Showing posts with label Penticton BC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Penticton BC. Show all posts

Thursday, April 17, 2025

CANNED: crime novel set at Penticton brewery


John Arendt
John Arendt

Crime novel set at Penticton brewery

Canned, by Lynda Lock, is set in Penticton’s thriving brewery scene

250424-sum-canned-novel

Lynda Lock’s book, Canned, is a crime story featuring Penticton’s brewery scene. The book is the fourth in Lock’s Death in the Vineyard Mystery series, all set in the South Okanagan. With Lock is her dog, Sparky, who is also featured in the novel.

A crime novel, written by a Penticton author, it features the city’s thriving brewery scene.

Canned, by Lynda L. Lock, features Jessica Sanderson and her mutt, Sparky, in the aftermath of an accident at a fictional craft brewery in Penticton.

While police investigate the death, Sanderson — who is not a police officer — also does some sleuthing and uncovers clues in the case.

While Lock describes the book as a beach read, the story also touches on drug use and addiction, which are noticeable in the city and throughout the country.

“My stories are fluffy, but I also want them based on fact,” she said.

The book is the fourth in Lock’s Death in the Vineyard Mystery series, all set in the South Okanagan.

While her previous B.C. novels feature the region’s wineries and wine culture, Canned involves a death at a brewery.

“I’ve always had a soft spot for the breweries here,” Lock said.

She is familiar with the world of craft beer as she and her husband Lawrie moved to Penticton in 1992, and in 1995 the couple opened Tin Whistle Brewery Co, in partnership with Linda and Richard Grierson. It was the 12th craft brewery to open in the province, and the first in Penticton. The group sold the brewery in 1998. 

Lock’s novel, Canned, was released around 30 years after the brewery started, and 24 years after Cannery Brewing, another well-established Penticton brewery was formed. The release also occurred around the Okanagan Fest of Ale, the long-running Penticton beer festival. 

In addition to her four Okanagan novels, Lock is also the author of the Isla Mujeres Mysteries, a series of seven books all set in Mexico and written when she lived in the area. She has also written three children’s books.

Canned on 293 pages and is available through Amazon Canada and other booksellers.

A launch party for Canned is scheduled for Sunday, April 27 from 1 to 3 p.m. at Cannery Brewing, 198 Ellis St., Penticton. The public is invited to meet the author and have their books signed.



Sunday, March 30, 2025

CANNED! My new mystery novel celebrates 30 years of craft brewing in S. Okanagan

 


Tin Whistle Brewing Company was created in 1995 by Lawrie and Lynda Lock, and Richard and Linda Grierson.

(Front) Steve Emshay, Richard Grierson, Lynda Lock, Dave Prechel  

(Back) Lawrie Lock, and his sister Linda Grierson

Photo credit Angela Prechel: 


1st South Okanagan craft brewery, Tin Whistle Brewing Company

It began in 1995 with a phone call between Lawrie Lock, and his sister Linda Grierson. In 1994, Linda and her husband Richard, suggested that the four of us open the first craft brewery in the south Okanagan. 

It took a year to buy a property, remodel it, order custom-made tanks and equipment, and more importantly learn how to make English-style ales.

We opened the Tin Whistle Brewing Company in August 1995 with three ales; Penticton Pale Ale, Whistle Stop Dark, and Rattlesnake ESB. 

Three months later we changed the names to Coyote Pale, Black Widow Dark, and kept Rattlesnake ESB. By 1996 we had added Peaches and Cream, and Killer Bee Dark Honey.

In 1998, local businesswoman, Lorraine Nagy, approached us, asking if we were interested in selling our company. Yes, we were! We had enjoyed the challenge of the startup and were ready for a new adventure.

Lorraine Nagy remained the owner of Tin Whistle until 2021, when she sold it to the current owners, Alexis Esseltine, Tim Scoon, and their family.

Congratulations to Alexis and Tim for steering Tin Whistle Brewing Company on a fresh new course. Follow the link below to see their interesting array of new products.

https://www.tinwhistlebrewery.com/

~

My newest murder mystery is set in Penticton BC, 

The Craft Brewery Capital of Canada!



