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Last updateFri, 17 May 2024 12pm

Rosebud Chamber Music Festival returns even bigger

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As you drive toward Rosebud, Alberta, the blacktop prairie highway rolls under your wheels as you make your way to the Rosebud Chamber Music Festival. Bugs hit your windshield as the wide-open road becomes the seam through this patchwork of canola and wheat.

In the distance, a white towering cloud dumps rain on the grateful land. You open your window, turn off the radio, and breathe in the fresh air. The anticipation of harvest is thick. 

You don’t know it, but you’re forming a lifelong memory. Time seems to disappear as you lose yourself in the echoes of First Nations People and long-forgotten sod-busting pioneers. 

Only a few corners, over a hill, and then into a green river valley which holds the hamlet of Rosebud, Alberta, home of Rosebud Centre of the Arts. 

Brighter than a thousand points of light, classical music luminaries descend on Rosebud once a year for the Rosebud Chamber Music Festival. The tsunami of excellence and anticipation emanates from our guests for the festival, a company that includes multi-Juno recipient, John Stetch, a quartet of Canada’s most thrilling young string players and acclaimed pianist, Peter Longworth.

This year, the Rosebud Chamber Music Festival is bringing a brand new outdoor performance to the spectacular Passion Play Site in Drumheller. Don’t miss this amazing week of concerts!

Schedule of Events:

•July 27, 7 pm: Reading Party! - Rosebud Mercantile

•July 29, 7:30 pm:  Jazz with Pianist, John Stetch, Rosebud Church

•July 30, 7:30 pm:  Beethoven Returns to the Badlands! - The Canadian Badlands Passion Play Site, Drumheller, Alberta

•July 31, 7:30 pm: Three Hills Arts Academy, Three Hills

•August 2, 7:30 pm: Rosebud Church


Dinny the Dinosaur will get much needed repairs

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Dinny the Dinosaur is going to be getting some much needed repairs.
Ed Palm of Palm Engineering LTD inspected the dinosaur, located at the Rotary Spray Park, on June 8 to determine if the structure was still safe for the public to be near. Palm Engineering provided a letter to council of their recommendations for the dinosaur. Within the letter, it is mentioned that the structure was built from odds and ends pieces of rebar, expanded wire mesh, stucco wire, chicken wire, and concrete mortar and that the work was done over 60 years ago. The cracks have developed overtime from shrinkage, water penetration and vibration caused by high winds.
The town of Drumheller then invited quotes to refurbish the dinosaur based on the report. Two quotes for Stage one of the repairs were received, one by Frank Hadfield of Paleoprep quoted at $42,472.50 and one by Steve Vernon quoted at $6,700.
At the Monday, July 27 Regular Council meeting, Council passed a motion to award the quote for the dinosaur rehabilitation to Steve Vernon.
Stage one of the repairs will include removing sections of the dinosaur where large cracks are present and removing sections of mortar, which appear, displaced in large scales.
It will also include welding penetrating rods from the inner rebar cage through the mesh to a layer of mesh played on the outside of the hole. Dinny will also get repairs done to his surface concrete that has been broken away or otherwise needs attention. Lastly, all the cracks will be covered with a brushed on layer of latex emulsified rubber such as Elasto Seal and then the dinosaur will be primed and painted.
“He needs some major repairs. We are basically going to put a Band-Aid on him right now,” Drumheller Mayor Terry Yemen said.
“For now, he is still engineered, he is still safe. They are going to do some patches to prevent the water from getting in, clean it up, hopefully it will look good and it should give us the time we need to make an informed decision,” Yemen told the Mail.
“Council is going to want to hear from the community. That dinosaur, it is very iconic, and it is kind of where it all started from, but there is going to have to be a very significant amount of money spent on him. Is that the direction the community wants us to go? There have been some great improvements to the world of dinosaurs now, so there is some other options there,” Yemen said.
“Perhaps that is what the community wants us to do, something new or we do have the option of repairing this one but it is going to be at a significant cost. At a later time, we are going to have to ask the community and get some direction from them of what they want to do with him,” he said. 

Drumheller players shine at Alberta 55 Plus summer games

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Strathmore was full of activity July 16-19 as over 1200 individuals gathered for a weekend of competition and friendship.

A culmination of more than two years of planning, buses arrived from the far north and south to deliver athletes to Strathmore and hundreds of cars and RV’s converged on the northern edge which housed the venues for the 15 sports and cultural activities which ranged from slo-pitch to pickleball to athletics and cribbage that were part of the Alberta 55 Plus Summer Games. 

The zone which includes Drumheller, Hanna and Three Hills were double winners. They won the Lieutenant Governor’s Cup which was awarded to the team that has shown the most improvement from previous Summer Games as well as the Spirit of Participation given to the zone team that exemplifies the true spirit of participation with personal integrity and sportsmanship both in and out of competition. 

Drumheller residents contributed to the 81 medals won by zone two. Phil Wade won a gold medal in javelin throw, setting a games record with a throw of over 29 m. Bob Friesen and Ian Jones both won a bronze medal in pickleball. This was a new sport in the games and was highly competitive. 

Other participants from Drumheller included Gus LeStrat playing crib, and Barb Barker, Mike Barker and Louise Paul in Creative Arts. Individuals from Oyen and Three Hills participated in golf, contract bridge, slo-pitch and floor curling.

More than 800 volunteers from the town of Strathmore and surrounding area made the games a tremendous event with young and old all pitching in to meet the needs of all participants. This included food, billets, people movers from site to site and rickshaw rides. 

Concerts were held on Friday and Saturday evening, including a one man play, a string  quartet, barn dance and Drew Gregory. 

On Sunday the games wrapped up with Her Honour the Honourable Lois Mitchell, CM, AOE, Lieutenant Governor of Alberta presenting the overall awards and closing comments. 

Calgary (Zone three) won the Alberta 55 Plus Zone Championship Trophy awarded to the zone team achieving the most points for the activity/sport competitions in the games with 126 medals won. 

The mission of the Alberta 55 Plus Association is to encourage individuals to remain active both physically and socially by seeking greater levels of physical, social, intellectual and creative achievement through friendly participation and competition while enhancing a sense of community spirit by bringing Albertans together. 

Zone two has recently provided two floor shuffleboard lanes to Drumheller and will be hosting a workshop to introduce this sport to Drumheller. Anyone wanting additional information on Alberta 55 Plus can contact Linda Traquair at 403-823-8460.


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