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Van Straten family battles Lyme Disease

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    After multiple consultations, tests, etc. The Van Straten clan is still suffering.
    Back in the summer of 2013, Angie and Joe noted a huge bite mark had appeared under Joe’s armpit which was thought to be a spider bite.
    After a few days, Joe started experiencing symptoms and went to the hospital to get blood work done.
    Lyme Disease can be a mixture of different things which may lead to false diagnosis or not getting diagnosed at all.
    “It’s a great imitator because it mocks so many other illnesses,” said Angie.
    Symptoms include: Body paralysis, heart palpitations, insomnia, sweats and chills, impaired concentration, dizziness, etc.
    The doctors determined Joe had a wblood infection, and prescribed him doxycycline antibiotics which seemed to help but then the symptoms came back with a vengeance.
    By the end of November, both Joe and Angie Van Straten had discovered they both had Lyme Disease.
    They found a naturopath in Calgary that was able to get their blood work tested in Armin Labs in Germany. The results came back positive.
    At that point, the couple decided their youngest son, Dextin, should be tested.
    Joe was an automotive mechanic at the Stettler Dodge dealership while Angie was a teacher at the Greentree School in Drumheller.
The Elisa test has a 30% accuracy and only tests for one strain or genospecies of Lyme disease whereas labs overseas have much more accurate testing.
    If there is a negative read on the Elisa test, then the second stage, the more accurate western blot test, will not be performed.
    One way to prevent Lyme disease is to wear long sleeves and check yourself over for bites when entering from outside.
    Medical bills for the family can range from $800 to $1000 just in herbal supplements alone.
    “We haven’t been able to work, so we have no money coming in. We were both denied disability and just trying to get through each day is just hard, it’s very very hard,” said Angie.
    Awareness of Lyme disease has spread but Angie feels it has been deterred by hospitals.
    “I think people don’t have enough of an understanding of it, I think it comes from the health care system. Lots of medical doctors don’t believe in lyme disease so they won’t treat it,” said Angie.
    Studies have suggested that Lyme disease can be transmitted via infected insects, sexual encounters, pregnancy, breastfeeding, or blood transfusions.
    Dextin has had no luck finding a doctor to treat him so parents Angie and Joe plan to send him to the United States.
    “It’s a lot of money but i’m sure hoping that we get at least enough for my little guy to get treated because the sooner you treat, the better chance they have of remission,” said Angie.
    As well as a press for cash, the family has been noticing stigmatism surround their new illness.
    “I have people in my life that don’t believe that this is happening to my family and I’ve already lost relationships because of it,” said Angie
    On the upside, Angie has contacted the Rumsey Ag Society to see about brainstorming ideas in support of the local family.
    “It’s not a quick fix kind of thing,” said Angie.


Rumsey curler wins College Nationals with RDC

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RDC Queens team member Katie Primrose grew up just north of Rumsey and was one of the team members to win the big medal.
    “We didn’t really expect it, I mean you always hope to do the best and win it all but going in we were kinda like the underdogs,” said Primrose. “We were just hoping to medal so when we won it, we were pretty surprised.”
    The gold medal served as a good send-off to Primroses’ skip, Marla Sherrer as she is in her last year of schooling.
    “It was a good way to end it,” said Primrose.
    Primrose began curling at a very young age as her siblings, parents and grandparents all played the sport.
    At age ten, she started to curl regularly after school through the Rumsey junior curling program held at the Rumsey curling rink.
    “There’s a picture of me when I’m probably three throwing a curling rock so I mean I’ve been curling for a while,” said Primrose.
    Primrose attributes her success to a strong and encouraging community, helping her every step of the way.
    “Rumsey is just a great curling community,” said Primrose. “They definitely encouraged me to keep curling and they encourage younger kids to curl so they are definitely one of the main reasons why I am where I am.”
    Primrose is in her first year of postsecondary, taking a Bachelor of Science in Agriculture.
    The Canadian Collegiate Athletic Association (CCAA) Curling National Championships were held in Camrose from Wednesday, March 22 to March 25 with 16 teams playing for the title.
    The team kept a level head throughout the season, facing many tough opponents along the way.
    “The competition throughout the whole season for our women’s curling was very competitive,” said Primrose. “Each team had their strengths.”
    As the round robin came to a close on the Friday, the RDC team had played four games, winning one and three, faced with the task of winning the rest of the games in order to see Saturday.
    “There was a little pressure,” said Primrose.
    The team took advantage of the sheets close to home as many more family and friends were able to come out and cheer them on.
    “It’s crazy to think that you’re national champions, I’ve only ever been provincial [champion],” said Primrose. “You’re just that one step higher.”
    Primrose’s coach Brad Hamilton will scout at local bonspiels and watch up and coming curlers. Primrose also had an ‘in’ as her older sister Julie had played for the RDC Queens before she joined.
    “If you are into curling and you know there’s a curling program, you figure out the tryouts and just go and hope for the best,” said Primrose.
    To future curlers, Primrose gave advice telling others to make the most of each opportunity to curl.
    “Any opportunity to curl or any bonspiel you can enter – just go for it.” said Primrose. “You never know what friends you’ll make.”

