Year: 2022

  • EPISODE 570 B -SEQUEL TO BLUEJAY STORY…PICTURE FROM SPORTS ILLUSTRATED…”SIT DOWN…SIT DOWN”


    EPISOE 570 B — SEQUEL TO THE BLUEJAY STORY…PICTURE FROM SPORTS ILLUSTRATED “SIT DOWN…SIT DOWN”

    alan skeoch
    april 22 , 2022

    SPORTS ILLUSTRATED, P.57, FALL ISSUE 1993

    I know the Blue J story sounds a little hard to believe…especially the
    post script where I mention my trials with the crowd who called me rather
    unflattering terms because I blocked their view of home plate.  Some
    four letter words spilled from the mouths of fans.  Directed at me.

    Well, Scott Bartle found the picture in Sports Illustrated 1993 and even
    got some of the scowls.   Indeed I did take up a lot of space with my arms full
    of Scott (and friends) Blue J’s.

    And I did sit down for a few minutes…perhaps an inning. Then guilt took
    over and I uttered those great words.  “Get a Blue Jay…five bucks only!”
    “Blue J’s — for your bum or your trophy wall.” “No peanuts, no popcorn — Blue J’s”
    And then moved back up the aisle where Marjorie was having better
    luck at sales.  

    alan


    image0.jpegimage0.jpeg


    Sent from my iPhone

    On Apr 21, 2022, at 11:01 PM, Scott Bartle <scott@sbartle.com> wrote:

    Thanks Alan, that was very good !

    Some have said that the team couldn’t have won without our help 😄



    EPISODE 670 A —     BLUE JAYS WoN WORLD SERIES 1992 AND 1993 — WE SOLD BLUE J’s 


    alan skeoch
    april 21, 2022


    1992 Blue J's.jpg


    THE BLUE “J” CA[PER 1993 (PARKDALE ROTARY CLUB)

    SCOTT BARTLE sent this picture today (April 21,2022)a.  Impossible to forget those halcyon days of

    1992 and 1993 when our Bluejys won back to back Baseball World Series championships.

    Back then I was a member of the tiny Parkdale Rotary Club … a club that made up for
    its size in spirit a lot of which was generated by Scott Bartle although he would insist
    that was not the case.   

    “Rotarians, I have a plan whereby we can make a little money and have a good time doing it.”
    “You have a plan?”
    “We can sell Blue J’s at the stadium…got clearance to do so.:
    “What is a Blue J ?”
    “Exactly what it says it is…a Blue J, made of foam rubber, about 2 feet long and 2 inches thick…soft as a baby’s bottom.”
    “Who would buy them?”
    “Fans…we are in the World Series for the second time…some would want a souvenir…others would want something soft
    to put their bums on…either way they will sell and we’l get a percentage for community work.”
    “When?;’”
    “Final game …need everybody out selling.”
    “Can Marjorie come as well?”
    “Need all the help we can get.”



    Luke-Anderson-receiving-his-PHF.png

    Recent picture of Scott Bartle with a Paul Harris Rotary award.

    PARKDALE ROTARY CLUB — SMALL GROUP WITH BIG INTENTIONS

    (NOTE: Scott Bartle, and friends Frank and Bruce,  invented the Blue J concept and then
    produced them.  The market was never big enough so the Blue J moment in history 
    was short but a lot of fun.)

    And so the adventure began.  Our principal, Bob Putnam, had joined the Parkdale Rotary Club as part of his
    community outreach.  Then the Board of Education shuffled him off to Western Tech.  And I took
    his place with the Rotarians.  This was not easy.  Teaching full time does not leave much time for
    community work.  But it was important.  Parkdale was a needy community.  Still is today.  Needed
    the Rotarians.  I felt strongly that the community that paid my salary should get something back…same
    feeling as the example set by Bob Putnam.  But how to get the time?  

    And now expected to sell Blue J’s at our baseball stadium.  Like selling popcorn and peanuts.  Rather
    demeaning.  Lessons to prepare, papers to mark…where will I find the time? Time was found. Good time.

    So glad we made time for this adventure.
    I will never forget the  game.  Nice warm sunny day with thousands of people streaming into
    the place.  We…our whole club with wives and others…intercepted the crowd inside.  “Get your Blue J…only $5”
    “GET A BLUE J…TO SIT ON”  “GET a Blue J to wave the team on to victory.”  “Better than popcorn.” (and other assorted yells)

    Scott had a truckload of the Blue J’s ready.  

