Westworld Saskatchewan

Spring 2015

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S P R I N G 2 0 1 5 | W E S T W O R L D 17 out the year, including Saskatchewan Writers and Saskatchewan Stitches conferences. e knitting retreat takes place twice a year, spring and fall. As I gaze out over the wintry land- scape, I'm already looking forward to coming back later in the year when the apples have been harvested, the honey collected and the maple leaves turned glorious gold. W For more information on the knitting retreats or to request a brochure, contact Wendy Toye in Hum- boldt at 1-800-344-6024; contact@hausof stitches.ca. Reach the abbey at 306-682-1775; guestmaster@stpeters.sk.ca. Frescoes on High THE GERMAN CATHOLICS who came to St. Peter's Colony in 1903 first built a small log church to the north of the monastery site. Five years later, local immigrant carpenters and volunteers rebuilt the church on a far grander scale. At 36 metres long and with two 18-metre-tall towers, the structure stands as a solid testament to faith. But what makes this church astonishing is the interior. Its sanctu- ary is emblazoned with frescoes depicting 80 life-sized figures of saints, each with a gilded halo. This work, a gift to the first abbot of St. Peter's Abbey, was painted by Count Berthold von Imhoff, a famous pioneer artist from St. Wahlberg whose religious paintings enrich many pioneer churches throughout Saskatchewan. The church became St. Peter's Cathedral in 1921, has been renovated several times and was declared a Municipal Heritage Property in 1984. It lies just across Hwy. 5 from St. Peter's Abbey and is open for visitors every day until 9 p.m. (except for January and February). –L.B. (l-r) Kevin Grieman, long-time knitter; Imhoff paintings inside St. Peter's Cathedral – the artist gave some of the saints the faces of abbey monks.

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