EPISODE 303 LORNE JOYCE — THE COMMERCIAL FISHERMEN ON LAKE ONARIO – A TOUGH LIFE


Note:  This  is a personal description of the commercial  fishery on Lake Ontario as seen through the eyes of Lorne Joyce, the
son of commercial fisherman Bob Joyce.  A few years ago I interviewed  Lorne about his  father.   I made notes then converted
the notes to dialogue from.  The result is a little choppy because our conversation jumped around.  I do think it give some idea about
the nature of commercial fishing on Lake Ontario up until 1960 when a ‘perfect storm’ (many many reasons) happened  that ended
commercial fishing in Port Credit.   Episodes that follow this episode will make the picture clearer.  

Lorne talked about the rum running years which  were so  dramatic that they obscured  the history of the Port Credit commercial
fishery.   The rum running years were dangerous times even though today  those years are made into sensational and amusing
twists of history.   Lorne’s  family and most families in Port Credit were Temperance people.  They did  not drink.   I believe Lorne;s
father may have dabbled in rum running….beer by what Lorne said…but our conversation skirted  around the facts.  Lorne was
hard to pin down on the prohibition years.  

Pictures of the Commercial Fishery are more  difficult to find than pictures of the rum running adventures.   The result distorts
this episode.



EPISODE 303   LORNE JOYCE — THE COMMERCIAL FISHERMEN ON LAKE ONTARIO – A TOUGH LIFE.



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1926 – 2013









LORNE JOYCE: OPTOMITRIST, FISHERMAN, HISTORIAN…PERHAPS RUM RUNNER


             “LORNE ALWAYS LAUGHED BEFORE HE SPOKE AND WITH HIS LAUGHTER THERE WAS A TWINKLE IN HIS EYES.  HE WAS A GOOD MAN.  I SPENT A WONDERFUL

                SUNDAY AFTERNOON TRYING TO DISCOVER WHAT MAKE HIM TICK….ONLY TO DISCOVER HE WAS TRYING TO DISCOVER WHAT MADE ME TICK.  HE WAS THAT
                KIND OF MAN.  SELF-EFFACING.    ABLE TO DIVERT TALK ABOUT HIS LIFE WITH A  LAUGH AND A STORY.  ONLY TO FIND HE WAS GENTLY DOING THE INTERVIEW. WE ALL MISS HIM.”
                   (Alan Skeoch, 2013)

Lorne Joyce is a man that is  hard  to forget.  He is gone now but shortly before his death we talked about fishing, rum running and, of  course, stonehookers.
Let me use his voice…pretend  I am Lorne using the notes I made that day…I remember him so well.

             
Picture of a typical fish boat…i.e. shaped  like a jelly bean.


“My dad and brothers were Port Credit fishermen…commercial kind.  No fishing rods…they were used by the sport fishermen and women.  We had long nets designed to catch adult fish  by their gills.  Our fish boats
were ugly things.  Fishboats looked like giant jelly beans…long, round on bottom and top, with side opening doors and a low transom so they could see where we
were going.  We dropped  the nets from the side doors…lead weights on the bottom, bobber floats on the top.  Then we would wait.  Drop other nets  in the mean time.
After a week or so we would return to the  first nets and pull them up hopefully with fish trapped by their gills.  Those nets were expensive…perhaps $25,000…so a
lost net was  a disaster.  Buoys were set above the nets so they could  be found.  How  were they found?  “We used a compass and  a  watch.”  Hauled the nets with with 
a roller winch.  Busy time. Detaching fish, gutting and cleaning them, packing them in ice  in summer time and stowing them in the fish boat.  Where did we get the ice”
We cut big blocks of ice from the Credit River in January and February, piled the blocks under straw in our ice house which was really just a simple shack. On a good day we could haul in ten tons of fish…whitefish for instance.  Big hauls were exhausting…they had to be cleaned fast, iced, packed in fish boxes on Port Credit dock and then
shipped  to the big fish markets in Chicago, New  York…even San Francisco.  Winter time fishing was dangerous.  Ice on the  lake could trap a fish boat.  I remember
Dad talking about one fish boat that got both trapped and  lost out on the lake ice for several days.  When  found the three men on board were alive but in bad shape
from the cold.

“Ice was dangerous in another way.   Winter spray would freeze on the fish boat.  Get thicker and thicker until there was real danger the boat would roll 
over.  We had to crawl  out with axes and try to knock big chunks of that heavy ice off … we could slip off ourselves. 

“Yes, men did die.  In January 1943, the Thomas brothers never returned.  They were lost somewhere near Port Dalhousie.  We sent the steel hulled Naomi to scour
the lake for them but all that  was found as a burned coat.  Fire  and  ice, bad combination.  Even  the Naomi got into trouble that year.  The tug was so heavily iced over
when it lumbered into port that the crew  had crawl out through the wheelhouse window.   Commercial fishing was a 12 month business full of risks.  The price we got
was the biggest risk of all.  Fish had to be sold fast.  By the 1940’s big catches did  not happen often.  The fishery was  getting fished out…Then  in 1960 our fish shacks
were sold from under us.  The land on the  east bank of the Credit River was put up for sale by he Federal government.  We were finished.”

“Our best years were the 1920’s.  But our money was not all  made by fishing.  Some  of the fishermen ran a little rum.  Dad did but he was  not proud of the fact for we are a Temperance family.  None  of us drink.  The lure of fast money trumped moral  principles.  Prohibition in the United States was a godsend
to a lot of fishermen.  The 13th amendment to the American constitution banned alcohol.  But it did not ban the thirst for whisky and beer.  Some Canadians
undertook to quench  that thirst.  We had Prohibition in Canada for a while but our distilleries were allowed to continue making the stuff.  Weird, right?
This is  how it worked shipping liquor from the Main Duck islands.  A large boat loaded with crates and  sacks  of whisky and beer would pick up the stuff  from Canadian
distillers like Corby’s, Gooderham and Worts, motor to the Main Duck islands and  then transfer the liquor to smaller motor boats that would race
to secret destinations  on the US shore….used  low sleek  and fast little launches.  Easy money.  Price of a bottle of whisky sky-rocketed  to $40 each. That’s $500 a
bottle today.  Big time criminal activity…got bigger and bigger…more and more dangerous.  Roots of organized crime.  People got killed.  Boats got burned.  Politicians, police, normally law  
abiding citizens got corrupted.  Speak easies proliferated.  Gangs got rich.  Al Capone emerged along with other big time criminals. 

“American coast guard boats were armed with machine guns.  I remember dad saying that one
rum runner bent over to grab a lunch sandwich and a US machine gun peppered the windscreen just missing him.  For a while rum runners built fast boat
that could  outrun the Coast Guard boats. We laugh about those days now but rum running was no joke. Lake Ontario was dangerous at night.



THE










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“Joe  Burke was the big rum runner in Port Credit…or so I was told.  During the years of  Canadian Prohibition, He  would  buy a lpad of liquor from a Canadian distillery, have it shipped by train to Port Credit, load it on a boat here and assure  Canadian customs people that the liquor was being shipped to St. Pierre and Miquelon, French
territory off the coast of Newfoundland.  Then peddle the liquor to American criminals.   His rum running boats never had enough gas for the long
trip up the St. Lawrene.  Only enough to get across the lake and  back.

“  Sometimes we  failed to sell the beer to the Americans and had to bring it back to Port Credit.   That was why we always had  about 150 feet of good rope
on board.  To avoid Canadian  customs people we would tie the  sacks beer to the long rope and drop it overboard just outside Port Credit harbour.   Then use
a drag a  hook to recover the beer when it was safe.   I know you are  wondering if we drank any ourselves.  We  did not but others did.  Opening a sack
of beer would get the big time bootleggers angry.  Dangerous.  To get around that the sack would be held over awashtubm and then slammed with a  hammer.  Bottles
would break and beer would leak into the washtub.  Ladle the foamy stuff into tin cups.   Explain to big time bootleggers, “ Sorry, Accidentally broken!  ” 

“My Dad  died  in 1928,  Shortly before he died he told mom to sell the boats as fast as possible.  Why?  Because they are old, made of wood,
and will rot fast.  She sold them but got next to nothing for them.  The same was happening to the stonehookers about then.
Both the fishery and stoehooking were in decline.    Stonehooking  was killed by the cement factories.  Commercial fishing limped along
until the late 1940’s and1950’s 


              


What remains?
 Some stonehookers houses are still in Port Credit.  The Naish house for instance 
And the Wilcox Hotel  And the blacksmith on Stavebank.  Perhaps most surprising is  the survival
of one old and decrepit ice  house over by Riverside  School.  


FISHING  to 1950    Fishboats open and Fishboats covered
 

 
They would motor out into Lake Ontario, often heading for the waters around  Main Duck Island far to the east.   Eight foot nets were strung together and dropped in the lake … corks on one side, weights on the other so the nets would hang vertically.  Buoys were attached to mark the place.  Lots of nets used…if a winter storm destroyed the nets the fishermen could lose as much as $25,000 and this did happen.  Five or ten days later they would return to the nets using a compass and a watch.  Compass and watch…think about that.  Then they would roller-winch in the nets, detach the fish and begin to clean and pack them on the ice that had been stowed in Port Credit ice house from the previous winter.  On a good day a fisherman could get ten tons of fish.  Big hauls like that had to be cleaned and iced fast and then shipped to the big fish markets in Chicago, New York…even San Francisco.
 
