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Last updateThu, 19 Sep 2024 5pm

Wheatland passes resolution calling for secession referendum

wheatland

    Wheatland County Council has passed a resolution to take to the Rural Municipalities of Alberta asking for the province to assert Alberta’s rights within the confederations and if necessary to hold a referendum for Alberta succession.
    The resolution entitled the Alberta First Resolution was presented by Wheatland Councillor Jason Wilson, asks the Provincial Government to take action on a number of issues including withdrawing from the Canadian Pension Plan, to collect personal income tax, remove equalization from the constitution, senate reform, replace the RCMP and take control of immigration.
    Further it resolves “If the federal government does not deal with these demands in good faith; if they block, hinder, or otherwise prevent Alberta from exercising its rights as outlined above, that the Government of Alberta will hold a Referendum with a “clear question”, as defined by The Clarity Act, on the secession of Alberta from the Canadian Confederation on October 18th, 2021.”
    The resolution was passed unanimously by the Wheatland County Council at its meeting on Tuesday, November 5.
    “I brought it forward identifying major concerns my residents have with how confederation is structured," said Wilson.
    “With those issues, I have outlined suggestions or recommendations that could potentially solve those problems within confederation.”
    He says while the resolution does ask for a referendum he says it is not a separatist movement.

    “This is a way to fix confederation… there is a prairie fire burning and this could be the fire retardant that saves it.”
    He adds the referendum is the final line in the sand.
    “When I was growing up my parents would ask me to do something, and there are consequences to inaction. That is all that statement is, it is the consequence of inaction on the federal government’s part. If they refuse to allow Alberta to reach its full potential within confederation, Alberta has to look at other options,” said Wilson.
    One question he is getting is whether this is within the scope of a county council.
    “Whether it is a provincial issue, federal issue of municipal issue, my residents are Albertans, and I tip my hat to Jason Kenney and his provincial government for sticking their necks out for Alberta and Alberta’s interests, but it not just solely a provincial issue, it’s my residents as well and as an elected official I must represent those concerns no matter how big or small,” said Wilson.


Local cadet shares D-Day anniversary experience

lightened d day cadet pic

    Last spring a contingent of Sea Cadets from Drumheller joined in the commemoration of the 75th anniversary of the D-Day Landing. Bailey Chung was one of the participants and she shared her experience with the Mail.
    On June 5, 2019, we started the day by visiting the Canadian cemetery in Normandy, France. Once we got there the emotions started hitting everyone very quickly. Even if we didn’t have a family buried in that cemetery, we all knew at least one person in the graveyard; we all were given the name of a solider to research before we got there.
    I was given a soldier by the name of Stephen Bolokoski. It was hard to find information on him and how he died. However, I did find he was one of four kids and the only sibling to fight in the war. I couldn’t find any living relatives sadly so I didn’t get a chance to lay anything on his grave from his family. I did, however, lay a poppy and a Canadian flag so he knew someone was thinking of him and was thankful for his sacrifice. I stood by his grave and took in the idea of someone so close to my age giving up his life to make sure I could live freely.
    After I was done at my soldier’s grave I looked around at the other graves. Over half of them didn’t have anything on them, no poppy or flag, so I grabbed some of the extra poppies I was given and one of my fellow cadets and I went around laying poppies on all the graves that didn’t have anything. We couldn’t get to all the graves which made me slightly heartbroken thinking of all the undecorated graves; sadly, we were out of time and there wasn’t anything more I could have done.
 After, we headed to Juno beach to see and explore what the soldiers saw 75 years ago. We explored the beach and walked the pathway they walked. As we walked along, we stopped and saw the Canadian house, the first house the Canadian overthrew and took from the Germans. It was a long walk going from one end of the beach to another but it was worth it. After that walk, we went to two more of the beaches that were overcome.
    As we were at the Omaha beach gift shop, we met this amazing person named Jack, a US veteran of Omaha. He told us a story about his landing on the beach and the emotions and struggles he went through the days and weeks he was there. I never thought that running into someone in a gift shop could change the way I view everything. The day continued as we visited a German cemetery. They may have been our enemy at the time but now they are just like us; they were fighting for what they thought was right.
    June 6, 2019, the day started early for us. We were unprepared for how hard the ceremony was going to hit everyone’s feelings. Being the first people there, we had an amazing view of the whole thing. There were five of the Drumheller cadets who participated in the ceremony and helped with the laying of boots and poppies.
    We stood and watched the ceremony, as the few veterans were left walked or were rolled to their seats. A number of high officials, as well as many high-ranking officials from the military, air, and naval forces, were in attendance. As we watched the ceremony’s videos and listened to the stories they told, it felt as though we were there going through and seeing what they saw and the emotions they felt. Words cannot describe what we saw or felt that day but it was an amazing ceremony. I feel so blessed to be able to be there and see it all first hand.

