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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Firefighters compete nationally in FireFit Challenge

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Six members of the Drumheller Fire Department competed at the Canadian and World FireFit Competition and came home showered with medals.
Each firefighter had to qualify for the competition at Spruce Meadows over the weekend of September 10. Individually and as a team, they shined on the course.
Duane Bolin said this is one of their best results ever.
“For sure it was, for bringing home plaques and medals, that’s for sure,” he said, adding this was his first gold medal at Canadians and the first medals at Worlds.
In the Canadian Over-60 category, Keith Hodgson won gold. In the Canadian over-50 category, Duane Bolin won gold, and Merv Smith won silver.
In the Canadian Over-50 team event, Bolin, Smith, and Hodgson won silver. In the Canadian, Over 40 team competition, Jonathan Molzahn, Jeff Gerlinger and Phil Thompson won silver.
In the TECH 2 relay Over-50 category, the team of Bolin and Smith won gold.
In the Canadian Over-50 team relay, Bolin Smith and Hodgson won silver, and then bronze in the World Over-50 relay. In the Canadian Over 40 relay Molzahn, Gerlinger, and Thompson won gold.
“We were kind of floored by the number of awards we won,” said Bolin.
He explains while this is the Canadian Championship, because there were competitors from the international community, they also participated in the same competition. He said FireiFit has expanded to have a European schedule.
‘FireFit is just starting to kick off there,” he said.
Bolin said the department members worked hard to get these results.
“We practice twice a week, and once we get closer to the competition, we would set up our course on the weekend,” he said.
He adds, the FireFit course challenges strength and stamina.
“It’s about keeping your overall fitness up. It is the big thing. Running stairs is your cardio piece, but then guys are usually doing straight training twice a week as well,” he said. “Someone might be a fast runner, but if they don’t have the strength to lift a hose or swing a hammer or pick up the dummy… that was the point of this whole obstacle course, it used to be a physical requirement for joining a fire department, testing your strength and abilities and everything else.”


Drumheller Legion honours Queen Elizabeth II

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Drumheller Legion held a memorial in honour of the late Queen Elizabeth II on Monday, September 19, the same day her state funeral was held at London’s Westminster Abbey in the United Kingdom. A memorial procession was originally planned to take place from the cenotaph in front of the Badlands Community Facility to the Legion, however, inclement weather moved the procession indoors. About 40 people, including Drumheller Mayor Heather Colberg and Battle River-Crowfoot MP Damien Kurek, attended the memorial. MP Kurek laid a wreath on behalf of Canada and gave a speech reflecting on Her Majesty’s 70 years of service on the throne, as the only monarch many have ever known. Drumheller Legion President Gary Boucher laid a wreath on behalf of the Drumheller Legion and gave a speech acknowledging Her Majesty for her service in World War II as an ambulance driver and mechanic, and her lifelong commitment to the throne and the people of the United Kingdom and Commonwealth. Mr. Boucher thanked everyone for joining the Legion in remembering Queen Elizabeth II and welcomed the reign of King Charles III with those gathered singing God Save the King.

Calgary Zoo grouse benefit from Drumheller's flood mitigation program

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Calgary Zoo staff and volunteers arrived in Drumheller on Tuesday, September 20 to begin harvesting sage from the Newcastle and Willow Estates areas; the sage will be used to help feed the population of greater sage-grouse which are part of the Zoo foundation-Wilder Institute-reintroduction breeding program for the species.
Zoo staff had previously made the journey to Drumheller in 2019 to conduct an ecological harvest, taking clippings and trimmings throughout the Drumheller Valley.
“The silver sagebrush found in the Drumheller Valley is an optimal winter food source for the greater sage-grouse,” Calgary Zoo habitat supervisor Ryan Neilson said in a press release from the Drumheller Resiliency and Flood Mitigation Office (DRMO).
Greater sage-grouse are the largest grouse species in North America, native to areas of southwestern Saskatchewan and Alberta, and are listed as an endangered species under the Species at Risk Act (SARA).
Wilder Institute is currently the only reintroduction breeding program for these birds in Canada and, as of February 2022, a total of 187 sage-grouse have been released into the wild through the program.
DRFMO says the partnership with the Zoo was a “natural partnership that made sense.”
This year’s harvest will be different from the ecological harvests in the past, as the Zoo will have the opportunity to take the whole bush to prevent wasting any part of the plant. Through whole bush harvesting, the Zoo may be able to transplant some of the harvested bushes to cultivate their own supply of silver sagebrush.
Indigenous groups were originally consulted at the beginning of the flood mitigation project, though not specifically on this aspect of the project. DRFMO adds it is open to working with Indigenous groups who may be interested in also harvesting sage.
At this time, it is unknown how much plant material the Zoo will be able to harvest; Flood Mitigation project director Deighen Blakely conducted a walkthrough of both berm sites with Mr. Nielsen on Monday, September 19.


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