It’s terrific in Transcona

A fabulous place for a night of music and fun

Advertisement

Advertise with us

You can't beat Old Transcona's Bond Street and Regent Avenue L-shaped strip for a safe and friendly live music pub crawl.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 24/03/2013 (4862 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

You can’t beat Old Transcona’s Bond Street and Regent Avenue L-shaped strip for a safe and friendly live music pub crawl.

The three hot spots in the L are The George in the iconic Royal George Hotel, The Silver Spike at the Princess Hotel and Joe’s Garage at The Pandora. The trio of hotel bars are perfectly situated so designated drivers can park in the middle, with a short block to bars at either end. At the end is a view of the famous Transcona Shops, for sentimental railroad types.

Talk about a time tunnel. These bars are safe, friendly places to be for locals and imports. Many people bar-hop all three in one evening. Unlike many city bars, which need serious security these days, there are no fights. Why? Because these are all neighbourhood bars, just like Cheers.

MAUREEN SCURFIELD / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Royal George co-owner Greg Pester and bartender Coco Titanich.
MAUREEN SCURFIELD / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Royal George co-owner Greg Pester and bartender Coco Titanich.

“Everybody knows your name,” says bartender Carrie Coughlan at The Silver Spike. “We have a very easygoing crowd. We don’t even have troubles argument-wise, because people know each other.”

The Royal George boasts the most entertainment — a minimum six nights a week. That’s partly because co-owner Greg Pester has a big interest in music. He’s the hot guitar player in the Sassy Jack band, which hosts an instrumental and singing jam on Wednesday nights. Bartender Coco Titanich, who took 10 years of singing lessons with Juno award-winning country singer Cindi Cain, sometimes hits the stage herself. Tuesday nights the Transcona Troubadors play, and Thursday nights it’s Shandra Levreault and Slow Motion Walter — an ever-changing lineup.

“They’re all wicked top-of-the-line players,” says Pester.

Weekends the bands vary, with the Curtis Newton Band playing this Saturday night, and again Sunday in a multi-band tribute to his old friend, the late and great musician/producer Craig Fotheringham. The lineup includes the Foster Martin Band, Sassy Jack, and The Silhouettes. Hidden behind a big wooden fence from Regent Avenue, Transcona’s main drag, is a patio, popular three seasons of the year for “secret” smokers. But the interior decor of the building is an ode to Winnipeg musicians, with collections of their 45s, albums and posters on the walls, from floor to ceiling.

Some pool table lights are shaped like race cars. A 1950s-era wooden shuffleboard dominates one wall, a huge stage and dance floor is at the dark end of the room. Lining another wall is a long row of seats from the back of a Greyhound Bus.

The Princess Hotel’s bar, The Spike, is the most modern of the three. But by “modern,” we’re talking relative to the area.

“About 15 years ago they redid the bar,” says Coughlan. It has a woodsy indoor patio feel, big dance floor, long stage and ringside seats for watching dancers — of all kinds. Daytime there are some exotic dancers and Wednesdays is Erotic Bingo night. These days there’s also a busy VLT casino section. The Princess Hotel is a family affair for Ron and Florence Osesky, their daughter Jodie and her husband Dave Isaak. Thursday to Saturday they hire live music for the long stage — mostly newer rock, and some country. (Catie St. Germain plays this Saturday night).

Coughlan confesses the reason she’s worked at The Spike for the past 16 years is the Transcona people.

“I love the people here. We have customers from 18 to 100 years old.” And there are lots of characters. “For instance, we have one great old guy called Tony who brings his tambourine every day.” He plays with the band or goes table to table and entertains people.

“In the daytime, we see a lot of retired CN workers and ex-firefighters and people from the immediate neighborhood.”

“A lot of older men tell me they never go past Plessis. No need to — everything’s at this end,” she laughs. True enough, the old Transcona stores and bars and restaurants (mostly Chinese restaurants and fast food) are clustered around that two-block area where the three bars are.

Across the street from the Princess Hotel and closer to the famous Transcona Shops gate is The Pandora, with its well-known bar Joe’s Garage.

The Pandy is known for its famous rock ‘n’ roll entertainers over the years. “This bar has had Steppenwolf, Big Sugar, Harlequin, Doug and the Slugs, Streetheart and lots more,” says bartender John Fedoruk, 22, whose dad Joe owned the Pandora for 25 years, selling to Joe and Lou-Ann Andrews last May.” Son John laughs and says the fact the seller and buyer had the same first name — and wouldn’t have to change the bar name from Joe’s Garage — helped seal the deal.

Some would argue the Pandora is best known as the place where Burton Cummings of The Guess Who fame would suddenly show up and do a free show. “We didn’t pay him; he just had drinks on the house. We couldn’t book him; he just came when he came.”

I was lucky enough to catch one of his famous late-night impromptu concerts when a rumour went out across the city early in the day that Cummings might play there late that night. The place was packed at 7 p.m. At midnight there was a commotion at the door, with security people parting the crowd like the Red Sea and Cummings striding through to the piano onstage, where he played for almost two hours — an unforgettable experience.

