Category Archives: featured

Team prepares for Sask. Summer Games

DAVIDSON—The gymnasium at Davidson School has become headquarters to the under-14 boys basketball team that is bound for the Saskatchewan Summer Games.

The team will represent the Prairie Central Zone at the games, where they will compete July 29 to Aug. 2 in Meadow Lake.

The trip has ensured that some local boys and their coaches will get to extend the basketball season well into the summer.

Tryouts for the team finished April 29 at Davidson School. Ten players were selected to represent the zone. Four of the boys are from Davidson: Huck and Mark Rettger, Ben Nykiforuk and James Morrison as well as Austin Evans from Kenaston. The remaining players are from Lumsden, Osler, Humboldt, Langham and Wynyard.

Kim Rettger is head coach of the squad. Assisting him are Raiders basketball alumnae Ian Kadlec, Luke Edwards and Scott Sigfusson.

“I’m excited to have these guys help. The boys relate to them a whole lot more than they do to me,” Rettger said.

“We have some good talent,” Rettger said of the team.

He was especially excited when a Grade 8 student from Osler walked into the gym the first day of tryouts. The eighth grader stands 6’4”.

“He walked in and looked Luke Edwards right in the eye,” Rettger said with a laugh.

Better still for the Prairie Central team is the kid from Osler can play ball.

Rettger said he wound up coaching Prairie Central’s team for the Summer Games by “sheer coincidence”. He was looking to enroll his son Mark in a summer league when it was suggested to him that Mark should tryout for a team going to the Sask. Summer Games.

“I discovered they had no coach,” Rettger said, so he gave it a try.

“So far it’s been terrific. We have nice kids on the team.”

The team will practise at least once every two weeks, mainly at Davidson. Rettger said they’ll also look to practise in gyms in other communities when the Davidson gym isn’t available.

Ticks causing problems earlier than usual

Nearly four weeks ago, local veterinarian Dr. Carmen Millham made an unexpected discovery while on a call to do semen testing on a client’s bulls.

It was April 2 and he found himself pulling 10 ticks from one bull and eight ticks off another. It was the sort of encounter he usually sees in early May.

This year ticks are out earlier than usual, due to warmer temperatures.

Now picking ticks from pets has become a daily occurrence for some dog owners.

Millham says he’s not surprised ticks have appeared so early. He says as soon as temperatures are sustained above -5°Celsius ticks will emerge from their winter hiding spots.

Then they climb up a piece of long grass and dangle there until an unsuspecting mammal walks by.

Millham says ticks have been out since the end of March. Their early emergence has been keeping him and his staff at Outlook Veterinary Clinic busy as people seek insecticides to prevent ticks from making a meal of their pets.

He recommends using a product that may be applied monthly and topically on a dog. The product is absorbed and circulates in the skin to deter ticks from attaching. The chemical will kill ticks as well.

He says people should regularly inspect their pets for ticks, especially if they have been in areas where there are woods or tall grasses. If people find a tick, it should be removed immediately because the longer it is attached to its host, the greater the chance for disease.

People should wear gloves and use tweezers to carefully grasp the exposed section of the tick’s body near the pet’s skin. Gently pull until the tick let’s go. To dispose of the tick, wrap it in tissue and flush it down the toilet. People should not crush, burn or suffocate a tick as these actions could spread infectious bacteria that cause Lyme disease.

 

Davidson Grad ceremonies moving back to gym

DAVIDSON—Davidson School’s graduation ceremonies are coming home.

The class of 2012 will celebrate its graduation, May 19,  in the school gymnasium instead of the local rink.

As the school’s population has declined in the last decade or so, moving grad back to the school had been discussed, however, the change was never made.

“I took the bull by the horns,” says teacher Paulette Killoh.

This year there are 16 students at the graduation. The small number makes it possible for the school to host the ceremony once again, which will make the event much more intimate.

“I want mom and dad and grandma and grandpa to have a good look at their grads” Killoh says. “It’s a celebration of our school and our kids. Anytime we get people into our school, it’s a good thing and grad should be all about that.”

As for accommodating the vast crowd that attends the ceremony, at last year’s graduation ceremonies, Killoh says she counted the 496 chairs set up on the floor in the rink.

“I am told we can get that in the gym and we still have our bleachers.”

Using the school gym will also make setting up for the ceremony much easier, Killoh says and they will save about $1,000 in costs of renting and transporting equipment to the rink.

Providing audio-visual equipment will be easier because the school’s system is all set up in the gym.

Killoh says she’s heard concerns that it will be too hot in the gym, but more often than not, she points out grads of recent past have been cool and wet.

“I think it’s a good idea to have it back in the school for the ease of it and it makes sense number wise. I thought it should be moved back years ago,” says retired teacher Rosemary O’Handley and former grad ceremony organizer.

