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Last updateSat, 27 Apr 2024 1pm

Comanches landing in Drumheller this summer

 

While most visitors to the valley come on the blacktop, this summer there will be a strong contingent coming from the air.
    From August 14-17, Don and Carol Ostergard will be using the valley to host The Great Dinosaur Valley Fly-in of 2014.
    The Ostergards are members of the International Comanche Society.  This is a group of enthusiasts of the Piper Comanche. This aircraft, produced from 1958 to 1972, has garnered a great following. Don says he expects about 30 to fly-in this summer to celebrate the plane and the valley.
    The couple has owned a 1959 Comanche for 35 years and are among the 2,000-plus members of the society. They introduced the Great Dinosaur Fly-in at the Society’s Annual meeting in Seattle last summer, and received a positive response from members in Ontario and Western Canada, all the way to the US West Coast, Texas, Arizona and the mid west.
    The couple hosted a similar event in Drumheller in 1987 and had about 25 planes and 60 people. There were more planes from California than all of Canada. They also organized a fly-in to Yellowknife about four years ago.
    They are aiming for a similar turnout as the previous events and have an agenda which includes visits to the Tyrrell, a local Hutterite colony, a barbecue at the Ostergard’s and a banquet at the Badlands Community Facility. 

Don and Carol Ostergard’s 1959 Piper Comanche. They are planning a Comanche Fly-in this August and expect about 30 planes.


    “Drumheller has numerous other attractions but the logistics of unleashing great numbers of people on the area can be overwhelming,” said Don. “So we are encouraging our people to spend an extra day or two in the area to enjoy the other delights on their own.”
    He says a report will appear in the society’s magazine, which is circulated worldwide.
    He said they personally know many of the members of the club, so they expect a good turn out. 
    Don says there is good potential for air tourism in Drumheller. The Valley has a good airport and there are all the services needed such as restaurants and lodging.
    “North America is full of organizations like the International Comanche Society with members who are looking for interesting places to fly,” said Don.


Tonnes of waste and old technology carted away in Drumheller’s 2014 Spring Cleanup

Old technology got the old heave-ho during Drumheller’s  recent Spring Cleanup.
    From May 5 to May 16, Town crews collected 185 computers, 279 televisions and 90 microwaves for disposal.
    That’s 85 more computers than residents disposed of last  year, and a few units over last year’s numbers each for microwaves and televisions.
    Drumhellerites had a lot of materials stashed away at their homes - 269.47 metric tonnes of household materials were hauled away by the Town.
    The household total also includes wood and compost.
    Tammy Nygaard, Operations Manager for the Drumheller & District Solid Waste Management Assocation, said the total collected for household in Drumheller during Spring Cleanup is the equivalent of one full year’s garbage in a smaller community with a population of 270 people.
    That equates to about 135 half ton trucks.
    Nygaard notes that’s a decrease in last year’s total of 283.37 metric tonnes, or 4.9 per cent.
    There was a sharp spike in propane tanks collected over last year - 2014 saw 237 tanks collected, compared to 2013’s 159.
    This year the town also collected 404 tires, 1,020 paint cans, 89 appliances containing freon, 43 batteries, and 40 metric tonnes of metal only.
    Manhours spent by crews on the spring cleanup work out to 864 regular hours, and 107 hours in overtime.
    Nygaard identified problems with this year’s cleanup as a lack of public sorting and separating their items, those rummaging through the materials making a mess of the pre-sorted piles, and unmanageable piles of trees.

Splish Splash

 

2-year-old Ryan Engler, son of Sara and Gary Engler and 1 1/2-year-old Madelyn Bladen, daughter of Lindsey and Mike Bladen, ventured out after this week’s rain in their new shiny rubber boots to find a few puddles to splash in Wednesday afternoon. May showers have greened up the hills and lawns bringing in a late spring.

Environment Canada's online 7-day forecast for Drumheller shows a 30 per cent chance of rain both Friday and Saturday, with a high of 22 degrees. We may get a break from the rain Sunday, with a forecast of sunny and 23 degrees, but a chance of rain again Monday.


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