    I am writing this note on April 21, 2022. Someevents are fuzzy.  but I remember much that day back in 1993 as
    if it was yesterday.  “Get your Blue J…now…Before we are sold out.” (a huckster’s lie). 

    Two incidents come to mind in particular.

    1): “Alan, look over there.  That’s Mike Harris from North Bay.  I’m going over to say
    hello…knew his mom and dad well, Hope and Dean were raised near Parkdale before moving to North Bay
    …I even had a date with his older brother Sid…back
    then Mike was just a little boy but he might remember.”’’
    “Well, how did it go?”
    “Failed…he would not even look at me.”

    Marjorie tried…failed.
    “Alan, he would not even look at me.”
    “Must have been the Blue J’s you were holding…maybe he did not have five bucks.”
    …maybe he thought you wanted his signature on the Blue J?
    “He just lost my vote.”

    2)  “Alan,” said Scott, “You take the centre aisle that runs from the bleachers right down to home plate.”
    “Just me?”
    “Marjorie and you.”
    So I nabbed the prize aisle.  From the people with no money in the gods to the
    the moneybag bunch behind home plate. “Get Your Blue J … Five Bucks”
    I sold a bunch but was surprised at the response from some of the front
    line fans.  “Get out of the way!” “For God’s sake sit down!” “I paid to see the goddman name…not to see a huckster like you”
    “Do you have a permit?””You son of a bitch, I missed that pitch.” “Prick!”  Kind remarks like that…lots of them.  What was I to do?”

    The answer was obvious.  Answer given by the fans.  “Sit Down!”  So I sat down on the cement steps
    just above the catcher…direct line from the pitcher.  Comfortable on my pile of Blue Js.  Marjorie was selling at the top and
    doing well.  I was not needed.  Hoped that Scott did not see me.”

    attachment.jpegattachment.jpegattachment.jpegimages.jpegimages.jpeg
    Strange.  I have searched through many pictures of the fans in 1993.  Lots of
    pictures of Joe Carter and Pau Molitor but no picture of fans waving a Blue J.
    Why is that?  Maybe Blue Jay management expected a cut of our small community
    budget.



    1992 Blue J's.jpg


    POST SCRIPT:  I Write this in memory of Tommy MacTaggart, Rotarian, whose memorial will be celebrated in Aliston on May 15.

    POST SCRPT:  IF you can find an old 1993 copy of Sports Illustrated you will find us waving and selling our Blue J’s…even
    a pic of me sitting down behind home plate.  

    POST SCRIPT:  AT one point I was treasurer of our Rotary Club.  That was an eye opener.  Up until
    then I thought Rotarians were all well healed business people.  Nor so.  Most were just people of modest means
    who wanted to help other people.   Much of the money raised went to help support the Redwood shelter for women
    fleeing abusive relationships.

    alan skeoch
    april 21,2022


  • Fwd: Tommy McTaggart


    EPISODE 670     BLUE JAYS WoN WORLD SERIES 1992 AND 1993 — WE SOLD BLUE J’s 


    alan skeoch
    april 21, 2022



    THE BLUE “J” CA[PER 1993 (PARKDALE ROTARY CLUB)

    SCOTT BARTLE sent this picture today (April 21,2022)a.  Impossible to forget those halcyon days of

    1992 and 1993 when our Bluejys won back to back Baseball World Series championships.

    Back then I was a member of the tiny Parkdale Rotary Club … a club that made up for
    its size in spirit a lot of which was generated by Scott Bartle although he would insist
    that was not the case.   

    “Rotarians, I have a plan whereby we can make a little money and have a good time doing it.”
    “You have a plan?”
    “We can sell Blue J’s at the stadium…got clearance to do so.:
    “What is a Blue J ?”
    “Exactly what it says it is…a Blue J, made of foam rubber, about 2 feet long and 2 inches thick…soft as a baby’s bottom.”
    “Who would buy them?”
    “Fans…we are in the World Series for the second time…some would want a souvenir…others would want something soft
    to put their bums on…either way they will sell and we’l get a percentage for community work.”
    “When?;’”
    “Final game …need everybody out selling.”
    “Can Marjorie come as well?”
    “Need all the help we can get.”



