Our everyday talk is filled with learning clichés – some camp, some corny, some even contradictory: "you can't teach an old dog new tricks" but "you're never too old to learn." We're going with that last one – along with "lifelong learning" and a sincere belief that "you learn something new every day" ... So we've pulled together some ideas to help you make it happen
By Laurie Carter
Look Out Vegas
Wow your pals at the Wednesday night poker game – or turn pro and make the casino start paying. They’re crying for dealers and starting May 1 you can learn those smooth moves right here in the Valley. If you’re nimble-fingered, over 18 and can count to 21, you’ve got the basics. Experienced casino dealers will do the rest.
Blackjack is still the staple game for traditionalists. This two-week (36 hour) course includes multi-deck shoes and card handling, chip and cash procedures, shuffle and cut, pitch (delivering the cards), game control, payoff procedures and security.
But Texas Hold ’Em poker is fast becoming the world’s most popular casino game. In three weeks (48 hours) you can learn to shuffle, cut and strip boxed cards and exposed cards; how to get those cards on the table – dealing the pitch up and flip pitch (sounds athletic); understanding and managing multiple side pots; talking the game and working with the pit boss; and pushing pots, tokes, tips, rakes and house drops (right!).
Fine Art school co-owner Todd Koch says, “The hardest thing to learn is pitching the cards. This takes time to master.” But it’s worth the effort if you aim to make a career as a dealer. “We receive several calls and emails on a daily basis … and casinos have expressed a serious interest in hiring our graduates.”
Cost: Blackjack – $399
Texas Hold ’Em – $499
Fine Art Casino Dealer School
4-2979 Pandosy Street, Kelowna
250.861.6699 or 1.866.881.6699
www.fineart.ca
info@fineart.ca
Fashion Statement
Whether the runways of Prêt à Porter Paris fill your imagination or you’re just trying to release your inner flair, the Okanagan Fashion Institute could be the starting point. Owner/director Tannis Porter says people have all kinds of reasons for taking the 36-week program.
“This year I have several students who plan to follow the entrepreneurial spirit and work toward opening their own boutiques and clothing lines,” she says. Others hope to apply for positions with a larger clothing company in California or New York, while two women are studying “purely out of personal interest and to design for themselves.”
Tannis has structured the program to make it easier for people with part-time jobs, running classes just two days a week either in the afternoon or evening. The course covers a wide spectrum of topics from fashion history to pattern making; from the sociology of fashion to sewing; from storyboards and mixed media illustrations to portfolios and marketing.
Classes are restricted to 12 participants and the instruction is hands-on with an aim to develop not only core skills but also “to inspire awareness and confidence in individuality, imagination, ambition and determination.”
Age is no barrier. Tannis has welcomed students as young as 18 and as mature as 64. So far no men have signed up – but she’s hoping.
Cost: $8,264
Okanagan Fashion Institute Inc
2nd Floor – 3030 Pandosy Street, Kelown
250.860.6696
www.okanaganfashioninstitute.ca
director@okanaganfashioninstitute.ca
Go Jump
Significant other tell you to take a flying leap? Facing a mid-life crisis? Maybe you’re just bored silly and want to stir the pot a little … skydiving could be for you. Admittedly, this has mostly been a sport for younger nut bars (sorry, personal bias peeking through) — younger people.
Okanagan Skydiving Adventures owner Mike Payne says, “the average age of jumpers is 22 for men and 23 for women, doing what we refer to as a traditional solo first jump.” That’s the one where somebody opens the door of the airplane and tells you, “watch that first step, it’s a dilly,” before you step into space. Happily, you don’t have to remember to pull the ripcord yourself — though, personally, that would be top-of-mind for me — and you’ve been through four hours of ground training before making your 3,500-foot leap of faith.
Mike adds that older jumpers (the granddaddy of all was 83) are showing up “because of the introduction of tandem skydiving, allowing for increased safety and security by having a very experienced instructor attached to the student/passenger.” Now we’re talking. Having a little company on that 120-mile-per-hour freefall — then coaching you on canopy control as you float for 10 to 15 minutes while the videographer (optional) records your every grimace and grin — sounds like sanity (or, at least a little closer to it).
Okanagan Skydiving is undergoing some changes — new ownership (Bret Chalmers) and a move to Salmon Arm — but you’ll still find all the info online and the same Nicholson-and-Freedman thrills.
