Year: 2022

  • EPISODE 539 LOOPY DEMOCRACY — THE TRUCK CONVOY AND CHAOS IN CANADA Saturday Feb 19 2022



    Begin forwarded message:


    From: marjorie skeoch <marjorieskeoch@gmail.com>
    Subject: Fwd: Saturday Feb 19 2022
    Date: February 20, 2022 at 10:11:43 AM EST
    To: ALAN SKEOCH <alan.skeoch@rogers.com>



    Dateline:  Feb. 20, 2022

    EPISODE 539   LOOPY  DEMOCRACY — THE TRUCK CONVOY AND CHAOS IN CANADA,  Saturday Feb 19 2022 






    To   John and any others who have time to read today.

    My story will be hard to understand today…I cannot understand it myself..


    I am trying to get a mental handle on the events.  Marjorie and I took photos
    as things  unfolded on Saturday. February 19, 2022.  These pictures are astounding to us.  Like a
    movie … a piece of fiction.  In midst of it alll my mouse failed.  It just would not
    move just like the protesters.  Eventually my nephew Robert got us a new mouse…a 
    super mouse.

    But I am still  processing events.  Frankly the whole mess in Ottawa makes no
    sense at all.  Irrational actions in the extreme category that confirms some of
    my earlier teaching efforts regarding democracy.  

    “Democracy is a troubled spirit whose dream, if it dream, presents only visions of hell.”

    With that quote we would discuss the perils of Direct democracy where Everyman and
    everywoman believe that their ideas matter most and must be expressed.   Today we
    have a great example of ‘loopy democracy’ where the least well informed ten percent
    of our nation attempted to seize control of the state in a confused bubble of loopy dangerous ideas.

    So what about our real system of representative democracy?   I believed in that.  
    Until recently.   Our politicians let us down big time.  Some of them even embracing
    the loopy democrats in the protest who wanted the Governor General to seize
    the reins of government snd then turn the reins over to them.  insanity on the march.

    All of us stunned and might profit from a time on the bouncy castle.

    alan skeoch










































    Sent from my iPhone



  • EPISODE 537 HORSE DRAWN HAY CART GOES TO MOVIES….NEW TRACKED SNOWPLOW MOVES IN

    EPISODE 537     HORSE DRAWN HAY ACART GOES TO MOVIES….NEW TRACKED SNOWPLOW MOVES IN


    alan skeoch
    Feb. 17,  2022

     

  • EPISODE 536 PREDICTIONS MADE BY GR. 10 TORONTO STUDENTS IN THE MILLENNIAL YEAR 2000

    EPISODE 536    PREDICTIONS MADE BY GR. 10 TORONTO STUDENTS IN THE MILLENNIAL YEAR 2000


    alan skeoch
    Feb. 17, 2022


    A DAY IN THE LIFE OF GRADE TEN STUDENTS 

    In the year 2000, the second millennium began.  I was asked to gather a cross section of Grade Ten students
    in Toronto schools to see how they viewed themselves and, particularly, to predict the future.  What they thought
    would happen 50 years from the year 2000.  

    And then to describe what a typical day was like…a TYPICAL DAY IN THE LIFE OF A GRADE TEN TORONTO STUDENT  

    By chance a friend gave me a copy of the book we made.  I had forgotten all about it and was rather pleasantly
    startled by the comments of these  young people.

    ROSY PREDICTIONS, were there many?   Yes, there were, many of them spot on.  And it did not take
    50 years for these predictions to happen.  

    DIRE PREDICTIONS, were there many?  Yes, there were and many of those were spot on.  

    FUNNY PREDICTIONS? were there many?  Yes,  Enough to keep us smiling. Such as the prediction
    by Bobby Foley that the squirrels of Queen’s park will be the dominant life creatures and we will be
    ‘legions of maids and janitors”.  We had a lot of laughs doing this project.

    HOW TO TRIGGER STUDENT PREDICTIONS

    SOME  disturbing predictions by were made by futurist John L. Peterson, ‘Out of the Blue: Wild Cards
    in our Future:   I thought his ridiculous comments would trigger the students.  I really did not need any
    adult input though.  Peterson’s predictions in 2000 seemed way out of whack!  But , lo and behold, here
    we are in the year 2022 and his precautions already seem fulfilled.  Downers for sure.

