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Last updateMon, 30 Sep 2024 4pm

Drumheller Halloween a success

Witches, dragons, superheroes, butterflies, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and more filled the halls of Greentree School for the traditional Halloween parade on October 31.
Grade six students were the first to start the parade. They would walk around the next grades classroom before moving to the next.
The class that was waiting would file behind the other class to continue the parade. When all the classrooms were reached, they would head to the gym where excited parents took pictures.
Later in the day, Downtown Drumheller was flooded with more impressive costumes. Business owners and staff waited out in the cold or in the front entrance of their buildings and handed out numerous amounts of candy.
The Pioneer Trail Seniors Centre said they have seen a year as high as 900 children due to perfect weather conditions.
The overall temperature for the day was resting around 2 degrees celsius with a skiff of snow which immediately melted. By the end of the day, the snow had turned to rain.
mailphotos by Terri Huxley

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Sully Farmer, 1, was dressed as a dragon for Halloween. As everyone waited for the costume covered kids to arrive, Farmer would occasionally move around and retrieve his ball before throwing it again, enjoying every minute of it.

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Mr. Robert Rowland led his grade one class around the gym during the parade.

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Many were excited to take photos of the variety of costumes the students had to offer. The three blind mice were even in attendance.

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Students waved to happy parents during their single-file parade.

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Kayla Clark takes a photo of one of the classes on the stage. She was dressed up as a mounted Giraffe.

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Vanessa Pitre began her Halloween in Downtown as a Penguin.

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Larry-Lo Morton of the Pioneer Trail Seniors Centre dressed up and asked children to toss a ball into a bucket to win some candy. The entire centre was dedicated to Halloween with a ball toss, a fishing game, and more.

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(l-r) Chad Stern, left, and Clint Keller stood outside handing out candy. They had mounted a skeleton dinosaur to the back of their truck to get into the Halloween spirit.

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The Hatt family dressed up with a Star Wars theme in mind.
Pictured above: Geoff Hatt; Janelle Hatt; Brody Hatt; Devin Hatt.

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Beckett Norman gets handed a piece of candy from Century 21 staff.

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Beckam Jensen was elated to hand out candy. Here he is showing off some of the loot before giving it away to another trick-or-treater.

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Emily Lowry was monkeying around for Halloween and helped hand out candy.

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Mike and Carol Tudor dressed up as ‘Sick and Tired’. They stood outside Third Avenue Arts to hand out candy.


Acme woman makes top six in Stampede Princess contest

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A former Acme girl made it right to the finals to become a Calgary Stampede Princess and is grateful for the experience.
    The Calgary Stampede Princesses for 2018 were crowned on Monday evening September 25.  While she did not make the final cut, Monique Uittenbogerd was in the top 6.
    “This was something I always wanted to do,” she said.
    Uittenbogerd grew up near Acme on a farm and attended Acme School.
    She tells the Mail she feels she brought a unique perspective to the pageant.         While many farm families work land that goes back generations, for her family, they started out brand new.
    She was born in the Netherlands, and then moved to Canada with her family at the age of 5. Within a couple years, she was riding a horse and her passion for the western way of life stuck. Her family was successful in establishing a family farm.
    She is an active volunteer in 4H and is currently at the Haskayne School of Business in Calgary pursuing her Bachelor of Commerce.
    While she wasn’t crowned on Monday night, she is grateful for the experience.

Grass fire ignited by carelessly discarded cigarette

At approximately 4:00 pm on Sunday, October 29,  there was a prairie fire visible from Highway 9 located 5 kilometres south of Highway 566 (Kathryn Road).  Photo by Cassandra Houston

RCMP are calling on all smokers to keep their cigarette butts to themselves after yet another grass fire was ignited by a carelessly discarded cigarette.
On October 29 at 3:20 pm, Beiseker RCMP responded to a 911 call reporting a grass fire in the ditch along Highway 9, north of Keoma. Firefighters from Beiseker, Crossfield, Irricana and Rockyview County scrambled to gain control of the fire in severely windy and dry conditions.
The fire spread rapidly and was blown eastward by strong winds. Nearby farmers and residents of the Tscheder Hutterite Colony were able to use farm equipment and create fire barriers which prevented the fire from reaching any nearby farmyards and residences.
After the fire was extinguished, RCMP and Fire investigators were able to locate the source of the fire, a cigarette butt along the shoulder of Highway 9 near Range Road 270.

At approximately 4:00 pm on Sunday, October 29,  there was a prairie fire visible from Highway 9 located 5 kilometres south of Highway 566 (Kathryn Road).  Photo by Cassandra Houston

The past few months have been exceptionally dry and as a result there have been a number of forest fires and grass fires in southern Alberta.
“We’ve lost farms, houses, pets, livestock and infrastructure to fires already; and, the greatest loss of all, a volunteer firefighter from Cypress County was killed while fighting a fire this fall", says Corporal Curtis Peters, Media Relations Officer for Southern Alberta.
"This is now the second fire that we know was caused by a cigarette butt. Both of these were completely preventable. We need people to get the message and STOP tossing their butts out of vehicles.”
In addition to the psychological consequences that causing a fire would impose, there are also legal and civil actions that a person could face including: A fine for littering, Criminal charges such as mischief or criminal negligence, or civil financial responsibility for costs associated to the fire response and repairs.
If members of the public see a fire, they should call 911.
If they see someone throwing a cigarette butt out of a vehicle, they should contact their local police and not engage in a confrontation with the person.

(photos by Cassandra Houston)


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