Cost: First Jump Course— $195
Tandem — $250
Video extra
Okanagan Skydiving Adventures
www.skydiveadventures.ca
Glowing Glass
Love that sign on Rose’s Pub? You could make one just like it – if you take Andrew James’ course – and practice really hard, for a long, long time.
Crafting neon signs is no walk in the park. Andrew says this is the toughest of all the heated glass trades. “The glass is incredibly brittle and difficult to manipulate. It’s like water when it’s heated.” But like the game of golf, where you’re always looking for that perfect swing, neon glass bending, seeking that perfect feel, keeps drawing him back. “You do it once and maybe not again for a couple of days,” he says. “But I love it. I do it because I love it.”
Andrew was always fascinated by neon and he learned the craft when a retired sign maker took him under his wing. There were no schools and when he moved to Kelowna a dozen years ago, and started work on the casino signs; he decided to pass on what he’d learned. As far as Andrew knows, his is the only neon tube bending school in Canada.
His students take up the craft for a variety of reasons – looking for a lifestyle change or wanting to learn how to restore antique signs – and they’ve come from as far as India, England and many parts of the US.
There are no set times for the full emersion six-week program, but Andrew requires a minimum of three students for this bright lights experience.
Cost: $4,500 US
Commercial Signs
852 Crowley Avenue, Kelowna
250.862.6625
www.aneontrainingschool.com
info@aneontrainingschool.com
Monday Night Live
Hoping to get your significant other to believe your lies? This course won’t do it … but you may provoke a laugh. And unless you’re terminally up tight and totally humour-free, it’s bound to be fun.
That’s the point, “to have fun, laugh, meet new people and learn the games from the show Whose Line Is It Anyway,” says Kelowna Actors Studio artistic director Randy Leslie. The course attracts lots of beginners and cast members range from 17 to 75. The only prerequisite is the ability to laugh (notice a recurring theme here) – especially at yourself.
Instructor Mark Reinelt brings tons of experience to class. A specialist in short form game-based and open scene improv (probably have to join the group to find out what that means), he’s a veteran performer who’s worked with improvisers from the Vancouver Theatre Sports League, The Groundlings and Second City. He’s stumped the boards all over BC and performed on radio and TV.
The last three summers Mark has facilitated at the Actors Studio Impov Camps (kids only), which is likely what prompted grown-ups to demand equal time fun. Although Mark maintains there are plenty of other benefits, like improved confidence in public speaking and meeting new people, thinking outside the box and problem solving.
This was the first year for the eight-week program that ends in March with a class performance – well, a performance by the class, at least. So, if improving your improv sounds appealing, clamour for more.
Cost: $255
Kelowna Actors Studio
1379 Ellis Street
Kelowna, BC V1Y 1Z9, Canada
250.862.2867
www.kelownaactorsstudio.com
info@kelownaactorsstudio.com
Don’t Hold Your Breath
Serpent Aquatics pioneered youth diving in the Okanagan. Since 2000, they’ve helped thousands of kids take their first breath underwater. The youngest Scuba Star was just five years old. The company also brought the first Scuba Rangers program to Canada and offers the PADI Seal Team for youth. Last year, they moved up to adults. Their oldest student just qualified for Canada Pension.
Owner Sheldon Voyd says, “a tremendous number of divers in the Okanagan are warm-water divers,” people who get their diver certification specifically to use when they’re vacationing in the Caribbean or Mexico or some equally alluring winter escape. And Serpent has structured its programs to make this as easy as possible.
You can study the “book-work” part of the course online through the e-learning option, then take the confined water segment with Serpent’s instructors at Johnson Bentley pool in Westbank (or in your own back yard if you’ve got a pool and you’d prefer private instruction). For the last part of the process, you have the option of making your open water dives in Okanagan Lake or taking the referral, doing the dives at any PADI training centre in the world (preferably somewhere warm with lots of sand and umbrella drinks).
With certification, you can explore the underwater world here in the Valley at Ellison Park’s new dive park or on the wreck at Fintry or, when you get really expert, checking out the caves and walls of Okanagan Mountain Park. Serpent also offers adventure dives and courses leading to advanced certification.