    DIRE PREDICTION IN YEAR 2000  THAT COULD NOT POSSIBLY COME TRUE?

    ( OR COULD THIS ACTUALLY HAPPEN…WITHOUT WAITING 50 YEARS?…Guess what, 
    these predictions seem to have happened or are happening right now.!!)







    COMMENT:

    THE final book is 134 pages long.  Each of the students was asked to describe one day in his or her life.  Not in the past or the future.
    But a day like May 30, year 2000….MY LIFE.

    What comforting days there were in the daily life of this cross section of Grade Ten students.  Affectionate, caring, humorous, humdrum,
    social, involved, intelligent…overwhelmingly positive.

    I would hope that the same is true today.  I fear that the positive predictions and positive daily life would 
    both be very difficult to find.

    DO YOU WANT TO HEAR MORE OF THEIR PREDICTIONS?
    DO YOU WANT TO READ WHAT ONE DAY, YEAR 2000,  OF A TYPICAL STUDENT?

    alan skeoch
    Feb. 17, 2022

    Post Script:  I think this project deserves another Episode…so joyful.  Any teacher who has had the profile of teaching
    Grade Ten students knows that the future will be in good hands.  At least that was my experience as a teacher.  And
    it was confirmed by this gang of kids we gathered together to describe one day in each of their lives.

    One student,Adam Nathanson, made a prediction that I have often quoted.   “Fifty years from now, human beings will
    go to the furthest reaches of space only to find that re, in fact, alone.”   That fact, if true, should make us value all the 
    wonders of our world and marvel at the spark of life within each of us.

  • EPISODE 534 DATELINE MAY 30, 1686 — PIERRE DE TROYES, Temiskaiming forest fires — Sam Markou, firefighter — Red Skeoch, inadvertent fire starter

    EPISODE 534  DATELINE MAY 30, 1686 — PIERRE DE TROYES, Temiskaiming forest fire — dateline 1957: Sam Markou, firefighter -dateline 1970: 
    Red Skeoch, fire starter


    Alan Skeoch
    Feb.15, 2022

    SAM MARKOU:  Dateline : summer day 1957



    Forest fires posing greater danger in Ontario – RCI | English

    SAM MARKOU’S fire was likely not this big but it was burning and ready to jump across the gap by which they got into the lake.



    Sam Markou and I have shared the last half of the the 20th century and the first quarter of
    the 21st century.  We did not share this forest fire though.

    Sam Markou called me yesterday after reading the story of the great forest fires of
    1911 and 1916.  “Alan, that story reminded me of the summer I worked near the 
    Manitoba border of Ontario as a teen ager.  I was part of a small team sent to douse
    a forest fire. Small fire it was thought so we were given a lot of hand pumped backpack
    equipment.  The fire was burning close to a small lake.  Just as we were filling the
    backpacks we noticed the fire had got bigger and was burning down both sides of
    the lake.  We dropped our gear and sped by canoe to the the gap. We got out in the nick
    of time.  I don’t know what happened to our gear.”  Sam and I have shared  a lot of
    adventures in our lives.  Teen agers of the same lucky generation.  Maybe this summer
    we will paddle from Toronto to Kenora and then NW to Caliper Lake just to see if
    his fire fighting gear is still there.  Maybe not.

    TEMISKAMING FOREST FIRE: dateline  May 30, 1686


    File:Fire-Forest.jpg - Wikimedia Commons

     FORESTS OF TEMISKAMING ARE PRONE TO FIRE…NOT JUST THEN OR NOW BUT ALWAYS

    Anyone who believes those great Temiskaming forest fires  were the only such
    conflagrations will be wrong.  Granted the piles of slash left by homesteaders and
    miners provided fuel for the fires of 1911,1916 and 1922.   But forest fires
    in the Boreal Forests of Canada are as old as time.  At least it seemed that 
    way when I cam across this account by Pierre de Troyes, dated May 30, 1686:

