Year: 2021

  • EPISODE 228 YUKON DIARY PERMAFROST IN AN OLD MINING ADIT IN YUKON IN 1962


    EPISODE 228   YUKON DIARY   PERMAFROST IN AN OLD MINING ADIT IN YUKON (summer of 1962)


    alan skeoch
    Jan. 2021

    The  early placer miners took risks when excavating holes in the frozen gravel of the Yukon.  As did
    the hard rock miners.   Safety precautions were good to fair but not  perfect. Whether they
    dug vertically (shafts) or horizontally (adits) there was always the danger the permafrost that locked the
    gravel would melt and the holes they dug  would collapse.  To keep these excavations safe  there had
    to be a lot of timbering inside.  

    Surprisingly the old mines that were allowed to flood  once abandoned are even now quite safe once
    drained while the mines that did not fill with water are dangerous because the timbers are prone to
    dry rot which means they lose their strength.

    Moses Lord, Dinky and  I found one adit which we  were able to explore.  The adit was frozen.   Ice 
    crystals made it stunningly beautiful as  you will see below.  Permafrost had  its grip  on the
    passageway so we felt quite safe.  Whether this  safety was an  illusion or not.

    alan skeoch
    Jan. 2021



    Two young miners excavating an adit.   The walls would have to be timbered fast.

    Imagine trying to hand drill a hole for explosives.   Imagine working in a mine where standing  straight was  impossible.
    Would you put your trust in that post and  wedge that is holding up the ceiling?   Miners in Dublin Gulch, Keno Hill, Wernecke Camp, Elsa, 
    Calumet, Silver King, Peso Silver took  lots of risks.  Some died in mine accidents.   Many more were crippled by silicosis and poisons
    in the water they drank.  To this day…January 17, 2021…drinking water in Keno City has to be trucked in by the Yukon government.



    Pictures taken in August 1962.   How long would it take to clothe this mine adit in these crystals? 



    Both of these fellows were great teammates on our jobs.  Both were members of the local First Nations people in Mayo Landing.
    I would never have found this adit were it not for Moses Lord.  

    alan skeoch
    Jan. 17 2021

    NOTE:  LOTS MORE TO COME FROM THE SUMMER OF  1962…BUT IT TAKES  TIME TO TRANSCRIBE.
    I HOPE MOST OF YOU  ENJOY READING THE RESULT.   THIS WOULD NEVER HAVE  BEEN DONE WERE
    IT NOT FOR THE COVID 19 PANDEMIC AND SUBSEQUENT LOCKDOWN.

  • EPISODE 227 YUKON DIARY JACK ACHESON…GOLD MINER, FINDS A MAMMOTH

    EPISODE  227   YUKON DIARY   JACK ACHESON..GOLD MINER   FNDS A MAMMOTH


    alan skeoch
    Jan. 2021

    By now you must find gold rather boring.


    Largest old nugget ever found…20 ounces
    Jack Acheson’s was 7 ounces,  about 1/3 this size.















    Tuesday, July 31, 1962

    What a beautiful day.   Bill Dunn, Andy and I walked and waded up Haggart Creek
    to see Jack Acheson at his hydraulic operation.  He suggested we look at his 
    shaft and do some gold panning with gravel concentrate taken off his sluice box.
    Later he showed us some gold nuggets.

    Strolled  back to camp and tried to divert a part of the stream through our
    camp like the placer miners do in order to get water running through their
    sluice boxes.   (Why did I want to divert the creek? Makes no sense.)

    Bill Scott, Hans Buhr and  Axel arrived … we packed and moved to town for
    the evening. I was not too hot on the idea  but it was cheaper.  Bill Dunn and
    I had a  couple of beers in the Silver Inn and then walked  home at dusk. 
       
    Watched a silver headed resident who was drunk trying to beat time to the
    music machine  then fell asleep with his  coffee cup  in his mouth.  Not 
    really funny.