The reason for moving grad to the rink was to make use of the brand new Communiplex facility that had just been built in 1995.

The town and the school have a joint-use agreement and using the Communiplex for grad was covered in this agreement, so the school did not have to worry about the cost

Back then, grad was held in June, it was usually hot in the gym, and the number of graduates was more than double the current crop.

“We had this new facility with lots of fresh air and lots of room,” recalls Diane Taylor, a retired teacher and veteran contributor to countless Davidson School graduation ceremonies. “It was a fantastic opportunity for us to get out of the hot gym.”

She hopes that future graduating classes will again have the kind of numbers that made the move to the Communiplex necessary back in the 1990s.

“Hopefully it will be ideal and needed again,” she says.

As the school’s population declined, she says they considered moving grad back to the gym a few times.

“Number one, it’s so much cleaner and it’s very nostalgic to be back in the gym,” Taylor says.

She recalls being on the gym stage herself when she graduated from Davidson School.

Plans for pool take shape

DAVIDSON—Davidson’s new swimming pool committee expects to meet this Thursday to review options and costs of building a new swimming pool.

They will also look at the pros and cons of possible locations including the current spot, the Communiplex and a third site that’s being considered.

Trevor Ouelette, Davidson’s rec. director, said he will present this third location at Thursday’s meeting.

This mysterious site has possibilities to enhance the pool’s visibility and increase traffic, Ouelette said as a teaser.

A pool is an investment in the community. Ouelette said a new pool may not be vital to the community, “but it makes it more inviting.”

He said amenities such as a nice rink, golf course and playgrounds help persuade people to move to a community, particularly people with young families who want places for their kids to play.

Last Wednesday Ouelette was working on his presentation for this week’s meeting where he will present the committee with some options.

He said there are three main types of pools they may consider. The first is a steel-framed pool with a vinyl liner, the style used for residential pools. This pool is economical to build, Ouelette said, but it cannot have a beach entry.

The second type is a zero-entry membrane liner. Ouelette said these pools are constructed using a very thick membrane with concrete flooring and steel-framed walls. These have many design possibilities and permit a beach entry.

The third, and most expensive option, is a zero-entry, spider tie concrete pool. This is the typical concrete outdoor pool. Because it is all concrete construction, it allows for full design possibilities.

With these options in mind, Ouelette said, “The next step is for the community to decide how much money do you want to raise or how much money do you want to spend? Do we try to fill our wish list or do we tailor our wish list to what we can afford.”

He said a pool with “beach entry into a paddling pool which leads into the main pool would be a dream.”

Ouelette recently met with a contractor from Pleasureway Sales in Saskatoon to go over various options.

He said they talked about a pool that is junior Olympic size with two diving boards.

In the meantime, Ouelette said he’s been researching current and prospective provincial and federal government grants.

He said there are many little grants that they can apply for and he has all those contacts.

“If there are any big $100,000 grants out there, they are hiding because I can’t find them,” he said.

Elbow man receives Medal of Bravery

Mark Janke of Elbow was among 36 people from across Canada honored Friday for their bravery.

He received the Medal of Bravery from Gov. Gen. David Johnston at Rideau Hall in Ottawa for his actions in rescuing people from a submerged vehicle near Stoughton on April 28, 2007. Darren Bieber of Weyburn also received the Medal of Bravery for his actions in this incident.

A car with five people on board had lost control, left the roadway and flipped into a water-filled ditch.

One of the occupants got out and ran to the road to alert passersby.

Janke  stopped his vehicle and got out to help. He pulled two people out of the wreckage. At that point, Bieber arrived and helped Janke pull out the last two victims. Bieber and Janke then took care of the two survivors until the ambulance arrived. Unfortunately, three of the four died.

The Medal of Bravery recognizes acts of bravery in hazardous circumstances.

RMs offer recycling to ratepayers

DAVIDSON—Ratepayers in the RMs of Arm River and Willner will have a place to take their recycling.

The councils of both RMs recently decided to rent a large bin from Loraas so they may provide recycling to their ratepayers on a trial basis.

The bin will be located behind the RM office on Lincoln Street in Davidson.

“We’re going to try it and if it doesn’t work, we’ll take it out,” Lorne Willner, Reeve of the R.M. of Arm River, said. “We’re happy to try it.”

The bin is there for the use of both rural municipalities’ ratepayers and residents.

The bin will be locked and will be accessible to ratepayers during office hours by signing for a key.

Willner said they will not accept any materials that may go to SARCAN including milk jugs and other beverage containers.

He’d rather see that people support SARCAN with these materials instead of the deposit money going to Loraas, which is charging rent on the bin.

The RMs have placed a notice in this week’s paper that explains the recycling bin policy as well as detailing acceptable and unacceptable material.

Willner said the spirit is to encourage people to recycle.

“We’re happy to still be using the landfill and will work with Davidson as much as we can,” he said.