Ralph Buzzard - Cowboy Legend still active at the age of 91

buzzard

    Ralph was born in Calgary on May 10, 1928 and lived in Rosebud for most of his life.
    Ralph’s dad taught him how to ride and break horses and while Ralph was going to school he broke many horses earning $5/head. At 14 years old, Ralph entered his first bareback competition at Hand hills Lake Stampede and finished 3rd. By the age of 20, he owned his own string of approximately 30 bucking horses. He trailed these horses from Youngstown to the Calgary Stampede picking up horses along the way from Cosgrave’s to the Stampede grounds.
    He ended up with approximately 200 head when they (Ralph, Dale Flett, Jim Armstrong, and Jack MacDonald) arrived at the Calgary Stampede grounds.         Ralph sold bucking horses to Dick Cosgrave, Reg Kesler & Bruce Flewelling throughout the years. In 1950, at the age of 22, Ralph outrode for Bob Heberling who won the Calgary Stampede Championship and Ralph was one of the outriders who won the Outriding Championship. The next year Ralph started driving his own chuckwagon.
    In 1951, Ralph took a Farrier course at Trout Springs and then shoed many wagon and track horses collecting a dollar for each foot shoed. In 1952 Ralph worked for the CNR (Canadian National Railway) and made $1.27 /hr. driving spikes and laying ties from Rockyford to Beynon.
    Ralph married Babe Lauder in 1953 and they had 2 children, Laurell and Gary. They divorced in 1958. Ralph worked in 4 different coal mines (Nacmine, East Coulee and 2 different mines in Rosebud) and was the top loader in 3 of them. Ralph worked sometimes after supper until midnight to earn extra money to buy more horses.
    In 1953 Ralph went to Lacombe and entered his wagon, took 2 seconds penalty and still won. Wilf Carter, the Country & Western singer, was there to sing after the show. Wilf and a few cowboys ended up in Ralph’s hotel room later and the party carried on until daylight.
    In 1954 Ralph was in Hanna chuckwagon racing when his house burned down in Rosebud and he lost everything. Ralph left the chuckwagon circuit and worked on the drilling rigs East of Brooks for a while. Ralph had enough of the rigs when he ended up in the hospital for treatment of frostbite to face and hands after being exposed to extreme windchills when standing up on the wide-open derrick when it was -30 degrees F.
    In 1962, Ralph met Faye in Brooks and they were married soon after. After having their daughter, Shauna, they moved to Chilliwack B.C. While Ralph lived in B.C. he bought and sold Holstein calves, buying them in B.C. and hauling and selling them in Alberta by the hundreds. Ralph soon got into racing thoroughbreds, driving a chariot and eventually started driving chuckwagons once again. In the day of Ralph’s competitive chuckwagon driving, Ralph and his horses became a force to be reckoned with on the professional chuckwagon circuit. Ralph put together top wagon teams on his own without having any big sponsors with large pools of sponsorship money and many horses to choose from. Ralph relied on his experience and knowledge of horses to build his wagon teams, one horse at a time.
    It took quite some time for Ralph to get enough horses together for two wagon teams and soon began breaking track records. Ralph set 4 track records in the towns of Bassano, Byemoor, Lake McGregor and Lacombe. Eight different chuckwagon drivers who won the Calgary Stampede were driving a horse on their wagon that was bought from Ralph. (Richard Cosgrave-Pushin Fate, Jason Glass-Hanuman Highway, Ronnie Glass-Lars Percina, Ward Willard-Rugged Art, Dave Lewis-Freddie, Hank Willard-Cherry Cup, Bill Greenwood-Run A Lot, Slim Helme-Stein Song).
    Ralph acquired the horse, Hanuman Highway who ran 7th in the 124th running of the Kentucky Derby and sold him to Jason Glass. While Ralph was in Chilliwack he organized a race meet where the World Professional Chuckwagons participated for the first time and it was a great show.
    Many of Ralph’s accomplishments are in the horse racing archives. Ralph received the World Professional Chuckwagon Association lifetime membership award. Ralph won the 1973 American Chuckwagon Championship in Cheyenne Wyoming by 9 seconds and won the 1974 Lake McGregor Chuckwagon meet. One year while driving at the Coronation Stampede, Ralph was leading the show until he rolled his wagon on the last day. On his way home, he stopped in Drumheller and got an x-ray which revealed a broken thumb and forefinger. Ralph got a special cast put on which allowed him to continue driving for the rest of the year.
    In 1975, Ralph was breaking some colts and needed some help, so he hired a man to help him and one day at breakfast the hired hand told him “I don’t have to go to the Calgary Stampede this year”. Ralph asked, “Why?” The hired hand replied, “because we have a Stampede here every day.”
    After retiring from chuckwagon racing in 1976, Ralph raced horses on the tracks in B.C., Alberta, and Saskatchewan. Ralph also raised thoroughbred colts from 1976 to 1985. The Buzzard name as Breeder wasn’t uncommon to see under the winner’s category at any Alberta race track.
    In 1988, Ralph was Lead Trainer and owned the horse Take Me To The Top, who was also Horse of the Year on the Alberta B Race Track. His horse, Northern Clipper, won the Millarville Derby in 1990. Ralph’s horses won over a hundred races. Ralph had two different herds of cattle, one Herford and the other herd were longhorns in the 1980s. Between 2004 and 2014, Ralph drove in parades and drove celebrities in the Calgary Stampede Parade.
 In 2007 he drove Jann Arden and she was his favorite celebrity. Besides Calgary, Ralph drove in parades in Hussar, Strathmore, Standard, Gleichen, Rockyford, Rosebud, Drumheller, and Three Hills. Ralph’s many parade ribbons and trophies can be viewed at the Rosebud Museum.


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