    Home Page | Rotary Club of Parkdale-High Park Humber

    Recent picture of Scott Bartle with a Paul Harris Rotary award.

    PARKDALE ROTARY CLUB — SMALL GROUP WITH BIG INTENTIONSS

    (NOTE: Scott Bartle, Frank Gagne and Bruce Conrad invented the Blue J concept and then
    produced them.  The market was never big enough so the Blue J moment in history 
    was short but a lot of fun.)

    And so the adventure began.  Our principal, Bob Putnam, had joined the Parkdale Rotary Club as part of his
    community outreach.  Then the Board of Education shuffled him off to Western Tech.  And I took
    his place with the Rotarians.  This was not easy.  Teaching full time does not leave much time for
    community work.  But it was important.  Parkdale was a needy community.  Still is today.  Needed
    the Rotarians.  I felt strongly that the community that paid my salary should get something back…same
    feeling as the example set by Bob Putnam.  But how to get the time?  

    And now expected to sell Blue J’s at our baseball stadium.  Like selling popcorn and peanuts.  Rather
    demeaning.  Lessons to prepare, papers to mark…where will I find the time? Time was found. Good time.

    So glad we made time for this adventure.
    I will never forget the  game.  Nice warm sunny day with thousands of people streaming into
    the place.  We…our whole club with wives and others…intercepted the crowd inside.  “Get your Blue J…only $5”
    “GET A BLUE J…TO SIT ON”  “GET a Blue J to wave the team on to victory.”  “Better than popcorn.” (and other assorted yells)

    Scott had a truckload of the Blue J’s ready.  

    I am writing this note on April 21, 2022. Someevents are fuzzy.  but I remember much that day back in 1993 as
    if it was yesterday.  “Get your Blue J…now…Before we are sold out.” (a huckster’s lie). 

    Two incidents come to mind in particular.

    1): “Alan, look over there.  That’s Mike Harris from North Bay.  I’m going over to say
    hello…knew his mom and dad well, Hope and Dean were raised near Parkdale before moving to North Bay
    …I even had a date with his older brother Sid…back
    then Mike was just a little boy but he might remember.”’’
    “Well, how did it go?”
    “Failed…he would not even look at me.”

    Marjorie tried…failed.
    “Alan, he would not even look at me.”
    “Must have been the Blue J’s you were holding…maybe he did not have five bucks.”
    …maybe he thought you wanted his signature on the Blue J?
    “He just lost my vote.”

    2)  “Alan,” said Scott, “You take the centre aisle that runs from the bleachers right down to home plate.”
    “Just me?”
    “Marjorie and you.”
    So I nabbed the prize aisle.  From the people with no money in the gods to the
    the moneybag bunch behind home plate. “Get Your Blue J … Five Bucks”
    I sold a bunch but was surprised at the response from some of the front
    line fans.  “Get out of the way!” “For God’s sake sit down!” “I paid to see the goddman name…not to see a huckster like you”
    “Do you have a permit?””You son of a bitch, I missed that pitch.” “Prick!”  Kind remarks like that…lots of them.  What was I to do?”

    The answer was obvious.  Answer given by the fans.  “Sit Down!”  So I sat down on the cement steps
    just above the catcher…direct line from the pitcher.  Comfortable on my pile of Blue Js.  Marjorie was selling at the top and
    doing well.  I was not needed.  Hoped that Scott did not see me.”

    An indescribable thing': 25 years later, Jays fan recalls 'euphoria' of 2nd  straight World Series win | CBC NewsOn the field for Joe Carter's World Series-winning home run - Sportsnet.caOn the field for Joe Carter's World Series-winning home run - Sportsnet.caThe glory past of the Toronto Blue Jays - Obiter DictaToday in Blue Jays History: Joe Carter Touches Them All - Bluebird Banter
    Strange.  I have searched through many pictures of the fans in 1993.  Lots of
    pictures of Joe Carter and Pau Molitor but no picture of fans waving a Blue J.
    Why is that?  Maybe Blue Jay management expected a cut of our small community
    budget.




    POST SCRIPT:  I Write this in memory of Tommy MacTaggart, Rotarian, whose memorial will be celebrated in Aliston on May 15.

