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How a Thorold grandmother in isolation gets together with family

Need something positive today? Read this.
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LouAnne Wronskis grandchildren Emma Claire, Alexandria and Mariah Tychynski visiting. Photo: Carolyn Tychynski.

It just isn’t your ordinary April in Thorold.

Shops aren’t open.

Events are cancelled.

Bars are closed. 

The message: ‘Stay at home and don’t visit anyone - especially not the elderly.’

Senior Thorold News reader LouAnne Wronski didn’t like that last part, but wanted to still keep in touch with family through isolation - so she wanted to tell our readers on how to still stay connected.

‘They were supposed to spend the March Break with us as they usually do, but this  year we have to make do with Face Time and video chats as well as porch drop-offs of treats like flowers, soup, baked goods and notes. For me, this is the biggest sacrifice is not getting to snuggle our sweeties,’ she wrote Thorold News in an email.

 


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Ludvig Drevfjall

About the Author: Ludvig Drevfjall

Ludvig Drevfjall has been the editor of ThoroldToday since January 2020. He has worked as a journalist in Sweden, British Columbia and Ontario
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