Year: 2021

  • EPISODE 349 SHORT PANTS TO KILST….38T ROVER CREW CIRCA 1956

    Note…some readers will identify with this story…having done similar things.
    Others will be sorry they were born too late for that carefree life.



    EPISODE 359     SHORT PANTS TO KILTS….38T ROVER CREW CIRCA 1956

                        (IN MEMORIAM TO BIG RED STEVENSON WHO WAS ALWAYS WITH US)

    alan skeoch
    june 2021

    Oh, how I wish Big Red Stevenson was alive today.  He passed on before I could
    assemble all these pictures of our 38th Boy Scout Rover Crew when we wore
    our short pants, neck scarves and Mountie Hats.  Knee socks with tasselled garters. We were all such good friends
    yet did not show it.  Our friendship was a reflex….present in our lives as much as a knee joint
    or a lower jaw.  Principled, focussed and proud.  Short pants!  


    Big Red Stevenson must have taken this picture.  Jim Garde Jr., Alan Skeoch, Don Strathdee
    and Doug Mason…all stroliing down a gravel road of semi-abandoned farms near Van Dorf….just
    a short distance north of Toronto.  Gone now…was about to become a subdivision in 1956.

    Those were the days…indeed, those were the years…when we were teen agers
    and proudly Boy Scouts then Rover Scouts.   The years when friendships were formed
    on camping trips organized on whim.  

     “Let’s go camping this week end”
    “Rover uniforms or civillian clothes?”
    “Etobicoke or Lake Simcoe”
    “Driven or should we thumb our way?”
    “Easier to thumb it.”


    USING THUMB TO HITCH RIDES ANYWHERE…EASY TO DO IN 1950’S

    Easy to get rides using the thumb if there were only 2 or 3 of us.
    When the whole Crew went together we needed big time planning.

    That’s Big Red Stevenosn on my right.  We were heading for Lake 
    Simcoe…straight north on Highway 401 …travelling light…no tent,
    no pots, no pans…our plan was to sleep on picnic tables I think…turned out
    not to be a good idea…did that only this one time, never forgot.


    Those were the 1950’s when we were young.   Most of my close friends were
    members of the 38th Boy Scout Troop and Rover Crew.  We were a little different
    than other Scout Troops in that we were not really badge collectors.  We were not
    into the one upmanship race to see how many little round patches could be sewn
    on our shirts.  Most of the evening Scout and Rover meetings were spent playing
    dodge ball and  hoping not to be hit by Harvey Scott who could really wing the ball.

     We lived to go camping.  Any season…even the depths of winter on
    snowshoes we flip-flopped  plodded our way into Nine Mile Lake north of Perry Sound.



    WE CONVERTED OUR SHORT PANTS FOR KILTS…CAMPBELL OF ARGYLE PATTERN

    Our leader, Ed Hisson, suggested we become a kilted crew and so
    we managed to do so.  Expensive but worth it.   Picture left to right..
    Ed Hisson,  Jim Garde Jr., Gord Clarke, Ted Christianson, Ross Stevenson,
    Doug Mason.

    (Ed Hisson as in ‘listen, listen, Hisson’s pissing’…Ed was a selfless kind
    of man…seemed as young as we were although married with kids of his own.)

    FIND BIG RED STEVENSON….SEE HOW MANY TIMES HE APPEARS.

    I WILL really miss Ross Stevenson. He was such a loyal friend for most of my life.
    It is hard to believe he is gone

    alan

      






    WE sang a lot.   yes, we did.  “We were rough and ready guys
                                                     But, oh, how we could harmonize 
                                                     Heart of my heart, I love that melody….”
    Big Red and many of us joined the Runnymede Presbyterian church choir
    when we were young.   I was booted out by pretending to sing bass and
    telling Mr. Shanahan “my voice had changed”.  Big Red sang in choirs
    all his life.   He never made a big deal out of it…just joyful expressions.
    HE was still singing when he died.  I remember one song we loved to sing
    on camping trips, a Mills Brothers song.  “Up a Lazy river in the noon day sun
                                                                      A lazy, lazy river when the work is done”
    (Maybe not the exact words…we changed words sometimes.)    Today I find
    it hard to believe that we sang so much.   



    Doug Mason was always ready for a challenge.  In this case swimming in a cold river
    around Easter time.  Doug and the rest of us attended the World Scout Jamboree
    in Niagara on The Lake.   Doug outdid himself.  He came home in his pyjama after
    trading all his uniform to American Scouts who admired our RCMP look.


