A bar where everybody knows your mother’s name

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Published: March 28, 2002

MEATH PARK, Sask. – Michele Sachowski’s husband knows she is in the

bar every night, but he’s not worried.

She owns the place.

Sachowski runs Humphrey’s Tavern in the northeastern Saskatchewan

village of Meath Park. She opened her bar on Friday, Feb. 13, 1998, and

figures her luck was running that day since she is still in business

and has hired three staff to assist her.

She worked at the village’s former pub but went without a job for three

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years after it burned down. She said she was driving her husband crazy

because she wanted to work, so they created a new pub. Humphrey’s

Tavern is named after Michele’s father, who died before he saw her in

business.

A contractor helped her choose among three likely buildings in the

village and the oldest one proved to be the soundest. The 1920s

building had been a store. Sachowski and her contractor tore down the

living quarters at the back, plugged up the hole at the side used to

haul in firewood and removed two large front windows. Then the

contractor put a new building within an old one, adding walls and a

ceiling. The room that resulted is draft-free and bright for a pub. It

holds a pool table, three VLTs, plus tables and chairs for a maximum of

105 people.

The gambling machines are a necessary evil: “If we didn’t have them we

wouldn’t be here.”

Sachowski is in the pub every day until midnight except Wednesdays when

she helps at her youngest child’s play school.

Women are not unusual in pubs, with the wives of owners usually taking

shifts, she said.

“I don’t feel unique. I’m just trying to get by.”

But she said it is probably easier for a woman owner to deal with

rowdies. She finds the men tend to behave better, wiping their feet at

the door and arguing less in front of her and her all-female staff.

Her pub is brighter and cleaner than the previous one, she said. It is

even drawing women and senior citizens who are not afraid to come in

for the afternoon to drink coffee or other beverages.

“After nine, we let the music go louder, swearing happens and a

younger crowd comes in.”

She said she’s never had a bad situation in her bar, other than two

after-hours break-ins.

“You have to know someone’s limit or how far to let an argument go.”

Social trends have also helped. More people are drinking in moderation

or bringing a designated driver.

She has few problems with underage drinkers because one of her staff

has teenagers and knows most of the young people in the area. The

tavern also gets yearbooks every year to check them out.

Sachowski said the best part of her job is meeting people and talking

to them.

Although not all of the village’s 250 residents are customers, the

tavern has some seasonal highlights that draw new faces.

In winter, there is a groomed snowmobile trail that runs right by the

front of the pub. In summer, tourists from nearby Candle Lake stop in.

And in spring and fall, Sachowski has held special events like a pig

roast, a magician and female impersonator. She also supports the

community by donating raffle sales such as a local crafter’s willow

chair to the skating club. She hosted the second annual chili contest

March 23 to raise money for the Garden River firefighters.

A customer who has popped in for a beer says, “You can’t beat the

small-town bar. They’re friends.”

About the author

Diane Rogers

Saskatoon newsroom

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