Ten tons!   That was good day.  There were not a lot of good days.  
 
Up early in the morning and out into the lake.  Fog made things difficult but winter ice was the biggest hazard.  “Ice formed on the water and once in a while the b oats would get trapped.  My Father (Bob Joyce) always managed to get home safely but I remember one time one boat with three men abourd was trapped in the ice for several days and my father and others searched for them, day after day.  It was scary.  The boat was finally found and the men were alive but in very bad shape from the cold because while the boat was covered and had a motor and stove which would normally keep them warm, they ran out fuel after the first few days.”*
 
(*Grandpa Bob (Joyce) spins a few tales to his grandchildren in the year 1993, P.17, book loaned from Sandra Church)
 
Men used axes to knocking off  chunks of ice from the sides and deck…trying to lighten the boat lest she capsize.  Those fish boats would never win a beauty contest.  Looked like an odd shaped wooden piano box afloat…or to use another metaphor…a toad sliding across the ice…a giant bobber.  But These covered fishing boats were a great improvement over earlier fishing boats … a covered deck with a side door for hauling in nets was a lot better than an open deck because the fishing fleet was a 12 month operation and protection was a godsend even if the slick lines of the old schooners were jettisoned.   
 
Some died.  The Thomas brothers were missing in January 1943 somewhere off Port Dalhousie.  The steel hulled Naomi scoured the lake for three days and all they found was a man’s burnt coat.  The Thomas brothers were never found.  Then men on board the NAOMI were at risk themselves for their tug was so heavily iced over when they lumbered into Port Credit the men had to crawl out the after-wheelhouse window.   Winter fishing was not some kind of holiday.
Naming fish boats was not always flattering.  The Norma Jean was named after Mrs. Bob Joyce .  She was not amused…being named after a schooner or one of the sleek launches in the harbour was OK.  But to be named after a fish boat!  A floating block of wood…a toad in the water.  Forget it. 
 


THIS photographer who took this picture was threatened by the men in the skiff.  “You better not be taking a picture”  A rum runners spped launch

had run aground  on the Detroit River and  the rum runners rushed to transfer the liquor to shore before being spotted by the Coast Guard sometime in the 1920’s

            alan skeoch
            Port Credit, Ontario
            based on a speech given in 2013

            Poor Scripts


1)   Canada adopted Prohibition in 1916. Repealed it in 1921

Not to be deterred, Province of Ontario passed its own prohibition. The Ontario Temperance Act (OTA, 1921-1927) outlawed the sale and consumption of any alcoholic beverage in Ontario. OTA did not restrict alcohol manufacture. It did restrict any distiller or brewer from selling their products within the province. Producers moved their sales operations to Province of Quebec.This allowed products made in Ontario to be legitimately sold from Quebec, and then legally shipped to foreign customers from Ontario. 


2)  The document below was excerpted from the AnnulReport of the Department of Fisheries of the Province of Ontario, 1899-1906

District Overseer Pratt reports :     That the season has been a profitable one both to the fishermen and the dealers j   that a smaller number than in former years have been engaged in fishing ; that prices   have ruled higher, and that with the exception of a few particular localities in Georgian   Bay, fish are decidedly on the increase. He is of the opinion that the causes of the   non-increase of fish in some localities are : (1) That in former years, saw dust had been   allowed to enter several streams and thereby became deposited over a considerable area   at river mouths ; (2; that the towing of large rafts of logs is detrimental to both fish,   life and fishing operations ; and (3) a fermentation process takes place when fresh bark   is deposited in the water, which causes the fish to avoid such places.     The fishermen, he says, complain that tugmen are not careful to avoid unnecessary   damage to nets, but frequently tow their rafts over net buoys, often getting foul of th   buoy line, dragging and tearing valuable property. He is of the opinion that the preser   vation line, inside of which net fishing is not allowed, is too far from shore from off   Moose Point north, and that there does not appear to be any good reason for shutting oft   so many acres of water. 

  Implements of Capture.     The principal implements of capture authorized in Ontario are the pound set, the   gill net, the hocp or fjke net, and the seine. The pound net preserves the fish alive,   and is set at right angles to the shore, from which runs out a leader until water   sufficiently deep in which to set the pound is found, vaiying from 25 to 40 feet, according   to the length of the stakes used. The fish, in passing up and down the shore, encounter-   ing the leader, are turned in their course and work along the leader until they pass into   the heart and thence into the pound, from which the net derives its name. Not more   than three nets in a string are permitted to be set, and an open or disconnected space   must be left between each net. They are placed at various distances apart, care being   exercised to prevent crowding or oveifishing. On the American side, where the water is   very much shallower, as many as 25 or 30 nets are set in a string, and as closely together   as the fishermen may desire. The fisherman with small capital has, therefore, no chance,   pocketed between long strings of these nets, and is forced out of the business, while on   this side all are put upon an equal footing. ^_^ — \     The hoop or fyke net, though differently constructed, operates similarly to the pound]   net, the fish being found alive in the bag or purse. It is set in marshy inshore waters,/   and is licensed to take coarse fish only. — ^     The gill net bangs like a wall in the water, suspended by buoys and floats, and is   kept taut by sinkers. It may be set in shallow or deep water. The fish are gilled in   attempting to pass through the met he s, and soon die. The occupation of gill net fishing   on the great lakes is attended with many dangers and hardships. The fishermen must   be on the water in all kinds of weather, the best lifts being, it is said, sometimes made   wien the lakes are the roughest.     The seine or sweep net is probably the oldest device for taking fish, and is a most   effective on« ; To it, however, is attributed the depletion of many waters once teeming   with fish, ai d its use, therefore, has been for seme years discouraged. It varies in length   according to the distance to be swept, one end being attached to the shore. All fish,   irrespective of size, within the circle described in its operation are taken.   

  The Commercial Fisheries.     ' As a national possession they are inestimable, aud as a field for industry and en-   terprise they are inexhaustible." They are perhaps unsurpassed in any country on the   giou«, not only in extent, but for their great economic value. Practically no attention   has as yet been directed to our great north west and northern waters, which teem with the   finer qualities of fish. These fisheries are destined in the near future to afford a liveli-   hood for thousands of our population, and become an important and continuous source of   food supply and revenue. In the older portions of the province, under a judicious   licensing system, a vigorous policy of supervision, and the requirement of a strict com-   pliance with the laws and regulations enacted for the protection of the fisheries, there   may soon be expected to be a large increase in the supply of fish and a perceptible im-   provement in the fishing industry, a matter which concerns not the present generation   only but which ia of vital importance to succeeding generations alsa. Any other course   will result in their complete extinction. ' : Propagation may plant and generous nature   may water, but a reasonable protection must be added to give permanent increase " The   fishermen for a consideration, are granted the privilege of netting in the public waters, but   this privilege must not be abused, nor the public's interests in the fisheries prejudiced   thereby. The history of commercial fishing in the great lakes of this province, until   within very recent years, has been one of wholesale destruction. Not many years ago   Lake Ontario teemed with whitefish and there are well authenticated instances of as   many as forty, fifty, and even ninety thousand having been taken in one night at Bur-   lington Beach. No thought was then had of saving the immature and unmarketable por-   tion of the catch, aud no thought was had of the morrow, but they were thrown upon the   beach to die, rot and be carted away as manure, and as a result of this improvidence   there are now but few whitefish in that lake ; aud, as in Lake Ontario, so in most of the   large bodies of fresh water where fishing has been engaged in to excess. The urgent   necessity of some decisive action to prevent the continued destruction of the immature   fish led to the introduction into our licenses, and subsequently into the Fisheries Act, of   the clause prohibiting the taking of any trout or whitefish under two pounds in weight —   in other words, the taking of these fish before they have arrived at the age of reproduc-   tion. It was suggested that the object desired could be accomplished by requiring the   mesh of the pot of the pound net to be sufficiently large to permit the escape of all fish   under that size ; and while this might have been a remedy in some place?,, in others —   such, for instance, as in Lake Erie, where a variety of kinds and sizes of fisll inhabits the   lake, and where the bulk of the catch is of herring and a small kind of pic ":erel — such a   condition would have resulted in the bankrupting of the fishermen, and was therefore   impracticable. Could a size have been stipulated, it would have been admittedly prefer-   
1899 ] GAME AND FISHERIES. 37         able, but it was found that a length which would in some waters meet the case, in others   would represent a fish of a much greater weight ; so that a weight limit was ultimately   decided upon. It will be satisfactory to know that before the adoption of the condition   the views of as many fishermen and purchasers of fish as possible were ascertained by per-   sonal visits to different points in the Province and otherwise, and that no objection was   made to it, but the contrary, many remarking that if the condition were observed it would   do more to replenish and secure the perpetuation of the trout and whitefish than any other   means that could be adopted, not excepting the strict observance of the close season. To   the credit of the fishermen it may be said that the restriction has been uniformly well   observed during the past season. The significance of this condition will be apparent to   every one when he recognizes that a whitefish or trout does not spawn before she has   attained a weight of two pounds, and that the taking of a fish below that weight means   that there has been eliminated from the supply not only a fish that has not contributed   her quota to the perpetuation of her species, but that one has been placed upon the   market of practically no commercial value. The fishermen cannot be so shortsighted as   not to see that in taking the immature fish they are destroying the "goose that lays the   golden egg." 

