A LEARN-TO-CURL 60TH BIRTHDAY PRESENT

Steve Powell and Tim Atkin have visited some pretty exotic locations in recent years as they pursue a birthday plan of celebrating in new places and experiencing new things.

Coach Rhonda Varnes with Steve Powell (centre) and Tim Atkin. Steve’s 60th birthday trip to Manitoba including a wish-list opportunity to try curling

Last year the Fort Lauderdale, Florida residents visited London where the main attraction, among many, was a trip to a Brand Museum – no, not the kind of brand museum you might find in Texas or Alberta. Steve had recently retired after a career as a Trade Mark attorney – and the brand museum dealing with corporate brand names, trademarks, etc was a perfect destination.

In years before there were things like truffle hunting with dogs in Italy’s Piedmont region, learning glass-blowing in Hawaii and making their own cologne in Italy.

This year, a visit to Manitoba for the Canadian Human Rights Museum and a learn-to-curl trip to Morris (yesterday, May 28, Steve’s 60th birthday).

Of course, a curling publication would like to suggest the curling was the primary objective of the trip – but no, that visit to Winnipeg’s Human Rights Museum has been the top of their ‘where-next’ list since they saw it on Amazing Race Canada.

A visit earlier in the week told them the museum trip truly merited top place on their list. They acknowledged they knew what to expect generally from the TV exposure – but not specifically and they described the current major exhibition, The LGBT Purge, as “an exceptional exhibit”. “So well done, we loved it,” Powell said.

The timing of the trip was set for Steve’s birthday but the coincidence of timing with Winnipeg’s Pride Festival has also allowed them to set a busy schedule.

The ‘what-else’ list has included curling for several years – exposed to it also on television both on the American version of Amazing Race and of course the Olympics, including the great visibility generated by John Shuster’s gold medal run in 2018.

So, when they learned that curling ice was available in Morris and that a coach-instructor was available in Rhonda Varnes, who has signed on for the summer as an on-call coach for the Cargill Curling Training Centre, their own amazing race took them down Highway #75 and onto sheet #1 at Morris.

“Until you try, you have no idea of the balance and the coordination that is required,” Powell said after an enjoyable 2-hour session on the ice.

Both delivering the stone and sweeping require more balance and coordination than Steve Powell (delivering) and Tim Atkin (sweeping) had ever imagined

Some slide-throw delivery attempts did not go particularly well. Powell suggested that the idea of the extra slippery slider didn’t make a lot of sense when the ice is already slippery enough.

Quick on her feet (two grippers please!) Coach Varnes was inspired by the fact that about 10 stick curlers, including 2024 Canadian champion Warren Johnson and 2022 Canadian champion Norm Magnusson, were using adjacent sheets for their weekly summer session.

Using the stick to facilitate the Florida ‘curlers’ deliveries, Coach Varnes talked with them about rotation and curl and release weight and all of the foreign language (to a visitor from Florida) which is spoken by curlers. She also explained how and why sweeping works (more foreign language – even to a lot of curlers).

By the end of their session, Powell called it “extraordinarily fun”. They were propelling their stones down the ice – often on the right line, often with the right weight, usually with the right turn and earning the satisfaction that goes with that stone stopping in the rings or that great feeling when you hear your stone crash against the opponent’s.

Powell and Atkin acknowledged that their time on the ice gave them a greater appreciation for the skill required for the game and for just how spectacular that Team Shuster gold medal win had been.

Are they ready to take up the sport full time? – maybe, but not an easy thing to do in Florida.

Are they interested in coming back to Morris for the stick bonspiel scheduled in early November – maybe, “but remind me when the cold weather comes,” Powell said with a big smile.

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VARNES PURSUING CURLING PRO ACCREDITATION

In one of her first assignments as the summer on-call coach/instructor for the Cargill Curling Training Centre in Morris, Rhonda Varnes learned what pro golf instructors know and what aspiring ACP’s (Accredited Curling Professional) will learn: most of the time, you’ll have no idea what challenges your day is going to bring you.

Rhonda Varnes with Steve Powell in his first experience on the curling ice.

For example, no matter how prepared you are, there is really no way to prepare to teach curling to two guys from Florida whose only knowledge of the game is having watched it a few times on TV.

While they were complimentary of their first exposure to curling as being “extraordinarily fun”, Steve Powell and Tim Atkin were equally complimentary of Varnes’ talents as a teacher.

Recognized as one of Manitoba’s fine competitive women curlers (semi-finalist at the RME Women’s a year ago with Darcy Robertson) and an excellent thrower of the stone, Varnes quickly figured out that teaching them to throw a stone was not going to work. A good teacher adapts and teaching them to deliver a stone with a delivery stick allowed them to learn the game and some of its nuances in the limited time available.

Varnes is one of the first in Manitoba to pursue certification as an Accredited Curling Professional. She’ll be doing a series of on-line courses in June/July, travelling to Oakville, ON for in-person work in August, more course work over the winter all targeting completion of the certification requirements by April.

