Category: Uncategorized

  • EPISODE 667 THE BIG PUSH…THE BIG BOX…FAILURE IS NOT AN OPTION OCT. 27, 2022

    EPISODE 667     THE BIG PUSH…THE BIG BOX…FAILURE IS NOT AN OPTION   OCT. 27, 2022

    alan skeoch
    Oct. 27, 2022

    What is happening at the end of Pinetree Way?  A lot of people are chewing their fingernails this week end?  Because this is the week end
    of the big push…Big push!  It is happening while the leafy splendour of Mary Fix Park remains unchanged as in the picture.


    DATELINE:  OCTOBER 27, 2022    WHAT IS THE ‘BIG PUSH”?

    I am sure that a  lot of top construction engineers will be nervously chewing their fingernails this
    week end.  Why?   Because this week end the big box is about  to be pushed under the
    railway tracks at Port Credit, Ontario.   Suppose something goes wrong and the push box
    fails.   Suppose the railway tracks above are moved even slightly then the whole  the push box is compromised…i.e. bent, broken, collapsing.
    Then we have a major disaster on our hands.  East West transportation by rail will be disrupted.
    The GO trip will cease to operate.  Freight traffic also.  A disaster.

    Tests indicate success.  Cross your fingers.

    There are two ‘Big Pushes” planned.  The second one?  Pushing a concrete box under the Queen Elizabeth Way
    The box must succeed. .  Failure cannot be considered.  The Queen Elizabeth way is the most travelled
    super highway in Canada.   If the big push fails and the QEW is compromised then transportation east west will
    be impossible.   

    So there will be two big pushes underway shortly both of which will allow the new Light Railway to connect
    Brampton to Port Credit.  The cost?  4.6 billion dollars.  The cost of success.   What is the cost of failure?
    Inconceivable.  Both big pushes must succeed.

    I think it would be a good ides for all of us to the our fingernails this week end.

    alan skeoch



    Just stones throw from Mary Fix Park is this jumble of construction signs, police cars, Excsvstors, drag lines, detours, and Johny on the Spots.



    Something big is about to happen but no one can see behind this jumble of huge concrete slabs … THE BIG PUSH = THE BIG BOXES…one at Port Credit …and the other
    at the Queen Elizabeth Highway and Hurontario Street.  The cost so far is 4.6 billion dollars.

    $4.6 billion Hurontario LRT uses unique ‘push box’ system to keep trains rolling


    COURTESY METROLINX — A large part of the $4.6 billion Hurontario LRT project is the push box, which is a large, hollow concrete box that will be pushed under the rail tracks to create a tunnel underneath without disrupting rail service above. Last year, crews completed a critical part of the process: the launch slab. The next step is to push the system through and lay the tracks. A pre-push successfully took place in February.

    The $4.6 billion Hurontario LRT, which will be renamed the Hazel McCallion Line, a critical 18-kilometre north-south connection between Port Credit and Brampton, is on track with plenty of work on tap for 2022.

    Crews will be installing a tunnel underneath the GO rail tracks at Port Credit station and building a new underpass under the QEW at Hurontario Street. New flood walls are also being erected to protect Mary Fix Creek.

    “The delivery of the Hazel McCallion Line is making great progress,” says Matt Llewellyn, a spokesperson for Metrolinx. “Significant pieces of work were completed in 2021, creating for an exciting start to 2022.”

    Last year crews installed about 7.5 kilometres of new watermain, sanitary and stormwater sewers along Hurontario Street.

    The 11,000-square-metre Operations Maintenance Storage Facility (OMSF) south of Highway 407 and west of Kennedy Road is nearing completion, with the internal fit-out now underway. It will have an operating centre that will control the LRT system. Tracks will be installed in the yard this year.


    As a refresher, the push box is a large, hollow concrete box that will be pushed underneath the Lakeshore West rail tracks at the Port Credit GO Station. This will create a tunnel under the rail tracks, allowing the future LRT line to move without disrupting rail service on the tracks above.


    i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Structure-Push-Box-2-edited.jpg?resize=300%2C169&ssl=1 300w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Structure-Push-Box-2-edited.jpg?resize=1024%2C575&ssl=1 1024w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Structure-Push-Box-2-edited.jpg?resize=768%2C431&ssl=1 768w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Structure-Push-Box-2-edited.jpg?resize=1536%2C863&ssl=1 1536w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Structure-Push-Box-2-edited.jpg?resize=2048%2C1150&ssl=1 2048w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Structure-Push-Box-2-edited.jpg?resize=1200%2C674&ssl=1 1200w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Structure-Push-Box-2-edited.jpg?resize=160%2C90&ssl=1 160w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Structure-Push-Box-2-edited.jpg?w=1440&ssl=1 1440w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Structure-Push-Box-2-edited.jpg?w=2160&ssl=1 2160w” data-lazy-loaded=”1″ sizes=”(max-width: 720px) 100vw, 720px” loading=”eager”>




    Image shows work on Port Credit GO and the push box.i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Push-Box-Steps-v3-004.jpg?resize=300%2C197&ssl=1 300w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Push-Box-Steps-v3-004.jpg?resize=1024%2C673&ssl=1 1024w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Push-Box-Steps-v3-004.jpg?resize=768%2C505&ssl=1 768w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Push-Box-Steps-v3-004.jpg?resize=1536%2C1010&ssl=1 1536w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Push-Box-Steps-v3-004.jpg?resize=2048%2C1347&ssl=1 2048w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Push-Box-Steps-v3-004.jpg?resize=1200%2C789&ssl=1 1200w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Push-Box-Steps-v3-004.jpg?resize=137%2C90&ssl=1 137w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Push-Box-Steps-v3-004.jpg?w=1440&ssl=1 1440w, i0.wp.com/blog.metrolinx.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/LSW-Push-Box-Steps-v3-004.jpg?w=2160&ssl=1 2160w” data-lazy-loaded=”1″ sizes=”(max-width: 720px) 100vw, 720px” loading=”eager”>







  • EPISODE 666 SOON THE LEAVES WILL BE DOWN SO HERE IS A FINAL REMINDER OF THEIR GLORY

    EPISODE 666     SOON THE LEAVES WILL BE DOWN SO HERE IS A FINAL REMINDER OF THEIR GLORY

    alan skeoch
    oct. 25, 2022

    In spite of the ugly presence of Covid 19 there is still lots of room for us to marvel at the world
    around us.   We have both contracted Covid 18 sadly.  I registered clear and thought my life
    could rear not normal so I went to our curling club for my regular fame.  A mistake.  No energy even
    though free from Covid.   I really let my team down.   John Morton’ team knew that I was not up
    to par when they  did not put the third end score on the board…i.e. i failed to do an obvious take out 
    because I had no strength.   We cancelled the game.  I disappointed Tracey and Peter who also
    noted I could not throw a takeout rock.   Even though Covid free it will take time to be able to
    wing  a rock down the ice.