EPISODE 202 ANDREW SKEOCH, SPORT FISHERMAN, PORT CREDIT, MARCH 2021 (story 2 Great Lakes)

EPISODE 202     ANDREW SKEOCH, SPORT FISHERMAN, PORT CREDIT, MARCH 2021 (story 2  Great Lakes)


alan skeoch
April  2021

ANDREW SKEOCH holding a Lake Trout caught offshore Port Credit, Ontario

LIFE AND DEATH IN THE GREATEST FISH BOWL ON EARTH:  THE GREAT LAKES.

“Andrew, could you send me some pictures of the fish you have caught this year?”
“Why, dad?”
“Because I cannot tell one fish from another.”
“I bet you are writing another story, dad.”
“I am.”
“About fish?”
“Andrew, this story is one of the greatest fish stories ever written.” (perhaps an overstatement)
“Your story?”
“No,  The story of Great Lakes fishing is absolutely fascinating but largely
unknown by the millions of people living on the shores  of the Great Lakes…
you know the fish.  I do not.   But I do  know the story of the Great Lakes fishery
could be a great documentary film.  Instead it remains
unknown.  I would like to change that.”
“OK, dad, here are the fish … fish caught this year just a couple of miles out of
Port Credit harbour.




1) LAKE TROUT
LAKE TROUT*

ONE OF THE MAIN ACTORS IN THIS  STORY…take a look
at the mouth…then the body.    Lake trout live for 30 years or
more and have historically been critical  predators  that have kept
fish populations in Lake Ontario healthy for thousands of years.
Up until 1960 when something went wrong in Lake Ontario and
all the Great Lakes.



2) CHINOOK OR KING SALMON
CHINOOK OR KING SALMON caught by Andrew Skeoch offshore Port Credit, Ontario

This huge Chinook (King) Salmon was caught in the 2018 Great Ontario salmon derby

CHINOOK OR KING SALMON…the largest sport fish caught in Lake Ontario
are chinook salmon.  They are a Pacific  Ocean  fish commonly found
laying eggs in rivers on the west coast of  North America.  What the hell are
they doing here … off shore Port Credit, Lake Ontario?  The answer will
startle you. Identifying feature…black gums  

3) COHO SALMON
COHO SALMON held by Andrew Skeoch…caught offshore Port Credit, Ontario


COHO SALMON  are snakier than Chinook salmon.  Are loved by sport fishermen because they put up a fight when
hooked.  A bit smaller than the Chinook Salmon.  They are natural to the west
coast rivers of North America where they breed much  like the Chinook Salmon.
Same Question:  What the hell are they doing here … offshore Port Credit, Ontario in 2021?
(Andrew Skeoch, holding coho salmon)


4) BROWN TROUT
BROWN TROUT (held by Lee Widgeon, offshore Port Credit, Ontario)


5)  ALEWIFE

ALWIFE…snagged by accident while  deep water fishing offshore
Port Credit, Ontario.  Alewives are he main diet of Lake Trout,
Chinook Salmon, Coho Salmon, Brown Trout and others.
Alewives became he largest biomass in the great lakes.  Millions
of them…maybe billions. This little fish is the villain and the hero
of Great Lakes ecology.   Depends  entirely upon your point of
view.  You may be surprised to know that these little fish account
for the presence of those gigantic  Chinook and  Coho Salmon
now common in the Great Lakes.  It is not a  simple story.  And, yes,
it is controversial. (Jackson Skeoch preparing to eat the alewife.)

6) RANBOW TROUT

RAINBOW TROUT caught by Dan Devlin

This is the beginning of the story of the Great Lakes Fishery.  I thought it might be best to 
start in the present and asked Andrew Skeoch if he could loan me pictures of the great fish
he and other sport fisherman catch regularly in Lake Ontario.  Today sport fishing is encouraged
by various governments along Great Lake shorelines.   Commercial fishing still happens
but not nearly as much as sport fishing.  Why?  Simple.  Money spent.  Sport Fishermen spend
about $80 per fish landed while commercial fisherman get $1.50 per pound of fish filleted
and  sold.  Sport Fishing is good for business…provides direct employment for many and sales
for fishing gear sold by retail stores all around the Great Lakes.  The down side?  Has sport
fishing undermined the natural ecology of the Great Lakes.

This  is just the beginning of the series of stories titled  LIFE AND DEATH IN THE GREATEST 
FISH BOWL IN THE WORLD: THE GREAT LAKES.

NEXT EPISODE 204 :   LORNE JOYCE, SON OF A COMMERCIAL FISHERMAN, HISTORIAN, 

EPISODE 300 LIFE AND DEATH IN THE LARGEST FFISH BOWL ON PLNET EARTH; the great lakes speech feb. 29, 2020


EPISODE 300: LIFE AND DEATH IN THE LARGEST FISH BOWL ON PLANET EARTH (PART ONE)

SPEECH AT STONEHOOKER BREWERY (PART 1)
FEB. 29,2020

ALAN SKEOCH
FEB. 29, 2020
 updated April 2, 2021


I HAVE NO BOAT.  I HAVE NO FISHING ROD.  I HAVE NO SPEAR. I CAN SWIM BUT POORLY SO.
 BUT I DO HAVE IMAGINATION.
TODAY WE STAND ON THE EDGE OF THE GREATEST SOURCE OF FRESH WATER IN THE WORLD.
A WORLD THAT WILL NEED  THIS WATER IN FUTURE YEARS.  FOR WE ARE ALL MADE MOSTLY OF
WATER.

Today
I STAND HERE AND MARVEL AT THE FORCES THAT GROUND OUT THIS HUGE AND  DEEP SERIES 
OF LAKES.  GREAT LAKES INDEED   IT IS  A HUMBLING EXPERIENCE.

 I WOULD LIKE TO TELL YOU MY EXPERIENCE WITH THIS LAKE.  SOME  FIRST HAND…SOME
SECOND  HAND.   EIGHT DECADES HAS  BEEN LOTS OF TIME TO WONDER.  BUT EIGHT DECADES
IS ONLY AS A GRAIN OF SAND ON THE BEACHES OF THIS LAKE.




A TITLE?    “LIFE AND DEATH IN THE LARGEST FISH BOWL ON PLANET EARTH”

THIS LAKE WAS NOT ALWAYS HERE.  BEFORE LAKE ONTARIO EMERGED  THERE WAS  A HUGE 
INLAND  SEA .   A SEA SO BIG THAT IT COVERED MOST OF THE PLANET EARTH.  BENEATH US
THAT SEA HAS LEFT REMINDERS.   FOSSILIZED CREATURES PRESSED INTO ANCIENT MUD, NOW
SHALE.

SOME OF THE  FIRST CREATURES TO LIVE ON OUR PLANET.   CREATURES SO OLD THAT EVEN
THE BEST MINDS IN THIS ROOM WILL BE BOGGLED.   CREATURES  588 MILLION YEARS OLD…CREATURES
THAT LIVED IN THIS ORDOVICIAN SEA FOR 43 MILLON YEARS AND THEN IN THE TWINKLING OF THE EYE
OF TIME WERE GONE.  MOST WERE GONE IN ONE OF THE FIVE GREAT EXTINCTIONS THAT HAVE
HAPPENED HERE.


Image result for living crinoid


Image result for crinoid anatomy

LET ME DESCRIBE ONE OF THESE CREATURES.  THE CRINOID.  AN ANIMAL  THAT LOOKED LIKE
A PLANT.    FEET THAT GRASPED  THE SEA BOTTOM.  A LONG SPINAL CHORD THAT LOOKED LIKE
A PIECE OF ROPE.  AT TOP THAT HAD MANY LONG TENTACLES THAT GRABBED PLANKTON AND
SHOVED THE FOOD  INTO A GAPING MOUTH.  AN  ANIMAL WITH MOUTH AND BUM LOCATED SIDE
BY SIDE. MOST CRINOIDS ARE SMALL BUT NOT ALL WERE SUCH. THE LARGEST WAS  140 FEET LONG.
 EXTINCT NOW?  NOT QUITE.  ONE WAS  SIGHTED IN THE BAHAMAS RECENTLY.

YOU WOULD NOT WANT TO MEET THIS GUY…NAUTILOIDS ARE CARNIVEROUS…SOME STILL EXIST DEEP IN
THE PACIFIC OCEAN…THEY ARE NOCTURNAL…NASTY.

Giant Trilobite Fossil Found on Australia
FOSSIL OF A GIANT TRILOBITE FOUND IN AUSTRALIA.  SMALLER TRILOBITES
ARE COMMON FOSSILS FOUND IN SEDIMENTARY ROCK AROUND THE GREAT LAKES.

