
Step Right Up: Formation Fun Day Returns with New Attractions
Archana Cini Lookout Newspaper Formation Fun Day returns to CFB Esquimalt on Sept 6, offering a free afternoon of food, entertainment, games, and family activities. New attractions debut this year, including a toddler-friendly soft play zone. The event fosters connection and belonging within the Defence Community by welcoming both newcomers and longtime residents. - The countdown is officially on for one of the most anticipated Defence community events of the year: Formation Fun Day. On Saturday, Sept 6 from 12 p.m. to 4 p.m., Formation Fun Day will take over the Naden Athletic Centre at Canadian Forces Base (CFB) Esquimalt. The event will unite military members, veterans, base employees, and their families for a free fair-style afternoon of food, entertainment, games, activities, and more. This year’s event promises to be a little different — in the best way. For Leah Pokocky, Personnel Support Programs (PSP) Special Event Coordinator, creating the 2025 Formation Fun Day experience meant listening first. “When in the initial planning stages, it was really important to me to reach out to our local Defence community to see what was enjoyed in the past, what might have been missing, and what they would be sad to not see again,” she says. As a result, the 2025 event is set to include new activities for the youngest children, along with more opportunities for older attendees to build meaningful community memories. Families with toddlers will find plenty to love this year, with Tiny Toes Soft Play Rentals introducing a fenced, concierge-supervised play space designed for children five and under. As Pokocky, a mother of an active two-year-old herself, puts it: “To find someone that safely engages your young child so you can actually finish your still-hot coffee... pure magic.” Entertainment will include That Bubble Guy’s smoke-filled rainbow bubbles; Vancouver Island’s largest...

Meet the Huber PO1s: Service Runs in the Family
Archana Cini, Contributions from Lt(Navy) Jonathan Lacasse and PO1 Brendan Huber Meet the Huber family: Brendan (52), Patrick (15), and Matthias (10), all serving as PO1s in RCN, Sea Cadets, and Navy League programs. Their shared naval involvement strengthens family bonds and instills leadership, seamanship, and citizenship values in the next generation. - What started as a father’s way of helping his children through the separations of service has since turned into a family of Petty Officers, 1st Class (PO1) at the youth and Royal Canadian Navy level. Meet the Huber family, united by both blood and a shared love of the navy. Among the Hubers are three PO1s: Brendan (52), his son Patrick (15), and son Matthias (10), serving in the Royal Canadian Navy (RCN), Lanark Royal Canadian Sea Cadet Corps Program (RCSCC LANARK), and the Carlplace Navy League Cadet Corps Program (NLCC Carlplace) respectively. At the helm of the Huber family stands Patrick and Matthias’s mother Kathryn Huber, an active member of the Navy League board. The Sea Cadets are a Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) supported program focused on leadership, fitness, and citizenship for children aged 12-19. The Navy Cadet Corps, delivered by the Navy League of Canada, teaches children aged 9-12 seamanship, leadership, and RCN traditions. To PO1 Brendan Huber, having his children join these organizations was not only a way to help them understand what he was doing away from home, but also a way to cope with his deployments. Now, his son Patrick has taken to his role of PO1 with enthusiasm and pride, with highlights including taking a Fitness and Sports Instructor Course and winning a RCSCC LANARK sportsman award. His son Matthais also won the Navy League Seamanship Award from NLCC Carlplace. When asked if his children might consider pursuing military careers, PO1...

Cadboro Bay’s Jemmy Jones Island: The Mariner Behind the Name
Lt(Navy) Mike Makow Jemmy Jones (1830–1882), a Welsh-born sea captain, left his mark on B.C.’s coast with an island off Cadboro Bay named after Jones accidentally grounding his ship there. Known for fearless seamanship, Jones once navigated the deadly Columbia River Bar from memory and famously escaped jail in disguise to reclaim his seized schooner, Jenny Jones. - Just off the coast of Cadboro Bay, Victoria, lies an islet jutting out of the sea — Jemmy Jones Island, an oftenoverlooked place carrying the legacy of one of British Columbia’s most audacious mariners. James ( Jemmy) Jones (1830–1882) was a Welsh-born sea captain whose life was filled with daring West Coast escapes and shipwrecks. The island is named not in honor of a great victory, but because Jones once ran his ship aground on it. And that, as history would have it, is what stuck. The incident was minor, with no lives lost or shipwreck — but it did leave a mark. The islet was soon dubbed Jemmy Jones Island, a name that endures on nautical charts and local maps to this day. After spending his youth searching for his father, adventuring, and mining, Jones first made his way to the coastlines of B.C. around 1854. Here, he quickly earned a reputation as a fearless and resourceful mariner, captaining schooners through treacherous waters and running freight between Puget Sound and Victoria for over a decade. Though illiterate, Jones also possessed a photographic memory and an uncanny sense of navigation. A striking example of this came in 1864, when Jones daringly navigated a ship through the Columbia River Bar, a stretch of water so deadly it’s known as ‘the Graveyard of the Pacific.’ When the bar pilot refused to guide the ship through dangerous conditions, Jones took the helm of his schooner...

Exercise Goldrush 2025 Builds Skills and Partnerships in the Pacific Northwest
A/SLt Kim Wachockier MARPAC Public Affairs Three Orca-class vessels (Cougar 61, Raven 56, Grizzly 60) took part in Exercise Gold Rush 2025. Training included towing drills, tidal narrows navigation, search and rescue exercises, and more. Memorable moments included a humpback whale encounter, partnerships with the U.S. Coast Guard, and stops in Ketchikan and Glacier Bay. - Three Royal Canadian Navy (RCN) Orcaclass vessels (Cougar 61, Raven 56, and Grizzly 60) recently spent the past weeks engaged in Exercise Goldrush 2025 (EXGR2025), a coastal training exercise conducted amidst the scenic and challenging waterways of B.C. and Alaska. The exercise united junior officers, sailors, Naval Reservists, Royal Military College (RMC) students, and Naval Experience Program participants for a dynamic, hands-on experience. Effectively operating together, EXGR2025 participants navigated narrow channels, conducted complex mariner deck evolutions, and honed real-world maritime skills to boost operability. In addition to providing opportunities for participants to engage in towing drills, tidal narrows navigation, person-overboard and search and rescue exercises, Goldrush 2025 also supported the new Naval Warfare Officer Professional Qualification (NWOPQ). As a result, Junior Bridge Watchkeepers can log up to 150 hours towards the 600-hour qualification requirement, in addition to the practical experience gained in challenging waterways. EXGR2025 was a voyage of many memorable encounters. In Ketchikan, Alaska, crews were welcomed by the United States (U.S.) Coast Guard with an invitation to the allranks mess, The Crow’s Nest. Glacier Bay saw each Canadian vessel joined by two U.S. National Park Rangers who shared their knowledge of the region’s history, ecology, and wildlife alongside RCN crews. Finally, a humpback whale stole the spotlight in the waters of the Pacific Northwest when it lingered alongside Cougar 61 for nearly two hours. The crew stopped both engines and followed marine wildlife safety protocols as the whale surfaced repeatedly, even rubbing...
CFB Esquimalt: A Historic Naval Base Anchoring Canada’s West Coast
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