Saturday, October 19, 2024

Bernina’s Eventful Adventures

Bernina and I are good friends

I met this grand old lady when I was 18, and she has been my friend for 55 years. She’s tired and is scheduled for a checkup next week, to see if we can revive her. She is a model 730 Record, Bernina sewing machine. We have been through a lot together.

Like many females of my era, I learned to sew in Home Economics class in Grade 8, making the obligatory multi-pocket apron. As I advanced through high school my sewing projects included several dresses, then in Grade 12 a tailored plaid wool skirt and matching plaid wool jacket.

Wacky grad dress!

Using my mom’s old pedal Singer Sewing machine that lived in the basement of our home, I created my high school graduation dress. The tunic design and the multi-colored fabric might not have been my best choice, but when the artsy owner of the fabric store and my creative mother ganged up on me, I acquiesced to their suggestions; their very persuasive suggestions.

The summer that I graduated, I was chosen as Miss Merritt, to be an ambassador for the town of Merritt at various British Columbia festivals and events. I designed and sewed the costumes for myself and the three young women, referred to as princesses, who shared the responsibility of being ambassadors.

Many events required a long formal dress. I didn’t have a lot of money, so I made whatever I needed. Some of the dresses were cute and some were oddly formal and too mature for an 18-year-old, but again, my creative mother and the artsy fabric store owner thought I looked divine.

A formal dress
That same year, I moved to Penticton, living with a family that was based in Penticton, but scattered. The husband worked as a cook in the camps up north. The daughter was married and living in Michigan. The oldest son was at university in Vancouver. And, the wife and younger son lived in the family home. They had extra bedrooms, and rented one to me for a low monthly rate, in exchange for minding their youngest son while his mom played bridge a few nights a week. The mother let me use her sewing machine to create the formal dresses that I needed.

One year later, Mom decided to buy me a sewing machine. I planned to move to Vancouver with another Penticton girl and share an apartment. Mom went into the Bernina sewing machine dealership at 418 Main Street in Penticton and purchased two 730 Record machines; one for my sister Judith in Vancouver, and a portable version of the same machine for me.

In those days the machines, without the cabinets to house them, were around three hundred, or more, dollars. It was a lot of money for a recently widowed woman to be spending, but she insisted that we needed sewing machines. Judith’s was in a cabinet. Mine was a portable. I was single and moving frequently and I didn’t want to deal with a bulky piece of furniture.

Ladies and me in costumes that I made

My next project was curtains for the Vancouver basement suite that my Penticton friend and I shared for six months.

Then friends asked me to make bridesmaid dresses for them. A year later I made a wedding dress for me, and my first husband, Sandy, requested that I make him several cozy wool shirts.

My portable Bernina sewing machine moved from Penticton to Vancouver, West Vancouver, North Vancouver, Bowen Island, back to Vancouver, then strangely enough back to Penticton in 1992, when Lawrie and I bought a home and acreage here.

Lawrie, sofa that I recovered
All along I sewed. Clothes. Reupholstered sofas. Slipcovered chairs. Upholstery for cars that Lawrie restored. Duvets. Curtains. Drapes. Tablecloths and napkins. And repairs of course.

Then when Lawrie and I moved to Mexico, in 2007, I left my Bernina with my oldest sister, Val in Gibsons. I didn’t want to subject the machine’s delicate electronics to the high humidity and salt at our oceanfront home. Val is a fabulous seamstress, and she had several specialty machines and didn’t need mine, so it languished in her basement for twelve years.

When I returned to Canada, in 2020, my sister reminded me that she still had the Bernina but she wasn’t using it. I retrieved it from her home, all thirty-five pounds of it, and brought it back to its origins in Penticton. It seems that both the Bernina and I are destined to live in this city.

The old girl doesn’t respond when I plug her in, and I have an appointment at the same Bernina dealership at 418 Main Street to see if the current owner, Wes, can repair her. Let’s hope she’s up for more adventures.

Cheers Lynda

Sparky sends his woofs!




Thursday, November 2, 2023

Peddling my butt around town!

           Yesterday I bought my 5th bicycle, a fancy e-bike that will transport me to new adventures. Its less expensive predecessors evoke strong emotions and good memories.