    POST SCRPT:  IF you can find an old 1993 copy of Sports Illustrated you will find us waving and selling our Blue J’s…even
    a pic of me sitting down behind home plate.  

    POST SCRIPT:  AT one point I was treasurer of our Rotary Club.  That was an eye opener.  Up until
    then I thought Rotarians were all well healed business people.  Nor so.  Most were just people of modest means
    who wanted to help other people.   Much of the money raised went to help support the Redwood shelter for women
    fleeing abusive relationships.

    alan skeoch
    april 21,2022

  • episode 568 Making munitions filings into fin jewelry….Edward Freeman 1914

    episode 568     Making munitions filings into fin jewelry….Edward Freeman  1914


    alan skeoch
    april 20, 2022

    This work of art is ignored lost in the back pantry of the old Freeman farm house.
    …along with balls of string, buttons, lane wicks, milk caps, news clipping of poems of
    Edna Jacques…and a single fine piece jewelry.

    episode 568     Making munitions filings into fin jewelry….Edward Freeman  1914


    FINE JEWELRY FROM ARTILLERY SHELLS BRASS FILINGS

    IN an earlier episode I described how the Freeman family were burned out
    of their log home in the long gone village of Krugerdorf in Northern Ontario.
    They had barely enough money to buy the 25 acre farm we own today.   The land
    remains terrible….stones and swamps.  Beautiful to look at but impossible to farm.
    when they arrived in 1914.

    So Edward Freeman got a job as a munitions maker in Toronto.  Seems to have been
    operating a metal carving lathe.  Perhaps the brass nose cones on artillery shells
    or the shell casings.

    “What is this, mom?”,  I asked when we were gutting the old farm house…removing the old
    pantry and interior walls making one huge room where once there were four tiny rooms.

    “That’s a brooch that your grandfather made for me in 1914.”
    “Was he a jeweller?”
    “Far from it.  he was doing whatever he could to pay for the farm.””
    “Making?”
    “Making artillery shells in Toronto during the week and coming
    here to the farm on Saturday and Sunday.”
    ‘Do you mean granddad made this brooch from bomb filings?”


    alan skeoch
    april 2022
  • Fwd: EPISODE 566 “TO SIR, WITH LOVE!” JOHN RICKER TURNS 99 YEARS OLD





    EPISODE 566   “TO SIR, WITH LOVE!”  JOHN RICKER TURNS 99 YEARS OLD

    alan skeoch
    April 19, 2022


    John Ricker, teacher (and other things that do not really matter as much)



    Impact on one young teacher



    Teachable moments do occur, and this is one of them.  



    (THIS note was intended as a birthday card to John Ricker, my teacher, but now seems
    it should be a bit bigger than that.  So it is now EPISODE 566, very personal kind of Episode.)

    Hi Marvi and John


    Of course Marjorie and I want to wish John a Happy Birthday…99 years…the Castelfield 
    Institute has been a wonderful way of maintaining contact with you
    John.  

     I am so glad you forgot to send my bill for all those bottles of beer
    and sandwiches.  Do not send bill now…too deep in the past.

    I remember my grandmother and grandfather celebrating their 95th
     and grandma said to me: “Alan, it seems like only yesterday.”
    She was referring to her lifespan…this motivated me to try and put
    that lifespan together so others could share in her life history.  The research
    sure surprised me and I am still digging.  i.e. Was the rather infamous
    Dr. Price, a Welshman who impregnated many women including my
    great Grandmother,…was he really that Dr. Price?   

    Family lore said Dr. Price was a man who evaded responsibility.  By
    digging I discovered that was not the case.  He disbelieved in marriage
    but paid for my grandmother to attend a very fancy ladies college
    in Kington…she emerged as a ‘lady’ which meant my grandfather was
    expected to tip his hat to her.  I am not sure he did that.

    Why tell you this?  Because “only yesterday” applies so well to you
    and the richness of your past.  I can only imagine your pacifist father’s
    shock when he discovered you had volunteered for the air force.
    And I know much about the horror you faced in bomber command.;;
    and can feel the loss you felt when so many friends did not return.

     But also you resolved to get on with life and make a career of teaching

    young people….kept life upbeat, meaningful and very very humourous no 
    matter how serious the matter under discussion.  