Though Transcona people may take a ribbing about being out in the sticks with its pink flamingos, they really don’t care. They still don’t have to watch their backs when they go out for a fun evening of live entertainment.

Maureen Scurfield

Maureen Scurfield
Advice columnist

Maureen Scurfield writes the Miss Lonelyhearts advice column.

Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.

Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

Jets mailbag: Breaking down the club’s off-season moves

Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe 22 minute read Preview

Jets mailbag: Breaking down the club’s off-season moves

Mike McIntyre and Ken Wiebe 22 minute read Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

One player seemingly can’t wait to get here. The other is looking for an exit route. Not surprisingly, these two Winnipeg Jets were featured prominently this month in our Free Press mailbag.

Read
Yesterday at 12:00 PM CDT

Hydro’s planned outages turn out the lights for thousands across province

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Preview

Hydro’s planned outages turn out the lights for thousands across province

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Yesterday at 6:36 PM CDT

Business owners in the East Beaches area of Lake Winnipeg hauled out generators Wednesday after a planned Manitoba Hydro outage left thousands of residents and cottagers without power.

Lise Bourassa, who runs several stores in Grand Beach, had to rent generators to accommodate the eight-hour blackout, which affected the area from Beaconia to Victoria Beach as well as Sagkeeng First Nation, while Hydro crews fixed a pole that was damaged by fire in May .

Despite the spare power source, she was only able to open one of her stores during the outage and said it came at a bad time.

“I understand the importance of what Manitoba Hydro is doing, the problem all the businesses in this area are having is that our season is very short and to be shut down for a full day has a fairly big impact, plus they added cost of getting generators,” she wrote in a message to the Free Press. “We also had less than one week to make arrangements, find electricians and generators to be able to keep all the food safe.”

Read
Yesterday at 6:36 PM CDT

Putting the pancake pilgrimage in focus

Editorial 4 minute read Preview

Putting the pancake pilgrimage in focus

Editorial 4 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

It’s a simple enough recipe: one-and-1/4 cups all-purpose flour, one tablespoon of sugar, two-and-1/2 teaspoons of baking powder, 1/4 teaspoon of baking soda, 1/4 teaspoon of kosher salt, one cup milk, one large egg and one tablespoon of canola oil.

Read
2:01 AM CDT

Jets drop puck on sweet 16th season at home

Ken Wiebe 4 minute read Preview

Jets drop puck on sweet 16th season at home

Ken Wiebe 4 minute read 2:16 PM CDT

The Winnipeg Jets will be a busy bunch when the new season begins.

The NHL released the freshly expanded 84-game schedules for all 32 teams on Thursday and the Jets open the campaign with 14 games during the month of October — including seven at Canada Life Centre.

The busiest month of the season for the Jets will be November, as they will play 15 games in 30 days.

Following the home opener against the Boston Bruins on Oct. 2, the Jets head out for two games in two days against the Detroit Red Wings and Pittsburgh Penguins before returning home for a three-game homestand that includes a visit from Nathan MacKinnon, Cale Makar and the Colorado Avalanche.

Read
2:16 PM CDT

Home residents turn to agency after operator lays off 70 staff who unionized

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Preview

Home residents turn to agency after operator lays off 70 staff who unionized

Nicole Buffie 4 minute read Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Residents of a Winnipeg retirement home have taken matters into their own hands after the majority of the facility’s home-care aides were laid off following their unionization.

A committee of residents have banded together to work with a private agency to staff Shaftesbury Park Retirement Residence after many of its existing aides complete their final shift on Monday.

“It is heartbreaking because there are a lot of vulnerable people here who are not capable of advocating for themselves,” said Joelle Robinson, who has lived at the home since 2023 after she suffered a brain aneurysm. “We’re trying very hard to make it so that our residents aren’t completely up the creek.”

Robinson, a retired lawyer, joined Terry Hopkinson and several other residents of the South Tuxedo home to create a committee and send out a request for proposal to eight companies that specialized in seniors care.

Read
Yesterday at 2:00 AM CDT

Man armed with ‘edged weapon’ dies after dispute in Linden Woods home

Scott Billeck 6 minute read Preview

Man armed with ‘edged weapon’ dies after dispute in Linden Woods home

Scott Billeck 6 minute read Tuesday, Jul. 14, 2026

The family of a 42-year-old Winnipeg man shot and killed by police in Linden Woods on Monday night says the incident raises troubling questions about how officers respond to people in mental-health crisis.

“Their reaction to mental health is my concern,” said the man’s sister-in-law, Erica Smith, who spoke outside her brother-in-law’s Avon Gate home on Tuesday. She said her brother-in-law struggled with his mental health.

“It didn’t have to end like this,” she said, fighting back tears. “It could have ended differently.”

Police said officers encountered the man armed with an “edged weapon” at the home when they arrived shortly before 10:30 p.m.

Read
Tuesday, Jul. 14, 2026