Author: Alan Skeoch

  • EPISODE 638 BARNEY DWAN 4 LEGEND OF THE LOST IRISH COW — REDISCOVERED

    EPISODE 538  BARNEY DWAN 4   LEGEND OF THE LOST IRISH COW — REDISCOVERED


    alan skeoch
    Sept. 7, 2022

    “Alan, there is a legend about a Dead Cow and a Mine Adit ….”
    (Sort of casual comments that Barney often made…fascinating comments.)




    One night John Hogan and I debated the ‘Dead Cow Legend’ while consuming a pint of Guinness
    in Kirwin’s rustic pub in Bunmahon.  Should we excavate or ignore the legend.?  Dr. John Stam
    voted yes.  And Barney Dwan led us to the site.


    We  discovered a large anomaly A short distance up the Mahon River
    in a dry valley, I think called a ‘boreen’.   
    Barney told me in his casual offhand way as we slogged from station to station.

    “Alan, there is an old story about a cow that was lost in this place.  Seems there once was
    a mine entrance on the slope and a cow wandered in the opening, got stuck and died
    there.”
    “Do you know the exact spot.”
    “I do”
    “Where?”
    “See the patch of Gorse on the east side of the valley.  That’s where the farmer sealed up
    the adit so no other cow would die.”
    “How can you be sure?”
    “The story of the lost cow has been told snd retold many times….long before I was born 
    it seems to have happened….around 1900.”

    Picture was taken NE of Bunmahon, not too far from the Dead Cow Legend’s location
    as I remember.

    Now this venture was a bit of a stretch.   Reaching into legends that may or may not be true was hardly
    an activity for our very modern search for mineral laden anomalies.  That night Dr. Stam
    John Hogan and I decided to see if the legend told by Barney Dwan was true or not.  If 
    true then we would have uncovered an adit that would give access to the old workings the
    walls of which would be meaningful.  If our actions were foolish then it was best to keep
    quiet about the plan for a ‘dig”.

    We hired one man who with pick, shovel, axe and wheelbarrow was told to clear the gorse
    and see if there was any sign of a mine opening underneath.   I am not sure if we told
    Dr. Paterson back in Toronto.  Think not at the beginning.

    Well, the rest was surprising.  The biggest surprise happened to the lone digger whose name
    I have forgotten.  He spent several days excavating.  There was a lot of earth to be
    moved once the gorse was gone.

    None of us expected an explosion.  Explosion!   Yes.  The ancient workings had filled with water
    over the decades  (160 years…1900 to 1960.   The adit was a giant reservoir and when the
    digger punctured the underground pool, tons of water whooshed out and he fled.  He Did not
    come for his money immediately.

    We waited a couple of days for the mine to drain and then all four of us entered with flashlights.’Four of us!
    Dr. Stam, JOhn Hogan, Alan Skeoch led by Barney Dwan as you can see in the picture below.


    That’s Barney Dwan heading into the Dead Cow Adit.  Seems he led the way..


    Some other creature died here.

    I am not sure about this picture.   I think it was the dead cow adit in Ireland but
    it could also be a mine adit in theYukon where the stillness of a century allowed perfect
    crystals to form.   Very delicate.  Same colours as the Dead Cow Adit.  So could be.

    This is certainly the Dead Cow Adit.   The walls were covered
    in slime and odd colours.  The adit was big enough for us to walk upright.
    At some distance we should have found water filled shaft but our exploration ended
    when we found the dead cow.  Yes, there was a dead cow…hips must
    have got wedged so she could not back out.  And there she died.  Or 
    maybe the legend was exaggerated and the old adit was used as a 
    grave for the cow who died of other problems.  The kernel of the
    legend turned out to be true which pleased all of our Irish employees
    even the digger who showed ump for his money eventually.



    The Dead Cow.  Evidence that legends can be true.