    Expenses   meals   3.65

    Wednesday  August 1, 1962

    Arose late and had  Marjorie’s package of  Sugar Pops  for breakfast…she
    sends interesting packages.   Then walked around Mayo Landing looking st 
    all the gardens with envy…took pictures…long summer days inYukon means great
    growing season.

    Bought $20 worth of grub for the Hans Buhr campsite.  Met little Patricia Gilroy
    who is 5 years old or so…she  came running down  the street to take my hand…
    calls me ‘uncle’…I walked her home.   There are normal families in the Yukon
    I must say that overland over again lest people believe the  Territory is filled with 24 year olds
    summer miners and aged like I have  implied.

    Later we  drove the Land Rover back to Dublin Gulch….60 mile  trip each time.

    I had a very pleasant supper with Jack Acheson at his camp…roast beef
    and Yorkshire pudding in his old log cabin.  Cooked by Mrs. Hanson the
    is partly First Nations.   Jack has a very nice  crew or maybe they are partners….
    Bob. Don and Albert.

    Jack showed me a huge tooth from  a Hairy Mammoth or a Mastodon…10,000
    or maybe 50,000 years old.  (which he gave to me later…see earlier story) 
    Then we looked over his collection of ancient tusks
    leaning against the outside  wall of the cabin.

    Then we  watched  him weigh his  gold….125 ounces  this week.
    (Note: gold in 2021 is $2,000 and ounce, therefore Jack’s weekly find was 
    worth $250.000 today but only $4,375 in 1962.  By 1966 Jack did not get
    enough gold to pay his bills according to Dr. Aho in his book Hills of Silver.

    Thursday August 2, 1962

    Up at 6 a.m. Had open air breakfast  then on
    the job  by 7 a.m.  Long hard day with seismic machine.  The forcite explosives
    gave both Bill Scott and me migraine headaches….called glycerine headaches as
    beaded material on sticks of  forcite is absorbed by our skin.

    We managed to do 6 determinations…sites.  Does not look good.  Permafrost
    lurks just below surface.  Cannot get sound waves to travel.

    Had a brief lunch with Albert who was clearing a tunnel into the shoulder  of
    the hill in search for gold bearing gravels…if found then hydraulic hose
    and bulldozer and dragline would move in I assumed.

    Managed to pick a tin can full of blueberries…big berries.  Walked
    home down Haggart Creek in he evening and had delicious supper with 
    Axel…pork chops and potatoes.

    After supper  Bill and I strengthened the tent.  Not proud  of our work.

    Our Seismic results are not good.   Must inform Jack Acheson tomorrow
    which is something we are not looking forward to doing

    Friday, August  3, 1962

    Up at 6 a.m.  Out to see Jack. Gave him  the bad news then did a test determination on
    bedrock…2800 feet per second…very slow…confirmed our view that permafrost problem
    exists.

    Drove up to tell Mrs. Anson we would not be here for supper then drove onto  see Fred Taylor
    …tell him that the seismogrph was not good at all in the area.   Fred was disappointed but
    cheerful…showed us some of his slides…had a chocolate bar … invited Fred down to our
    camp.   We are not sure how  this  failed project is financed…not our side of the business…expect
    there will be no charge

     failed in effort to divert some water to our site vis a sluice system.  Failure.   (not sure why
    we did this).  Ron,  Buddy, Fred and Neil dropped into our camp for a visit…usual camaraderie.

    Mail from Marjorie.   Will sleep  in tomorrow.

    The placer gold miners were hoping we could tell them depth of  overburden to bed rock
    which would  help them decide where to strip the gravel.   No luck.

    Fred’s slides…fireweed, Dinky aRay Harris,Fred, Len,Alan, Peso Silver camp

    Saturday August 4, 1962

    Not much doing today.   Built frame for cook tent then discovered maggots in the Polish
    sausage and  slab of bacon.   Washed them out in Haggart Creek.  Hope I got them all…ghastly
    looking things.    I wonder what kind of pollutants are in the Haggart Creek water…certainly lots
    of lead which is not good.   Maybe  the lead will kill the maggots.


