HI,
SOME of you actually read these Episodes. Some of you do not because your lives are full or you think I am a jerk…or both.
I just sent Episode 99.
Why am I doing this? Several reasons but foremost is the fact that many of you are stuck in isolation and I felt these stories might break the boredom. Another thought is the stories might trigger your own memories and thereby make the tedium less onerous. Maybe you might even record moments in your lives that were memorable.
Another reason is that I hoped my grandchildren might read them and see their grandfather and grandmother in a different light. Not sure they even read them sadly.
alan august 2020
P.S. I am not finished. The stories will keep coming.
Year: 2020
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Note from Alan…ON MY 99TH EPISODE
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EPISODE 99 LAST FLIGHT OUT ON A CRIPPLED BUSH PLANE
EPISODE 99” LAST FLIGHT OUT … ON A CRIPPLED BUSH PLANEalan skeochAugust 2020
EPISODE 99 LAST FLIGHT OUT ON A CRIPPLED BUSH PLANEalan skeochaugust 2020PILOT “Listen boys, I do not like this little lakeso do your work fast. The water is going downand landing will get difficult.”“Take less per load.”“Possible but soon there’ll not be enough water to land.”“These are the last off our anomalies…we will work fast.Come back for us in three days.: (I do not remember this time line exactly)The summer of 1964 was hot. To many that means heightened fire danger which wastrue. We had a no fire rule for much of the summer. But the real danger was the slow butsteady evaporation of water from the lakes. A lot of waterwas gone between June and September. That fact is apparent in the photograph ofour fly camp (Episode 97). Looks like the water has gone down five feet or more.Flight pontoon landings that were easy and safe in June became difficult and dangerousin September.
This picture was taken in mid August. Take a look at the high water mark on the shore. Seems water had gone down aboutfour or five feet by then. On our last job the water level had dropped more. Very dangerous for water landings and takeoffs aswe discovered.It was our last job.we Were finished. The crew had returned to Paradise Lodge to pack up.Marjorie had caught the ACR to Sault Ste Marie. “Meet you atthe airport, Marjorie…maybe around noon.” My part of the job was finished. I had to beback in school by the end of the Labour Day Week End.The plan was neat. We had finished work on an anomaly close to a small lakesouth of our Wart Lake camp. All that was left was a pile of gear….tents, cookinggoods, some wire frame cots, axes,shovels.,Coleman stoves, fuel, etc. I don’t really remember what wasin the pile of goods. Maybe 200 to 300 pounds ofeuipment.
“I don’t like this lake…too shallow,” said the pilot when he dropped us a few days earlier.“And it will get worse.”We did the job as fast as we could and had arranged a pick up. Don’t remember much about the first flightbut I do know I was feeling quite nostalgic. This would be the last bush job of m life. I knew thatand wanted to savour my exit alone. Crew out first. The flight wentwell although the distance from touchdown to the end of the lake was short.That was not the problem. I did not expect a problem for I was wrapped inmy memories of so many bush planes on so many lakes. Mostly Beavers but a fewCessnas and one Seabee which was just a visitor being dropped off. “ThoseSeabees are really dangerous. Motor at the rear. Pushing. If the motor quits thegoddamn thing drops like a rock. No ability to glide. Cessnas glide best.”The Cessna 170 came in at tree top level. Had to. Landing strip of water was shortas evaporation created shallows where once there was two or three feet of water.The pilot cut power early and the plane settled down harder than usual. Bigger chevronof water. And something different. Slightly lopsided. The plane turned and idledits way to our landing site. Slight slant. Odd.“Hit a fucking deadhead. Ripped the pontoon…goddamnit.”Submerged objects terrified bush pilots. Often they took a run at landingthen circled. Looking for objects. Like dead heads…old submerged logs ortrees sometimes angled upwards.“I’m going to pump out the water while you load. Could be tricky. Putload as far forward as you can…need the weight for extra lift.”Took no time at all. Ignition. And we worked our way to best takeoff positionand he gave it full power. We flumed our way down the lake with an increasingslant as the pontoon filled with water. Fast but not fast enough. The far shoreand tree line got closer and closer. “Can’t make it!” and the pilot cut power and the plane settled. Slightly off centre. And closeto shore. Too close.“Dump the load on the beach. We’ll try once more but empty. Got to get offthis fucking lake. “ He cursed and pumped out the pontoon water.“There. Let’s give it another try.”He taxied down as far as he could without getting tangled in weeds. Thenwe were moving. The pontoon filled with water as we went full throttledown the lake. Far shore became the near shore. No lift yet.“Move your body forward…gut more lift.”Then we had liftoff. To me it seemed just in time. Seemed we werejust skirting the swamp and maybe touching tree tops Not true ofcourse. Imagination played.The rest of the flight was easy. In an hour we had landed at Sault SteMarie where Marjorie was supposed to be waiting. I had said noon butwe were late, very late. She was not there.Her turquoise VW beetle was in the parking lot but no sign ofMarjorie.Then she walked into the holding lounge from the aircraft side.
