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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Drumheller brings home two prestigious Alto Awards

    Drumheller is on top of the Alberta tourism world after the annual Alto Awards on Monday night in Banff.
    Drumheller was nominated for the Tourism Community of the Year Award alongside the Red Deer Centennial.

Drumheller was the recipient of two Alto Awards on Monday. Drumheller won the Tourism Community of the Year Award and the Canadian Badlands Passion Play won the Alberta Pride Award. Accepting the awards were Shelley Rymal, Leanna Mohan (left), Chris Curtis, Linda Digby, Vance Neudorf, LaVerne Erickson, Mike Dooley, Marty Eberth, and Bob Cromwell.

    The Canadian Badlands Passion Play, who has been nominated numerous times over the years, was running against the Calgary Stampede and the Sinister 7 Ultra of Blairmore for the Alberta Pride Award.
    Both Drumheller and the Passion Play won their respective categories.
    “The Passion Play won the Alberta Pride Award and we (Drumheller as a whole) won what is basically the academy award for best picture. It’s great,” said Chris Curtis, executive director of Travel Drumheller. “It was a real uplifting thing last night. Everyone was really stoked.”
     The Tourism Community of the Year Award is designed to acknowledge a collective and successful effort on the part of a community to work together to promote tourism.
    The Alberta Pride is meant to recognize a business or organization that captures the essence of the Alberta experience.
    Tourism in Drumheller, despite the flooding in late June was strong this year, especially in late July and through August. Several tourism operators even saw record numbers during the long weekends.
    The Passion Play was hit hard initially by the flood. Their first weekend, which started soon after the flood, saw some of their lowest attendance in a decade. Ticket sales went cold during the Passion Play’s prime selling time.
    Attendance bounced back the second weekend of the play to on par with, if not slightly higher than, previous years.
    Curtis credits teammwork between operators.
    “It’s really the hard work of all the operators. It was a really exhilarating experience felt by a whole team. We were so pumped last (Monday) night,” said Curtis.   


Good old fashioned Canadian Halloween

When life gives you snow, you make snowmen, even if it's almost Halloween. The Walsh family, with Coyne and Opal pictured here, took advantage of the pre-Halloween snow to make a snow-jack o' lantern. On Sunday, the Valley was buried in the first snowfall of winter, but luckily predictions say things will warm up in time for the weekend.

Snowy Sunday claims two lives in Highway 27 collision

   Two people were declared deceased at the scene of a collision at the intersection of Highway 27 and Range Road 250, west of Trochu, late Sunday morning.

   At roughly 10 a.m. on Sunday, October 27, the two people were driving in a truck and collided with a piece of heavy equipment travelling along Highway 27. Emergency services, Three Hills RCMP, and the RCMP Collision Analyst responded to the scene and the highway was closed to facilitate emergency personel and the subsequent investigation.

   Three Hills RCMP believe the wintery weather and road conditions were factors in the collision.


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