Family marks centennial of grandfather’s mine rescue

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    A century ago, a young miner near Champion named Harry Trentham was wondering whether he was breathing his last breath.
    Today, there are 107 descendants of Harry, and many gathered last weekend at the very site where, for 87 hours, he tapped with a rock to allow rescuers to know where he was and to not lose hope.
    Bob Grenville brought The Mail collection of newspaper clippings and reports recounting the more than three days that his grandfather was trapped. It tells a story of presence of mind, perseverance, and ingenuity.
    At 8:30 a.m. on April 9, 1917, Harry Trentham went to work. He had settled in Three Hills by then, but learned of work in the Champion area. It was his first day, and he went to work at a  small mine about seven miles north and a mile and half east of Champion, Alberta.
    He was working in Room # 9, when at about 10:30 a.m. without warning it caved in. He was literally cut off from the outside world. In a Calgary Herald story 21 years later, Harry talked about the incident. At the time of the cave-in, he was moving a car of coal to the outlet of the shaft. He pushed the car back, keeping ahead of the falling debris until he came to a dead end. He piled rock, sand and anything else he could get his hand on to hold up the roof at the entry. He protected about a three square foot area at the end of the car. It allowed him a small air space, but he could hardly move. There he stayed for 87 hours.
    About four hours after the cave-in, mine inspectors Moses Johnson, and Duncan McDonald, who later went on to manage the Murray Colliery in East Coulee, were called to the scene. They arrived at 6:30 p.m. that evening. The miners on scene worked in earnest, but in the eight hours since the cave in, they were only able to penetrate about three feet.
The Inspectors took control of the operations.  Room 9 was about 180-190 feet from the entryway. Neither of the adjacent rooms  were useful to access Trentham.
    They continued to work trying to penetrate through the cave-in by driving piles ahead, and then putting in timbers when space was made.
    This too, was a slow process and 30 hours after the cave-in they had only managed to move about 30 feet.
    While it seemed hopeless, it was about that time, they received confirmation that Trentham was still alive. While they were digging, periodically they would tap on the pillar of coal in hopes of getting a response.  At 4:30 p.m., on April 11, Trentham knocked back. This was the first sign that he was alive.
    It was more than a knock. From this knocking, they were able to discern that he was using something very heavy to make the noise and that he was approximately 50 -60 feet away from the rescue party.
    They decided to change their tack and sink a shaft from the surface to reach the miner.

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    They were in luck. Mr. Kidd, a surveyor from Drumheller was in the area at another mine.  By working with the overman they pinpointed where to dig, and by 9:30 that night shovels were in the ground. While they were digging above, they left miners working on the cave-in underground so Trentham would hear work and not give up hope. When they reached 14 feet, they ceased digging in the cave-in, but left two miners down to push a mine car back and forth to force air to the entombed miner.
    They continued to dig manually as using an explosive would have been too risky. The shaft connected to room #9 at 3 a.m. on April 13. At 5 a.m., they began to drive a tunnel towards Trentham.
 Eventually they made a connection to the miner with an auger. A 1-inch pipe was inserted in the drill hole. They poured a mixture of water and brandy through the pipe. This was the first drink Trentham had in more than 85 hours.
    They were able to talk to Trentham and he told them that everything around him was caved, so they had to proceed carefully. They reduced the size of the hole a to point that the smallest of the rescue party was able to reach through and grasp Trentham’s hand.
    The tunnels from where they broke into the room, until they reached Trentham, was 36 feet and took 17 hours to construct. In talking to Trentham after the rescue, he said he only lost hope once, where it sounded like the workers were digging in the wrong direction.
    It is not known how much longer he continued to work in Champion, however, he remained a miner. He discovered a seam of coal in a coulee in the Orkney area and there he built a life for his family. He had one daughter and five sons.
    While he was within hours of death during those three days underground, it was Typhoid that struck him and one of his sons down in 1938.
    His family endured and last week at the celebration there were more than 60 gathered including 15 of his grandchildren, Harry’s daughter Marjorie Grenville, 92, and his youngest son Bob Trentham, 89. The family even invented a new drink. Brandy and water is now known to the family as a “Harry Shot.”


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