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Last updateFri, 19 Apr 2024 5pm

Orphaned owl rescued*



    Penny and Bert Dekeyser had an unexpected visitor for two days at the end of April.
    They rescued a great horned owlet, that was still too young to fly, near the family farm in Verdant Valley.    
    “My husband saw it running down the ditch and wasn’t sure what it was. Then he stopped the truck and looked, and it ran into the hedge,” said Penny Dekeyser.
    Bert went to get Penny, and a pair of leather gloves.
    They think the owl must have walked to the ditch, because it was nowhere close to a nest.
    They captured the little owl  and housed it in a dog kennel, and Penny contacted the Calgary Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre.
    “In the meantime, we fed it little chunks of steak cut in really small pieces on a tooth pick and then water through a medicine syringe,” Penny explains.
    She said the owlet would hiss and clack its beak at her when she put her hand in the kennel, but when it started getting food and water, would come right to the edge of the cage and just sit and look at her, or eat.
    Penny took the orphaned owl to the wildlife centre after two days because the centre warned her the little owl risked getting sick.
    “When I spoke to them they said it couldn’t eat steak for very long because that wasn’t their diet -  they needed to have regurgitated mice for their diet or they would get some kind of disease.”
    When Penny took the owlet to the wildlife centre, staff told her it was a healthy baby owl.
    They also let her know there was a great horned owl at the centre that would act as a surrogate parent for the orphan.
    Staff at the wildlife rehabilitation centre expect the owl to be there through the summer and into the fall, until it can fly well enough and catch mice on its own on a consistent basis.
    Penny plans on paying a visit to the little owl to see how he/she is doing.
    Penny said about thirty years ago, her family nursed a full-grown great horned owl back to health and then released it into the wild.


Life sentence for Rideout in Hanna double homicide*

Curtis Rideout was sentenced to life in prison without a hope for parole for 12 years.
    Rideout appeared in Court of Queen’s Bench on Monday, May 5. He was scheduled to go to trial for the second-degree murder of his father Bruce Rideout and the first-degree murder of Lenette Tammy Euteneier. The two were found deceased in a Hanna residence in March of 2012.
    On Monday, Curtis Rideout changed his plea to guilty for the second-degree murder of Lenette Euteneier and the manslaughter of Bruce Rideout.
 Early in the morning on March 8, 2012, Curtis Rideout in hysterics, asked a friend to call the police. When the police arrived, the story of the night before unfolds.
    According to an agreed statement of facts, the day before Curtis and his father Bruce spent the afternoon together at Bruce’s home. They attended to Euteneier’s home for dinner. They socialized and drank, and then at about 10 p.m. returned to Bruce home to continue partying.
    At about 2 a.m. matters took a turn for the worse. Bruce produced a muzzle black powder rifle and taunted Curtis. In the end Euteneier and Bruce Rideout lay dead.
     The court heard victim impact statements from both the family of Bruce Rideout and of Euteneiers. Bruce’s brother Boyd read a number of statements from the family on their behalf.
    "Because you could not back down…now two people are dead,” read the former RCMP officer.
    When Euteneier’s youngest son read his victim impact statement, he asked Rideout to look at him while delivering his statement.
    Crown prosecutor Ron Peterson and defense council Hugh Sommerville presented a joint submission of a life sentence for the second-degree murder of Lenette Euteneier, and a seven-year sentence for manslaughter of Bruce Rideout, to be served concurrently.
    Sommerville spoke on behalf of Curtis, who wished to tell the families “there was nothing more he could do but plead guilty and accept the life sentence.”
    Justice A.G. Park described Curtis’s actions as “reckless and criminal…that took way two lives.” Park recognized that while Curtis's father taunted him to pull the trigger, it was not an excuse, but did provide some reason.
    Justice Park agreed with the joint submission for a life sentence, with no parole for 12 years.

Tipple restoration underway at Atlas Coal Mine

Monday, April 28, was the official start date for restoration of the wooden tipple at the Atlas Coal Mine.
    Macdonald and Lawrence Timber Framing Ltd., a specialist carpentry company based on Vancouver Island, B.C., are undertaking the four week restoration.
    The tipple restoration is phase 1 of the three-phase multi-year restoration project at the national historic site.

Jay Russell, Interim Manager of the Atlas Coal Mine,  accepts a $1,300 donation from Barb Taillon and Jessica Sharpe of the Drumheller branch of Chinook Credit Union. The funds were raised during a branch bake sale held April 17, and during a month-long raffle of a bird house sculpture. Russell said the funds will go toward the wooden tipple restoration that started April 28 at the Atlas Coal Mine.


    “In essence, what we’re doing this time is a couple of big pieces of timber, which is support timber. They’ll replace a couple of those,” explains the Atlas Coal Mine’s Interim Manager, Jay Russell.
    “It is an historical structure, so we have to do it right, and do it smart.”
    “It’s important. It’s exciting.”
    He said there are historical artifacts that must be moved out of the way for restoration, and then returned, without any damage to them.
    Russell notes the tipple will still be open during this restoration.
    “It’s not going to impede our tour offering - the crew has been very gracious, and they’re going to let us access the tipple.”
    The tipple was open for toonie tours during the May Day Miners’ Festival, May 2-4.
    Phase 2 of the restoration could start as early as next year, depending on a variety of factors.
    There were 139 mines in the valley, so there would have been 139 tipples, said Russell.
    The Atlas Coal Mine wooden tipple is the last remaining wooden tipple standing in all of Canada.
    Russell said the structure was built in 1937.


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