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Cosgrave heading to Ponoka's Dash for Cash*

Cosgrave photo courtesy Shellie Scott Photography

Hand Hills chuckwagon driver Colt Cosgrave is set to head off to the 78th Annual Ponoka Stampede.
    The chuckwagon championship runs June 26 to July 1 at the Ponoka Stampede, where the top eight chuckwagons qualifying after the first four days of racing move on to the semi-final round, and the top four times from the semi-final round compete in the Tommy Dorchester $50,000 Winner-Take-All Championship final heat to try and win the Ponoka Stampede Championship.
    Cosgrave was scheduled to race during Guy Weadick Days in High River, but the event was postponed from June 19 - 22 to July 17 - 20.
    Before that, Cosgrave was competing in Grande Prairie, where he figures he came out 13th.
    After that, he was off to Saskatoon, where he had a bit of a tough time.
    “Just took a barrel. I think we were bottom ten there - nothing went right,” he said.
    That race aside, Cosgrave, who has been racing chuckwagons professionally for 18 years now, said the season is shaping up, including the latest equine additions to the team.
    “(It) Looks good. There are a lot of new horses that are really coming around, so we should do all right," he said.
    In the last three years, Cosgrave estimates they’ve brought in 30 new head, including a bunch of new horses this year.
    After the Ponoka Stampede, it’s off to the “Greatest Outdoor Show on Earth” to race in the GMC Rangeland Derby at the Calgary Stampede, July 4 to 13, where 36 chuckwagon drivers qualified to race this year.
    During the 2013 Rangeland Derby, Cosgrave placed in the top ten three times.
    High River Autoplex and RV purchased the Cosgrave canvas for the Calgary Stampede for $100,000, and also won the bid for the Ponoka Stampede for $18,000.
    “I know a lot of guys have a different one every show,” said Cosgrave, “but he’s been with me for 13 years now.”
    Cosgrave said other than the ten days spent at the Calgary Stampede, he’ll be racing in a different show every week. He said it’s about ten years now that he’s competed at the Calgary Stampede.


Wheatland East School breaks ground*



    After literally years of waiting the Wheatland East School broke ground at its site Monday afternoon.
    Students from Hussar, Standard, Gleichen and Rockyford were at the site near the intersection of highways 840 and 561 for an activity day to mark the end of the school year and to witness a groundbreaking ceremony. It was attended by the Superintendent of Golden Hills, Bevan Daverne, board chair David Price, staff, teachers, representation from Wheatland County and MLA Dr. Neil Brown.
    “Because of the aging infrastructure in the surrounding communities it was deemed necessary to replace those schools rather than do upgrades, so we are going to have a first class facility here, from Kindergarten all the way up to Grade 12,” Brown told The Mail.
    A solution to the Wheatland East school situation has been in the works for years.  Getting to this point was predicated by extensive meaningful consultation with the communities and parents, as well as working through the proper processes with the county to secure the parcel of lands.
    “We are very pleased to have students come out here and be part of this day, and it is a credit to the four communities working together and having this come forward, that is what has made a difference,” said Price.
    The school itself is designed for a core capacity of 450 students, and can be expanded to accommodate more.
    “We have completed the design and have gone through quite a process,” said Superintendent Daverne. “Our design is ready to go and we are in the process of completing the tendering process and beginning work,” he said.
    The school is slated to open to students in the fall of 2016.
With bricks and mortar taking shape, the plans turn to delivery.
    “We are combining four schools into one school and the staff component we are still working on,” said Daverne. “From a programming perspective we are looking at some pretty innovative and exciting plans. We have a couple announcements on dual credits with a couple of colleges and more in the works, but we are really looking to have a community school that fits and is responsive to local needs.
    “We are in the middle of agricultural Alberta and we are looking to have partnership with agricultural programming, we are looking at opportunities with energy programming… as well as expanding what we have been offering for other options.”
     He sees a great advantage to rural schools.
    “When you look around our nation today and our province, a lot of our leaders come from rural schools. The advantages they have had in the smaller school settings for confidence and leadership abilities, we see that paying dividends in our world today, and our local parents have told us we want to see a local and rural school, and for among many reasons, that is one of them,” said Daverne.
    He is excited for the future.
    “We know we want to have great programming and be responsive to parents, that is how we have ended up with this location and we want to the best we can for kids,” he said. “This is going to be a state of the art facility. A lot of planning has gone into it and with the programming enhancements that are going with it, and I can’t wait. 2016 is going to be awesome.”

Athletes take on triathlon

Cam Bertch races to the finish of the solo sprint event at the Drumheller DinoFest triathlon. The event grew again this year with racers taking on both sprint and Olympic distances as individuals or as teams.

Athletes swam, rode and ran their way to the bitter end, and in doing so earned the title triathlete.
    The Drumheller DinoFest triathlon on Saturday morning, June 14, saw competitors take on the grueling course in both the sprint and Olympic distances, and also in solo and team events.    
    Organizer Morgan Syvertsen said this year they saw more participants and more volunteers, which made it a smooth event.
    In the solo Olympic distance Mike Cochrane of Cochrane took the win with a time of 2:41:01. In the team event, Carbon racers Alyssa, Joshua and Kari Church came out on top with a time of 2:50:03.
    For the sprint distance, Kacey Blanchette of Drumheller won the solo event with a time of 1:29:29. Rob Kloepfer and Chris Capobianco won the team event with a time of 1:25:50.
    This was the third Drumheller triathlon, and each year the numbers keep growing with participants from within and outside Drumheller.  Organizers are confident the event will continue to grow.


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