    Only yesterday!   Lots of good times, John, especially the impact you
    had on me as a very naive potential teacher.  Your ‘antics’ at the
    front of the room were worth replicating with warmth and gusto.
    Always a serious thread of solid history giving your lessons real meaning.

    I remember one odd lesson on “doing projects” where your students
    at Parkdale made historical objects like siege weapons of ancient 
    times.   My students did the same only went one better.  The girls
    made dresses … i.e. Marie Antoinette’s dress…and wore them
    to class.  One dress I kept to show other students and then returned 
    it to her 30 years later.  “Sir, I swiped the dress material from a yard
    goods store in Parkdale.”  How could she do that?  Under her own
    dress?  I should have asked.

    One of the things that makes me really good about the career path
    you sent me on at Parkdale is the continuing contact I have with
    some of the ex-students.  Two of them, Jeanette Chau and Julia (Walkely) Sherman.
    even nominated me for
    some ‘writer of the year’ award in Mississauga.  Imagine that?
    After retiring in 1999…being still remembered.    Like you I am out to pasture and enjoying the
    rich red clover that the bees enjoy. To be remembered is Sweet all the same.
      I wager you feel good about being remembered by so many
    people you have taught.  Know you do because I have heard you mention
    them.  



    What was I doing at the OCE winter program when most of my
    friends had taken the speed up summer program?   I thought
    the longer course would be better.  And to do so I turned down
    many job offers from Humberside and others.  If I was to be a
    teacher I wanted the best grounding possible.  And got it.
    Partway through the winter course you sent me to Brockville for
    a paid job for two weeks.  What a rare privilege.  Accomodation was arranged 
    with an Irish family that wanted me to play checkers with them
    each evening.  How could I prepare lessons?  Only after they went to bed.
    But Must do the lessons.  Not hired as a babysitter.  Those kids expected some big questions.   Some
    of my best lessons began the way you began often.  “Can you help me.”  “I do not for
    the life of me understand why Riel was executed by John A.. Macdonald?”
    (long long pause) ” Can anyone help me?”

    Homework!   A thorny isaue.  Too much homework can destroy the
    impact of the big questions.   Maybe best to ignore homework.  Most boys
    would not do homework anyway.  Some could not read.  Some could
    not understand abstractions anyway.  Some did not give a damn.
    But all were capable of being motivated.

    I remember another teacher who you must have known.  Evan Cruickshank
    was my teacher at Humberside then moved to Parkdale.  You two had
    similarities in that you could motivate students with big questions.  “Crooky”
    once said in class in answer to a student question…”I don’t know.”
    That night I went to the library ro help him out and told him privatley  the next day
    the info he needed.  He thanked me.  Later I realized it was a teaching method.
    He could trigger kids to do things they rarely did…like doing research in
    a library…alone.  



    Difficult students were a challenge.  I loved trying to turn them around.
    Like the kids that told me to ‘Fuck Off!”  They were the best to turn
    around and the easiest.  You told me I would meet these kids.
    If a kid reached the stage of frustration that
    he or she was ready to use that expletive then the student was ready
    for a teachable moment.   Lots of unhappy kids at Parkdale.  Kids
    that needed help without fawning.  “Alan, if you take the job at Parkdale,
    you will never leave.”  You were so right, John.  And what an honour to
    be a teacher in the school where you were once a student and became
    a teacher after the horrors of World War II.  It was a trust bestowed.

    Then there was Simon Cotter.  President of the student council who

    had a skill that bothered some teachers.  He was a leader and became
    our pseudo principal which was hard for some  teachers to accept. I
    think you would have loved him…just rebellious enough to be loved.
    “Sir can you help me out…bit of a jam….organized a school trip to Hawaii
    on March break.  Travel company assumed there was a teacher chaperone.
    Danger it will be cancelled. Lots of the kids saved all summer for  this trip
    and they could lose  their money.  Could you come along?” “As long
    as I can pay for Marjorie and our boys.”  What an adventure that 
    turned into.  Simon ran the show.   Our kids were young and disappeared in
    the arms of the tripsters much of the time. Sort of a role reversal with a good dash of respect.
    Allowed us to really get to know students who did not need coddling. No favouritism.
    We were all along for the ride.  “Alan, those are street kids…you are going to have
    trouble…cancel the trip.”   Street kids were the best kids to take on a trip.  They knew
    how to avoid trouble.  You would have loved that trip.  




