Winnipeg fisher reels in an escape for children battling cancer - Action News
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Manitoba

Winnipeg fisher reels in an escape for children battling cancer

A Winnipeg fisherman is being recognized for helping children, who are battling cancer, forget what they're going through.

Clancy Solomon featured in national TV commercial for his 'gratifying' fishing trips

Dane Goodall-George, left, got to know Clancy Solomon when they went fishing during a derby for cancer patients. Their friendship has been profiled in a national advertising campaign by Chevrolet Canada. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

A Winnipeg fisherman is being recognizedfor helping children, who are battling cancer, forget what they're going through.

Clancy Solomon's been hooked on inviting kids diagnosed with cancerand their families out on the watersince he wasasked24 years ago and now he's beingfeatured in a national truck commercial.

It's brought exposure to these fishing trips that bringSolomon and the kids he meets a lot of joy.

"If they're having an issue, they can come back to this particular day fishing and bring back that memory," Solomon said. "We don't know what works but hopefully that's a part of it."

Helping kids catch fish

6 years ago
Duration 1:06
Clancy Solomon has a passion for fishing, and when he was asked to teach kids living with cancer how to fish he was hooked.

Solomon volunteers with the Kids Fishing For A Cure charity, giving a hook and a line to children living with cancer as they set off along the Red River near Selkirk annually.

He might be as happyasthe kidsreeling in their first catch, he suggests.

"To see these kids and the excitement they have when they're walking down the docks and they have a fishing rod in hand," Solomon said. "An experience that they can cherish, remember, it's very, very gratifying."

He's nowin a TV commercial because he responded to an email from a casting agency asking him what he uses his Chevrolet truck for. Pleased that he tows his fishing boat to help others,Solomon was cast for thestarring role.

Fishing is apassion he can share with children who may need an escape, even if it's just for a day.

"Some of them have taken treatments the night before, shouldn't be out in the sun or on the water, but they're out there and they want to fish."

These days are about bonding. Duringthe hours Solomon spends on the water with the kids and their families, they get to know each other. They become friends.

For 24 years, Clancy Solomon has invited children undergoing cancer treatment and their families into his boat for a day on the water. He volunteers with the charity Kids Fishing for a Cure, organized by CancerCare Manitoba. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

It can behard to contemplate what these young "troopers"are battlingthrough, he said.

"Some of them are fighting for their lives," Solomon said. "I think the tough part is when you come back the next year and you look for familiar faces and you hear one of them can't be part of the program."

He's joined in the commercial by Dane Goodall-George, a 13-year-old who endured 68 weeks of chemotherapy because of thetumours growingbehind his eyes.

The Grade 7 studentremembers snagging a catfish on his first fishing trip with Solomon. The fish wasas long as he is wide.

Dane Goodall-George, 13, says he loves fishing and being out on the water. (Tyson Koschik/CBC)

"He's a nice guy," he says of Solomon. "He's very generous."

Solomon has had a range offishing partners, including military veterans and children withdown syndrome, through volunteering withother charities.

He expects to keep fishing withthose who need a boostas long as he can.

"Any issues that we haveis so small compared to them. When Itake a look at them, I get strength from them."

With files from Nelly Gonzalez, Wendy Parker