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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Volunteers breathe new life into Munchie Park

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Munchie has a new look in time for the holiday season.
The park on the corner of 3rd Avenue and 2nd Street West has been a great place for residents and tourists to enjoy the outdoors, however Munchie, the topiary dinosaur was looking a little worse for wear.
Corrine Gerling explains that a few weeks ago, while at Valley Brewery, right beside the park, a conversation started about the Munchie, and Mayor Heather Colberg, asked Irv and Corrine if they would help put new lights on Munchie. The Gerlings have been active volunteers in the community, working on this park, as well as helping with the cleanup and the light up the night event. They agreed to help.
When we went out and looked at it, we said, ‘it needs to be painted,’” said Corrine. “She (Colberg) spied Joe Castonguay, also in the brewery, and she immediately seconded him.”
‘We took the lights off, called Heather, she called Joe, and it was painted. In the meantime, the town ordered some new lights.”
The Gerlings enlisted Bob and Barb Neigum to help put the new lights up.
“He does look really good, the difference is startling isn’t it?” We were very pleased with how it turned out.
She says volunteerism is important to the community.

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“If everybody gets involved a bit, it just helps the town. Whether it is the cleanup or you are picking up garbage on a walk. We aren’t on any big town committees, but if there is a project to be done with a few days labour we will take those kinds of things on,” said Corrine.
While Munchie is prominent in the park, this year the park was kept in pristine condition due in large part to the volunteer efforts of Gloria Haanen. During the spring and summer, it was rare not to seen Haanen at the park, pulling weeds and making it beautiful for the community.
“I quit work about 12 years ago, and I like to garden, but I live in an apartment and there is no garden here, so I just go down there and do that,” she explains.
This year she spent about three days a week at Munchie Park. She was busy with everything from planting, to watering and weeding.
She explained that in previous years there was an inmate crew that helped to plant the garden as well as help with upkeep.
This year they didn’t have that program so I spent a lot more time down there than I normally do. I do the watering and the rest of it, and Corrine and few other people did the planting. It takes a group effort,” said Haanen.
Her work has created a great space for the community to enjoy. Her thanks are modest but appreciated.
“I get lots of ‘’beeps’ (from cars driving by), lots of thank yous, and that does it for me,” she said, adding that Munchie “just glitters, they have done a wonderful job of it.”


Rotary Club recognizes local unsung hero

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The Rotary Club of Drumheller presented the Distinguished Unsung Hero Award, which recognizes individuals who contribute to their community through volunteerism, at their meeting on Monday, November 9.

This year, the award was presented to Eric Dahl, who has volunteered his time over the last several years to maintain the graves of veterans interred at the Drumheller Cemetery.

"Every grave is a page in Drumheller's history book," Dahl said during the presentation, adding cleaning is like church for him.

Dahl first started cleaning veterans graves in 2016 and most recently headed a volunteer project to place flags on the over 400 graves of veterans at the local cemetery. 

Raptor Ridge Resort undergoes geotechnical review

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A geotechnical review of Raptor Ridge RV Resort site uncovered a minor concern regarding the location of an underground water pipeline and helped determine the stability of the proposed development site.
The report was presented during the regular Starland County council meeting on Wednesday, October 14 by Municipal Services manager Glen Riep.
Raptor Ridge Resort project manager Bob Doornenbal told the Mail, “We did a full geotechnical study on the property, and through this process were able to locate the waterline which intersects the middle of the development.”
The review revealed a section of waterline crossing the property was “not on the registered plan.” There is also a “lack of working tracer wire” according to the report; tracer wire is used to mark the location of underground utilities, such as water and gas pipelines.
Without working tracer wire, the pipeline will need to be daylighted, or manually exposed.
The study also showed “no issues with site stability” for the development site.
“This means our required setbacks from the escarpment will still coincide with not being able to see the development from the valley,” Doornenbal added.
Raptor Ridge Resort was proposed to Drumheller council in January of this year, with an open-house hosted in February. According to Doornenbal, they are in the process of preparing a development permit and “securing all the information and studies” required by all government and planning entities, including both the Town of Drumheller and Starland County.
Phase 1 of the development will include 97 titled RV sites overlooking the Red Deer River, Drumheller Valley, and the surrounding Badlands. Each site can be personalized and buyers are granted year-round access to their RVs and trailers, as well as the resort’s common amenities.


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