    “The fire burned into the woods with great fierceness pushed along by
    a very strong wind … Whirlwinds of flame swept swept the length of the portage …
    we were obliged to run with all our strength, while the fire while the fire pressed
    so closely that the sleeve of shirt was burned by the shower of sparks and burning
    cinders … We hurriedly climbed into our canoes … and moved to the centre of the
    lake, which at that spot was only thirty feet wide.  The fire then became so furious
    that the flames swept like a torrent over our heads.  and set fire to the bush on
    the other side of the lake.”
        North of Lake Temiskaming, May 30, 1686, Pierre de Troyes

    GRASS FIRE, FIFTH LINE, ERN TOWNSHIP, WELLINGTON COUNTY, 1970


    Dogs do talk, Peter certainly did the day of the grass fire.  “Red started a fire today…lost control of it…we gave up!…where is my dinner”



    New forest fire discovered near Kamiskotia Lake - Timmins News
    Grass fires happen every springtime.  The causes are often human centred.  

    Arnold “Red” Skeoch came home to Toronto from a day at the farm
    in early spring around 1970.  His pantlegs were black.  His bare legs
    were black.  His arms were black.  Everything else was wet with sweat.  His dog, Pete, was 
    concerned.  We could tell by the way the dog reported to us.  Dad’s
    comment was longer and larded with curse words.  “The goddamn grass fire 
    got out of hand.  I started the fire just to clear a patch of the garden but the
    wind caught it.  I tried to stamp it out…ran back and forth using my coat but
    the fire got bigger and bigger.   I let it burn…exhausted.  Burned like a son
     of a bitch all the way to the tree line in the back field.”  When we drove
    up to the farm the next day the front fields were all black and later became
    a rich green with new growth feeding on the ashes.  The tree line at the back
    had held and quashed the fire.   That was the biggest grass fire that dad
    started but it was not the last.  We should have kept dad on the dog leash
    rather than Pete.

    Mom love dad, in spite of all the reasons not to do so.  When he got in trouble, which was often, she had one word for him.  “Oh, Red,
    you Fathead.”   This was one of those days.


    SOME SAY THE WORLD WILL END IN FIRE, SOME SAY IN HATE

    Robert Frost’s popular poem on the world ending in fire is thought to be a
    compression of Dante’s Inferno.  Hell in other words where humans
    are trapped by ice as the forest of hell burns towards their expose heads…or
    something line that.   Not a pleasant prospect.   The poem has even deeper
    origins.  But let’s keep it simple.    Red Skeoch must have felt his little
    world of agriculture was about to be incinerated the day.  And I believe
    he used the word ‘hell’ often.  “How in hell can I get this goddamned fire out?”

    Fire and Ice 

    Some say the world will end in fire,
    Some say in ice.
    From what I’ve tasted of desire
    I hold with those who favor fire.
    But if it had to perish twice,
    I think I know enough of hate
    To say that for destruction ice
    Is also great
    And would suffice.

  • EPISODE 532 QUESTIONS WITHOUT ANSWERS: I wish I had asked Edward Freeman, granddad

    NOTE: I try to make the stories have broad appeal even if family centred. Maybe to trigger readers own memories.
     I never asked enough questions of my grandparents.  And I fear my attempt here to record
    the past is ignored by those closest to me…our sons and their children.  I know many friends read the
    stories…Russ, Dan, Faye, Jeannette, Bryce, Owen, James, Mary, Ted, John, Noreen, Sam, Oksana, Doug,
    Chris, Robert, Sandra, Brad, Aidan and lots more.  Marjorie proof reads each story which is a big help.  No one has yet complained when
    I use use curse words to put a title drama into the project.   So far 532 stories. Too many to read. One negative result?  I have gained
    three pounds just when I thought I was losing weight.



    EPISODE 532   QUESTIONS WITHOUT ANSWERS  (Questions I never asked Granddad…failed him)


    alan skeoch
    Feb. 12, 2022


    THE FREEMAN FAMILY, CIRCA 1890.  I AM NOT EVEN SURE WHICH ONE IS EDWARD FREEMAN.  SOME SAY THE TALL
    BOY BEHIND THE FATHER BUT GRANDDAD WAS SHORT.

