A WALK IN LAKESIDE PARK WITH JOSEPH BRANNAN

The playground at Lakeside Park in Kitchener provided a convenient meeting spot for my walk with labour organizer, library advocate and bird enthusiast Joseph Brannan, but it made for a snowy trek to the ploughed path.  

“All this snow is going to melt and go into the lake there,” Brannan said. “The projects that the Creek Collective group have done recently and Ellie Anglin’s Ribbon Zine have all made me think so much more about watersheds.” 

Our walk took us past the Greenbrook water treatment plant, a pumphouse that is still in operation, as well as the foundations of an old treatment station. It is this history and connection to nature that makes the park a special one for Brannan to visit. 

Brannan was born and raised in Cambridge and lived in Waterloo before relocating to Kitchener five years ago to be closer to work.  

“I feel like I can disparage [the tri-cities] all equally,” Brannan joked. “While I love them all for their strengths.” 

One of those strengths is Kitchener’s bike network, which Brannan uses year-round. With Lakeside Park’s proximity to Mausser Park and Meinzinger Park, as well as its connection to the trail system, Brannan often finds himself passing through the green space on two wheels. 

“The Iron Horse Trail is really the highway that connects KW,” Brannan said. “It’s not [highways] seven and eight. Kitchener’s bike network is really getting better and better. It’s not perfect, but it’s pretty fantastic.” 

As an all-season rider, Brannan has a special appreciation for what biking in the snowy weather can provide.  

“There’s something really great about coming home from work in the evening on a couple of crisp centimetres of fresh snow, just the silence of it,” he said. 

Biking is also a way that Brannan experiences and engages with the community. He appreciates the way cycling provides a chance to connect with other riders and pedestrians, and to be able to respond to people in need of help in a way that being contained and isolated in a car does not facilitate. 

The desire for community and connection is also what drove Brannan to pursue a career in the public library sector. He works as a Library Services Coordinator at the Central branch and also serves as the vice president of CUPE Local 331, which represents the Kitchener Library employees. 

“It is a joy to point someone to the resources that they need,” Brannan said. “It is a joy to connect someone with a good book and see them come back and say, ‘it was fantastic.’” 

One of Brannan’s favourite parts of the job is answering patron emails, asking for book recommendations and getting into the mindset of each reader to point them in the right direction. He has also organized library programming around counter-mapping, which draws from Indigenous movements to reclaim land and examine how maps reflect use of space, power and ownership. 

“I think the library is a keystone of every community and should be protected, appreciated and resourced,” Brannan said. “When the community gives their feedback on what they need from that space, that informs the work that a library can prioritize.” 

We stopped at a roofed structure which Brannan identified as a swallow habitat. We trekked through the snow to look underneath at the artificial perches that encourage nest building. And when we walked to the lake, he spoke about the many birds and other creatures that inhabit the park. 

“You hear the city all around, but [Lakeside Park] is a real gem of something that’s been protected,” Brannan said. “This is a huge birding hotspot in the spring and fall.” 

Brannan developed a love of birds from spending time in the woods as a child and from his grandfather who passed along his appreciation and knowledge. More recently, Brannan has felt a connection to the legacy of his great-grandmother and his Mennonite heritage as he has begun to explore fibre arts. 

“The slow, mechanical, hands-on aspect of stitching and knitting is something I find very soothing,” he said. “Turning a fibre into something useful is probably one of the oldest things that people have ever done, and so it feels like connecting with the entirety of human history.” 

Quilting and knitting provide a chance for Brannan to make something tangible and usable, and to engage with his analytical brain while working through the math involved in those crafting projects. And he is quick to connect his interests back to the library, citing the programs for knitters, bikers and bird lovers that are offered regularly.  

Brannan is optimistic about the future of Kitchener, and through his work, interests and even his commute he finds ways to contribute to building a hopeful way forward.   

“One of Kitchener’s strengths is its many groups of people that are trying to build community very intentionally,” Brannan said.  

“There’s a lot of potential in Kitchener,” he said.

#ellieAnglin #Heritage #JosephBrannan #kitchener #lakesidePark #Mennonite #ribbonZine #vicePresident

COMMUNITY, ARTISTS CELEBRATE SCHNEIDER’S CREEK

As brief spurts of rain trickled down, flowing into the rushing streams of water below, people from all around Kitchener and the Lower Doon neighbourhood gathered atop the Old Mill Rd. bridge for the inaugural CreekFest on Saturday, Sept. 13, 2025.   

Put on as a collaboration between The Creek Collective, Reep Green Solutions, Homer Watson House & Gallery and an organizing committee from the Lower Doon neighbourhood,  the event took place at the meeting point between Schneider Creek and the Grand River—just downhill from the annual Homer Watson House Art Fair.  

An array of tents by a variety of arts groups and environmental organizations dotted the length of the bridge, along with free face painting, a bike decorating booth and a community painting activity.  

Performances of all sorts ran throughout the afternoon, from watershed readings by renowned local authors Ellie Anglin and Tanis Macdonald to musical acts by Kaleo and Jesse Thomas. Erika Lui performed both an aerial and ground dance on top of and below the bridge as a response to CHANNEL MIGRATION, a Schneider Creek audiowalk launched by The Creek Collective earlier this year at Open Ears – Festival of Music and Sound.  

The idea for CreekFest came about following a community mural event facilitated in June 2024 by local artists Jackie Bradshaw and Nadine Badran, both of whom are members of Creek Collective.   

Community members were invited to meet above the Schneider Creek tunnel behind Reep House, along Queen St. and Mill St., to partake in an all-ages community mural workshop.   

“It went so successfully, and a lot of people were interested in the work. We liked how it drew people’s attention to the presence of the creek that’s tunneled there,” Geoff Martin, one of the three co-founders of the Creek Collective, said.  

The Creek Collective was founded by Geoff Martin, Sydney Lancaster and Deborah Carruthers.  

The three artists formed The Creek Collective after discovering a common interest in each other’s works in relation to Schneider Creek, and they have since added a variety of local artists to their membership.   

“We aim to spur consideration of the Creek not simply as an exploitable resource or neglected storm sewer but as a community member who is essential to life in Kitchener,” the organization’s website reads.  

“It’s both a neighbourhood block party and also a city watershed festival. [We’re] calling people down to the mouth of the creek to think about where their creeks flow to. It’s Schneider Creek, but the Henry Sturm and Strassburg, Shoemaker and Montgomery and Balzer—those creeks all flow into Schneider Creek. The water that’s travelling under this bridge is coming from 67 per cent of the city,” Martin said.  

Martin credited the Lower Doon community as a key support in organizing the event and especially Ben McCann who is a local resident and one of the co-organizers.   

“The whole idea was to make it not just be about the neighbourhood, but to bring people in from Kitchener into here to learn more about the watershed,” McCann said.   

Conversations for CreekFest 2026 have already begun, according to Martin.  

#creekCollective #creekfest #DeborahCarruthers #ellieAnglin #erikaLui #GeoffMartin #HansHaryanto #jesseThomas #kitchener #lowerDoon #oldMillRoad #sydneyLancaster #TanisMacDonald