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Final bonspiel curled in Drumheller Curling Club rink

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The Drumheller Curling Club hosted its final mixed bonspiel in the curling rink along Riverside Drive over the weekend of March 26 and 27. This will be the last bonspiel hosted at the rink as the club prepares to move from the building in June due to numerous repairs required for health and safety. Leonard Price and his team beat Dawn Wright’s team in the A final, Andrew Hodgson’s team beat the Rumsey Primrose team in the B final, and Darryl Brereton’s team won over Heather Little’s team in the C final.


Apple Watch makes 6,000km journey home

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When most people lose their watch…maybe drop it on the street, or leave it in a locker room, the expectation is they will never see it again.
For one Drumheller man, he was able to have his watch returned from almost 6,000 kilometers away and four fathoms under the sea.
Tony Pliva was snorkeling on a catamaran in St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands.
“We were a couple of miles offshore at a shipwreck, and I jumped over the side instead of walking down the stairs, and when I surfaced, my watch was gone,” explained Pliva.
It was an Apple Watch, and while it is water-resistant, it had fallen about 25 feet below the surface in saltwater.
“There was no way I could get it with snorkel gear,” he said.
Because it was an Apple Watch, he was able to go on his iPhone and lock the watch.
“If someone finds it and charges it up, the only thing that pops up is my information,” he explained.
Despite this, he was pretty sure it was the last time he would see the watch, despite it being in a popular diving area.
Just two days later, he received an email from a diver who found the watch.
“They were from California, and they mailed it to me,” he said.
The watch arrived in the mail just last week.
“It works, and I am wearing it right now, he said.
“Technology is pretty cool sometimes. Scary sometimes, but pretty cool as well,” said Pliva.

Town strikes deal with CN for cross-community trail development

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The Town of Drumheller has struck a deal that could potentially connect the community from Wayne to Nacmine with trails.
At the April 4 Regular Council Meeting, CAO Darryl Drohomerski presented an update regarding the CN Trail Project.
“We’ve been successful in securing a twenty-five-year lease with CN for the use of the right-of-way from Midland, Newcastle, Downtown, Rosedale, and Wayne to convert it into an active transportation trail system,” Drohomerski announced. “The cost of the twenty-five-year lease is one dollar per year.”
CN removed the rail in 2014, and the then-present Mayor and Council had initiated conversations with CN to convert the railbeds into active transportation trails. At the time, CN was not in the position to lease the land for this purpose, however, the Town has since been able to negotiate an agreement earlier this month.
“Residents have wanted this for a long time,” begins Mayor Heather Colberg. “We are so excited to finally see this much-anticipated development come to life. Thank you for the work that past and present Council and Administration have done to get us to this point, and of course, a huge thank you to CN for working with us to offer this new trail system to our community!”

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Drohomerski also noted “developed areas of the trail will be comprised of recycled asphalt millings, similar to some sections of the Badlands River Parks trail system. This surface is considered an all-weather surface and can support mobility equipment. There will be accessibility points (ramps) to access the trail, mostly in the downtown developments.”
At the request of Councillor Tom Zariski, the first area scheduled to be developed is connecting Downtown Drumheller to the lights at 19 Street East near Walmart, to provide much-needed pedestrian access to this area.
The town plans on allocating an annual budget of $25,000 for trail development, which is not an increase from previous operational budgets. No funding from the Flood Mitigation project is allocated to the rail trail.
The current plan is to develop this trail in sections. The Town wants to develop the trail in a fiscally responsible and sustainable manner with support from federal and provincial grants and potential sponsorships.
The lease also includes the Midland train bridge. It eventually will be open to active transportation. This means walking, running, and cycling. It will not be open to motorized vehicles.


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