At the age of three-and-three-quarters (age accuracy is vitally important to pre-schoolers) my first taste of personal freedom came in the form of a red tricycle, a Christmas gift from my parents. My three older sisters, myself, and our parents, lived in Bralorne, a remote mining town located in the coastal mountains of British Columbia.

Dad and Mom 1954

Mom and Dad both worked; my mother was a waitress at the company-owned café, and my father was an underground shift boss in the gold mine. With four growing daughters, they didn’t have the money or the energy to participate in expensive events, yet remarkedly that year my mother scrimped and saved enough money to purchase a beautiful, midnight-blue, strapless gown for the annual Christmas party. The tight bodice and full skirt were scattered with gauzy golden stars. 

In the photograph, my handsome dad has his arm around my beautiful 35-year-old mom as they beamed happy smiles at the camera.

While Mom and Dad were at the Christmas party, my 9-year-old sister Judith was tasked with babysitting me. Presumably, my two older sisters Valdine and JoAnn were occupied with their own social activities or their after-school jobs. In any case, they weren’t home that night and Judith was in charge! Which led to one of her more interesting escapades.

Judith was notoriously nosey about Christmas gifts for anyone in the family. She proceeded to carefully open the wrapping on everyone’s presents, including a large box which to my delight contained the bits and pieces for a tricycle. Judith assembled the tricycle, let me ride it around the living room, then disassembled it and repackaged it. All of the gifts that she’d opened were carefully repackaged before anyone returned home.

JoAnn, Judith, Valdine, Lynda

“Don’t you dare tell anyone!” She said, shaking a threatening finger in my face, “and act surprised on Christmas morning!”

I didn’t breathe a word about her antics, and, for a soon-to-be-four-year-old, I put on a credible performance of surprise.

Many years later, I told Mom the story. She thought it was hilarious, that Judith had taken the trouble to assemble and then disassemble the tricycle forcing dear old Dad to spend an hour on Christmas morning putting my tricycle together—for the second time.

~

In 1961, the announcement of the gold mine closing within the year, meant both of my parents would soon be jobless. Part of our family moved from Bralorne to Chilliwack, a farm-based city in the Fraser Valley. Dad thought the experience of living in a city, even a small city like Chilliwack, would civilize Judith and me, give us a different perspective, and perhaps tame our tom-boy manners.

My two older sisters, Valdine aged twenty-one, and JoAnn aged twenty, struck out on their own, moving to Vancouver where they shared an apartment, dated, and worked. By 1961, Judith was a rebellious sixteen-year-old, who hated school and wanted to work or hang out with boys. I was ten years old, completely self-sufficient, and happy to spend hours quietly reading. 

Chilliwack was where I first learned to ride a proper bicycle. It was an expensive, green, Raleigh, a gift from my mother. I was delighted and puzzled. We weren’t rich. Mom was still a waitress, now working at The Peaks Dinner in Chilliwack and Dad was the underground shift boss at Craigmont Copper Mine in Merritt. Dad commuted every two weeks (before the word was invented) from his job in Merritt to our family home in Chilliwack. He’d spend a few days then drive back to Merritt.

Lynda 1961

My elementary school in Chilliwack was located only about a mile from our home. In the previous thirteen years, all of my sisters and I had walked a longer distance in the cold mountain temperatures from our house in Bradian to the main townsite of Bralorne to attend school. My mother’s insistence that I now needed a bicycle to get to school in Chilliwack was mystifying, but I wasn’t about to refuse her generous gift.

I loved that shiny green bike. I spent hours exploring roads, ponds, fields, and pathways in Chilliwack, Rosedale, and East Chilliwack. I brought home interesting but very dead birds, wrapping them in plastic and freezing them—for later. I had grand ideas of taxidermy. Or displays. (Mom found, and tossed my frozen treasures.)

A couple of years later Mom, Judith, and I relocated to Merritt to be with Dad. The Chilliwack experiment of refining my sister and me wasn’t going well. Judith had become an uncontrollable handful, too much for Mom. And my grade seven city friends were far more advanced than me. The girls had weekly hair appointments. The boys wore shirts and ties. And they all like to play spin-the-bottle. I was completely out of my depth.

