Category: Uncategorized

  • EPISODE 333: IMAGINATIVE CREATION OF SIX ENGINED MULTI-GUNNED PIECE OF WW 2 FOLK ART (Provenance -British Commonwealth Air Training Plan)



    EPISODE 333;    IMAGINATIVE CREATION OF SIX ENGINED MULTI-GUNNED PIECE OF WW 2 FOLK ART (Provenance -British
    Commonwealth Air Training Plan)

    alan skeoch
    May 2021


    ALAN SKEOCH:  DONOR

    Where did I ever purchase this huge piece of aviation folk art?  The answer is lost in the
    foggy part of my brain.  It is  one big piece of folk art which I was told, at the time of 
    purchase, was built by a pilot or pilots being trained between 1940 and 1945 under the 
    British Commonwealth Air Training Plan.  

    I have sent some neurons scurrying around my brain to find where I bought the plane.
    We will see how successful they are in time.

    A few years  ago I did a CBC radio story on a Halifax bomber (HX 313, 424 Tiger Squadron, #6 Bomber
    Group. based at Slo[tpm pff Sea;e. Yorkshire).   In the process I visited he Canadian warplane museum
    at Downsview but did not donate the folk art immediately.  For a couple of years it hung in our barn…high
    up, out of danger.  Then for some reason I figured the model was too important to hang there.

    ENTER GORDON JOYCE

    “Gord, would you have time to restore this model…some propellers are broken and gun barrels gone….
    needs to be repainted exactly as it was…what do you think?”
    “Give me a week or so…love to do it.”

    And a week later Gord had it ready.  Ready for what?

    “Alan, what are you going to do with it?”
    “Donate it to the Canadian Airplane Museum up at Downsview.”
    “When?”
    “Tomorrow.”

    I am not sure if Gord came with me that day.  I do remember the place was in chaos.  The building
    was beng renovated for some other purpose and the museum had to move to Hamilton…fast move
    done by volunteers.  Booted out in other words.

    A VISIT TO DOWNSVIEW: CHAOS

    “What do you have there?” asked the man in charge
    “A folk art model of a six engined bomber made somewhere near Oshawa between
    1940 and 1945.  pilot or pilots being trained under the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan..etc.etc.
     I would like to donate it now that it is restored.
    “Put it over there.”
    (Not sure my name was even taken…I felt sorry for those volunteers)

    This was not quite the reception I expected.  But the chaos of moving made me forgive 
    them.  I had hoped the model would be a delight for children visiting the museum with
    parents or grandparents.    The aircraft is pure imagination.   There is joy in imagination.

    That happened several years ago.  The museum has been successfully moved to
    Mount Hope near Hamilton.

    I wonder what happened to my model?

    alan skeoch




  • EPISODE 332: wooden picture of first library in Port Credit Done by Alan Skeoch

    EPISODE 332   WOODEN QUILT OF FIRST LIBRARY IN PORT CREDIT  by Alan Skeoch

    alan skeoch
    May  2021

    In 1980, Aileen Wortley asked me to make a Wooden Quilt of the first library in
    Port Credit. Below is the end result which hung in the Port Credit library for years.
    Then remodelling happened  and the picture disappeared.

    Perhaps activists Dennis or Elizabeth  you can trace it down.

    alan




  • EPISODE 331 TOURING The SLOVAK REPUBLIC

    EPISODE  441     TOURING THE SLOVAK REPUBLIC IN 1993


    alan skeoch
    may 2, 2021

    Find Gorbachov and Yeltsin…wooden dolls writing dolls in a market.

    Kevin rented a Skoda for our tour of the Slovakian Hinterland. A local car would
    keep us anonymous he felt.   So we would not be seen as tourists.

     I really wanted
    to see a collective farms.   We failed to do that.

    There is nothing worse than a tourist who thinks he or she
    understands a foreign country after a visit that lasted only a few days.  That was us.
    We made generalizations faster than a cat could catch a mouse.   The  pictures in
    this Episode are just the result of a fast visit to the Slovak Republic in March 1993 
    when there was still snow on the ground.   Pictures a little too much
    on the sensational scale.  Just enjoy them.  Do not think they express the 
    reality of life in Slovakia.  They are the result of a week end drive to the
    High Tatra mountains,


    Not everyone loved us…read  the Graffiti…”English Rounders” is not a compliment


    Here is Slovak dog we met.  Not too friendly with a muzzle made of steel.


