Most of the works for This Loop is Wearing Thin were created when she was working at the EAGM. “A lot of it came from playing off of the work that I had done previously in Woodlawn, using kitchen scraps and these materials that we throw away or consume. These … waste products that become part of our daily ritual were a big jumping off for me,” said Schultz. While most of the work had been completed in her time here, the exhibit had been booked at the EAGM previously. The installation features a video component along with the works. The video has all of the small pieces that aren’t in the installation going through these different transformations, such as ice melting, the produce decomposing and food drying out.
The park would go in the empty area between the pool and the rink. “All we’re looking at doing is building a six-foot fence … we don’t have it all staked out or anything like that, but it would roughly require 350 feet of fence to be built. It would be built to any regulations that are present, and whatever the city would propose would be best,” said Porter. A former member of the Weyburn Kinsmen Club, Porter noted the Kin members in Weyburn are running the dog park in that community. Designs for the park indicate there would be a small holding pen with a small gate with access from the inside of the main park, and another small gate with access to the dog park. This area would be used to get dogs accustomed to their surroundings.
SESKSAR volunteers Monica Kovach, Dan Hardern, Leanne Strokov and Alex Critikos of Estevan s zone responded to a mock emergency in Woodlawn Regional Park. Photo submitted
Cody Chorney was a part of the training in Carlyle zone, along with missing from the picture Pat Ross. Photo submitted
SESKSAR volunteers Mike Meyers, left, and Katia Bigney, right, along with spontaneous volunteer Ashlyn Meyers held a mock search in the Carnduff area. Photo submitted
Sandy Stewart and Clarence Fradette were a part of Weyburn s zone training along with other SESKSAR volunteers. Photo submitted Groups of people wearing high-visibility vests with compasses in their hands could be noticed all across southeast Saskatchewan lately.
So he’s part of Estevan and Area Trails Association, a group of outdoor enthusiasts who like to use trails for outdoor activities. They’ve been constructing trails for a little more than two years, and they’re eager to promote the existing trails while seeking support for new ones. The amount of time needed to complete a trail depends on terrain and what you’re looking to get. “It can go anywhere from weed whipping and raking a section, or it can go all the way down to hauling rocks in, wood, cement, whatever you need to make the terrain rideable and fun,” said Mantei. “It depends on where you’re at, but it’s anywhere from a month to two per kilometre.”
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