Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadians Go For Frosty New Year's Day Swim In Annual Polar Bear Plunges

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Jan, 2016 01:04 PM
    Canadians across the country are participating in a frosty New Year's Day tradition — the polar bear dip.
     
    Ten people braved freezing temperatures to leap off a snow-covered wharf into the frigid Atlantic in Portugal Cove, N.L.
     
    In Nova Scotia, more than 130 people — some in colourful costumes — gathered to leap from a wharf under the watchful eye of members of the local fire department for the 22nd annual polar bear dip in Herring Cove.
     
     
    People donned tutus and onesies as they plunged from the wharf in the small community just outside Halifax, where temperatures were hovering around -1 C on Friday.
     
    Eighty-one-year-old Ernie Ross was first into the water, wearing salmon-coloured swimming trunks with the phrase "Happy 2016" written across his chest in black marker.
     
     
    Organizers estimate 250 swimmers — one wearing a lab coat and riding a boogie board — entered the water during a polar bear dip at Britannia Beach in Ottawa, as cross-country skiers made their way through a nearby park.
     
    Snow flurries didn't deter several hundred people from turning out at a Toronto beach to run en masse into Lake Ontario in the 11th annual Toronto Polar Bear Dip.
     
    Organizers of the 31st annual Courage Polar Bear Dip in Oakville, Ont., say they are hoping nearly 1,000 people will take the plunge into Lake Ontario on Friday afternoon.
     
     
    The oldest Polar Bear Club in the country was founded in 1920 in Vancouver, and since then the tradition has spread. Vancouver's club is still the largest, with more than 2,500 entries in 2014.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Manitoba Wants More Federal Money To Finance Policing For First Nations

    Manitoba's attorney general says he will be pushing for more federal money to help bolster front-line First Nations policing on remote reserves.

    Manitoba Wants More Federal Money To Finance Policing For First Nations

    Winter Storm Dumps Snow In Maritimes For Second Time In Three Days

    Winter Storm Dumps Snow In Maritimes For Second Time In Three Days
    Parts of the Maritimes are digging out for the second time in three days as a winter storm sweeps through parts of the region.

    Winter Storm Dumps Snow In Maritimes For Second Time In Three Days

    B.C. Government Reaches Settlement With Wrongfully Fired Health Workers

    Rebecca and William Warburton were among the drug-research workers who were fired in September 2012 amid allegations of inappropriate access to medical records that included possible criminal conduct.

    B.C. Government Reaches Settlement With Wrongfully Fired Health Workers

    Punjabi Man, Jaskaran Sidhu, Arrested For Allegedly Biting Air Canada Flight Attendant

    Punjabi Man, Jaskaran Sidhu, Arrested For Allegedly Biting Air Canada Flight Attendant
    47-year-old Jaskaran Sidhu who lives in Alberta, has been charged with assault and causing bodily harm. The flight returned to Toronto's Pearson International Airport after the incident.

    Punjabi Man, Jaskaran Sidhu, Arrested For Allegedly Biting Air Canada Flight Attendant

    Homes Shake, Residents Unnerved, But No Damage As Moderate Earthquake Strikes British Columbia

    Homes Shake, Residents Unnerved, But No Damage As Moderate Earthquake Strikes British Columbia
    t struck at 11:39 p.m. local time Tuesday, about 20 kilometres north of Victoria, and was felt across much of southern B.C. 

    Homes Shake, Residents Unnerved, But No Damage As Moderate Earthquake Strikes British Columbia

    Terrace, B.C., Police Arrest Man After Three Calls Within Minutes

    Terrace, B.C., Police Arrest Man After Three Calls Within Minutes
     A 22-year-old man is under arrest in Terrace, B.C., after his actions prompted three emergency calls within minutes on Monday night.

    Terrace, B.C., Police Arrest Man After Three Calls Within Minutes