    In your OCE classes way back in 1963 there was no one in the room
    that you did not notice.  A collective.  No favouritism.  All were tied up in one bundle.
    I loved that.  Sucking around was never something I liked doing.
    I wanted my teachers to be above favouritism even if they had favourites.
    Some of the students i taught so many years ago still call me “Sir”
    and have difficulty calling me “Alan” which to me means there was respect
    for the distance between teachers and students.  And no favoritism even
    if I had favoriites like Conrad Blonski whose mother was barely holding
    on…living below the poverty line as a “carnie” with a popgun booth
    at local carnivals.  “Where do you sleep, Conrad?” “On the floor beneath
    the popguns.” he said without feeling sorry for himself.  Who could not love
    such a kid.?  He loved me.  Sounds so vain to say that.  How do I know?  Because he punched me
    on the shoulder often with a “:good morning, sir”   The happiest times of his
    life were his student days at Parkdale.  Sad to say that.  Good teachers
    have that skill.   You did.  I tried to emulate.  No sucking around.  Respect.

    Rather long “Happy Birthday”, John.  But it could be one hell of s lot longer.

    alan skeoch
    (we have known each other
    for 63 years…I now call you John
    but called you ’sir’ for many years.)
     




    “You know something kids?  Our prime minister, Pierre Trudeau, is not particularly interested
    in what teachers have to say…but he is very interested in what you have to say.”
    “So what, sir?”
    “So, I bet five dollars, that if you sent him an invitation to speak at Parkdale, he would come.
    If I sent that letter, it would be ignored.”
    “Go away, sir.”
    “Write the letter.”

    And so my Grade Ten class wrote the letter and sure as god made little green apples,
    we had a visit from our Prime Minister.

    Now why should I tell you this, John, on your 99th birthday?  Because you had that
    ability to make young people feel important…feel wanted…feel their opinions and actions
    mattered.   I tried to do the same.

    “Guess what the first thing he said when he arrived?”
    “No idea, sir.”
    “Where’s the washroom?”

    “Sir, why did he come to Parkdale?”
    “By election may have had something to do with it.”


    Parkdale Collegiate History Department, big wheels…in their own minds anyway.
    Made to feel so by Parkdale students.  



    CONCUSION

    Below are two pictures of a Penny Archade Carnival sideshow.

    It’s time for you to guess why I have chosen to put these
    two pictures into your birthday card, John.  Abstract reasoning is
    a skill where two seemingly meaningless events are made sensible.




    Meaning?  Let me guess.
    1) Big events are part of life.
    2) The ability to laugh is a treasure.
    3) Men may not lead as well as women
    4) Put a nickel in the life machine and see where it leads.
    5) Life is a sideshow, keep that in mind.
    6) Do not take yourself too seriously
    7) History is full  of bumps and grinds.
    8) Making a living is not easy
    9) What’s the big idea today, sir?
    10) Sex appeal drives us on.

    11) No meaning whatever, only the big man at the
    carnival has a striking resemblance to John Ricker…compare
    the pictures…just for the hell of it.  Do I need to Apologise?  yes.

    alan skeoch
    april 2022

  • EPISODE 565 RATRAY MARSH DEVASTATED BY EMERALD ASH BORER

    EPISODE 565    RATRAY MARSH DEVASTATED BY EMERALD ASH BORER


    alan skeoch
    April 17, 2022




    One of Mississauga’s most enchanting forest trails has been devastated
    by the Emerald Ash Borer.   Tree cutting by City Parks employees has littered 
    the forest floor with the corpses of the ash trees that were once so dominant.
    Very sad.

    But the forest trail is still enchanting.   New boardwalk actually makes Ratray
    Marsh more exciting than ever.   The chance that humans will stray from
    the trails has been minimized and forestry employees are trying to return the marsh
    to its natural states…free from invasive species including humans.

    Worth a trip for sure.

    Often the pathways are empty … and just as often there are many people enjoying the
    trails.  We arrived on an empty day…i.e. very few people…which enhanced our
    enjoyment.  Marjorie, Kevin and I did not even talk to each other until Marjorie
    pointed out  things.  Such as the danger of Asian Carp in the Marsh waterway.
    We wandered lonely as a cloud.  ‘
    Excuse the stolen line.

    alan