    So here are some pics that show that our trees are holding on to their fall leaves just to 
    keep us all happy.  
    ….except for that derelict farm…

    alan
  • EPISODE 665 : Guess what’s happening next week on Glenburnie

    EPISODE 665  : Guess what’s happening next week on Glenburnie

    Marjorie skeoch
    Ot 22, 2022



    Some good news this morning.  I tested negative for Covid 19….at last.  From my birthday last Sunday Oct. 16 to my rescue from

    the clutches of  the virus…today, Oct 22, 2022 I have been on a nasty roller coaster ride that I would not like  to visit ever again.

    Note that the second red line is gone…which means I am virus negative.

    Here is Marjorie’s contribution































    Sent from my iPhone


  • EPISODE 661 THE WUHAN MARKET, HORSESHOE BATS, RACCOON DOGS, AND THE COVID 19 VIRUS (OCT. 19, 2022) ALAN SKEOCH

    EPISODE 661   THE WUHAN  MARKET,  HORSESHOE BATS, RACCOON DOGS, AND THE COVID 19 VIRUS  (OCT. 19, 2022) ALAN SKEOCH


    alan skeoch
    oct. 19, 2022





    Large-eared Horseshoe Bat - The Australian Museum

    HORESHOE BAT …
    Cute little fellows?  Not cute at all…the link between Covid 19 and humanity


    Untold story: That time when Asian raccoon dogs nearly invaded Minnesota -  Duluth News Tribune | News, weather, and sports from Duluth, Minnesota
    RACCOON DOG

    One of the rarest animal in the world…a raccoon dog.  No  others in
    its family tree save , perhaps distant connection to the fox family. 
    I had never heard of raccoon dogs until I got Covid 19  on Oct. 16, 2022.
    The was my 84th birthday and I was sick, really sick after a root canal surgery
    three days earlier on Thursday Oct. 14, 2022.  On those days I had no reason to link
    my illness to this RACCOON DOG, one of the rarest creatures on earth today.

     the Raccoon dog today is on the verge of extinction.


    ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/320/cpsprodpb/D6A4/production/_107184945_racdog.jpg 320w, ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/480/cpsprodpb/D6A4/production/_107184945_racdog.jpg 480w, ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/624/cpsprodpb/D6A4/production/_107184945_racdog.jpg 624w, ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/800/cpsprodpb/D6A4/production/_107184945_racdog.jpg 800w, ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/976/cpsprodpb/D6A4/production/_107184945_racdog.jpg 976w” width=”976″ height=”549″ loading=”lazy” class=”ssrcss-evoj7m-Image ee0ct7c0″>


    CUTE, but also very dangerous.  Raccoon dogs are now the chief suspects in the spread of the Coronavirus around the world with
    hundreds of thousands of deaths.

    How can the scourge be traced to Raccoon dogs?   Indeed, how can Covid 19’s history even be traced back in time?
    Many teams of scientists have been doing this and their weapon is the SWAB.   those little sticks with some fluff on the
    tip.  Thousands and thousands of these swabs have been used to ‘wipe down’ suspected concentrations of the Covid 19
    virus…a virus so small that it can only be seen through electron microscopes.


    THE WUHAN MARKET PLACE, WUHAN CITY, CHINA




    January 1, 2020, The Wuhan Police shut down the Wuhan Market.  Guards prevent entry. 

    There are 11 million people living in Wuhan!  I had never heard of the place until the global pandemic arrived.  And the scourge arrived
    with the speed of summer lightning.   On Feb 29, 2020 I was guest speaker at a meeting in Mississauga.   My subject was Invasive 
    species and the Great Lakes.   We had an audience of 100 people at the Stonehooker Brewey in the City of Mississauga..
    Covic 19 was not on my list of invasive species.  Not that day.  But the next day  March 1, 2020, Covid 19 was on the tip
    of everyone’s tongue.  The virus had become a pandemic which spread around the world between December, 2019 and
    March 2020.   The Grim Reaper followed.

    World Health  scientists,  Chinese national health scientists,  Independent scientists have swabbed the Wuhan market
    from floor to table height….from cage to cage searching for concentrations or even evidence of the presence of
    the Coronavirus.  

    They found one corner of the market…a tiny corner where once stood several live animal cages holding
    two racoon dog cages and a fox cage.  the rest of the huge market was blank…no sign of Covid 19 but
    this corner was dense with contaminated swabs.

    And one table was loaded with evidence….that table may have been the table where one or perhaps
    both of the raccoon dogs wee slaughtered and their wild meat carried away to contaminate the whole of
    planet earth.

    There is now almost total agreement that these two raccoon dogs provided the Intermediate link between
    the Horseshoe bats who carried the virus and the transfer of the virus to the first few humans.

    (There remains the possibility, remote though it be,  that some human carrier brought the virus
    to the market and gave the Covid 19 to the racoon dogs instead of the other way around.
    This is a one in a thousand possibility.)




    CASE OF ALAN SKEOCH…HOW DID ALAN GET THE VIRUS?



    We did the Covid Test twice and each time I got the red line…..positive test for Covid 19




    “AT 5 P.M. on Oct. 13, 2020,  I stepped out of my dentists office with a new root canal.
    I felt good.  Some pain which I was sure would diminish.  Instead of getting into the car
    right away, I turned left nd walked about 100 yards to the Salvation Army Thrift Store 
    to look at there book collection and perhaps buy a couple. Passed three very down at the heal
    man on the way   Then I got in the car
    and drove home.    

    Did someone cough passing me in those hundred feet and a droplet got ingested?
    Was my mask ineffective?   Had persons with Covid 19 been handling the 
    books before me?   

    I was contaminated but did not know it.  How?

    I have no idea.   I did not know that I Had been contaminated with  Covid 19 until
    October 18 when my dentist wondered at  my prolonged sickness after surgeryd, “Is there a chance you have Covid 19?”

    “Let’s see … we have the test kit.”
    “Cn’t see how I can have picked up Covid 19?”
    “That is probably what most infected people say.”

    “You know what else people say?”
    “They think those Raccoon dogs are really cute”
    “Turns out they are not cute at al….they are carriers of disease.”




     The Covid 19 virus seems to have originated as living material in Horseshoe  
    bats living in wild properties north and west of Wuhann, China.  No danger unless  
    doing scientific work in a bat cave stumbling on the bat excrement, perhaps toaching live bats.  
    Rare.  But Chinese scientists were, at the time studying these pats and the diseases they
    carried.  

    What was needed was to find an Intermediate carrier of Covid 19, a creature that might have more direct contact
    with humans.




    1,149 Raccoon Dog Stock Photos, Pictures & Royalty-Free ...

    NOTES FROM VARIOUS SOURCES

    Background

    HORSESHOE BATS  and PIPISTRELLE BATS

    THE carriers of the Covid 19 viruses.