Cost: Adult Certification $485
Serpent Aquatics
2441B Main Street, Westbank
250.768.3335
877.768.3330
www.serpentaquatics.com
info@serpentaquatics.com
Down on the Farm
For generations, learning how to farm was a no-brainer. Watch mom and dad and do your chores. Now – not so much. Think about it. Suppose your midlife crisis puts you in mind to head “back to the land” – to take up organic farming. What would you do – track down a copy of Farming for Dummies, Google “apprentice farmer” – actually, that wouldn’t be a bad idea because you’d turn up www.soilapprenticeships.org and snooping around the site, you’d find an option right here in Peachland.
Joe and Jessica Klein, who run Homestead Certified Organic Farm, one of the oldest active homesteads in the Interior, have been taking in Farmer Brown wannabe’s for years. Their students, usually couples that come from across Canada and points south, may stay between three months and a year. It’s a family environment. Apprentices live in private accommodations, but share organic vegetarian meals at the family table.
The program follows traditional Okanagan farm rhythms – up early, work til early afternoon, six days a week. Depending on the season, there’s soil preparation, haying, weeding and harvesting. Joe says the crop list includes “just about everything that grows here” – tree fruits, berries, nuts, vegetables, herbs, flowers and, in the greenhouse, salad mix. Students also care for horses and goats, with special lessons on milking the goats and making cheese and yogurt.
“It’s a good experience,” says Jessica, who explains that they make a point of including their students in community activities and there’s lots of time for hiking and swimming. She says that some of their “extended family” comes back year after year and other former apprentices have been sending Christmas cards for two decades.
Joe and Jessica also offer a one-day program where locals can come and work for the morning, share lunch and take home a selection of produce.
Cost: Labour in exchange for room and board and knowledge, although long-term apprentices also receive a small allowance.
Homestead Certified Organic Farm
4855 MacKinnon Road, Peachland
jjhomestead@telus.net
Cutting Edge Craft
Some people have a definite plan, like building a stained glass window for their home or learning how to make glass beads because they love designing jewellery (or they’ve just got too much time on their hands). Whatever the inspiration – cathedral window or arts and crafts sidelight, Tiffany lamp or Aunt Fanny’s three-strand necklace – Terry and John Dunstan offer a workshop (actually, 17 different workshops) to get you going.
Both are passionate about glass and Terry says, “we’re constantly learning about new techniques and products and passing the information along to our customers.” They run classes at their store, T.J. Homecrafts, in Armstrong, the Vernon Community Arts Centre and the Revelstoke Arts Centre.
Most students, teens to pensioners, come from the Okanagan and Shuswap, and Terry says they see only slightly more women than men. Often, the first class is a gift. “About half of the people who take a class just fall in love with working with glass.”
Once you have the basics, the possibilities are wide open – lamps, panels, mosaics, garden art, fused glass plates, suncatchers – you get the idea. And when you run out of room at home, you can give your crafts away. Terry and John even help make it easy.
One of their most popular classes is Angels II. Offered only at Christmas, the two-hour session provides beginners with pre-cut glass and a selection of accents along with instruction on how to make an angel ornament. Heavenly … (ouch!)
Cost: $22 to $170
T.J. Homecrafts
3422 Larch Drive, Armstrong
250.546.3866
www.tjhomecrafts.com
Sail the Sky
Who says man (woman — persons) can’t fly? Just step off the side of a mountain — nothing to it … and if you happen to be strapped to a paragliding canopy, so much the better. It’s all about the landing.
Glenn Derouin (who’s flown from cliff faces in some of the world’s most exotic places) or one of the other instructors at Paraglide Canada will show you the ropes. Tandem flights are the best way to get a feel for the sport and decide if you want to make a habit of flying leaps. After a short briefing on flight theory, launch and landing techniques, you’re off from one of many drop-dead beautiful (oops, bad choice of words) — really stunning (not much better) — very pretty sites in the Okanagan.
The tandem pilot will take the controls and all you have to do is hold tight to your camera and enjoy the ride. If the experience leaves you feeling like M-O-R-E, the company offers several training options starting with a two-day introductory course, to get you airborne on your own. You’ll learn about the equipment and basic flight theory then practice handling and launching skills before making your first small flights, then gradually work your way up to higher flights.
Paraglide Canada provides excellent modern equipment (no wax wings), including a reserve parachute, plus transportation, radios and full instructor supervision for all courses.
Cost: Tandem flight — $175.