NAUTILOIDS AND  TRILOBITES SWAM AMONG THE CRINOIDS.  STRANGE CREATURES.
PALEOZOIC ERA WHICH LASTED  FROM 542 TO 250 MILLION YEARS AGO…300 MILLION YEARS!

THE BAHAMAS.  THAT IS WHERE PORT CREDIT WAS MILLIONS OF YEARS AGO.  IN THE TROPICS.  THE EARTH
IS A LIVING THING…IT MOVES AROUND.  WE LIVE ON TOP OF THESE HUGE TECTONIC PLATES FLOATING
ON THE LIQUID MAGMA BENEATH US.

YOU CAN  FIND CRINOIDS IF YOU WANT TO.  EASY.  JUST FIND A  SHINGLE BEACH LIKE THE RATTRAY
MARSH.  THOSE SHINGLES…FLAT SLABS  OF SHALE…ARE MILLIONS  OF  YEARS OLD AND IMPRESSED
IN MANY ARE CRINOID  FOSSILS.   

ONE TINY SHINGLE BEACH STILL EXISTS IN PORT CREDIT.   BUT NOT FOR LONG.  DEVELOPERS WILL SOON
GOBBLE THAT UP.  

THE GAP BETWEEN THEN AND NOW IS MILLIONS OF YEARS WIDE.  TOO WIDE FOR MY MIND TO DO
ANYTHING BUT MARVEL.

MY  STORIES ARE MOSTLY PLACED IN THE PRESENT….THE LAST 200 YEARS.   LONG AFTER THE GLACIERS
GROUND OUT OUR LAKE BOTTOM…THEN FILLED THAT HUGE CAVITY WITH MELT WATER.

MONSTERS


MY STORIES  ARE SHORT.  

  The Port Credit Monster…July 1892, Mr. and Mrs. Park spotted a serpent near Kingston…”eyes looked like balls of fire…” attacked them he fought it off with a pole.  Repeated sightings followed.  Oshawa, Whitby, Main Duck Islands…it was heading our way…fisherman claimed it was 40 feet long, 18 inches thick…Scarborough, Toronto…kids began  making sea monsters out of logs…August 1,1892…monster sighted off Port Credit…marathon swimmers training at the time…saw the monster…10 feet long…”Get out of the water, quick!”, screamed parents to the kids of Port Credit…At dusk Ambrose Adams, park caretaker set out in a rowboat to investigate…took a crowbar with him…newspaper sent a reporter…Adams returned at dark, announced the danger had passed for he had captured the monster and tied it to the lighthouse.  Newspaper reporter went wild…got a boat and flashlight…found the monster…a wooden rocking horse with a long tail of seaweed attached….Did that end the sightings…No.  Oct. 12, 1892, Port Credit fire chief William Newman and his son-in-law reported they had seen a creature 100 feet long.  “Without a mistake”  “We were standing on the shore close to the Port Credit Lighthouse when we sighted the serpent coming toward us, and travelling at something like 30 miles an hour.  It had a large, green head, resembling that of a lion, and would be about 20 feet in length.” The Chief said it swam in a zigzag course…water foamed around it.   People crowded Port Credit beaches in 1892.  But the serpent was never seen again.  Maybe one of you will see it someday.

THAT WAS A FAKE MONSTER…FOOLED MANY.  BUT BELIEVE YOU ME THERE ARE MONSTERS IN OUR LAKE.

FOR THOUSANDS OF YEARS HUMANS LIVED ALONG OUR LAKESHORE AND  UP THE CREDIT RIVER.  THEY
DEPENDED UPON THE LAKE FOR THEIR SURVIVAL AND  THE LAKE NEVER FAILED THEM.  EACH YEAR THEIR 
DRYING RACKS WERE FESTOONED  WITH ATLANTIC SALMON SPEARED  WITH EASE AT THE MOUTH OF THE
CREDIT RIVER.

SOME MONSTERS  WERE HUMAN

FIRST NATION PEOPLE’S  HISTORY ON THE CREDIT RIVER AND LAKE ONTARIO IS MUCH LONGER THAN THOSE OF EUROPEANS.  PERHAPS
THE WORST EVENT OCCURRED HERE   WHEN THE MISSISSAUGA CANOES RETURNED FROM TORONTO
WITH THE BODY OF CHIEF WABAKININE  AND HIS  WIFE.   BOTH MURDERED BY SGT McEWEN OF THE QUEEN’S 
YORK RANGERS AND A COUPLE OF WHITE SETTLERS.    MY WIFE, MARJORIE, DOES NOT LIKE ME TO TELL THIS
STORY FOR IT REFLECTS POORLY ON HUMAN BEHAVIOUR.   LAUNDERING HISTORY IS HARD TO JUSTIFY.
MCEWEN  AND  HIS FRIENDS  WERE INTENT OF RAPE…DRAGGED  CHIEF WABAKININE’S SISTER FROM BENEATH
HER CANOE ONE NIGHT.  THE CHIEF’S WIFE ALERTED THE CHIEF WHO TRIED TO INTERVENE.  HE HAD BEEN
DRINKING.  HE WAS  BEATEN SO BADLY HE DIED…AS  DID HIS WIFE.  MCEWEN WAS  ARRESTED BUT THE CASE
WENT NOWHERE.   THIS  NEARLY TRIGGERED A WAR THAT THE MISSISSAUGAS MEIGHT HAVE WON HAD NOT
JOSEPH GRANT  INTERVENED.   CAUTIONED THAT BRITISH  ARMY WAS TOO LARGE TO FIGHT.
THE CHIEF AND  HIS WIFE WERE BURIED HERE…SOMEWHERE.

firstnations.innisfillibrary.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Canise-or-Great-Sail-an-Ojibwa-Chief-Simcoe-Elizabeth-Posthuma-Gwillim-1762-1850-Picture-1794-English-226×300.jpg 226w, firstnations.innisfillibrary.ca/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/Canise-or-Great-Sail-an-Ojibwa-Chief-Simcoe-Elizabeth-Posthuma-Gwillim-1762-1850-Picture-1794-English-203×270.jpg 203w” sizes=”(max-width: 338px) 100vw, 338px” apple-inline=”yes” id=”43A26E95-573E-4CF2-8D54-86410AB02E7C” src=”http://alanskeoch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Canise-or-Great-Sail-an-Ojibwa-Chief-Simcoe-Elizabeth-Posthuma-Gwillim-1762-1850-Picture-1794-English.jpg”>

 Push came to shove in an even more ghastly way.  Again water was involved.  Chief Wabikinine, his wife and sister, paddled along our waterfront en route to Fort York to trade skins and dried salmon.  Trading involved brandy.   Traders were an unscrupulous lot in general.  Get the natives drunk, makes trading easier…more one sided.  Wabakinine was to be followed by the rest of the band the next day.
He got into the brandy early.  Tottered to bed in his tent.  A soldier from Fort York, Sgt Mcuen by name, and a couple of settlers, came along and pulled Wabakinine’s sister out from under her canoe where she was sleeping.  Wabakinine and his wife tried to stop them.  He was clobbered on the head as was his wife…more than a concussion…a fatal blow.  The band found him and took him home along our waterfront…perhaps to Bronte harbour, maybe here in Port Credit…where he died.   Nearly triggered a First Nation war…which was  the last chance of a Mississauga victory for warriors were available.  But Joseph Brant cautioned against action.


AFTER A  BEWILDERING SERIES OF TREATIES AND LAND ’SURRENDERS’,…THE SURVIVORS OF EUROPEAN DISEASES AND DECEPTIONS MOVED TO THE NEW CREIDT 
RESERVE WHERE THEY LIVE TO THIS  DAY.  I SPOKE THERE A YEAR AGO AND WAS TREATED WARMLY I MIGHT ADD.

IN THOSE EARLY YEARS, LAKE ONTARIO WAS THE ONLY ROAD…A WATER ROAD. SO PLACES LIKE PORT CREDIT WITH
A NATURAL SHELTERED HARBOUR WERE IMPORTANT.  SO IMPORTANT WAS THE CREDIT RIVER THAT JOHN  GRAVES
SIMCOE CONSIDERED LOCATING HIS GOVERNMENT HERE RATHER THAN TORONTO.  THE NAVIGABLE PART OF THE
 CREDIT RIVER WAS TOO SHORT.  HAD THE REVERSE HAPPENED OUR VILLAGE WOULD HAVE BECOME  A METROPOLIS
DOMINATED BY THE CN TOWER.

THIS SEEMS A GOOD TIME TO CONSIDER THE  LAKE ITSELF.

SETTLERS FLOODED ONTARIO IN THE 19TH CENTURY.  THEIR IMPACT CHANGED THE LAKE.  THEY BUTCHERED THE FORESTS FOR BARREL STAVES, LUMBER AND  MASTS FOR THE
KING’S SHIPS.  THEY SET FIRES EVERYWHERE FOR FOR POTASH TO MAKE EXPLOSIVES AND PERFUME.  THEY KILLED THE ATLANTIC SALMON WHOSE  GILLS COULD  NOT HANDLE SAWDUST.  WORSE  
STILL WERE THE DAMS.  WATER WAS  POWER BUT ONLY IF THE RIVERS WERE DAMMED.  THE DAMS HAMPERED FISH FROM SPAWNING.   THE CONSTANT DUMPING OF RAW SEWAGE
DID NOT HELP.  WE WERE FOULING OUR OWN NEST.  FISH REPRODUCTION WAS DIFFICULT…HOW COULD  FISH  GET OVER A DAM?  

