Year: 2021

  • EPISODE 379 MEMORIES OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLE , CANADA DAY 2021″ “LOOK, THERE’S AN INDIAN…GET YOUR CAMERA.”

    (Beginning…short series on my meetings with indigenous Canadians )

    EPISODE 379    MEMORIES OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLE ON CANADA DAY 2021: “LOOK, THERE’S AN INDIAN…GET YOUR CAMERA.”


    alan skeoch
    July 1, 2021

    In my ten years of summer work in mining exploration I met many indigenous Canadians and two indigenous Americans.  In retrospect
    the experience is unsettling.,,but also joyful.  Mostly joyful.






    This is the closest photo I can find to illustrate a strange experience in late summer 1967…Northern Quebec.




    My experience with indigenous Canadians is episodic … i.e. discrete stories unrelated to each other
    but collectively important to me on this Canada Day 2021.  

    1) Summer 1957:   I had been working in a tent camp near Chibougamau, northern Quebec for two months.  Outdoor work
    slogging through our Canadian coniferous forests.  Tough work.  No time for the niceties of civilized life
    like a haircut or a bath in soapy water.   Our crew was flown out to an old logging camp on the Opemiska
    road…a wide gravel road where mining trucks had the right of way and precious few cars ever travelled.

    Early One  sunshine filled evening I climbed up on a rock outcrop overlooking the roadway.  In a cloud of dust
    a car came barreling along.   Passed me by.  Then braked and backed up.  A priest got out along with
    some well dressed passengers with cameras.

    “Look up there…that is an Indian…take pictures if you want.”

    They were looking at me then snapped a few pictures. And then they were gone.  That was my earliest experience
    with native people.  I was the native person.  I was caught on camera as if I was a moose or black bear that had
    crept out of the forest.   Yes, it was amusing.  But in the back of my brain it was also unsettling. WhyWere native people
    treated this way…i.e. ‘Things’ to be photographed then ignored?

    And what made me look like an ‘Indian’?  My skin was now dark…like leather.  My hair was uncut.  My skin a bernished leather.
    I had given up the war with insect cannibals…let them have their victory if they could chew their way through smoke filled pores.
    I was part of the forest.  An oddity…a shadow.  My existence was entertainment…captured then forgotten.
    That moment in 1957 remains crystal clear in my memory.  There was something about the moment ,,,those  cameras snapping.  
    Something disconcerting.   At the time, however, it was just amusing. “Look, there’s an Indian up there on the rock.”

    Our crew of ten men were all Anglo-Canadians.  That is we were all English speaking.  Our linecutting crew,
    on the other hand, was all Franco-Canadian.  French speaking.  Our two crews did not talk to each other.  We lived
    in the two solitudes of Canadian life.  

    What was missing?   There were no indigenous Canadians on either crew.   At least none to my mind.  Yet not many
    miles to the North West was the Mistassini Reserve…a large population of English speaking native people..

    Chibougamau was a boom town.  Miners…lots of them.  Young men mostly with a few prostitutes available at
    $20 a throw.   All this was very surprising to me for I was just a Grade 11 high school student from Toronto.  Voltaire’s
    Candide as it were.

    Where were our  indigenous Canadians in this hurly burly world of Chibougamau?   Where were they? They were not present.
    They may have been here and there in the forested fringe but I never met one…never saw one….then I became one.

    Where were they?   This is…was… their land.   Why were some of them not working the bush trails they
    must have known so well.   Why was a Toronto high school student doing the job.
     Now it is year 2021 and I have never heard an answer.  Where were they?


    NEXT:  PART TWO … BARREN LAND OF WEST ALASKA

    THE ONLY time we were ever armed as geophysical exploration teams was the Alaska job.
    But I remember meeting two Yupik indigenous people more than I remember this
    rifle meant to scare off Kodiak bears.   The memory of first contact with Yupiks does not
    reflect well on me.   Remember I was just a kid.  The contact was fleeting but in retrospect
    disconcerting.   Coming in Episode 380
  • EPISODE 379 MEMORIES OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLE , CANADA DAY 2021″ “LOOK, THERE’S AN INDIAN…GET YOUR CAMERA.”

    (Beginning…short series on my meetings with indigenous Canadians )

    EPISODE 379    MEMORIES OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLE ON CANADA DAY 2021: “LOOK, THERE’S AN INDIAN…GET YOUR CAMERA.”


    alan skeoch
    July 1, 2021

    In my ten years of summer work in mining exploration I met many indigenous Canadians and two indigenous Americans.  In retrospect
    the experience is unsettling.,,but also joyful.  Mostly joyful.






    This is the closest photo I can find to illustrate a strange experience in late summer 1967…Northern Quebec.




    My experience with indigenous Canadians is episodic … i.e. discrete stories unrelated to each other
    but collectively important to me on this Canada Day 2021.  