    EAGLE GOLD MINE…DUBLIN  GULCH TODAY (2021)

     This  is how the Eagle Gold  Mine operates today.  Immense machines but the system is 
    essentially the same as the old gold banners … much liike Jack’s system.  The Eagle mine
    seems to be  working over the same ground catching the gold others  missed…and then
    stopping more and more overburden.




    Work History (Report by Eagle Gold)

    Placer gold was discovered on Haggart Creek in 1895 and on Dublin Gulch in 1898. The first hard rock claims were recorded in Oct/1901 and included Dublin Lode (2404), North Star and numerous other claims. In 1904 a 14 m adit was driven on the Dublin Lode claim. By 1912, development work had been recorded on five separate claim groups. On the Stewart-Catto claim group (Happy Jack (8029) and Victoria (8022) claims) recorded in Jun-Oct/08, two adits were driven, the first 38 m long and off vein, and the second a 600 m crosscut which included 23 m of drifting on vein. On the Olive claim (8025) recorded in Jun/08, a 21 meter adit was driven, the last metre of which was on the vein. Trenching and pitting was performed on the Shamrock claim group, while an 8 m shaft was sunk on the Blue Lead claim group (8049), recorded in Dec/09.

    T. McKay and A.H. Martin tied on Bob (55056), Mucking Futch, and other claims to the Olive claim in Nov/37, prospected with pits and shallow shafts in 1938 and sold the claims to Treadwell Yukon Ltd, which performed more trenching. The property was transferred to Keno Hill Mining Company Ltd in 1946.

    Restaked as Avoca, etc cl (59052) in Oct/48 by J.B. O’Neill and J.J. Colt, who explored with hand and bulldozer trenching in 1949-54, sold an interest in 1958 to E.H. Barker, who trenched in 1958-61 and sold the property to Peso Silver Mines Ltd in 1962. Peso performed trenching in 1962.”
  • EPISODE 226 YUKON DIARY MONDAY JULY 16 1962 TO Monday July 30, 1962

    EPISODE 224    YUKON DIARY      Monday July 16,1962 to Monday July 30,  1962

    alan skeoch
    jan.  2021
    Turam harness was elaborate.  If we met a hungry Bear escape would be difficult.

    “God I loved those jobs…remember each one to this day but the Yukon job is best because  I kept a detailed diary.”

