Media releases

  • Brock University toasts gift of 2,500 historically significant wines

    MEDIA RELEASE: 23 September 2021 – R0096

    Renowned wine expert Michael Vaughan has selected Brock University’s Cool Climate Oenology and Viticulture Institute (CCOVI) as the new home of his impeccably preserved collection of award-winning Canadian wines.

    The Michael Vaughan Wine Collection contains 2,500 bottles of historical wines from across the country, including a number of extremely rare bottles that date back decades. The collection has been personally curated and preserved by Vaughan and contains some of the last-remaining bottles of their kind that are still in mint condition and drinkable.

    Vaughan, who earned his PhD in International Economics from the University of Toronto, was a Professor of Economics at Ryerson University before becoming an award-winning national wine writer and critic. He said his collection was curated with intellectual pursuits in mind. As an educator himself, Vaughan said he felt CCOVI’s state-of-the-art facilities and reputation for research and educational excellence made it an ideal partner for both housing and utilizing his unique collection.

    “I wanted to make sure the wines I have accumulated went somewhere where they could be a useful learning experience,” he said. “I wanted to share them with an academic institution. The most important one for me was Brock, because it made sense that it went to a place where the students, the faculty and the winemakers could experience the evolution of these wines and see how good they still were and how they had changed over all of these years.”

    Brock University has become a trusted steward for unique, historically significant collections, including the Alexander Hamilton collection that was donated to the Brock Library’s Archives and Special Collections last year.

    Debbie Inglis, Director of Brock’s CCOVI, said the Michael Vaughan Wine Collection is a prime example of how gifts of this kind and ongoing partnerships with donors can serve students, researchers and the community for years to come.

    “This generous donation, coupled with Michael’s expertise, will be a valuable asset to the Institute as we work to address the evolving research and outreach needs of our industry and educate future generations of grape growers and winemakers,” she said. “This collection serves as a living history of the evolution of Canadian wine, allowing us to learn from the past and bolster the sustainability and success of our industry in the future.”

    The collection will be housed in CCOVI’s 44,000-bottle capacity wine cellar, where the wines will be climate-controlled, archived and preserved as part of the Institute’s Canadian Wine Library.

    “This donation contains wines from some of Canada’s top wine vintages, including 1998 and 1999, and to have these coming through our doors is very exciting,” said Barb Tatarnic, CCOVI’s Manager of Continuing Education and Outreach. “It opens up a treasure trove of opportunities for CCOVI to take a deep dive into these wines and to offer tastings and research opportunities that look at things like ageability, the impact that good vineyard practices have on the quality of wines, climate, weather impacts on vintage variation and much, much more.”

    Vaughan has been studying, collecting and writing about wine for more than 50 years, documenting the 1970s resurgence of the Canadian wine industry first-hand. He is the publisher/editor and creator of Vintage Assessments, a not-for-profit publication dedicated to professional buyers, sommeliers and wine lovers, and has personally tasted and critiqued tens of thousands of the world’s top wines.

    The value of the collection he is gifting to Brock lies in the health of the wines themselves, which he preserved in a climate- and humidity-controlled environment and routinely evaluated for quality using a time-honoured technique to preserve their integrity.

    “I keep my wine very cold because I don’t want it to evolve, so my secret of having wines that are still drinkable after 50 years is the temperature,” Vaughan said. “The wines that have been donated to CCOVI had never moved out of my climate-controlled storage.”

    Vaughan will continue to offer his breadth of expertise and collaborate with CCOVI on various outreach, research and educational opportunities involving the presentation of these wines going forward.

    “This is the fun part,” he said. “I really want to continue working with Brock, including on some interesting projects I have in mind.”

    CCOVI, which is poised to celebrate its 25th anniversary in October, is developing plans for hosting these opportunities, as well as an event to celebrate the donation, in the near future.

    CCOVI Director Debbie Inglis and wine expert Michael Vaughan are available for media interviews.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca or 905-347-1970

    * Sarah Ackles, Marketing and Communications Officer, Cool Climate Oenology and Viticulture Institute, Brock University sackles@brocku.ca289-783-5478

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Brock event to focus on bone and muscle health in COVID-19 era

    MEDIA RELEASE: 22 September 2021 – R0095

    Important aspects of bone and muscle health, including implications of low activity during the COVID-19 pandemic on different demographics, will be discussed at an upcoming Brock University event.

    Hosted by Brock’s Centre for Bone and Muscle Health (CBMH), the fourth Musculoskeletal Health Education Forum takes place Saturday, Oct. 2 from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. and will be held online for the first time. The public event will bring together international speakers and participants to explore topics related to the theme of Musculoskeletal Health and Performance during the COVID-19 Era.

    The aim of the CBMH to increase knowledge of bone and muscle health through research and to use that information to improve well-being of individuals, organizations and communities in Niagara and beyond.

    “The Centre for Bone and Muscle Health is a leader in knowledge translation,” says Brock Kinesiology Professor and outgoing Centre Director Bareket Falk. “Very often, scientific findings stay in the lab and don’t get translated to the real world. A main purpose of our biennial forum is to mobilize knowledge into the hands of practitioners and the field.”

    The Musculoskeletal Health Education Forum connects academics, professionals and community members as they discuss important aspects of bone and muscle health. The event also provides students with the opportunity to become further engaged in current topics.

    Falk says this year’s online platform has allowed for participation by an array of experts from around the world.

    “Our lineup of speakers is exciting because they will be considering the different aspects of COVID-19 from their own settings and environments,” she says. “There will be an international lens on having to deal with different aspects of lockdowns and restrictions.”

    Examples of some of the differences and similarities being explored will include, how to stay active and resume activities during the pandemic, and the different implications of lower activity levels for children, adults, seniors, athletes and those recovering from COVID-19, and more.

    “There are many interesting nuances for how COVID-19 has been handled geographically,” Falk says. “For instance, here in Canada we were encouraged to go outdoors for physical activity, but at times in Australia, they were only allowed a five-kilometre radius and in Israel, only 500 metres.”

    The event’s keynote speakers are Dr. Yoni Yarom, from the Medix Center for Sports Medicine at the Israel Olympic Center, who will present on “COVID-19 and Return to Play,” and University of Saskatchewan Kinesiology Professor Phil Chilibeck, who will discuss “Keeping gyms and sports competitions open during COVID-19 — is the use of face masks a viable strategy?”

    Session speakers on the agenda include Michaela Devries, University of Waterloo, Health Sciences and Kinesiology Assistant Professor; Bruce Craven, Craven Sport Services (Saskatoon), President and Physiotherapist; Katsu Funai, University of Utah, Diabetes and Metabolism Research Center Associate Professor; and Bahram Jam, Advanced Physical Therapy Education Institute (Toronto), Founder and Director.

    “Muscles and bones are very much related but in research, we often focus on one specific thing and do not always look at or cannot look at it from a bigger view. Sometimes, the interaction between them can be overlooked,” Falk says. “By bringing together stakeholders who see the benefits of these important interactions, we can find new opportunities to collaborate in research to ensure cohesion of efforts, minimize the duplication of efforts and capitalize upon common goals and resources.”

    The Musculoskeletal Health Education Forum is intended for a wide audience of practitioners, professionals, students and other academics and non-academics within the field of musculoskeletal health.

    This webinar is free and open to the public, but registration is required to gain access to the online Zoom event. Please RSVP online.

    For more information, please contact cbmh@brocku.ca

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases