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GARTH ROBERT GRIEDER Obituary pic GARTH ROBERT GRIEDER Obituary pic

GARTH ROBERT GRIEDER

Born: May 13, 1935

Date of Passing: May 23, 2026

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GARTH ROBERT GRIEDER

May 13, 1935 - May 23, 2026


"The Liquidator"



Garth Robert Grieder passed away peacefully on May 23, 2026, surrounded by family and friends.

Born in 1935 to Paul and Mary Grieder, Garth spent his earliest years on a farm in Carmen, Manitoba, where he fondly remembered milking cows and churning butter. At age three, he was bucked in the nose by a horse. His version of the story was that he thought "the back end was the front," an incident he maintained led to a lifelong impairment to his sense of smell, though it never diminished his appreciation for a good home-cooked meal.

Garth was a born entrepreneur and tireless worker. After his family moved to St. Vital in 1940, he began working at age 14, delivering for a drug store while also maintaining a paper route. During the historic 1950 flood, Garth was out delivering papers and would often say, "I went out to deliver papers in the morning and couldn't go back home." St. Vital was so flooded that the family travelled by canoe to reach the grocery store.

After completing Grade 10 at Glenlawn Collegiate, Garth decided he had learned what he intended to from the education system and entered the workforce full time at age 16. Even before that, he had already started his first business, a vegetable stand while still in school. The stand even sold Pepsi, which was a hot commodity at the time, much to the detriment of his younger brother Brian, who had been recruited to help and was one day struck by the Pepsi truck while biking to Garth's vegetable stand.

Garth was always working and always thinking up new business ideas.

His first long-term position was with Lowe Brothers Paint beginning in 1955. By day he sold paint, and after work, he arranged painting jobs for customers on the side. By age 20, he had begun hiring family and friends to help complete projects.

One favourite story involved a job painting twenty wooden louvers on a house. Garth had hired his friend Ray Hellofs to help. Working at his trademark pace, Garth was finishing his nineteenth louver before realizing Ray was still working on his first. Years later, the family learned from an insider that while Garth's speed was exceptional, perfection may not always have accompanied it.

His entrepreneurial instincts extended beyond painting. At one point, he even manufactured his own automotive repair filler and sold it to local autobody shops.

Garth married his first love, Carole, in 1958. Together they raised two sons, Gord and Barry. They shared 24 happy years together, traveling around the world and building a business, before Carole's tragic passing in 1982.

Garth found his true calling in 1965 after a conversation during a baseball game with a friend who worked as Claims Manager at Reimer Express. Through that discussion, Garth realized he could buy distressed freight and salvaged product and sell it for a profit. He began selling product from the trunk of his Chevy Caprice before renting the basement of a building on Erin Street.

When registering a business name, his longtime lawyer Neil McKay learned Garth's first choice, Erin Distributors, was unavailable. Faced with choosing another name, Garth simply looked out the window at his Chevy Caprice and suggested "Caprice Distributors."

Neil doubted General Motors could possibly have left the name unregistered. To everyone's surprise, they had. Caprice Distributors was born, in 1966.

Operating from its first location at 932 Erin Street, Caprice Distributors became a Manitoba institution. Freight claims, bankruptcy stock, insurance claims, and close-outs. If there was inventory to liquidate, chances are Garth found it and brought those deals to Winnipeg.

From Eaton's Wholesale to casket manufacturers, leather jacket companies, lumber yards, and pool table manufacturers, Caprice handled it all. Their motto was simple: "It's Like Christmas Every Day!" At its height, Caprice operated as many as eleven locations, extending as far as Dauphin, Boissevain, and Swan River.

In 1985, Garth founded G&L Sales Ltd. alongside business partner and lifelong friend Gord Lowry, who had started Lowry's Manufacturing in the basement of Caprice in 1969. Today, G&L Liquidation Warehouse continues on the foundation built by Garth and Gord.

Garth was loved by everyone he dealt with. He was easy-going, hardworking, kind, and as honest a person you could ever meet. The legacy of his honesty follows the company he built to this day.

Following Carole's passing, Garth met his second wife, Abbie. They married in 1983 and welcomed a son together, Garth Jr. They built a life together in their dream home in Tuxedo, where they shared more than thirty years of memories.

Outside work, Garth loved golf. Beginning in 1951 at Windsor Golf Course in St. Vital, he later became a member at Niakwa Golf Course before eventually joining St. Charles Country Club in 1984, where he remained for more than thirty years and recorded two hole-in-ones.

He also loved horse racing. Garth owned several dozen horses over the past 50 years, which he raced at Assiniboia Downs and collected his fair share of winner's circle photographs.

He also enjoyed travelling to Las Vegas with family and friends, making many trips over the past 50 years.

When Garth's health began declining in 2022, his wife Abbie devoted herself to his care, helping ensure he made the very most of his final years. She spent hours with him every single day and brought him home each weekend to family and friends. Garth could not have been blessed with a better companion.

Garth is survived by his wife Abbie; sons Gord (Kim), Barry (Suzy), and Garth Jr. (Cali); grandchildren Victoria, Brandon, Bradley, Anna, and James; brother Brian (Judy), and Fred; along with his many nieces, nephews, extended family, and friends.

