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Last updateSat, 27 Apr 2024 1pm

Community assesses damage from storm



    Drumheller and the surrounding area were hit by a destructive hailstorm Saturday, July 19.
    Developing in the Rocky Mountains, and heading Eastward throughout the evening, the summer storm that blew through Drumheller brought alarming amounts of damage to the area due to a large volume of hail, intermingled with rain and high wind speeds.    
    Bill McMurtry is a meteorologist with Environment Canada and oversees Alberta’s weather patterns for the summer months.
    “It’s fairly typical, what we’re seeing this time of year. We’re right in the summer’s severe weather season right now,” explains McMurtry.
    Around eight-thirty p.m., as the storm began to approach, Drumheller’s temperature dropped from 22 degrees to 13 degrees within half an hour. Wind speeds began to peak to almost 90 km/h while chunks of varying size hail began to mix into the oncoming downpour.
    The storm hit Drumheller full throttle and left everything in its path in disarray.  Dinosaur Golf and Country Club seemed to be caught in the middle of the destruction. 
                Within a twenty minute time frame, there were five full grown trees uprooted due to strong wind gusts and large branches were whipped around the golf course’s front nine. Hail damage on the greens and the clubhouse were discovered after the storm’s passing. The golf course has lost two days worth of revenue in order to clean up the mess and hoped to reopen Tuesday, July 22.
    As some Drumheller businesses struggled to open Monday morning, farmers in the area faced a more permanent loss of their own. Cropland ended up seeing the brute end of the storm, as some farmers ended up losing almost 100%  of their yield to hail damage.
    Joe Rowbottom has been farming in the Drumheller area for twenty years and has experience handling situations like weather damage.
    “I’d say that a third of our acres are a 100 per cent write off. But it was getting to the point that we needed rain fairly badly, and we got moisture, maybe not the preferred form, but we did get it, and now we get some relief for the cow feed, since we’re going to try and bail a bunch of it,” says Rowbottom. “It’s still disappointing because we had a really nice crop coming and we put a lot of effort into it to get it that way. I mean, your goal as a farmer is to harvest the crop, not collect hail insurance.”
    The storm that ripped through the area seemed to have limitless destruction. Alan Kendrick, director of infrastructure for the town, oversaw the aftermath of the storm’s blows.
    “I don’t think we have a complete list of all the damage, but from what I’ve seen it’s been mostly trees,” explains Kendrick, “my understanding is that many residents have experienced cracked siding, shingle damage, and broken windows.”


Town hires Corporate Services Director, Economic Development Officer

The Town of Drumheller has made some key hires recently,  filling out its staff.
    The Town announced this week that it has hired Barbara Miller as Director of Corporate Services.
    “Barbara’s years of experience will be a valuable addition to our organization,” said Town of Drumheller CAO Ray Romanetz.
    She brings with her a certified accountant designation and considerable experience. She has a varied skill set that includes budgeting, planning, forecasting and control experience in the public sector.
    Miller will be starting on August 5.
    The Town also announced that Cody Glydon will fill the role of Economic Development Officer.
    He has been in the valley for about two and a half years working as a broadcaster. Originally from Windthorst, Saskatchewan, he studied broadcasting at Western Academy Broadcasting Academy and began his career in Dauphin, Manitoba.
    His background as a communications professional will help him immensely in his new role. Glydon started on July 21.
 

Storm rips through valley

Sunday morning Drumheller residents were getting a better look at the damage caused by Saturday night’s thunderstorm.

A violent storm ripped through the valley shortly before 9 p.m. Saturday night, and within the hour calm was restored. Almost immediately social media buzzed with incredible photos and videos of the storm rolling in, and the destruction it left in its wake.

 Trees were uprooted, siding and roofs were torn apart and gardens flattened. There were also reports of power outages in different areas of the valley.

One of the most dramatic images from the storm is the toppled dinosaur at the Fossil World Discovery Centre.

Due to the damage, Dinosaur Trail Golf and Country Club posted on its Facebook site that it would be closed on Sunday, July 20 to allow the turf to heal and to clean up. It also put a call out to members, if they had the time to spare, to come out and help with the clean up effort.

The Encana Science Camps at the Royal Tyrrell Museum also fell victim to the storm and will have to cancel its programs this week.   Camp director Morgan Syvertsen posted that the tipi camp was destroyed by the weather event.


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