Author: Alan Skeoch

  • EPISODE 568 GEORGE DECKER — AND THE DISCOVERY OF L’ANSE AUX MEADOWS

    EPISODE 568    GEORGE DECKER — AND THE DISCOVERY OF L’ANSE AUX MEADOWS


    alan skeoch
    april 6, 2022

    DO YOU HAVE PLANS FOR A SUMMER VACATION?



    IF, after you read this Episode, you decide to visit L’Anse Aux Meadows, be ready for a wind swept, cold, rather hostile experience.
    Wonderful if you have imagination and love discovery.  Terrible, if you expect crowds of people and Tim Horton’s or Starbucks coffee shops.
    And getting there…getting to the northern tip of Newfoundland, is an adventure in itself.  Just remember the comforts of urban life
    will be absent.  If, however, you long for a sense of adventure, then this is a place you must visit at least once in your life.   Not many
    people will believe me and those longing for the soft life will be utterly and completely disappointed.

    I was lucky enough to have shaken the hand of George Decker.

    George Decker as we met him at L’Anse aux Meadows — The man who showed Anne Stine Ingsted ’some old Indian mounds’ that
    turned out to be the most important historical site in North America.

    GEORGE DECKER

    Very few people live on this windswept barren tip of Newfoundland.  Devoid of just about everything.  Hard to believe
    it is the most significant historical site in North America according to UNESCO.  IT was here that we met George Decker, the
    man who directed the Ingsted’s to a few mounds of earth “where I think some Indians once lived.”   Not Indians of course.
    This site, L’Anse aux Meadows, was where a Viking open decked sailing ship landed sometime between 950 AD and 1050 AD
    How do we know that?



    The History of the Vikings' Innovations - HISTORY

    imgur.com | Viking longship, Viking ship, Longship
    HOW DO WE KNOW VIKINGS LANDED HERE?


    Viking Ring Headed Pins by Thorthor's Hammer

    Viking pins that held their clothes in place.  This pin, found in Newfoundland in 1960, was the tiniest proof the Vikings
    landed at L’Anse aux Meadows in1,000 AD.   There were other clues.

    Several other clues.  Charcoal bits could be Carbon14 dated with accuracy. So around 1,000 AD people had fire pits here.  Why?  To keep
    warm of course but also to smelt iron.  The swamp around the site contained lots of bog iron…. precipitate of iron rich water.  Bog iron
    could be smelted by fire into iron.  Not much iron but enough to repair a wooden ship or enough iron to be pounded into weapons i suppose.

    When the Ingsted’s carefully excavated the site they found a few other things.  Small things.  So small that most of us would
    ignore them.   And it is these tiny things that conclusively proved this was a place where Vikings lived long long ago.  Almost 
    500 years before Christopher Columbus landed in the West Indies

    Let me just talk about one of these discoveries.  A pice of stone.  Round. with a hole in the centre.  Small…fits comfortably in
    the palm of a human hand with lots of flesh left over.  It is called a spindle whorl.  A key piece used in the making of woollen thread…in the ultimate manufacture
    of cloth.  Or the repairing of cloth.  The stone will twist .. will spin … if held correctly.  I am not sure how but have been assured
    it is a simple thing to do.  These stones can be traced back to Norway.  Artefacts that could be dated around 1,000 A.D.

    This spindle whorl had another meaning.  Women used spindle whorls. Not men.  Making and mending cloth was women’s work.
    Think about it.  This spindle whorl meant that women were living on this god forsaken tip of Newfoundland a thousand years
    ago.   The presence of women hinted strongly that this was not just an accidental landing of a Viking ship lost in a North
    Atlantic gale.  This was a settlement.  Women.  The Icelandic stories handed down from generation generation had much
    to say about these women.  One woman in particulars.  One tough women.   If the tales are as accurate as most people
    believe.  For the present I will keep her out of this short Episode.  She is a separate story, perhaps told later.




