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  • EPISODE 731 FEB. 2, 2023 COLDEST NIGHT OF WINTER COMING IN 1 HOUR


    EPISODE 731    FEB. 2, 2023  COLDEST NIGHT OF WINTER COMING IN 1 HOUR

    alan skeoch
    Feb. 2, 2023

    NOTE:  This story is to be read/viewed  twice.  Once now on this frigid day and
    once next August when the day is hot enough to fry eggs on the sidewalk.
    Then you will have to decide which is best…FIRE OR ICE?   The truth of the
    matter is that neither fire nor ice are nice. They are killers.  Our lives as human
    beings are IN BETWEEN.  Take a moment to consider that and to think of the
    wonder or wonders.  What wonder of wonders?  That we have peopled the
    earth,   Maybe our arrogance.  Our belief that  we deserve the Earth is just
    a matter of chance.   And our place here is just a lucky quirk of time.  Those
    dinosaurs lived longer on this planet than we have.   And if we want to live
    here longer then we have a task indeed. Lots of people have mulled over 
    these thoughts.   Thoughts made simple and melodic by Robert Frost as
    you know.

    Fire and Ice 

    Some say the world will end in fire,
    Some say in ice.
    From what I’ve tasted of desire
    I hold with those who favor fire.
    But if it had to perish twice,
    I think I know enough of hate
    To say that for destruction ice
    Is also great
    And would suffice.


    AND ALL THE EARTH WAS LOCKED IN ICE AND SNOW….OR SEEMED SO


    note:  This is why second winter scene Episode….the worst or the best

    OUR FARM ANIMALS KNOW THE COLD NIGHT IS COMING


    MARJORIE ALL DECKED OUT IN PINK AND GREEN AND PURPLE…WITH A FUEL STICK OF KIT KAT

    OUR SMALL BARN IN BACKGROUND WAS ONCE ON THE FARM OF J.S. WOODSWORTH…FOUNDER OF THE CCF….
    WE HAD IT MOVED HEERE FROM ETOBICOKE



    NOT LONG AGO THIS WAS A FARM AND THE DRIVEWAY HAD MEANING

  • EPISODE 728 STUPID IS AS STUPID DOES—gsthering horse manure to grow mushrooms

    episode 728   STUPID IS AS STUPID DOES—gathering horse manure to grow mushrooms

    alan skeoch
    Feb.1, 2023



    “Alan, this is stupid…really dumb.”
    “What?”
    “Gathering all that horse manure”
    “Need about a ton of horse manure , figure.”
    “You are going to wreck our car…how much does that load on the roof weigh?”
    “I figure about 400 pounds….8 x 50…roof should be OK”
    “And inside the car?”
    “Less…lots of room for you and the coonhound”
    “If people knew how stupid you can be they must wonder about our marriage.”
    “Wait a bit…wait until the spawn arrives.”
    “Spawn?”
    “We are going to grow mushrooms in the spring and summer….Horse manure and mushroom spawn is all we need.”
    “Why?”
    “Something to do in the winter while you ride your horse….I will gather up the hoseballs.”
    “Wacko!”
    “Lorne and Carol will let me have the teams horseballs as well. ‘Road apples’!  Four or five trips to the city
    with loads like this should do it…a ton of horseballs dumped in that big box I’ve built at the back of our lot.
    No one knows…not much smell. Actually I like the smell of horse manure…better than pigs snd cows.”
    “What if the neighbours see the car looking like this…roof loaded with horse manure.”
    “Who would believe it?”

    NOTE:  I spent the month of February that year (1970’s) hauling horse manure from farm to city.  No one asked what was in
    the sacks on the car roof.   Sort of strange as I expected questions.  No police stopped…no neighbour questioned.
    It was winter…February…when most people are indoors.   These were great days.   While Lorne forked manure
    onto his bob sleigh for the horses to haul it to the back field, I rescued the horse dung.  Somewhere I had read
    that horse manure makes great mushrooms.  And that was all I needed.  Recipe?  A ton of horse manure and
    a package of mushroom spores from Dominion Seed House.  Dump the stuff in the box and wait for my 
    mushroom crop.

    Well it did not quite work as planned.  I checked the mushroom coffin regularly….days and days, weeks and
    weeks.  No mushrooms.  Then around June…months later …there was one tiny little mushroom.  One goddamn
    mushroom!  After all my labour.  Not even sure it was an edible mushroom.  Just like everything else in life,
    mushroom growing demands skill.   That was something I did not have.  