    “Among all the known creatures, the bats are rich in various viruses inside. You can find most viruses responsible for human diseases like rabies, SARS, and Ebola,” Tian Junhua, a Wuhan CDC (Centre for 

    Disease Control) researcher, says in the video. “It is while discovering new viruses that we are most at risk of infection

    Bats, with extensive geographical distribution and capability of flight, constitute the second largest group of mammalian species and have been documented as natural hosts of a large number of diverse viruses such as lyssaviruses, paramyxoviruses and filoviruses [12]. In the past decade, numerous novel coronaviruses have been discovered in a wide variety of bat species throughout Asia, Europe, Africa and America [3]. Within the coronavirus genera Alphacoronavirus and Betacoronavirus, which mainly infect mammals, 7 out of the 15 currently assigned viral species have only been found in bats [4]. It is proposed that bats are major hosts for alphacoronaviruses and betacoronaviruses and play an important role as the gene source in the evolution of these two coronavirus genera [5]. Among the coronaviruses harbored by bats, some have drawn particular research interests, as they have been found to be associated with two high profile human disease outbreaks, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) and Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS).


    There are way more species of horseshoe bats | EurekAlert!






    Scientists have released three studies that reveal intriguing new clues about how the COVID-19 pandemic started. Two of the reports trace the outbreak back to a massive market that sold live animals, among other goods, in Wuhan, China1,2, and a third suggests that the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 spilled over from animals — possibly those sold at the market — to humans at least twice in November or December 20193. Posted on 25 and 26 February, all three are preprints, and so have not been published in a peer-reviewed journal.

    These analyses add weight to original suspicions that the pandemic began at the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market, which many of the people who were infected earliest with SARS-CoV-2 had visited. The preprints contain genetic analyses of coronavirus samples collected from the market and from people infected in December 2019 and January 2020, as well as geolocation analyses connecting many of the samples to a section of the market where live animals were sold. Taken together, these lines of evidence point towards the market as the source of the outbreak — a situation akin to that seen in the epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in 2002–04, for which animal markets were found to be ground zero — says Kristian Andersen, a virologist at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California, and an author on two of the reports. “This is extremely strong evidence,” he says.


    However, none of the studies contains definitive evidence about what type of animal might have harboured the virus before it spread to humans. Andersen speculates that the culprits could be raccoon dogs, squat dog-like mammals used for food and their fur in China. One of the studies he co-authored2 suggests that raccoon dogs were sold in a section of the market where several positive samples were collected. And reports4 show that the animals can harbour other types of coronavirus.

    Nevertheless, some virologists say that the new evidence pointing to the Huanan market doesn’t rule out an alternative hypothesis. They say that the market could just have been the location of a massive amplifying event, in which an infected person spread the virus to many other people, rather than the site of the original spillover.

    “Analysis-wise, this is excellent work, but it remains open to interpretation,” says Vincent Munster, a virologist at the Rocky Mountain Laboratories, a division of the National Institutes of Health in Hamilton, Montana. He says that searching for SARS-CoV-2 and antibodies against it in blood samples collected from animals sold at the market, and from people who sold animals at the market, could provide more-definitive evidence of COVID-19’s origins. The number of positive samples from the market does suggest an animal source, Munster says. But he is frustrated that more-thorough investigations haven’t already been conducted: “We are talking about a pandemic that has upended the lives of so many people.”

    Ground zero?

    In early January 2020, Chinese authorities identified the Huanan market as a potential source of a viral outbreak because most people infected with COVID-19 at that time had been there in the days before they began to show symptoms, or were in contact with people who had been. Hoping to stem the outbreak, the authorities closed the market. Researchers then collected samples from poultry, snakes, badgers, giant salamanders, Siamese crocodiles and other animals sold there. They also swabbed drains, cages, toilets and vendors’ stalls in search of the pathogen. Following an investigation led by the World Health Organization (WHO), researchers released a report in March 2021 showing that all of the nearly 200 samples collected directly from animals were negative, but that around 1,000 environmental samples from the stalls and other areas of the market were positive.

    A team in China including researchers at China’s Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has now sequenced genetic material recovered from those positive samples, and released the results in a preprint posted on 25 February1. The scientists confirm that the samples contain SARS-CoV-2 sequences almost identical to those that have been circulating in humans. Furthermore, they show that the two original virus lineages circulating at the start of the pandemic, called A and B, were both present at the market.

    “It’s a nice piece of work,” says Ray Yip, an epidemiologist and a former director of the China branch of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “They’ve confirmed that the Huanan market was indeed a very important spreading location.”

    As soon as the report from China had been posted online, Andersen and his colleagues rushed to post manuscripts they had been working on for weeks.

  • EPISODE 660 MY BUNMAHON DIARY, IRELAND 1960, PART ONE

    EPISODE 660     MY BUNMAHON DIARY, IRELAND 1960

    NOTE: SOME OVERLAP …BUT THIS WAS THE ORIGINAL, WHERE MY NERVOUSNESS WAS CONFESSED.

    THE UNFORGETTABLE SUMMER OF 1960…BUNMAHON (MAIN COPY PART ONE)

    NOTE:  THIS IS  JUST A ROUGH INTRO TO BUNMAHON FROM MY OLD  JOURNAL…NEEDS TO BE POLISHED…HOPE MY BOSS DR. NORM PATTERSON
    IS NOT OFFENDED.  WE HAD A LOT OF TROUBLE ON THIS JOB. THERE ARE LOTS OF TYPOS.


    THE UNFORGETTABLE SUMMER OF 1960…BUNMAHON


    alan skeoch
    May 2019


    Flying in to Ireland in 1960 was like flying back into time.  Wonderful…spellbinding.
    This  piece  of the story covers  my first month on the job in the tiny village
    of Bunmahon.   it was not always a village. At one point in the 19th cetury the 
    population exceeded 2,000.  In 1960, when we arrived the population was 200 at 
    best and  likely less than that,  Many were unemployed  and glad to see us.
    There was high hope that the ancient copper mine could  be reopened.  Our
    survey would help make that decision.






    Tuesday June 14, 1960



    At last our crates  of equipment have arrived in Bunmahon.  Long trip by rail then ship  to Liverpool, then trans shipped
    to Dublin and finally put on train to Waterford  then by truck to Bunmahon.  That trip took nearly a  month, two weeks
    of which I spent in Dublin trying to expedite things.  No matter. No surprise really.  The good thing is that  we are now ready
    to get the survey underway which means the pressure on me will increase exponentially.   I think I am ready.






    HISTORY OF KNOCKMAHON COPPER MINE and TANKARDSTOWN COPPER MINE, BUNMAHON, COUNTY WATERFORD, IRELAND

    Once upon a time there were two big mines here.
    The Knockmahon abandoned mine site does not look as dramatic as  Tankardstown with its stone ruins stand high above the cliffs that far the Atlantic Ocean in
    County Waterford, Ireland.   Copper stained these cliffs for centuries so even the  most ancient Irish  people  were aware that there was
    something different about the place.  Mining began  in  earnest at the Knockmahon site in the1820’s reaching peak production in 1840 
     the copper seams were exhausted unless the miners decided  to tunnel under the sea.  A new mine was  found nearby at Tankardstown
    which thrived through the 1850;s when copper prices were initially high and then began to fall.  In 1879 the Tankardstown mine was 
    abandoned.   In the glory days there were more than 2000 men using picks and  shovels and blasting powder to make a near starvation
    living wresting copper from the depths.  Some of their passageways  and  stopes extended far out beneath the sea.  (*Later I would get
    a chance to crawl on my stomach through these old mine adits and  shafts.  Stupid and dangerous but I was young and foolish.)