    1) Summer 1957:   I had been working in a tent camp near Chibougamau, northern Quebec for two months.  Outdoor work
    slogging through our Canadian coniferous forests.  Tough work.  No time for the niceties of civilized life
    like a haircut or a bath in soapy water.   Our crew was flown out to an old logging camp on the Opemiska
    road…a wide gravel road where mining trucks had the right of way and precious few cars ever travelled.

    Early One  sunshine filled evening I climbed up on a rock outcrop overlooking the roadway.  In a cloud of dust
    a car came barreling along.   Passed me by.  Then braked and backed up.  A priest got out along with
    some well dressed passengers with cameras.

    “Look up there…that is an Indian…take pictures if you want.”

    They were looking at me then snapped a few pictures. And then they were gone.  That was my earliest experience
    with native people.  I was the native person.  I was caught on camera as if I was a moose or black bear that had
    crept out of the forest.   Yes, it was amusing.  But in the back of my brain it was also unsettling. WhyWere native people
    treated this way…i.e. ‘Things’ to be photographed then ignored?

    And what made me look like an ‘Indian’?  My skin was now dark…like leather.  My hair was uncut.  My skin a bernished leather.
    I had given up the war with insect cannibals…let them have their victory if they could chew their way through smoke filled pores.
    I was part of the forest.  An oddity…a shadow.  My existence was entertainment…captured then forgotten.
    That moment in 1957 remains crystal clear in my memory.  There was something about the moment ,,,those  cameras snapping.  
    Something disconcerting.   At the time, however, it was just amusing. “Look, there’s an Indian up there on the rock.”

    Our crew of ten men were all Anglo-Canadians.  That is we were all English speaking.  Our linecutting crew,
    on the other hand, was all Franco-Canadian.  French speaking.  Our two crews did not talk to each other.  We lived
    in the two solitudes of Canadian life.  

    What was missing?   There were no indigenous Canadians on either crew.   At least none to my mind.  Yet not many
    miles to the North West was the Mistassini Reserve…a large population of English speaking native people..

    Chibougamau was a boom town.  Miners…lots of them.  Young men mostly with a few prostitutes available at
    $20 a throw.   All this was very surprising to me for I was just a Grade 11 high school student from Toronto.  Voltaire’s
    Candide as it were.

    Where were our  indigenous Canadians in this hurly burly world of Chibougamau?   Where were they? They were not present.
    They may have been here and there in the forested fringe but I never met one…never saw one….then I became one.

    Where were they?   This is…was… their land.   Why were some of them not working the bush trails they
    must have known so well.   Why was a Toronto high school student doing the job.
     Now it is year 2021 and I have never heard an answer.  Where were they?


    NEXT:  PART TWO … BARREN LAND OF WEST ALASKA

    THE ONLY time we were ever armed as geophysical exploration teams was the Alaska job.
    But I remember meeting two Yupik indigenous people more than I remember this
    rifle meant to scare off Kodiak bears.   The memory of first contact with Yupiks does not
    reflect well on me.   Remember I was just a kid.  The contact was fleeting but in retrospect
    disconcerting.   Coming in Episode 380
  • EPISODE 379 HAPPY CANADA DAY

    EPISODE 379     HAPPY CANADA DAY


    alan skeoch
    July 1, 2021

    Well, Canada Day seems to to a bit of a downer this year.  The unmarked graves
    of hundreds of native children wrenched from their homes only to die and be
    buried in unmarked graves is a terrible legacy of Residential Schools.

    Guilt?  Who should carry the guilt?  Much more will be said about this legacy.

    It is a tough time.
    We need to be happy…absolute need right now…so here is
    my greeting on Canada Day 2021


    Kevin and Andrew Skeoch…some years ago.  

    Coming…my experience with indigenous people during my decade doing
    mining exploration in tiny corners of North America that few will ever 
    see.  Often these tiny corners were the homes of indigenous people.
    More to come.

    alan
  • EPISODE 37ROBERT ROOT’S EXPERIENCE WITh LYME DISEASE – TICKS

    EPISODE  379     ROBERT ROOT’S EXPERIENCE WITH LYME DISEASE = TICKS


    SUMMERTIME AND THE NATURAL WORLD IS INVITING.





    I love daisies…wild flowers in general.  I also love looking for Monarch Butterflies.  As do you.  Be careful…CAREFUL!



    black legged tick – sometimes carrier of lyme disease -If deer are present then ticks are present.



    black legged female tick swollen with blood

    Photo of two nymphal blacklegged ticks on a hiking boot.
    two ticks on a hiking boot…massive enlarged photo to show how tiny ticks can be




    JUNE 28, 2021

    LETTER TO ROBERT ROOT FRM ALAN SKEOCH

    Hi Rooter,

    I feel duty bound to write an episode on Lyme Disease  as many of
    my stories involve outdoor activity …. sometimes but not many in long grass.
    Your story is very important.  A cautionary tale since many people long for
    a chance to get outdoors.  Chasing butterflies maybe.  Be careful.

