Thursday, 23 July 2009

The nicest buffalo I have ever met

Today I woke up for work I wanted to go right back to bed. Some of my friends were spending the day at the beach while I would be stuck in the office being bored, at least that is what I thought.
Then Michelle called me into her office to tell me about a picture I needed to go get. I didn't know what to expect then I googled Bailey D. Buffalo, the animal I was about to meet.
Now I don't know much about wild animals, but I do know a few things like pigs don't fly, cows don't jump over the moon and Buffalo don't hang out in houses and ride in cars.
But was I ever wrong, at least about the buffalo.
Bailey D. Buffalo Jr. was not some wild creature, he was actually a friendly pet that kind of reminded me of my dog.
Bailey Jr. is the second buffalo Jim and Linda Sautner have raised as a pet, and has already become the next buffalo to be making headlines across the world.
After talking to Kim for about 40 minutes I almost forgot that the gentle, innocent animal he had been describing was a animal that weighed nearly 1,000 pounds.
We went out to see Bailey one last time before I left, because to be honest, I just wanted to see him again.
Bailey and Jim's dog, Charlie Brown, were hanging out together, and both got excited to see Jim approaching them.
When Jim went to give some attention to his pet buffalo, Bailey went for his hand, and I thought it was all over. I could see the headlines: "Reporter witnesses man loose hand to pet buffalo" "Buffalo gets taste of human then goes right for journalist."
To my surprise Bailey just stood there and sucked on Jim's hand. Like a baby and a bottle.
As I stood there amazed Jim asked me a question I thought I would never hear, "Want to put you hand in my buffalos mouth?"
Immediately I said no. Why would I ever want to do something like that? I was certain that is my hand went into that mouth it would never come back. 
Then Jim reminded me I would likely never get a chance to do this again and I pulled up my sleeve and tried to hide my fear, even though Bailey could probably smell it from a mile away.
My hand went in, stayed attached to my arm, and I calmed down.
It felt like his mouth was made of sandpaper and I knew he could rip off my hand in a second, but it was interesting, to say the least, and kind of reminded me of when my dog sucks on my pinky. 
It took lots of soap and scrubbing to get all the slobber off my hand, but it was worth it.
Once again I got to do something I would never have dreamed about doing all thanks to my job.




Picture Above: Me with Jim and Bailey D. Buffalo Jr. Yes, he is in the car.

Tuesday, 14 July 2009

First memory of the Boys and Girls Club

I have no idea how many stories I have written about the Leduc Boys and Girls Club, and I probably couldn't count how many pictures I have taken of members of the club.
Not only have I learned more about the club and everything they do for the community, but I have also had the opportunity to meet the people who make it the great place it is today.
My first memories of the club are from a long, long time ago when I was still in elementary school. 
It was probably when I was in Grade 4 or 5, when I was still a shy little girl that hated attention (I know what you're thinking - Laura, hating attention? No way. But it's true!)
My class went on a field trip to the club to learn about safety. We were in the middle of being taught what to do if a stranger approached us, when they decided to pick us kids to come up and show what we would do.
Even though I did everything in my power not to make eye contact with the speaker I still was the chosen one.
I remember the person pretending to be in a car, and I was pretending to be riding my bike. 
He Pulled up and started talking to me, I said something along the lines of "Sorry I cant talk right now my mom is waiting for me at home" and pretended to speed away. 
Knowing myself, I was probably certain I was wrong, my face was likely burning red and I could have cried I was so embarrassed to speak in in front of my entire class.
The staff at the club went on about how great I did and I was on top of the world.
This was about the time I stopped being so shy.
I went home that night and taught my little brother and sister what to do if a stranger ever approached them, and felt like a genius.
I never was a member of the club, but would always go on buddy days and on school trips.
In those few times I thought it was one of the coolest places for kids to hang out. 
My work with the club only confirms all my thoughts.
The staff know how to be friends with all the kids, while being great role-models.
The Boys and Girls Club takes kids off the street and away from their precious TV and computer screens. It keep them active and even teaches them with games and day trips.
The club is more than just a place to drop off your kids while you are at work, its a fun friendly environment that is probably a second home to several of the young members.

Monday, 13 July 2009

Ghost stories


It's amazing how a train of thought can completely jump the track.

I did not intend to write about ghosts today. I didn't even plan on thinking about ghosts today. But a hilarious news item on CTV, scoped in a moment of boredom, has taken me on a 45-minute journey deep into the shadowy territory of the paranormal.