    The rise and fall of the two mines occurred at the same time as the Great Potato Famine of the mid to late 1840’s.  Where  did all these
    miners go?  Most were  present among the starving Irish families  who risked  their lives  on the immigrant ships  crossing the Atlantic  to 
    Canada and the United States.

    Today, in 2019, the whole 25 kilometres coast from Tramore to Bunmahon is a  walking trail and road  designed to attract tourists
    Called the COPPER  COAST.

    THE  1960 RECONSIDERATION OF THE IRISH  COPPER COAST

    Copper prices  jumped in 1960 largely due to a crisis in Africa where political instability threaened
    the world  supply of copper.   Big mining companies began to look elsewhere.   Denison Mines  decided 
    to give another look at these two old  Irish  copper mines.  Had the mother load been missed?
    Were there still rich copper seams to be exploited?



    JOURNAL ENTRIES OF ALAN SKEOCH, AGE 21, INSTRUMENT MAN

    TUESDAY JUNE 14, 1960

    I guess I am nervous because I spent a terrible night in my new bed,  Body began twitching.  Nervousness
    I imagine.  Much is  expected of me.  Hope I can  deliver. Got up and wrote letter to Marjorie. I should be fine
    since I am now surrounded and I assume protected by quite  a  collection Roman Catholic icons. 
     My room is large but damn cold.  Meals
    cooked by  Mrs. Kenneday are good.  Before we started  laying out our base line and getting things underway
    we had to get our bearings so we went down to the sea, below the cliffs and then on top of the cliffs.  Then 
    the three of us took a close look at the ruins of the old Tankardstown mine.  Several shafts. Dangerous.  One
    shaft has been used as  a garbage site by local people.  Noticed a great pile of old glass milk bottles…antiques
    but worth your life to retrieve them as they are on the edge of a great black hole.  The mine operated here
    in the early to late 19th century…1870’s it seems to have been abandoned.  Must have been a big community
    here at one time for locals say there were once 21 pubs and now there are only two.  Kerwin’s is the Catholic 
    pub and therefore the most active…hub of the community it seems.  The other pub across the road is
    Anglican in clientele.  Few people.  John Hogan very wisely spent several hours in Kerwin’s pub playing darts.
    The place is dark and rather decrepit.  But the bar is fascinating.   Good to show the flag here as it were.
    We  had a tremendous evening meal in our private dining room at Mrs. Kennedy’s.  That was followed  by
    a religious discussion where I was odd man out.  Kept my mouth shut.  John Stam and John Hogan then
    set up a game of pinochle.  Never played the game before but won all the same.  I no longer need  worry
    about expense money as John Stam brought lots.  Wrote another letter to Marjorie.  I need some rough
    clothes.  Lucky that Mrs. Kennedy also operate the only store in the village or in the region.  She sells
    everything from clothes to cigarettes to hard goods and even food.  Her main floor store is big but very 
    dark.   Business does not seem to be good.  Village empty most of the time.  Very little traffic on the
    main road.  One man approached us  about a job.  He would  be the first of many.  Seems the villafge
    is placing great hope in our work.

    Wednesday June 15, 1960


    The Kennedy family of Bunmahon made room for us in their sprawling house above. 
    Mrs. Kennedy ran the only surviving store in Bunmahon which  was a combined dry goods,
    hardware and limited  grocery store.  It was very dark inside indicating sales  were anything but brisk.




    The Kenneday family made us  feel very welcome.  Their handicapped son Gerald was especially enthused  about
    our arrival and he would have willingly followed me into the hills and galleys had not Mrs. Kennedy interfered.  She
    was the boss…not only of the  family but also the leading matriarch of the whole community.   Mr. Kennedy was
    a genial man who loved his large farming operation.  Their daughter was shy but very happy to have us as tenants
    in rooms  that were abandoned most of the time.


    Woke up and got dressed early.  Everyone else asleep.  Nice Irish Breakfast with all the trimmings
    including fried  tomatoes and Irish back bacon (like a steak).  The house is really a row of houses
    all  linked together and  lived in by the Kennedy family.  Sort of reminded me of Charles Dickens
    house where Miss Havisham lived her solitary magic life…A house that Time forgot filled with spider webs and very musty and sad…
     but that is an unfair comparison for the Kennedy house is very
    much alive.  Damp and dark though.  

    Now facing the big test.  I am supposed to be a veteran instrument man who has worked for HUNTEC
    for some time.  In other words  I bloody well seem to know what I am doing.  Got the Ronka E.M. unit
    and took it to the old stage road for a test.  I remembered much about it but took time to read and re-read
    the manual just in case I made a mistake.   When all seemed  correct I switched  it on and the  damn ‘in phase’
    did not register nor did  the ‘out phase’.  Tested again and  again on 60 odd stations at 50’ separation.
    Gave up finally. Then visited the little lumber mill and bought 1,000 stskrd got 5 pound.  Needed to mark
    stations when things get working.  Then I spent the afternoon playing around with the Ronka.  Worried.
    Finally…miracle of miracles…I got the thing working.  Amazed at myself.  We are trying to keep John
    Hogan unaware of my ignorance.  Must Speak a kind  of pseudo professional mumbo jumbo.  

    I expect to be here well into the month of August.  Played  pinochle all evening.  Great meals.
    We drew up a grid for our test survey using the Turam as opposed to the Ronka.  But the Turam has
    not arrived.  It is the backbone of the job.   Bill Morrison taught me how to set it up and operate it
    on the Alaska job last summer.  My memory is pretty good…not perfect…but good.

    Went down the sea for a few minutes.  Weather is changing and some huge waves are
    crashing into the stony beach.  There is  a huge iron ball on the beach.  A reminder of World War II
    …a decommissioned floating mine about the size of a small car.  Holes now evident where once
    the detonators were.

    Thursday, June 16, 1960

    Heavy fog this morning.  John and John planned  to attend a special mass being held  for them but
    heavy fog was a problem. The Fiat car would not start anyway.  I cannot understand why a special
    mass was being done for John and John.   Obviously they know I am a Protestant and are therefore left
    out which is fine by me.  Seems to make me the only Protestant in the village…but that does not seem
    to be a problem so far.  Took the Ronka out for the whole day…62 stations, 3 lines, dual  frequency. We
    came across a  number of old mine shafts…perhaps  air adits…will have to be careful as little warning, false
    step and down we go…lucky there is a cable joining the Ronka hoops at 50 or 100 foot separation.  Fall in
    a shaft and hang there until partner pulls me out.  Bad joke.  Now that
    is more of a joke than anything else but the open shafts  do  exist.  

