winnipeg/mb/ca

Golden Boy, atop the Manitoba Legislative Building dome, photos by Charles Gardet & Zef


events planner
At Fame
Kiss Me, I'm Gay: St Paddy's Day 2013

March 16, 2013 9:30pm-2am at Fame, 279 Garry Street. St Patrick's Day dance party. Dress: wear green, get green - cash prizes for best costume. DJ: Hallmark. An 18+ event, $5 cover charge. Coming: March 22nd CabarGay Variety Show; and March 28th Bad Thursday Mardi Gras - "Dirty Deeds for Beads." with DJ Roy and performances by Alexa Silver and Victoria Lush.


www.famenightclubwinnipeg.com/content/bollywood-new-years-eve-event
Pan-sexual festish event
The Ball | Spring

April 6, 2013, at the Ozzy's, 160 Osborne Street. 18+ fetish dress code party. Pansexual fetish event for prairie dwellers, local fetish news updates - straight, queer, gay, lesbian, or bi; interested in bondage, domination, submission, sadism, masochism, power play, multiple partners, cross dressing, exhibition, voyeurism, kinky toys, leather, latex, lace, or just plain old sex.


www.theball.ca
26 Years - Pride of the Prairies
Pride Winnipeg Festival 2013

May 25 - June 2, 2013. Over 30,000 typically attend the festival, dance, rally and parade, concerts and market -events for all segments of diverse community.

www.gaypridewinnipeg.com
100% uncensored, 100% unjuried
Winnipeg Fringe Festival 2013

July 17-28, 2013. The second-largest event of its kind in North America each year, welcoming companies from all over the world to present exciting independant theatre.

www.winnipegfringe.com
Celebrating diversity
Folklorama

July / August annual events. Since 1970, now with over 40 pavillions, celebrating the diverse cultural heritages & cuisines of the many peoples from around the world who made Manitoba their new home. Includes performers, story tellers, food, music, games, & more.

www.folklorama.ca
Grab your popcorn, find a seat
Reel Pride 2013

Mid-October, 2013, six-day annual glbt film festival from the Winnipeg Gay & Lesbian Film Society - usually at the Gas Station Arts Centre, 445 River Ave, Osborne Village. See their website for more info on films and screening times.


www.reelpride.org
Centre culturel franco-manitobain
Festival Voyageur

Mid-February, 2014, Parc du Voyageur, 233 boul. Provencher. Annual festival recreating & honoring era of fur trader pioneers: village, snow sculptures, artisan works, clothing, candy, music performances, arts and heritage of First Nations, bison ranch.

festivalvoyageur.mb.ca
top experiences
Beaconia Beach & Bonnycastle Park:

Beaconia Beach - beautiful, pristine 3km-wide sands on freshwater lake, clothing-optional, popular with gay men.

Bonnycastle Park - south end of Garry Street, between Fort Garry Place and Assiniboine River, the cruisiest spot in Winnipeg, especially on summer weekends. Also lots of pedestrian action along Assiniboine Avenue, up to Manitoba Legislature buildings.

Manitoba Legislative Building:

One of the province’s most famous symbols is the “Golden Boy,” a beautiful gilded 17-foot figure perched atop the Manitoba Legislature Building. He embodies the province’s spirit of enterprise and youth and has been considered a good luck charm since he survived the bombing of the foundry in Paris where he was cast in 1918. Guided tours of the building are available.

www.gov.mb.ca/mit/legtour/index.html
Royal Canadian Mint:

Ever wonder how coins are made? All of Canada’s money is minted and printed right in Winnipeg, as are the currencies of more than sixty other governments around the world. Guided tours are available year-round and the interactive coin museum gives visitors the opportunity to strike their own souvenir coins and attempt to lift a gold bar worth more than $200,000. Unfortunately, visitors are not given free samples.

www.mint.ca/
St. Boniface:

Winnipeg was founded and first settled by French Canadians and their Metis (mixed French and Native) descendents and only became majority Anglophone following the province’s admission into Canada and the resulting wave of immigration from English Canada. French still dominates in Winnipeg’s French quarter, St. Boniface and the area is a great place to experience la vie française. More than 30 designated historical sites tell the story of the original Metis settlement on the Red River. One of these, the St. Boniface Cathedral hosts theatrical productions of the province’s history in the adjoining cemetery, where the Metis leader Louis Riel is buried.

The Exchange District National Historic Site:

The heart of Winnipeg is in the Exchange District, a national historic site that comprises more than 150 Victorian buildings from when Winnipeg was the booming center of Canada’s westward expansion. The area is home to many art galleries, studio theatres, and major cultural institutions like the Manitoba Theatre Center and the Manitoba Opera. The world-class facilities here have made Winnipeg an unlikely cultural hotspot, premiering shows that have gone on to Broadway and featuring acting icons like Keanu Reaves. Old Market Square is packed all summer long with festivals like Folkarama, the Fringe Theatre Festival, and the Jazz Festival.

www.exchangedistrict.org/biz/
The Forks:

It may be a misnomer, but “The Forks” is the name given to the area where the Red and Assiniboine Rivers converge. The area has been an important meeting and trading point throughout the region’s history and today remains one of the city’s major tourist attractions. The Forks Market houses specialty food shops, an ethnic food court and a farmer’s market in a historic building overlooking the water. In the summer the area is often buzzing with buskers and musicians and in the winter you can skate along the Red River – the world’s longest skating rink. Soon the area will be home to the under-construction Canadian Museum for Human Rights.

www.theforks.com/

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