EPISODE 880 “GET IN THE POLICE CAR, SON, WE ARE GOING FOR A RIDE”
EPISODE 879 TREES ARE SMARTER THAN YOU AND ME….THEY KNOW WHAT’S COMNG
“I grow old … I grow old …
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled.”
EPISODE 876 IN THE BEGINNG…A CREATION STORY…SKY WOMAN FELL FROM THE CLOUDS
Northeast (Southeastern Canada and Northeastern US, including the Great Lakes)
Fwd: EPISODE 876 DID YOU EVER GET THE STRAP IN SCHOOL? (remember ‘spare the rod and soil the child’
EPISODE 876 DID YOU EVER GET THE STRAP IN SCHOOL?alan skeochsept/ 27. 2023’
When did the strap stop being used in schools in Toronto?
By 1979, the York and North York School Boards had joined Toronto in banning the strap, but in the early 1980s it was still permitted in Scarborough, Etobicoke, East York, Peel, York Region, the Metropolitan Separate School Board, and virtually everywhere else in the province. Elsewhere in Canada, the tide turned towards abolition in the 1990s.THE STRAPI got the strap once. At least I think I got the strap. Was it my imagination or did it really happen? I am not sure but havea clear memory of waiting in the principals’ office for him to deliver a whack on my hand with a leather strap that looked likea thing dad used to sharpen his razor in days before Gillette Blue Blades made the razer strap obsolete,Memory“I sm sitting on a wood office chair outside the principal’s office in Runnymede pubic school . Toronto. Nervous.Not exactly sure what I have done. I was To be strapped though. Likely because I vaulted over the school fence in a kind of somersault. Or maybebecause I was late for school because it was garbage day and there were always good things to find like thewestern novel Frontier Doctor which was jammed in my back pocket“Well, son, stretch out your right hand.”“I’m left handed.”“Then stretch out your left hand.”(I should have shut up.)“I am going to hit you once wit this strap. Do not move your hand.”(Good idea…I must move my hand. Do not want to be hit. Wait untilstrap coming downward…..then..”
Damn!
“You moved your hand. I hiT my own knee”My memory ends there. I remember he was mad but do not rememberhim actually hitting me. If he did then the blow was not memorable. Hitting hisown knee was memorable. No laugh..no snicker…no tears.Afraid he would double the punishment. But he did not. Did this really happen?My brain says i t did. The same brain had said Santa Calus was not real years agoThe same brain that told me to sit down most of the day..that way no-one would noticethat the ass was torn out of my pats. My back pocket had hooked on the fenceand tore a gap revealing y underwear or my bare ass.
Those were the days in late 1940’s and early 1950’swhen strapping kids was considered essential. Belevers in the strap really believed thatto “spare the rod was to spoil the child.” A good whack on the hand was important somehow.Seemed a bit deranged to me.Our family did not believe in strapping. My dad was a big tough tire builder. Strongas an ox. But he did not believe in disciplining Eric and me. Never touched usHe was prepared, however, to defend us from the dangers of the outside world.One illustration ? A lady followed us home from school one day. We were with ourfriends…big Red Stevenson Billy and Bobby Rankin, Brian Hetheirngton…and hadbeen using pea shooters all the way home. Especially this one woman’s diningroom window which was in range. No ill will to her just fired the beans because i was in range.
The window glass got a shower of hard white beansrather than soft green peas.So there she was. Folowing us. We lived closest to the school so got the visitor…the woman.Dad was working the night shift at Dunlop Tire. He was home only because therewere no horses running at Dufferin track that day. The doorbell rang and dadlumbered down to the main floor. Opened the door….“Your boys have been firing white beans at my window!”“What the hell are you talking about?”“Your boys…”“Listen and listen closely Get your goddamn self off my verandahand bugger off homel”“But…(splutter splutter)Dad closed the door, lumbered back u the stairs, ignored Eric and me, andwent to bed…night shift. We had a one bedroom house. Eric and I slept thereat night. Dad did on night shifts but normally dad had the front-room couchmom the dining room couch We were a close knit family. Loved each other butnever said so Did not need to say that nor to get kissy assy with hugs.I never told dad about the strap. Afraid he would go down to school and punch the shit out ofthe principal who already had a sore knee.When Marjorie and I had Kevin and Andrew we followed the same patternbut les dramatically. Certainly no strapping. Makes me shiver to eventhink of that. The closest i ever sae to discipline was quietly saying:I was disappointed’to kevin or Andrew for some minor indiscretion. And the boy began to cry. Maybewords hurt more than a strap. But I am not convinced.If you beilong to the ‘SPARE THE ROD OR SPOIL THE CHILD’ parental generationthen Get the hell off our verandahalan skeoch
EPISODE 884 APPLES IN A TANGLED ORCHARD
The myth regarding cows and apples
You might have heard this myth. Cows that eat apples can get a bloated stomach and die. But that’s not what’s happening when your cattle feed on apples fallen on the ground or those that you offer them to diversify their diet.