“I pretended to be sick.”“A man offered me a tour of the city from his plane. I did notknow he was just a pilot in training. Scared me near to death.Only way we got back on the ground fast was I pretended tobe about to vomit”And so it ended. Our days of mining exploration were over. Theyended with a bang.alan skeochAugust 2020P.S. I know this sounds hard to believe. Writing from memorycan result in exaggeration. So here are the simple factsof that last flight.1) Water levels had fallen dramatically (see picture)2) Pilot did hit something and punctured one pontoon.3) I watched him pump out the pontoon4) We failed to get liftoff on our first attempt and jettisonedthe cargo on the beach.5) Second attempt was just barely successful and I rememberthe pilot asking me to lean forward.6) Our baggage? Do not know what happened.7) Marjorie did take a joy ride that scared her enough to feign vomit8) This was not my final job. The next summer we flew to MerrittB.C. on a short seismic job. But this Paradise Lodge job wasmy last bush job.
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EPISODE 98 FOOD…good and bad, AILMENTS, VIOLENCE and ISN’T THAT FUNNY…AN OVERVIEW
EPISODE 98 FOOD…good and bad, AILMENTS, VIOLENCE, and ISN’T THAT FUNY…AN OVERVIEWalan skeochAugust 2020This was the Dawson City, General Store in the Yukon as it appearedin 1961.The building was slowly sinking into the permafrost each year. This picture has nothing to do with the story that follows. My jobfor ten summers was as unique as the Dawson City hardware store.FOOD FOLLOWS…GOOD AND BAD
THEN AILMENTS…FROM TOOTHACHE TO PILES TO AXE ERRORSTHEN VIOLENCE…VERY LITTLETHEN “ISN’T THAT FUNNY?”…
Dinner at our fly camp in summer of 1964. After the supper of wormy stew we wentback to the good staple food of pork and beans. That is Bob Bartlettpouring condensed milk onto something and beside him is Serge Lavoie.
This captures what life is like in he bush…cooking over an open fire. Very rough and unpleasant. in this casethe fire is much too large but it was made in the pouring rain when we took a lunchtime break…and tried to dry our socks. Fires were always carefully extinguished. Never once do I remember a firecausing damage. One Question? Where would you sit here? Careful, you couldeasily get piles. Yukon Territory job. 1961.alan skeoch’August 2020Many of our jobs had camp cooks, sometimes we ate in diners. But a lot ofthe jobs were bush jobs where we were our own cooks.WHAT WAS GOOD FOOD?