    John Hogan and Barney Dwan in the Dead Cow Adit.




    alan skeoch
    Sept. 7, 2022


















  • EPISODE 637 BARNEY DWAN 3: MYSTERIOUS BALLS OF COPPER WIRE DOTTED IRISH PASTURE FIELDS

    EPISODE 637   BARNEY DWAN 3:  MYSTERIOUS  BALLS OF COPPER WIRE DOTTED IRISH PASTURE FIELDS


    alan skeoch
    sept. 3,,2022


    THIS  is our 6,000 foot base line about to be put on Barney Dwan’s back by Willy.
    Our story is centred on the surprising disappearance of sections of this base line
    which was a mystery until cattle spit out round baseball like balls of our base line.

    TROUBLE  — BASE LINE 

    Our base line was over one mile long, often longer.   This base line consisted of a single strange of yellow sheathed coper wire.  In the Canadian or 
    Alaskan wilderness there were occasional breaks in the base line caused by wile animals most often….deer, moose, raccoons.  When the base line was
    broken no signal was sent so the break had to be mended immediately which meant the base line had to be patrolled and spliced.  Time wasted as a
    result.  But the breaks were few in number normally

    Except in zieland the base line breaks were often and a lo of time was wasted.  Why so often?  Most breaks were caused by cows actually eating our 
    base line….eating dozens of metres of base line.   The first bite gave the cow an electric jolt.   Some farmers said their cows were knocked out cold
    by the electricity.  I never saw a cos flattened by our base line although it may have happened.  What happened regularly owner was cattle actually\
    eating the base line.  Gest long lengths of copper wire.  Initially we wondered why so much wire disappeared.  The reason was soon evident when 
    the cows began regurgitating baseball sized balls of our copper wire.  Cows have four stomachs needed to digest course food.  Each day they take
    a break from eating to chew their cud  Foreign material is rgujrguatated.  Everywhere we crossed a pasture field we would begin to find these balls
    of chewed copper wire.  Somewhere I have pictures of these balls of copper but they have not been found yet.    Most complaints by farmers
    wee received by Barney Dwan.  I only receive a few directly.






    Once we realized the cattle problem we kept a close eye on the herds but there were
    lots of cattle and it was difficult to stop them from munching our base line.
    That’s Barney Dwan on the right as our survey crew had to stop work to find
    where the wire was severed.  We found the guilty parties….cattle (above)

    The cattle, sheep and swine along with the people of Bunmahon were often watching us.


    COMPLAINTS

    We did get complaints from farmers, usually filtered by Barney Dwan.  In the course of the job
    I may have faced two or three irate farmers.  If Iwas a farmer and
    someone was doing a Turam survey in my pasture fields I would have been irate.  Why?
    Copper balls regurgitated as cows chewed and spewed their cud. Copper can be poisonous.


    Seemed there were more animals than people on the roads and in the fields.



    We hired this young lad to protect our grounding rods from
    cattle.   He loved the job and made out sites into personal 
    camp grounds.  He had been hurt as a child and was handicapped.
    Barney recommended him.  He took the job very seriously .



    Sometimes most of our working day was spent repairing the baseline.  Initially
    these repairs were made by Barney and I.   

    “We need to hire a man just to patrol the base line.”
    ’Another new employee that the executives back in Canada might questions but never did
    although they might have raised their eyebrows a bit.  How could a cow be worse than a moose?”

    Barney was fastest at repairing our cable and I also think he helped deflect the complaints
     about coper poisoning of cattle.   Someone may have paid damages but I never
    heard about it.  Farmers had legitimate complaints.  Perhaps the prospect of reopening
    the ancient Knockmahon copper mind trumped complaints about copper wire in the guts of cattle.

    I believe the whole community of Bunmahon hoped and prayed that our survey
    would revitalize the community.  Jobs, in other words.   That may have been the
    reason there were so few complaints from farmers.  Everyone wanted us to succeed.  Unfortunately
    success was not to be.   Dr. John Stam was a professional geophysicist.  He interpreted the raw data
    and determined, I think, that any mineralization was too badly faulted to be economically viable.
    This is speculation on my part.  All I did was get the raw data,..to find anomalies, not to interpret 
    the results.  Dr. Stam did authorize us to excavate trenches where he thought our dots indicated
    a promising site.  