    Bill Dunn and Alan Skeoch…swimming…alone on this wilderness Yukon lake.
    One of our campsites…looks a little messy but it was clean.  That’s Andy the Korean War Vet holding the pot and spoon which meant it was  his day to do he cooking. We never complained to a cook.  Had we done so we would never get a cook.  Those are socks on the guideline.  Meat was always strung high in a tree to discourage bears.  Garbage  was burned.  Dishes were washed. Socks were Most important pieces  of clothing. Water was dangerous as streams may have had arsenic, cadmium, certainly lead in
    the water.  Easier to drink beer and safer.
    Monday July 16, 1962
    Breakfast of Prem*, orange  juice, crackers, cheese snd  coffee then  began packing.  Mailed books to mom and Marjorie then met Henry who insisted I have coffee with him.  Nice.
    (*we called it Clap)
    In  the pouring rain we loaded the 1953  Dodge  Power  wagon again for the Silver Titan job.  then  drove to Cecils’ where we were surprised to find a brand new  campsite..neat…like a military camp…new tents lined up with precision…clean as a whistle.  Had a delicious meal…better than canned meat and sardines and pork and beans.  Then got our new home  in order….12 x 14 foot tent with wood  walls and  floor.   Old Ted Swanson supervised.
    Bill Dunn arrived back in camp….we traded stories for an hour
    expenses  Meals  1.50
    Tuesday  July 17, 1962
    Got base line cable  ready  then drove to Proctor’s and began stringing cable ….. 12,000  feet.
    A long and agonizing day…reels weigh about 50 lbs.  Drove back to camp for gas and field books.
    Started reading console for 20 stations…..2,000 feet then had trouble with motor generator .
    Took picture of old shaft with windlass on top.   System was strange.  In order to get to gold baring gravel the old placer miners had to dig vertical shafts through the permafrost.  To do this they had to heat the ground in order to loosen the gravel from the icy grip of ancient frost.  Then haul the waste gravel up using the windlass and tub.  At least I think that was how it was done.
    Wednesday July 18  1962
    Had 10 cable breaks in morning, but did manage 13,600 feet of line….2.72 miles.
    Thursday,  July  19, 1962
    Bills Scott, Bill Dunn and I had  a  successful day…14,300 feet read (2.86 miles).  The bush was hot as hell
    Swimming was unusual.  Picture of  Bill Dunn and I swimming somewhere near our Silver Titan site.  But we had taken time to make a raft so this picture does  not make sense  unless we found the raft already  made.  Pic shows Bill Dunn on the left.  Whose underwear needed cleaning the most?
    At four we knocked off and went for swim in a little lake…good way to wash
    our underwear.  Wonderful swim.     Letters from home report that cucumbers and tomatoes  are good at farm.
    Ed Jackman wrote (Dominican priest now) to report he is surrounded by Nuns.  Drove to Elsa for ice cream only to find the store closed.
    Friday, July 20, 1962
    Hard day in bush…19,000 feet .. 3.82 miles.
    Returned to camp to find that Ted Swanson had shot a bear…a grizzly.   I just hate the worship of guns here in the Yukon .  No reason to shoot the bear….depressing to see the corpse on the trail.  Our company, Hunting Tech, does not include guns in bush camps…a  ‘no no’…I remember asking Floyd Faulkner why ?  His answer.
    “If guns were in camps we would shoot each other.”…a joke but the joke has
    some meaning.  Tensions can get high on some jobs.  That was especially so
    on the Groundhog River job when three of us were in total wilderness isolation for more than two months.
    Drove to Mayo for a  milk shake made with 1 can of condensed milk slightly shaken.  Lousy taste.  Girls in Mayo gave me a rough time.  I forgot my pants were torn…no underwear on…kept winking at me…sort of funny.
    Saturday, July 21, 1962
    Rain for first two hours then Andy and I drove into the bush to begin work.
    Good progress…12,500 line feet…2.5 miles.
    These plastic car coins were free in boxes of cereal.   Good for rewards.  “Special award to A. Skeoch and team on August 23, 1962 for getting  3 line miles done in the pouring rain.”   “presented by  Axel Doulis of Rio Plata Mines, Dublin Gulch”
    Blueberries are ripe and ready for picking…same applies to the swamp apples (which are too sweet…different taste.}  At lunch Andy told me some hair raising stories about the Korean war and North Korean guerrillas operating behind the lines.  Andy drove supply trucks in convoy at night. NK guerrillas would jump on board the last truck….kill driver.  Andy would jump off when that happened.  True?  False?   Check the record.
    Bill Dunn joined us in the afternoon reducing work load.  Henry Robichuck and Lionel Raltin awaited  us on the road by the truck   They had been walking since 5.30 a.m. after their truck broke down on the Haggart Creek road.   Hardly a road since a good part is the riverbed.  I drove them to camp hen Bob Gilroy took them on to Mayo.
    Sunday,  July 22, 1962
    Overcast but no rain.  Bugs will be bad.   Bill Dunn and I got a good start. We did 14,000 line feet…2.82 mlles.   Motor cut out twice.
    Andy’s feet have been terribly mangled by  his boots…cuts… open   wounds to the tendons it seems and quite infected.   He is frightened at any suggestion that he see a doctor.
