Author: Alan Skeoch

  • EPISODE 598 “BLUEJAYS? NOPE, THE DAMN YANKEES’

    EPISODE 598    ‘BLUEJAYS? NOPE, THE DAMN YANKEES”


    alan skeoch
    June 16, 2022





    SOMETIMES IMPULSE PAYS OFF BIG TIME…DAMN YANKEES

    ON impulse, Marjorie and I booked two front row tickets to see 
    The Damn Yankees at the Shaw Festival at $45 a seat.  Cheap.
    We did not know the story but relied on the Shaw Festival people
    to provide first rate entertainment.  We were not disappointed
    even though the twists and turns of the plot were a little mystifying.
    …Like Mr. Applegate was supposed to be the Devil.  How 
    could that be when he was so funny, so capable of amusing contortions,
    LIKE an affable, if dishonest, crook. I liked him. Who could like the devil?

    Why did we like the production?.  Because we really needed
    a release from the dark days through which the our sister
    nation is living right now.  Trump has twisted Americs into a
    Gordian knot which is hard to unravel.  It has been years since
    we have crossed the border into the USA.  Blood, guns and
    lies keep piling on with no end in sight.

    The play Damn Yankees restored the America of 1955.  A good
    year just a decade after the end of a World War.  Optimistic nation. The play Damn
    Yankees is a lot of fun…full of songs and terrific dancing.
    The stage is converted into a mobile baseball stadium 
    complete with a sweat swathed locker room. 

    Damn Yankees ended with a standing ovation from the audience
    made amusing when the devil, Applegate, tried to crawl under
    the curtain to corrupt the audience in a most amusing way.

    Lots of sex…both innocent and manipulating kind.  Captivating.

    We came away from the theatre into the charm of one of
    Canada’s great tourist centres…Niagara on the Lake.

    About as sweet as a slice of ice cooled watermelon on a summer day,

    alan






    STORY LINE FOR DAMN YANKEES (NOT THAT YOU NEED IT)

    SYNOPSIS  (NOT THAT YOU NEED IT)