     
    The trenches were deep with no support framing and as a result were dangerous.
    I think that is Barney Dwan deep down.  Perhaps not though as our trenching
    crew was separate from our survey crew.



    I wish we had been successful.

    alan skeoch

    sept. 2022 
    reflecting on the 1960 survey


    Post script:

    Outbreak of copper poisoning in cattle fed poultry litter

    In a feedlot of about 1,000 head of cattle, 146 animals died within a period of a few months affected by a disease characterized by anorexia, icterus, hemoglobinuria, constipation, or diarrhea. The clinical course of the disease lasted a few days. Postmortem findings were generalized icterus and a yellow discolored liver. The kidneys were dark brown, and the urinary bladder was filled with urine of the same dark-brown color. The main histopathological findings were centrolobular coagulative necrosis, apoptosis, bilestasis, and proliferation of bile ducts in the portal space. Changes in the kidneys included nephrosis and the presence of bile and precipitates, and cylinders of albumin and of hemoglobin in the uriniferous tubules. Liver samples, collected from 3 animals on which postmortem examinations were performed, had 2,008, 2,783 and 4,906 ppm copper in their dry matter. Two samples of poultry litter fed to the cattle contained 362 and 323 ppm copper. The green forage that formed the rest of their feed only had 4.7 ppm copper. Copper poisoning was diagnosed, most probably caused by feeding litter from poultry that had been fed a ration treated with copper sulfate to avoid aspergillosis.

    HAIRBALLS COMMONLY REGURGITATED BY CATTLE



    “Most people are familiar with the horrifying and soggy hairballs left behind by their cats, but cows can also suffer from furry masses stuck in their stomachs. While a cat can painstakingly hurl up their own matted hair, however, cows don’t have the ability to vomit up these hairballs. This means their bovine fur is stuck in one of their four stomachs for good.

    Cows have what are called ruminant digestive systems. Unlike humans, who have one stomach for digestion, cows have four, allowing them to eat tough, fibrous grass until they are full. Since this grass is high in fiber and hard to digest, sometimes the regurgitate small bits of it to re-chew. Because their stomachs are separated, foreign bits can become easily stuck in their bodies.”  (quote from source)

    IN our case the balls were made of copper wire.


    www.ripleys.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/078HairBalls.00_00_03_04.Still003-300×225.jpg 300w, www.ripleys.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/078HairBalls.00_00_03_04.Still003-768×576.jpg 768w, www.ripleys.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/078HairBalls.00_00_03_04.Still003-1024×768.jpg 1024w, www.ripleys.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/078HairBalls.00_00_03_04.Still003-360×270.jpg 360w, www.ripleys.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/078HairBalls.00_00_03_04.Still003-750×563.jpg 750w” sizes=”(max-width: 1920px) 100vw, 1920px” apple-inline=”yes” id=”6CFE5ABE-4B4B-49E7-A66D-8C05089A23B6″ style=”box-sizing: border-box; border: 0px; vertical-align: middle; max-width: 100%; display: block; margin: 30px auto;” data=”https://alanskeoch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/078HairBalls.00_00_03_04.Still003-1.jpeg” type=”application/x-apple-msg-attachment” height=”480″ width=”640″ apple-width=”yes” apple-height=”yes”>

    Some of the foreign items commonly found inside cows are hairballs. These masses eventually clump together, forming smooth spheres. Unfortunately, the spheres can prove deadly. As they grow larger, they make the stomach non-functional, blocking food from traveling or digesting properly. By the time a hairball reaches four inches in diameter, a cow will become emaciated and seek to drink massive amounts of water.

    Cow hairballs are often only discovered after the animal has died. Goats, sheep, llamas, and deer can all develop these hairballs. For a long time, these clumps were considered to have curative properties. Known as a”bezoar,” it was believed the hairballs absorbed poison and were an ultimate form of antidote.