    The mosquitoes are sons bitches. we spent the lunch break enveloped in smoke from a smudge fire to keep the little bastards at bay.  I think we ate more smoke than food.
    No danger of a forest fire…everything was soaking wet including us.   Smoke discouraged mosquitoes.
    Returned to camp at 4 p.m. and began building my packing case to ship to Toronto much to the amusement of Ted.    Then John Strebchuck asked for a lift to Alex Smith’s place …took nearly an hour to get there… through Keno City road which was treacherous .   Then gathered up some of the old 1920’s wall paper from a roadhouse that was  being torn down. Roadhouse is a flattering term.  In the mid 1920’s this had been a kind of hotel…two to a bed.  Man above leaked something onto old man Wernecke while snooker guy arrived to share the lower bunk.   Copies  of  News of the World, 1916-1919 pasted to walls  as insulation.
    My eyes are quite sore for some reason.
    Monday July 23, 1962
    The  heavens  opened up today…full day of  rain.      Got up, ate breakfast and went back to bed for an hour.   Luxury.  Spent the afternoon reading, writing and adding to my diary.
    The foreman  of the diamond drill crew came into our tent and we spent time talking politics.   In the afternoon Bill drove to Mayo to phone Rosemary long distance ($8.75)  while I relaxed with my copy of Klondike and the Star Weekly (sent by Marjorie).  Then finished my packing case.
    Bill Dunn examining diamond drill core at Silver Titan geologist’s shack.
    At supper one of the fellows suggested the beef be wrapped in brown paper…to give the Wrigley gum people some competition.   Ted dumped sugar bowl all over…mess. Andy got cake icing all over his face.  Mess.
    Bill Scott arrived back at camp with mail from Marjorie…to letters plus a Huckleberry Hound pin.  Amusing.  Bill also brought the old pick, shovel and axe that I left in the Chateau Inn after finding them in an old mine adit when  Moses  Lord, Dinky and I found an old adit entrance from the 1920’s. The tools will go in my packing crate.
    Abandoned log shack somewhere near Peso Silver holdings.  Sod roof.
    Election 1962…Tommy Douglas, John Diefenbaker, Lester Pearson in costume from the Wizard  of Oz.  (MacPherson political cartoon)
    Tuesday July 24, 1962.
    Overcast and  wet but suitable enough for working…that does  not mean pleasant,  every bush we try to slide past soaks us…every mossy swamp has more water to soak into our worn out gum rubbers…wet feet are bloody uncomfortable.  But we can work…got 15,500 feet done, 3.1 line miles.   our lunch was enjoyable, a respite before we launched into swampy land  all afternoon.  All the eastern part of this base line set up is swamp.
    Andy fell in the river…tough times  for him.  His feet are a nightmare…cut, cut, cut.
    In the evening we went to a movie in Elsa…titled Tiger Bay…good. Drove back to camp and  had  a slice of lemon meringue pie before crawling  into my damp sleeping bag.   Nights  are getting  colder and it is only nearly end of July.   Hot days sometimes.   Cold nights most times.
    Ted Scanson told story of an old man on one  bush job …a man who never washed his plate.  “reversed the plate for each meal…had a heap of driedfoodi on each side” Sometimes we must get close to that.
    Wednesday July 25, 1962
    Most frustrating  day.   Only got 4,300 feet done.  Trouble  with the battery connection….  off and on…short circuit or maybe  moisture…slowed us to a crawl …long time at each picket just to get signal.   Really hard to make repairs when off and on signals.
    Returned to camp in hell of a mood…cursing. “Last time I will ever work with this goddamn Turam” etc. etc.  Cooled down once I realized the problem was repairable.
    Ontario College of Education information arrived.  I will be a teacher in the future…sort of hard to believe.   Love this life in the bush at times but it is only for the young.
    Thursday July 26,  1962
    Jack Gillies arrived in camp for breakfast…drunk as  a skunk. While it was distressing to see him that way, it was also humorous.  Jack is a good natured drunk.  I have seen others who turn angry and dangerous but none of those yet in the Yukon.
    The console failed again and I spent the morning checking the circuitry…found a broken connection and  soldered same.   Meanwhile I had Bill Dunn and Andy coil up the base line.  Rain  came around  lunch  but we worked through it and had the base line coiled by 3.30.
    Three packages from home and  Marjorie today one of  which was a bottle of wild raspberry jam, some cookies and magazines. Old Ted Scanson came in but refused a cookie because he had  a wad of chewing tobacco in his mouth.
    Jeff  Morin, the CP airline agent, paid a visit before flying home to Ireland.
    We drove to Mayo Landing and registered in the Tim-O-Lou motel.  Had two rum and Coca Cola drinks at the Chateau Inn then returned to the Motel.
    In the middle of the night Bill got up and drove out of town for a walk.
    Nice pic of Marjorie beside  my little library and alarm  clock.   Books are important.
    Seismograph did not operate for some reason.  Always some problem…often simple but hard to find.  Worst is a loose connection…off snd on problem.
    Very depressing scene in the Chateau Inn where an old man (in his 50’s)
    was sitting alone at a  table talking to himself and  making actions that
    seemed to simulate a  man fishing.  An elderly First Nations woman sat