    Hard to believe how cold Ireland is in June.  Should have packed heavy clothes.  Shivering. But the land
    is beautiful with wild poppies blooming in the lush green fields and stone fencerows.  Donkeys, horses, pigs 
    and  cattle. Really old Ireland, some of the buildings even have thatch grooves while others have no rooves
    at all…derelict cottages testify that the population is shrinking.   Hundreds of miners, many of them from
    The copper mines in Cornwall, left Ireland  when the rich copper seams could no longer be found.  Became
    miners  in Montana and Canada.  

    This is the Mahon River that flowed from the hills deep in the interior.   

    Bunmanhon has two churches…Catholic and Anglican…but only one is ;used…i.e. the Catholic Church
     The Anglican church  was abandoned and is  now cemented at the doors and windows. Mrs. Kennedy
    regaled  us with stories of a  local authoress who wrote ‘dirty’ stories about Ireland. The books  are now banned
    here in  Bunmahon.  The priest has burned  any he finds.  Our ears perked up at this story so we will
    keep our eyes  open for dirty books as we assume they concern sex.  Then again the books could be about
    politics  which is  less interesting.  

    Now  that we have settled into the village the local men are approaching us for jobs.  We will do some hiring
    of course.  I will need someone to help me get through the brier fences…thousands  of sharp needles have
    already ripped my shirt and punctured my skin.   I saw a badger today…seems  bunch of them have burrow
    in a  brier patch.  After we plotted the results John and john got the pinochle  game ready. Hogan told the
    funny biblical story about Jacob tying his ass to a tree then walking three miles into Jerusalem…:That’s
    stretching it,” he concluded.  We get silly at times which is a very good sign.  Maybe I will  not need
    to keep up the bluff that I am a very experienced field man and let John Hogan know i learned how to
    run the Turam last summer on the barren lands  of Western Alaska.  That would make it easier on me.

    Friday, June 17, 1960

    Got up with the sun and  wrote letters then heard Mrs. Kennedy getting breakfast ready downstairs.  Beautiful
    day today…warm, sunshine.  Today was spent setting up stakes on our new  survey lines.  Pickets every
    hundred feet on the lines running at right angles from our base line which is one long line of  shielded  copper
    wire grunded at both ends with iron rods and hooked to our motor generator.  We pump electricity into the
    ground in search of possible mineral conductors.  Seems weird but it works.

    Sounds like an  easy job putting in pickets every hundred  feet on our survey lines.  I thought it would ve a
    piece of cake compared with doing so in the Canadian boreal forest with its thick btush and  millions  of biting
    insects of varying sizes but all on a blood diet.  Not so fast, Alan.  Problems  here as well.  I fell headlong
    into a six foot wide gulley of brier.  Did not see the dip and  in a  microsecond  I ripped  pants and skin and
    lay there with the brier needles  all  around.  Dared  not move for a few minutes  so spent the time swearing
    using fine sentences taught to us by our dad…”Goddamn son of a bitching bastardly brier,” etc. etc.  Not sure
    if  Irish swear like that.  Slowly and carefully I moved backwards  and snaked  my way out of the needle trap.

    “These  gorse bushes are trouble…big time trouble, John.”
    “Why?”
    “The are impenetrable.”
    “No worse than a cedar and tag alder swamp in Canada.”
    “Far far worse…each branch  of gorse is covered with needles…rip my clothes and puncture my skin.”
    and to make matters worse the damn gorse lines these tiny Irish farm fields. Today I could not get
    through from one field to the other without shedding blood.”
    “Surely we can cut holes with axes or machetes.”
    “Can be done but it will be difficult and slow. And then there is going to be another problem…the stone
    fences under the gorse.    How will I be able to climb these fences when strapped to the Turam console,
    receiving coil and battery pack…ear phones  and field notebook as well.”
    “What do  you suggest?”
    “I suggest we hire a man to help me get over the fences.”
    “There going to laugh at you back in Canada.”
    “More worried that Norm would see me as a bit of a baby.”



    “Nothing worse than gorse in your pants  and shirts…needles  that could reach through almost
    any material to make a person bleed.  Hence gorse made excellent fences.  In May and June
    the gorse is deceptively beautiful.”



    WHEREVER we experienced beautiful yellow flowers in June we also found thousands a stiff sharp needles  capable of
    penetrating clothes, boots and flesh.  Good and evil on the same branch.



    Saturday June 18  1960


    Both E.M. units, the Ronka and the Turam, are designed to pick up signals from  an artificial electrical impulse forced into the ground
    by s motor generator attached to a base line of yellow shielded copper wire.   Barney Dwan (above) is setting down this three mile long
    strand of  wire across an open field section.   Our ‘lines’ were set out at right angles on both sides of  this base line.   NOTE: We 
    had big problems with this yellow wire base line…BIG PROBLEMS. In Alaska I had a roll like this strapped to my back once when jumping
    from the helicopter pontoon to the cabin as we took off.  I did not make it but fell between pontoon and cabin as we lifted.  Unhurt because
    of the melted  bed of sloppy summer muskeg above the permafrost.  Our problem with the wire in Ireland was much different.  WHAT PROBLEM?
    You will see.

    Saturday June 18, 1960


    Base Line #2 North west 30,
    Up a little late….8 a.m….on job at nine, worked until three extending the base line from 2400 to 7600feet over some very rough patches of brier (gorse) and
    nettles.  Lots  of cattle in  the small  fields which could be a problem if they get curious about our yellow electric base line cable.  John Hogan joined me in
    the field as  he is quite curious about the project naturally.  Had lunch in the pub…2 shilling bottle of corona (apple cider…hard kind) Then back to our rooms
    took a bath, washed clothes then we drove to Tramore for a game of miniature golf on the strand after which we found a pub for 3 beers and a five course supper
    (12 shilling, 6 pence) then carried  on to Waterford for a glass of creme de menthe and the movie ‘Carry On Nurse’.  Wish there was more to do other than drinking
    and pinochle in evenings.  Must keep client happy however and John Hogan does love touring and socializing.  An  easy life except when doing the dirty work
    crawling through gorse fences and bleeding.   Saturday is a day of rest in the normal world.  It has never been such doing Geophysical surveying…seven day week.
    But 7 day week does not work here in Ireland.