Meantime, she’ll be working as an on-call coach-instructor at the Cargill Curling Training Centre this summer. She will be available to work with individuals and even teams who want to improve their skills, whether at a competitive level or a more intermediate level.

“I can’t think of anything more satisfying than helping curlers, whatever level they are at, elevate their game. Helping grow their enjoyment of the game is very satisfying,” she said.

Current plans are for the ice in Morris to be available all summer. Curlers with an interest in a single session or a series of sessions are encouraged to contact club Manager Steph Berard (manager@morriscurlingclub.com). If you are interested in using Rhonda Varne’s coach/instructor services, Steph will put you in direct contact for further planning.

CHANGE OF VENUE FOR BOB PICKEN OPEN MASTERS SPIEL

The Bob Picken Open Masters Bonspiel presented by Access Credit Union, the season-opener Masters bonspiel, will move to a new host club for the 2025 bonspiel. The event has awarded $9,000 in Junior Development grants to Manitoba curling club junior programs over the last six years.

The event will be hosted by the East St. Paul Curling Club and will once again be played in late September (Sept. 23-26, 2025)

“We are hopeful to start the season again at the Bob Picken Open Masters,” says 2025 Canadian Masters champion skip Randy Neufeld. “It was a great way to start the season a year ago. It gave us five competitive games but a relaxed schedule to get started.”

Neufeld says he is always excited by the start of a new curling season. The Picken Open Masters provides an early start and an early opportunity to renew friendships and rivalries along with the added benefit of raising funds to support junior curling development.

The bonspiel will once again offer a CurlManitoba Masters Men’s championship entry for the Manitoba’s Credit Unions Masters to be played in Brandon in February of 2026. While they are planning to participate in the bonspiel, Neufeld’s Manitoba/Canadian champions will not be competing for the provincial berth as they have an automatic entry in Brandon as the 2025 champions.

The bonspiel format will be unchanged from 2025, featuring:

  • A maximum of 24 Men’s, Women’s or Mixed teams, with stick curlers welcome
  • Four team pools with a three-game round-robin
  • One game a day for the round-robin with a choice of playing on the morning OR afternoon draw (tentatively 9:30AM and 1:30PM)
  • A championship playoff with two games (for finalists) to be played on the Friday.
  • A separate four-team women’s playoff if there are minimum of four women’s team entries.

Entries will open about mid-August, 2025.

A successful 2024 bonspiel, with the support of CurlManitoba and Access Credit Union, allowed the committee to make six $500 Bob Picken Junior Legacy grants to support junior curling programs across Manitoba. The recipient clubs included Altona, East St. Paul, Ste. Anne, St. Vital and Teulon.  The sixth successful application was coordinated by the Swan River Curling Club on behalf of the Sliding Stars North junior program.

Beginning in 2019, the bonspiel made $1,500 in junior grants annually (with 2020 missed due to the pandemic). Recipient clubs included:
2023: Winkler, Elmwood, Portage
2022: Carman, Swan River, Westman Development League (Virden)
2021: Interlake Junior Inter-Club League (East St. Paul, Selkirk, Stonewall), Bob Picken Inter-Club Youth League (Pembina, Elmwood, La Salle, Fort Garry, Assiniboine Memorial)
2019: Oakville, Riverview, Thistle

The organizing committee expresses sincere appreciation to the Granite Curling Club for its support and sponsorship of the Picken Open Masters Bonspiel in the years after the bonspiel had to move from Bob Poicken’s home club at Valour Road/Thistle.

The committee is delighted by the move of the one and only BOBSPIEL to CURL ESP, home of one of the most vibrant Masters curling programs in the province, and looks forward to continuing the Bob Picken Junior Legacy grants program. Clubs will be informed of application procedures when next curling season begins.

CHANGE OF DATE FOR 2026 RME WOMEN OF THE RINGS

CurlManitoba has announced a change of dates for the 2026 RME Women of the Rings Championship presented by Case IH.

The Manitoba women’s championship will now be played December 30, 2025 to January 4, 2026. The venue, Riverdale Community Centre in Rivers, is unchanged.

“We very much appreciate the co-operation of the Rivers host committee and the Riverdale Community Centre in making the change,” says CurlManitoba Executive Director Craig Baker.

“The previously announced dates in early January were the best fit in the Grand Slam of Curling’s plans to bring the AMJ Players’ Championship to Steinbach’s new Southeast Event Centre – recently announced for January 6-11, 2026,” said Baker. “The change of dates for the Manitoba Women’s championship event made sense in order to ensure Manitoba curling fans can support their favorite local teams in Rivers and their favorite international teams in Steinbach.”

Curling fans are excited to see the new Southeast Event Centre turned into a curling venue and anticipate the possibility of it hosting future provincial and even national/international championships.