News | DrumhellerMail - Page #2554
09252024Wed
Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Town targets mosquitoes

    Public Works staff have been targeting one of summer’s most annoying pests.
    Staff have been hard at work nipping  mosquitoes in the bud. Over the past three weeks, standing water in the area has been monitored and sprayed to help keep outdoors tolerable.
    “We finished the first application on the ground and in the air,” said Daryl McConkey, a licensed applicator with the Town.
    To control the mosquito population McConkey monitors any standing water for mosquito larva and, if found, sprays a product that targets the larval stage.
    “You go out and check some water, for example, a roadside ditch, and if there is larva, you spray it with a backpack sprayer. It’s a granular product that eliminates larva,” said McConkey. “We use Alpine Helicopters and go out and cover farmers’ fields and several areas in the Valley. The water in there we can’t get to, especially now, because seeding is going on.”
    Mosquitoes require standing water to reproduce and this spring provided them with more than recent years.
    “I’ve been here 27 years and it was the most I’ve ever seen,” said McConkey. “We’re just hoping we don’t get any more rain. That will fill up some new spots and the cycle will start all over again.”
    If all goes well, McConkey hopes the Town’s stockpile of mosquito neutralizer will last for the remainder of the summer. Further applications depend on moisture and continued monitoring for mosquito larva.
    “We have enough product for one more application. We should be good for this year, unless we get a monsoon. It’s going to depend on the amount of moisture in the next month,” said McConkey. “Right now, there shouldn’t be any larva in any water. If they haven’t hatched by now, they’re not there.”


90 days consecutive sentence for inmate carrying hash

    A serving inmate at the Drumheller Institution was given 90 extra days in custody after trying to ditch a canister of hash before entering the Drumheller Institution.
    Darryll Hannaford appeared in provincial court in Drumheller on Friday, April 19. He pleaded guilty to possession for the purposes of trafficking.
    The court heard how on February 5, he was being transported from the Calgary Remand Centre to the Drumheller Institution, when sheriffs saw him try to ditch a canister before going through screening. The canister contained 36 grams of cannabis resin.
    This has an institutional value of $17,000.
    Through council, Hannaford said he agreed to carry the package because he was afraid he would be stabbed.
    Hannaford was sentenced to 90 days incarceration; consecutive to any sentence he is currently serving.

Drumheller firefighters stand down from Nordegg wildfire

    They were willing and able, but conditions were favourable and members of the Drumheller Fire Department ready to battle wildfires were stood down.
    inSide Drumheller reported in its May 17 edition that three fire firefighters Mike Devaleriola, Ryan Young and Steve Hatt were ready to roll and provide their services to the residents of Nordegg who were threatened by wildfires. inSide Drumheller also learned that Cody Blasken made himself available to help.  They were to report on Saturday morning, however at the last minute, they were asked to stand down.
    “We received a phone call at 4:30 on Friday afternoon and they said they had it under control and were letting people back in (to Nordegg), so Drumheller didn’t get to participate,” said Drumheller Fire Chief Bill Bachynski.

Michael Devaleriola, Ryan Young, and Steve Hatt called from Nordegg wildfire.


    He goes on to say the community was appreciative of their commitment.
    “They thanked us very much, and I told them if there was ever another time, by all means call us, we should be able to help,” said Bachynski.
    Recent cooler temperatures and moisture have helped to drop the risk of wildfires, although there is still fire bans in much of south central Alberta.
    “We go through this every spring. It depends a lot on humidity conditions, how cold it gets at night and if there is dew forming. There are many factors that play in to it,” said Bachynski.
    Currently there is no fire ban in place for Drumheller. There are still bans in the County of Stettler, and Special Areas 2 and 3, and a fire prevention notice in Kneehill County.


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