We went to experience the Rosebud Theatre and the excellent lunch buffet across the street in the old grain exchange building. They had the Diary of Anne Frank playing and the wife really wanted to see it and so we went. Excellent production. Of course, I know nothing about live theatre, but I did enjoy it very much. It’s like watching a life-sized 3D movie on a giant screen.
Scenic photos of various historic wooden grain elevators found in Alberta that were a part of daily life in early Western Canada. I had travelled to these locations taking photos and experiencing the small towns that they were a part of. Wooden grain elevators were once common across the prairie provinces, but are now rather scarce as they have largely been replaced by large concrete grain terminals. Grain elevators were the heart of their communities and are slowly disappearing due to age, fire and neglect. Some of the grain elevators shown have already burnt down or were demolished.
Rosebud Alberta Grain Elevator
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityExpirationFrom
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityFloor DifferenceExpirationFrom
Rosebud Alberta Grain Elevator
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityExpirationFrom
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityFloor DifferenceExpirationFrom
We went to experience the Rosebud Theatre and the excellent lunch buffet across the street in the old grain exchange building. They had the Diary of Anne Frank playing and the wife really wanted to see it and so we went. Excellent production. Of course, I know nothing about live theatre, but I did enjoy it very much. It’s like watching a life-sized 3D movie on a giant screen.
Scenic photos of various historic wooden grain elevators found in Alberta that were a part of daily life in early Western Canada. I had travelled to these locations taking photos and experiencing the small towns that they were a part of. Wooden grain elevators were once common across the prairie provinces, but are now rather scarce as they have largely been replaced by large concrete grain terminals. Grain elevators were the heart of their communities and are slowly disappearing due to age, fire and neglect. Some of the grain elevators shown have already burnt down or were demolished.