    Not all was lost.  I loved gathering horse manure in the winter time.  Marjorie would take Spartacus, our estrogen
    gelding, up and down the fifth line.  We rescued him from certain death.   Those estrogen mares were chained up
    in barns with tubes hooked to their arses to gather their urine.  Why?  For Birth control pills.  Terrible life for those
    mares.  Had to be pregnant mares for some reason. Their colts were of no use.  We rescued Sparky.  Called
    him Spartacus after the slave in Roman history.


    Imagine this wagon filled to the brim with manure destined for the far field.  Imagine
    sitting on top of  the load bouncing along to the team’s version of Jingle Bells.
    Sweet memories.


    On some clear sunny winter days I even got a chance to ride across the snow clad fields with the loads
    of manure.   I think Lorne just kept the horses for that purpose.  And he was pleased that we could do the
    manure spring together.  He never charged me for the horse manure.  I thought it was free but now realize
    it was a money crop that made the fields more productive.

    Bottom line?   I was a total failure as a mushroom grower.  That puny little mushroom in the plywood 
    coffin was never harvested.   Our car, A Renault 15, did have a special aroma.  Maybe I should have
    sent a note to France telling the car company to add a sentence in their brochure.  “This car can
    carry 400 pounds of horse manure on its roof without denting.”

    Suppose Marjorie had married the Lawyers son in North Bay?  Could he have
    given her a better life.  I think not.


    Marjorie had many boyfriends.  I met most of them.  One even proposed to her at university.  She refused
    gracefully because she liked me better…a bit better.   Now that, I realize, is hard to understand.  Some women
    marry with the expectation they can change their husbands.   Marjorie never did this.   Even when
    our car, house, clothes  had the faint smell of horse manure.

    Was the mushroom failure the only failure in our lives?  Not so.  There were many failures.  I built a
    barn on the farm..it collapsed.   I tried to make maple syrup using a Forth line forest.  Some son of a 
    bitch shot our pails of the trees.  We accepted a contract to grow cucumbers for Manthew Wells Rose
    Brand pickles company of Guelph.  We were laughed at and lost our investment.  The company wanted 
    gherkins and we produced crooks and nubs and cucumbers as long as your arm…all of which were
    dumped.  Our payment for months of labour was less that $50.   Our investment in a tractor and our
    labour was a couple of thousand dollars.  A failure.  Even the tractor, a well used Farmal A, was a disaster
    as I forgot to put anti freeze in the radiator and the hard winter cracked the block.  Scrap.  I loved that
    tractor.  Lots of failures in my life…in our lives.  You would think I (we) would learn from these failures.
    We never did.  That’s what farmers must feel as their glowing expectations turn into broken dreams.



    These fine bred horses did not come from Estrogen barns.  They came from fine mares and stallions.  Spartacus was not that lucky.


    “Alan, you have given readers we are total failures at everything.”
    “Right.  We have had more success raising kids and dogs.    But
    readers like failures.  More human.  Everybody fails at one time or
    another.  




    “If they do not fail.  Have continual success in life.  Guess what happens to them?”
    “I do not know.”
    “Neither do I.”

    alan skeoch
    ev. 1, 2023


    “Marjorie, there seems to be a funny smell in the car these days”
    “Look at the roof.”
  • EPISODE 727 HORSE DRAWN GRAIN BINDER AND CORN BINDER…CAN YOU TELL THE DIFFERENCE? (OHIO AMISH FARMS)

    EPISODE 727     HORSE DRAWN GRAIN BINDER AND CORN BINDER…CAN YOU TELL THE DIFFERENCE? (OHIO AMISH FARMS)


    alan skeoch
    Jan. 31, 2023

    A motorized combine harvester does the work of harvesting now.  One man and another couple of drivers
    with triple axle trucks and attached trailers do all th harbrding o drbrtsl 100 acre farms in one day.

    Harvesting has not always been that easy.

    In the early 1990’s we were able to find older machines and horses at work in Central Ohio on Amish farms.
    Today, in 2023 the same early machines will be harvesting much as it was done between 1880 and 1950.

    Two binding machines ..  A grain binder nd s corn binder.   Binder?   Both machines did the same
    thing.  They cut grain and corn into bundles that were then tied by a length of binder twine although the first 
    binders used wire which was not nearly as edible as twine.  Once bound into sheaves there were other
    labour intensive steps…stooking to assure the tassels were dried in the sun and then the sheave ere loaded and 
    hauled to that dinosaur of the harvest…the threshing mach ior the less well known corn shelling machine.

    who said farming was easy?