    at the next table. also seemed drunk.  She was watching him closely and
    eventually joined him at his table as he babbled .  One comment was
    “She was such  a tiny woman.”   Whatever that meant only he would
    know.  Maybe she knew as well.  Sad.
    Note from 2021:   I was 23 years old  when I kept this diary. To me at
    that time I described  him as  “an elderly man in his 50’s”.  Today in
    2021 I consider a man  in his 50’s as young.  Hell,  our own kids are
    in their 50’s.
    Friday July  27, 1962
    “Who the hell is hammering on the door?”  It was Bill Dunn…cheerful
    as usual.   Had a good shower, washed my hair and put my dirty clothes
    back  on once more.  We shared Marjorie’s jam and cookies for breakfast.
    Spent the morning walking around town and then packed our equipment in
    Al Trigg’s truck.   Then bought two little girls ice cream cones…very cute
    kids one of  which  belonged to the Gilroys.  Then Bill Scott and I got
    into the back of the truck where Bill sat on the seismograph which gave
    me a bit of a  worry.
    Hans Buka was still not ready for us when we arrived. No tent had
    been pitched,  His work team leaves  much to be desired.  Filthy.
    Garbage dump is right beside their eating table.  Seem  to be eating
    a diet consisting mostly of beans.   Their latrine is non existent which
    means the little white patches  here and there are toilet paper markers.
    Perhaps I should not mention this.  When we set up a camp  we
    designste s latrine spot immediately.
    No point in us staying so we came back to the motel with Al.  He told  us how his mom was killed in an avalanche last winter.  Ten miles  by snowshoe at -40 degrees… tragedy made the national  news.
    After supper at Luigi’s we joined the Mayo Landing volunteer fire department in a test fire.  Quite amusing.  Two glasses of wine.
    Then off to bed reading Generation of Vipers.
    expenses   food  $5.50  (saved  some for end of job plan, ate jam instead)
                    Insect repellent  $4.35
    Saturday  July 28, 1962
    We got up at 8, showered and  Bill went down to breakfast while I read.
    Hans Buhr picked us up in the Land Rover at 11 a.m. and  drove us to the job site. …60 miles…we stopped en route to look at his D9 bulldozer which was  sinking into a muskeg bog.
    Arrived at the camp at 1.10 … disgusted by the filth.  Garbage all around..i.e.
    bacon rinds under feet at cook tent…empty food  cans  and broken bottles…and worse  i.e. the little white patches.   Doing mining exploration may sound rough and dirty but really not so  bad.  We have standards.  This linocutting crew did not have standards.  Nothing we could do about it.
    We immediately set up our motor generator and  associated equipment…base line cable up the hill (more like s mountain than a hill)     So steep that Andy nearly had a heart attack.  He is a constant worry…really nice guy but his health has been compromised…terrified  of doctors.
    After that we had  to set up our own tent and get ready for bed.
    Bill and Andy  decided to sleep outside the tent due to the heat.
    Days  are unpredictable…hot, cold and freezing.
    We had  beans and beeferoni for lunch…same for  supper.  I am  amazed
    that their crew has survived he filth.
    Tested the equipment then went for a walk and discovered that’
    Bill Dunn had  broken into the Wadco Placer miners shed.  I told  him
    to get the hell out.  Then watched the grayling jumping in the Creek.
    Then had glass Gilbey’s Red Castle tawny Australian wine.   Why did I
    keep this  record so precisely…who cares what wine I drank?
    Expenses   $5.50
    Ordered prints of my pictures for fellows
    5 x Dawson Hardware
    5 x Red  Feather bar
    5 x Old sod covered shack
    2 x Al and campsite
    2 x Bill at shitter
    2 x haircut
    2 x Americans
    Sunday July 29, 1962
    Arose  and had breakfast with whole crew then waited around for vehicle…waited until 1.30…stopped at a placer gold mine site operated  by Gerry Smasniuk (sp?) from Dublin Gulch.
    Heard story about an old timer who took his annual bath by walking into Mayo Lake with his bar of soap.
    We chased a big brown bear down the road.
    George showed us a 7.5 ounce gold nugget he owns.
    Visited the Gilroys and had a drink with them.  Patricia and Susan, their
    daughters, were  cute and fascinating .  Charming.   Bob got us a vehicle and we drove back to camp at 8 p.m.
    Monday July  30, 1962
    Had breakfast with Moses Lord and Water Malecky both of whom are legendary Yukoners.   (see note from Aho book on Malecky AND story about Moses Lord)
    Then started the motor and left Ed to his trouble shooting examination of our equipment.  He  was a disappointment by creating more troubles than he solved.
    We built a log pyramid  to take our cable over Haggart Creek.
    Dirk, Wheland, Hugh, Len, and Bud dropped in for a few laughs  and cup of tea.
    Bill drove out to Mayo Landing again (60 miles)…no point in me going as well so I remained and had a  nice day of rest.  Spent an hour watching the grayling jumping in Haggart Creek then went to bed but could  not sleep for some reason…either nerves  or lack of exercise.
    alan skeoch
    Jan. 2021
    NEXT SECTION OF DIARY WILL BEGIN
    Tuesday July 31, 1962
  • EPISODE 225 SHORT NOTE TO READERS …