    Sometime in the Future: Washington, D.C. Act I Meg and Joe Boyd are middle aged, and happily married. Meg knows that Joe is a good and faithful husband but that he isn’t always hers. For “Six Months out of Every Year” he, like millions of other men, belongs to baseball. He is a fan of the perennially losing Washington Senators and he hates the fact that those “Damn Yankees” are going to win the American League pennant again this year. He would do anything not to let that happen again. He would even sell his soul to the devil! Out of nowhere a suave man, Mr. Applegate, appears and makes Joe an offer. If Joe will give him his soul, Mr. Applegate (a.k.a. The Devil) will make Joe the great long hitter that the Senators so desperately need. Joe is, of course, concerned for Meg, but as he’s always wanted to be a ballplayer he gives in to the temptation. However, being the real estate salesman that he is, he negotiates an escape clause – if he decides that he doesn’t want to give his soul to the Devil by September 24, he can still have it back. Mr. Applegate reluctantly agrees. Joe writes Meg a farewell note – “Goodbye, Old Girl.” He is transformed into a younger, more vibrant Joe – Joe Hardy. Joe and Applegate leave to make Joe’s dream come true. Outside the ball field, four Washington players sing their philosophy of baseball and life. They may not have the skill to beat the Yankees but they have something else – “Heart.” Mr. Applegate enters with Joe and convinces Van Buren, the coach, to give Joe a tryout. Joe, shoeless because the previous Joe’s feet were much smaller, borrows a pair of shoes from another ballplayer. All of this is witnessed by a pushy reporter and Senators’ fan, Gloria Thorpe, who at Applegate’s invitation watches Joe’s skillful playing. His tryout is spectacular and Gloria offers to help catapult Joe Hardy to superstar status by naming him “Shoeless Joe from Hannibal, Mo.” Joe becomes irritated by all the press attention, particularly from Gloria. All he wants to do is play baseball and help the Senators win. More than all of that, he realizes how much he misses Meg. Applegate, sensing that Joe may change his mind about his soul, calls in his secret weapon: Lola, formerly the ugliest woman in Providence, Rhode Island. Lola can do anything – all it takes is “A Little Brains, A Little Talent.” Meanwhile, Joe misses Meg so much that he goes back home and convinces her to rent him a room – “A Man Doesn’t Know.” Meg’s bridge partners recognize the great Joe Hardy and are quite impressed. Out of nowhere Applegate appears to inform Meg that there is a new zoning law prohibiting the rental of rooms in private homes. Joe takes Applegate outside to send him away. Applegate quickly informs him that Lola is here and is dying to meet him. He explains that he isn’t interested. Thanks to Joe, the Senators are on a winning streak, and after a great game Applegate brings Lola in to meet him. He wants to get home but Lola has other things in mind – after all, “Whatever Lola Wants” . . . Joe succeeds in convincing Lola that where he should be is home with Meg. Applegate appears and chastises Lola for her failure to seduce him. The Chevy Chase Fan Club rehearses a song for a dinner saluting Joe Hardy – “Heart” – reprise. Prior to the dinner, a repentant Lola tells Joe that she’s on his side. Gloria, on the other hand, has just returned from Hannibal, Mo., and no one there has ever heard of Joe Hardy. Applegate tells Gloria emphatically that Joe Hardy is not Shifty McCoy, the bribe-taking ballplayer in the Mexican league. Meanwhile, the salute to Joe is about to begin, and Lola and one of the players, Sohovik, do their number – “Who’s Got the Pain?” Soon Joe is informed that the newspapers are about to hit the streets saying that he took a bribe. The crowd is in an uproar. Joe tries to calm them down. Van Buren informs him that the baseball commissioner has set a hearing for the next day, September 24, and if he can’t prove who he really is, he’ll be cut from the team. Act II In the locker room, the players worry about winning a game without Joe’s help. They must not be distracted by anything like women or Joe’s hearing, or women, or booze, or women – they have to think about “The Game.” Without Joe, the Senators lose the game. Joe is worried that he won’t be able to clear his name and that Meg might lose respect for him. He calls her and they meet. Without revealing himself, he asks her if she thinks he’s Shifty McCoy. She says no. She knows she’s a good judge of character. That’s why she knows the other Joe, her Joe will return to her. Joe assures her that he (the other Joe) is “Near to You.” At his swanky apartment, Applegate tells Lola of his plans to have the Senators lose so that Joe has to stay and play beyond the date that had been set. For her part Lola feels bad for Joe. Joe arrives to tell Applegate of his decision: he wants out. Today is the 24th. Applegate says it isn’t as simple as that, these transformations can only take place at the witching hour – midnight! Applegate tells Joe that if at five minutes to midnight he still wants out, so be it. Joe asks what he is supposed to do if the hearing is still going on. Applegate tells him to just ask to step into the next room and once through that door Joe Hardy will disappear forever. Joe agrees. Lola repeats the litanies that Applegate has taught her: “Never feel sorry for anybody, never feel sorry for anybody.” Distressed by Lola’s attitude and Joe’s decision, Applegate reminisces about a time when evil things were a lot easier – “Those Were the Good Old Days.” At the hearing Joe is vindicated, thanks to an impassioned speech by Meg and her bridge friends. However, his vindication comes just as the clock strikes midnight. It’s too late for Joe to become his former self. Lola, for spite, has slipped four sleeping pills into an ecstatic Applegate’s demon rum, so he won’t wake up until after the game tomorrow. Joe’s soul is lost, but at least the Senators will win the American League pennant. To celebrate this little bit of happiness, Joe and Lola go out on the town – “Two Lost Souls.” The next day Applegate awakens to find the game already in progress. He berates Lola for her “good” deed and then asks her what the score is, “4 to 3, Washington,” is her reply. Applegate assures her that Washington will lose the game even if he has to transform Joe in front of everyone. However, before that, he transforms Lola back to her former ugly self. At the game, Applegate and the ugly Lola watch as the Senators are about to clinch the pennant. Not being able to allow himself to be outwitted by Joe, Applegate transforms him as a ball is hit in his direction. The transformation takes place and the old Joe stumbles, but, at the last moment, he regains his balance and strength and catches the ball. The Senators win the game. Back at home the old Joe is welcomed by a relieved and happy Meg and despite the protestations of Applegate, Meg and Joe find the comfort they cherish in each other – “A Man Doesn’t Know.”

  • EPISODE 596 BENARES…MUSIC ON THE VERANDAH, JUNE 2022

    EPISODE   596    BENARES…MUSIC ON THE VERANDAH, June 2022


    alan skeoch
    June 13,2022

    Benares Historic House – Arts and culture



    Benares Historic House – Arts and culture

    Benares Historic House, Mississauga | DestiMap | Destinations On Map


    “Marjorie, would you and Alan like to attend a music concert at Benares?”, asked Janis Alton
    “When?”
    “Every Friday evening for the whole summer…different performers…this Friday
    the Temple Band is coming…30 musicians…big brass band.”
    “How much does it cost?”
    “Nothing…they pass the hat at intermission, most people give a $10 donation.”
    “Big crowd?”
    “Varies but usually around 70 people….concert has a nice feeling of community…you
    can sit on the grass but most people bring their own chair.”