So, if that’s not true, where does this myth come from? There is a small grain in this myth, which is that the cows can get a little bloated when eating apples. However, that happens only if they eat a lot of apples all of a sudden and for the first time in their lives.
Anything new that’s introduced to a cow’s diet can cause bloating. It is not only apples that can cause this side effect, but any other fruits and veggies that your cows may eat by accident or otherwise. As long as cows feed on fallen apples, they won’t run the risk of overeating.
They know what’s good for them and what isn’t and they won’t eat more than what they can digest. So, if you plan to introduce apples into your cows’ diet, do so gradually. And here’s another thing. Many cows love apples and will consider them treats.
EPISODE 883 OUR KITTEN WAS THIRSTY TODSY
EPISODE 882 CRAB APPLE JELLY…FROM WILD CRAB APPLE TREE…guarded by three mowers with hidden knife like blades
EPISODE 881 HOW I FOUND ROBERT DOWNEY AND HIS THRESHING TEAM LABOUR DAY AT STEAM ERA 2023
EPISODE 880:ROBERT DOWNEY’S 1920 OR 1930 CORN COB SHUCKER…FEATURING 7 YEAR OLD DOMINIC DEBOER
EPISODE 880: ROBERT DOWNEY’S 1920 OR 1930 CORN COB SHUCKER…FEATURING 7 YEAR OLD DOMINIC DEBOER
I am 38 years old, born and raised just south of Caledonia, where I still reside. I am a licensed mechanic by trade and currently working at the Hamilton Airport fixing ground service equipment. I also do some farming and help Leanne’s family with the 4000 or so acres they do. I started working on things at a young age in my grandfather’s shop, Allan McBay, who was a Skid-Doo dealer, ag mechanic and farmer. I would spend all of my holidays and summers there working on equipment. At the time of his death, we counted all of the tractors, not including equipment and there were roughly 160 tractors. I got the “old iron bug” from him. Lol. All the way through high school my friends could not understand why I was always spending time at grandpas until one day they came up and took a tour through the barns, after that they understood and a few of them caught the “bug” themselves. I bought my first tractor, a 1949 Farmall H, when I was 17 and the first thing I did was take it to grandpas to get his seal of approval. After that it was just a tradition to get his seal of approval on all our tractors purchases. I was fortunate enough to end up with a farm girl who also caught the bug for old iron and she has since started collecting her own, however like Hatfield’s and McCoys, we have our fun battles as I come from an International Harvester family and she is a John Deere family. It is all in good fun, but at the end of the day we love all the old iron. We have a vast number of plows that we use in the fall to do plow days, the corn shredder, a corn binder, an old new holland baler with a mounted 2-cylinder Wisconsin engine and a few IH fast hitch attachments. My current project I have been working on is a 1976 IH Loadstar truck that I have put onto a newer truck chassis and plan on using to haul the old iron around on. I was also just lucky enough to retrieve my grandpa Downey’s 1947 International KB3 truck that will be on the restore list next.Between Leanne, Dale, Colin, Joe, Dominic and myself we are pushing in the neighbourhood of 50 tractors in our little collection. the oldest being my 1938 McCormick Deering 10-20 on steel and the newest being my 1960 Farmall 560 diesel that I still do farm work with.
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$1,600 in 1930 has the same “purchasing power” or “buying power” as $29,064.72 in 2023. To get the total inflation rate for the 93 years between 1930 and 2023, we use the following formula: The average inflation rate of 3.17% has a compounding effect between 1930 and 2023