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COOPER:

COOPER: Wade James Cooper of Prince Albert, SK, aged 44, died June 30th, 2011 when the airplane in which he, his brother Cam, and three others were passengers crashed while attempting to leave their fishing camp at Buss Lake in northern Saskatchewan.
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COOPER:

COOPER: Wade James Cooper of Prince Albert, SK, aged 44, died June 30th, 2011 when the airplane in which he, his brother Cam, and three others were passengers crashed while attempting to leave their fishing camp at Buss Lake in northern Saskatchewan. Wade was the third child of Jim and Sharon Cooper, born and raised on a farm in Senlac, SK, part of a close-knit extended family. He attended Grades 1-9 in Senlac and finished high school in Unity, SK. He helped out on the farm from an early age. He liked to earn a wage and before he finished high school, he was already working as a welder for a local business. After Grade 12, Wade moved to Vancouver and completed a course in Deep Sea Salvage where he learned to navigate the bottom of the ocean, repairing bridges and building fish farms. He also tried his hand at oilfield work, truck driving, used car sales, steer wrestling and bull-riding. He used to say he was the best bull-rider in the country for the first two seconds. Wade loved to make a deal and in 1993, he found a way to combine his interest in sales with his farm background when he began buying and selling cattle. Before long, he'd worked his way up to become manager of Heartland Livestock Services, Prince Albert Branch. He acted as auctioneer at the market, rarely missing a sale and was the voice of market reports on radio in P.A. and Saskatoon. He was well-known for his one-liners, jokes usually made at the expense of the order buyers. He enjoyed visiting farms and many of the people he dealt with became his friends as well as his customers. He also farmed on the side, buying land near Senlac and Prince Albert and running his own herd of cows. As much as he loved his work, Wade loved his family more. He and his wife Nadine settled on a farm near MacDowell and were soon blessed with three children: sons Bryn (6) and Sam (4) and daughter, Grace (2). Children brought out the best in Wade. He knew how to enter their world, pretending to be a bucking bull for them to ride, offering his bald head as a canvas for brightly coloured markers and cooking Kraft Dinner for breakfast. He taught them about cows and frogs and coyotes. His presence created chaos and laughter and Nadine was his quiet centre, his what-would-we-do-without-you-Nellie. Wade was a fun-loving uncle to his young nieces and nephews and a thoughtful mentor to the older children of family and friends. His gift was the ability to turn ordinary moments of daily life into stories so funny they brought tears to your eyes. He understood that laughter brings people together, making the good times better and hard times easier. Left behind to tell his awesome stories are his wife Nadine (Bryant) and their beautiful children, Bryn, Sam and Grace of Prince Albert, SK; parents Jim and Sharon (Mills) of Senlac, SK; sister Kelly Cooper and husband Hugh O'Neill and their children Casey and Anika of Belleisle Creek, NB; sister-in-law Glenice (Wagner) and children Maggy, Ruben and Sandy of Senlac, SK; brother Ash and wife Katrina (Marshall) and their son Jinks of Senlac, SK; mother and father-in-law Carol and Vern Bryant of Battleford, SK; sister-in-law Jodi Chmelnyk (Bryant) and husband Cory and their children Alex and Jorja of Murray Lake, SK. Wade was predeceased by his sister Connie and joined in his passing by his brother Cam. He is lovingly remembered by uncles, aunts, cousins, nieces, nephews and many friends. He lives on in the faces of his beautiful children and in the hearts of those who love him. Memorial donations can be made to the Wade Cooper Children's Trust or the Cam Cooper Children's Trust, Unity Credit Union, Box 370, Unity SK, S0K 4L0. ____________________________________________________




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