He was predeceased by his first wife Carole; sisters Millie and Freda; and brother Ernie.

Special thanks to the Simkin Centre and its wonderful staff for the exceptional care and compassion that helped make Garth's final year so special.

Garth lived an extraordinary life.

He built two iconic businesses that have served Manitoba for over sixty years, created opportunity, worked relentlessly, and cared deeply for the people around him. His family could not have been prouder to call him husband, father, brother, uncle, grandpa, and friend.

You could not meet a kinder or more generous man.

He will be deeply missed.

A celebration of life will be held in the near future, with details to be announced at a later date. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to a charity of your choice or simply honour Garth's memory through an act of kindness.

As published in Winnipeg Free Press on May 30, 2026

Condolences & Memories (10 entries)

  • I Will always remember Garth as a friend and boss. He could calculate a page of inventory in seconds. He was an amazing person. - Posted by: Judy (Worked for caprice) on: Jun 01, 2026

  • What a beautiful tribute. Our families have been friends for years. I worked for Garth one summer in university. He crackled with energy and ideas, always. A really good man. Sending everyone my very warmest! Reegan - Posted by: Reegan charad (Family friend) on: May 31, 2026

  • Such a loving person, kind, sincere, generous. Always interested in my family, asking how they were all doing. Miss those little office moments where we would talk about deals and his love for horses and Vegas. Loved going to truck companies to buy salvage. I stayed out of the paint decisions because I knew he loved paint but his employees didn't. The last couple of years were hard to not be able to communicate. I now wished I would have told him he was the best person I have ever met to have as a friend. I will never forget him. - Posted by: james danylishin (Friend) on: May 31, 2026

  • I am truly saddened at the loss of a life - long friend, Garth Grieder. I last saw Garth at Syd’s Celebration of Life in early 2026. What a pleasure it was to reconnect with Garth, Abbie and now Garth, Jr. and Cali. Syd and I partnered with Garth and Carole in Carlana Farms at Assiniboine Downs and spent many years watching our thoroughbreds there as well as warmer destinations. We were also fortunate to be able to join them on many trips to Las Vegas staying at the Golden Nugget both with and without Gord and Barry. Visiting Caprice was always an adventure. Garth was the consummate wheeler - dealer as well as gentleman while doing so. Winnipeg has lost an institution but I am certain Garth Jr. will follow in his father’s footsteps. The tribute to Garth is true in every word and so beautifully written. Not one part of his incredible life has been omitted. May he now rest in eternal peace. - Posted by: Lana Storey (friend) on: May 30, 2026

  • Abbie and family please know we are thinking of you at this time I hope Garth, Wayne,Geordie and Sid find a good golf course to play up there . And Garth I hope the ribs are as good up there as they were down here Always Earl - Posted by: Earl Dudek (Friend and long ago employee) on: May 30, 2026

  • Dearest Garth, it was an honour to care for you during your stay with the Simkin family. Your humble presence and your big soft heart shined through you and made our care for you feel easy like a breeze. You never complained, even in your last days on this earth. Your graceful presence and your beautiful smile made losing you feel lighter. You knew you were transitioning to a bigger and better place far away from this earth and were very accepting to same. Dearest Garth may you rest in the arms of the angels knowing that you left a mark with everyone whom loved you, knew you and cared for you. - Posted by: Nada H. (Caregiver from the Simkin centre .) on: May 30, 2026

  • Dear Abbie: I was so sorry to hear that Garth has passed away and would like to extend my deepest sympathy to you and your family. Sincerely, Alice Sisler - Posted by: Alice Sisler (Friend) on: May 30, 2026

  • I have fond memories doing business with Garth during my days at CJOB. He was always welcoming, albeit the only time we could meet was between 6:30 a.m. - 7 a.m. After that he was on to the next deal, a reminder of the EverReady Bunny, never stopping. A special memory, while in one of our early morning meetings, a mgr popped his head in & told Garth there was a great deal on a container of pita bread, to which Garth responded, what the heck is pita bread. I gave him my 2 cents, suggesting that we would often make pizza for our daughters using Pita bread, that sealed the deal. A very special man, RIP my friend. Al Jones - Posted by: Al Jones (business associate) on: May 30, 2026

  • Our condolences to Abbie, Garth Jr, Cali (and new baby) and all the special people at Caprice/L&G sales whom we have met over so very many years. Garth will be remembered and missed for his many qualities of kindness, caring, astuteness and his amazing memory. We will miss him. - Posted by: Gwen Kalansky/Keith sigmundson (Friends) on: May 30, 2026

  • Garth was an incredible man, and one I was lucky enough to get to know. I worked in the industry with his buddy Ron Yeager for years, and then Jerome Breslaw. In my younger years, my homes were decorated in “early Caprice”. Many memorable times with this icon.. sorry for his passing, however I am sure after the last 6 Years it was welcomed.. may he be at peace and forever remembered as the exceptional human he was.. God bless Garth…. Xo - Posted by: Lorri McInnes (Old friend) on: May 30, 2026

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