Cooking. Essential was bacon…needed to grease the pan for both French Toastand Pancakes, both of which we ate often in various forms. Note the blazingaxes in the background. A special light axe for marking trails.1) French Toast was great for breakfast as long as the eggs lasted. Rotten eggsmade poor French Toast but that never happened. The nose was key to freshness.French Toast had an added plus factor. Slabs could be eaten cold at lunch sittingon a dry log. Two meals. Even three if there were some leftovers for supper.2) Peanut butter…could be slathered on cold French toast. Or on anything. Peanutbutter could be eaten with a spoon right from the can or bottle. No wash upneeded. A perfect food. And if too many field mice found our cook tent thenpeanut butter on a Victor snap trap solved the problem. Red squirrels neededa rat trap but were also suckers for peanut butter. Rarely used though. There wasno trap big enough for black bears with whom we shared food a few times.3) Rolled oats cooked fast for breakfast with brown sugar andcanned or powdered milk. Then the leftover porridge would cool and form agelatinous slab for lunch. The slab could be rolled with marmalade orpeanut butter in between. Scrumptious . Many many lunches of suchmake my mouth water even today. wrapped in wax paper which served thedouble function of starting the lunch time fire for our Billy cans of tea.4) Salami or Polish sausage. Both kept well. The flies preferred to laytheir eggs in the slabs of sowbelly…bacon slabs…rather than the salamior Polish sausage. Why? I am not sure but suspect the latter were loadedwith preservatives that the flies sensed but we did not.5) Pork and Beans. A camp favourite even though the cans were oftentoo heavy to pack if we were not returning to base camps for a dayor two. Throw in a slab of butter and more salt and pepper. Smellwas terrific. Dining like kings and queens. There were side effects, of course,,but the side effects were very healthy Nothing worse than constipation.Or, as we called that affliction, “the screaming shits”.5) Cookies…lots of them. Usually Peak Frean shortbreads of various shapes.But I remember large boxes of David’s cookies on the Quebec job. I mean large…about the size of a small suitcase. That company made lots of sweet thingswith marshmallow fillings. We never put limits on consumption that I remember.6) Food for fast consumption. On deep bush jobs where food service was bybush plane at irregular intervals we would order some fresh food…like fruit. Maybea watermelon to eat right away or a six quart basket of peaches. Oranges werebest since they kept well. Sometimes we might even try a pie or cake…againfor fast consumption the arrival day. Gorge and starve.7) Drinks. You might think we would order several cases of ginger ale or Coca colabut that did not happen. Lots of tea bags and ground coffee. Hot chocolate madewith powdered milk was drinkable but barely so. Fresh milk was a luxury item.Alcohol was never on site which I find strange on reflections because we alwayscelebrated the end of a job with a beer or double O.P. (Yukon job).
WE never had alcohol on the job. After a job, however, we celebrated. This is my favourite picture of celebrationin Ireland in 1960. Most of these men were our employees and they all enjoyed a pint of Guinness as did we.8) Bread. Useful whether fresh or stale. Old bread got rather crusty but couldbe softened in the form of French toast as mentioned above. Mouldy breadwas garbage but sometimes the mould was spotty and could be cut out.Sliced bread got mouldy in the first four or five slices…deep in the loaf sometimesa good slice was found.9) Canned Prunes. The two terrors we wanted to avoid were Constipation andDiarrhea. Bot are debilitating. Constipation seemed the most common hencethe canned prunes.10) Pasta…lots of it in the form of Kraft Dinners, and a few attempts atspaghetti with canned sauce…no fancy pastas however likeLasagna…too hard to make. Kraft dinner best.
Mrs. Kennedy was the dominating person in Bonmahon. Ireland job. She also saw that we ate well. No rough food like wehad in our wilderness camps.11) Mrs. Kennedy, on the Irish job, made my lunch sandwiches filledwith Lobster. A delicacy. But I had never eaten lobster and carefullyasked her, “Could you make peanut butter sandwiches?” She hadnever heard of peanut butter sandwiches Both are good.WHAT WAS BAD FOOD?1) Wieners. I expect readers would find this wiener aversion surprising becausethey are fast food items. Hot dogs…super easy The problem was that with timeour wieners exuded a white bluish substance…preservatives I think. On heGroundhog River job I remember picking up a wiener with one finger…the bluishstuff stuck to the finger tip. Did we eat them anyway? Not sure. We ate a lotthings that were disgusting.2) Sowbelly. Again I remember the Groundhog River job where the blow flieslaid eggs in our slabs of bacon (really sowbelly). Cutting off the contaminatedend was part of the ritual of breakfast.3) Canned meats. Edible but not pleasant. We referred to all cansof preserved meat as cans of Clap.4) Doughnuts. great when fresh but very soon turned into life preserver ringsas hard a bullets. Of course they could be dipped in tea.6) Fresh fruit like grapes, peaches, pears, cherries, melons. Wonderfullwhen the airplane arrived