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Shoot for the STARS

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Cowboys of all ages came out to the Prairie Mountain Livestock Arena near Rumsey to compete in a mounted shooting event on Saturday, September 4 and Sunday, September 5 to support STARS air ambulance.
This is the third Prairie Mountain STARS fundraiser, with the previous two fundraisers raising more than $4,200 for STARS.
“We are doing three stages of mounted shooting, and three STARS fun classes through the weekend,” says event organizer Myrna Anderson.
This year the goal was to raise $5,000 and prior to the weekend’s festivities the group had raised nearly half the amount through donations from local businesses, and $1,000 raised from a virtual auction. All entry fees from the weekend’s competitors were also donated towards the fundraiser.
Anderson says the fundraiser began after her husband Blair, who is also a mounted shooting competitor, had a horse riding accident in 2009, in a remote location which left him with a broken back.
He was transported to hospital by STARS air ambulance, and Anderson says were it not for STARS’ quick response time her husband would have been left paralyzed from the accident.
Blair Anderson was one of the riders who competed in the weekend competition.

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Although the turnout for the fundraiser was lower than in previous years, Myrna said she was still happy with the number of competitors and spectators who turned out, despite COVID-19 restrictions.
The competition featured riders of all ages, the youngest being only three years old, and the oldest 77-the riders under 18 were not permitted to shoot the blank rounds at the balloon targets due to mounted shooting competition rules and regulations.
Rather than cash prizes, riders competed for the Mens and Womens Overall Champion buckles.

 

Update: The Prairie Mountain STARS fundraiser raised a total of $5,339.50 for STARS air ambulance according to event organizer Myrna Anderson.


New Wheatland Wind project moves forward

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A public hearing was held by Wheatland County council on Tuesday, August 24 regarding the redesignation of some 471 acres of land for a new wind energy project, known as the Wheatland Wind project, which will be located approximately 20 to 30 kilometres southeast of the Town of Drumheller.
The project received approval from the Alberta Utilities Commission in September 2018, and Wheatland County council gave first reading to the proposed land redesignation during the July 13 regular council meeting.
“The approvals align with statutory policies and, in general, applications like this tend to be in the public interest, contributing to the electrical grid in a sustainable and environmentally responsible manner is a positive,” said Wheatland County senior planner Stefan Kunz during the public hearing. “It increases energy availability to all the province, and locally there will be tax revenue and job creation benefits to Wheatland County as well.”
A total of three written submissions from two area landowners were received ahead of the public hearing, all opposing the proposed wind project.
One submission, from an area landowner, cited concerns over the cost effectiveness of the wind project, as well as environmental and noise impacts the turbines will have on the area.
The second submission came from an oil and gas company with mineral and surface leases within the project boundary, which also cited noise levels as a concern, as well as the impact the project will have on future development for the company.
Division 7 Councillor Ben Armstrong noted the only comments he has received from area landowners in his division, where the project will be located, is “when it’s going to happen.”
Construction is anticipated to begin mid-October this year, though it will break for winter mid-November; the facility is expected to be operational by the end of 2022.
During the construction phase it is estimated the project will create some 200 jobs, with between five and 15 full-time jobs permanently created once operational, including an on-site facility manager.
Council carried second and third reading unanimously.

Dinosaur Valley Studios part of new Orca display at Royal B.C. Museum

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A new exhibit at the Royal British Columbia Museum called Orcas: Our shared Future, opened on April 16, and a local shop tucked away in the community of East Coulee played a large role in bringing the exhibition to life.
Dinosaur Valley Studios has carved out a unique niche, and for the Royal British Columbia Museum, this meant creating the armature for an Orca skeleton on display.
“This is the first major exhibit we have done with them,” said the president of Dinosaur Valley Studios, Frank Hadfield. “We are in some talks for future projects as well.”
Fabricator Bronson Kozdas said every project is different but each have similar goals.
“The main goal is to support the bones physically and be as invisible as possible. If we do our job right, you don’t really notice what we did,” said Kozdas.
He adds the bones have to be removable for research, and minimally impacted to preserve their integrity. The Orca is suspended in the exhibit and posed as if it were chasing salmon upwards out of the water.
This project was a bright spot for a small local business in the age of COVID. While much of their work is shipped nationally and internationally, the whole world is experiencing a slowdown.
“We have a number of projects that are waiting to go. We have a potential project in Sparwood BC, and another large project in Winnipeg, and one in Long Island, New York, and these are all held up due to the travel restrictions. But we are just doing what we can remotely until we get back in the swing of things. A lot of our stuff is not virtual, we have to have the real stuff,” said Hadfield.
Part of their success is being adaptable. The business started in about 2006, focusing on skeletal reconstructions, but that has since morphed into other facets. This includes film and prop work, corporate work, such as their paleo panels.
They even have a couple of local projects. One is at the Splash Park with the Drumheller Rotary Club. They are creating a cartoon-like dinosaur figure that will also function as a donation box. They are also creating a model of Eugene, the protagonist in the locally produced children’s books “Have You Seen My Human? A Badlands DinoStory.”
“Because we work globally, I think we have been able to live through this,” he said. “I think what separates us is we are a little more diverse in what we do.”
Currently, they are working on building a support system for a gigantic fin whale for an upcoming project for a village called Middle Arm in Newfoundland.
“It is actually going to be part of a tourism initiative, we have already done two whales there, and this will be the third in the series,” said Hadfield.
So far, they have the skull and flippers at the shop, and the rest of the skeleton is expected over the summer so they can complete the built. In the end, it will be over 60 feet long. The skeleton will be mounted and assembled in Drumheller and then disassembled to be shipped.
“The logistics of this build around will be much different than the other because the Orca is only about 20 feet,” said Hadfield
In the meantime, Dinosaur Valley Studios will keep plugging along until restrictions are lessened.
“I think it is going to be a very busy summer once the restrictions are off, I think it is going to open the floodgates. We are trying to get prepared as well,” he said.


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