Discover Sherwood Park Strathcona County April 2016 | Page 31
Communities
The spirit of Josephburg is as vibrant as ever. Josephburg is host
to many events and socials. The Agricultural Society sponsors
the Country Classic, a junior livestock show, the annual
Fiddle Jamboree and every fall and winter, Josephburg
Presents brings a series of entertainers to the hamlet.
Details are available at www.josephburg-ag.ca.
Christmas in the Heartland has become a family
favourite with a full-day of events in the area;
ending up with Light Up Heartland Hall. For
maps and updates, visit www.strathcona.ca/
holidayfun.
If you are in Josephburg to participate in hockey at
Moyer Recreation Centre, visit relatives or participate in
a local gymkhana or ball game, or out for a drive, you will
see - everything is ‘better in the Burg’!
For hall bookings see page 43.
North Cooking Lake
The hamlet of Deville-North Cooking Lake has 66 residents
and is located just 26 kilometres south east of Sherwood Park
and only 4 kilometres south of the Waskahegan Staging Area
and Interpretive Centre’s; the main entrance to the Cooking
Lake-Blackfoot Wildlife, Grazing and Provincial Recreation
Area. This special area includes 170 kilometres maintained
walking, hiking, mountain biking, equestrian, Nordic skiing,
dog sledding and snowshoeing trails for day use.
The North Cooking Lake landscape we see today was formed
by glaciers that left what is referred to as hummocky knob and kettle formations strewn
with boulders that originated in the Canadian Shield. Originally part of Cooking Lake Forest
Reserve, people started to settle in the area around 1900.
Due to the multiple lakes with sandy beaches, North Cooking Lake was known as one of
Edmonton’s recreation and resort spots in the early 1900s. It was so popular that special trains
operated to bring vacationers to North Cooking Lake Station where steamers and motor
boats delivered them to different resorts.
North Cooking Lake is now a peaceful residential retreat. The community league was set up in
1952. It has provided social and educational development to the community ever since. It was
responsible for the funding and volunteers who built the Homecoming Park and Community
Hall. Homecoming Park is a 39-acre site with three baseball diamonds, a playground, nature
trail, picnic area, group fire spot, and a natural skating pond.
For hall bookings see page 43.
Come for a Visit — Stay for a Lifetime!
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