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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Drumheller Aquaplex plans for new low-entry pool

aquaplex exterior

The Drumheller Auqaplex is about to undergo a major facelift.

The Aquaplex Retrofit project will include the installation of a pool liner, and also a low-entry pool. 

“It will be like going to the beach. This will be easier for anyone under the age of five to enter the pool,” says Daryl Drohomerski, Director of Infrastructure for the Town of Drumheller. 

The project will also include relocating the hot tub and updating the steam rooms. 

The project was approved by council in early April of this year. Tenders for the project close on Thursday, August 25 for two different contracts. 

“We want one contractor for the installation of the pool liner, and the second one is for a general  contractor which is in charge of managing the general site, they would do electrical work.” 

“Our goal is to have the project reviewed and a decision put into council for the September 6 council meeting,” says Drohomerski. 

This new design of the pool boasts many advantages. 

“The pool will still be able to host competitive swimming meets. And this will also make the pool accessible to all ages so they can enjoy swimming. Not just for youngsters but for  folks who have trouble getting up and down ladders. They  will no longer have that issue It will be a great addition. I think when the system is finished it will be one of the most modern pools in the province,” says Drohomerski. 

The completion period of this project will be around two months. The town has not announced when construction is to be completed.


Swainson's hawk rescued by resident

tony hawk

Last week an acreage owner had a unique guest, who, after invited, decided to stick around a couple days.

  Tony Keller lives near Munson and last week along Township road 30-0, he spotted a small falcon-like bird that appeared to be a fledgling hawk on the road.

“I was driving down the road and he was just sitting there,” said Keller. “I slowed down because I thought he would take off and get out of the way of the car, but he hobbled down into the ditch. So I slowed down, got out, picked him up from the ditch, and made sure he wasn’t all busted up, put it in the passenger seat of the car and took him home.”

The bird was missing feathers from the top of its head and appeared to be somewhat injured.

After he took the bird home, he tried to feed it some meat and used an infant medicine syringe to give it some fluid. Tony left the bird alone to explore and it hopped up into a tree. The next morning the bird appeared to be gone.

“But I found him hiding out over by my shop,” said Keller. He brought the bird closer to his house to keep it from any wild animals in the area and called the Medicine River Wildlife Centre.

“He hobbled around and called out a few times. He could see his buddies flying around above him but nobody would come and see him,” chuckles Keller.

Keller gave him some more nourishment and the bird spent the next night in the shop and the day after, he met a staff member of the rehabilitation centre in Three Hills and handed the bird over.

Carol Kelly, executive director of the Medicine River Wildlife Centre explains the centre is a wildlife hospital with goal of rehabilitating animals and then releasing them back into the wild. It is also an education centre.

“What we do is look at the animal, identify what is wrong with it. In most cases at this time of year most injured hawks have been hit by cars, secondly electrocuted on power lines or thirdly injured by barbed wire,” Kelly said. “We’ll decide on treatment according to that and if it improves, is strong and healthy and ready to release, we’ll do that.”

She said often the animals do not stabilize and perish while they are being treated, or they are too injured to treat and are humanely put down.  

Keller hopes he will cross paths with the bird again.

“If he does recover, I hope they bring him back down here. These birds are doing a pretty good job of keeping the gopher and mice away,” said Keller.

Kelly says this might not be possible.

“If it is a baby Swainson’s hawk like we believe it is, they all leave Alberta by September. By the time this one recovers from its injuries and it is strong and ready to go, hopefully it will be ready to catch the migration, and leave with Swainson’s hawks. At that point it doesn’t really matter where you release it because they are all leaving anyway.”

It’s hard to say if it will ever return.

“Whether that particular bird might migrate back to this area next year is anybody’s guess,” said Kelly. “The adults will very likely return to the same territory if they were successful there, whereas the babies can disperse.”

  She said that in this case it appears the right thing for the animal was done.