but very soon rotten or fly infested. We gorged.Then chucked the rotten remainder in the latrine. There werewild berries however. I was never sure which of the wild berries wereedible and which were not. Walter Helstein ate them all so he became ourberry tester. Blueberries were easy to get as were swamp apples (orange, large)but they were super sweet to an extreme. Walter ate lots of red berriesthat seemed inedible to me. (Groundhog River job)7) Some dehydrated packages turned out to be wormy as mentioned in Episode97 but that was not true of all dehydrated food.8) Chocolates….in candy form or bar form. Fear of toothache from cavitiesmade all forms of chocolate suspect. But we always ordered a coupleof cases of chocolate bars. When we got a toothache we just hadto tough it out. No dentists in the bush. That applied to any ailment.9) Moose meat: Marjorie was given a slab of moose meat tocook for the fellows on a short camping venture to Wart Lake. Therewas no way that the moosemeat could be made edible usingnormal cooking skills. Tough as leather no matter what was done.WHAT AILMENTS DID WE FACE?1) My worst ailment had nothing to do with food. It was my feet. The constantrubbing of my boots against the undergrowth soon wore through to myfeet. Water seeped in and got warmed up by my body temperature so thatmy feet were cooking. By the end of some bush jobs my feet were aspock marked as the fields of France in World War I. Flesh could be peeled.2) On bush jobs in the Yukon, Alaska, Northern Ontariowe always carried a hand made billy can…a coffee can with a wire loopfor making tea. Usually using tea bags. It was possible however to makeLabrador tea from a common shrub with canoe like leaf shape with fuzzyunderbelly. Making tea was easy. Could be done anywhere with a smallfire. Sitting was the problem. The undergrowth was often spongy with wetmosses of all kinds. Sitting on the moss was like sitting on a pillow…awet pillow. We looked for dry dead logs instead. Sitting on wet mossday after day was crazy. Piles! Anyone who has had piles knowsthe discomfort. We sure did and looked for windfall strewn forestfloor where there were logs to sit on.3) Tooth ache…terrible thing. Constant pain. happened occasionally.Nothing we could do other than tough it out. I seem to remember suggestingwe tie a string to a tooth and the other end to the Yukon cabin door. Slam thedoor and out comes the tooth. Only time I remember that working waswith my brother way back in the years when he trusted my ideas.4) Food poisoning. I got that on the Cochrane job from eating rottenbalogna. I could not work and spent a couple of days in my sleepingbag wondering if I was going to die Everyone else went to work. Myonly visitor was a big black bear who arrived when all others were gone.No problem. he or she was just sniffing around the cook shack wheresome scraps must have been available.5) Serious cuts with axes. Using a blazing axe requires a little skill.Alway put blazes on sold trees. Never try to blaze a leafy branch. Why not?Because branches are elastic. Hit a branch and it bounces back.Along with the bounce back comes your blazing axle. I remember a particularlydifficult fellow would just would not learn. Sliced himself badly with his blazing axeand had to be taken out on a emergency flight. No loss. He was justtoo much trouble to have around. Lazy. Looking for the easy way. Accidentprone.6) Falling. So easy to do and a fall could have serious conseqencesas happened to Walter Helstein when he fell on a sharpened picket whichpierced his hand and was subsequently infected because we couldn’t geta plane to pit him up because the weather turned stormy.We warned Walter not step on fallen tree trunks. Never step on a fallen log…to do so was topossibly slip and fall headlong into whatever was on the other side. Step over. In Walter’s case sharpenedpickets like the Viet Cong used in the Viet Nam war were low to the ground on the other side.Freshly cut by lone cutters. Lethal. Easy toget hurt. Walter was too old for the job Perhaps sixty. He couldn’t step over logs.The end result was tragic (as mentioned in earlier episode), poor Walter lay in the tent for daysmoaning as infection spread. When float plane could finally land, Walter was in very badshape and spent a long time in hospital recovering…months. All from a single misstep pmtpa moss covered windfall. We never saw Walter again. Missed him.WAS VIOLENCE COMMON?Nerves get frayed on tough bush jobs where two or three men have to live togetherunder poor conditions. Tension develops over small things. ‘ Who ate all the chocolate bars?My pack frame load is heavier than yours, you bastard. Let’s rotate he lead job when blazingtrail. You jerk, your goddamn belt buckle has made the compass wrong.’It is very easy to get on someone’s nerves even in the best OF jobs. On a bush jobtensions occur fast. How are they best handled? Here I turn to Floyd Faulkneragain (Groundhog River job…3 months together on a ground crew .searching for anomalies foundby an airborne crew) Even if compass bearings were correct we sometimes madeerrors. One time, however, was really bad. “Al, you take the lead with the compass,we’ll do the blazing.” Big mistake. My Boy Scout belt buckle was big and bronze. itdeflected the compass. We were hopelessly lost by the time that error