Your Sunrise at 3 AM Question is All Wrong
Morning from the Interlake — here's what's happening in Selkirk today.
You know, the Premier talking about ending daylight saving time has got folks in Selkirk buzzing, but not about the 3 AM sunrise. That’s not what we’re worried about. People here, especially those who work the early shifts at Gerdau or are out on the river for the pickerel run, are wondering what it means for their day-to-day. It’s not about the novelty of an early sunrise; it’s about how it shifts everything else.
### The Real Selkirk Questions
For us, it's about the rhythm of life here. Think about:
* **Fishing Schedules:** The Red River dictates a lot of our lives. When the bite is good, you're out there. If sunrise shifts, so does the best fishing time, and that impacts more than just recreation—it's part of our identity. * **Work Commutes:** A lot of Selkirk folks head south to Winnipeg for work. An extra hour of dark on the drive down River Road in the morning can feel a lot longer, especially with the deer often out early. * **Family Time:** If the sun sets earlier in the evening during summer, that means less daylight for kids playing at Selkirk Park or for family barbecues on Manitoba Avenue. It really changes the feeling of those long summer nights we cherish.
The truth is, Selkirk isn't a Winnipeg suburb. We have our own steel mill, our own hospital, and our own river. Respect the difference. This time change, whatever form it takes, will affect us differently than it might in the city. It’s about how it impacts our independent rhythm, our connection to the land and water, and the quiet authority we carry from living where two worlds meet. It’s a bigger shift than just an hour on the clock for many of us.
Nolan Chicken, MiTL Sports Desk, Selkirk.
The crew on the Morning Wire dives deep into these kinds of stories every day – you can catch them live at mornings.live.