March 1, 2002
The unofficial sport of
the Games
Pin collectors unite
for the 2002 AWG
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
Denise Hutchings frowns
when questioned about the size of her pin collection.
"Ive lost count.
They seem to multiply," she says with a quick smile.
From her desk at Iqaluit
city hall, the finance officer proudly displays 300 colourful pins fastened
to two pieces of red fabric.
With the exception of a
Tim Hortons coffee pot, her dotted display represents sporting events and Canadian
territories and provinces.
At home, hundreds
perhaps thousands of the intricate metal badges are stored in bowls and
in drawers.
The attraction is simple,
Hutchings said. Collecting pins allows her to meet people and refine her bartering
skills. The hobby is affordable, environmentally friendly and open to new members.
"I started in the
early 80s, when Terry Young gave me a polar bear pin back in Newfoundland,"
she said.
Coincidentally, Young is
now the principal at Inuksuk high school in Iqaluit.
A former stamp collector,
Hutchings keeps pin gathering simple.
She never goes online to
trade and she doesnt belong to any specialized clubs. However, thats
not to say pin traders do not have extreme tendencies. Some traders have exchanged
the shirt off their back to get a pin theyve searched for.
Pin trading is an unofficial
sport at the Arctic Winter Games. This month, more than a dozen pins are being
introduced at the Games, including nine pins representing each official sport.
A five-piece pin set will be available but only one pin per day will be released.
"Weve had lots
of calls already," said Tamara Macpherson, AWG external relations officer.
"A man in Alberta called and wants 10 of each."
Hutchings is also an amateur
curler and coach. Her favourite pin is of Canadian curler Sandra Schmirler,
who died in 2000.
"That one is special.
I wont be trading it," Hutchings said.
Money is rarely exchanged
when trading pins. Even so, the stakes can be high. At the 2001 Canada Summer
Games last year, Hutchings traded 13 limited edition Nunavut pins for one "O"
shaped pin. The "O" pin completed the word "SPORT."
"He made me pay,"
she said with a laugh. "Usually you trade pin for pin but I wanted the
"O" so badly."
Pin collectors share similar
characteristics, Hutchings said: an eye for detail, an appreciation for all
things different and refusal to accept no for an answer.
"I like it because
sometimes you have to fight for what you want. You need the drive to get something
you want," she said.
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