    Sunday June 19, 1960

    Bridey woke me.  Who is Bridey?  She is our caregiver…gets  us up in mornings, makes our beds, and  supervises our spiritual lives.  Today she entered
    my room and hauled off my covers commenting, “Time for Mass, Master Skeoch…out of bed.”  I am not sure if she knew I was Protesant or not.  Did not matter
     to Bridey for she was determined I go to mass, perhaps to make me into a better person.  That posed a dilemma.Should I conform and go to mass or should
    I just take the opportunity to sleep in on Sundays?   I chose mass…with Bridey’s encouragement.  Glad I did as our presence at Sunday mass made us part
    of the Bunmahon community.  John Stam and John Hogan are both Catholic.  Spent the afternoon writing and playing pinochle then we went down to Kirwinn’s
    pub where the village drinkers gather.  Only stayed  briefly as I decided to take a long walk along the cliff footpath above the ocean. Looked  down upon that 
    huge cast iron land mine on Bunmahon beech.  Reminder of World War II..  Later in the evening I quizzed Mrs. Kenneday about Dunhill Castle. “Stormed by
    Cromwell,” she said.  Then she casually mentioned that a previous Canadian mining crew (McPhare Group) set a bad reputation for Canadians.  The inference
    was that they did not go to church and raised  hell in the evenings.

    It was only 15 years earlier that floating mines like this were floating submerged along the Irish coast.  

    “When Mrs. Kenneday found out I was Presbyterian she commented “the new bridge over the Mahon River was built by a Presbyterian” .  John Hogan respnded
    “Christ, that bridge will never last long.”  

    Sad to see so many local people spending all their money in the pub.  None of the Kennedy family go to the pub though so there must be others who avoid
    drinking.  Perhaps the expression that Guiness is a “meal in a glass” makes  sense.  Someone told 
    us a local joke about a visitor to ireland asking: “When do the pubs close?” “September, I think.”

    Monday June 20, 1960

    Rose early…beautiful sunny day. Did 12,000 feet of line with John Stam and our Irish employees (Bandy, John and Larry).  The going is very slow…obstructions
    everywhere, especially those gorse covered stone fences.  Nightmare. Used the Brunton Compass to try and keep lines straight.  Worked steadily with just 20
    minutes for a fast lunch.  Returned to Bunmahon at 6 p.m.  Letter from Arbuckle arrived saying the Turam E.M. unit would arrive tomorrow.  About time as the
    Turam is our key unit.  The Ronka is our back up. Stopped at Kirwan’s pub for a beer then home to Mrs. Kennedy’s for a grand supper.  Did some writing before
    going back to the pub where I was shown a collection of old weapons, some from “the time of the trouble”, an” expression meaning the 1920’s and gaining of
    Irish Home Rule.  Just as I was looking at the weapons a gentleman arrived  with a shotgun and his hunting dog.  Dressed like a lord.  The dog befriended me
    although the hunter said “that was not his habit.”  Four girls seem to congregate in front of the house each evening.  Seems vain to say but they seem to be
    interested in me.  Played another game of pinochle which is becoming very tedious.  I am really getting to enjoy the village life of Bunmahon which has a lot
    of similarities  to the John Wayne and Maureen Ohara film ‘The Quiet Man’ even down to the friendly toleration of a Church of Ireland (Anglican) minority who 
    visited the pub across the road from Kirwin’s. (seemed empty most of the time though).

    Tuesday June 21, 1960

    Today we drove to Waterford to get the Turam.  We?  Hired the local owners of Kirwan’s pub (Frank and Kevin) and their aged Ford truck.  All was ready and soon
    loaded then we retired to a local pub where I bought the boys a  glass of Guinness and lunch.  Quite a different atmosphere in this pub…very political…had to be very careful
    cautioned Kevin and Frank.  Sort of interesting.  No smart remarks.  We drove back to Bunmahon and began unpacking while cleaning up the Kennedy garden shed
    which would be our workshop and paymaster shop.  Hired two men…Andy Kirwan who is very shy and will not talk unless forced to do so and Tom Powell who talks a
    lot…perhaps too much.  John came back and assisted another man to coil 15,000 feet of shielded  copper wire.  All set for tomorrow with the Turam.  It has been a long wait.
    Tried a new drink called a shandy…ale and  lemonade…probably I will stick to Guinness as most do.  Nice to have clean clothes to wear thanks to mrs. Kennedy and Bridey.

    Wednesday June 22, 1960

    Wrote home then packed cable on the back reel for our first Turam baseline of 14,500 feet…nearly three miles. Very rough going.  We set up our generator base down by the
    Atlantic Ocean.  Cranked motor…held my breath.  It would not start.  Gas was  wrong…put in regular gas and the motor purred. I know that sounds simple but it was not so
    simple.  I was  supposed to be the expert on the Turam but I had no idea what was  wrong and just changed the gas on impulse.  Floyd told me years ago that all problems are
    usually simple to solve.  “Al, do not make things difficult.”   Floyd was my first real wilderness scholar and teacher back in Canada.  He nicknamed me Fucking Al for some 
    twisted reason.  It was not used as a hateful term. I think he liked me.  Maybe he spoke in opposites.




    We hired two new men, Andy and Tom.  Today I saw my first Irish hare…big speedy creature.  At night John Stsm and John Hogan got into a religious discussion with me.  I am
    not really up to speed on religion…never will be…although I stood my ground as a Protestant and they took theirs.  No hostility.  Very Canadian.  I think most Canadians  are
    really Humanists.   Then we got down to another serious game of pinochle.  I would rather be out walking the cliff trails at sunset.

    Thursday June 23, 196-0

    Now our real troubles began.  Started the motor generator but not generating.   Took a long time to figure out why.  Again the problem was simple…the base line
    wire was broken in three places along one thousand foot stretch.  Some creatures had nibbled…foxes? rabbits?  Simple to repair.  Looks like we  will spend hours
    and hours repairing our base line each day.  Did not know which  creature was doing the damage but as usual it was simple and should have been obvious right from
    the start.  The fields had herds of cattle.  Cattle like to munch grass but they also liked to munch yellow copper cables.


    Three of our employees are resting after lunch.  Bandy, on the right, became my right hand man.  We were good friends in not time
    and he shared some wonderful adventures with me.  More of that later.  Behind the men are the cattle…peacefully chewing up ou
    grounded cable.  Then ruminating and vomitting balls of copper wire about the size of baseballs.


     the Turam operated perfectly on 660 cox frequency so the rest of the day was a success. We had data for Dr. Stam at last.  Began training more men as instrument 
    helpers.  I was surprised to discover that one our new men, Willy, could not count.  He never said so.  Wish he had as that would have made my job easier.   I would not have asked
    him to mark the pickets.  Larry on the other hand cannot hear which makes things difficult.  Not their faults.  All and all things went well today and we found two anomalies which
    were plotted on graph paper in the evening.  Surveying in a country as old as Ireland brings lots of discoveries such as the stone bridge we found today covered in ivy but no
    sign of ever been connected to a road network.

    Got a long letter from Marjorie.  She is a wonderful writer…better than me for sure.  She seems to be enjoying herself back in Canada.

    John Hogan and I went down to Kirwan’s for cider and the owner bought us each a pint of Guinness.

    There is an old black Labrador dog that belongs to the Kennedy’s and has a special job.  He is trained to keep Gerald from drowning in the sea.   Gerald is Mrs. Kennedy’s disabled son.
    Mongoloid little boy who is sure friendly and good natured although severely handicapped.  When he strolls down to the sea the Labrador dog goes  with him.  He is allowed to wade
    a bit but never deeper than his ankles before he is pushed back out of the water by the dog.  