    Last night I was thinking about the shows we put on to entertain parents of the Scouts and Cubs.  One show
    got out of hand when Ernie Sutcliffe volunteered to demonstrate the Fireman’s Lift which he had just learned
    as a new member of the Metro Police force.  I will hold that story back.   I need to work up my nerve to tell the story.
    Bob Denny (boy in sweater) volunteered to be the patient.  He wished he had not done so.  Story coming tomorrow.





    We were not aways the wisest of rover crews in Toronto as noted above
    where we took a job to remove a tree.  Incompetent.   yes, for sure.  And
    when a block of wood from the tree broke one of the owners concrete slabs
    he refused to pay us.



    In this picture we have rushed from the cabin to wash up before breakfast I think.
    Or maybe we wanted drinking water right from the source.





    Ross Stevenson never missed a camping trip.  In this case it was so cold that
    we were reticent to take off our coats in the cabin.   No, I must be wrong for  we
    are still wearing our snowshoes.   I bought a bottle of Catawba wine for a dollar.
    That was stupid. Disorienting.  I could not tell up from down and went head first into
    snowdrifts only to be hauled out by Big Red.  By this time we were 18 years old and
    really stupid at times.  




    Marg phoned to let me know that Big Red had died in his sleep.  “Just slipped away.”  Then she turned up with a large bird house Red had
    been building for me.  The wood work was perfect.  A work of art.  No bird will ever sleep in it.  I had no idea Red was
    creating something for me.   He was that kind of person.   Selfless…enjoyed the company of others…giving.  God,
    I miss him.

    POST SCRIPT

    MARjorie joined the Rover Crew




    Amazing how Marjorie fitted in so perfectly.  She liked my friends from the get go.  And they liked her.  


    When Marjorie became a big part of my life she joined our Rover Crew and all the
    people that were associated with the crew.  Marjorie is 4th from the left in a black dress.
    Red Stevenson back row.  His mom, Mrs. Stevenson second row first person from right.
    She loved to laugh. In my mind I still hear her.  None of us had much money but
    never noticed.  Salt of the earth as the Bible says.  I can say that having never read
    the Bible.


    ALAN SKEOCH


  • EPISODE 358 WHAT DO SEE HERE? AN IMAGINATION EXERCISE

    EPISODE 358     WHAT DO SEE HERE?  AN IMAGINATION EXERCISE


    alan skeoch
    June 2021

    EPISODE 358     WHAT DO SEE HERE?  AN IMAGINATION EXERCISE


    FOUR POINTS OF VIEW

    “WHAT do you see here?”
    (All four of us are looking at a big piece of driftwood)

    THE SEAL: “I see a nice sun deck where I can stretch out.”
    ANDREW   “I see a great fish zooming through the surf..”
    KEVIN  “I see a rocket being wheeled to the launch pad at Cape Canaveral.”

    “What do you see dad?”

    ALAN: ” I see your mother in a skimpy bathing suit…smiling.”

    ALL:  “Get serous, how could you possibly see Mom in a skimpy bathing suit in that piece of driftwood?

    ALAN  “I alway see your mom in  a skimpy bathing suit no matter what I look at.”

    alan skeoch
    June 2021

    POST SCRIPT TO READERS:  What do you see there?
  • EPISODE 358 WHAT DO SEE HERE? AN IMAGINATION EXERCISE

    EPISODE 358     WHAT DO SEE HERE?  AN IMAGINATION EXERCISE


    alan skeoch
    June 2021

    EPISODE 358     WHAT DO SEE HERE?  AN IMAGINATION EXERCISE


    FOUR POINTS OF VIEW

    “WHAT do you see here?”
    (All four of us are looking at a big piece of driftwood)

    THE SEAL: “I see a nice sun deck where I can stretch out.”
    ANDREW   “I see a great fish zooming through the surf..”
    KEVIN  “I see a rocket being wheeled to the launch pad at Cape Canaveral.”

    “What do you see dad?”

    ALAN: ” I see your mother in a skimpy bathing suit…smiling.”

    ALL:  “Get serous, how could you possibly see Mom in a skimpy bathing suit in that piece of driftwood?

    ALAN  “I alway see your mom in  a skimpy bathing suit no matter what I look at.”

    alan skeoch
    June 2021

    POST SCRIPT TO READERS:  What do you see there?
  • EPISODE 357 HOW DID THESE MARINE FOSSILS GET TO TOP OF ROCKY MOUNTAINS?

