June 21, 2009:
Rain,
rain, blessed rain! We just got back from Tisdale and Ridgedale; it was
raining buckets when we left this morning and we had the wipers going as
fast as they could go for the first ten miles or so. After that, there
were only a couple of brief periods when we could shut them down, and then
only until we met a vehicle. When we got home late this afternoon, it had
almost stopped raining, but there was quite a bit of water in the ditches.
A man at Ridgedale told me they were in dire need of rain, and I think
that was the case all the way to
Saskatoon
at least. It will be interesting to learn how much rain fell on the city
– our neighbour’s gauge says 4½ inches but I don’t know if it has
ever been emptied, or if she waters the gauge when she waters her plants.
Our
reason for going to Ridgedale was to attend our grandson,
Logan
’s, baptism, and also for a visit with Mike, Marg and Danny who we
hadn’t seen for some time. The minister, Rev. Alan Shaw, was extremely
interesting and entertaining, but when it came time for
Logan
’s baptism, he wouldn’t leave his father’s arms. Aaron had to hold
him while Alan dabbed water on his forehead, and that was okay.
Afterwards,
we went to the home of Nicole’s sister, Erin, and her husband, Curtis
and had chilli and cake, both of which were super. Erin and Curtis had
their baby baptised today, too. Around their house, Aaron is called Uncle
Bob as Aaron sounds too much like
Erin
. We also met Nicole’s and Erin’s mother, Cindy, who looks more like
their sister than their mother, and Curtis’s parents, Diane and Jim
Barber. We had a real good visiting time, and took a few four generation
pictures.
Highway
41 is sure nice. Re-surfacing is just about complete on a long stretch
east of Wakaw; there is a short stretch of older surface that is a bit
rough, but then another long stretch of quite new surface. That highway is
about twenty years old; it really shortened the distance from Tisdale and
Melfort to
Saskatoon
and has seen a lot of traffic, but it broke up badly when still quite new.
I suspect it has been re-surfaced, and in some cases rebuilt, several
times since then; let’s hope this new job stands up better. Right now,
it’s a joy to travel on.
We just
watched a very interesting TV program called “15 Minutes of Fame”.
This week, it dwelt on
Mozart
,
Saskatchewan
, which is where our daughter, Laurie (Corrie) Grimson gets her mail. We
knew many of the people interviewed, including Laurie, Joyce Grimson,
Edwina Onyskevich, Thor Arnason, the Nupdals, Jean Hallgrimson, and Emer
Gudmiundson. Basically, it spoke of Mozart’s rise to fame when it became
of philatelic interest in the 1970s. The fame was short-lived and the town
has declined from about sixty souls to thirty or less. Unfortunately, the
show spent most of its time decrying the demise of small centers with many
shots of abandoned houses and cars, something that TV reporters just love
to do. Don’t show the attractive features of a town – show the
weed-grown back alleys and junked cars. Kinda depressing. They did the
footage in winter, too, when nothing is at its best