was discovered.Floyd’s reaction was laughter. We faced hours of labour retracing our steps, correlatingour position with the aerial photographs. I was 17 years old and threw a hissy fit…beganthrashing at the jungle undergrowth and yelling like a stuck pig. “Goddamn bastardly bush”Floyd thought that was even funnier.From that incident I got the nickname “Fucking Al” which was a term of endearment.Another incident on the same job made me look like a fool. We had to pack our fly campout to the Groundhog River from some distance east…miles. There had been big stormand the tents and fly sheets were wet and terribly heavy. A real bitch. “Bob, my loadis way heavier than yours.” “OK, Al. we’ll switch loads.” Another stupid incident.Bob had the big wet tent. It was so heavy that by the time I reached the GroundhogRiver, my packframe was bent into a curved piece of useless junk. Bob and Floydwere amused. Make me look like a fool, right?All the years I worked for Dr. Paterson there were no fights. Quite amazing becausethe job was very tough and the communities were sometimes not prone tolovable relationships. But no violence. On one occasion Dr. Paterson was amused…no, incredulous..when theAlaskan branch of Humble Oil armed us all with heavy duty rifles. Our companynever gave us weapons for fear we would shoot each other. True.No need.Really, we had a good time together nearly all the time. That was whyI loved the job so much.ONE CASE OF VIOLENCE IN TEN YEARSOne summer I took a survey job with the Ontario Department of Highways buildingHighway 17 across Northern Ontario. We were based in a trailer camp outsidethe village of Hunta. Eight of us about 18years old. . An age when stupidthings happen. One of our crew was ‘disturbed’…really a bit wacko. John (nolast name used here) just did not fit in. He could not fit in anywhere. There wassomething seriously wrong with him. It took a while to surface but when he snappedwe were lucky that no one died. Some of the boys picked on John as teen agersare prone to do. Like a big Boy Scout, I took John on my survey crew and got alongOK … not terrific but OK. At least until one day when Isignalled John to move to the right or left just to keep our line straight as we couldJohn turned … looked at me….and threw his blazing axe at me. Missed by a footor two. But there was no reason for the sudden anger. I was least likely to makefun of him. Privately I told the crew foreman who was reaching a point where herealized John was a problem.That night John did something I can never forget. We were all asleep ordozing in the trailer. The night was black, Suddenly there was a loud crashat one of the bunks. John had got up silently. Holding a large granite boulderhigh above one of the guys who had teased him… a Finlander fromThunder Bay as I remember. Then John dropped or threw the rcck down hard.The rock smashed a big gallon water can beside the Fin’s head. Crushed completely.We got the lights on. By then John was back in his bunk. just lay there whilethe rest of us clustered around the water jug. He was silent. He did not move.He must have done it. Had he intended tokill or just to warn? We were never sure. The next day officials arrived to takeJohn away. We never saw or heard from him again.That was the only violent act that got close to me in ten years of exploration.FUNNY THINGS HAPPENED ON EACH JOB.Humour is a tricky thing to present. Incidents that I consider funny mayseem insensitive and crude. Like the time that Bill and I were sittingin a bar in Dawson City. We had camped outside the town on an oldsourdough claim site. Needed a beer badly after a tough night and day.We were really just kids pretending to be men. Beside us on the floorof the bar two very large people…one male and one female…had decidedto copulate. They were having difficulty with their clothes because bothwere dead drunk. Bill and I kept our cool and pretended the behaviouron the floor was normal. the bar tender came around the bar and beganrolling the amorous couple towards the door. I seem to remember therolling but no sure how he got them out the door. They took a lot of doorspace. Later Bill and I laughed and laughed. You may not considerthat funny.
Bill and I worked damn hard on that Yukon job. We deserved s week end break in Dawson City. Here Bill isplotting our data. Sadly his Dad died in the middle of that summer and he had a rush flight home.On another occasion our contractor, a mining speculator called Dr. Ahofrom BC, had the habit of buying newcomers to the Yukon ‘Double op’s”at the Mayo Landing hotel. “Here boys have a Double OP” Whatis a Double OP? It is a liquid explosive. Rum and Whisky sentto the Yukon was double regular proof…i.e. damn close to purealcohol. Multiply that times twice and you will understand what happenedafter only one of these was consumed. Dr. Aho thought that was funny.I agreed after we had been around Mayo Landing for some time. Lotsof heavy drinking. Even our pilot Bob was drunk much of the time.Isn’t that funny?Then there was the time we sent Joe Fortin to Chibougamau in1958 toget us food. He flew out. Then at dusk he flew back. Just gettingout of the Beaver was a chore. He fell into the water from the pontoon.Joe was dead drunk. He spent his time and our money at theChibougamau Inn. Forgot to get us food. Isn’t that funny?
