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Last updateThu, 19 Sep 2024 5pm

University researcher investigating “soap holes”

soap holes

    A university researcher is looking for help from residents to learn more about soap holes.
    Soap holes were first described in the 1960s by researcher Josef Toth as “local areas of soil weakness where a mixture of water and sediment can be discharging. Sometimes there is a little pile of soil (like a little mud volcano) at their orifice or puddles of standing water.”
    Many might know them as mud boils, and Jake MacLaine wants to learn more about them.
    “Understanding how common they are and their distribution in the context of Alberta geology is the main focus of my undergraduate research, which I’m conducting with Dr. Cathy Ryan in Geosciences at the University of Calgary,” he said. “In the longer term, our research team may select a few to investigate in greater detail in the future.”
    MacLaine explains these are a unique feature, but he says in his research, most rural landowners he has contacted in the area are aware. There have been reports as far west as the foothills. They are described as soap holes because the sediment can feel like a soggy bar of soap.
    One of the unique characteristics they want to look at is, at times, some of these are reported to be very deep. As Toth recorded, he could bury a 2.5 meter pole into one. Other anecdotal reports tell of people sticking telephone poles into them by hand.
    “It is common for livestock or machinery to get stuck in them. For this reason, farmers stick fence poles in or around them,” he said.
    “One rancher I talked to in the area said they just about lost a horse in one. They went out into the pasture to show their grandkids the horses. They found only the head of one horse sticking out of the soap hole. Luckily, they were able to pull the horse out before hypothermia set in. And they were lucky to get there when they did.”
    Another unique characteristic to some is that some have remained unfrozen through the winter in the absence of significant water flow.
    For his research, MacLaine is planning to contact as many landowners as possible to learn the location and characteristics of these soap holes and have landowners complete a short survey.
    His survey is at http://fluidsurveys.com/s/soap-holes/. For more information email MacLaine at jamaclai@ucalgary.ca


Riverside "Mystery Tree" memorial to family

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    A family has been making Christmas brighter with a heartfelt tradition, which manifests this time of year in the park along Riverside Drive.
    inSide Drumheller published a photo on December 19, 2014 of a family taking a photo in front of a beautifully decorated Christmas tree. Not knowing who beautifully decorated the tree, the paper referred to it as a “Christmas Mystery.”
    This December The Mail received correspondence from Brett and Terra Adams exclaiming, “We didn’t know we were a mystery!”
    Terra explains her family has decorated the tree for the last five years.
    It began in 2009 when her sister-in-law Sandra looked out of her parent’s window at Christmas and suggested they decorate one of the evergreens in the park.
    “A nice idea but we thought we would have trouble getting permission to do it so let the discussion go,” she said.
    Sadly, less than a year later in October of 2010, the family lost Sandra to brain cancer.
    When Christmas came around, they did not forget her suggestion a year before and asked the Town of Drumheller if they could decorate the tree. They received the permission, and since then the tree is brightly decorated, visible from the window from Sandra’s parents Don and Linda Adams' home.
    “It was our tree of remembrance, our own small tribute to those who were in our hearts,” she said.
    A few years later, the tree also became their tree of hope. Terra explains her brother-in-law Trevor was diagnosed with Leukemia. He lost his battle in April 2014.
    This fall the family had three trees planted in the park, and last week the family was out to begin decorating.
    “Over the last 5 years we have encouraged others we know to hang a decoration for their own loved ones.  Some years the elements are hard on the decorations, but if it’s there when we take them down, it goes up the year after,” said Terra. “Over the last year, we have been privileged with gratitude for decorating the tree, and with that we thought we would share our story.”

Government invokes closure on Bill 6 debate

 

bails

A local farmer off Highway 575 at the top of the Carbon Hill voices his displeasure with hay bales.

The controversy over Bill 6 isn’t going away as the government continues to jockey to make the bill law, and farmers and ranchers get stronger in their resolve to put an end to what they see as flawed legislation.

The story has been developing hour by hour.

On Tuesday evening, the Alberta government served notice to introduce motions to invoke closure on debate of the Farm Safety Bill. On Wednesday morning, House Leader Brian Mason introduced the motion, invoking closure on the Second Reading of the Bill. It passed 39-24.

At 3 p.m. on Monday, Lori Sigurdson, Minister of Jobs, Skills, Training and Labour and Oneil Carlier, Minister of Agriculture and Forestry held a media availability to introduce amendments to the Enhanced Protection for Farm and Ranch Workers Act. These amendments “explicitly exclude the application of WCB and OHS to owners of a farm or ranch operation, family members of the owners, and friends and neighbours who volunteer their time on the farm or ranch.”
 “Across Alberta, we have heard farming and ranching families’ concerns. We know that farming in Alberta is more than a business, it is a way of life. It has always been our intention to preserve that way of life. The amendments explicitly exclude owners of farming or ranching operations, and their family members, from the mandatory application of WCB and OHS rules. We are also introducing amendments to assure Albertans that neighbours can still volunteer to help each other out, without being subject to the new rules,” said Sigurdson.
    These amendments were expected, but still come as opposition to the bill continues to mount. The Official Wildrose Opposition welcomed the amendment but say the bill still needs to go back to the drawing board. One of the main concerns is meaningful consultation.
    “Albertans can count on Wildrose to stand up for them against this legislation,” Wildrose Shadow Agriculture Minister Rick Strankman said.  “The NDP have broken the trust of farmers and ranchers, and need to actually consult with them before redrawing the bill.”
    Over the weekend, the Wildrose reported that 1,300 Alberta residents attended seven different rallies. One of the largest was in Bassano which Strankman attended, as did a number of area farmers, Jim Eskeland’s neighbours said.
    For Eskeland, he would like to see the government be transparent about the bill.
    “They need to come out and put their cards on the table, let’s negotiate this now and pass it in one step-done,’ said Eskeland. “I don’t think anybody is arguing that we cannot have some sort of safety net for farm workers. Anybody I have talked to, who have employees, are doing it privately.”
    He says simply by how the bill was handled, it has caused distrust in the government.
    "I think the biggest thing that has everyone in an uproar is they tried to ram it through, and didn’t say anything about it until it passed first reading. It’s a money grab and it is going to affect a lot of people.”
    “If they put it to a committee for public discussion, that would be fine,” he said.
    Without consultations, many are still wondering the implications of the bill.
    “There is a heck of a lot of difference between a feedlot and a family farm,” said Eskeland.
    “You don’t know what to believe or what not to believe,” he said. "The government is very clever with how they have put it out there as a safety measure, but if they do bring in OHS regulations, how does a rancher get on his horse?”
    They should have come out and said, ‘this is what we would like to see,’ get rid of all the misconception but that is what happens when you don’t consult with people.”
    Eskeland said the government has underestimated the power of the rural electorate.
    “The fight is getting stronger,” he said. “Over the week you could see on some of the social media groups I am in, it is getting fired up, There are vocal people at these rallies, but I think if they pass, I think there will be a much bigger push.”


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