The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.2005, Blaðsíða 24

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.03.2005, Blaðsíða 24
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Vol. 59 #3 1 10 Siggi and Lizzie badly, and he was forced to decline. However, he became a skillful cowboy, and became a rodeo champion, with prizes for calf-roping. In 1902, one dozen Icelandic men, mostly young, but some nearing middle age, rode north on a trip of exploration into the Canadian mid-west. Their destination turned out to be Vatnabyggd, the area to the south of the Quill Lakes, Foam Lake, Fishing Lake, Noop Lake, the tiny Hoseason’s Lake, Birch Creek and Milligan Creek - the Water Settlement. Siggi was in that group, choosing home- steads for himself (in his mother’s name), for Steve, Jon and Bjorn. His cousins Sam (Samsi) Samson and Joe Gislason also chose land, as did many others. A huge migration followed from the Dakotas into what soon became Saskatchewan, leaving behind 40 and 80-acre homesteads for the 160 acres that was being offered. By old country standards, this was a grand estate! Siggi, however, had other ideas. Another cousin (Icelanders have so many cousins!) convinced him that he should homestead in Montana. Hence the Saskatchewan property was registered to his mother, while he built a ranch in Montana, the Lazy-S Bar, from which he worked to round up wild horses, break them for farm work, and deliver them to North Dakota and to Saskatchewan, replacing the oxen that so many early homesteaders used. The nearby Blackfoot reservation provided help in rounding up horses from the hills, and Siggi braved spring blizzards and packs of wolves to bring herds of horses through the Big Muddy Valley, through the valley of the Wood River, past Wood Mountain, and up into the Vatnabyggd territory. Siggi married Elisabet Petursson about the same time he settled in Montana. ‘Lizzie’ was a strong, independent typeset- ter for the local paper in Edinburg, N.D. In her day she was not only a farm house- keeper and gardener, but a practical nurse and midwife. She once headed the Saskatchewan Poultry Growers Association, chosen because her fowl repeatedly won prizes at city fairs. Some were shocked to learn that her flock con- sisted of only a couple of dozen chickens! In those few were examples of many exotic Lizzie, Siggi Tobba and Sophie in 1926 (Elfros)

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