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‘Challenges every single muscle’: Champion tree climber turns work into passion

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WINNIPEG – Climbing up trees, wrangling with ropes and navigating twisted odd-angled limbs may not be everyone’s idea of a great day.

But it is to Jordyn Dyck, who has turned her job as an arborist into a passion leading to international tree-climbing competitions.

“(In my) mid-20s, I had tried a bunch of different jobs — mostly labour-intensive ones — and just nothing was really fulfilling my soul in the way that I kind of needed. And then somebody told me you could climb a tree (for work), and that felt like a good path to follow,” she said while trimming a large oak towering over a two-storey home in west Winnipeg.

“I think my favourite part is that it’s so hard. It’s impossible to kind of perfect it. You have to be mentally strong, physically strong. You’ve got to have a good understanding of biology and physics and angles and forces … every day is a new puzzle to solve.”

Dyck was urged several years ago by her boss at Trilogy Tree Services to enter competitions. Now in her 30s, she has racked up an impressive number of wins, most recently at the annual Prairie Chapter Tree Climbing Championship last month in Calgary.

That secured her a spot in an international championship next year in New Zealand. Later this year, she’s headed to another international event in the United States.

Tree climbing is hard work, she said.

It was evident as she demonstrated throwing a line over a large limb, climbing more than 10 meters up and walking along limbs without getting snarled by leaves and sharp branches.

“It’s definitely the most difficult thing I’ve ever done physically, for sure. It just challenges every single muscle in your body every day.”

Competitions can test every facet of an arborist’s skill set. It’s not just about speed — competitors earn points in a series of events that focus on accuracy, safety and other factors.

Climbers can be required to toss throwlines at targets set up in a tree. They may also have to simulate work duties, such as using a handsaw or pole pruner while high in the air. There is also a simulated aerial rescue, where competitors have to safely get another person down from a tree.

Points can be deducted for anything from an unsafe manoeuvre to breaking a tree limb.

Dyck figures the tallest tree she has climbed competitively was about 23 metres in Tennessee. Tackling the giant Redwoods along the Pacific Coast is on her “bucket list.”

Her passion prompted her to get a tattoo on her back of the tree used in her employer’s logo.

“I tell everybody that this job has made me the best version of myself. I’ve been pushed every day to find a new best that I can.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 14, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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With a parade of athletes on Champs Elysées, France throws one last party for the Paris Olympics

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PARIS (AP) — The curtain came down on Paris’ feel-good summer with a grand parade of French athletes on the Champs Elysées on Saturday after the country threw one last party to celebrate the Olympic and Paralympic Games.

The Parade of Champions included 460 Olympic and Paralympic athletes, including 120 Paris medalists. About 70,000 spectators lined up on the parade’s route on the French capital’s famed avenue that ended on a ring-shaped stage around the Arc de Triomphe monument. Hundreds of the Games’ volunteers, Olympic and Paralympic representatives and city officials also attended.

Organizers delivered a celebration of French sport on par with the spectacular and audacious opening and closing of the July 26-Aug. 11 Olympics and the Aug. 28-Sept. 8 Paralympic ceremonies.

“Among us, we call it the 5th ceremony,” Thierry Reboul, the director of ceremonies, told French media. “We tried to include the same elements to this show as we did to the four ceremonies this summer: surprise, emotion and sharing.”

President Emmanuel Macron and his new prime minister, Michel Barnier, also attended. During the ceremony, Macron decorated with state honors 120 French Olympians, who had medaled in Paris, including the star swimmer and judoka, Léon Marchand and Teddy Riner. In all, 187 French athletes were bestowed with the Legion of Honor or the National Order of Merit on Saturday, but not all participated in the parade.

Macron’s celebration of the Olympic spirit that he said has produced “national harmony” came against the backdrop of a harsh political reality and a deeply divided society following an inconclusive legislative elections in July, just before the start of the Paris Games.

Faced with a hung parliament, social tensions and ballooning debt, Macron earlier this month appointed Barnier — a veteran conservative and the European Union’s former Brexit negotiator — to form a new government.

Macron’s decision caused fury in the left-wing coalition that won the most seats in the National Assembly, but not enough to govern alone, leaving France’s powerful lower house of parliament with no party holding a majority.

Barnier said he will present his ministers next week. The New Popular Front coalition vowed protests and censure against Macron and the new government, insisting that the president has dismissed the popular vote that gave the leftist alliance the mandate to govern.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Toronto police investigating fatal stabbing in the city’s west end as homicide

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The Toronto Police Service has launched a homicide investigation into a Thursday morning stabbing in the city’s west end that killed one person.

Officers responded to a See Ambulance call in the Lake Shore Boulevard and Islington Avenue area shortly after 6 a.m.

They say there was an altercation between more than two people, and one man sustained life-threatening injuries and later died at the hospital.

The victim has been identified as a 36-year-old from Toronto, while another man was also wounded but ran away from the crime scene.

On Friday, the police reported that the fled man was found with non-life-threatening injuries.

The 35-year-old Toronto man was arrested, charged with second-degree murder and scheduled for a Saturday morning court appearance.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 14, 2024.

Note to readers: CORRECTS lead and graph 5 to clarify that the injured man who fled was a suspect

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k.d. lang gets the band back together for Canadian country music awards show

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EDMONTON – The return of k.d. lang and the Reclines is expected to be a highlight as the Canadian Country Music Association hands out its annual hardware tonight in Edmonton.

The appearance marks the first time the Alberta songstress has teamed up with the band in 35 years and is tied to her induction into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame.

Lang and the Reclines are expected to perform “Big Boned Gal” from the last album they recorded together in 1989.

Singer MacKenzie Porter of Medicine Hat, Alta., is co-hosting the show with American crooner Thomas Rhett, and they are also set to perform.

Porter is up for six awards, including female artist of the year, as well as single and video of the year for “Chasin’ Tornadoes.”

She’s tied with Jade Eagleson of Bailieboro, Ont., who is also nominated for best single for “Rodeo Queen” and top album for “Do It Anyway.”

Tenille Townes is defending her title of best female artist after winning the prize in 2023 for the fifth consecutive year. The “Somebody’s Daughter” singer from Grande Prairie, Alta., was first nominated for the award in 2011, when she was 17.

Brett Kissel and Dallas Smith are set to perform and the James Barker Band and Steven Lee Olsen are set to take the stage as presenters.

The awards show is back in Alberta’s capital for the first time since 2014. It was held in Hamilton last year and in Calgary in 2022.

It airs live on CTV at 8 p.m. ET.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 14, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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