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Lorne was a sincere pleasure to work with and a 'force' indeed. My sympathies are with the family during this time. I cannot express how respected Lorne was. His positivity and strength will be immensely missed.
A quick smile, an easy laugh and a warm welcome for anyone and everyone. Those are the things I think about when I remember Lorne.  I remember him sharing with me long ago how much he loved you Kelly.   My heart hurts for you and your family.  Sending prayers that God hold you in His gentle and healing hands.  😢💔

I am so sorry and shocked to hear of Lorne’s passing. I had the pleasure of knowing Lorne for 30 years. 

Becoming a client of Lone Wolf  at the onset as a broker owner in 2003, Lorne was always personable and a friendly resource any time I reached out. 

I always enjoyed a laugh and friendship with him over the many years at any national or international real estate gatherings. 

My condolences to his family. Lorne will always be remembered with the greatest respect and admiration. 

I am so very sorry for your loss. 

Gloria Riddall

So sorry to hear of your loss.  Lorne was a wonderful man taken away too soon

Lorne was an incredible mentor. Lone Wolf was my first "big girl job" and my first job in tech. As a woman, you of course hear the horror stories about how women are treated in the tech industry, and that really scared me as a young 26-year old. So, I was nervous starting at Lone Wolf. Fortunately for me, my desk was the first when you walked into first floor suite, so anytime Lorne would come down to see someone, he'd always stop and say hi to me. On my first day, he stopped at my desk and introduced himself. I didn't realize he was the CEO at the time with his Hawaiian shirt, huge smile, and pair of jeans! Little did I know, this man would shape my future!!

Over the course of my 4 years at Lone Wolf, Lorne taught me that CEOs really can have an open-door policy, not to be afraid to speak up when you see something wrong, and that you don't just have to be an employee number on a screen. Lorne made an effort to visit everyone on their birthdays, know every employee by name, and say hi with a smile every time he passed you in the hall. For me, he set the bar for how a company should treat their employees. 

Now, I'm a video game producer - an industry arguably more volatile towards women than tech - and I use Lorne as the bar I've set for companies and how they need to treat their employees. I use the tools and mottos he's taught me - yes/no/7 and "go slow to go fast" - as fundamentals in my work and teach them to my teams, as well. I think, for Lorne, he was simply just being himself - a loving, caring, genuine person. I don't think he realized that treating his employees with so much compassion and kindness would have such a long-lasting effect. I wish I had kept in touch with him or been able to tell him how much of an impact he has truly had on my life and career. 

My most sincere condolences to his family. Lorne was truly one-of-a-kind and he will truly be missed by all. <3 

I am devastated about this terrible news. Lorne and I knew each other for 40 years and shared so many moments in life. I think REMAX Professionals Inc. was Lone Wolf’s first REMAX customer. Kelly I was lucky to be around when you and Lorne met and he loved you so dearly. Family was everything to Lorne. I am so sorry I can’t be there as I am in Germany celebrating a special uncle’s 80 birthday. We have lost a special person 
Lorne was one of the kindest, understanding, gentle and accepting people I have been blessed to have had in my life since I was a child. I will miss him a great deal. 
My heart and love goes out to his family and friends.
Sharing News of Dundurn Press…
2019, Kitchener, ON, Canada
Sharing News of Dundurn Press Acquisition In Waterloo Region Record — with Lorne Wallace and Randall Howard
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Dear Kelli and family, I am so incredibly sorry to hear about the passing of Lorne. When I first heard of his illness, I was hopeful that a stem cell donor would be found so that he could get back to living the vibrant life I always knew him for. I remember meeting Lorne on a number of occasions but the one that sticks out the most is on our way to a RE/MAX International Conference in San Diego in the early 2000s and him asking me how old I thought that he was. I have never been good with guessing ages. When I told him that I thought that he was in his late 50s, he was shocked. I think his grey hair threw me off. Anyway, all was forgiven and he drove me to our hotel in his convertible Mustang. It was so fun running into him. He was always full of stories to share and laughs to be had. Our last meeting was in July 2018 when we met you both at Rocky Crest on our way to The Schneider's Music Under the Stars Charity Gala Dinner at their Lake House for Canada's Walk of Fame. It's hard to believe that this was almost five years ago. How so much has changed. Thinking of you all at this very difficult time. He was definitely taken too soon, but he has left an indelible mark in all our worlds and will never be forgotten. Warm and tender hugs.
My deepest condolences to Lorne’s family. My heart goes out to you.

One of the first times Hayley & I got to know Lorne & Kelli was at my stepdad Paul’s 60th birthday on New Years Eve in Florida. Mel - my mom - had enlisted all the kids to help make food for the party, so we were all down there for the celebration. We didn’t know many people at the party outside of our family, but everyone we spoke with seemingly had heard of us, and knew who we were. The drinks were flowing, and it started to get overwhelming being confronted by all these new faces, drink in hand, who would say “You’re Zack! And you must be Hayley! I know all about you!”

So Hayley and I found a spot that was outside, under the lanai, but just at the end of the porch around a corner where no one walked. We were hidden, but could still hear the party. It was perfect. We were still technically “at the party”. Every time we heard someone coming, we’d stop talking, and they wouldn’t venture around the corner. Eventually, one of my stepbrothers found our secret hideout, and we pulled him in to keep it secret. We held out for a while. But then Lorne & Kelli wandered around the corner. They were the only “adults” who dared wander to the end of the long porch, and we thought the jig was up. The secret hideout was busted!