Two-day introductory — $440
Paraglide Canada
503.1962
www.paraglidecanada.com
glenn@paraglidecanada.com
ohmmmmmm…
Yoga classes? Ummmmmm – nothing unusual about that. These days yoga’s more popular than ice cream (Mmmmmmm). What is unique, however, is the yoga teacher training available in the Valley through the South Okanagan Yoga Teacher Training and Philosophy Studies Program (SOYTTPSP – try meditating on that one!).
All levity aside, this is serious training for people who are serious about yoga. Marion, known by one and all as Mugs (okay, maybe not so serious) McConnell is one of the best qualified instructors you’re going to find anywhere and together with Dariel Vogel, teaches this program here and in four other cities in BC and Alberta. Graduates have met the requirements to be recognized by the Yoga Alliance as Registered Yoga Teachers and after three years of teaching, can write the International Yoga Teachers Association exams.
Mugs says that it takes about two years to complete the training part-time or around six months full time. Students attend group sessions monthly, in Summerland, where they review home study assignments, learn how to do the poses, caution, benefits, meditation, breathing techniques and hear from guest lecturers, giving them the opportunity to explore various styles. Between sessions they work on their own, studying the philosophy texts and attending yoga classes at approved institutions.
Some students choose to study the philosophy alone, but often get hooked and then want to learn to teach. Mugs says the majority of their students are women ranging in age from early 20s to retirement. Most grads plan to open their own studios, while some intend to work from home or through fitness centres, gyms or resorts.
Cost: 200-hour program $2,800 (paid in instalments over the two years) plus fees for outside anatomy, physiology and first aid classes
500-hour program Same plus fees for attending special classes with outside teachers
South Okanagan Yoga Teacher Training and Philosophy Studies
1227 Kensington Street, Penticton (Classes in Summerland)
250.492.2587
www.soyayoga.com
mugs@yogaessentials.com
Feel the Rhythm of the Beat
How’s this for a primal take on stress release – beat the crap out of something. Okay, that’s a bit of an exaggeration – well, a major exaggeration. Nothing violent here, no blood, no broken bones – just the pure pulsing pleasure of connecting fingers and skin – whoa, this isn’t going in the right direction either. Drumming, we’re talking drumming.
Trevor Salloum heard the beat way back at Raymer Elementary and he started with the standard drum set. But he got into hand drumming as a student at York University. “There’s a primitive magnetism to drum playing,” he says, and it carried him on some pretty far-flung journeys – studying Afro-Cuban rhythms in Cuba, exploring the beat of his Middle Eastern heritage and falling for the Latin charm of a Brazilian beauty and the music of her homeland.
There’s no question that listening to his music (you can regularly catch his group Major Mambo at venues around the Valley) is good for what ails you. But Trevor, who is also a retired naturopathic physician, maintains that playing is where the real benefits come in.
People play for fun, says Trevor. But, for example in the Afro-Cuban class that involves folkloric music brought by slaves from West Africa, the ancient rhythms have “strong effects on the human body.”
He says drumming can “reduce anxiety and stress,
enhance mood and the immune system, build self esteem and confidence,” even “strengthen personal and professional relationships and promote group cohesiveness and interaction.”
And Trevor should know, he wrote the book. Actually, a whole bunch of books/CDs’DVDs – like Fun with Bongos and Afro-Latin Polyrhythms (say that on three times fast). His latest DVD release is The Art of Arabic Drumming.
Since retiring from his day job Trevor spends more time teaching both private and group classes. While the majority of his students are women in the 40 to mid-60 range, he says the number of 20-somethings has recently increased and he’s got drummers from seven to 70, including a father-son duo. With Trevor’s drop-in rate, you can check it out and see if you’ve got the beat.
Cost: Private Lessons $40/hour
Group Lessons $15/hour drop-in or $125 for 10 weeks
Trevor Salloum
250.763.3951
www.trevorsalloum.com
salloum@shaw.ca
Pounding Iron
This story isn’t about iron-“pumping” bodybuilding — at least not in the way you’re thinking — this story’s about blacksmithing. And just why would anybody want to learn a horse-drawn trade in the mega jumbo jet age? These days, most of the people who come to master blacksmith Joe Delisimunovic are more inclined to make candlesticks than horseshoes. But the skills and techniques that Joe learned as a boy at his grandfather’s forge in Croatia and later during his formal apprenticeship, are the same ones that served medieval armourers, pioneer plough-makers and now, modern artisans.
