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Doodle Doodle Do: Williams Lake Stampede song revived for 50th anniversary

When Beth Veenkamp started working for the City of Williams Lakein 2017, she noticed that the annual stampede song didn't seem to be in use any more. So she tried to track down a recording of it.

Musician Alan Moberg wrote the song50 years ago and re-recorded it this year

Spectators watch a bull rider at the Williams Lake Stampede in this undated photo. The stampede, held annually during the Canada Day long weekend, returns this year after a two-year hiatus due to the COVID pandemic. (Submitted by Museum of the Cariboo Chilcotin)

It's the kind of thing only a local would miss.

When Beth Veenkamp started working for the City of Williams Lakein 2017, she noticed that the annual stampede song didn't seem to be in use any more.

The economic development officer grew up in the city, located in the Central Interior, and had learned the tune as part of her childhood.

Now, as the Williams Lake Stampede returns after a two-year hiatus caused by COVID,Veenkamp says shewanted to bring back the songto celebrate its silver anniversary.

WATCH |Alan Mobergsings the Williams Lake Stampede song in May (Video by Scott Nelson)

Long-time musician and Salt Spring Island resident Alan Moberg wrote the Williams Lake Stampede song50 years ago.

The lyrics describe many of the activities of the rodeo and the communities that attend the event,paying tribute to cowboy culture of the area.

Moberg said when he first came up to Williams Lake to perform the tune during the stampede, there wasn't much of an audience.

But that quickly changed, with thousands of people from the province and across the world attending the event in recent years.

This historical photo shows a bull rider at the Williams Lake Stampede in 1974. (Submitted by Museum of the Cariboo Chilcotin)

It's not clear how the song recording was lost or why the community stopped playing it.

Veenkamp said shestarted digging around to find a copyof the song, including visiting the radio station only to discover that there didn't seem to be a recording in existence any more.

"I thought, 'Oh, this needs to be fixed,'" she said.

SoVeenkamp teamed up with the Museum of the Cariboo Chilcotinthis year to re-record Moberg singing the song, which has since beenmade available on the city's websitealong with the sheet music.

The City of Williams Lake created a special album cover, pictured here, to mark the anniversary and re-recording of the song. (Submitted by Beth Veenkamp)

Many people who grew up in Williams Lake in the 1970s and 1980s learned the Williams Lake Stampede song, Veenkamp said.

"It's catchy and it gets stuck in your head. It's our song," she said.

"It's Williams Lake's song and not every small town has their very own song."

Veenkamp said the lyrics do seem to hold true five decades after they were released.

"You really do feel like you're part of the last frontier. It's very untouched and beautiful."

For Moberg, thetrip down memory lane has been a good one.

"It meant a lot to hear those young people cheering and roaring about it so it's pretty special," he said.

The Williams Lake Stampede is held every year duringthe Canada Day long weekend.

LISTEN | The story behind Williams Lake's song, which is getting a 50th anniversary revival