News | DrumhellerMail - Page #2183
10022024Wed
Last updateMon, 30 Sep 2024 4pm

Santa’s Christmas Day Dinner enters 32nd year

santas-dinner-2013

 

The warmth of friendship became a belief, and that belief has become a tradition that has spanned 32 years.
    That belief is simply that no one should be alone on Christmas.
    The Santa Claus Christmas Dinner started simply as a small group of friends coming together to celebrate the holiday. Today there is an open invitation to anyone to come to Yavis Family Restaurant to enjoy turkey with all the fixings on Christmas Day.
    Yavis Restaurant will be open from noon to 3 p.m. on Christmas Day for the annual Santa’s Christmas Dinner and the restaurant is excited to continue to be a part of this tradition that shows no sign of slowing down.  
    This is a great chance for those who do not have family in town, to come and enjoy their neighbours’ company. There are others who do not have the means to make themselves a Christmas dinner.
    Whole families in Drumheller now make the annual dinner a part of their Christmas tradition. Whole families have also made volunteering to put on the dinner a tradition as well. This includes cooking turkeys and sides, serving and a few shifts on the dishwashing crew.
    Volunteers also offer a shuttle for those in need of transportation. They will also deliver meals to those who are bound to their home.
    Last year volunteers served up more than 300 dinners.
    To arrange a ride to the dinner or a drop-off or to learn how they can get involved, contact Century 21 at 403-823-2121, or drop by the office in downtown Drumheller before December 23.


Memories of Christmases past

carrie-moeller-dec-2014

97-year-old Carrie Moeller has fond memories of childhood Christmases in Denmark, which included the tradition of leaving shoes on the windowsill for Santa’s helper to fill with treats.

Drumheller’s Carrie Moeller, 97, was nine years old when her family moved to Canada from Demark in 1927.
    It was a bit of a change for the young girl from her life in Denmark, which held fond memories of previous holidays.
    “I remember Christmases,” said Moeller.
    “The Christmas tree in the front room had real lights. We didn’t have electricity like we have now.”
    Candles the size of present-day birthday candles were put in holders that had a clip, and the lights, the little candles, were clipped into the tree.  
    “The first time you saw the tree was Christmas eve,” Moeller explains. “That was your surprise.”
    Moeller said another tradition was started a week to ten days before Christmas.
    The kids would take their shoes and put them on the windowsill, and the Nisseman, Santa Claus’s helper (elf/gnome), would put a treat in the shoe.
    “First thing in the morning you went and looked in the shoe,” said Moeller.
    Moeller’s family emigrated to Canada just a few years prior to the Great Depression that hit North America and spelled tough times for many families. But they still tried to make holiday meals special.
    “The depression was hard. Let’s put it this way - most women are cooks - they can make a meal out of next to nothing. You learn to do that from childhood, you watch your Mother.”
    Moeller and her family spent  a winter in Dalum, then moved to a one-bedroom  place in a Calgary rooming house, where they were able to save money to purchase their  own home.
    The Danish Christmas dinner goose gave way to the tradition of Canadian turkey, but Moeller kept up the Christmas shoe tradition when she married and had her own family, and chuckles while remembering her son was twelve before he was willing to give up the holiday shoe tradition
    Moeller said regardless of the times, her favourite thing about Christmases, in addition to the smell of pine trees, is being with people.
    “Family. The children. Christmas with children is something I miss.”
    She said she feels Christmas has become too commercial, and that something special is getting lost for families with so much focus on the material.
    “Give me family and friends to celebrate with.”
    Moeller lived with her daughter until about six months ago, and is now a resident of Sunshine Lodge, where she says you couldn’t ask for a kinder group of people. Her top Christmas wish for everybody is to see them content.
    “Just to see people happy. Enjoying each other and family.”

Dragons take Oilers in overtime



Sarah Devereaux

The Drumheller Dragons were in Okotoks Thursday night and took a 5-4 overtime win against the Oilers.
The Oilers scored three straight goals less than five minutes into the game before the Dragons' Hunter Mills scored a power play goal. The Oilers scored another goal to make the score at the end of the first 4-1 Oilers. The Dragons scored two back-to-back goals in the second period and another in the fourth to tie the game at four a piece. Mitchell Cook scored the overtime goal giving the Dragons the win.
The Dragons now travel home to face the Camrose Kodiaks Friday night. Game time is 7:30 p.m. at Memorial Arena.


Subcategories

The Drumheller Mail encourages commenting on our stories but due to our harassment policy we must remove any comments that are offensive, or don’t meet the guidelines of our commenting policy.