To be successful, Joe says students “should have a feel for art and be creative. You need to be physically fit. Blacksmithing is hard physical work. You need to be patient and be able to put in a hard days work.” Although he adds that modern tooling and technology make it “much easier today than 50 years ago. It used to be the biggest, strongest men would be blacksmiths. Today you can find anyone, as long as they have the skill.”
While more men than women seek his training, Joe says, “more women are in business because of the course than men. Women just seem more committed.”
These days Joe is semi-retired but his sons are carrying on as 2nd Generation Metal Craft in Vernon. “I am pleased to say that they have been my best students and I will continue on with them as a creative consultant.”
Cost: $2,000 (average)
Students keep what they
make including hand tools
ivica@shaw.ca
Sky Pilot
Ever watch the TV footage of helicopter jockeys … scooping lake water into a low-slung bucket, whooshing off to some goat-track-only mountain canyon, hovering above a hell-fury of leaping flames to deliver their payload — then turning around to do it all over again? Mind-boggling isn’t it.
If you’ve also wondered where those pilots get their skills (we won’t even speculate on their guts), bet you didn’t know that lots of them learned right here in the Valley.
For sure this isn’t a career choice for the feint of heart — especially if you’re interested in mountain work, which is what attracts most students to Okanagan Mountain Helicopters. Owner/chief instructor John Vates says the average trainee is early- to mid-20s, though the occasional 40-something turns up and a growing number are women.
Some people tackle the private pilot program (60 hours of flight time plus ground training), but John says that, because rental helicopters aren’t readily available and few people can afford their own (except maybe in the Okanagan), there’s little call for it.
Most students are interested in learning the skills they’ll need to service remote northern camps or work for the forestry department. The Kelowna school is the only training facility in Western Canada that offers a realistic bush camp experience as part of the commercial pilot curriculum. This course, which requires 100 hours of flight time in addition to ground school, includes long line practice, pad landings, hover exit training, fuelling from barrels, winter operations and mountain work to 8,000 feet. But you’ll have to opt for the full Magilla 115-hour premium program if you want to learn how to dangle those buckets.
Cost: Private pilot — $26,000 to $30,000
Commercial pilot —
$46,000 to $59,000
depending on specialties
Okanagan Mountain Helicopters
6285 Airport Way, Kelowna
491.9359
www.okhelicopters.com
info@okhelicopters.com
Martini Madness
verybody wants to mix martinis, though Fine Arts Bartending School co-owner Todd Koch says mohitos are mounting a serious challenge as most requested drink. (Somebody’s been tripping to Cuba.)
No worries, the school teaches over 100 different cocktails and tunies — like Harvey Wallbanger, melon ball, killer Kool-Aid and electric ice tea. Drinks are divided by base alcohol type — whiskey/rye/Scotch, gin, vodka, tequila, rum, brandy, liqueurs — plus cream-based drinks, beer, wine and shooters.
It’s got to be tough memorizing so many recipes, but Todd says flash cards help and all the training is hands-on. Don’t get any ideas here, no live ammo — just water and food colour — and lots of practice.
Day one students start mastering the essential equipment — shot glass, shake tin, mixing glass, bar spoon and strainer — and the proper techniques to measure and pour. The course also highlights glassware selection, customer service and — here’s the biggie — how to increase tips.
This is an equal opportunity career with a pretty even split between the sexes. No surprise that it appeals mostly to gen X and Yers, but boomers and fogies are welcome. The eight-day bartending course is spread over two weeks with the option of day or night classes.
Grads who aspire to ape Tom Cruise and Bryan Brown’s Cocktail moves can sign-on for a one-day program offered monthly and learn to Flair.
Cost: Bartending — $475
Flair — $125
Fine Art Bartending School
4-2979 Pandosy Street, Kelowna
861.6699 or 1.866.881.6699
www.fineart.ca
info@fineart.ca
Private Eye
ast cars, hot sex, bling-bling and intrigue … in your dreams. Real life private investigation isn’t about glamour, it’s about patient, resourceful — work. So lose the Sam Spade-Thomas Magnum-VI Warshawski fantasy. This job takes a world of knowledge and, really surprisingly, you can start to accumulate it right here in the Valley. The Focus Training Institute is one of only two institutions approved to provide this training in BC.
