Your belongings after a fire? That's a unique exhibit.
Morning from the junction — here's what's moving in Melfort.
You know, sometimes the news out of Regina or Saskatoon feels a long way off. But then you hear about something like this art exhibit from Denare Beach, and it just sticks with you. After the Wolf wildfire last year, people in Denare Beach lost everything. A couple there, instead of just cleaning up, took what was left — things changed by the fire — and turned it into an art exhibit. It’s now showing at the Legislative Building in Regina.
This isn’t about just putting a brave face on things; it’s about making sense of what’s left when the land you know gets scorched. We're used to seeing the big numbers on wildfire suppression, the federal aircraft, the endless news cycles. But this puts the focus squarely on the human scale of it. It’s a testament to how people cope when a natural disaster tears through your home, your community. It takes some grit to find meaning in what's essentially a pile of rubble.
### What This Means for Melfort
* **Resilience:** It’s a stark reminder of the resilience of northern Saskatchewan communities, a quality we understand well here in the northeast, especially after tough growing seasons or unexpected challenges on the farm.
* **Art as coping:** Shows how art can be more than just decoration; it can be a way to process trauma and move forward.
* **Northern connection:** Even though Denare Beach is a ways north of us, it’s still part of our province, and we’re all connected by these events. It reminds you that the trees up there matter just as much as the black loam of the Carrot River Valley down here.
It's a different way to look at loss, certainly. Not just the physical damage, but how people pick up the pieces and try to make something out of it. It makes you think about how we’d respond if a fire ever threatened the grain elevators or the Melfort Research Farm.
Jack Lawson, MiTL Sports Desk, Melfort.
You can hear more on this kind of story from the Morning Show crew — check them out at mornings.live.