Skip to content

Art Borups Corners

Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario

MELGUND-RECREATION-ARTS-AND-CULTURE
Primary Menu
  • Home
  • About
    • About Art Borups Corners
    • Artists, Researchers and Collaborators
    • Arts Incubator Winnipeg
    • Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario
      • Local Services Board of Melgund
      • Borups Corners, Northwestern Ontario
      • Dyment, Northwestern Ontario
      • Neighbouring Communities
    • Recreation
      • Framework for Recreation and Parks in Canada
      • Melgund Recreation
      • Recreation for an Aging Population
      • Youth Engagement
    • Reports
      • 2023-2024 Report
      • 2021-2022 Report
      • Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) Tracker
  • News
    • Arts, Culture, and Community Innovation
    • Melgund Township News
    • Motivation Matters!
    • Events and Activities
    • Local Services Board of Melgund Meeting Minutes
    • News Archive
    • Photos and Short Stories
  • Arts and Culture
    • Melgund Township Spring and Summer Arts Incubator Program
    • Living Land Lab
    • Milkweed to Market
    • Storytelling Club
      • Spring Short Stories
      • Winter Stories 2026
      • Unfinished Tales and Short Stories
  • Resources
    • Adaptive Phased Management
    • The Easy EPUB Reader
    • Melgund Integrated Nuclear Impact Assessment Project
    • Explore Our Methods, Epistemologies, and Pedagogies
    • Funding Programs and Sources
    • Guide for Local Services Boards
    • Northern Services Boards Act
    • Workshops
  • Exhibitions
    • 2026 Spring Exhibition
    • ARTSPOT Under $100 Art Show in Winnipeg
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Borups Corners
  • Hairy Honeysuckle
  • Borups Corners
  • Photos and Short Stories

Hairy Honeysuckle

Jamie Bell Jun 19, 2025
A vibrant Hairy Honeysuckle (Lonicera hirsuta) in its natural glory near Dryden, Ontario. This photo, part of our summer project documenting local plants, highlights the striking golden blooms of this beautiful native vine.

A vibrant Hairy Honeysuckle (Lonicera hirsuta) in its natural glory near Dryden, Ontario. This photo, part of our summer project documenting local plants, highlights the striking golden blooms of this beautiful native vine.

A Golden Embrace in the North

One of our projects this summer is focusing on documenting the rich botanical tapestry of Northwestern Ontario. We’ve found a lot of neat and interesting plants we never noticed or paid any attention to before, and we’re learning a lot.

Today’s flower is the vibrant Hairy Honeysuckle (Lonicera hirsuta). This isn’t the more commonly known, often invasive, honeysuckle, but rather a species truly at home in our rugged local environment. With delicate, golden-yellow flowers, their tubular forms unwrap like miniature trumpets. Through the lens, we aimed to do more than just record its presence; we sought to convey the sheer joy and tenacity of this wild beauty.

What makes Lonicera hirsuta so special, especially for our project, is its status as a native species thriving in its natural habitat. Its name hints at the fine hairs often found on its stems and leaves, a small detail that adds to its unique character. As it scrambles and climbs, often along rocky outcrops or through sparse woodlands, its bright blooms offer a striking contrast to the muted greens and grays of the Canadian Shield.

About the Author

Jamie Bell

Jamie Bell

Administrator

Jamie Bell is a Winnipeg-based interdisciplinary artist and strategist working at the intersection of media arts, community engagement, and public affairs. Among others, his work has been supported by the Canada Council for the Arts, the Manitoba Arts Council, and the OpenAI Researcher Access Program, with a focus on participatory media, strategic communications, and arts-based collaboration across northern and urban contexts.

Author's website Author's posts
Tags: Borups Corners Dyment Melgund Township Northwestern Ontario Ontario Arts Plants SDG 11 SDG 15

Continue Reading

Previous: Melgund Township News for June 2025
Next: Wild Columbine

Related News

Nuclear Waste Services (NWS) manages the delivery of the UK’s first Geological Disposal Facility (GDF). The UK Government’s GDF siting process requires Nuclear Waste Services to identify both a suitable site and a willing host community
  • Community Lens
  • Photos and Short Stories

Get to Know Nuclear Waste Projects Around the World

Art Borups Corners May 4, 2026
Ontario nonprofits must adopt by-laws early, defining how decisions, meetings, and responsibilities will function internally.
  • Community Lens
  • Photos and Short Stories