    “Benares is an odd name…strange…is it a house or a barn or a music hall?”
    “It’s a grand Georgian mansion built in 1835 by a retired English officer 
    …Benares is a city in Indian where he served.  Benares looks like an American pre Civil War
     spiffy home…pillars and grand entrance…hard to describe but
    sure worth seeing.”
    “Private property, I imagine?”
    “Nope.  Owned by the City of Mississauga.  Restored.  Hidden away really.  Most 
    people do not even know it exists.

    “Are open air concerts common?”
    “In the summer, ‘when the living is easy,” as the song says.”
    “What song?”
    “Old Man Rover/  “push that barge, tote that bail, get a little drunk and you land in jail.”
    ‘Get serous.”
    “I am serious.  Next Friday, June 16, the Burlington Welsh Male Chorus is coming…Welsh folk songs, Hymns,
    even opera…”
    “Like the Men from the Welsh coal mines in How Green Was My Valley’?”
    “Imagine so.”

    SO WE WENT TO BENARES — TO HEAR THE TEMPLE BAND — AND NEXT WEEK WE’LL SPEND
    FRIDY EVENING BEING SERENADED BY THE BURLINGTON WELSH MALE CHORUS.
    (and every Friday for the whole summer, a different musical performance….outdooor on  the grass
    for  a suggested $10 donation….1507 Clarkson Road North – 905 625 4860)











    “Any refreshments?”
    “Cold drinks and sweet stuff “
    “Parking?”
    “Free parking…get here early though…6.30, performances begin at 7 p.m.”

    “Hey, that mansion looks wonderful.  Are there tours?”
    “Rich history to the place…no room here for that…Tours in daytime”
    “How did Mississauga get the place?”
    “Donated….given to the City of Mississauga by the Sayers family…it was
    once their home.   “
    “Couldn’t you tell a bit about the place?”
    “No time right now, I am re reading How Green Was My Valley…you know
    my mom was Welsh…I actually saw the miners coming up from the coal pits
    near Aberdare…they were singing.  Really singing.  Sometimes history is not
    exaggerated.”

    alan skeoch
    June 13m 2022

  • EPISODE 596 “OF BARNS AND TURTLES — AN UNCERTAIN FUTURE”

    EPISODE 596   OF BARNS AND TURTLES — AN UNCERTAIN FUTURE


    alan skeoch
    June 11, 2022






    “Too much change is not good for the soul, Marjorie.”
    “What made you say that ungodly thing Alan?’

    “We have seen too much change, why can’t our wold stand still?”
    “Indeed, why cannot our small corner of the planet resist the turmoil of change?

    June 11, 2022 and we were driving to the farm taking a less
    travelled road up the Sixth line, northern corner of Halton  County en route
    top our farm.   Change was coming with the speed of summer lightning.
    Not all bad.  Not at all bad, I suppose/  Homes, warehouses, factories, 
    a gas power plant….places we all love and need.  I suppose.

    But standing…barely standing…not long  to remain standings was this
    derelict barn.   One large corner ripped open.  A mortal wound.
    No longer does it house the horses we saw there just a couple of 
    years ago.   No milking cows of long long ago.  The house still
    stands with broken windows and nailed shut doorways.  The family
    gone.    A farm no more.   

    Worth a short drive just to see this.  Better world to come.   We hope
    and pray.  Urban community with jobs and schools and plazas being 
    built as we drive.  But something is lost.

    Then a  real reminder happened.



    Reminder of change appeared in front of our truck.

    “Alan, snapping turtle on the road.”
    “Stop the truck,I’ll get him or her into the deep grass.”
    “Watch out, snapping turtles have long necks and sharp mouths.”
    “Just lift it with the toe of my boot….over and over…tumbling.”
    “Don’t hurt it.”
    “Better my boot than a truck tire.”
    “Sad…the turtle has no place to go…home being bulll dozed…ponds being drained.”
    “If the snapper can reach Sixteen Mile Creek, there is hope…the Creek is large
    and cannot be disturbed.”
    “Why is it on the road anyway?”
    “June is turtle egg laying time I believe.”
    “Not much hope for baby snapping turtles around here.”




    “Couldn’t we get the poor thing in a box and release it in our ponds?”
    “Good idea…should have done that.”
    “Not sure Woody the dog would be happy with the snapping turtle waddling around in
    the back of the truck.

    We drove on

    alan
  • EPISODE 595 STONEY FARM … LEGAY OF THE ICE AGE

    EPISODE 595    STONEY FARM…LEGACY OF  THE ICE AGE


    alan skeoch
    June 2022

    As I have said many times, “Our best crop is stones…they come up every year”




    SOMETIMES  forced labour was used to control this unwanted…unloved..stone crop.  In this case Ron Saunders brought
    his back hoe Excavator to clear out the old pond which was really a swamp in front of the old barn on the Freeman farm.  We planned a bigger pond
    after my jerry built barn replacement had collapsed into a pile of rubble. 