    EPISODE 727     HORSE DRAWN GRAIN BINDER AND CORN BINDER…CAN YOU TELL THE DIFFERENCE? (OHIO AMISH FARMS)

    Do you remember that line from Oklahoma …”The corn is as high as giraffe’s eye”…or was it an elephant’s eye?




    This power driven corn sheller is rare….maybe none left other than this painting

    Horses were one ugly clued.  Now there is no place for them in farm labour.  Bath anyone?

  • episode 727 MY DREAM

    Note:  I asked Marjorie if she wanted to proof read this story.  She refused,
    “If it is about a dream I do not want to read it.”  Maybe readers might feel
    the same way.  Especially Bill Proc.


    EPISODE 727   MY DREAM


    alan skeoch
    Jan. 29, 



    I often dream…detailed dreams that are sometimes amusing and often include people i know well.
    Last night for instance Bill Proc was the main man.  (I shortened his name to four letters in case someone knows him.)

    THE DREAM

    Sam and I were jabbering to each other over in the vast Dixie Plaza parking lot when a half ron
    truck pulled up beside the garbage container.   Surprised to see Bill Proc getting out of the truck.
    He looked a little harassed like he wanted to get back in the truck as fast as possible.  He even
    left the drivers’ side door open.  And he had a friend with him.

    On the back of the truck was a huge monster steel container.  Really big.  About 8’ x 3’ x 6’.  
    Heavy rusted steel plate.  Bigger than a breadbasket.   Way bigger.

    “Hi Bill!”
    “Jesus!  What the hell are you doing here?”
    “What’s up?”
    “No time to talk, Al…got to unload this bastard”

    And the two of them tipped the monster out of the back of the truck.  It hit with a clatter
    as in ‘awoke with a clatter to see what was the matter’;  Then Bill Proc and friend hopped
    in the ruck and buggered off.

    I guess they did not see the ‘No Dumping’ sign.    

    “What in hell’s half acre is Proc doing?”
    “I don’t know what he was doing but I do know we should get the hell out of here, Sam.”

    So we each drove our separate ways.  All that was left in the parking lot was the behemoth put there
    by Bill Proc.    It towered over the parking lot like a dirty iceberg.   Huge.  Open at one end.  Empty.

    The phone was ringing when I got home.

    “Is Alan Skeoch living at this number?”
    “Yes.”
    “You get the hell over here then before I call the police.”
    “Who is this?”
    “Manager of Dixie Plaza.  You were spotted by our security people”
    “So what?”
    “Smart ass.  You dumped a large steel container beside our garbage drums.  Can’t you read?”
    “I did not do it .”
    “Lie! Get over here and get the damn thing….now.  No more talk.”

    What should I do?  Give Bill Proc a call.  Give Bill Proc’s name to the Plaza manager.   Rat on a
    friend?   

    Best to call our son Andrew.  He has a couple of big trucks.

    “Andy can you help.  I am being charged with illegal dumping over at the Plaza.”’’
    “Did you do it?’ 
    (Imagine my own son thinking I could be guilty.)
    “No.   But I know the guy who did. It was Bill Proc.”
    “Get him “
    “Can’t.   Not sure where he lives and doubt he could tip the rhino back into his
    truck.  He had a hell of a time dumping it out.  You could get help tipping it into
    your cube van….electric gate on back.”
    “Dad, this sounds stupid.”
    “I could get charged…maybe arrested. “
    “How big is the thing?”
    “Andy,  I think about 8 x 6 x3….all steel, open at one end.  Seemed empty.  You and
    Nick could get it loaded.”
    “Then what?”
    “Then take it to the farm where I keep all those rusted shapes for movie rentals.”
    “Dad, you do not need any more of that stuff.”
    “Enough lectures…I am in trouble.”

    So I Drove over to Dixie

    Met Andy and Nick and we loaded the bastard into the cube van.
    The manager must have been watching from some peep hole.  Then Andy took it
    to the farm.

    End of story…end of dream?”

    No. Believe it or not a movie company phoned. 

     “Al,  we need a big piece of
    rusty crap to cover up a computer station in an old factory.  Really big and rusty
    kind of thing.  Got to make the place look like 1945 rather than 2023… Can you help?”

    Wonder of wonders.   I rented the bastardly behemoth for $200 same day.
    Only one question in my mind now.

    “Should I tell Bill Proc?”

    THEN I WOKE UP.  LOOKED OUT THE WINDOW IN CASE IT WAS
    NOT A DREAM.

    alan skeoch
    January 2023