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Carbon boy Cole Goodine competes against best of the best

Carbon local Cole Goodine takes a breather after two rides at the Calgary Stampede on July 10, 2017.

Competing in the Bareback category of the Calgary Stampede, Carbon boy Cole Goodine competes against the best of the best.

Riding from July 7 to July 10 in the ‘A’ pool, Goodine was able to squeeze $3,000 out of the event.
Within the sport of Bareback riding, control and flare are a cowboy’s two favourite assets.

“The way to get the best marks is to show control but exposure while you’re still in control. So the longer the spurs stroke, the more wild it looks while you maintain control,” explained Goodine.

Goodine split his winnings three out of the four days. On the final day, he was able to take a decent amount of pay for his re-ride.

“The money got split up a lot, I never got one full cheque for myself.”

Initially, Goodine started team roping and calf roping before discovering his love for bareback riding.

Goodine got into the sport after he and a buddy tried it on a dare. After that, there was no going back.

“I was hooked as soon as I got thrown through the air,” said Goodine.

Goodine hangs on for dear life at a rodeo competition from earlier this year - Submitted photo

Rodeo runs in the family.

“My dad was a bull rider and my mom was a barrel racer and my grandpa was a bareback rider and my other grandpa was a calf roper”.

“My mom literally planned me and my sisters’ births so that she could still barrel race and not miss out on anything,” said Goodine. “I was born in the saddle.”

As of this past week, three generations of Goodine’s have now participated in Stampede.

“Unreal, it’s pretty exciting. It’s always been a dream just to have my dad there with me.”

Goodine got himself into ‘a bit of a wreck’ on the last day.

“The horse came down on me and then once I got out of it, I got offered a re-ride and I was about to get on the re-ride when my dad was waiting there behind the chutes to help me out – make sure I was okay.”

He rode the re-ride with ease, earning himself a cheque.

This is Goodine’s first year fully committed to the sport after being laid-off from work. “I thought I might as well go for it.”

This year he has been fighting with a number of minor to serious injuries due to the sport. He has a problem with the disk in his back as well as hip, rib problems, thumb dislocation, and a bone was put out in his foot.

Goodine was ranked #1 in Canada last year until the end. He continually pushes himself to do better to compete with the best, year in and year out.

“I typically train three to four hours a day, five to six days a week. I try to stay healthy and strong enough to compete with the best in the world. We’re all pushing harder and harder to be better and better and pushing the human limits.

"In order to compete against the best, you have to push that a little bit more all the time,” said Goodine.

When asked how it felt to compete on the world stage, Goodine smiled and fervently said “There’s not really words to describe it. It’s unreal to just be in the same category that they are.”

Out of the four draws for horses, two were great, and two not so much.

“There were two that didn’t work out as well as I had hoped.”

The first day, he got a horse that was difficult to ride but was able to regain himself on the next two.

“So I got a couple horses that really suited me and a couple horses that did not but I managed to fight through it and I’m really proud of myself for that.”

Despite the multiple injuries, Goodine has much more fight left in him for the rest of the rodeo season ahead.

“There’s a lot of rodeo left and I’m feeling foxy.”


New site offers over 3,000 courses to DVSS students

    Having a bit of a techie for a principal seems to be a bonus for Drumheller Valley Secondary School (DVSS) in obtaining availability to current learning tools for both students and staff.
    School principal Curtis LaPierre launched to the school in mid-February “lynda.com”, a website that offers over 3,000 courses in different categories such as business, computers, and creative design.
    “We provide as many opportunities for kids to touch base with different career sectors,” said LaPierre, “so they can find where their gifts are.”
    Originally considering the site as a professional development resource for staff, LaPierre found the programs on the site could capture students interest, and perhaps help them find an interest they hadn’t had a chance to explore previously.
    The principal gave the example of one young student who became so interested in the lynda.com course he was taking, he completed over 14 high school credits in a 5 credit time space.
    LaPierre said since the launch of the site about a month ago, he’s had 92 students registered and over 500 of the instructional videos viewed.
    A premium subscription to the site for one person is $450 per person; the license LaPierre obtained for the school’s students and staff use comes in at $10 per person.
    LaPierre said he’s always looking for opportunities for kids to step outside and engage themselves, the new site expands the DVSS course offerings for its students outside the regular school timetable.
    The principal notes the students access to lynda.com also supports one of the missions of DVSS. “If I can get kids to take a course just because they’re interested, we’ve won - we’ve engaged a lifelong learner.”

Electoral boundary battle heats up

Nathan Cooper headshot

Redrafting the map of electoral boundaries is hitting some opposition, especially in the Drumheller-Stettler riding where the proposed new Drumheller-Strathmore riding looks to increase the population and area.
The interim report of the Electoral Boundaries Commission was released in May and it recommended some big changes to the local riding, including removing Stettler from the riding, and adding Strathmore. This will bump the riding population up from 36,810 to 54,232, a variance of 16 per cent over the provincial average of 46,698.
The proposal would also expand the area of the riding.
Nathan Cooper, Democracy and Accountability Critic for the Official Opposition, has concerns.
“In a constituency like Drumheller- Strathmore, it is going to be north of 30,000 square kilometres and have a plus 16 per cent population, that doesn’t check either of the boxes. It is nowhere close to parity in population and it makes it very difficult in making it effective in representing that constituency,” said Cooper. “I don’t think it has done well for representation.”
He explains the commission has the power to make exceptions for riding size and population up to 25 percent over the average, based on a number of criteria.
“The current Drumheller-Stettler constituency, it meets four of the five conditions required for it to be designated as a special constituency,” he said. “The Boundary Commission does have some other options. They could allow Drumheller-Stettler to remain the same and be outside of the 25 per cent population threshold.”
These criteria include being more than 150 kilometers from the legislature, no town within the division that has a population over 8,000, has a Metis or indigenous settlement, shares a boundary with a provincial border and exceeds 20,000 square kilometers.
Following the release of the interim report, another round of public consultations began. Written submissions were being accepted until July 16. As well, there have been public meetings scheduled with the Electoral Boundary Commission including one in Brooks on July 21 at 1 p.m.
“There will be a large show of support for changes to the map in the south-east corner of the province,” he said.
MLA for Drumheller-Stettler Rick Strankman said they are planning to have local voices heard.
“We are going to be making a submission to the Boundary Commission for an exception for Drumheller-Stettler,” said Strankman. “I see even less representation for those of us who live east of Hanna. It’s frustrating. I’ve talked to council members from Stettler County and they’re in an uproar because Stettler County is effectively cut in half, and the Town of Stettler is taken out. What kind of a Gerrymandered thing is that?”
Cooper would like to see a positive outcome for the area.
“It will be interesting to see what happens at the end of October, once the commission releases its final report. I certainly hope for the people in that region, that they make some changes, and readjust some of those lines, or designate a special constituency.”


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