“If it is clearly injured we recommend putting it into a small cardboard box, keep it dark, warm and quiet and contact the centre,” she said. 

Kelly said there are cases when it is not so clear, however technology can help. With so many carrying a smart phone with a camera, a phone call and a couple of photos can help.

“Before you disturb an animal, you can talk to someone,” she said.

Three Hills craft brewery launches

prairie brewing

 

Prairie Brewing Co. another start-up in Alberta’s booming beer business

Prairie Brewing Co. officially received the Alberta Gaming and Liquor Commission’s stamp of approval two weeks ago and have begun small-scale production of a line of craft beer, joining dozens of start-up small breweries capitalizing on Alberta’s developing beer market and its ideal brewing conditions.

The local trio at the helm, Mark Ferguson (a mechanical engineer and farmer), Ryan Ferguson (another mechanical engineer and no relation to Mark), and Darren Kester (a petroleum engineer technologist) have been running full-bore since receiving licensing earlier this month, and with their first production batches due in two weeks, Prairie Brewing Co. will start popping up on barroom taps around the Three Hills area soon.

They currently are running a small single keg operation and plan to provide local restaurants, golf clubs, curling rinks, with kegs of their three different varieties of beer, as well as offer individual 1 litre growlers, before ramping up and expanding production over the next year to start canning their brew for sale in stores.

“The support has been overwhelming – the frustrating thing is we can’t sell it yet,” Mark Ferguson laughs. “Everyone has been asking for it but we haven’t been able to sell anything yet so we’re really itching to get a saleable product on the market.”

Right now Prairie Brewing will be offering three different types of beer. Their India Pale Ale is higher alcohol, but less hoppy and bitter than most of the more powerful craft IPAs that are on the market. Their witbier is citrusy and a bit spicy, with hints of coriander, and their brown ale, the Orkney Brown, is smooth and “with a kind of toffee-caramel flavouring and a sweeter, maltier taste,” said brewmaster Ryan Ferguson. 

“We tried to brew something that everyone would like”

It’s been awhile coming. The idea was born on a trip the trio took with their spouses to Australia in January 2015. There, they toured a brewery and one night, over a few pints, they began talking about starting their own brewery. “Looks easy enough,” “can’t be that hard,” they said. When they got home, they got serious about it and began seeking approval to start up another craft brewery in a province hopping with new brews in a market where consumers were going crazy for all drinks craft.

“It’s a weird marketplace, actually,” said Mark. “There’s tremendous support for all the micro breweries, not a competitive edge, and a deep interest from others involved in the industry. Right now there is plenty of demand for craft beer so the competitiveness I wouldn’t describe as cutthroat. It’s a community, and other breweries want you to succeed.”

The Alberta craft beer market is booming. Ever since the Alberta government laxed laws on small breweries in 2013, the market has expanded from just 12 small operations to more than thirty currently in operation, reported Swerve magazine in a feature on Alberta beer. Some commentators are projecting up to 57 craft breweries to open in the province in the next year.

“There are relatively few microbreweries in Alberta per capita in relation to anywhere else in western North America,” said Mark. “BC has way more and certainly the western US is very densely populated. Maybe at that point you see more competition, but not right now in Alberta.”

Together with the wide open and thirsty market, Alberta brewers are helped by the fact they live on some of the best malt barley producing lands in the world. Swerve magazine reported that Alberta produces 56 per cent of Canada’s total barley exports from the corridor of prairie between Edmonton and Lethbridge.

It’s a mix of different reasons, says Mark. “The climate is very stable, high-quality grain comes out of central Alberta year after year, and that coupled with the state of the art farming practices used here is what makes Alberta barley a premium.”

Prairie Brewing currently brings in malt barley from Alix, Alberta, one of the biggest producers in the province, but the group plans to eventually use grain grown on their family farm to create locally brewed, locally sourced craft beer. They eventually plan to set up their own malting operation, too.

“It’s all from the central Alberta region, but as we move forward we will actually be using home grown ingredients.”


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