    A rural farm…family owned I assume…not a collective farm in other words.  I believed
    incorrectly that we would see many large collective farms.  We did not.  The whole
    issue of land ownership has no simple answer.   I loved these old rural buildings
    but they were not the norm.


    Charming rural scene…but not usual.   Must avoid generalizing.  Busy streets with
    cars, trucks, busses were the norm just like any other country.


    As we began to enter the mountain country…heading for the High Tatras Mountains




    Yes, that is a New Hampshire hen I think



    “Kevin, stop the car…that looks like a collective farm barn..huge…must be
    used by many families.”
    “Dad, look at the roof…the barn is a wreck just like some in Ontario. This is not
    a farm.”

    “Kevin, pull over here. This looks like it might be a collective farm”
    “We are not stopping…there are people watching us from the far wall…must
    be a little careful.”
    (Sure enough there were people…men…maybe a problem, maybe not…we continued)

    the house is newish…but the storage buildings are ancient…potatoes, apples, whatever.




    Pictures often distorted reality.

    Charming village street.  But not the norm.  Most Slovaks live in tall Soviet built
    apartment buildings.   I should have taken a picture of them but did not

    March 1993 was not the tourist season…apparent here





    The sale of Soviet era officers hats at a market.











    Dolls made from fine woodwork and corn husks…very fine work.











    There seemed to be lots of castles…some in ruins, others seemed inhabited


    Here we are on top of the Tatra mountains.  Many Slovaks go up here just to go
    hiking along the peaks.   



    Kevin and Marjorie going up or down.  I was going the opposite way.  We took a bottle
    of wine with us for our top of the mountain lunch.  We were not supposed to do that
    we discovered.









    Second last picture…end of our Slovak adventure.   Too bad Kevin’s eyes are closed but
    I was not looking at him. My eyes  were on the woman in pink


    I think this is the best picture to use as a conclusion.  Generalization from this boys’
    face would be accurate.  We had a good time.

    alan skeoch
  • EPISODE 330 TENSION AT A SLOVAK DINNER PARTY…WHO WILL PAY THE BILL?

    EPISODE 330    TENSION AT A SLOVAK DINNER PART


    MAY 1, 2021

    THE SLOVAK DINNER PARTY



    “Dad, we have arranged a special dinner party tonight…for you…”
    “For Marjorie and me?”
    “Well maybe a few others…like all my fellow American School visiting teachers.”
    “How many?”
    “Probably 20…”
    “Where is the party?”
    “Sort of a secret, really. even I do not know where we are going… we will all take taxis to a village not far from Bratislava…a real
    Slovak village… with music and dancing and food and wine…the whole ten yards…All arranged by the gym teacher at the school.”
    “Big restaurant?”
    “No.  it will be held in a  wine cellar.  A place with no sign…a strange place, Dad…as you will see.

    (A year or so later the gym teacher came to visit us in Canada.  He and his wife loved swimming
    in our farm pond in spite of the leaches.)
    Slovakian signage was limited.  NO great neon signs.  These signs
    were found on top of the High Tatra Mountains .. for hikers.  We would
    go there for a couple of days.  But the big day …today … was
    the wine party …in a village in the dark.


    So we all piled in several taxis  and travelled  into the darkness of a Slovak night.  Not many street lights
    and soon there were none.  We passed through several villages…all shuttered up and dark.  No one on
    the streets … the village houses tended to have no front yards.  Direct street access.  Set back
    somewhat though…cobbled.  A few pin pricks of light escaped some houses but most were dark as
    a dungeon.




    When we reached our party centre, we were really non plussed.  No signage.  Just darkness and
    ancient buildings.   Kevin led the way with  a Slovak host.  Really secretive.  As if we would be
    arrested for some communist reason.  Like lack of respect.   Or flaunting wealth.
    Kev and our guide from the school hammered on a big round topped door…big enough for a cart
    to enter.  We walked through a couple of stone arches and then descended into
    a big room with a curved stone ceiling.  And lots of barrels.