The news item in question was about two men who have been charged with trespassing after firefighters had to rescue them from the roof of the Charles Camsell Hospital in Edmonton. While exploring the long-abandoned building with their friends, they somehow thought it would be fun to try to scale down the outside of it, and wound up getting stuck.

Apparent fun-ness of rappelling down the outside of a building without equipment notwithstanding, my first reaction to this story was: "exploring the Charles Camsell Hospital in the middle of the night WHAT?!"

As I mentioned to Laura, this building is creepy as all get-out. When we first moved to Edmonton, my boyfriend and I stayed with a friend of his who lived just down the street from the hospital. It was late when we arrived, so I wasn't able to see much of the city during the drive from the airport, but I did see the hospital — a yellow-brick monolith plopped in the middle of quiet suburbia, surrounded by a barbed-wire fence and signs warning would-be urban explorers of guard dogs that like to snack on trespassers. Not one of the building's hundreds of square windows has its glass intact.

Even in the light of day, I felt the urge to quicken my step when walking past the hospital. That had more to do with being warned that it was a popular hangout for crackheads and gangs than any suspicions of paranormal activity, but the decrepit appearance of the building, which has been defunct since '96, didn't make me feel any more comfy.

Laura's response to all this was "I bet it's haunted."

A quick Google search produced satisfying results: this guy says it's haunted, this guy implies it's haunted and has photos of the interior that certainly make it look like an appropriate setting for an Amityville-style paranormal throwdown.

The hospital reportedly has a checkered past. It housed a psychiatric ward, and a secondary structure, which no longer exists, served as a quarantine for tuberculosis patients in the mid-20th century. Darker stories suggest that Mengele-esque experiments were carried out on Aboriginal children there.

A place with such sad and morbid connotations as a hospital — especially a decrepit, abandoned one — is a perfect breeding ground for ghost stories.

Someone allegedly recorded a woman's scream on the fourth floor of the building, and if you click the second link I posted above, you can read through the debate around a photograph that purports to show a masked figure peering around the corner in the basement of the hospital. (I could totally see it, but darkness and the suggestive power of fear can tend to morph something as innocuous as peeling paint into a ghoulish apparition.)

I don't know if I believe in ghosts, but I do believe that a place can seem to exude a palpable atmosphere of sadness and fear when it is known to be the site of a distressing event.

So far, my only encounter with a "ghost" was quite a joyful one. In the summer of 2003, I worked at Restoule Provincial Park in northern Ontario, a place that really lent itself to ghost stories because of its rich history. The remains of a root cellar in the midst of a thick grove of pine trees stood testament to the first family to homestead in the area, and an archeologist had discovered evidence of an Iroquois fishing village on the banks of the Restoule River.

The more experienced park employees told of a spirit who wanders the forest by night, swinging a lantern, looking for his hunting party. A few people claimed to have seen the ghost of a small boy wandering the fire tower trail at dusk; some said they could hear the frightened sobs of a lost child.

I wrote these stories off as good campfire fodder, but then, one night, I had a strange encounter.

In August, I had come down with a bad cold, and, not wanting to bother my roommate with my constant coughing in the night, I decided to set up a tent in the staff campground and sleep there until I was better. This worked well, and so on the night in question, I set out from the staff house with my little table lantern and headed down the dirt road to the campground. I soon found I didn't need the lantern; the moon was so full and bright it cast shadows.

As I walked down the hill towards the group campground, I saw a silhouette a short distance in front of me, walking in the same direction. My first thought was that it was another camper, but the silhouette, although human, seemed insubstantial somehow, more shadow than solid flesh.

I turned on my lantern. There was nobody else on the path.

I didn't feel afraid or intimidated, just oddly exhilarated. I feared nothing that summer but the toe-eating muskies of Stormy Lake — but that's another story.

And that's where this train of thought disembarks. Ghosts — are they real? Do we want them to be? Are they gentle? Scary? Both? What say you? Is Leduc haunted? (Apparently New Sarepta is). Leave your comments.

(Photo: Casper! Via)

Choosing the right campground

Bobby Roy

As a 22-year-old I look forward to the times that I can go camping during our short summers, but when you get stereotyped when you're with a group of young people going camping I don't think that's right.

This past weekend there were about 18 of us set out to do some camping for a combined birthday party. We had it all planned out on Facebook about a month in advance to see where we could go. Our destination ended up being Thunder Lake Provinicial Park. 