    The project seemed like a good idea to everyone except for dad, Arnold Red Skeoch, who announced to all and sundry
    that the whole project was “goddamned stupid waste of time and money”/   Dad often spoke in opposite.  If he said something
    was goddamn stupid then he might mean it was interesting.



    Here is what the same site looks like today….June 9, 2022.   Time has a habit of totally changing landscapes.  Rest assured, however, that the
    stones are still there just under the surface.  Stones are pushed up by the first each year…they look like hard mushrooms in springtime and play havoc
    with the blade of the John Deere mower.



    This is Arnold Red Skeoch smoking a White Owl Invincible … amused at the pond project.





    These are the unpaid labourers who were dragooned into picking stones.  DAvid, Kevin, Andrew and Robert Skeoch. (Skeoch boys, bottom to top)


    Hidden photo taken of the labour crew.



    Marjorie, Deana, Mom (Elsie Freeman))

    The pile of lumber is the ruin of my first (and only) effort at barn building.  My barn stood
    for about two months then collapsed .
  • EPISODE 594 BBEES, BEARS, AND MICE

    EPISODE 594      BEES, BEARS, AND MICE


    alan skeoch
    June 5, 2022


    4,610 American Black Bear Stock Photos, Pictures & Royalty-Free Images -  iStock

    BEEKEEPING … NOT THAT EASY

    Our son Andrew became a beekeeper this year. And he had
    success .   Two hives became three hives and honey
    production was harvested.   New bee hives…clean homes
    for the Queens and their thousands of worker bees.

    When winter came, Andrew slipped covers over the hives.  
    Nice and warm.
    Tp dissuade skinks and other honey loving wild animals
    he built a ire mesh wall around the bee yard.

    The bees almost made it through the winter.   Almost.
    Spring was on the distant horizon when Andrew found
    one of his hives had been destroyed by a mouse or a
    bunch of mice.  

    Only one hive survived this attack.  He packed them up
    and moved them into his drive shed.  Away from the bee 
    yard which had become a bee cemetery..  But mice found
    the surviving hive and ate his bees and his honey.

    He will not give up.  Three new bee colonies are on
    the way from the United States as I write this sad note.
    Andrew remains optimistic that he can solve the problems
    To assist him he has the advice of Russ Vanstone, a skilled
    bee keeper for decades.  Russ has seen all the problems. No doubt
    when he reads this Episode he will respond with advice and may
    even make location suggestions.   

    But I am not too sure that the bee yard can be rescued.
    Bill Brooks,  our nearby farm machine mechanic slipped
    me a copy of the Halton Hills Indpendent and Free Press dated
    May 26, 2022, article by Herb Garbutt.

    “…when Ray Lavender went to check on his three hives near
    his house just north of Acton” they had all been nocked over
    and there were large claw marks on them.  Claw marks..big ones.
    A bear had
    dropped by.

    So what?  So the same bear may pay a visit.Andrew’s hives are
    also located just north of  Acton.   The smell of honey could
    bring the bear to Andrew’s bee yard.   And if he moves the
    bee yard close to the barn that would mean big trouble.

    There have been 35 sightings of bears (or a bear) in the
    Guelph regions and 10 of these sightings were close to 
    Acton.

    Remember the childhood story about Algie?
    “Algie met a bear
    And the bear was bulge
    And the bulge was Algie”

    So what should Andrew do if he meets the bear?
    “…slowly back away while watching and waiting for it 
    to leave.  If you are near a car or building, get inside”
    Then wait for the bear to leave.  Once gone, remove  the
    food he or she was after.

    One question, I must ask Andrew and Russ: “How can Andrew be
    sure it was mouse that got his bees.  Might it have been the
    Acton bear?  Bears move around but also stay around.

    I have met quite a few bears in my lifetime.  No trouble.  They
    slip away or are too busy eating blueberries or garbage to
    get aggressive.   Not an animal to pet though.  As a joke my
    friend Wick (Terry Wickstrom) visited an island on Lake of the
    Woods when the kids were small.  “Would you boys like to go
    bear hunting?”  They agreed.  The island was small, perhaps
    a couple of acres.   Forested;  We pretended to hunt a bear.
    Big joke!  At the blueberry patch we found a nice pile of bear
    dung.  Fresh!  FRESH!  A bear was really on the island.

    We backed our way to the boat and got off the island.
    No problem fortunately.

    Andrew was small at the time.  He could have become
    Algie, I suppose.

    alan