THE PROBLEM OF POLLUTANTS BECAME SO SEVERE BY 1977 THAT BOTH CANADA  AND THE UNITED STATES  PASSED THE CLEAN WATER ACT THAT MADE THE DUMPING OF
RAW SEWAGE AND  INDUSTIRAL POLLUTANTS  IN STREAMS AND RIVERS  WAS MADE A CRIMINAL OFFENCE.  THE TRIGGER FOR ACTION WAS A RIVER IN NEW  YORK STATE
THAT REGULARLY BURST INTO FIRE.    THAT DID NOT HAPPEN UNTIL LATE IN THE 20TH CENTURY.    THE CLEAN WATER ACT WAS ACCLAIMED AS LONG OVERDUE.  BUT IT WAS LIMIED
TO SEWER PIPES AND FACTORY DRAINS.  NOTHING WAS SAID ABOUT PESTICIDE RUNOFF FROM FARM FIELDS.

REMEMBER THE LAKE MONSTER…10 TO 100 FEET LONG WITH A DRAGON HEAD.  SPOTTED OFFSHORE AT PORT CREDIT IN 1893?  REMEMBER I SAID THERE WOULD BE  WORSE MONSTERS.
BY 1960 THE FISH IN LAKE  ONTARIO WERE BEING KILLED BY A REAL  MONSTER.  ONE OF THESE MONSTERS  COULD KILL 18 KILOGRAMS OF SALMON, TROUT OR STURGEON.   THE MONSTER
IS THE SEA LAMPREY.   UGLY THINGS WITH A HEAD  LIKE A SINK PLUNGER ONLY FILLED WITH HOOKS.  GRABS A SALMON AND SUCKS  ITS FLESH AND BLOOD UNTIL THE FISH DIES.  ONE LAMPRY
WAS KILLING DOZENS OF LARGE FISH IN LAKE ONTARIO BY 1960.  SO MANY THAT THE WHOLE FISHERY WAS  IN JEOPARDY.   THE  PROBLEM HAS BEEN  PARTIALLY SOLVED BY PUTTING LAMPREY
POISON IN THE HEADWATERS OF OUR  CREEKS AND RIVERS WHERE THEY BREED.   90% HAVE BEEN REMOVED.  NOT PERFECT.






BY 1960 THE LAKE ONTARIO FISHERY WAS IN JEOPARDY FOR MANY REASONS. POLLUTION AND LAMPREYS WERE ONLY TWO  OF THEM.  OVERFISHING.  NO  LIMITS.
NO PRESERVATIVES BUT BLOCKS OF ICE HARVESTED IN WINTER TIME AND STACKED IN FLIMSY ICE  SHACKS TO TRY AND STAVE OF DECOMPOSITION.   

HOW MANY FISH COLD GET THROUGH THIS FISH NET?  NOT MANY.


LITTLE MENTION IS MADE OF THIS FISHERY BY HISTORIANS.  PERHAPS  BECAUSE NO GREAT WEALTH EVER CAME FROM IT.  BUT THERE ARE SNIPPETS HERE AND
THERE SUCH AS THE 1927 NOTE IN THE BRAMPTON COMPOSITOR THAT THE LARGEST LAKE TROUT EVER CAUGHT WAS  NETTED BY A.J. JOYCE OF PORT CREDIT, A FISHERMAN.’
THAT TROUT WEIGHED 32.5 POUNDS.  BY 1917 COMMERCIAL FISHING WAS A DYING INDUSTRY.  POLLUTION, SEA LAMPREYS, OVERFISHING.  

SEE FUTURE EPISODES 

alan skeoch
Feb. 29  2020
updated  April 2, 2021


POST SCRIPT

WE ARE ENJOYING DINNER IN THE STONEHOOKER BREWERY, NAMED IN HONOUR OF PORT CREDIT’S STONEHOOKING PAST

 ON ANY GIVEN DAY IN THE 19TH CENTURY THERE WOULD
BE 25 TO 30 SCHOONERS ANCHORED IN PORT CREDIT.   FEW OF THEM FISHED FOR FISH.  MOST OF THEM FISHED FOR SLABS  OF SEDIMENTARY ROCK…SHALE.  STONEHOOKERS THEY WERE CALLED.
UNIQUE.  PECULIAR.  STONEHOOKERS USED OLD SCHOONERS…SAILING SHIPS RENDERED OBSOLETE BY STEAM POWERED SHIPS.  MOST OF THESE STONEHOOKERS WERE NOT
PRETTY TO LOOK AT.  MORE ABOUT THEM WILL COME IN LATER EPISODES.

WHY WOULD PEOPLE WANT TO ‘FISH FOR SLABS OF ROCK’?  THINK ABOUT IT.



TYPICAL  STONEHOOKING SCHOONER IN PORT CREDIT HARBOUR CIRCA 1900



heritagemississauga.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Unknown-People-Stonehookers-of-Port-Credit-300×182.jpg 300w” sizes=”(max-width: 723px) 100vw, 723px” apple-inline=”yes” id=”601D5FA6-2B44-414F-B6D4-6685AA5B8795″ src=”http://alanskeoch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Unknown-People-Stonehookers-of-Port-Credit.jpeg”>

UNKNOWN PERSONS:  STONEHOOKING COUPLE IN PORT CREDIT

EPISODE 301 SLIGHT DIVERSION INTO BEE KEEPING

EPISODE 301      SLIGHT DIVERSION INTO BEE KEEPING…

ALAN SKEOCH
APRIL 2, 2021




I was a total failure as a bee keeper.  Must have been 40 years ago that I bought a bee colony from
somewhere in the United States.  I had already bought all the support technology and had
even taken some beekeeping instruction from a man who I thought was a friend.  Those
are the two mistakes  I  made.  1) Thinking that used bee hives and used equipment was
all I needed to become  a beekeeper.  2) I thought that my instructor was a friend  Oh, yes,
he knew bees.  He had several hives but he turned out not to be a friend.  His name will not
be mentioned.

My package of live bees arrived in the mail and I turned them loose in my old beehives.
I had  never heard  of all the diseases that afflict bees and was therefore startled to discover
my bees had something that was very infectious which  I think was called Sack Brood…not sure.
The end result was that I had to set the hive on fire and  kill my bees lest they infect other hives.
This was not a  nice experience.

The worst experience was when Marjorie phoned me at school to say my bee instructor
had arrived at our house and that his intentions were not good.  In that instance I acted
fast…called his home…did not care who was  listening.  “I am  going to say this only once…
keep the hell away from my wife, my house,  my life.  Understand.  Or do you need more instruction!”

TIME LAPSE OF 40 YEARS

WE ARE NOW BEEKEEPERS…YEARS 2020 AND 2021






Our son Andrew decided to try beekeeping much in the way  I did.  Just dive into
it and see how it goes   Let the bees do their work.  Bee keeping is not that simple.
Like all farming, bee keeping involves careful care which means keeping an eye
on the bees.


WE Have two friends who are skilled bee keepers.  Brad’s bees lived  in his back
yard  quite happily until they flew off in a swarm.  One queen and as many worker
bees as she could persuade just buzzed off.   The remaining bees tried to maintain
the home hive but for various reasons  they failed  Not Brad’s fault at all.   

My other friend Russ is an active bee keeper. He cares for his bees as  intensively as
a mother duck  does with her ducklings.   He does steal their honey. Carefully.  Never
steals enough to starve the bees.  And in the winter months he even takes sugar
syrup to his bee yard.   Russ also knows how to keep bees healthy.  There are 
chemicals .. medIcines the bees must have.

“Andrew, maybe you and Russ should get together.  He Knows bees.”

They both carefully examined Andrew’s bee yard.  Andrew  built a fence around
it…wire fence…to keep the skunks away.  He made sure the bees had a
south exposure.  And nice private place on the edge of the forest.
 He checks  his bees every week and his two hives of
bees have survived the winter months.

Today he is preparing for the arrival of another bee colony.

Andrew is carrying a super of bees  into the farm kitchen.  It is not such a good picture because I was  not sure
what kind of  reception Andrew would get with his notion that the hive should be warm beside the stove when the new bees arrive.


“Mom,  my new bees are arriving and they must be kept
warm so Brought a welcoming bunch of bees from the bee yard.
You will find them in your kitchen.  Too cold  for the new 
bees.   Try not to disturb them.”

Marjorie is alway obliging.  The bees are now in the kitchen at the farm 
as I speak. 

“Here dad, take a slab of honeycomb.  The bees will never miss it. “

“Andrew I have a gift for you.  LIppincott’s Farm Manual on Bee Keeping. 
Published in 1923 as a hard cover book based on issues of his monthly magazine
copies of which  were printed from 1868 to 1914.   This is a rare book, Andrew,
some copies are available on the internet but not many…cost $60.”

