Skip to content

The Arts Incubator

Winnipeg, Manitoba

The project is grounded in a dynamic process of collaborative engagement and capacity building, utilizing arts-based research methodologies to ensure the work is both relevant and empowering. A key focus is Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR), which positions young people as leaders in investigating their own economic realities and co-designing their futures. Through a series of co-design workshops, digital storytelling projects, and community forums, ECO-STAR North facilitates intergenerational knowledge transfer, connecting youth with Elders and established creators. This hands-on, community-led approach ensures the resulting toolkit is not an academic exercise, but a living, practical resource built by and for Northern innovators, strengthening a resilient and interconnected creative ecosystem.
Primary Menu
  • Home
  • About
    • Winnipeg, Manitoba
    • Art Borups Corners
    • Artists, Collaborators And Mentors
    • Hubs
      • Borups Corners
      • Dyment Recreation Hall and Complex
      • Minneapolis, Minnesota
    • Funders and Supporters
      • Canada Council for the Arts
      • Global Dignity Canada
      • Local Services Board of Melgund
      • Manitoba Arts Council
      • Minneapolis College of Art and Design
    • Reports
      • 2023-2024 Report
      • 2021-2022 Report
    • Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) Tracker
    • Resources
      • Adaptive Phased Management
      • Climate CO-STAR Builder (ECO_STAR)
      • Entrepreneurship Resources
      • Framework for Recreation in Canada
      • Funding Programs and Sources
      • Parks for All
      • The Common Vision
  • Projects
    • Books and Short Stories
      • Barnes and Noble
      • Boekholt Boekhandels
      • eBook.de
      • Ex Libris
      • Fnac
      • Hugendubel
      • LaFeltrinelli Internet Bookshop
      • Lehmanns Media
      • Osiander
      • Palace Marketplace
      • Morawa
      • Orell Füssli
      • Standaard Boekhandel
      • Thalia
    • Food Security
      • Come Eat With Me Manitoba Cookbook
      • Towards a Framework for Northern Food Systems Innovation
      • Food Preservation Training and Curriculum Development
      • Relationship Development and Engagement with the Minneapolis College of Art and Design and University of Minnesota Duluth
      • Relationship Development and Engagement Activities with the University of the Arctic
      • The Art of Canning and Creative Entrepreneurship
    • Incubating Artificial Intelligence
      • Artist Bio Builder Writing Tool
      • Art Idea Generator
      • Asteroids
      • ECO-STAR North
      • Inuit Innovators
      • Step Inside Your Content
      • The Creative Entrepreneurship CO-STAR Guide
      • Unfinished Tales: Methods in Generative Storywork
    • Media Arts and Storytelling
    • Melgund Township Oral History Project
    • Recreation
      • Art Borups Corners
      • Arts and Recreation for an Aging Population
      • Creative Arts for Community Recreation
      • Facilities
        • The Cook Shack
        • Dyment Recreation Hall
        • Melgund Lake Boat Launch
        • Ice Fishing Shack
    • Stories & Publishing Skills
    • Youth Engagement
  • News
    • Borups Corners News
    • Creative Entrepreneurship
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Arts & Creative Leadership
    • Food Security and Innovation
    • Melgund Township News
    • Photos and Short Stories
    • Winnipeg
  • Events
    • Canada Day 2025
    • 2025-2026 Melgund Township Music Series
  • Contact
  • Home
  • Photos and Short Stories
  • Split, Stack, and Settle In
  • Photos and Short Stories

Split, Stack, and Settle In

There’s something deeply satisfying about the thunk of a wood splitter cutting clean through a log.
Tony Eetak May 31, 2025
Getting a head start on winter—cutting and stacking wood before the mosquitoes and ticks take over. We only use older trees and always plant new ones, replacing every log we burned last year. It’s part of our seasonal rhythm and our arts-based approach to sustainable living.

Getting a head start on winter—cutting and stacking wood before the mosquitoes and ticks take over. We only use older trees and always plant new ones, replacing every log we burned last year. It’s part of our seasonal rhythm and our arts-based approach to sustainable living.

The Art of Cutting Wood Before the Bugs Wake Up

There’s something deeply satisfying about the thunk of a wood splitter cutting clean through a log. The smell of fresh-cut pine, the pattern of rings etched like time-lapse memories—cutting wood for the winter isn’t just a chore, it’s a ritual. And right now, before the armies of mosquitoes buzz and the ticks march out, it’s the perfect time to do it.

We’re not just cutting for the sake of it—we’re replacing every log we burned last year, restocking our woodpile in preparation for the long cold stretch to come. It’s part of a seasonal rhythm we respect. We use old trees that are ready to fall or have already come down, making room for new growth. And for every tree we take, we make sure to plant new ones, keeping the cycle of renewal alive and rooted.

