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Last updateThu, 18 Apr 2024 9am

All deer and elk heads required for mandatory CWD testing

    Hunters in the Drumheller area are being asked to keep their heads this hunting season.
    Three Wildlife Management Units (WMU’s) have been added to the list of mandatory deer head submission units as part of the mandatory fall Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) surveillance program. The Drumheller area is among those listed.
    The addition of the Drumheller area comes after the disease continues to expand its distribution from eastern Alberta into the Red Deer River, Southern Saskatchewan River, and Battle River watersheds.
    “In past years its been optional, but now the disease is spreading up the Red Deer River,” said Ed Hofman, a biologist with Fish and Wildlife in Drumheller.
    The surveillance program requires hunters to submit all heads of the deer and elk they hunt to a freezer location. From there, the heads can be tested for CWD to better understand the spread of the disease and gauge the effectiveness of control programs.
    “We’re trying to control it through increased harvest in the areas where it is known the disease is present. The disease is found in the lymph nodes at the base of the brain, so that’s why we ask hunters to submit the heads. They go to a lab in Edmonton and there technicians will test to see if the disease is there,” said Hofman.
    A freezer location for deer and elk heads will be placed at 701 Railway Avenue, the UFA Cardlock. All deer and elk killed in the area must be submitted.
    Hunters who submit animals that test positive for CWD will be contacted. Therefore, it is recommended hunters wait until learning the results of the test before eating any meat from their animals.
    “There’s no medical evidence to show it's transmissible to humans. We do inform every hunter who submitted a positive deer, so they can decide if they want to eat it or not,” said Hofman.
    CWD is a type of transmissible spongiform encephalopahty caused by prions (similar to mad cow disease). The disease is characterized by weight loss, decreased interactions with other animals, listlessness, lowing of the head, blank expression, repetitive walking in set patterns, and smell of rotting meat. Excessive salivation and grinding teeth have also been observed.
    The disease is always fatal.
    This past year saw the testing of 3,195 animals. Of those heads, the overall infection rate was 1.03 per cent, but was slightly higher (1.52 per cent) in mule deer. White-tailed deer had an infection rate of 0.26 per cent. All cases were detected in the CWD risk area on the eastern Alberta border.
    The first case of CWD in Alberta was found in Acadia Valley, near the Saskatchewan border, in 2005.
    More information about CWD and requirements for hunters can be found at www.srd.alberta.ca/FishWildlife.


BCAVA supports Red Rose campaign

    November is Family Violence Prevention Month in Alberta and for years  Big Country Anti-Violence Association (BCAVA) has been participating in the Red Rose Campaign.
    This year is no exception. On Tuesday, November 6, the BCAVA, assisted by volunteers from Grace House, delivered 260 roses to area businesses  and churches to raise awareness of family violence in the community.
    There is no charge for the rose, and it is not there to solicit funds. Organizers simply ask these institutions to display the rose in a prominent place.
    The red rose is in memory of women, children and men who have died as a result of family violence. The roses were distributed in Drumheller and Drumheller communities including East Coulee, Rosedale and Wayne as well as Morrin, Munson and Delia.
    The Red Rose campaign in Drumheller has been well-supported for many years by Home-Town Realty, who provide financial support for purchasing the roses. This year, the association presented the business with a plaque in appreciation for its support

In appreciation for their years of support, the BCAVA presented Home-Town  Realty with a plaque. At the kick-off of the Red Rose Campaign are (l-r) Cathy Smoliak, Joseph Legacy, Susan Keddie, Major Dhadwal, Larry Keddie, Heather Van Dyk, Chris Hustler, Phil McCluskey, Marian Ewing,  Cindy Stelmaschuk,  Susan Niehaus, Cora Bolt, Tina Mraz  and Kristi Donison.      

 

Miner’s Memorial to be unveiled Saturday

    The blood tax of coal was 3.5 lives for every million tons of coal produced in Drumheller valley. 
    In all 207 lives were lost while working the black.  These names, gathered by a 3 year volunteer research project spearheaded by the Atlas Coal Mine Historical Society, are etched in black granite on a monument to be unveiled November 10 in downtown Drumheller. Guests for the unveiling will include sons, daughters, wives, nieces and nephews of men who perished in the Drumheller coalfield.

    The unveiling will take place at 2  p.m. on Saturday at the park next to the Civic Centre. The ceremony and reception will then move to the Badlands Community Facility at 2:10 p.m.
    The first mine fatality in Drumheller was a tourist.  In 1913, Harry Holden was visiting the booming new town and was taken on a tour of the Drumheller Mine. Not only was this tour illegal, it was deadly, as the hoistman neglected to hitch the mine car he was riding in to the cable before sending it down the slope.  According to the report, every bone in Holden’s body was broken.
    The worst decade was the 1920’s during which 77 lives were lost in the Drumheller mines.  This is the decade of biggest growth in Drumheller, when over 50 mines were operating and most of downtown Drumheller was built. These tumultuous years were characterized by “a civil war of miners” as various unions fought for the right to represent the miners and improve their working conditions.  Communism was huge, as many miners felt the companies paid little heed to their safety and working conditions.
    Some miners were also war veterans. Meredith Rowden was decorated with a DMO for extreme bravey in the Battle of Passchendaele, only to be killed in the Midland Mine when a huge slab of rock fell on him in 1928. 
    In WW2, miners were considered an essential service, and generally not allowed to leave their job.  Private George Hill Brown was serving his country in the Atlas Coal Mine. On January 4, 1944, he slipped beneath a car and was fatally injured.  His name also appears on the Drumheller cenotaph because he was in Active Service at the time of his death. Tragically, his brother Bertram was killed in the Murray Mine the year before, when a pony bolted. Ponies were used for hauling coal underground.
    The Miners’ Memorial is a granite and steel monument designed by James Smith of Ontario. The monument will be unveiled at 2 pm on November 10 in downtown Drumheller.  Everyone is welcome to attend. The park will be fully developed over the next few months, and dedicated on May 4, 2013.


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