    Friday June 24, 1960

    New gas for the generator.  Expected a fine day with lots of distance covered.  That did not happen as a serious of small disasters tumbled out.  First, the cable was broken in three
    places none of them close…had to cover 8,000 feet to find them.  Second, something wrong with the gas again.  Suspect water got in somehow as rain is regular occurrence.  Third,
    there were two broken instrument cables and some kind of short circuit.  Fourth, the motor itself broke down once we got clean gas. Why?  Fifth, another  cable broke just as we
    finally got started.  Suspect cattle.  Solution is to hire a man to walk the cable each day and make repairs.  Even with all thsse problems we managed to get 3,000 feet of survey line
    completed.  

    Good news when we got back to Bunmahon.  My university results arrived.  I passed.  I would like to have had higher marks but word I was getting that a number of my friends did
    not pass.   John Hogan came back after a short visit to Killarney.  I think he rushed back just to play $%^%$ pinochle.

    I made up the pay checks for our employees and they lined up outside the garden shed office.  Got cash through Mrs. Kenndy.  I bet the boys back in Canada are wondering why we need
    so many men on the payroll.   I have an answer.  “The wages here are 1 pound per day…about $2.50 a day…so we can hire a lot of men for very little money and they need it badly otherwise
    Kerwan’s pub will go bankrupt.”


    Here is our crew, most of them, lining up on a Friday evening for their weekly pay.  John Hogan
    is the man  on the left.  He  represented  our client Denison Mines.   Dr. John Stam is
    our company geophysicist (far right).  His job was the most important for he would interpret
    my survey results and write a report that would either support the idea of a new mine in 
    Bunmahon or state there was nothing worth retrieving.

    Payday in the Kennedy Garden Shed.  The wage was one pound per day…about $2.50
    Canadian.  Not much really.  Some days the men  worked overtime though for more money.  And as
    my job as paymaster proceeded I got a bit carried away and gave each man a
    pack of cigarettes then added  a  chocolate bar.  Dr. Norm Paterson would be amused back in Canada
    if he saw  this picture..which he will  never see..

    “ALan, just who do  you think you are…some kind of philanthropist using other people’s money?”
    “Right, I guess I made payday a  little excessive.”
    “Where did you get the idea of adding cigarettes  and chocolate bars?”
    “John Wayne!”
    “Do you mean  you were beginning to think you were The Quiet Man?”
    ‘Suppose it looks that way.”
    “What did they think  back in Toronto?”
    “I think Norm Paterson…Dr. Paterson…used the term precocious applied to me.”
    “And  Floyd?”
    “He continued to call me Fucking Al.”

    We became quite the community celebrities as the local police constable kept close eye on us as did
    the local priest who was  often seen standing along the road as we crossed nd  criss-crossed.

    Saturday June 25, 1960

    “Why hire so many local people?”  The answer is not so simple.  I am not trying to run a charity on
    Huntec money.  We need people that we never needed in Canada.  We need a  man to check our grounded 
    cable and make repairs.  The cattle chew chunks regularly…must taint the milk a bit but they regurgitate
    the balls as they ruminate.  A bigger worry is cattle biting into the live cable.  One farmer claimed a cow was
    knocked down and out by the electric charge.  That my or may not be true but we want to assure the local farmers that
    we are being careful.  The government of Ireland made me paint a danger sign in English and irish and place 
    that sign where our generator is located.  We have hired a local handicapped boy to guard the motor generator site.
    Then there is the problem of the fences and the gorse.  We need a man to help making a path and lifting me over
    these places and there are many of them as the fields  are small.  We also need a linecutting crew of three men
    to survey and mark with pickets the 50 and 100 foot spaces for readings to be taken. We are lucky that so many
    men are available and willing.

    This young handicapped lad just loved his job protecting our base line.  He set up his campsite wherever we moved
    the motor generator and took his job very seriously.   The first job he ever had  and perhaps his  only job.  The other 
    employees covered for him so that I  would not notice he was mentally handicapped.  I  knew.

    Drove to check cable as usual with Bandy as helper.  Today I discovered his real name was  Barney Dwan but
    the local  dialect was so hard for me to understand that “Barney” became “Bandy” much to the amusement of
    everyone who started calling him Bandy.  I wondered  why the men laughed so much. 

    The instrument failed again.  Wasted three hours trying to find the problem. Narrowed  it down to the amplifier which
    I could not fix so gave the men half a day holiday while I took he Turam to Waterford for repairs   Very depressing.  Spent
    some time in a Waterford  pub waiting then drove back west to Tramore for supper.  Saw  the movie “Sirrocco” after playing
    a round of miniature golf with John Hogan who accompanied me on the trip.

    We  were all startled at bed time when John Hogan found a tick buried  in his thigh.  Gorged in blood so the damn
    thing looked big.  Got it out using a cigarette and careful work with tweezers.  Mickey offered  us his bicycle for our
    use if we needed to get a doctor.  We slathered the wound with rubbing alcohol and hoped for the best. From now
    on we will examine our bodies  after work as the area is infested  with ticks.  A close look at the cattle herds show that as
    most of their noses have ticks hanging there like little sacks.




    Ticks Were something new to me.  At first I dismissed them as creatures of no consequence to me personally for they
    seemed associated with sheep.   Surely in Canada the hords of black flies, moose flies, deer flies,
    mosquitoes and midges were far worse than ticks.   Ticks cannot fly and if  sheep or cattle or horses were carrying ticks I 
    was unlikely to pick them up for petting domestic animals was not part of the job.

    Ignorance is no excuse.  Irish  ticks may not fly but they do know how to leap from a  waving piece  of long  grass to
    a piece of exposed flesh and then begin their burrowing and  do so  painlessly.  Once engorged with blood the female tick
    just drops off and continues its’ life cycle.  It is possible to be a tick host and never know it.   Ticks are not themselves dangerous
    The serous problems arise from the bacteria the tick transfers to the human or animal host.  Ireland in 1960 had  lots of ticks but
    most were not too dangerous.  Hedghog ticks  were the most likely to grab us  as  we climbed over and t through gorse covered fencerows.

    NOTE:  TODAY, 2019, Black Legged ticks are spreading through Ontario perhaps  aided by global warming.  These ticks  are
    extremely dangerous for they transmit Lyme disease to humans. People die.

    Sunday June 26,1960

    An uneventful day.  Went to mass at the Ballyaneen RC church.  Then we played  pinochle until noon, had  nice lunch,  read 
    part of  Forster’s Passage to India and dosed off until evening,  Repaired  cables and switches and then went to the dog
    races where I lost three beers to John and John.

