B.C. seniors credit 'laughter yoga' in their enduring love story
As Sarah Kendall and Gene Furbee look back on their enduring love story, they can’t help but laugh.
WITH ADAM SAWATSKY
As Sarah Kendall and Gene Furbee look back on their enduring love story, they can’t help but laugh.
While growing up deaf, Chris Dodd was always trying to be heard. “I was a little bit of a clown,” Chris tells us through a sign language interpreter. “I liked to get attention.”
Keith Alessi will never forget being a boy and discovering the instrument that would eventually save his life.
To appreciate why Karin Hedetniemi was so surprised by what she found buried in her back garden – how meaningful it was to discover an old metal dog tag from 1950 – we need to go back to when she met Gary Salmon in 2018.
When Catherine Dobrowolski began doing daily walks by the water, she never expected to make an eight-legged friend.
Before David Beck discovered the positive potential of filling a balloon full of water, he was striving to be a full-time travel photographer.
It all began with the unexpected arrival of a big box at the beginning of the school year, which was filled with red headbands and an an invitation to become a "Kindness Ninja."
When Ping-Yi Wu started taking a selfie while floating in the ocean near East Sooke, B.C., the tourist never imagined she would eventually capture an orca with her camera.
Adam finds out why an Esquimalt couple is crediting their enduring love story with laughter.
Got a story idea for a Swatsky Sign-Off? Contact Adam at signoff@bellmedia.ca.
A rescue operation for an orca calf trapped in a remote tidal lagoon off Vancouver Island has been put on hold after it started eating seal meat thrown in the water for what is believed to be the first time.
Mounties say seven people have been arrested after a series of co-ordinated property searches on Vancouver Island yielded multiple firearms, including 3D-printed handguns, and several kilograms of drugs.
In Colwood, B.C., there are 35 residential homes in the tsunami inundation zone.
Students at a Que. school are accusing their teacher of unlawfully selling their art online. Genevieve Beauchemin has the details.