogspot.com/

Happy Father’s Day!

 

Father’s Day is an occasion to mark and celebrate the contribution that your own father has made to your life. Many people send or give cards or gifts to their fathers. It is a relatively modern holiday so different families have a range of traditions. Father’s Day is not a federal public holiday in Canada. It falls on a Sunday, which is a day off for many workers so many offices and stores are closed. However, some shopping precincts and stores, as well as restaurants, cafes and entertainment venues, may be particularly busy on Father’s Day.

There are some suggestions that the idea of Father’s Day may originate in pagan sun worship. Some branches of paganism see the Sun as the father of the universe. The June solstice occurs around the same time of year as Father’s Day so some people saw a link between the two.

The idea of a special day to honor fathers and celebrate fatherhood was introduced from the United States. A woman called Sonora Smart Dodd was inspired by the American Mother’s Day celebrations and planned a day to honor fathers early in the 20th century. The first Father’s Day was celebrated in Spokane, Washington on June 19, 1910.

In the United States, there are a range of events, which may have inspired the idea of Father’s Day. One of these was the start of the Mother’s Day tradition in the first decade of the 20th century. Another was a memorial service held in 1908 for a large group of men, many of them fathers, who were killed in a mining accident in Monongah, West Virginia in December 1907.

 

Date :
Sunday, June 17, 2018

Lambs down Park Festival

 

Come Celebrate 100 years of the Canadian Co-operative Wools Growers. The Carleton Place (BIA) isn’t sheepish about letting people know that Carleton Place is the largest distribution centre for lamb’s wool in Canada!

With wool being the fibre on which the festival is centered, the day will feature hands-on demonstrations of sheep herding involving working sheep dogs, sheep shearing and the spinning / weaving of wool. Along with a petting zoo, pony rides, local craft & food vendors.

There will be local fresh produce, petting zoo and pony rides, kids activities and more. Spectators can relax at a picnic table enjoy a bite to eat and a drink from great local vendors.

You will find unique demonstrators and displays with all kinds of interactive activities for the young and old to participate.

 

Date : Saturday, June 16, 2018 from 9am to 3pm

Event location : Canadian Co-operative Wool Growers – 142 Franktown Rd, Carleton Place

Contact : http://downtowncarletonplace.com/

The Roy Brown Walking Tour

 

Captain A. Roy Brown is well-known as one of the highest scoring Canadian fighter pilots of the First World War. Brown was credited with the shooting down of Baron Manfred von Richthofen, “The Red Baron”, on April 21, 1918. Join us on June 4th for an evening walking tour that explores “A Day in the Life of Roy Brown”. We’ll be wandering Roy’s neighbourhood and learning more about his family and his days growing up in Carleton Place! 

Our tour begins at the Carleton Place and District Chamber of Commerce, 170 Bridge Street.

Tickets are $5 each and available at the Carleton Place and Beckwith Heritage Museum. No ticket? No problem – meet us outside the Chamber building by 6:15 pm!

Roy Brown Day at the Carleton Place and Beckwith Heritage Museum will take place on Monday, June 4th, 2018. Celebrate by joining in a FREE walking tour of Roy’s neighbourhood . You’ll learn more about this famous flying ace by walking the streets of his youth. Tour will be approximately one hour.

 

 

Date : Monday, June 4, 2018 at 6:15pm

Event location : Carleton Place and Beckwith Heritage Museum – 267 Edmund Street, Carleton Place, ON K7C 3E8

Contact : 613-253-7013 or http://www.cpbheritagemuseum.com/

Yard, Plant and Bake Sale

 

 

Date : Saturday, June 2, 2018 from 8am to 1pm

Event location : Zion-Memorial United Church – 37 Franklin Street, Carleton Place ON, K7C 1R6

Contact : 613-257-2133

Bites on bridge Street

 

A guided food tour in Carleton Place.

A unique culinary experience! See, hear, smell, and taste all that Carleton Place has to offer. You’ll walk along beautiful Bridge Street, stopping to sample great food and drink at six local establishments. Hear interesting historical stories of some of the characters of town. Chat with the chefs about their fabulous food that rivals any in the big city. Whether you are a local, visiting family, a day-tripper or an international traveler, you’re in for a fun and memorable experience. Culinary. Historical. Tourific!

 

 

Date : June 1 to November, 9, 2018 from 1pm to 4pm

Event location : Carleton Place, ON

The 5th Annual Learning Expo

 

The 5th Annual Learning Expo takes place in the gymnasium at St. Gregory’s Catholic School (176 Townline Rd W Carleton Place) on May 9th from 2pm-6pm as part of the school’s Catholic Education Week Open House. It is free to attend and is an excellent opportunity for parents, caregivers and educators to connect to children and youth services and activities in our area.

Exhibitors include extracurricular programs for children, children’s mental health services, playgroups and parenting resources, tutors, community organizations and service groups, toy and book vendors, libraries and more! If you are a parent or work with children this is the perfect opportunity to explore all our community resources in one convenient place.

Students will be showcasing Metis Art (dot paintings, beaded sunflowers and batik) throughout the school at the St. Gregory Art Gallery. The school’s Scholastic Book Fair will also be open during the event.

Bring your kids to explore with you! There will be demos, game areas, arts and crafts, an obstacle course and more!

For information about the Expo, to register as an exhibitor or for media inquiries please contact scavanagh@opendoors.on.ca
Find us on Facebook at: www.facebook.com/learningexpo/

 

Date :
Wednesday, May 9, 2018 from 2-6pm

 

Event location :
St. Gregory’s Catholic School
(176 Townline Rd W Carleton Place)

 

Contact :
Sarah Cavanagh
Phone contact: (613) 257-8260
E-mail: arizaconsulting1@gmail.com