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Second annual Gardening Show filling up fast

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Delia Community Hall will be the hub of growth and spring fever as the Second Annual Gardening Workshop and Trade Show will happen on Saturday, April 14 from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Doors will open at 8:00 a.m. and registration is mandatory in order to participate.
“I think if people are interested at all in gardening, shelterbelts, and building up their soils it is definitely worth attending,” said Dara Kudras, Assistant Agricultural Fieldman of Starland County. “You also get a great lunch and there is going to be a ton of door prizes including live plants and trees and that sort of thing.”
Last year’s trade show was held in Munson and was considered a hit amongst the 90 people that attended.
Connie Tremblay of White Star Permaculture will be speaking on the various benefits of permaculture. Permaculture is the development of agricultural ecosystems intended to be sustainable and self-sufficient.
“She will be speaking on edible forage, the importance of soil and pollinators in our garden as well,” said Kudras.
Megan Evans of the Alberta Native Bee Council will be speaking on native pollinators in the garden and focusing on bumblebees.
A Treetime representative will be on site as well to discuss how to build a proper shelter belt and to talk about the different plant species the company carries.
“So after all of our speakers are done, we go to our hands-on activities for the afternoon and Connie Tremblay will be leading the microbe energize transplant so we will be transplanting tomatoes using microbe energized soil which she is bringing from home,” said Kudras.

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The second workshop will have participants creating bumblebee houses which will be lead by the Alberta Native Bee Council. The maximum number of participants will be capped at 60 and each one must bring their own drill.
The Alberta Native Bee Council could potentially be receiving funds to provide these bee boxes across the province.
“If they get approved we will be some of the first to do these bee boxes,” said Kudras.
Kudras explained that each participant will come home with at least one transplanted tomato and a bee box if they are of the first 60 people to sign up.
For tradeshow booths, attendees can expect to see Rosebud Valley Honey, P & J Home and Yard Improvements, Treetime, Countryside Greenhouses, White Star Permaculture, Dani Dooley, Sandi Checkel of Checkel Greenhouses and Cattlemunns Ranching.
Anyone interested in this event can call Kudras at the Starland County office at 403-772-3793 to preregister.


Cooper seeks UCP nomination in Olds-Disdbury-Three-Hills

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MLA for Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills Nathan Cooper has officially announced he will be seeking the nomination of the United Conservative Party to run in the next provincial election.
The political landscape has changed much since the last provincial election. The Wild Rose Party and the Conservative Party have united, and each Constituency Association will be holding a nomination to select candidates for the new party.
“I really feel blessed to have such a broad, deep, and motivated team supporting both my candidacy and my family,” said Cooper. “This is exactly what Alberta needs going into next year’s general election.”
“Defeating the NDP is vital for the future of our communities and our province. This isn’t just about the next election. It’s about the next 30 years. It’s about rebuilding Alberta’s foundations for our children, and our children’s children.”
In making his bid, he has received support from many community leaders including former MLA and Ethics Commissioner Bob Clark, former MLA Connie Ostermann and mayors, and councillors throughout the riding.
I am very pleased with all the people who came from all across the constituency to the launch (April 5),” he said. “Politics is really a team sport and last night was as much about a team as it was about me.”
He says one thing that excites him about the upcoming race is that the constituency boundaries are new.
“The new constituency runs right up to the Drumheller city limits and includes all of Rosebud, Hussar, Rockyford, and Standard. So, I am really looking forward to getting to know constituents in that new region of the constituency as well.”
He says at this point, a nomination process has not been set. He explains the party is working on finalizing the nomination rules. The Party has opened up nominations in Innisfail-Sylvan Lake where former MLA Don MacIntyre resigned and in Fort McMurray-Conklin, Brian Jean’s former riding.
“From what I understand there is a set of rules that will be used for those two nominations. As to whether those will be the set of nomination rules that are applied across the board for the other 87 constituencies when it comes to the 2019 election, I don’t know,” he said.
“It is really important from my perspective that we get out there now and really start meeting folks, engaging our membership, and trying to grow our membership even larger across the constituency.”
He believes it is important that the nomination process is fair.
“Jason Kenney made that commitment during his leadership race that every nomination race would be open and a democratic process would take place, I see no evidence to the contrary and I know he remains committed to that process.”
While he does not know when the nomination process will begin, he feels it is important that constituents know where he stands.
“I think it is important, for myself, that we are ready, that we’ve engaged members and that the work is done over the next number of months. I have no idea when the nomination may or may not open, but I think letting folk know this is my intention is a fair and reasonable thing to do.”

Fossils of Mongolia topic of this week’s Speaker Series

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The April 12 session of the 2018 Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology’s Speaker Series is a presentation by Dr. Bolortsetseg Minjin, Institute for the Study of Mongolian Dinosaurs, entitled, “The Past, Present, and Future of Mongolian Paleontology.”
Dinosaurs were first discovered in Mongolia in the early 20th Century by expeditions led by Roy Chapman Andrews of the American Museum of Natural History. This set off a great rush to find Asian dinosaurs, and multiple international expeditions discovered a treasure-trove of new dinosaur sites. Despite the long history of fossil collecting in Mongolia, much of the Mongolian public, including children, are largely unaware of these expeditions and their discoveries.
Due to the lack of awareness of these discoveries, the prevalence of illegal fossil poaching rose with the support and funding of international collectors. The trade in Mongolian fossils culminated with Heritage Auction’s house in NYC attempting to sell a stolen skeleton of Tyrannosaurus bataar in 2012, with a starting bid of $850,000.
In this talk, Dr. Minjin will discuss the rise of fossil poaching in Mongolia, the laws that protect these fossils, and evidence for a vast network of fossil smugglers and profiteers. She will detail efforts to halt fossil poaching, educate the public about palaeontology, and bring economic benefit to Mongolia through fossil conservation.
The Royal Tyrrell Museum’s Speaker Series talks are free and open to the public. The series is held every Thursday until April 26 at 11:00 a.m. in the Museum auditorium. Speaker Series talks are also available on the Museum’s YouTube channel: youtube.com/c/RoyalTyrrellMuseumofPalaeontology.


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