Break-ins reported in Craik home, vehicles

By Kevin Gilby

CRAIK—According to the Craik RCMP, several vehicles and a residence were broken into during the early morning hours of April 2.

Some community members woke to the sight of two vehicles abandoned in a farmer’s field near the west edge of Craik while others had the misfortune of seeing their vehicles contents tossed about.

In total, at least six unlocked vehicles were entered with contents moved about in an apparent search for valuables. Two other vehicles where stolen only to be abandoned just outside town limits in a field.

In addition, a private residence was illegally entered and a Town of Craik storage shed was broken into.

One community member observed suspicious activity around 3 a.m. on April 2 but did not report it to the RCMP until it was later discovered that that person’s vehicle was “rummaged” sometime during the night. The victim gave the RCMP a description of two young adult males observed during the night that may have been involved in the theft(s).

RCMP Const. Ian Smith said that the RCMP cannot confirm if any or all of the break-ins and car thefts are related and an investigation remains active.

Smith advised everyone, “If you like it, lock it.”

The public is asked to contact the Craik RCMP at 306-734-5200 or Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477) if they have any information about this or any other crime.

Three area boys competing with Zone 5 bantam team in Regina

REGINA — Three local boys will represent the region this weekend as part of the Zone 5 team competing in the 2015 Sask First Bantam Tournament in Regina.

The roster includes Dean McNabb and Reegan Taylor of Davidson, as well as Dodge Long of Loreburn.

The Zone 5 team is one of eight competing in the provincial tournament, running from Thursday, April 16 to Sunday, April 19 at the Cooperators Centre in Regina.

The team, which has never played together as one unit before, will have two opportunities to practise on Thursday and Friday before the tournament begins on Friday afternoon.

Reegan Taylor, who turns 15 during the tournament, is the son of Linda Haas and Gord Taylor, and played with the Davidson Huskies last season.

He has been playing hockey for six years. Asked to describe his reaction to being named to the zone team, he said, “I was pretty pumped about it.”

Taylor said he hasn’t been on skates since the regular season ended in late March, but added he has been preparing for the tournament with weight training.

He said the short time allotted for practice will make it challenging to develop the team together, but added, “I think (it’s) more of a personal skill-based tournament . . . I guess it’s whatever you put out there.”

Dodge Long, 14, who joins Taylor on the team’s offensive roster, is the son of Rick and Jill Long of Loreburn. Last season he played for the Saskatchewan Valley Vipers, based in Martensville and Warman.

He said he has been playing hockey since the age of three but now plays on the city team, due to the lack of a local team in his age bracket.

His father, Rick, said that entails a “horrendous” volume of driving, but noted that the results have been good, adding, “It’s a great opportunity for the boys to make that zone team.”

Dodge Long also competed on the zone bantam team in the Saskatchewan Winter Games in Prince Albert in 2014. He said he has kept active since the end of the regular season, taking part in midget AAA and junior A training camps.

Also representing the local district is Dean McNabb, 15, who played for the Notre Dame Hounds last season. The son of Kim and Jeannine McNabb of Davidson, he will serve as one of the team’s two goalies.

His older brother, 24-year-old Brayden McNabb, is currently on a two-year contract with the NHL’s Los Angeles Kings.

Of the 20 players on the Zone 5 bantam roster, a total of nine played with the Saskatchewan Valley Vipers this past season, giving them a degree of familiarity with each other’s playing patterns.

Zone tryouts were held in the beginning of February with the rosters announced shortly afterward. The teams are restricted in the amount of time they can spend practising together, in an effort to provide a more even playing field for all teams.

The tournament finals will be held beginning Sunday morning.

Unlawfully allowing edible game to be wasted

A bank slip found at the scene of a dead bull moose that had been shot near Elbow was a key piece of evidence that resulted in two Saskatchewan men recently being fined a total of $6,970 in Outlook provincial court for unlawfully hunting moose near Elbow.

The two hunters, Wade Hassett of Craik and Craig Hassett of Saskatoon, pleaded guilty to four charges under the Saskatchewan Wildlife Act and Regulations for unlawfully allowing a hunting licence to be used by another person, unlawfully possessing wildlife taken in contravention of the Act and two counts of unlawfully allowing edible game to be wasted.

Craig was fined $4,760 and Wade was fined $2,210. Both men were also suspended from hunting for one year.

The charges resulted from a call to the Ministry of Environment in October 2014 after someone found a dead bull moose in the Elbow area. Conservation officers investigated the complaint and found a dead bull moose that had been shot and left. No meat, antlers, hide or other parts had been removed from the moose. Evidence found at the scene led to both men being charged.

The evidence was a bank slip from the Craik RBC branch.

Through further analysis of the bank slip, conservation officers were able to determine the source of the slip and learned, “a local man and son were involved in shooting the moose,” Gary Provencher, a conservation officer with the Ministry of Environment’s compliance education and training unit in Prince Albert, said last Wednesday.

Conservation officers found out that Wade had a Saskatchewan resident either sex moose licence for Wildlife Management Zone 23, which covers the Elbow area. Craig did not have a licence.

Provencher said the two men were out hunting near Elbow on Oct. 1, 2014, the opening day of moose hunting season.

The men fired a number of shots at a group of moose. Provencher said they were not aware they hit one moose and kept firing and knocked another moose down.

Provencher said when they found they’d hit two moose they loaded up the larger bull moose to take home and left the smaller moose in the area where they shot it, which was later discovered and reported to conservation officers.

“We rely on the public to give us a call,” Provencher said.