“Do your want the $60 now?”

“No, your mother and I will expect a tub of honey now and then.”



Lippincott’s developed a series of manuals regarding agricultural production, including this volume on beekeeping. Among other things, it offers a historical look at apiculture, the practice of human harvesting of products from honey bee colonies, as well as its marketing methodology. Beekeeping has quite a history, dating back to at least 15,000 years ago. The story of J.B. Lippincott & Co. offers a look at the complexities of the publishing industry. J.B. Lippincott & Co. was an American publishing house established in 1836 by Joshua Ballinger Lippincott, which still exists today as Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, which itself is an imprint of the publishing conglomerate, Wolters Kluwer, and focuses on technical journals. Initially J.B. Lippincott & Co. published Bibles and other religious materials, before expanding into fiction, almanacs, medical and other books. Later, Lippincott’s Monthly Magazine was issued, from 1868-1914 and offered novels, short stories, opinion pieces and other writings. In 1978, Lippincott’s was acquired by Harper & Row, which was then acquired by Wolters Kluwer in 1990.

Fwd: special NOTE APRIL 2, 2021



Begin forwarded message:


From: ALAN SKEOCH <alan.skeoch@rogers.com>
Subject: special NOTE APRIL 2, 2021
Date: April 3, 2021 at 9:30:11 AM EDT
To: John Wardle <john.t.wardle@gmail.com>


I made a big mistake and pushed  delete…lost whole story.   
So I will begin again tonight.   I managed to find my speech  of Feb. 29,2020
which will rescue much of the story.  TiTled “LIFE AND DEATH IN THE GREATEST FISH BOWL IN OUR WORLD: THE GREAT LAKES “

Sorry about the error…trying to rush too fast…new  story will come tonight

alan


EPISODE 298 THE OLD ICE HOUSE…PORT CREDIT FISHERY….AND A QUOTE BY ALVERT EINSEIN

EPISODE 299    THE GREAT LAKES FISHERY…and a  quote by ALBERT EINSTEIN

alan skeoch
March 2021


Where did tis fish come from?  


Andrew, Jackson and Olivia are holding large Coho salmon caught in the spring
of 2021 or the fall of 2020 about two kilometres from Port Credit.

Look at the mouth of this salmon.  Mean mouth.  This  is a top predator
feeding on something in Lake Ontario waters.  


Change is the  only sure  thing in life. Everything else cannot be  depended upon.
While these comments seem overblown when applied to the Great Lakes Fishery
just a casual  look seems to confirm that these huge bodies  of water…the largest
containers of fresh  water in the world…have undergone radical change in the short
time we human beings have had a chance to tinker with the water.  We, you and I, have tinkered
too much  with
the fish populations.  Early settlers believed Great Lakes  fish were inexhaustible.

I am not a fisherman.  One of our two sons, however, is an avid 
fisherman.  He even bought a large power  launch to get him out
to the prime fishing ground just a  mile or so off the Port Credit coast of Lake
Ontario.   He drops his spinners down a hundred feet or so and often hauls in
huge 30 pound Coho salmon.   Fish  so big even Andrew has trouble holding
some of them up for photographic  proof that these creatures who race up
the rest coast rivers  of  North America have become established in the Great Lakes.

Snaps  a picture then carefully slide the ugly monster back into the lake.
“Catch  snd  Release “ fishermen.  Sport fishermen like  Andrew motor their way out
of Port credit harbour in great numbers.  A Trawler fleet is neatly tied up along
the west bank of the Credit River renting space on board for those who will never
have money to buy a boat themselves.  Some tiny outboard motor fishermen 
work their way to the rising grounds as well. 

 “Some of these small boats
break down or run out of gas and have to towed back  to the harbour.  I’ve done
that too many times.  Lose patience especially if a fishing boat has run out of gas.
Takes ages to town a boat back to safety.  Means  I cannot fish as much I\as  I would
like.”
“Andrew, are there any commercial fishermen around?”
“Never met one.”
“Port Credit once  harboured a whole fleet of fish boats.  Are
you sure you have never seen one?”
“What do  their boats look like?
“Like a huge jelly bean with a flap like gate on the side.”
“Jelly bean?”
“Yes…the commercial fishing fleet looked like a bag of white jelly beans
as they motored out to the fishing grounds in Lake Ontario.  It was a
good business that supported many of the people living in Port Credit
through the 10th and 20th centuries.  But it is gone today.”
“What happened>”
“Answering that question is very difficult…super complicated.  Yet simple
to understand.  Too many people in the 19th and early 20th century were commercial
fishermen and there were precious few regulations.”
“Can you tell me why in short form.  I do not have time to listen to a long
lecture.”



LAKE STURGEON…A SAD STORY

“One illustration.  A fish that nobody seemed to want.  The lake sturgeon.  An ancient fish that lived
a long life under normal  circumstances.  The most ancient of the fish in the Great lakes, And also one
of the largest. Some sturgeon were ten feet long and weighed up to 190 kilograms.  And there were lots
of them.   Five million pounds of sturgeon were caught in Lake Erie in a single ear.   That is one great 
load of fish.   The sturgeon was considered a pest fish and there was no market for their meat.  But they
were caught in large numbers just to try and clear them out of Lake  Erie.  What happened to them once caught?\
GOOd question with a terrible answer.  Some were dried and  stacked  as firewood for the steamships.
Others were fed to pigs….and  others were simply used as fertilizer.  Millions of Sturgeon
were taken in the 19th century.  By 1900 they were extinct except for tiny populations in the Upper Great Lakes.
Killing big Lake Sturgeon for no good reason endangered the survival the species.   It took 14 to 33 years
for a female Lake Sturgeon to reach sexual maturity,  Males took from 12 to 17 years.  They were not 
wildly sexual.  Females only spawn once  every three to seven years.  Males are only interested in sex every
from one to four years.   Once fertilized   a female Lake Sturgeon can lay from 4,000 to 7,000 eggs for every
point of the weight  of females.  These old ladies of the lakes made up for lost time big time.  But not after
we humans got here.

Giant sturgeon caught in Fraser River, B.C.  Caught and released by Michael Snell.

Once  the biggest and oldest Lake Sturgeon were stacked as cordwood
or ground  up as fertilizer the survival of Lake Sturgeon was doomed.

NOTE:  THERE ARE 27 SPECIES OF STURGEON (ACIPENSERIDAE) which  can be traced back in fossils to the Late Cretaceous – and even more ancient in the Triassic period  some
245 million years ago.  Found in Eurasia and North  America.  The largest ever found was in the Volga estuary in 1827 which was 24 feet long, and wished 2,571 kilograms (3,463 pounds).
Overharvestng  for caviar today has put sturgeon on the edge of extinction.

Sturgeon

Temporal range: Upper CretaceousHolocene[1] 70.6–Present Ma 

Sturgeon.jpg
Scientific classificatione
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Acipenseriformes
Family: Acipenseridae
Bonaparte, 1831
Subfamilies
See text for genera and species.

So most Canadians  will never see a Lake Sturgeon.  

The sad tale of the Lake Sturgeon is only one of the tragic events in the aquatic history of the Great Lakes.  More are coming.


A PUZZLE THAT YOU CAN SOLVE…OR WAIT FOR ME TO SOLVE FOR YOU

Here is  a puzzle.   Perhaps you can answer.  Take a look at those salmon that Andrew and Jackson
are holding.  They were caught tis year…1021.   And they were not far off the coast of Port Credit.
But they are Coho salmon…a Pacific Ocean  fish that breeds in the rivers  of  the North American west
coast.   What are they doing in the Great Lakes?  They should not be here?   How did they get here?
In the next few Episodes I can answer that question and in the process raise a lot of other questions
whose answers  may startle you.

But first let me take you back to an historic event on Feb. 29, 2020 at the Stonehooker Brewery
in Port Credit.  The day before Covid 19 changed our world.

HOW  DID SKEOCH GET INTERESTED IN THE WATERS OF THE GREAT LAKES?



On February 29, 2020, I was asked to give a lecture on the Great Lakes Water to 100 dinner guests
at the Stonehooker Brewery in Port Credit.   I prepared the lecture for two months and figured the audience
would only be able to listen to 45 minutes  at the most.  Part of  our time at the Stonehooker Brewery
would be spent tasting beer and socializing.  Given a choice which would you prefer listening or drinking?

Marjorie Skeoch approached the lectern.  She was nervous but well prepared to introduce the speaker (her
husband).  She opened her speech with a quotation from Albert Einstein.   The quotation was found
on a wine bottle table from the Niagara district.

“Good evening, before I introduce Alan let me give you something to think about…

“THE MIND THAT OPENS TO A NEW IDEA NEVER RETURNS TO ITS  ORIGINAL  SIZE”
   (ALBERT EINSTEIN, as quoted  on the wine called OPEN, a Niagara Merlot)


When  MARJORIE gave her 20.5 minute introduction to her husband as speaker…she closed her eyes  and pushed
that wine bottle off the lectern to smash on the cement floor below.  She knew how to get attention.


