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Classic cars gather for annual Three Hills show

    Car lovers are heading for the hills.
    Three Hills, Western Canada’s cruise capital, is gearing up to host their Annual Cruise Weekend starting on May 31.
    The show has grown over 30 years.  Historically, the cruise has had just the Show and Shines and Cruise, but things took on a new look last year with the addition of drag racing, a poker rally, live music, and more.
    Cruise into A&W Friday evening for the Meet and Greet and then cruise through town and north on Highway 21 to Trochu and back.
    Saturday includes breakfasts, swap meet, show and shine, motorcycle show, FMX motorcycle jumping, live music, beef on a bun and cruise cabaret featuring “The Chevelles”.
    Sunday kicks off with another pancake breakfast, poker rally and drag racing goes all afternoon at the Three Hills Airport.
    A children’s play centre will operate at the airport from 7:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Shuttle service from Three Hills to the airport operates from 7:30 am - 6:00 pm with pick-up at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church parking lot (Main Street) and at Get ‘n Go/Super 8 parking lot at the intersection of Highways 21 and 583.
    Bring your camera, bring your friends, it’s going to be a great weekend.


Rosebud’s summer musical set for stage

    The opening number of Rosebud Theatre’s summer musical roars out of the gate with a slap bass and a fiddle solo. The fact that it’s just a rehearsal makes no difference; the Cotton Patch Gospel band plays with skill and exuberance.
    “The music just grabs you right off the first song and tears you right out of your seat,” says Rosebud Theatre’s resident Music Director Bill Hamm. “It pulls you into the story as well as any starter of a show I’ve ever seen. By the time that first song is over, audiences don’t want to be anywhere else but in that theatre.” Hamm knows this from personal experience. This is the third time the musical has been produced in Rosebud (the first was in 1991 and the second in 1998) and Hamm was in the band for both productions.
    Cotton Patch Gospel is often described as Harry Chapin’s bluegrass musical. Chapin, one of the most influential popular songwriters of the twentieth century, is best known for Cat’s in the Cradle, Taxi, and All My Life’s a Circle. He was inspired by Tom Key’s one-man play based on the Cotton Patch Translations of the Bible by Clarence Jordan, and together with Russell Treyz, they wrote the play as we know it today.
     The play is Jesus’ life set in modern-day Georgia. In the adaptation, Jesus is born in Gainesville and is lynched just outside of Atlanta by religious and political extremists. The story is vividly brought to life with the help of the Cotton Patch band and such songs as “Somethin’s Brewin’ in Gainesville,” “Goin’ to Atlanta,” and the soulful “Jubilation.”
    Cotton Patch Gospel seemed like the perfect play for Rosebud Theatre’s audience back in 1991; however there was just one problem: Rosebud didn’t have a bluegrass band.
    “We had to see if we had the horses to do it. We were all really green at this style of music,” says Hamm.
    But they did it. They formed a bluegrass band called The Rosebud River Valley Boys from actors, rock ‘n’ roll, and classical musicians that lived beyond the production of Cotton Patch Gospel. They still get together to gig today.
    This summer, to celebrate the theatre’s 30th Anniversary Season, Cotton Patch Gospel will once again grace the Rosebud Opera House stage—but with a twist. “This time, Morris had a vision to do it focusing on women telling the story,” Hamm explains. “You’ve got groups like the Dixie Chicks or the Good Lovelies doing a style of music with power and beautiful harmonies. We’ve got three very talented women in the Cotton Patch cast for this production. Amy Burks, Alixandra Cowman and Lauren De Graaf are all talented musicians, singers and actors.”
    Hamm and resident company member Nathan Schmidt, reprise their roles on guitar and fiddle respectively. Joel Stephanson plucks the stand-up acoustic bass and talented newcomer Ryan Schroeder demonstrates his mastery of the banjo.
    “The play works on so many levels,” says Hamm. “The music is so entertaining and it is really well knitted to the text. The story itself is an old one, and needs to be told in a way that causes us to pay attention.” He continues, “It is also a way of expressing our faith, with integrity, in a show that would work on any stage. It’s a well-paced, well-written piece of theatre that is filled with life.
    “This is one of the best shows we’ve ever done here,” he sums up. “It’s well-paced. It has a full gamut of emotional expression. It is sad, poignant, funny, pensive; really a whole human experience. This is going to be something special – something the whole family can enjoy together.”
    Cotton Patch Gospel runs May 31 - August 24, 2013 with matinee performances on Wednesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays and evening performances Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays.

Town targets mosquitoes

    Public Works staff have been targeting one of summer’s most annoying pests.
    Staff have been hard at work nipping  mosquitoes in the bud. Over the past three weeks, standing water in the area has been monitored and sprayed to help keep outdoors tolerable.
    “We finished the first application on the ground and in the air,” said Daryl McConkey, a licensed applicator with the Town.
    To control the mosquito population McConkey monitors any standing water for mosquito larva and, if found, sprays a product that targets the larval stage.
    “You go out and check some water, for example, a roadside ditch, and if there is larva, you spray it with a backpack sprayer. It’s a granular product that eliminates larva,” said McConkey. “We use Alpine Helicopters and go out and cover farmers’ fields and several areas in the Valley. The water in there we can’t get to, especially now, because seeding is going on.”
    Mosquitoes require standing water to reproduce and this spring provided them with more than recent years.
    “I’ve been here 27 years and it was the most I’ve ever seen,” said McConkey. “We’re just hoping we don’t get any more rain. That will fill up some new spots and the cycle will start all over again.”
    If all goes well, McConkey hopes the Town’s stockpile of mosquito neutralizer will last for the remainder of the summer. Further applications depend on moisture and continued monitoring for mosquito larva.
    “We have enough product for one more application. We should be good for this year, unless we get a monsoon. It’s going to depend on the amount of moisture in the next month,” said McConkey. “Right now, there shouldn’t be any larva in any water. If they haven’t hatched by now, they’re not there.”


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