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Last updateTue, 24 Dec 2024 1pm

Local marketing group finalist for tourism award

    Joint marketing, lead by the Royal Tyrrell Museum, is producing dinosaur-sized results.
    Alberta Tourism is considering the Tyrrell Museum for the Alto Award in the Marketing Partnership category for their “Drumheller – days and days of discovery” campaign.    
    Other finalists for the award are Brewster Travel Canada for “Unplug and Explore” in Banff, and Tourism Calgary and Partners for their “Experience WOW” campaigns.
    The Alto Awards are given out annually to individuals and organizations who are committed to enriching tourism in Alberta, who inspire others with their efforts, and demonstrate the success of working together.
    The “Drumheller – days and days of discovery” campaign is a partnership between various attractions, hotels, town, chamber, golf course, and theatre.
    Multi-channel marking strategies using print, online, and mobile ads exceeded expectations and increased awareness of Drumheller. The success of the campaign was measured by online impressions, brochure distribution, and a five per cent increase of traffic to TravelDrumheller.com.
    Previously there had been no leader in the community for marketing. “Drumheller is currently without a destination marketing organization, so there was no leader to initiate group projects,” said Leanna Mohan, Marketing Coordinator at the Royal Tyrrell Museum. “We had to become our own leaders. It took initiative, trust and the ability to think bigger than our own operation.”
    Technology has been the key to their success. Mobile ads on smart phones and online ads on targeted sites made it possible to track success in new mediums. Members were also able to try new strategies without risking too much of their own limited funds.
     “The key driver, the Royal Tyrrell Museum, made available its design and marketing expertise to a community project,” said Linda Digby of the Atlas Coal Mine. “Having the museum get in the sandbox with local operators and stakeholders has been critical to our success.”    
    The Alto Awards will be presented at the Travel Alberta Industry Conference on October 23-25.


Strankman wins nod for Wildrose

    A man who was incarcerated for his stance on Wheat Board policy will be leading the Wildrose as candidate for the next provincial election for the Drumheller-Stettler riding.
    Rick Strankman won the nod from the riding part membership. Of the approximately 700 in the riding who purchased memberships, just over 300 participated in the vote. About 20 votes separated the two candidates.
    “I don’t know if it is a blessing or a curse, but I am going to do the best I can to make it the best I can,” said Strankman following his victory.
     The race was between Strankman and local candidate Doug Wade. Membership voted in a travelling ballot over  the last week.
    “I was thrilled and glad I ran,” said Wade following the vote, and encourages supporters to get behind Strankman.  "I believed what I was doing was the right thing and still do.”
    Strankman first came in to prominence in the mid 1990’s when he took 756 bushels of wheat across the Canadian border into the US and sold it. He was charged under the Customs Act and was jailed in 2002. He admits this notoriety may have helped in the race.
    “I don’t know if it was wholly the resonation of what people thought about, but it certainly gave me some traction in some circles,” he said.
    Moving beyond the membership of the party and to a wider voter audience, he does not believe his activism would be a factor.
    “Some people see it as  ‘this guy will stick to his convictions,’ … and that is how we saw it,” he said.
    “Coming from the jail house, I realized change is made from a different building, it is called the House of Parliament… so now I am hoping to go forward and make positive change for the people of Alberta under the auspices of Wildrose and the leadership of Danielle Smith.”
    His goal is to provide a vision for the province, something he said waned in the final days of Klein’s reign.
    “A friend of mine told me there are two kinds of politicians, one is a representative politician and the other is a visionary.  I would like to strive, as builder of a farm, and several side enterprises, to be visionary, to grow and develop things. It is simple to be a representative and just take surveys and be on committees, but it is difficult to be visionary and bring positive change forward, and I feel that was the experience I learned with my activism in the Wheat Board.”
    He knows he has his work cut out for him running in the riding versus incumbent Jack Hayden.
    “He certainly has greater knowledge of the system and experience. He has been a career-oriented politician, but I am going to give it the best shot I can because I believe Albertans deserve a change and want a change. I hope the vision and leadership of Danielle Smith will help all of us as candidates bring forward a better Alberta,” Strankman said.

Animal shot in January confirmed as wolf

    Biologists have identified an animal shot near Little Fish Lake last winter was a wolf, and what a wolf it was.
    In The Mail’s January 12 edition, it reported that Ed Gammie killed the animal on his property. The animal weighed about 115 pounds and measured about 6 feet from nose to tail, large even by a wolf standard.
    Local Fish and Wildlife submitted the skull to The University of Alberta to be properly identified.
    Rob Losey, a member of the faculty of Anthropology at the University of Alberta and a palaeontologist colleague from Belgium identified the skull to be a typical adult wolf.
    “We used a series of measurements on the wolf’s skull and compared them with measurements taken on a large group of North America (largely Alberta) and Eurasian wolves, as well as with those of dogs. We then used a multivariate statistical program to assess whether the skull more resembled a wolf or a dog,” said Losey.
    Local Fish and Wildlife officer Byron Jensen explained that throughout history, animals have been most often catalogued by measurements, and these are used to determine the species. There is no simple DNA test. What also complicates the identification is that wolves and dogs have been mixing for centuries, and even if it appears as a wolf, it is difficult to say if it is a pure strain.
    He said this occurrence of a wolf in the area is rare given the landscape and the fact the pack animal was alone. Having said that, it is not completely unexpected, as wild animals can have large and varied ranges.  Resident sightings have confirmed the presence of cougars in the area over the past few years, and Jensen said every five or six years a black bear typically wanders down the river valley.
    What also struck Jensen is the size. In comparing it with a wolf skull he had in the office, he concluded it is one big wolf.
    Patty Ralrick, who is affiliated with the Royal Tyrrell Museum, confirmed his feeling. The subject of her masters research is on Little Fish Lake, and she took measurements of the skull.  In her mind, there is no doubt it is a wolf. While they are a rarity today, in her field work she stumbled upon about a dozen skull in the Little Fish Lake area between 600 and 1,400 years old.
    “It was the largest skull I had seen,” said Ralrick, who compared known wolf skulls in the Royal Alberta Museum and skulls collected by Alberta Fish and Wildlife.
    “When I took all my measurements that I took of the skull of the wolf from the Delia area, and put it into my matrices, it fell out with the wolves, and actually very high. It is a very large animal … it is definitely one of the biggest skulls I have seen.”
    Aside from just the size, she said the large size of the cutting teeth, the shape of auditory bullae and the shape of the skull tipped her off that it was a wolf.
    As for Gammie, he has the skull to keep.
    “I hope this is the last one I see,” he said.


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