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Dragons return to ice versus Kodiaks

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While the crowd at the Drumheller Memorial Area was sparse, it was also filled to capacity with COVID-19 restrictions in place. A crowd of 100 fans watched the Dragons play their first exhibition game of the season.
On Friday night, October 9, after more than seven months without competitive hockey, the Dragons hosted the Camrose Kodiaks, in the first game of the new exhibition season. The Dragons met the big veteran squad head to head with their youth and speed, making for a competitive first game of the season.
The Dragons had some good opportunities early, but were bogged down killing penalties early on. Despite this, they outshot the Kodiaks 8-7 in the first period and Hayden Prosofsky scored with 28 seconds left in the period on the power play. He was assisted by Tyson Gross and Luke Fennig. The Kodiaks came back in the second and scored two to win 2-1.
The Dragons were on the road for the first time this exhibition season on Saturday, October 10, to play the Kodiaks. This time Camrose jumped out early and by the end of the first period were leading 2-0.
The Dragons made it a game in the second period outshooting the Kodiaks 10-2. Myles Hillman put the Dragons on the scoreboard six minutes into the period, and then Sam Simard scored at the 13:13 mark assisted by Moe Hakim and Aiden Yakimchuk, and again at the 17-minute mark, again assisted by Yakimchuk and Grayson Dietrich. The Dragons took a 3-2 lead, however, the Kodiaks buttoned it up in the third period with two goals to win.
This Saturday, night, October 17, the Dragons are back home against the Kodiaks at 7 p.m.


12-year-old dino hunter makes discovery at Horseshoe Canyon

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A 12-year-old boy made a dino-sized discovery in Horseshoe Canyon this summer that helps to fill in knowledge gaps about dinosaurs from this time period.  

Nathan Hrushkin, 12, is an aspiring palaeontologist, and on July 12, he and his father were prospecting in Horseshoe Canyon, as they have for the last six years. They were at one site of interest in the portion of the canyon in the Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC) Nodwell site. It was of interest because they had discovered small fragments in previous years.

"We were super excited about that, but we didn’t figure they were from dinosaurs, we thought they were from some sort of mammal or something,” Nathan explains. We came back this year with some friends of ours, and there weren’t quite as many on the ground there in that offshoot of the valley, but my dad said ‘if they were here on the ground, they were probably washing out from above.'”

Nathan hiked up the face and discovered about four bones sitting on the ground.

“Two were sticking out of the ground and two were just lying there,” he said.

 They took photos of the bones, and took GPS coordinates, and sent the information to the Royal Tyrrell.   

Francios Therrien, curator of Dinosaur Palaeoecology at the Royal Tyrrell Museum immediately understood the significance of the discovery of the young hadrosaur, commonly known as a duck-billed dinosaur.

           “We are in a part of the province where we actually have very few reports of fossils being discovered. We have fossils discovered in the Drumheller Valley or Dinosaur Provincial Park, but here is an isolated place and we have a gap in terms of fossil discovery," he explains. “The other point of this is the time interval represented by the rocks behind me, represents a gap of about 69 million years ago when we don't know what type of dinosaurs lived around here. So now the discovery Nathan made is of great significance because it fills this gap.”

Due to the significance of the find, the Tyrrell made the decision to excavate the fossil for further study. Crews were in the isolated part of the canyon unearthing the specimen throughout the summer, and on October 15, removed the largest portions of the fossil to be taken to the Royal Tyrrell Museum.

Therrien said Nathan and his family did the right thing when they discovered the fossil.

           “Nathan did the perfect thing when he made his discovery, he took photos of his find, took GPS coordinates of where he found it, and then he reported to the Royal Tyrrell Museum so a team could come here and investigate,” said Therrien.

Carys Richards, communications manager for NCC’s Alberta region, says one of its mandates is to connect Canadians to nature.

“We would encourage people to come out and explore this site, see what makes the Canadian Badlands so special, but please if you are coming out, be a good visitor and stay on the trails,” she said.

 “This is really exciting for NCC from a conservation perspective because when we talk about conservation we are focused on the benefit for future generations, but this is a really great reminder that protecting land doesn’t only benefit the future but also helps unearth mysteries of our past.”

Nathan is committed to keep exploring. 

"We’ve been coming here for years, and every year we find something a little bit better than the last year, our only goal is to outdo ourselves from this year, and that might be pretty difficult,” said Nathan.   

Legion hosting PTSD sharing sessions

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The Drumheller Legion is inviting those in the community who are surviving mental trauma to come for a coffee and find friends to lean on.
The Legion is hosting an afternoon to support members of the community who are suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). They are offering a safe place to share experiences and feelings with others who may have gone through the same thing.
“It is just to give people an outlet, there is nothing here in Drumheller, and we have all been through stuff," said Drumheller Legion Gary Boucher. “We want to open a place for people to come and feel safe, they can talk about what they want, and it is not going to go back out this door, and this is what we need.”
This is not a Royal Canadian Legion sponsored event. Rather, it is a local Legion initiative aimed at the community at large, and they invite anybody, being ex-service personnel, emergency responders, correctional staff, law enforcement, or anyone else who is dealing with traumatic experiences.
“We are not doctors, and we don’t have a cure, but a place to be with others,” says Boucher.
The first session is slated for Sunday, October 18, at 1 p.m. at the Legion. There is no need to preregister, participants can just drop in. They will be practicing COVID-19 protocols including social distancing and masks if preferred.


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