    EPISODE 357    HOW DID THESE MARINE FOSSILS GET TO TOP OF ROCKY MOUNTAINS?


    alan skeoch
    June 4, 2021

    “OK boys, we have Now driven more than halfway across Canada and it is time
    to find out why.”
    “Awwww, dad, you sound too much like a school teacher….this is summer holidays.”
    “Your are right….I am going to shut up.   Let’s go mountain climbing.”
    “Sounds great.”
    “How about right here…we will just park the truck and climb to the snow line…way up there.”
    “Can you and mom do that…and the dogs.”
    “You bet.”


    And so we climbed through a Talus slope …broken rock … held in place for now but not forever.  And away above us was the snow line.  Steep enough to lose footing.
    No one anywhere around  and far below was the Jasper highway…more and more distant with each footfall.  The boys tumbled in the snow followed 
    by Tara, our coonhound, and Maxie .. a stray we rescued as it was about to be shot.  just the right amount of danger.  




    The slope of the mountain was about 45 degrees.  It was a wonder that we did not trigger
    an avalanche.   

    “Dad, looks what we found!”
    “What?”
    “Piles and piles of fossils….rocks are loaded with them.”
    “You must be kidding…”
    “Look…look….”


    “Well, I’ll be damned.  You are right…fossils….”
    “How did they get here, dad?”
    “weird…I thought fossils like these were sea  creattures…things that lived at the bottom 
    of the sea.”
    “How did they get up here, dad…up on the top of the Rocky mountains?”


    “I have no idea…maybe some tourists…”
    “Don’t be silly, dad…how did these fossils get up here?”
    “Must be some explanation.”
    “Dad, how did they get there?”

    “I thought this was our summer holidays, boys.?  Cut the school teacher stuff…”
    “Dad, we are going to find out.”
    “When you do, be sure and tell me.”
    “I wonder what these fossils looked like when they were alive?”
    “Find that out for me too…Meanwhile let’s have some fun.”
    “Fun?”
    “A snowball fight in the middle of August…”

    (And I winged a nice round snowball at the boys.)

    Those of you reading this story must know all  the answers.  Maybe
    one or two of you can even identify the fossils.

    alan skeoch
  • EPISODE 356 OUR FARM IN 1958 AND WAY BACK IN 1914 WHEN IT WAS REALLY A FARM

    NOTE:  I HOPE  THESE PICS MAKE SENSE…GIVE AN IMPRESSION OF THE
    IMPORTANCE OF THE FREEMAN FARM AS ALL OF US TOOK OUR HUMAN JOURNEY



    EPISODE 356    OUR FARM IN 1958 AND WAY BACK IN 1914 WHEN IT WAS REALLY A FARM


    alan skeoch
    June 3, 2021


    THE TERM HARDSCRABBLE FARM WAS INVENTED TO DESCRIBE OUR FAMILY
    FARM IN THE DAYS WHEN MAKING A LIVING FARMING WAS VERY DIFFICULT.
    TODAY IT WOULD BE IMPOSSIBLE ON A 25 ACRE FARM LIKE THIS…ALL SWAMPS
    AND STONEY FIELDS.   BUT GRANDMA LOUISA FREEMAN AND GRANDPA
    EDWARD FREEMAN MANAGED TO MAKE A LIVING AND RAISE TWO CHILDREN.
    …AND ENJOY THEIR LIVES.




    ALAN SKEOCH                                                             ALAN  SKEOCH AND ARNOLD ‘RED’ SKEOCH
    THIS IS ELSIE (FREEMAN) SKEOCH WITH GRANDSON KEVIN.  SHE WAS THE PERSON THAT INHERITED THE FARM  IN 1958 AND MANAGED
    TO PAY THE  TAXES AND THE UPKEEP AFTER GRANDMA AND GRANDPA DIED.  HOW SHE DID THAT IS A MYSTERY, FOR EVERY PENNY
    SHE EARNED WAS DONE WITH A SEWING MACHINE .. MUCH OF THE TIME IN SWEATSHOPS.   A GREAT WOMAN…OUR MOTHER.
    DAD’S MONEY WENT TO FEED HORSES AT RACETRACKS ACROSS ONTARIO AND NEW YORK STATE.  MOM WAS MUCH MORE CAREFUL.
    DAD WAS ONE OF THE GREAT CHARACTERS OF THIS WORLD.  LOVABLE BUT IRRESPONSIBLE.   THEIR MARRIAGE WAS A GOOD ONE.

    MY BROTHER ERIC AND I WERE CITY BOYS REALLY BUT THE FREEMAN FARM
    WAS ALWAYS A PLACE WHERE WE WOULD BE WELCOMED…INDEED , A
    PLACE WHERE WE WERE WANTED.   ANYTIME.  A SECOND HOME.