Expect to jump through hoops just to get in. The security requirements and background checks are killer (oops, bad metaphor). For starters, you must be 19 years old, bondable and have a squeaky clean criminal record. But if you make the grade, this can be an interesting and rewarding career.
Frances McLachlan, who works in Focus’s Kelowna office, says PIs deal mostly with civil law, “investigating claims of bodily injury, locating witnesses, interviewing and taking statements. More specialized forms of investigation are document analysis and accident and arson investigation.”
The intensive course covers privacy, criminal, civil and human resource law as well as the court system and the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Students also learn a variety of skills including surveillance; interviewing and taking statements; note taking and report writing; skip tracing and background checks.
And that’s not the end. Graduates have to complete a minimum of 2,400 hours of on-the-job training before qualifying for an unrestricted license and constantly changing laws make this a career for lifelong learners.
Cost: 450-hour program — $5,853
Focus Training Institute
206 - 1470 St. Paul Street, Kelowna
www.focustraininginstitute.com
frances@focustraininginstitute.com
Saddle Up
Bob Land has the gravelly voice and slow-spoken manner that puts you in mind of a cowboy — and rightly so. When he was growing up in the remote Chilcotin, horses were the only mode of transport. And during his many years as a guide-outfitter and packer, he learned — through the seat of his pants — the importance of a good saddle. For the last 47 years he’s been building that experience into hand-made saddlery and since his move to Vernon in 1987, passing it on.
Although he claims to be semi-retired, Bob still takes on students four to eight times a year and plans “to keep at it quite a while yet.” In the spirit of the traditional seven-year saddle making apprenticeship, his approach is one-on-one (or a couple learning together) coaching through the actual construction of a saddle or braiding of harness.
Students come from Canada, the United States, Europe and Australia, to spend from three weeks to three months on individual courses or combinations. A primary attraction is Bob’s insistence that the saddle “fit their use, fit their horse and fit the person.” He says it’s like trying on several different pairs of size-10 shoes. Some feel better than others. It’s the same with horses — different breeds have different back conformation and it matters how the saddle is constructed.
Bob’s courses are completely customized to the needs of the student and include all materials. He’ll work with you on all-around, pleasure, roper, buckaroo, museum replica and even English saddles or rawhide braiding. Everything is individually cut, shaped and fitted, then hand stitched or laced — no cookie cutters — no rivets. With Bob Land, you learn pure craftsmanship.
Cost: Western saddle (3 weeks) $6,500
Western saddle (6 weeks) $13,000
Braiding (head stall) $5,800
Okanagan Saddlery
7979 Baker Hogg Road, Vernon
877.723.3534
www.okanagansaddlery.com
sales@okanagansaddlery.com
Look Out Trout
rads of the Kalamalka Fly Fishers courses are headed to a lake near you!
If you’re faced with somebody who’s just taken the five-night fly casting course, you may be all right — especially if it’s a guy. Club president and expert instructor Ruben Breitkreutz says women and kids are better listeners and more willing to rely on technique instead of power to cast the line your way.
But if your human opponent has also completed the 10-night fly tying course, you’re in big trouble. Who could resist one of their locally delicious, entomologically authentic creations? I ask you.
Anglers, here’s your chance to finally get the upper hand. If you’re new to the sport or looking for a refresh-er, the casting course covers equipment, knots, fish finding (now we’re talking), what they’re eating and vital skills like how to cast into the wind (which may be something like whistling into the wind or even … never mind). You’ll get lots of great tips and a detailed manual that contains a great reference to local flies.
Many grads of the casting course decide they want to take the next step and learn how to tie their own flies (nothing like roping a steer). Ruben says the toughest part is gaining as much control with your left hand as your right — or vice versa for southpaws. But the end result is 16 to 18 irresistible morsels and the knowledge of how to make hundreds more, just by looking at a picture.
Courses are offered annually with registration through Greater Vernon Parks and Recreation. The club uses the program as a fundraiser to help support conservation initiatives, school district 22 educational programs and an Okanagan College bursary in fresh water sciences.
Cost: Fly Casting — $69 (check for early bird special)
Fly Tying — $89 (check for early bird special)
Kalamalka Fly Fishers Club
www.kalflyfishers.ca
info@kalflyfishers.ca
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