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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Watkin to retire from Recreation therapy at continuing care

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    A woman who has dedicated nearly 40 years to making the lives of seniors in the community better, is retiring after a long, rewarding career.
    Maxine Watkin has worked in recreation therapy for seniors in Drumheller since 1977. At the end of the month, she will be retiring.  
    “If I would have stayed until July, I would have worked 40 years in recreation,” she chuckles.
    Her job is important to the hospital and the long-term residents.
    “What we do is try to improve the lives of the long-term residents there,” she explains. “We do many things, from mental aerobics to exercises to playing noodle hockey to baking. We try to cover all the domains. Our goal is to try to make life better for those people and fill in their time.”
    On Monday, they were hosting a pizza party for lunch.
    She began her career after graduating in 1965 as a certified nursing aid. She came to Drumheller on one of her postings.  Here she met her husband Dave and they were married. They left the valley a few years later for Red Deer and then Calgary, where she worked at the Baker Sanatorium.
    When Dave was transferred back to Drumheller, she began work in acute care. Shift work can be difficult for a young parent and she jumped when there was a chance to get into recreation.
    “In 1977, I transferred over to the recreation program, I was lucky to get in there,” she said.
    This was at the very beginning of providing recreation for seniors, and they were charting new territory.
    She says it is very rewarding work.
    “My goal was to always treat them the way I would want to be treated, or my parents or loved ones. Over the 40 years, a lot of the residents I have known, I also had their parents as clients,” she said. “It hasn’t really been work, it has been a pleasure to be there. I love my work, so it was easy.”
    She adds that it can be a very emotionally taxing job.
    ‘You get close to them and then you lose them, or you see them with their health deteriorating.  Years ago I heard ‘you have to go to work, and then you leave it there when you go home.’ That’s hard.”
    It will also be a difficult day on the 31st. She says adding she is surrounded by great co-workers.
       “I work with a wonderful team of girls and that has made life easy for me too. When you spend five days out of seven with them, I will really miss them when I retire.”
     As for retirement, she plans on working more in the garden and spending more time with Dave.
    “We are always proud of our yard,” she said.


Happy Birthday BCF

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The Badlands Community Facility celebrated its 5th birthday on Monday, March 13. Members of Council were joined by staff and members of the community to mark the occasion with coffee and cake.  It was also a great way to kick off  Customer appreciation week (l-r) Councillors Lisa Hansen-Zacharuk, Sharel Shoff,  Tara McMillan, Tom Zariski and Deputy Mayor Patrick Kolafa cut the cake.

Speaker Series double header

Konishi March16

    Speaker Series is offering  two presentations at the Royal Tyrrell Museum this week.
    The March 16 session is a presentation by Dr. Takuya Konishi, University of Cincinnati, entitled “Sharing Under the Cretaceous Sea: Global Distribution Achieved by Halisaurine Mosasaurs Explained by a New Discovery from Japan.”
    Mosasaurs were large, flipper-bearing swimming lizards from the age of the last dinosaurs, about 100–66 million years ago.
    Out of this highly diverse assemblage, halisaurine mosasaurs were small and seemed less well adapted to life in water since they lacked the well-developed flippers and tail fin of their larger contemporaries. Yet these small mosasaurs became increasingly more common in the fossil record towards the end of the Cretaceous, indicating their evolutionary success alongside their larger, fast-swimming cousins.
    In his talk, Konishi will explain why a recently discovered skull from Japan sheds new light on halisaurine mosasaurs’ potential survival strategy: that halisaurines evolved a pair of large, forward-facing eyes that would have increased their ability to see in the dark, allowing them to hunt at night.
    The Friday, March 17 session is a presentation by Dr. Grant Zazula, Yukon Government, entitled Ice Age Mammals of the Frozen North.
    Since the earliest discoveries during the famed Klondike gold rush of 1898, scientists have ventured into the remote tundra and boreal forest of northwest Canada to study the fossils of woolly mammoths, giant beavers, arctic camels and their cohorts.
    This tradition of gold miners and palaeontologists working collaboratively continues today with the Yukon Government’s palaeontology program. The permafrost exposed by Yukon gold miners is an internationally renowned archive of arctic environmental change and major source of ice age vertebrates, including ancient DNA preserved in these fossil bones.
    In his talk, Zazula will explore how research on the ice age record of Yukon is leading to valuable insights into how ancient mammal communities responded to climate change in the geologically recent past and provides informative analogs for changes occurring in Canada’s north at present.
    The Royal Tyrrell Museum’s Speaker Series talks are free and open to the public. They are held every Thursday (and this week, Friday!) until April 27 at 11:00 a.m. in the Museum auditorium.


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