Unfortunately or fortunately I never gave the lecture I had planned.  Marjorie, my wife, stole the
show because she was charged with the job of introducing the guest speaker…i.e. her husband.
Normal introductions might take 3 to 4 minutes  at the outset.  Marjorie took 20.5 minutes, “And  even then
I only got as far as 1995”.   She was great.  Made us laugh and cry. She had practiced her speech  for
two months as well.   She  got some information from the label on a wine bottle.  She took the bottle
to the lecture…read the label not attributed to Albert Einstein…and then dropped the bottle to the
cement floor of the brewery.   Shattered.   One member, Shaymus Stokes, jumped up to gather
the glass shards at Marjorie’s feet.  Was she upset?  Not in the least.  She continued to speak
about her husband in spite of the fact that her son Andrew kept tapping his watch along with other
gestures.  

So by the time I got to the lectern, I was an anticlimax.   So the speech wa never given.

Then one day later, March 1, 2020, we all became aware that millions of creatures so small
that they were invisible were sickening and killing people around the world.  Covid 19 took
centre stage.   My lecture that was never given was the last lecture in Port Credit.
We have been in lockdown  ever since.

alan skeoch
April 1, 2021


EPISODE 299 DAMAGE RAVENS DO TO ME

EPISODE 299   DAMAGE RAVENS DO TO ME


alan skeoch
March 30 2021

It is enough to make me cry.   The ravens.   A pair of them have built
their huge nest of corse sticks high above my  fanning mills.  Sort of hidden but
I knew they were there.   Having a pair of nesting ravens  return
year after year to set, hatch and rear their young seemed  quite an
honour.     

I hardly know they are up there.  Just the odd bit of scratching.
No hoarse raven calls.  that will come later when the babies are
near full grown.  Right now all is quiet.  Our so I thought.

Today I discovered  why they are so  quiet.  They have spent the winter
and spring months dropping great slurry turds on my prize fanning mills.
which  were hidden behind some crates  I never really looked behind
the crates  lest I disturb the ravens.   I believed ravens were intelligent
creatures…most intelligent creatures.   Wonderful  stories are 
written about ravens.  First Nations people on our west coach
consider ravens very smart…but also very wily.



“They are tricksters,” so the legends say.
“How true!”
“They have spent the winter dropping their turds  straight down
on my best fanning mills.”

They  have been quiet.  Not because they are embarrassed at their toilet functions.
They have been quietly laughing at me.  “Every time Alan comes into the drive shed
he looks up at our nest.  He never looks behind the crates.  His prize fanning mills
are steadily being filled with our crap.  And  he doesn’t know…doesn’t even suspect.
He thinks he is such a nice guy.  Giving us a place to nest.   Patronizing us.  We will
make a fool of him.  Drop another load.   Our dung looks like whitewash.  those
red fanning mills are now festooned in streaks of white…piles of white.
We have tricked him …made a fool of him.



Woody  was  quite relaxed about the situation.  He had an “It told you so” look
as he watched me me use a scraper to get the big lumps of excrement removed.
And then the  water and brush to get the steaks of white excrement from everything else.
“Alan, the ravens do not want you as a friend.  
They are bullies…they want to make you look like a fool.
And that they have achieved.”   




It took all afternoon to clean just one fanning mill.   I have five or six sitting under the raven nest.
Now I know what the First Nations people mean when they say Ravens are tricksters.  

“Never trust a raven, Alan”
Why not?”
“Because they will treat you like dirt.”

alan

EPISODE 297 LITTLE IRON BRIDGE ON FIFTH LINEAT STEELES AVENE….FORGOTTEN

EPISODE  297    FORGOTTEN LITTLE IRON BRIDGE ….FIFTH LINE AND STEELES  AVENUE, NEAR MILTON… MARCH  27, 2021


alan skeoch
March 27, 2021



THIS IS A STORY ABOUT A LITTLE IRON BRIDGE…DOOMED I SUPPOSE
(but on the other side there may be a yellow brick road anD the tin man)

Which  picture do you find more interesting.?  The new bridge under the 401 or the LITTLE IRON BRIDGE…Both of images  are within a few
hundred feet of  each other on the Fifth Line of Halton County and
Steeles  Avenue.  



CREATING A WORLD  CLASS DISTRIBUTING CENTRE 

Great Euclid gravel truck and  a squadron of D 9 Caterpillar bulldozers  have been levelling the land
for months.  Results  are apparent driving south
of Steeles  on the Fifth line of Halton.  

Immense warehouses have been erected.  Most of them are larger than our whole farm.  Imagine 25 acres
covered cement upon which are mounted structural steel be beams 30 feet high… sheathed… with
a few very austere windows and  doors.  This is a haven for hundreds of 18 wheelers unloading, sorting
an reloading the bits And pieces of things we really need and think we think we really need.
One warehouse is so large that I cannot even get a picture of it..at a distance it seems to cover 
100 acres … entrance only allows 18 wheelers.  But they cannot get there because of the
little iron bridge.

Let me tell you the site of these huge windowless warehouses is very disconcerting.  Especially for
those of us who remember the farms that once were here.  

One farm on this site I remember so 
clearly.  Auction sale of everything.  A cold spring day like today. And Marjorie trusted me with Andrew
who was just a little tike…maybe 6 years old.  “Look after yourself, Andrew, I am busy bidding.”
He disappeared into the threshing floor of the big bank barn.  Escaped my notice until an hour or so
later when my parental duty started to get to me.  

“Andrew, where are you?”
“UP here, Dad…look up.”

And there he was walking along a barn beam 30 or 40 feet above me.  I forget that all barns had
access ladders built into the structures.  Andrew found the ladder.  And he came down  without
trouble.  The trouble occurred when I came home and told Marjorie about Andrew’s climbing skills.




At this moment there is a bend in the fifth line where the little iron bridge
sits clothed in trees and shrubs but no foliage.  With leaves the bridge disappears.  I bet the
plans include the demolition of this last vestige of a bygone era.   Road is narrow
so very hard to stop … best to park a little distant.   Marjorie would not let me cross the
iron bridge…fear I would fall through.  If I was alone I would have taken my chances.
Why?  Because on the other side in the deep bruh there may well be ‘a yellow brick road’…and
maybe  the tin man, straw man and Judy Garland.!!   

You think not?  Take a second look…there is a big yellow sign.


alan skeoch
Mach  2021



EPISODE 295 “HONK! HONK! WE ARE BACK!” our two wild geese came in for a landing March 25, 2021

EPISODE 295   “HONK! HONK! WE ARE BACK!”… our two wild Canada geese landed on the pond March 25, 2021

alan skeoch
March 27, 2021

Today….March 27, 2021, the ponds are dark and grey and all around the ponds is black and brown.  The ice still is present but
melting fast.  In a  month the whole landscape will change.  The Caanads Geese love this time of year.  They feel safe
and get ready for family time.


They arrived while I was rolling barrels  into the barn.  They knew I was  concentrating on the barrels and not the sky so
they flew lower and  honked. HONK! HONK!  Then flew lower still with flaps down, like  huge747’s they did a smooth pond  landing in tandem.
Our Canada geese have arrived as they do every year.  The same pair for they mate for life.

NESTING IS A SEMI SECRET TIME OF YEAR

We see them more in the sky than in the pond.  Somehow they manage to flatten themselves and meld into the 
pond scrub bushes and patches of old plants that are now black and grey just like them.  On some occasions
we have found their nesting sites … more  by accident than  design.   Procreation among Canada Geese is much
like human procreation.  It is a private event….hidden from sight.

Actually they get quite angry when we circle the big pond.  One will take off and circle overhead like
some kind of fighter aircraft looking for an enemy to strafe.  And, once found, the enemy is strafed with Canada Goose
words…Honking frenetically.   Telling us to “Get the hell back to the house or to the barn or to the road”  From the closing
days of March to mid April this is no longer our pond.  It is theirs.  We know that.  The dog Woody knows that and
even when he detects the nest he stays clear.  He never bothers the lovers.

When the eggs hatch and are mobile,  mom and pop…goose and  gander…change their behaviour.  They show off
their progeny.  Strut around the ponds…waddle around the daffodils with those little balls of fluff tucked close behind
them.  They show us what has happened.  

The showing off phase is short.  Once they do the proud thing for a couple of days they just disappear.  I have
no idea where they go with those little balls of fluff.  They must have another pond somewhere close by because they
disappear long before the goslings are ready to fly.

One reason for their departure makes himself or herself known to us in late April or May might
be the reason our geese do not stay around.  We have always had a  big snapping turtle in the pond….with
a moss covered casing as big as a Thanksgiving dinner plate.  The big snapper is a rather omnivorous
fellow.  Eats just about everything from pond weeds, to carrion to little baby geese.  Mom and pop must
know that.   So our ponds…we have four of them covering out 20% of our farm…our ponds are  wetlands
supporting all kinds of wild life.   And  each creature has a special  time.

Right now, however, the ponds belong to our  Canada geese.  