    JANUARY 16, 2021 SHORT NOTE TO READERS.
    Hi,
    Well, I have now reached Episode 224 in my attempt to relieve the terrible stress we are all living through…a double terror really. First is the pandemic which has made our planet and our lives a nightmare from which there seems no escape. Second is the terror instituted by the President of the United States whose malignant narcissism has made one big lie into an insurrection.
    I hope these Episodes relieve tension somewhat. My worry is that the Episodes are far too self centred. For that I apologize. I am currently in the middle of my Yukon Diary …events that I found unforgettable. Humourous. Tragic. Human. Historical. Hard to believe really…but that summer of 1962 really happened. I hope you are able to escape into the past as I have done. Vicariously. I am enjoying the recall. Please see the Episodes that way.
    alan

  • EPISODE 223 YUKON DIARY 1953 DODGE POWER WAGON ROLLS OVER AND OVER IN 1962

    EPISODE  223   YUKON DIARY  8    1953 DODGE POWER WAGON ROLLED LIKE A  SOCCER  BALL

    alan skeoch
    Jan. 2021


    Our 1953 Power Wagon…bought or rented just forget which…looks rather
    nice here as we consider whether to drive over the rubble blocking the road
    up to Keno Hill.  Sadly we did not treat the  Power Wagon well.



    “HE  rolled the Power Wagon…rolled on that hairpin turn… the son of a bitch went over  sideways.”
    “What … are you kidding?”
    “No…rolled over the edge near the hairpin…went over sideways..
    “Who was driving?”
    “Moses Lord or Bill Dunn…not sure which but the Power Wagon rolled
    over and over like a soccer ball.”
    “Wrecked?”
    “That’s the funny part….the  son of a bitch landed on the bottom part of the fucking hairpin…landed on all four wheels.”
    “And  Moses* drove it back to camp…take  a look over here.”

    *Not sure who was driving.  As my diary unfolds you will find out.