People are encouraged to call Saskatchewan’s Turn In Poachers (TIP) line to report violations or if they discover a carcass and to provide them with as much information as possible such as activity in the area, vehicle sightings and descriptions of people.

In the case of the dead bull moose near Elbow, Provencher said it was lucky the bank slip didn’t blow away. In other cases, officers will look for a bullet and analyze it to see if they can tell the type of gun it came from.

Provencher said conservation officers receive quite a few calls during hunting season.

“Illegal violations like this occur every year all over Saskatchewan,” he said.

In 2014 Saskatchewan Environment issued 60 either sex moose hunting licences and 40 antlerless moose hunting licences in Wildlife Management Zone 23. The season lasted four weeks, from Oct. 1 to 14 and from Nov. 1 to 14, 2014.

If anyone suspects wildlife, fisheries, forestry or environmental violations, they are asked to call a local Ministry of Environment office, Saskatchewan’s toll-free Turn In Poachers line at 1-800-667-7561 or #5555 for SaskTel subscribers or report a violation online at Saskatchewan Environment.

Book recognizes military service

The most recent edition of the Saskatchewan Command of the Royal Canadian Legion’s Military Service Book features names of 47 local veterans. Included in the book is a picture of Davidson’s Alf Stulberg who served in the Second World War.
The most recent edition of the Saskatchewan Command of the Royal Canadian Legion’s Military Service Book features names of 47 local veterans. Included in the book is a picture of Davidson’s Alf Stulberg who served in the Second World War.

DAVIDSON—The latest edition of the Saskatchewan Command of the Royal Canadian Legion’s Military Service Recognition Book features the pictures and stories of 47 Second World War Veterans from the Davidson area.

Published March 2015, a copy of this book as well as past editions is available at the Davidson branch of Palliser Regional Library and at Davidson School’s library.

The books are not for sale and are instead available to the public at educational facilities.

The service recognition books honour those who have served in the First and Second World War, Korean War as well as more recent armed conflicts and peacekeeping missions.

The Legion’s Military Service Recognition Book is an ongoing project and people may continue to submit information about their own, a relative or a friend’s service for future books. A new volume is printed each year.

With 47 local veterans recognized, there is still much more to do, said Gord McRae, president of the Davidson branch of the Royal Canadian Legion.

“I started researching and I found 512 names of men who served and were from Davidson, Girvin and Bladworth,” McRae said.

He wants to do more research on First World War veterans.

“They are just names. The Second World War, we’ve done a great job (with getting their stories) but with the First World War, we’re lacking,” McRae said.

He would like for schools to take up the challenge by having senior students pick a veteran’s name and do some research.

Anderson rink curls at Optimist U18 International Championships

Hanna Anderson skipped team Saskatchewan at the Optimist U18 International Championships in Edmonton last weekend. Pictured are (from left) skip Hanna Anderson from Hanley, third Amanda Waterfield from Saskatoon, second Madison Martin from Outlook, lead Payton Worth from Delisle and coach Natal Laycock from Saskatoon. (Contributed photo)
Hanna Anderson skipped team Saskatchewan at the Optimist U18 International Championships in Edmonton last weekend. Pictured are (from left) skip Hanna Anderson from Hanley, third Amanda Waterfield from Saskatoon, second Madison Martin from Outlook, lead Payton Worth from Delisle and coach Natal Laycock from Saskatoon.
(Contributed photo)

Team Anderson were west central regional winners on March 14 in Outlook, winning a berth at the Ramada Provincial Juvenile Women’s Championship in Nipawin March 19 to 22.

The team curled well at the competition, winning 5-4 in a tight final. Skip Hanna Anderson drew to the house for the first place finish and the honour of wearing the green jackets to represent Saskatchewan at last weekend’s Optimist U18 International Championship in Edmonton, Alberta.

They won bronze at the Saskatchewan winter games in February 2014 and moved on to lose a close game in the final at the Canada Winter Games trials in Regina in December of 2014.

Anderson had her hometown wishing Team Sask all the best as they compete for the international title.

House suffers extensive smoke damage

DAVIDSON—Firefighters from Davidson and Craik volunteer departments responded to a house fire Sunday, March 29 in the R. M. of Willner.

Davidson fire chief Clayton Schilling said a 911 call came in at 11:58 a.m. Sunday that the house of Jerry and Shelley Woodman, about one mile off the 749 Girvin Grid southwest of Davidson, was on fire.

Shelley noticed smoke coming from the roof of the one-storey house when she returned home from church and called it in, Jerry said.

No one was inside the house. Jerry said Shelley had gone to church and he and his son were away from home picking up some tools. He quickly returned home when he learned of the fire.

Craik and Davidson firefighters arrived soon after.

“They weren’t very far behind us,” Jerry said.

Schilling said when firefighters arrived Shelley and her son were spraying water onto the fire through a basement window.

He said three firefighters quickly suited up and fought the fire from the inside. The fire was contained to the northeast half of the basement.

Schilling said the fire was easy to put out with firefighters from Davidson and Craik putting water on it.

From the outside, Schilling said a person wouldn’t know the house had been on fire, however, smoke damage to the entire house and its contents was extensive.

Schilling said smoke was pouring out of the roof vents when they arrived on scene.

Jerry said they are currently living in a camper trailer in the farmyard for the time being.

An insurance adjuster has been on site and Jerry said a crew was out last Tuesday to start cleaning out the contents.

The fire was determined to have been caused by an unattended candle that was left burning in a basement bedroom.

Fire crews were on scene for about three hours with seven firefighters from Davidson and 12 from Craik’s responding. The Craik volunteer department happened to be conducting First Aid training that day, so all its firefighters were in Craik and able to respond.