    HARRY HORSMAN IN FRONT OF EDWARD FREEMAN’S ’SHACK’ NEAR KRUGERSDORF 1914.  FIND THE TARPAPER.
    (Granddad, how long does it take to fell a tree and cut one of those logs in the picture?  
    Did Harry help with the cross cut saw? Is this your house? How many logs are needed to build a house?
    How long did it take for your house to burn to the ground?  Why did you not start all over again?}

    So many questions flood my mind  Questions for which I will never find answers
    because the people who knew the answers are long gone.  When they were
    around I was too wrapped up in my own life.  Such is true of all of us I suppose.

    Take Edward Freeman, my grandfather, who is so fascinating to me these days.
    Yet I know so little about him because I never asked.  Sure he told us the 
    story about the forest fire and feeing on a work train flat car while burning embers
    showered down.  Were it not for my cousin Ted Freeman, I would not have
    known the full drama as the bridge builders waited for the men on the handcar
    to emerge alive from the inferno at the last minute. He could have told me so much more…
    had I shown any interest.   I was just too wrapped up in myself…like most grandkids.

    Just for the hell of it, I have written a few questions I should have asked granddad 70
    years ago.  Why should you read them?  Because, if you are the same age as I am, a
    lot of questions like mine come to mind about your own families.



    Questions (that will never be answered)

    1) Granddad, why did you quit your job as head gardener at Eywood Coourt?  You had 
    a home far better than you ever had for the rest of your life.  Surely the embarassment
    of tipping your hat to your betters was not that bad. Maybe you did not quit, maybe 
    Mr. Gwyer let you go! (i.e. you were fired.) But that seems doubtful as your memories of
    Eywood are so positive.

    2) Granddad, from 1909 to 1912 you tried to make a living selling carrots and such
    to Torontonians. How could you possibly make a living selling vegetables you grew
    in distant Etobicoke?  You had to buy a horse and buggy as well as all the tools
     How did you keep the wireworms out of
    the carrots?  How did you keep the cabbage worms out of the cabbage?  Didn’t the
    Colorado potato bug ruin your potatoes?   And the corn borers must have chewed
    the corn.  And all these vegetables could not provide an income for12 months.
    You probably had some chickens that had to be  hidden from foxes, raccoons and rats.
    How did you control those nasty chicken lice on their bums?  Seems the market garden
    was a failure.

    3) Granddad, you told Cousin Ted that you built a tar paper covered shack
    on that 12 acre bit of land that had to be cleared first.   How much money
    did you have left after paying costs of emigration?  Where did that money come
    from?  Ted says you told him you made money on the stock market in England?
    What stocks?

    4) Granddad, in 1908 you travelled to Manitoba to check out homesteading but
    when you got back to Toronto, Grandma (you called her Lou) refused to go
    west because doctors and schools were few and far between.  Tell me about
    that conversation. 

    5) Granddad, is it true that grandma was raised as a lady because her father, Dr Price,
    paid for part of her education at the Lady Hawkins academy in Kington?
    Mom said grandma was illegitimate and turned loose of the streets of
    Birmigham until rescued by a person known as Aunt Webb. Which story 
    is true?   If she was so highly educated  as a lady then the streets of Birmingham
    story may not be true.  I have sent a note to the Hawkins Academy to see if
    a girl named Louisa Bufton was enrolled around 1885.  No answer.

    6) Granddad, who was Dr. Price?   There was a very famous Dr. William Price
    living in Wales and places where Mrs Bufton lived, a famous but also an eccentric man  who  did not
    believe in marriage.  He sired many children and took some responsibility
    for them.  Dr. William Price.  Could there be two men named Dr. Price in the same place? Same man or not?  Why was grandma named 
    Louisa Amelia Bufton and not Louisa Price?   

    7) Granddad, why did you, in 1912,  decide to homestead in New Ontario.  This was
    a rough wilderness plagued by horrific forest fires.  You must have been aware of
    the 1911 Porcupine fire…yet You took the train
    north to Krugersdorf in 1912 and secured a 160 acre homestead there.
    Free land as long as you cleared 16 acres and bill a cabin.  Where was this
    farm located?   What kind of house did you build?.  Is this picture below
    the house?  I believe that is Harry Horsman in the picture.  He liked your
    14 year old daughter, Elsie, she eventually became my mother.  He was all alone and lonely
    according to mom who I thin liked him as a friend or a bit more than a friend. Is this
    picture the log house that burned in the Great Matheson Fire of 1916 or did it
    burn earlier in the 1913 Englehart fire?