    WHEN we heard that our 1953 Dodge Power  Wagon rolled over on a hairpin turn we were sure it
    was a write off.  More concerned that Moses Lord was hurt…maybe dead.  But both Moses and
    the Power Wagon were just  shaken up.  Moses was more embarrassed than physically scarred…just
    surface cuts and bruises.  

    The Power Wagon looks a little worse for wear. Some broken windows…cracked.   A lot 
    of dents…sides, roof , fenders…but we  had already done some of those.  And  it was second
    hand when and not very pretty when we got it.  It looks prettier than it really was  in the picture.
    If I find my bashed up version of the truck I will include it later.

    Power  Wagons were built for that kind of thing.  Originally built in World War II as a heavy
    duty off road military truck.  Most had half ton bodies…open back.  A few looked like ours.
    They were advertised as indestructible and seemed to live up to their name.




    This is the same model Power Wagon owned originally by the United States  Navy… restored by a collector.


    This is  NOT THE PESO SILVER HAIRPIN CURVE but gives some idea of the mountain  (hill) roads bashed
    through by mining companies.  Our power wagon rolled down as far as those two dead trees and landed on
    the switchback part of the road.   This picture was  taken in British Columbia on a different job.






    And here are a while collection of hairpins…again picture NOT TAKEN IN THE YUKON but the hairpins
    looked  much  like this only not so  many.


    Somewhere I have  a picture  of the Dodge Power Wagon after the roll…if  found I will include it
    in the diary entry.
    static01.nyt.com/images/2017/10/15/world/canada/Keno-slide-V5LK/Keno-slide-V5LK-jumbo.jpg?quality=90&auto=webp 1024w, static01.nyt.com/images/2017/10/15/world/canada/Keno-slide-V5LK/Keno-slide-V5LK-superJumbo.jpg?quality=90&auto=webp 2048w” sizes=”((min-width: 600px) and (max-width: 1004px)) 84vw, (min-width: 1005px) 80vw, 100vw” decoding=”async” style=”opacity: 1;” class=””>

    This direction finder is located at the top of Keno Hill today…looking over the silver rich McQuesten valley…picture gives some
    idea of the topography…in the distance is the Peso Silver property where the Dodge did its tumble.  The grade on the Peso Silver
    bush  road  was  not as steep as the previous pictures.  But dangerous all the same.
    Here some of the  Peso Silver boys are looking  over the Dodge…with the usual nonplussed expressions.




    And here is another  Power Wagon making its way through the bush  where there is no road.






    We had one other adventure with the Power Wagon…again amusing.  One of the guys…name forgotten at present…was sent to Mayo
    Landing  for food or some such thing.  He got drunk instead and did not get back to camp so we sent a search party down the hill
    looking for him.  Found him and the Power Wagon resting in the middle of  Haggart Creek.   The boulder strewn creek was  part of
    the road to Peso Silver.  He had  passed out.  I seem to remember that the Power Wagon  was still running but I  could be wrong.
    The driver was an  alcoholic.  We knew that and should  never have sent him to Mayo Landing.   Neither he nor the Dodge were hurt.

    The incident reminded  me of my first job in the wilderness north west of Chibougamau, northern Quebec, when we sent Joe Fortin
    to get food supplies on a  Beaver float plane.  He was not the pilot…that’s for sure.  He arrived  back dead drunk.  So drunk
    he nearly fell off the pontoon.  No food.  Just Joe coming back to camp.  That was my first bush  job with Geo Tech Exploration
    when I was  a Grade 11 high school student.   I did  not drink back then.  Well, not quite true, I did drink a couple of those tiny
    draught glasses of  beer in the Chibougamau Inn.  When Joe staggered off the Beaver I was shocked.   By the time I worked
    for Hunting Technical and Exploration Services that shock  had worn off.   We tried to separate the alcoholics  from
    the social drinkers.  Sometimes that was not easy to do.   When I was  given a can of Molson’s Export on one occasion 
    I wrapped  it in brown paper and mailed it to my dad back in Toronto.  Mom said  dad was touched.  


    alan  skeoch
    Jan.  2021