Lynda, Stanley Park Vancouver BC
Fortunately, the central part of Merritt is flat and easy for riding so I frequently rode my Raleigh, with our family dog trotting beside me. Then I entered grade eight and I was (in my mind) too cool to ride a bicycle.

My cherished bike gathered dust in the basement until Mom informed me, “If you aren’t going to ride your bike. I will.”

“Noooo,” I wailed loudly, in protest. “You can’t do that! Mothers do not ride bicycles. It just isn’t cool.”

Whenever she saw me walking with my high school friends, she’d yell my name, and wave vigorously as she pedaled past—on my bicycle.  

I was mortified.

~

My third bicycle was a birthday gift from my husband Lawrie. It was my first ten-speed and another level of freedom. We were living on Bowen Island, a hilly, mountain-top that poked out of the chilly waters of Howe Sound. Seven Hills is a stretch of steep, winding road between Snug Cove and our home at Eaglecliff. It took me several weeks of trying before I could master the long torturous uphill grind, even with a ten-speed bike. The ride down Seven Hills was gloriously fast and cool!

Lawrie, Stanley Park
When we moved to downtown Vancouver in the mid-1980s, I purchased a ten-speed bike for Lawrie. We frequently cycled with a group of friends from our condo complex, enjoying the Stanley Park seawall while stopping at several pubs on our route. By the end of our ride, a few of the inebriated participants staggered home while pushing their bicycles.

~

The fourth bicycle, I purchased second-hand for $75.00 USD while living in Mexico, on the island of Isla Mujeres, in the Caribbean Sea.

It was a frustrating experience keeping a bicycle operational with the daily onslaught of humid, salty, tropical winds. One or two of the spokes broke on a daily basis. I replaced them with aluminum spokes. That didn’t solve the problem, it only slightly slowed the destruction. Brakes, handlebars, tire rims, and pedals. Everything rusted, corroded, or shattered.

Lynda, Isla Mujeres Mexico

I worked on my bike. Lawrie worked on my bike. A local repair shop worked on my bike. Eighteen months later, I gave it to my friend, Javier.

In the meantime, I had circumnavigated the island. Explored and photographed several neighborhoods. Dodged taxis, trucks, cars, motos, and golf carts. Avoided dogs, cats, crabs, baby turtles, iguanas, and a large boa constrictor that likes to roam the island. It’s still there. Alive and well, and looking for small prey.

The other gringas who ride bikes on Isla are fit and tanned. They casually cycle the island, looking cool and charming, while I am a red-faced, odorous, hot mess of sweat.

It was time to take a break from the fun of cycling in the tropics.

~

My new steed! 
My fifth bicycle is an e-bike, purchased yesterday from the helpful folks at the Bike Barn in Penticton BC.

It costs a lot more than all of my previous bikes added together, but I am hoping the electrical motor will help propel my tired old ass along the many interesting trails in and around the Okanagan Valley. 

And then I’ll need a pet trailer so that Sparky can also enjoy the adventure.

I wonder if we’ll be able to outrun a bear on the e-bike?

Cheers Lynda

Sparky sends his woofs!


Sparky and my newest murder mystery series


Sunday, August 27, 2023

Sparky's Epic Adventure Across North America (Rossland, Grand Forks, Greenwood, and back home to Penticton BC)

August 23rd: Sparky's Epic Adventure Across North America. A total of 24,632 kilometers since May 1st. We're back (temporarily).

We're headed to visit friends in Surrey for a few days before finally returning to our condo on September 1st.

Cheers Lynda and The Sparkinator.


Christina Lake BC

Christina Lake BC

Grand Forks BC

Grand Forks BC


Grand Forks BC

Grand Forks BC

Grand Forks BC


Grand Forks BC


Grand Forks BC OK Tires mural


Town of  Greenwood BC

Greenwood BC


Greenwood BC

Greenwood BC

Greenwood BC

Greenwood BC

South Okanagan

Entering Osoyoos BC



Kyla - joined us as co-pilot for 6482 KMS

Lynda and Sparky 24,642 kms since May 1st 

THE END!


Small towns. Big mountains!

Typical September weather September is my favourite month of the year in British Columbia. Cool nights. Warm sunny days. The aroma of ripe p...