  • EPISODE 637 BARNEY DWAN 3: MYSTERIOUS BALLS OF COPPER WIRE DOTTED IRISH PASTURE FIELDS

    EPISODE 637   BARNEY DWAN 3:  MYSTERIOUS  BALLS OF COPPER WIRE DOTTED IRISH PASTURE FIELDS


    alan skeoch
    sept. 3,,2022


    THIS  is our 6,000 foot base line about to be put on Barney Dwan’s back by Willy.
    Our story is centred on the surprising disappearance of sections of this base line
    which was a mystery until cattle spit out round baseball like balls of our base line.

    TROUBLE  — BASE LINE 

    Our base line was over one mile long, often longer.   This base line consisted of a single strange of yellow sheathed coper wire.  In the Canadian or 
    Alaskan wilderness there were occasional breaks in the base line caused by wile animals most often….deer, moose, raccoons.  When the base line was
    broken no signal was sent so the break had to be mended immediately which meant the base line had to be patrolled and spliced.  Time wasted as a
    result.  But the breaks were few in number normally

    Except in zieland the base line breaks were often and a lo of time was wasted.  Why so often?  Most breaks were caused by cows actually eating our 
    base line….eating dozens of metres of base line.   The first bite gave the cow an electric jolt.   Some farmers said their cows were knocked out cold
    by the electricity.  I never saw a cos flattened by our base line although it may have happened.  What happened regularly owner was cattle actually\
    eating the base line.  Gest long lengths of copper wire.  Initially we wondered why so much wire disappeared.  The reason was soon evident when 
    the cows began regurgitating baseball sized balls of our copper wire.  Cows have four stomachs needed to digest course food.  Each day they take
    a break from eating to chew their cud  Foreign material is rgujrguatated.  Everywhere we crossed a pasture field we would begin to find these balls
    of chewed copper wire.  Somewhere I have pictures of these balls of copper but they have not been found yet.    Most complaints by farmers
    wee received by Barney Dwan.  I only receive a few directly.






    Once we realized the cattle problem we kept a close eye on the herds but there were
    lots of cattle and it was difficult to stop them from munching our base line.
    That’s Barney Dwan on the right as our survey crew had to stop work to find
    where the wire was severed.  We found the guilty parties….cattle (above)

    The cattle, sheep and swine along with the people of Bunmahon were often watching us.


    COMPLAINTS

    We did get complaints from farmers, usually filtered by Barney Dwan.  In the course of the job
    I may have faced two or three irate farmers.  If Iwas a farmer and
    someone was doing a Turam survey in my pasture fields I would have been irate.  Why?
    Copper balls regurgitated as cows chewed and spewed their cud. Copper can be poisonous.


    Seemed there were more animals than people on the roads and in the fields.



    We hired this young lad to protect our grounding rods from
    cattle.   He loved the job and made out sites into personal 
    camp grounds.  He had been hurt as a child and was handicapped.
    Barney recommended him.  He took the job very seriously .



    Sometimes most of our working day was spent repairing the baseline.  Initially
    these repairs were made by Barney and I.   

    “We need to hire a man just to patrol the base line.”
    ’Another new employee that the executives back in Canada might questions but never did
    although they might have raised their eyebrows a bit.  How could a cow be worse than a moose?”

    Barney was fastest at repairing our cable and I also think he helped deflect the complaints
     about coper poisoning of cattle.   Someone may have paid damages but I never
    heard about it.  Farmers had legitimate complaints.  Perhaps the prospect of reopening
    the ancient Knockmahon copper mind trumped complaints about copper wire in the guts of cattle.

    I believe the whole community of Bunmahon hoped and prayed that our survey
    would revitalize the community.  Jobs, in other words.   That may have been the
    reason there were so few complaints from farmers.  Everyone wanted us to succeed.  Unfortunately
    success was not to be.   Dr. John Stam was a professional geophysicist.  He interpreted the raw data
    and determined, I think, that any mineralization was too badly faulted to be economically viable.
    This is speculation on my part.  All I did was get the raw data,..to find anomalies, not to interpret 
    the results.  Dr. Stam did authorize us to excavate trenches where he thought our dots indicated
    a promising site.  

