The South Riding RV Travels

126

September 20th - 21st - Austin MB - Regina SK - RCMP Museum - Moose Jaw SK Saskatchewan

This is grain country with grain fields as far as the eye can see. Harvesting had taken place but here the bales had yet to be collected.
Here the bales have been gathered but the view does help to show the vastness of the area under cultivation.
Grain isn't universal since from time to time we did find some cattle but there were not huge numbers of animals. We also saw a few sheep.
There are fewer trees up here. But it is common to protect a farm with a stand of trees. At this time of year the leaves are changing and as the sun catches them you get a wonderful golden glow. However they don't have the sugar maples which are the ones which turn that fantastic shade of red.
No, this is not New York but a rather drab warehouse converted into a nightclub in Regina with a jazzed up front. It was all done with tiles.
There was not much to excite us in Regina but we felt we ought to visit the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) museum. In actual fact this headquarters building is for the Royal North West Mounted Police, one of several names in the force's evolution. This building faces on to the parade ground which is hallowed ground. Don't park there, or even walk across it!
The oldest building in Regina, this is now the RCMP chapel. We had a guided tour and this was one of the buildings we could look round. It is much in demand for weddings and baptisms but you have to be connected to the force. There are currently about 23,000 in the force. This site also houses the training school. There are several buildings which have had different uses over the years. However these days they only use horses for ceremony.
The church has a number of stained glass windows of which these were the most striking. One represents the end with the head bowed in prayer and the rifle reversed. The other celebrates the beginning with the bugler sounding the start of day.
This was their cenotaph with all the names of the officers killed on duty since their inception.
It perhaps is not widely known that they had their own air wing because of the extent of the territories they needed (and still need) to cover. There are models of several aircraft which had been used over the years in the museum. You have to look at a map of these provinces to comprehend how vast and inaccessible most of Canada is. They have a twelfth of the earth's landmass yet the population virtually all lives in the bottom 100 miles.
It was a very military organisation in its early years and the uniforms in the museum reflect that. Each one has a story but you would need to understand all the history to follow that.
We did have a quick look in the shop. The RCMP is a very potent marketing symbol, as they have now realised, and you cannot use their name without permission. They had a case of merchandise from the past - most (including Barbie) were distinctly tacky.
We moved on and camped just down the road (well 30 miles away) in Moose Jaw, otherwise known as Gas City. It specialises in the production of asphalt mostly in this plant just across the river from our camp site.