Hosting Your First Nonprofit Board Meeting

Art Borups Corners May 4, 2026
A silent predator waits beneath the waves while a merchant vessel sails across a textbook's deep margins.
  • Borups Corners
  • Photos and Short Stories

Marginalia: At Sea

Art Borups Corners May 3, 2026

Recent Posts

  • Get to Know Nuclear Waste Projects Around the World
  • Hosting Your First Nonprofit Board Meeting
  • Marginalia: At Sea
  • Spring’s Fuzzy First Responders
  • First Board Meetings for Ontario Nonprofits

Upcoming Exhibitions

The Melgund Integrated Nuclear Impact Assessment Project (MINIAP) is a community-driven research and policy initiative examining the environmental, social, cultural, economic, and long-term safety impacts of the proposed Deep Geological Repository (DGR) for Canada’s used nuclear fuel in Melgund, Ontario. Aligned with the federal impact assessment process led by the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada and the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission, and focused on the proposal advanced by the Nuclear Waste Management Organization, this integrated project analyzes groundwater protection, nuclear waste storage safety, Indigenous rights and treaty interests, environmental monitoring, long-term radioactive waste containment, emergency preparedness, regulatory oversight, community health, regional economic impacts, and intergenerational stewardship. Designed to enhance public participation, transparency, and evidence-based decision-making, the Melgund Integrated Nuclear Impact Assessment Project provides accessible analysis, technical review, and community engagement resources to support informed input into Canada’s nuclear waste management strategy and the federal impact assessment process.
Discover a growing collection of inspirational and motivational short stories from Manitoba and Northwestern Ontario, created to inspire hope, resilience, courage, and personal growth. These uplifting short stories and daily motivational reads are rooted in strong community values, dignity, integrity, perseverance, and leadership—reflecting life across the Prairies and Northern Ontario.

Each inspirational story delivers powerful life lessons, positive mindset reminders, and encouragement for self-improvement, mental strength, and purposeful living. Whether you’re searching for motivational stories for tough times, short stories about resilience and overcoming challenges, or inspirational reflections grounded in rural, northern, and Indigenous-informed community perspectives, this collection is designed to fuel optimism, confidence, and long-term success.

Through storytelling that highlights community leadership, youth empowerment, kindness, and values-based living, these inspirational short stories help readers in Manitoba, Northwestern Ontario, and beyond stay grounded, build inner strength, and move forward with clarity, hope, and possibility.

You may have missed

Nuclear Waste Services (NWS) manages the delivery of the UK’s first Geological Disposal Facility (GDF). The UK Government’s GDF siting process requires Nuclear Waste Services to identify both a suitable site and a willing host community
  • Community Lens
  • Photos and Short Stories

Get to Know Nuclear Waste Projects Around the World

Art Borups Corners May 4, 2026
Ontario nonprofits must adopt by-laws early, defining how decisions, meetings, and responsibilities will function internally.
  • Community Lens
  • Photos and Short Stories

Hosting Your First Nonprofit Board Meeting

Art Borups Corners May 4, 2026
A silent predator waits beneath the waves while a merchant vessel sails across a textbook's deep margins.
  • Borups Corners
  • Photos and Short Stories

Marginalia: At Sea

Art Borups Corners May 3, 2026
Squeezing these velvety soft catkins is the only acceptable way to celebrate the arrival of the mud.
  • Photos and Short Stories

Spring’s Fuzzy First Responders

Art Borups Corners May 3, 2026

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The Arts Incubator and Art Borups Corners Collective was seeded with strategic arts innovation funding from the Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse and the Local Services Board of Melgund. We thank them for their investment, support and bringing the arts to life.

Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse Logo

NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO ARTS PROGRAMS

This platform, our Northwestern Ontario hub and programs have been made possible with support from the Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program. We gratefully acknowledge their funding and support in making the work we do possible.

Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program

SUPPORTING ARTS AND RECREATION

Borups Corners Arts and Recreation supports arts and recreation in Melgund Township, Northwestern Ontario as volunteer-driven Arts Collective.

Ontario Arts Council Multi and Inter-Arts Projects Program
Copyright © Art Borups Corners in partnership with The Arts Incubator Winnipeg. All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.