There is a rich rural heritage to the Canadian Prairies, one that I worry will increasingly be lost and forgotten.
My earliest memories regarding a family address was for a PO box in Clashmoor, SK, a town with a Saskatchewan Wheat Pool elevator on a ribbon of branch line steel. There was a store, a post office with a residence in the back, and a couple of other houses.
But grain trucks rolled there with area grain, and we picked up mail, and at least some groceries.
The store burned. The post office closed, as did the elevator. The rail was ripped from the earth.
Today no aspect of Clashmoor remains except in a few area histories and the fading memories of the likes of myself.
So why do I mention that here now?
Over the summer I have noticed how rural communities continue to fade.
I walked an area in Preeceville just the other day. The ghost bed of the railroad still visible, the steel long gone with another reminder the big rail companies were eager to abandon small town Western Canada, shipping grain deliveries to highways, one now pocked with potholes you have to think grain trucks are at least artily responsible for.
The grain elevator remains standing in Preeceville, but it is not the draw for area farmers to visits the town it was when built.
The area along the rail bed is now a green space, one we scouted with the hope it might one day soon be a disc golf course, it would be ideal for that, but the loss of elevator and rail line were not lost on me that they were major blows to the community.
But the loss of branch lines is a relatively recent thing.
Our history extends decades before that.
But how do we get people to care about that more distant past?
The Yorkton branch of the Western Development Museum recently held day camps for youth. It was a chance to make butter by hand. To create rope the old fashioned way. To make ice cream.
They may seem like skills no longer needed, so why bother, but they do connect us to our past too.
Not that most youth seemed to be interested. In a community of near 20,000, four youth were involved the day of my visit.
Our heritage is important though, although maybe that is best recognized from afar.
An example was pointed out to me by a friend on Facebook just last week. New Finland, Sask., is losing one of its historic settler homes.
For the record New Finland measures about 12 miles north and south and 14 miles east and west within the municipalities of Willowdale and Rocanville. It is circled by five towns. To the south are Whitewood and Wapella on the Number 1 Highway; to the northeast is Tantallon on the Qu鈥橝pelle River; to the east and northwest respectively are the potash towns of Rocanville and Esterhazy.
The home is not 小蓝视频 lost due to the ravages of age, but rather the 100-year-old home is 小蓝视频 dismantled in order to send it to a museum in Finland; (World of Trails museum in Per盲sein盲joki, Finland).
The project speaks to the importance of history to those in Finland shown by their willingness to be involved in what has to be a costly venture to connect to those who immigrated a century ago.
Perhaps it is something we in Canada can learn from.
Our past is important for it is the foundation of our future, and at present we seem satisfied to let many aspects of that foundation fade away.
聽Calvin Daniels is Editor with Yorkton This Week.