Bill Gilbey in bed on the Marathon jobThen there was Bill Gilbey (Gilbey’s Gin family) on the Marathon jobthumbing his way through the women’s lingerie section of Eaton’s cataloguesaying “We are a pathetic bunch relying on Eaton’s catalogue for our pornography.”Isn’t that funny?
Then you will remember the BC job at Merritt where the minemanager and geologist mistook Marjorie for a Vancouver hookerthat I had hired as company at night. This picture is not the motelroom bed but gives the right impression all the same. Isn’t that funny?Then there was our flight from Anchorage, Alaska, to Seattle with a lot of Americanmilitary brass flying out of Tokyo. Our regular flight had been cancelled due tocrippled landing gear. The US officers were a stiff bunch. Noneof them drank. So the stewardess gave us her full attention. Freedrinks. When we sobered up in a Seattle Hotel we were allwearing Japanese kimonos. Isn’t that funny?Then there was Pete in the Yukon, lying in bed each nightreading the Bible. He could quote chapter and verse by heart.I wondered. “Pete, you must be really religious?”“Not so at all. I read the bible just to get into arguments..reallyI am an atheist. Isn’t that funny?
Then there is our helicopter pilot on the Alaskan job awakeningus on the camp PA with his charming “Let’s get Fucking Airborne”Or the camp cook explaining the finer points of eating moose heart.Isn’t that funny?
Then there is Barney Dwan warning me to be careful crossing Irish farmfields. “There was a nun who took a short cut and all that was everfound were her boots with her feet in them.” (Hogs got her)Isn’t that funny?Then there were all those lonely hearts club letters I received onthe Groundhog River job. Dozens of young (and older0 women hopingI would marry them or at least help them out of poverty. Those letterscame when my friends Russ and Jim enrolled me in the club.Isn’t that funny?Obviously, a lot of these stories are not funny at all. Unless youare 17 or 18 years old enjoying the full panorama of life.alan skeochAugust 2020Next EPISODE 99…LAST FLIGHT OUT ON A CRIPPLED BUSH PLANE -
EPISODE 97 FLY CAMP BUILT AT DUSK: SUPPER WAS A BIT DISGUSTING 1964
EPISODE 97 FLY CAMP BUILT AT DUSK: SUPPER WAS A BIT DISGUSTING SUMMER 1964 PARADISE LODGEalan skeochAugust 2020We had trouble getting a bush plane…Only available in late afternoon. This was unfortunate because it meantour crew had to set up our fly camp as night approached. But it had to be done. These last few anomalieswere too far west of base camp at Paradise Lodge so the camp had to include an airborne component. Suchflights were very common on other bush jobs but this was the first for the Paradise Lodge crew who werenew to the business. The fellows were quite excited about the idea of flying in to a tiny lake and setting up acampsite in the wilderness.
“Looks like a good spot down there…where that slab of treeless granite meets the lake.”“No problem…lake is small but we can set down.”The Cessna touched the water so gently it was hardly noticeable were it not for the huge Chevronof water driven up by the pontoons.“I think we can get everyone here…and the canoe…in two flights..before dusk.”, the pilot had explained.And he did just that.
As the sun got close to the horizon the Cessna took off for Sault Ste Marie. We wereon our own.Five of us were then left alone to get the camp constructed as daylightfaded. Not so easy. We had with canvas wall tents…three of them to erect. First act was to saw downridge poles and de-limb them. Then six sets of support beams. Lashed together. No time to look for perfectly flat groundin the forest. each other. Amicably we hoped.It was not a pretty sight but it would do. The job might take three or four days and then we wouldfly back to base camp. No need for a pretty campsite. Dusk became darkness before the tentswere lashed in place. We had not eaten but already had a nice fire going on the baregranite well away from the tinder dry forest.All of this was quite standard. Perhaps boring to anyone reading this story. Maybe interesting toreal outdoorsy people whose criticism is unwanted. We were on a job not a fishing holiday.The main event? That happened in the blackness of night. A supper all of us would remember.“How about a big stew for supper?”“Fine.”“I have just the thing….a great stew…dried in packages….just add water.”My enthusiasm was misplaced. Sadly. The stew was advertised as a perfect meal forbackpackers. Packages rather than cans, therefore light in weight. Full of all kinds of goodthings…meat, potatoes, carrots, broth, onions…the works. And no work required. Justrip open the package and dump the dried contents into boiling water. I did so…severalpackages dumped and boiling on an open fire in the splendid darkness of a summer nightin the wilderness.We got the tents in place. And then dug into the stew. It tasted good. Thick with lotsof chunks and a spicy gravy.