    Perhaps you have not noticed that there are no signs…not a sign.

    “This is a winery Dad.  Slovak wines are special.”
    “Why so secretive?”
    “I don’t really know.  Seems to have something to do  with the socialist government.  Capitalist businesses were suspect of Western
    way of life.  So better to not flaunt the success of this winery.  But really, Dad, I do not know
    why having a dinner party seems to be kept  a secret.”






    There were  a whole bunch of people serving us.  We had one long table piled with food…Slovak specialities that I have since
    forgotten.  And wine.  Loads of wine in dark green bottles…corks  removed.   No labels on the bottles
    made me  feel this was out of the ordinary.   Wine was soon splashed around.    And a musical group arrived in folk costume
    to entertain us with dance and Slovak music.  It was a grand time.  The kids like Kevin seemed to need a
    chance like this to relax. Lots of noise and lots of laughter.  Great hurrahs  for the music makers.  



    The average age of the revellers  was 21 or 22…or even younger.  Marjorie and  i were the old folk and were treated
     nicely by both Kevin’s fellow teachers and to Slovak hosts.  It was a great party.

    Then it ended.  Abruptly.  The music stopped.  The hosts gathered in a little coterie with suspicious glances
    at our group.  Something was wrong.  Really wrong.

    “What is happening, Kevin?”
    “I don’t know…let me ask our guide.  He set the whole thing up.”
    (whispered  conversation then Kevin reported)
    “They are wondering how a bunch of kids like us are able to pay for the dinner and the music.”
    “They know teachers do not get much money.” (wage for these young teachers was $125 per month)

    I thought about the situation.  Marjorie and I seemed  to have special status.  Maybe we could get the 
    situation under control.  I took a quick look in my wallet.  Perhaps  $300 or $400 in U.S. currency.
    This party for 20 people would certainly cost that much.  I got worried but decided to be the big spender…the big shot.

    “Tell them that we will pay the whole bill, Kevin.”

    (Aside to Kevin: “Do  you have any cash ?”   “A little”  “Back me up then just in  case…”)

    What a change.  The music started with special  soloist in Slovak language.  Broad smiles
    all around.  Lots of looks our way …  smiling.   These Slovak villagers were not wealthy but they
    had put on a grand dinner party for the young American teachers all of whom were working for little
    pay and living wherever cheap housing could be found.  Neither the kids nor the hosts were
    in it for the money.  

     (Amusing thing happened with one  teacher who was staying with a Slovak
    family.  She got fatter and fatter because the family ate a lot of lard. Lots  of lard slathered on toast
    for breakfast.  She did not object.  She was a guest.)

    But my thoughts were centred on the bill.  Could I pay the bill?

    Yet!  Maybe!  I had no idea of the total cost of this extravaganza and only hoped I had enough
    cash to cover a dinner for 20 young people with wine and music.  What if I did not have
    the cash?   

    Surprise!  When the evening was over and it was time to settle up I got a bill for somewhere
    around $120 or $130!  That was all.  Included money for the musicians. Amounted to $6 or $7 each.
    And to top it off we were all given a corked bottle of wine.  No label wine.  No name on the winery…so
    I could never thank the hosts properly.

    Then in the darkness of a March night somewhere in rural Slovakia our taxis arrived and
    we drove back to Bratislava.  Village after village dark.  I don’t remember street lights
    until we arrived in the city.

    An unforgettable evening.  Wonderful.


    alan skeoch
    May 1, 2021
    (remembering a March evening in 1993 in 
    the new republic of Slovaks)


  • EPISODE 329 CELEBRATION IN PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC

    EPISODE 329   CELEBRATION IN PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC


    alan skeoch
    May 1, 2021

    Our visit to the czech and Slovak republics,  March 1993

    PRAGUE,  CZECH REPUBLIC

    At least one group of citizens seemed very happy.  We visited Prague on some kind of special
    day.  FolK dances and folk costumes galore.  

    The Macdonald’s restaurant chain was a going concern.  Very successful. Partly because of
    the public washroom.   Long lineup.







    Everything we did turned  out to be a new Adventure…as  you will see in the next Episode 330

    alan skeoch
    May 1, 2021