In our arts-based living lab, even the practical has its poetry. Cutting wood becomes an act of rhythm and balance: a dance between blade and bark, timing and torque. It’s the original fitness program—no gym membership required. Each round log, stacked neatly with care, is a promise of warmth in the cold months ahead. It’s a reminder that self-reliance, sustainability, and creativity can go hand in hand—and that preparation is a kind of quiet power.

So we roll up our sleeves, breathe in that crisp spring air, and get to work before the bugs try to claim the season. Because there’s nothing quite like the satisfaction of a woodpile—symmetrical, sun-drenched, and smelling like survival.

About the Author

Tony Eetak

Tony Eetak

Administrator

Tony Eetak is an emerging artist, musician and culture connector from Arviat, Nunavut, now exploring the arts in Winnipeg, Manitoba. A founding member of the Art Borups Corners, Tony has a demonstrated passion for photography, music, composition, and visual arts. With over five years of experience as a dedicated volunteer, collaborator and co-funder of several arts projects, Tony has been involved in various participatory arts events through organizations like the Arviat Film Society, Global Dignity Canada, Inclusion in Northern Research, and Our People, Our Climate. His contributions earned him recognition as a National Role Model by Global Dignity Canada in 2023. His work has been supported by the Canada Council for the Arts, Manitoba Arts Council and the OpenAI Researcher Access Program.

Visit Website View All Posts
Tags: SDG 15

Post navigation

Previous: Rhubarb Adventures: A Sweet and Tart Harvest!
Next: The Pine Cone That Wasn’t

Related News

Across the vast, culturally rich landscapes of Northwestern Ontario and the broader Canadian North, a powerful creative movement is taking shape. From the intricate beadwork of the Anishinaabe and Dene to the striking sculptures of Inuit carvers and the digital art of a new generation, creativity in these regions has always been more than expression — it is storytelling, identity, and survival.
  • Community Projects
  • ECO-STAR-North
  • Photos and Short Stories
  • Winnipeg

What is ECO-STAR North?

Art Borups Corners November 6, 2025 0
When we talk about AI agents in popular culture, we often imagine something autonomous, almost sentient: a voice that understands us perfectly and acts on its own. But in reality, the kind of systems we’re exploring are far more precise, methodical, and controlled. They are stateful orchestration engines, designed to interpret human intent and transform it into structured, reliable outputs. In other words, they turn creative chaos into ordered, auditable data.
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Photos and Short Stories

What Is an Agentic System?

Jamie Bell November 3, 2025 0
Downtown Windsor Ontario - Detroit River
  • Photos and Short Stories

The Detroit River

Jamie Bell October 31, 2025 0

Recent Posts

  • Chicken Pot Pie Time
  • AI Agents: Specialists at Work
  • Research: When AI Becomes a Team
  • AI and the Arts
  • Agentic Design? So, Where’s the Art?

You may have missed

Golden, flaky crusts hide rich, savory fillings brimming with local ingredients. Each chicken pot pie tells a story.
  • Food Security and Innovation
  • Winnipeg

Chicken Pot Pie Time

Jamie Bell November 14, 2025 0
Multi-agent systems rely on specialist agents — AI systems dedicated to specific types of work. These can include text generation, image synthesis, data analysis, or even music composition. Each agent is designed to perform a narrow but complex task exceptionally well.
  • Artificial Intelligence

AI Agents: Specialists at Work

The Arts Incubator - Winnipeg November 12, 2025 0
At its core, an AI “agent” is not sentient. It’s a system capable of perceiving its environment, planning a sequence of actions, and executing those actions to reach a goal. In a multi-agent system, these behaviors are distributed across the team.
  • Artificial Intelligence

Research: When AI Becomes a Team

Jamie Bell November 10, 2025 0
Practical workflows are also changing the conversation. Artists are increasingly using AI to handle repetitive or large-scale tasks, freeing humans to focus on storytelling and interpretation.
  • Creative Entrepreneurship

AI and the Arts

Jamie Bell November 9, 2025 0

MANITOBA ARTS PROGRAMS

This platform, our Winnipeg, Manitoba hub and programs have been made possible with support from the Manitoba Arts Council Indigenous 360 Program. We gratefully acknowledge their funding and support in making the work we do possible.

Manitoba Arts Council Indigenous 360 Program

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The Arts Incubator was seeded and piloted with strategic arts innovation funding from the Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse. We thank them for their investment, supporting northern arts capacity building and bringing the arts to life.

Canada Council for the Arts Digital Greenhouse Logo

NORTHWESTERN ONTARIO ARTS

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
Copyright © All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.