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Motorcycle tinkering a family affair

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 A family that tinkers together stays together. And eventually will hit the road together on a small collection of motorcycles.

The Mail caught up with 15-year-old Daniel Law in his garage tinkering with his 1971 Honda Trail bike. The bike was his great uncle’s and sat at his farm for years. He brought it home and undertook a restoration. He learned that this bike may have sparked the love of motorcycles in his family.

“This was the exact same bike my Dad learned to ride on, down in McGrath,” explains Daniel. 

Today the family has five bikes ready to hit the road, and Daniel has one more, partially in a box in the garage and partially in his bedroom.             

Growing up, there was always a bike around the home. His father has a Kawasaki Voyager touring bike and the kids all took their turn riding around with father Brian and mother Cindy. In fact, as his older sister Sarah and brother Devin came of age, they all began riding.

It is one thing to have a bunch of cool bikes, it’s another to keep them roadworthy, and that’s where the tinkering comes in.

His father, always handy, has restored an antique 1924 International Farm truck and Daniel explains that a Princess Auto industrial motor became the basis of a project. Working from a template they also built a go kart from scratch. 

A few years after they moved to the valley, he acquired the Honda trail bike he has restored. He has also busted his knuckles working on the rest of the family bikes.

“The newest bike we have is a 93. They are all old enough and  it takes a bit a work to keep them going, but we take good care of them the best we can,” he said.

A 1969 Yamaha CT 175 two stroke trail bike is his next project. 

“It’s a work in progress. I was going to restore it, but now I think I’ll just turn it into a dirt bike,” said Daniel. 

Daniel tells The Mail, he turns 16 next  April and then he will be licensed to drive. He, along with his mother and father, are planning  a trip in the Kananaskis, where he will ride his Honda 650 touring bike. His little brother Ben, 11, will have the choice of three bikes to ride along with until he catches the spark.


Drumheller’s architectural history recorded in blog

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In a piece for the CBC’s feature series Calgary at a Crossroads published this week, author Aritha Van Herk compared the identity of her city to the character of some of the world’s best known and, often, overblown metropolises. She wrote, “London resides in its stately imperialism, New York swaggers on size. We’re neither, not nearly as staged or as venerable. Our fantasies are local, delicate in their unfolding. We think of neighbourhoods and dynasties smaller than cultural megaliths or empires.”

The protagonists in our stories are small compared to those heroes of Europe’s grand histories. The prairies are founded by the struggling merchant with keen business savvy, sweat-browed ranchers and farmers living a life of subsistence, settlers stumbling ass-backwards onto producing land. Drumheller is not founded as a result of some great battle for territory eventually named for the winning king – Drumheller was named after a simple coin toss between two simple men. 

Our European prairie narratives are young and still developing, most no more distant than a paltry one hundred years – our beginnings are often not much older than our first buildings. Our history and the buildings it developed in are, unlike the remaining ruins of other, more ancient civilizations, still present and essential in understanding our roots, our history, and our direction.

Cataloging the history of our prairies is of the utmost importance, and this historical project is looking for assistance from the people of Drumheller in keeping and recording our all too fragile historical record.

Century 21 is continuing the work of earlier local historians in a blog on their website,Stories Behind Downtown Drumheller Buildings,which aims to keep a record of the stories and developments tied to Drumheller’s earliest buildings located in the downtown. It continues the work of local historian Michael Gaschnitz, who published a pamphlet for the Drumheller Main Street Program detailing the histories behind Drumheller’s oldest buildings.

“When I was a young kid I remember my dad and grandpa giving me a copy of this coil bound book to read with the history of all the buildings in town,” says Century 21’s Bob Sheddy. “Twenty-five years later I went searching for that book, and while reading it, I thought that it was something that deserved to be updated and put online.”

The blog uses Gaschnitz’s initial groundwork, focusing posts on individual buildings in Drumheller and relaying local stories and historical fact to put together a narrative for each building as its function and architecture changed over the years. Damaged by fire, the changing economics of the valley, evolving tastes and needs, shape the local story as it develops through the years.

Take the current Jurassic Ink building on 3rd Avenue West. The building was built in 1925 by a local miner of 35 years who built it as a grocery store with his own money. During the miner’s strike he rented it out and it became a military shop, and later a Simpson Sears order office. Later it became a dress making shop, a hot tub rental store, and a beer and wine supply shop, and then recently an insurance office, and today, a tattoo shop.

But the record is incomplete. Gaschnitz did not detail every building downtown, and the bloggers are looking for assistance from locals who know the ins and outs of local history to help finish the list before the architectural record is altered or gone for good.

“Drumheller has a rich history and we want to help preserve it,” said Century 21’s Cassandra Houston. “If you have any information or old photos to share please email them to power.realty@century21.ca or call Bob Sheddy at 403-823-2222.”

“It is easy for me to update the existing buildings that weren’t tracked,” said Sheddy.

Rosedale campground project moves forward, with a twist

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The owners of the overgrown and derelict golf course in Rosedale have met opposition after announcing plans to develop a seasonal RV park on the location, if town council approves zoning changes to the property.

First reading of the zoning change is tabled for Monday, August 22 at 4:30 pm in the council chambers. If first reading is passed, a public hearing will be held at a later date, which will be advertised for two weeks prior, before the change is brought to council again for a second reading.

RA Hamilton and Associates sent out the proposed plan last week and immediately met with negative feedback from neighbours, who the developers say may be misinformed. They were largely opposed to increased tourist and visitor traffic into their quiet community from a permanent mobile home park, even though it will be a seasonal campground. RA Hamilton received 27 letters in opposition to the project and a petition signed by a number of neighbours.

“Consensus-wise I believe they would want it to remain as a park,” said owner Norah Hamilton. “They wanted to keep it as a park, as we’ve always let people have free access to it, but we’re looking to develop it again. They said they’d prefer something seasonal, rather than something year-round.”

The organization amended the design and will have 64 lots for RV and tent camping, as opposed to the previous 87, as well as been approved for relocating the entrance to the north side of the property where traffic already flows to the Swinging Bridge. But the campground will have a unique twist that developers hope will spur greater interest and cement a connection with the community. 

RA Hamilton plans to structure the park as a multi-stake hybrid cooperative with several membership levels that would allow residents and employees to own a piece of the project in addition to receiving an ROI. Hamilton said several local tradesmen and practitioners have expressed interest in providing sweat equity into both the construction of the infrastructure and being involved in the teaching of classes on topics as various as butchering, beekeeping, hunting, bio-diesel labs, and offering certification in various professions and hobbies. Locals can purchase memberships and become financial stakeholders in the operation. 

“It’s the things we want to do in our retirement, and we’re hoping those who are also retiring in the community will go to the classes and maybe teach classes, too,” said Hamilton. 

The cooperative idea comes after opposition to a year-round mobile home park, which door-to-door conversation Hamilton and her husband had conducted in the neighbourhood showed strong opposition due to increased year-round traffic into the area. She says that would be the most obvious option for them because it is the biggest revenue generator and would not require a municipal land use designation change, but they want to do something different for the community.

“We want to enhance the community, not deteriorate the community,” said Hamilton. “When employees own the company it has a much higher probability of success. The neighbours can own a piece of this project.”

They intend to invest close to $1.75 million into the campground/tourism/educational mash up on ten acres of land in Rosedale that RA Hamilton had been sitting on for ten years.

 


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