I hope
you are enjoying your Saskatchewan Day long week-end. Most of us enjoy the
extra day off at the beginning of August without really thinking about what it
means to live in Saskatchewan and how fortunate we are to do so.
While
this summer has been tumultuous with sudden and heavy rainfall and an
unprecedented number of floods and tornadoes, we should remember how privileged
we are that this is the exception and not our usual weather. It has also been a
year of impassable roads as our highways have been flooded over all around us. However, this is unusual and hopefully
something we will not see again for a long time. Our neighbors to the south face tornadoes
every year. We see them only a few times in our lifetime. They are terrifying,
to say the least, and I am very happy that we do not have to suffer the
destruction and terror of these violent storms each and every year.
Saskatchewan
has four very distinct seasons. Most of us take these changes for granted.
There is a beauty in each season which people in non-changing climates never
get to experience. We have the opportunity to enjoy all types of sports and
activities which change with each season. I know of a woman who was born and
raised in Hawaii and now lives here. She absolutely refuses to visit her family
during the winter because she loves the snow and doesn’t want to miss a minute
of it. She is always telling people we don’t realize how wonderful it is to
have the different seasons. Having grown up where the temperature is constant
all year, she savours each change she experiences here as the seasons change.
Many of
us who live here are descendents of people who have been in this province for only
a few generations, and we know how hard they worked to give us the life we now
enjoy. Many families around Prince Albert have received one-hundred year
recognition for their family farms. Farming has changed a great deal, but in
this province, many farms stay in the same family generation after generation. The people who came before us were leaders in
public health care, cooperatives and had a deep belief in helping each other - a
true testament to our sense of community and sharing which has made this
province so great.
Our
winters may be too cold, our summers to short, and we may not be as
sophisticated as some might wish us to be, but we wouldn’t have it any other
way!
Happy
Saskatchewan Day! Celebrating the greatness of our province . . . it's a good thing!
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