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Last updateSun, 06 Oct 2024 1pm

Carbon bareback rider heading to Canadian finals

Street Dance CFR

    Professional Rodeo bareback riding competitor Cole Goodine, 25, of Carbon will be competing in the Canadian Finals Rodeo at Edmonton Rexall Place November 11 to the 15.
    This is his second year after turning professional and second in a row making the CFR, making it last year in his rookie season.
    “I am just excited to ride with my heroes,” he tells The Mail.
    Goodine has been around rodeo his whole life and began competing at 15. He began riding bareback when he was 17.
    It turned out to be a good season for Goodine.
    “It was a really rough year to start out. Things started  to pick up and I began to draw better,” said Goodine. “I won seven of them. They were the smaller rodeos, but I managed to win or place in enough of them, I qualified.”

    This is his second trip to the finals and he feels more prepared, and more relaxed.
    “Last year was very nerve racking. I felt like I had a lot of pressure to prove that I deserved to be there, in my rookie year,” said Goodine. “I think this year will be better, a little less pressure and a lot more fun.
  Cole is also the Kenton Randal Bareback Riding Series Champion for 2015, which consists of about 30 high profile rodeos during the season throughout Alberta, British Columbia and Saskatchewan.
     In his day job, Cole works in Linden for Lost Creek Welding and Fabrication as a Journeyman Welder. His employer supports his rodeo career. Mike Stapley at Lost Creek is his personal sponsor and helps him with travel expenses throughout the summer, along with keeping him employed.
  Cole is also grateful to  Fountain Tire in Drumheller for their support, and MJ Byrtus a Website Development Company out of Sylvan Lake who helped out with equipment costs.
              


DVSS students earn their way to WE Day in Calgary

WE Day for DVSS pic

Students from Drumheller Valley Secondary School (DVSS) headed to the Saddledome in Calgary for WE Day on Tuesday, October 27.
    WE Day is a huge media event launching a year of change in the world.  Students do not pay for a ticket to attend WE Day but earn their way through doing at least one international and one local project, humanitarian or service in the world.  
    WE Day is the brain child of the Kielburger brothers who founded “Save the Children.”  
    In order to go to this event, the 30 DVSS students raised money for the Morgan Jayne Project, helped with the school’s annual seniors dinner and helped to launch anti bullying initiatives throughout the year.
    DVSS participant Camille Mendoza said that, “WE Day motivated me to want to try to make a positive impact on the world.’
    The DVSS Friends of Rachel (FOR) club found the day to be very exciting and challenging with extremely motivating speakers including Olympic medalist Silken Laumann, author Joseph Boyden, actor Henry Winkler, actress Marlee Matlin and many more. The speakers inspired and challenged the students to “be the change they wish to see in the world.”
    FOR club president Savanna Richardson had this to say about her experience.  “WE Day was a very moving and powerful experience that deeply impacted everyone.”
    DVSS participant Madison Lang attended for the first time and said she “found WE Day to be an inspiring experience.”

Science fiction feature wraps up in valley

Filmingsmall

    The majestic badlands of the Drumheller valley will be once again prominent in a feature film.
    Last week a crew was at Picture Canyon, near East Coulee filming a science fiction film called the Edict, by filmmaker Benjamin Ross Hayden.
     In August of this year, The Mail brought readers the story of Hayden. The young filmmaker was the recipient of the Telefilm Mirco Budget Program, in the Aboriginal component  category. He is also working with the Adam Beach Film Institute.  
    He wrapped up filming in the area last Friday.  
    “I want to create art forms that have a lasting legacy. For the last three or four years I have been waiting for a feature film opportunity and this has gone off better than I expected,” Hayden told The Mail.
     He  explains The Edict is a Canadian science fiction adventure about life in the far future with  nomadic outsiders roaming the land searching for home. The hunter is sent to find a home for the people. On this journey, they find the ancient human will to survive.
    As a filmmaker, he has brought this vision from the blank page to the set where he is creating these scenes. At this point he stresses the importance of collaboration.
    “When you are on set, the most creative you can be is when you are working with so many like-minded creative professionals. That is where having a plan is only the starting point for telling a story,” said Hayden.
    He says the landscape plays an important role in the story telling.
    “Before stepping in we were looking at how the landscape could take form. What we have found is that we are making the characters very small, moving through the valley, which makes the area seem very vast. We actually don’t know the relative size of the hoodoos at any given point, so making the characters seem like they are moving through a colossal setting expands the scope of the film.”
    Shooting is slated for about four weeks and they are continuing to film in Calgary in forested areas.
    The Micro Budget Production supports new Canadian talent, supporting the production and promotions of their first feature length film. It is for projects with a budget up to $250,000, and productions can receive up to $120,000 in financing through the program. The Valley Below, shot in Drumheller by Kyle Thomas, was a recipient of this program.


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