    Picture taken in Krugersdorf of Harry Horsman in front of what may have been the Freeman home until it burned to the ground.



    8) Cutting trees with  cross cut saw needs two people.  Who was your helper?
    Did Harry Horsman help you clear those 16 compulsory acres and help build the log house?
    How tough was it to clear those 16 acres.   Were many of the fires that plagued 
    Englehart and north to Cochrane started by homesteaders trying to clear
    their land?  You could sell the logs but had to pile the branches…easy to start forest fires
    back then, was it not?  By the way, granddad, I have a bunch of love letters Harry Horsman
    sent to Elsie.  I must tell his story again.  Years ago I made an illustrated film about Harry.
    Mom gave me his letters after Dad died.   I wonder how many women keep letters of old
    boyfriends.   Too bad about Harry.  Dead in the Somme offensive of 1916.  The same year you
    left Krugersdorf.  What happened to your homestead?  Seized by the government?


    9) Why did you stop working on the homestead and take a job as a carpenter —a bridgebuilder —
    with the Temiskming and Northern ontario Railroad?  Had you given up on the idea
    of becoming a farmer?

    10) What were the men like that you worked alongside?  Did grandma really work in a local hotel
    to earn the money to buy that pump organ?  Why was music so important to both of you.
    Violin, pump organ, and singing.   I remember you playing The Devils Dream on the violin
    in 1950’s.  You looked at my hand and said, “Alan, you have long  fingers and should take
    up the violin.”  I think Ted had longer fingers.  He still plays that same violin.  

    11) Just what was buried beside the Krugersdorf house when that forest fire swept down?
    Did Grandma really push and shove the organ out of the burning cabin?  How did it 
    survive without catching fire.?

    12  Granddad, did you ever regret going to Canada?  Seems you had a better life in
    England.  Was it all a big mistake?    You spent the winters carving oak picture frames
    for old photos of the people on the Eywood estate…like Mrs. Sears the cook who’
    became godmother to mom (Elsie).   Those framed pictures hung in the front room
    of the farmhouse.  Why were they so highly valued?  Were those pictures really
    pictures of ‘regret’?  The frame of mom is massive, see it below.



    13)  Granddad, I found a postcard that mom brought back from Herefordshire after
    her 1933 trip to England.  You sent the card to Uncle Chris urging him and all your
    brothers and sisters to migrate to Canada.   One reason you stated was for them
    to get away from your father who you hated while you loved your mother and feared
    for her health.  Tell me more about them.  Was he an alcoholic?   Did he really try
    to commit suicide when they lived in Lyonshall?  (maybe best if I not ask those
    questions)  Eventually Anna, Chris and Cliff did migrate.  Aunt Annie died at our house when
    I was small.  She gave me a little porcelain money pig the week she died.  She gave
    Eric A tinware globe of the world.   Funny the things I remember.  I still have the pig.
      

    14) Granddad, would you say you were the victim of misleading advertising
    by the Canadian government.?   Your trip to ‘new Ontario’ in 1912 must have
    contrasted with the posters which painted a very rosy picture.
    Did Grandma get upset when things just did not work out?  She never 
    complained.  Only complaint I ever heard from Grandma was those winter
    evenings when you played the violin which started Laddie howling in harmony.
    “Dad, stop encouragng Laddie.”  Why did she call you dad and not Edward?


    Pin on brandyRailways and Immigration to Canada



    Canada Immigration

    Just getting ready for winter occupied much of your time in Canada.  I remember these piles
    of hardwood that took so much effort each year.


    15) Granddad, why did you not tell me about your early life.  Being a head
    gardener was a very elevated position in the stratified English social structure.
    Didn’t you regret your decision to give all that up.  Were there not regrets?
    Seems there were things of which you would rather not speak.

     
    Was life at Eywood Court good?   Why did you leave?  Were you pushed?  There are Push and Pull factors, which was
    dominant?