     
    The trenches were deep with no support framing and as a result were dangerous.
    I think that is Barney Dwan deep down.  Perhaps not though as our trenching
    crew was separate from our survey crew.



    I wish we had been successful.

    alan skeoch

    sept. 2022 
    reflecting on the 1960 survey


    Post script:

    Outbreak of copper poisoning in cattle fed poultry litter

    In a feedlot of about 1,000 head of cattle, 146 animals died within a period of a few months affected by a disease characterized by anorexia, icterus, hemoglobinuria, constipation, or diarrhea. The clinical course of the disease lasted a few days. Postmortem findings were generalized icterus and a yellow discolored liver. The kidneys were dark brown, and the urinary bladder was filled with urine of the same dark-brown color. The main histopathological findings were centrolobular coagulative necrosis, apoptosis, bilestasis, and proliferation of bile ducts in the portal space. Changes in the kidneys included nephrosis and the presence of bile and precipitates, and cylinders of albumin and of hemoglobin in the uriniferous tubules. Liver samples, collected from 3 animals on which postmortem examinations were performed, had 2,008, 2,783 and 4,906 ppm copper in their dry matter. Two samples of poultry litter fed to the cattle contained 362 and 323 ppm copper. The green forage that formed the rest of their feed only had 4.7 ppm copper. Copper poisoning was diagnosed, most probably caused by feeding litter from poultry that had been fed a ration treated with copper sulfate to avoid aspergillosis.

    HAIRBALLS COMMONLY REGURGITATED BY CATTLE



    “Most people are familiar with the horrifying and soggy hairballs left behind by their cats, but cows can also suffer from furry masses stuck in their stomachs. While a cat can painstakingly hurl up their own matted hair, however, cows don’t have the ability to vomit up these hairballs. This means their bovine fur is stuck in one of their four stomachs for good.

    Cows have what are called ruminant digestive systems. Unlike humans, who have one stomach for digestion, cows have four, allowing them to eat tough, fibrous grass until they are full. Since this grass is high in fiber and hard to digest, sometimes the regurgitate small bits of it to re-chew. Because their stomachs are separated, foreign bits can become easily stuck in their bodies.”  (quote from source)

    IN our case the balls were made of copper wire.


    www.ripleys.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/078HairBalls.00_00_03_04.Still003-300×225.jpg 300w, www.ripleys.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/078HairBalls.00_00_03_04.Still003-768×576.jpg 768w, www.ripleys.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/078HairBalls.00_00_03_04.Still003-1024×768.jpg 1024w, www.ripleys.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/078HairBalls.00_00_03_04.Still003-360×270.jpg 360w, www.ripleys.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/078HairBalls.00_00_03_04.Still003-750×563.jpg 750w” sizes=”(max-width: 1920px) 100vw, 1920px” style=”box-sizing: border-box; border: 0px; vertical-align: middle; max-width: 100%; display: block; margin: 30px auto;” apple-inline=”yes” id=”6CFE5ABE-4B4B-49E7-A66D-8C05089A23B6″ data=”https://alanskeoch.ca/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/078HairBalls.00_00_03_04.Still003.jpeg” type=”application/x-apple-msg-attachment” height=”480″ width=”640″ apple-width=”yes” apple-height=”yes”>

    Some of the foreign items commonly found inside cows are hairballs. These masses eventually clump together, forming smooth spheres. Unfortunately, the spheres can prove deadly. As they grow larger, they make the stomach non-functional, blocking food from traveling or digesting properly. By the time a hairball reaches four inches in diameter, a cow will become emaciated and seek to drink massive amounts of water.

    Cow hairballs are often only discovered after the animal has died. Goats, sheep, llamas, and deer can all develop these hairballs. For a long time, these clumps were considered to have curative properties. Known as a”bezoar,” it was believed the hairballs absorbed poison and were an ultimate form of antidote.





