August 18, 2008:
Sunny,
breezy, temperatures hitting the 30s – perfect summertime weather. A
weather guru was interviewed on radio the other day and the interviewer
complained about all the cool and damp days in a supposedly hot, dry
summer. The gurus reply was that we are just getting into the best part of
the summer. That should be good news for farmers with crops to harvest;
unfortunately few of those crops will be ready for a couple of weeks so
anything can happen by then. In the meantime, we will bask in the
sunshine.
We
just got home from a motor home outing with the Saskatoon Sunseeker Sams,
the travel club we joined this year. We went to
Prince Albert
and stayed at the Prince Albert Exhibition Campground, right across the
fence from Wal-Mart. There is a long row of very tall black poplars along
that fence and they gave shade to all our activities. We had a wonderful
time, mostly just visiting with the most congenial bunch of people you
could ever expect to meet, but also playing Bocce, Blongo and Whist.
One
of our members is a retired
United
Church
minister, so we even have our own non-denominational church service on
Sunday mornings. Everybody attends, too. If you read the
Saskatoon
Sun, you might have read an article about travel clubs, featuring our
minister and his wife, Don and Donna Barss. It came out about a week ago
and was pretty favorable.
Twinning is under way on Highway 11 from
Saskatoon
to
Prince Albert
. It is finished to a few miles north of Osler, and the stretch from there
to Hague should be open soon. It sure will be welcome, because that is one
busy highway. We don’t like to hold up traffic when we puddle along at
about 85 kph, so when we see two or three vehicles backed up behind us, we
pull over and let them by if at all possible. All summer, including our
Dakotas trip, we hardly had to do that at all, but going to
Prince Albert
and coming back we did it numerous times on the two-lane stretch.
Feeling
the need of a cup of coffee this morning, we stopped at the Trapper’s
Cabin, right on the highway north of
Duck
Lake
, across the highway from their museum. It was run by a middle aged
Aboriginal lady who appeared to suffer from arthritis, by the way she
moved and a painful expression. At first you might feel unwelcome, but
then she came and sat with us as we had our coffee and bannock, which is
her house specialty. We really enjoyed visiting with her. She even showed
me how her twenty four flavor soft ice cream machine worked. She was quite
proud of the fact that three years ago the townspeople gave her a year at
most, and here she is just finishing up three years. Next time we go by,
we are going to stop for a meal. We liked the place.
On our way to
Prince Albert
, we stopped at
Valley
Regional
Park
, just north of Rosthern, and Doreen made us some lunch. The park has a
high, man-made hill with a long, serpentine slide. More popular than the
slide, though, was a trolley on a cable, attached to a pole on a wooden
platform. Kids hang onto the trolley and ride the cable car down. Usually
there is just one kid, but sometimes a couple would cling together. It
really teaches the kids co-operation, because the trolley is pretty heavy
to pull back up to the top.
More
than once we saw a boy being dragged down to the bottom again because he
couldn’t quite make it to the platform. Usually, though there would be
two or better yet, three boys around the platform. When the kid with the
trolley got close to the top and powered out, the other two would help him
get up to where he could hook an arm around the post supporting the
platform. Then the two would climb up onto the platform and reach out to
grab the tow rope and pull the trolley the rest of the way. They put an
awful lot of effort into a brief ride but it must have been worth it
because they did it over and over.