    Bog iron - WikipediaBog Iron: Iron ore

    So this place was once a settlement.  No doubt  Bog iron and spindle whorl and dateable charcoal are facts found in
    the rubble of the mounds.    Then why is this site not well known?    Some people reading this short Episode have likely 
    never heard of L’Anse aux Meadows.  Why not?   Because the Vikings did not stay here long.  Several years at most.
    They may have had no intention of living here for long.  Maybe they came to get lumber.  There was no wood in Greenland
    and a thousand years ago the temperature was warmer…trees grew here on the tip of Newfoundland.  Then again the Vikings
    may have hated the isolation of the place.  They could not get along with the anti people…called the ’Skraelings’.  Had some
    bloody confrontations.




    Viking Spindles - Northern Lace

    Soapstone spindle whorl | Dawn's Dress DiarySpindle whorl - Stock Image - C045/1956 - Science Photo LibraryViking spindle whorl - Stock Image - C043/0588 - Science Photo Library


    How do we know they did not stay long?  No graveyards found on the site.  Very few artifacts.  No deep mounds
    of charcoal.  No domestic animal bones.  Lots of seal bones but no domestic animal bones.  Vikings
    took animals on board their open ships normally.  No evidence of such found yet at the site.  No barn for
    instance.  Just a couple large sod covered structures where people lived.

    Lots of mystery here.  Why on earth was this empty land called Vinland?  Was this just a real estate
    dodge.  Talk about a place as if it was heaven on earth to sucker somebody into 
    buying and settling?  Maybe.  Or maybe grape vines once grew here a thousand years ago
    when Climate Change brought about a glorious heating of lands in the North Atlantic.  The Vikings
    landed here when times were good.   They got the hell out of here before times became bad.
    They did not stay long.  Then they were forgotten for a thousand years.


    DISCOVERY…A PERSONAL WORD

    The word ‘discovery’ is misleading.  Often a discovery is not world shattering
    because it has been present for some time and known about by people who
    never get full credit for the discovery.   Christopher Columbus, for instance, gets credit
    for the discovery of North America.  Columbus may well have been the first European
    to find North America in 1493.   But there were millions of people living in North America
    for centuries before Columbus.   

    The Viking explorers found North America nearly 500 years before Columbus.  But even
    they were not the first to find Newfoundland.  Others were there long before Eric the Red
    and his kin.  The Vikings called them ‘Skraelings’.  They were really people of Asian origin
    that followed hairy mammoths across the Bering land bridge in the last Ice Age when
    the Bering Sea was dry land caused by the Ice Age that imprisoned water as solid ice
    on the Arctic and Antarctic ice caps.

    So discovery is a personal thing.  From birth to death we have so many discoveries in our
    lives.  I fear your discovery of L’Anse Aux Meadows will disappoint most of you.  But for
    those of you who can strip the present to reach deep into the past and are able to look upon the world was a thousand
    years ago, you will be thrilled.  But do not say I did not warn you.



    This was my view as I looked seaward from L’Anse Aux Meadows in the late 1960;s.   When the Vikings looked seaward the ocean was not nearly as harsh
    as it is today.   At their backs were the skraelings ready to kill them.  Who were the Scraelings?  Likely they were the Beothuk native people of whom
    not a single one survives today.

    alan skeoch
    april 8, 2022

    NEXT EPISODE…A PICTURE GALLERY OF L’ANSE AUX  MEADOWS AND VICINITY


  • EPSODE 569 SET DECORATION FOR MOVIE ‘ASYLUM FILMED ST KINGSTON PENITENTIARY

    EPSODE 569       SET DECORATION FOR MOVIE ‘ASYLUM’  FILMED AT KINGSTON PENITENTIARY


    alan skeoch
    April 7, 2022






    “Alan, we need four old tractor tires.”
    “What movie?”
    “Title is ASYLUM.”
    “Where is it to be filmed:
    “The old Kingston Penitentiary at Kingston.”

    Now here is a chance for imagination.  How do you
    think these four tractor tires will reinforce the 
    script for ‘Asylum?”

    I have no idea.  I am sending this episode because
    my cousin Owen T. believes many readers would like
    to know more about the things we provide the movie
    industry.