I have stopped rolling my barrels today.
I looked up from my labour as the geese lowered their landing gear and settled on the pond surface so gently that 
there was hardly a ripple.  Why so quiet on landing?  In such contrast to their behaviour above my head?
You guessed it.   They do not want the big snapper to wake up too early.

alan skeoch
March 26, 2021





EPISODE 294 “JUST GETTNG BY WITH WHAT WE HAVE” THE JOHN CALDER STORY (the stone house)

EPISODE 294   ‘JUST GETTNG BY WITH WHAT WE HAVE”…THE JOHN CALDER STORY (the stone house)


alan skeoch
March 2021





Just before Christmas 1983, their farm house caught fire.  Burned  to the ground and all therein
was gone.  Including the plans.   Including what plans?  The plans for the new house.  Hand drawn
plans from the intricacies of John Calder’s brain.  Converted to paper.  But preserved in John’s 
head fortunately.   

Eleanor and John Calder in 1985.   Look behind them and above them.  what do you see?



“Eleanor, we will just have to build our house of stone.  The bush is mostly cedar.  No black  cherry, oak
or maple.   Dead and dying elms are the only hardwoods.  So we  best begin gathering boulders.”

The old farm house was as dead and dying as the elms.   I visited  there several times.  Whoever built it
had very little money.   Log foundation had settled on the ground.  Perhaps at one time these logs
were set on boulders but all had now touched  the moist earth and rot ensued.  The house was 
crooked.  Jerry built.  But it would make do until John could gather enough boulders from the fence
rows and fields to get his stone house started.  

“Hardly any of the granites have a flat face.  They will have to be split with flat face on the outside if
the house is to look good.”




So, while gathering boulders, John had begun splitting them with a 14 pound sledge.   In his mind
he knew what he wanted.  Easier to build a frame house…2 x  4 balloon framed, bats of insulation
between the spaces , ship lap siding.   Easy.  Such a house could be built in a couple of months.
The house that John built took five years to complete.  And then all the plans went up in smoke
in the house fire.  No one killed.  John got badly burned trying to save what he could  through a
broken window as the fire became an inferno.   Christmas 1983.  All gone.

People lose their houses to fire often.   Many fires are much more  serious than the Calder fire because
death is in the ashes.  John and Eleanor got out in time.  As did Anne, James  and little
Douglas.   The fire could  have been so much worse had someone died.  

But there were losses.  Family treasures.   When disaster strikes, like the Calder inferno, there is
precious little time to waste.  What can be grabbed as you leap for an escape route.  Today, I suppose 
you might grab the computer memory…perhaps a  pile of computer chips.  

When the clouds of Chlorine gas were tumbling down on Mississauga during a train disaster
years ago, Marjorie grabbed the kids, then the animals, then a pile of photo albums as we abandoned
our home.  We had a bit of time.  John and Eleanor did not have that luxury.   We drove up to
the Townsend  home farm in January to see what we could do to help.  Cousin Eleanor carried on
as normal as  she could.  No time for lamenting.  She had 35 Holstein cows that had to be milked
every day.   

“Where is John?”
“In the cellar trying to recover some dishes.”

I am not an outwardly emotional man.  No blubbering. Somewhat Stoic.  But the image
of John trying to clean deeply scoured soot from a few dinner plates rescued after the
fire hit me hard.  John may have made light of the  tragedy.   May have  sincerely felt lucky
since no one had  died.  But he was hurt all the same.  And this pile of dishes, hopeless
looking dishes, was getting his full attention.   He was in shock. Never saw him that way
before or after.  But that moment in the Towsnend cellar I knew the stiff upper lip posture
that John and Eleanor maintained  was partly bravado.

Others knew that as well.  Help came from all around and  from distant places.  Help for what?
Help for the new house.  Help that was more psychological than physical.  Physically John
built the house himself.  He never said that but everyone knew it.  Only John knew what to do.
 John had begun construction and he now entered the full speed
ahead  phase.  John was not a quitter.  He may have revealed that they had been hurt
by the fire as he scrubbed the black from the porcelain dinner plates.  But that revelation
was soon gone.

For the next few years John was really busy.  We dropped by now and then as John
piled stone on stone and the stone house grew out of the ashes of the log house.
He  could not do it all alone.  James, his oldest son, and  Anne, his daughter and,
of course Eleanor  must have been part of the project .  But every time we drove
in the farm lane, John was alone pushing boulders into place, mixing cement, erecting
a catwalk around the pile of stone.

When  the job was done,  or nearly done, in 1985, Harrowsmith Magazine sent a reporter and
a photographer who marvelled at John’s great achievement.   And the writer captured
John’s dismissive comments about what he had achieved.  The article is titled
STICKS AND STONES, HARROWSMITH MAGAZINE.  (copy below).

I do not have the skills of John Calder.  Nor the patience.  But I am able to appreciate
greatness in the human spirit.   

I just would like  to make one  comment about John.  Every time we pulled in his
laneway, he put down his cement trowel or his rock splitter and took time to 
welcome us.  We were received as if we were visiting royalty.  He asked  about our
lives.  He offered to convert our logs and Massey Harris rescued timbers into planks.
It was as if he had nothing better  to do. Which was not the case.  He had  a house
to build.  He did not need  us around.  But he was glad we were there.  
John kept his light under a bushel.   What do I mean by that? Just that It was not in his
nature to glorify his achievements.  


The journalist from Harrowsmith  praised  John so nicely that I think
quotations from his featured article will help you understand  John Calder and his Stone House Falderol.
Folderol?   Yes, John built two stone houses  one inside the other.  

A FEW POINTS WORTH HIGHLIGHTING ABOUT THE HOUSE THAT JOHN BUILT

1) “It’s what we could do with what we had,” John Calder mutters through the flare of a match in his pipe.  What he means is that
he and his wife Eleanor built this imposing 2,000 square foot house near Belwood, Ontario, without an architect, a
contractor or a mortgage…The wood  and stone came, literally, from the land; the labour , all from family hands.
      Charles Long, Harrowsmith Magazine.

2) When they came here in 1979 “the old house was sitting on the ground….the bottom logs all rotten.  John took
one look at that and decided to build a new house from logs he could get from the farm forest.  All he found was cedar
so he  decided ‘the new house would have to be made of atone’

3 “I learned  from John that if you want to build a house the first thing you do is build sawmill,” said Eleanor to Charles Long.
So John scoured the Countryside for bits and pieces until he had a sawmill and planer.  Then he began to saw  the lumber
that would be the floors, beams and walls of the stone house  The joists are 6×6  cedar  and spoliated elm planks clothe the
 walls. The  massive spruce  
beams were too big  for the planer so had to be planed by hand.  “The respect for material shines through most clearly
in this revealing of native wood.” , wrote journalist Charles Long.  

4) John planned a double stone wall.  A stone wall within a stone wall.  A ‘stone sandwich’ if you will.  The air space
in between would act as an insulation barrier.  All built using farm boulders.  The building inspector was flabbergasted.
“You better get a consulting engineer to look at it.  If he says it’s  OK , I’ll approve it.” Approval came in 1978 and John
poured his twin stone wall foundation  using his s small cement mixer driven by an antique gas engine.

5) Dead centre was a  massive stone pier.  The foundation of the twin flue chimney. One flue for the main floor wood stove
which would be the primary heat source backed up by an oil heater in the cellar.

6) The journalist, Charles Long, estimated that John used 200 tons of concrete along with the tons and tons
of field  stones.  John did all this ‘with the help of the kids’  (James and  Anne) and, of course Eleanor.  “The result is a stone sandwich
26” thick. …cross section consists of  8” of stone and reinforce  concrete”  then an air space “and another 8” of masonry.”  This is
a simplification of the process.  Suffice it to say that John had a system that held the dead  air space vertical while the stone
walls were built around that dead air space.

7) And so the house began rise.  The granite boulders split by hand were set in concrete with their flat faces outward.   At every opening
for windows and doors John tied the two houses together with mesh and concrete.   Stable.  But just in case of weakness John 
“Wrapped the entire house at each floor with a double loop of galvanized steel cable tried in the concrete behind he boulders.”

8) Building the stone hose was not easy.  It took five years.”Perhaps time, like the stone, is not an expense to be counted..”
wrote Charles Long who was clearly moved by John’s experience.  In 1983 the old log farm house burned down.
The plans  for the new house burned with the house.  But the plans were still in John’s head…survived.  And the work
continued…roofing, insulation, floors, partitions, doors, windows, plumbing, electricity, heat.

9) Then in 1985 the task was over.  The kids became adults in between. 

I FEEL GIULTY…TO THINK I WAS THE EARTH AND  SKY

While John was doing all this and not saying much about the scale of his project.  I had the colossal nerve
to come up to his sawmill with my beams.  To take his time.  To think I was the ‘earth and sky’.  Let me
adapt the words stolen from My Fair Lady.

What a fool I was, what a dominated fool
To think that I was the Earth and sky
What a fool I was, what an elevated fool
What a mutton-headed dote was I 
No, my reverberating friend
I am not the beginning and the end.

All I ever did was watch…observe the impossible becoming the possible snd finally
the masterpiece.  The Stone House.  
JOHN  AND ELEANOR just had a way about them that minimized their achievements.  

alan skeoch
March 2021





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