    Monday June 27, 1960

    Bandy (Barney) had  long ground  cable repaired from cow damage by 8 a.m.  Worried about Turam but took it out on wild
    hope it would work but once again it let us down.  John Stam is very depressed and  even considering giviing up the contract.
    So I took out the Ronka for the day.  On our first set up disaster happened when a car drove right between us tearing the 
    connecting cable apart.  Could have dragged  us along the road if  cable had  not snapped. We made rough repairs  and continued. 
     At four p.m. the Ronka stopped working, likely the rough
    connection reoair.  No matter because John Stam  arrived from Waterford with the newly refurbished Turam which  seems 
    OK now.  

    Andy offered to buy me a beer…very generous as his income is close to poverty level.  I bought a bottle of cider for John and  John
    to drink at our pinochle game where, as  usual, we discussed religion.  I  was  surprised  to learn that Catholics actually believe
    in Adam and  Eve.  Maybe they were putting me on. 

    Got nice letters from Marjorie and Russ Vanstone.  Spent sleepless night worrying about the Turam.


    Now here is an interesting  pair of photos.  On the left we are working across an Irish grain field in 1960 while
    the right I am doing the same kind  of survey in Alaska in 1959



    Tuesday June 28, 1960

    Got up early and soldered some cable heads in our little shed.  What a beautiful  day and even the Turam seemed to notice
    the sun on the irish greenery.  The Turam worked perfectly until noon when once again our cable was severed by some cow
    located somewhere along the three mile base line.  Sure enough.  A cow had bitten the live wire and got knocked out.  “She
    fell like a  stone!”  We are lucky that the local farmers have not launched law actions if we have been stunning or knocking out
    their cattle.  I wonder if the knock out story is true?  The Irish  are good story tellers after all.  Some farmers are after us according
    to my Irish crew who are not too concerned.  There seems to be a cultural division between the largely unemployed cottagers
    and the distinctly better healed farmers.  They do not like each other.

    John Stam is more cheerful today since our expense money arrived in Dungarven. My day was terrific because the Turam  worked
    perfectly.  We crossed over some old mine shafts which  are hardly guarded or protected,  Some seem to be used as garbage pits.
    “Some animals fall down them but not many…no worries.” Some comfort!  I did my washing in the evening, wrote home and 
    as usual did some light repairs this time to the voltmeter connection.  Mrs Kennedy served us tea while we played yet another
    game of pinochle.  Outside the night was stunning with Golden clouds and a crescent moon.  

    How can  I say to John and  John that i am getting to hate pinochle.  Bunmahon is so interesting.  I would rather walk the cliffs 
    and have a pint of Guinness  at Kerwan’s.  I would  like to have a pint at the Anglican pub but fear that would cause trouble.
    It would be interesting to hear what the Anglo Irish minority have to say.  Perhaps they would say nothing.  Amazing how close
    to the stereotypes created in the Quiet Man fit the local social dynamics of Bunmahon.  I am sure, however, that such a comment’
    by a newcomer like me would be resented so I try to take everything in but keep my mouth shut.   The men seem to like me.

    This is  Kirwan’s pub on every Friday evening when a percentage of income was  spent
    on a few pints of Guinness.   We joined as often as we could.  Sometimes the fellows
    wanted to treat us to pints of Guinness.  Without insulting we thanked them but
    avoided these ‘free’ pints.    John Hogan is lighting up a Wild Woodbine cigarette on
    the far left.  Mrs. Kerwan is presiding over the bar on the far right.



    Kerwan’s pub has a  dark sitting room featuring slabs of pine nailed to the walls  and stumps tables.
    In this case John Hogan and  I are relaxing.


    Wednesday June  29, 1960

    John Hogan took off early to drive to Dublin for some reason.  I had a successful day with the Turam finishing 2.5 lines in the morning
    then Andy brought me a quart of Cidonia (hard cider) for lunch in an Irish field before finishing line 4400 and  finding a very large
    anomaly.   Then the motor stopped and we had another two hour delay.

    In the evening Willy and Bandy took me to a hurling match in Dunhill.  The game can be rough if they hit each other
    with the curling sticks that look like shortened  hockey sticks.  Clubs if you will.  The outdoor washroom was  interesting.
    A few sheets of corrugated iron were anchored  in place by steel posts and that was  a washroom.  I do not know what
    women used.

    Hurling is an Irish brute force kind of game.  










    Thursday June 30, 1960

    Got an early start today which was spoiled as usual by a broken base line cable.  We are now getting used to finding baseball
    sized rolls of  our base line wire here and there in farmers fields.  Farmers are getting more and  more concerned that our wire is
    endangering their dairy herds.We did 4 lines today working from 8.30 to 6.30.  A long day here in Ireland.  In Canada I would cover
    much  more territory doing Turam work pushed on by the millions of flies f

    Willy had to be sent home when his lumbago began acting up.  Then the console connection broke and had to be soldered.

    Today we saw an old fort…2,000 years old according to Bandy.  “Supposed to be filled with fairies, you know.” “There are ghosts
    in this valley.” “Then there is the mystery of the postman that just disappeared one day.”



    Bandy alerted me to another danger today when we crossed a field dominated by two huge boars.  Big tusks and angry 
    demeanour.  “Be careful with the herds  of pigs, Maser Skeoch, a nun disappeared around here once when she crossed
    a field with pigs.  All that was found was her boots with her feet inside.”  The men love telling me stories.  Maybe some of the
    stories are true or have a kernel of truth.   Enjoy them immensely.  Today we worked  until 7 p.m. and then I spent the evening
    trying to fix the Ronka with no luck.   The men are all good workers and I hate pushing them but we are expecting Holmes to
    arrive any day from India.  He is a top man with the company.  Needs to be impressed.   Tired tonight…”Too tired to 
    climb the stairs,” as my grandmother used to sing to us on winer evenings at the farm.

    Small thatched  roof cottages  were located here and  there on the outskirts of Bunmahon.  Small  holdings
    of an acre or less.  Some of these cottages turned most of their land over to potatoes.  Others  managed
    to keep a few animals, even a  horse or two.


    Friday July 1, 1960

    “Mass! Master Skeoch get out of bed…time for mass.”  Bridey hammers on my door then enters the room
    and rips of my covers  reminding me all the time that  I must not miss mass.  She even carries a BELL that 
    she rings with gusto.if I am not out of bed fast.   Lucky I wear in a bIg night shirt because Bridey  
    rips off the blankets to speed me up.  Mass is very important to Bridey and she  has made mass feel
    important to me…a Protestant…a  Humanist.

    Quite amusing…nice really.

    STOP FOR A REST


    END OF THE INTRODUCTION TO BUNMAHON…LOTS MORE TO COME
    SUCH AS AN INTRODUCTON TO THE BOYS WHO  MADE THE SURVEY 
    SUCCESSFULL.

    AND THEN THE PRIZE OF PRIZES WHEN BARNEY SUGGESTED “MASER SKEOCH
    DO YOU WANT TO GO UNDERGROUND IN THE OLD MINES….I KNOW THE SECRET
    ENTRANCES.”

    alan  skeoch
    May 2019