    A few years ago a good friend of mine got Lyme disease from a tick bite when
    he walked through long grass on a hiking trail near Ancaster Ontario.  He did not
    notice the tic.   It bit him, sucked some of his blood then dropped off.  Infected him. Rooter
    had no idea he was infected with Lyme Disease so carried on normally until the
    full impact of the disease struck.  It was devastating.  Best said in his own
    words.   A clear warning to avoid long grass.  Easy to say.  Hard to do.




    ROBERT ROOT’S STORY

        
    Sunday afternoon August 22nd 2004 My wife and I went for a walk near The Hermitage in Ancaster. 
    I left the trail and went into the long grass to get to the pinnacle of a hill we were climbing.  A day later a bulls eye rash
    appeared on my left ankle and both ankles were badly swollen.  I lay down and put my feet up and my heart felt like it
    was being flooded as lymphatic fluid poured into my heart from my legs.  The next day I saw my doctor and he put me
    on an antibiotic and Lasix ( a dewatering pill ).  4X a day I put my feet up to drain the fluid.  The lymphatic system
    was badly affected.  I had to stay around the house with my legs propped up and cancelled other activities.
    I sang in a quartet at church but had to cancel that on the 29th and stay lying with my feet up. 
    On the 30th I went to my doctor again and he gave me more antibiotics.  This was a very symmetrical disease.
    When my left armpit was inflamed my right arm pit was too.  Swelling in my left wrist coincided with swelling of the right wrist.
    When I first lay down my heart felt flooded as the great thoracic duct poured lymph into the auricle of the heart.  Wednesday
    Sept 1st I saw my doctor again and received a third round of antibiotics for 7 days.   I stayed home the weekend of
    Sept 5th and rested with my feet up.  Friday Sept 10th I washed the car.  I was now getting more active but still spent a good
    part of each day with my legs up.  Sept 16th I went to choir practice and Sept 18th I attended My son Wesley’s STAG at
    Woodbine racetrack but had to go to the car and prop my legs up to drain for a while. 
    Sept. 29th my doctor prescribed support hose for me and to this day 17 years later I have to wear support hose and put
    my legs up during the day.   I am one of the “Lucky ones” because my doctor got me the correct antibiotics right away.

    Many people who contract Lyme Disease and don’t get the correct treatment right away suffer permanent organ
    damage and have lifelong disabilities.

    My doctor is a frontier doctor.  He has been treating farmers for a good part of his life.  One year he got the record for
    the most home visits in a year.  He initially thought I had spider bites but he did diagnose the correct antibiotic.  Hallelujah!

    We still check for ticks and occasionally find them on us even if we are not out in long grass.





    CAUTION

    Being outdoors after the Covid 19 isolation can be wonderful.  But be careful.
    Long years ago when I worked in Southern Ireland I noticed many cattle herds
    carried ticks on their snouts.  I had never heard of ticks until then.  Our work involved
    crossing and criss crossing Irish fields…climbing over stone fences with lots of long grasses.

         Pushing our way through gorse and bracken…dense.

      So each
    night I carefully examined my body for ticks. Especially my legs.  Never found one
    fortunately.   Irish ticks were ugly but did not carry Lyme disease then but they do now..  In North
    America the situation was dangerous. 

    You would not want to get Lyme Disease as my good friend Bob Root has explained.

    Marjorie picked a tick from Woody our Labrador last week.  No joke.

    alan skeoch
    june 2021


  • EPISODE 378 STONE SILO CIRCA 1870-1880: WHERE DID THEY GET THE STONES?

    EPISODE 378    STONE SILO CIRCA 1870-1880: WHERE DID THEY GET THE STONES?


    alan skeoch
    June 2021

    This stone silo has stood here since Angus McLean built it in the 1870’s.  ( McLean-Saunders-MacLeod-Skeoch, Skeoch, Con…owners)
    Take a close look.  Not one stone is uniform.  Sizes and shapes are never replicated.  It looks unstable yet the silo is now over 
    150 years old.  An unusual piece of Scottish stonemasons art.

    Angus McLean had to use whatever was available.  And in Erin Township, Wellington County,
    Ontario stones were always available.  They still are.  Each year a new crop of stones is pushed 
    to the surface.  “That’s my best crop.”
     





    Stone are available if we decide to make the silo higher.   One factor is missing.  The skill to take rounded irregular stones
    of all sizes  and put them together in such a way that they will stand for 150 years.  Angus McLean died a long time ago.




    Enthusiastic stone pickers.


    Piled on a stone boat.



    Hauled oto a designated spot for the stone pile.  Then unloaded.   There were always snakes ready to take up residence in
    the stone pile.

    Why was this rocky land given or sold to Scottish migrants in the 19th century?  Simple answer.  Scotland is
    full of stone fields.   The land agents figured Scots would like stone fields.  And they did.  Stone houses were 
    a specialty as was the stone house built on the Skeoch farm near Fergus.  Like the silo , it is still standing.