    Unfortunately I forgot to put the digital chip back in
    my camera.  Spent day loading truck and taking
    nonexistent pictures.

    alan


  • EPISODE 566 EXPLANATION OF HOW ASTRONAUTS GO #1 AND #2 (i.e. Shooting Stars)

    EPISODE 566 EXPLANATION OF HOW ASTRONAUTS GO #1 AND #2 (i.e. Shooting Stars)
    alan skeoch april 6, 2022
    Have you ever wondered how astronauts relieve themselves (i.e. go to the bathroom…i.e. ______) ?
    Well Chris Hadfield explains how using layman’s and laywoman’s language and a rather humourous explanation of shooting stars. Makes going #1 and #2 rather pleasant…particularly #2. Thanks to my cousin Owen who has a scientific interest in everything…and particular thanks to Chris Hadfield for making the wonders of the night sky a little less mysterious.
    alan
    EPISODE 566 EXPLANATION OF HOW ASTRONAUTS GO #1 AND #2 (i.e. Shooting Stars)

  • EPISODE 566 THE COMPLAINT…BIG TIME…NOT YOUR FAULT JIM BUT SOMEBODY’S FAULT…NOT MINE.

    Note: As most readers know we rent props and sets to movies.  This is not
    always a smooth business.  The timing  has to be precise and dependable.
    That is sometimes difficult.



    EPISODE 566  THE COMPLAINT…BIG TIME…NOT YOUR FAULT, JIM ,BUT SOMEBODY’S FAULT…NOT MINE.



    DATE   APRIL 5, 2022

    PASS THIS ALONG 

    Hi Jim,


    Well, it happened again.  Truck return with no loader.  Just driver Keith who helped thankfully.
    There seemed to be a panic to get things back to suppliers like me (us) so
    I rearranged my day for this job…had to be back in city by 1 pm.  Rushed up and back…100 km.
      Asked the person in charge of returning items to
    send two people as i have bad knee and just had surgery on a minor thing on my head.
    “No lifting, Alan, until sutures come out”, said the surgeon.  Bit of a laugh really.  Your person on set did not
    understand the difficulty.

    REMEMBER THE PICK UP….

    Dilemma.  To load the carts or send truck back empty?  Decided to get help for the pick up where only one 
    man was sent…a driver.  At the time I said make sure two people are sent with the return load. otherwise I could never get it
    back in barn so will have to get help from others.  As you know.  


    Just to get  the carts to your truck on the pick up I had to hire this guy in orange otherwise the carts would not
    have been loaded.  He was not part of your film.   You needed them for the next day.  Imagine the problem you would face if the carts did not arrive on time.
    I know a lot of money is invested … on the day of shooting.  So I accommodate as best I can.

    THE RETURN

    I had hoped the return would be smooth.  Not so.  Keith snd I could not lift them into place in the barn. I knew that. i.  He is a driver and not supposed to load and restock.   He did help
    which he could have refused.  A fine human being.  For me the pain was like having this anvil (BELOW) on my knee.  Not your fault…you are sick with Covid,  The movie is big enough
    to afford loaders.  I am surprised that I was expected to get these carts back in barn alone.  

     All was neatly packed.  That was good.  These are very fragile items…the carts.  They are very old and were imported from Switzerland at high cost.

    Now I have to worry about them being exposed to weather.  

    And my knee and stitches to head were complaining all night.  Do not get me wrong. I know some of the people on set and they know me.  Not a person who complains. I hate to
    use the ‘age card’ but I am a very senior citizen.  In good health normally but not this time,   I could have sent the load back but chose to do
    the right  thing with the cheerful help of Keith.  I rearranged my plans to suit your return plans.

    We parked the truck at the road due to muddy fields…and ferried carts to the back of the barn using my ATV.   But there was still lots of lifting.

    Keith showed me a picture of the set….my carts are front and centre on the mystery planet in the script. i.e. important to the movie.  The carts look great.

    Now I face another trip up to farm when I get an extra person from my son’s business.   Another 100 km and labour.  

    Pass this along to the powers that be.

    alan

    THE ANVIL

    TRY lifting this anvil with a sore knee.  Try lifting it with a good knee then dropping it on your foot.


  • Fwd: Alan had KNEE AND FEET REPLACEMENTS…ONLY WODY CARED



    EPISODE 566   ALAN HAD KNEE AND FOOT REPLACEMENTS…ONLY WOODY CARED.


    alan skeoch
    April 1, 2022