We openly lamented being found out, but Lorne & Kelli were not about to give up our spot. Within moments, Lorne was making jokes and Kelli was so warm and kind toward us. “It’s nice over here. You guys found the best spot in the house!” It was a marked difference in energy from most of the other guests at the party. They knew who we were, but didn’t force what they knew on us, they asked about us, and we asked about them, how they met Mel & Paul, and where they lived. We had very good, very easy conversation and felt immediate mutual respect on all sides.

After we chatted for what seemed like a long time, they both started to head back to the party, and as they left, they assured us our secret was safe with them. I had almost certainly met them both before that, but that was the first time we’d ever spoken without Mel & Paul present. They were warm, easy to speak with, and Lorne was very funny. And they didn’t tell anyone about our secret spot!

Two years later, Hayley and I were going stir-crazy in our 500ft² apartment in Toronto, considering moving out of the city and finding a different way of life. And then all work stopped, and stores closed, and CERB started, and uncertainty was everywhere. Like countless others, we were reassessing our lives and talking with family on a regular basis. My mom mentioned that Lorne owned a farm around the corner from Puslinch Lake, and said that we should ask him about renting it.

After a lot of budgeting and planning and trying to figure out every way in which it could fail, we decided to speak with Lorne during the August long weekend about renting the house. He & Kelli came to Mel & Paul’s island on Puslinch Lake on their boat, and we discussed the terms & responsibilities of the rental with him. And then we shook his hand and all of a sudden we were moving out of Toronto.

If you look up the term “fixer-upper”, there’s a picture of that house in the dictionary. The house was our responsibility, but, when we moved in, Lorne was on the property all the time working on projects. He was taking down fences, cleaning up the bush, taking the stalls out of the barn, cutting the grass, clearing trails, managing the forest, planting trees, going for walks in the forest with friends & family, and always making plans for his next steps. It was very clear to us once we moved in that he relished in making things his own and working hard. He never wanted anything ready made. Things better made with his own two hands.

We could tell that that farm meant a lot to him because of how much time he spent there, and that he was always bringing his family, and his grandkids around. We could tell he wanted to imbue his work ethic and the ensuing satisfaction it brings in his grandkids. We were really touched by his dream of establishing a forest, knowing that the fruits of his labour might not be fully realized in his lifetime. Lorne often lamented how little work he could do while he was coping the stomach virus that was plaguing him for a long time. And Hayley & I would look at each other and quietly wonder: “Wait — he usually has more energy than this?”

After we moved out, when he’d recovered from the virus, we saw the manifestation of him at full capacity. The way he changed the stables into the drive shed, poured a new foundation, refinished the walls, revitalized the driveway, installed a bathroom, removed the old fences, and numerous other ways in which he transformed that place were all astounding. And that was just in that spot. One had to wonder what other changes were happening when his truck wasn’t parked out back at the farm.

We were so incredibly lucky to have been there even though the time was short. We were there less than a year. It was more than just a house though – that house was a tall list of repairs that we were learning how to do as we went. It was an opportunity to learn how to live in an incredibly different way from which we were accustomed. We knew that living there would be a lot of work, and it was, but in the journal I write in daily, I read back and see how often I say how relaxing it was to be there. Having access to that forest was healing too.

Living there was life changing. The amount of happiness we were afforded being in that environment greatly out-weighted all the challenges we faced while living there. We got to prove to ourselves that we were capable of making some pretty drastic changes to the way we lived. We would not have had that without Lorne’s willingness to take a chance on us. Lorne renting that house to us affirmed a way of life we now know we want to work toward. Without that opportunity Lorne offered us — without that gift — we wouldn’t have our personal vision of what our future would look like. We could never overstate the respect and appreciation we have for the ways in which Lorne affected us.

Thank you, Lorne. Thank you so much.

I first met Lorne in around1988- 1990 he and Dez ,had just put Lone wolf on the path …I sold him his first add in Real Estate Markting  ,they had some small rented space up Dixie rd north of of the 401 …he never looked back ,nose to the grindstone and ALWAYS just a hoot to be around ,we became friends,if memory serves me correctly,sometimes it does and doesn’t…it was a NAR show in Miami maybe 1992-1993 ,I had talked Heino into REM Participating there ,we did not have the budget to stay at the Miami convention centre ,so I called the chamber of commerce in Hollywood and asked them if there was a nice little motel / hotel on the beach …I ended up bartering the 2 bdrm suite rite on the water !….I told Lorne about it and he asked if he could come and stay with me and do the show …well have I got some funny stories of our stay together at the room ,one that I have to say was our toilet in the room was kinda crooked you had to twist yourself on and off of it ..bit of a story there ….but we had an insane time at a bar I use to live above in ft Lauderdale around 1973 …BIG DADDIES “Bikini Lounge “….a monstrous story one night we had at the bikini ..Lorne would bring up that story for years later .

I have to say to Kelli and family ,Lorne was the most honourable and kind man that has ever walked this planet ,I will never forget him and all the neat things we did and just sharing time together always moved me !

Kelli the last time I saw you was February 2019,when you guys had your condo in Cape Coral ,I paid you a visit ,I was on ft Myers beach for 3 months,I remember you had a real bitch of a time with your back then ,I hope that has got sorted for you .

I now live on Vancouver island 🏝️…on Qualicum Beach..our most temperate climate in Canada sorta living the dream .

There are so many stories ,some I’m sure you would love to hear some day …so keep the family strong ,and as I will always carry Lorne in my ❤️ 

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Lorne Wallace