Then we went to bed. Satisfied with the camp and more than satisfied with the stew.As a matter of fact we could not eat all the stew … set remainderit aside for morning clean up.“Jesu Christ! Look at this!”“What?”“The pot if full of dead worms…little dead white worms…dozens of them.”“That bastard that sold this so called perfect stew must have known.”“Who was he?”“No idea…just sounded good in the camp outfitters advert.”“Yuck!”“Anybody have a gut ache?”Nobody was sick. The worms had been well cooked and must havebeen quite edible. Actually we all had a good laugh.There was some concern about our food supply. How many packagesof dried food ? Too many, but we had the usual back up. As I rememberthat back up was a case of pork and beans…lots of bread and eggsfor French toast and a few boxes of Nielsen’s Jersey Milk Chocolate bars.A good sized sack of rolled oats, dried milk powder…The basics. We would be fine. I do not remember any bitching. We just goton with the job.
Breaking camp a few days later did not take long. The Cessna arrived in the morningand that meant we were back at Paradise lodge by noon. We were overjoyed tosee our cook again.alan skeochAugust 2020P.S. Look at the rock along the sore….the high and low water marks. The lower the lake levelsgot as summer progressed the more dangerous takeoffs and landing became. Sometimeslog deadheads lurked. Sometimes lake bottoms, sharp rocks, were deceptively shrouded inwater weeds. Pilots got nervous by late August. For good reason as will bedescribed in Episode 99. -
EPISODE 96 CAUGHT IN A CYCLONIC STORM…LIGHTNING STRIKE KNOCKS US OUT
EPISODE 96 PARADISE LODGE…CAUGHT IN A SUDEN CYCLONIC STORM…LIGHTNING, KNOCKED OUTalan skeochaugust 2020Serge Lavoie and I were completing a magnetometer survey on an anomaly a fewmiles south of our base camp at Paradise Lodge. Seemed to be a sunny day. Stayedthat way until we looked at the sky about mid-afternoon. Black storm clouds movingour director. Moving fast. The forest seemed unusually quiet for a spell and thenall hell broke loose.Great swirling winds tore into the forest. Winds strong enough to uproot whole clumpsof trees. Particularly clumps of cedar that whipped over shoving their tangle of roots and dirtskyward.Usually we toughed out storms by just hunkering down. This was different. The wind wascyclonic…moving in circles. Rain, thunder, lightning. Noise as loud as a ACR freighttrain.One of us was carrying the magnetometer while the other carried related gear.We were trying to reach the ACR roadbed, perhaps a mile or two east ofour survey area.We never made it until later.I remember a crack. Like an axe splitting a birch block. Sudden.And that is all I remember until I woke up. Same with Serge. When we awakenedour gear was strewn around. The Magnetometer with its tripod was a good ten orfifteen feet from where we lay.We were fine. But we had no idea how long we were knocked out. Was it five minutesor an hour. What had happened? We guessed it was a lightning strike nearby…close but not closeenough to kill.The storm was still happening but the ferocity had eased. I seem to remember several clumpsof cedar ripped from the ground. Overturned on their sides. Were the trees likethat before the storm.“What happened, Serge?”“No idea…knocked down”“Let’s get out of here…maybe a freight train coming.”Sure enough we were able to flag down an ACR diesel and loadourselves and the mag into the open doors of a freight car. The engineermust have known us for he stopped at Mile 71giving us a minute or two tojump down with our gear.Bottom line? We had no idea what had happened to us in that cedar swamp.But something knocked us down and out. Later in the fall when Serge visitedus at home in Toronto we remembered that storm. What knocked us down?PERHAPS someone reading this has an answer.1) caught in big cyclonic type sudden storm (circular winds with high velocity)2) suddenly we were knocked out for a few minutes or longer3) the magnetometer was ten feet away from us when we both woke up4) seem to remember clumps of cedars down with roots in air5) storm may have ended as fast as it came upon us6) only Serge and I had the experience … we were several miles from campalan skeochaugust 2020