Thunder Lake doesn't have a website to explain what the park is like, but there are tidbits of information around the internet to see what it looked like. I found some pictures and some information about it and it looked like a pretty decent destination for a weekend of camping even with as many as 18 of us going. 

Overall we booked five sites for all of us. I had made the call to reserve three spots under my name while another friend booked two. Everything sounded like it was going to be hunky dorey, but it sure wasn't. 

The only rules that the person reserving the camping spots on the phone said were that it was four people max per site. So I figured that it won't be too bad. We've got five sites so that equals the possibility of 20 people. Boy was I wrong. 

I was the first to arrive to the campground way earlier than anyone, so I got one site and started to set up camp. I did a couple walks around the campground to scope out the place and see how the weekend was going to be like. As more people started to arrive the problems began. 

By the time everyone had arrived the problem was in full force. Apparently one of the people at the front desk had told the rules of the campground to them and we weren't going to like them. We were not about to stick around to find out. 

Apparently the four person per campsite rule meant that only four people were allowed on any site at any time during the whole weekend. We couldn't even walk back and forth to each site. Not only that, but we were told that we were probably going to get kicked out by the night's end. Apparently its a family campground and young people in larger groups should not camp there. 

I wish they would have told us that at the beginning. This would have not only saved us the grief of driving up there, but all the arguments and hassles we had to deal with. Now I know its hard to tell over the phone how old someone is, but when you book three sites wouldn't you expect quite a bunch of people to show up? It would have been also nice if they would have that information given to you beforehand or that there would be a disclaimer posted on a website about the rules of Thunder Lake Provincial Park is. 

I understand that dealing with a bunch of drunk young people is never fun to deal with, but its not like we're out there to cause trouble. It's good that they have these types of campgrounds that families can go out and enjoy their weekend without having to worry about who they'll get stuck to, but it would be nice to know which campgrounds are made for families and which are made for more of a party-going crowd. 

By the end they did give us our money back and the front desk people were nice for the most part, but it would have been nice if they could have treated us like a normal camping going crowd. We couldn't even set up our tents before we were pretty much told that we were going to get kicked out, nor did we even make a peep before any of this went down. 

I do have to admit that we have gotten out of hand before, so I do understand what they are thinking when they saw a whole bunch of us pull in. 

I would just like to see more campgrounds get the word out on what kind of campground they have and who its more made for. I don't want to ruin anyone's vacation by being a drunken idiot and nor should anyone expect that, but I don't enjoy being kicked out before we do anything. 

Apart from the late Friday night shenanigans the weekend actually turned out pretty good as we found a remote campground called Peanut Lake.

As a reporter I should have known never to assume anything, so next time I'll be asking a whole bunch of other questions to make sure it's the right campground.

Saturday, 11 July 2009

Happy hour


Kelowna's own Malibu Knights, the world's first "adventure rock" band, played Burnsy O'Flannagans in Leduc last night. For lead vocalist Dan Harden, pictured above, it was a homecoming of sorts: Harden grew up here. Find out what "adventure rock" is — and why a band from Kelowna bills themselves as the Malibu Knights — in the July 17 issue of the Rep.

Below: Barefoot troubadour Shane Squires, the band's guitarist and harmony whiz, opened the show with a few solo covers.


Photos by Alex Pope.

Friday, 10 July 2009

Leducians? Leducites? Let's call the whole thing off!

According to a story in today's Globe and Mail, the citizens of the city of Red Deer have elected to officially call themselves "Red Deerians."

Tres originale. Personally, I think "Red Deerios" — the name suggested by a group of Red Deer school children — is much catchier. It rhymes with Cheerios, and Cheerios are delicious. But hey, if Red Deerians are happy with their new title, then that's what matters.

I've been working in Leduc for more than seven months now, and I'm still not sure how to refer to residents of Leduc. It comes up from time to time in my writing and I wish I had something punchier than "residents of Leduc."

Back in February, Bob Palmer, better known as Flyin' Bob, performed at our Maclab Centre, and right off the bat, asked the audience how they like to refer to themselves.

"Leducians?" he suggested.

"Leducites!" someone shouted.

Leducians it was, at least for the duration of the show.

But honestly, in all (okay, partial) seriousness: what do you call someone who lives in Leduc? Leducians? Leducites? My personal favorite, Leducies?

What say you? Leave your suggestions in the comments or Tweet us!

Jumping for a cause

Photos from the 2009 Kids Jump for Cancer equestrian event, taking place at Amberlea Meadows until July 12.









(Photos by Alexandra Pope)