Columnists

Our contributing columnists cover a wide range of topics that are important to both themselves and a wider audience. Their coverage lets readers form their own opinions on the issues that matter to their daily lives. Our columnists are engaging, sometimes witty, and always insightful as they delve into the issues that capture our attention, evoke our emotions or simply make us laugh.

Nancy Melcher- The Nature Nut

I AM the “Nature Nut”. After more than four decades of environmental education and an ongoing love of the outdoors, I have a wealth of information to share about the natural world around us. As a result, I often get assignments for the paper that are related to the environment. I welcome questions about things you’ve seen or heard, smelled or touched, or even tasted in the great outdoors and on local trails and roads. I am also active in local community theatre, and you might find me acting on the stage, or perhaps working behind the scenes helping to build sets and stage-managing. I’m in touch with the wider arts community, and through “Art-y Facts” I try to keep Cosmos readers in tune with upcoming concerts, exhibitions, book readings, plays, and special events. I moved to Coppins Corners in 1983, and shortly thereafter my husband and I moved into town: we’ve lived here ever since. We’ve raised our son here, and enjoy the vibrant lifestyle that this community offers. It is definitely the centre of our universe!

Nancy Melcher is The Nature Nut. Send details of your sightings or questions about the natural world to: general@melcher.cx

Justyne Edgell

Lisha Van Nieuwenhove- A Blonde Moment

A Blonde Moment” was how I first found my words on the pages of The Uxbridge Cosmos. Former editor Conrad Boyce and I were doing a play together, he discovered I had a background in journalism and writing, and he asked me to write a column. A few short years later, I found myself at the helm of the best little newspaper in Durham Region (in my opinion). I still like to take off the editor hat, every now and again, and write a “Blonde” column because it lets me give voice to things that I love to write about but have no place anywhere else in the paper. And just to note – my hair is naturally blonde.

Ted Barris- Barris Beat

For most of my professional life, I have been in love… in love with words and in love with applying the best descriptions those words can deliver about the people, places and events I encounter in the stories I write for print, media and online publication. My column, The Barris Beat (coined by my late father, Alex, when he wrote a column for the Globe & Mail in the 1950s) demands that I never stop searching for vivid ways of putting a human face in words to community, service, colour, memory and innovation around me. As a new or regular reader of my weekly column, you can expect that I’ll keep trying to bring that love affair with words and life to each column.

Roger Varley- Am I Wrong?

I began writing for The Cosmos 10 years ago when I retired after spending most of my working life in the news business.

I began my career with The Canadian Press, the best training ground for journalists, and spent almost 30 years there. I worked for a few years with The Uxbridge Times-Journal until it was acquired by Metroland and then worked for York Metroland, where I was a co-winner of the Canadian Community Newspapers Association ‘s feature writing award. On joining The Cosmos, I brought back my Am I Wrong? column and my Cup of Coffee interviews, both of which started when I was at the Times-Journal. For the last 10 years, I have reported regularly on Uxbridge council and the Uxbridge Bruins and have covered the local candidates in every municipal, provincial and federal election in that time. In my time I have interviewed prime ministers, party leaders, cabinet ministers, entertainment stars and sports notables. But my 10 years at The Cosmos have been the most enjoyable.

Want to tell Roger Varley if he’s wrong or right?Email him at rogervarley999@gmail.com

Conrad Boyce- Wandering the Cosmos

I’m a native Albertan, and lived many years in both B.C. and the Yukon before emigrating to Ontario in 1995. I became involved in the Uxbridge arts community almost immediately but was obliged to work elsewhere until I became the founding editor/publisher of the Cosmos in 2005. Among the other local writing projects I’m most proud of are Maud of Leaskdale, the one-woman play I created for the LMMSO in Leaskdale, and Jewel on the Hill, the book about the Thomas Foster Memorial I wrote in 2014. I now live in the Ottawa Valley, where I babysit grandchildren and am finding other things to keep me busy!