  • EPISODE 637 KHALID AND WOODY….SERVICE THAT IS HARD TO BELIEVE

    Note:  I found this story while doing some searching on my computer .  It happened in 2018.
    It will warm your heart and renew your faith in human beings.


    EPISODE 637   KHALID AND WOODY…SERVICE THAT IS HARD TO BELIEVE


    (COMFORT INN…KANATA,   AUGUST 3, 2018)


    alan  skeoch
    sept. 5, 2022


    Friday  August 3,  2018 was arguable the  busiest day  of the year for Khalid Mohiuddin, the General  Manager
    of the  Kanada Comfort Inn.  He had a vIsiting baseball team, a  collection wolfies (weird bunch who  wore wolf  heads and  had fluffy tails), 
    a  tour  bus from the
    United States and  dozens  of  tourists.  

    Marjorie,  Woody  and  I were  just  part of  the throng.  But we became a problem .  Dogs  can  be  a big problem for hotels.  And  I mean big.



    This is  Khalid, busy trying  to find places for  everyone in his Ottawa, Ontario Comfort Inn.
              The motel was super busy when we arrived.  And we became a problem immediately
              because of Woody, our Labrador dog who had a mind of his own



    “My dog Woody will  not go upstairs fo our  second  floor room.”,said Marjorie to Khalid
    “I beg your pardon?”
    “Woody will not climb those stairs.”
    “Other dogs have done  it … regularly … surely Woody will do do if  he  sees others?”
    “Woody has his own mind…his own terrors.”
    “Terrors?”
    “Yes, Khalid, our dog sees the stairs differently.”
    “How?”
    “Here, get down  on your hands and  knees…what do  you see?”
    “Ahah!  I see through the stairs…I see the wall and  a  pit below.  Woody is not a stupid dog.   he knows
    danger.”
    “He won’t budge.  Locked his paw  over  the leash…FULL STOP!”


    “ONLY  ONE THING  TO DO  ABOUT THAT, MADAM!
    “What?”
    “I  will carry him up and  down the stairs like this.”

    And  Khalid  Mohiuddin picked Woody  up in his arms  and  carried  him 
    upstairs and  downstairs for the two nights of  our  visit.

















  • EPISODE 636 STEAM ERA AT MILTON SEPT. 3 TO 5, 2022

    EPISODE 636    STEAM ERA,  4TH LINE, HALTON COUNTY, NEAR MILTON


    alan skeoch
    Sept.  2022

    There is still time get to Steam Era if you get this Episode today, sept. 3, 2022
    The show last until Monday sept..5.



    Labour day week end discovery by accident….STEAM ERA IS BACK !!!

    What is Steam Eara?  It is the annual celebration of a long lost age in which 
    hot steam was harnessed to operate gigantic steam driven tractors.   Because of
    the danger that compressed steam is explosive most of these ancient dinosaurs
    of the farm fields have gone to the scrap heap a century ago.   But not all.
    Some have been kept and maintained and each labour day week end the
    sound of steam whistles echo up and down the Fourth Line of Halton County.

    There may be time for a few readers to visit Steam Era.  Short instructions
    Drive 401 to Trafalgar Rod exit, north to Steeles, west to 4th line, north to Steam Era
    on the farm of Sherwood and Gladys Hume.  SEPT. 3,4,5,  2022.


    This is our oldest son, Kevin, whose  hat indicates he is an enthusiast.   He even bought T shirts
    for his progeny.    One was fitted for me but he ran out of money and bought a Steam Era
    Cookbook instead.


    A cedar shingle making machine…driven by a steam engine.


    This old forgotten steel wheeled tractor will never run again.  A beauty for your mailbox.


    Mr. Weeber has made by hand dozens of the cogged wheels that once were driven by stationary
    steam engines bolted to the floors of 19th century factories.  The cogged wheels were made of iron.

    “This is my jig’, he said and I misinterpreted
    “You mean you can do a jig?”
    “Certainly”, he responded and proceeded to dance across the floor of the steam display barn/

    I got him on camera but from wrong side.



    Life can be interesting.

    alan