Year: 2022

  • EPISODE 677 ESCAPING THE YUKON ON A HIGH JACKED PUBLIC BUS in 1961 — CONSIDER THIS EPISODE AN APOLOGY



    EPISODE 677    ESCAPING THE YUKON

    alan skeoch
    Nov. 11, 2022

    My planned exit from the Yukon was not as easy as planned.  
    First crisis was the bus.  Big time crisis for me.   Given the same situation what
    would you have done?   Dumb is as dumb does.

    Another One Rides the Bus: Systems of Mass Transit as Vehicles of ProtestAesthetics - ITAP of my bus ride : r/itookapictureNostalgic and melancholy. I want to be able to portray the feeling you get  on long school bus rides. | Eleanor and park, Trip, Night aesthetic

    1,728 School Bus In The Fall Stock Photos, Pictures & Royalty-Free Images -  iStock

    I am not sure what the bus looked like.  Perhaps like this one but not coloured
    like a school  bus.   The trip began sometime around 1 a.m.  In the dark so no
    pictures are available.


    Silver Trail Yukon Travel Guide - Backcountry Canada Travel

    Mayo Landing was not as glorious as this sign indicates. At least not so in 1961


    YUKON Travel Guide

    Stewart Crossing was a postage stamp sized place.  Empty.  A wilderness bust stop.


    I AM SITTING in front of my coputer trying to decide whether this actually happened. Maybe I invented
    the story…or exaggerated the story.  It has been more than 70 years since I stole that public bus
    on that cold Yukon night.   Did it really happen?  Have I been telling a lie for decades.  A big lie,
    like ex President Donald Trump I have told the lie so many times to so many 
    people that I may have come to believe the lie myself.

    “On my last nigh in  Mayo Landing in the tiny hours of  September 13, 1962, I stole a public bus
    and drove it …along with passengers ….from Mayo to Stewart Crossing.”

    Yes,, it happened  and is recorded in my Diary.   Just one short sentence.  “I took the May bus with 
    passengers and drove to Stewart Crossing.  Had do it.”

    So my memory has served me well and this is my chance to unload the events of that evening.
    My last evening in Mayo Landing was spent drinking beer with my mining friends.   Miners are nomadic.
    They meet for a short time…get to know each other…have a  few beers together.  Then, if they are lucky
    they have job for a few months or years until the ore runs out and they have to look for another
    pace to hand their hats.   Nomads.  

    And this is more true for geophysical prospectors.  Jobs last a few weeks or occasionally
    for a whole summer like our Yukon job.  When the work is over the men take off for parts unknown…
    a kind of diaspora.   

    We celebrated our friendship that bitter Yukon night.  Sept. 12, 1961.  Not a crybaby kind of evening.  Just last 
    meeting of people we would never see again.  Bill was there and Peter the Biblical scholar and Gilroy
    the staker….and Moses Lord representing the native population.  Most of them would get very drunk.
    I faked it a bit.  Only drank a few.,,  felt safe doing so for I could sleep on the bus ride
    to Stewart Crossing.

    The bus was supposed to leave at 1 a.m. or  thereabouts.   So at 12.30 I shook hands wirh
    the boys whose ages ranged from 21 to 61 or older.  We had shared a lot of adventures some
    of which were  recounted in an earlier episode. We had lived and worked rough.   We would
    never see each other again.   And we know it.

    “Where the hell is the bus?”
    “Looks to be  a bit late.”

    There were five or six of us waiting in the darkness for the bus.  But the bus never 
    came.

    “Happens all the time, the driver is sleeping it off at home.  May not show up”
    “But I have to be in Stewart Crossing by 6 a.m.”
    “You can try to wake him.  His cabin is not far.  You’ll see the bus.”
    “Got to wake him up  Will he be drunk?”
    “Hard to say.”
    “I’ll go get him.”
    “Careful of his dogs mind you.”
    “Dogs?”
    “He has a few huskies … dog team kind.  Might not take
    kindly to a stranger like you”

    If I  missed the bus coming down from Dawson City to Whitehorse then
    my elaborate plant would collapse.  And I did not know what I would
    do.  pay for a fight from May to Toronto?….with a whole bunch of flight
    connections.  Would cost a fortune.  Worse would be the crashing of my big
    plan.   I really wanted to find Dead Horse Gulch, the Childoot Pass, Lake
    Bennet , Skagway , the ghostly Treadwell Mine, and the
    landlocked mysterious city of Juneau where the Tlingit people once lived.  

    “If the driver does not wake up and the dogs scare the shit out of you, there is
    another  way.”
    “Take the bus.”
    “I can’t drive a bus….and certainly don’t want to steal one anyway.”
    “Happens all the time…”
    “What happens?”
    “A passenger takes the bus.  Keys are in the ignition.”

    Crisis.  What to do?  Seemed a bit off the wall to try and take the bus.  But if I did not do that
    then all my plans would fall flat.    I remember tentatively entering the bus.  Door was open
    as if I was expected.  Long metal arm did the opening and closing.  I pulled the arm and 
    the door closed.  Key was in ignition and when turned the motor rumbled into life.   But no
    sign the rumble awakened the driver.

    I cannot remember whether it was stick shift or automatic.  Seems to me there was a floor
    shift which I slipped into first gear and the bus was on the move.  At the Mayo Hotel I stopped.
    May as well take the passengers with me  Five or six of them.  Local indigenous relatives of
    Moses Loord no doubt.  They did not bat an eye.  Flopped into seats as if this was a normal
    situation.

    The thought of insurance risk popped into my head.  Was i risking the lives of these people.
    The thought popped out just as fast.  I had other things to consider.  Like lights.  Road gear.
    Pitch black highway.  I took it slow.  Only 33 miles to Stewart Crossing .  Lots of time as the Dawson
    southbound bus was not expected until dawn.  

    What can go wrong? Gas!  Was the bus gassed cup.  Seemed so.  I got more confident as the 
    miles rolled by.  Traffic in the early hours of Sept. 13 was nil.  All I had  to do was keep the moving
    and scan he road for moose.    Did I have high or low beams?  No idea and not much chance
    to check.   Confidence increased.

    Was the road gravel or tarmac?  Try to keep to centre.  Test brakes gingerly but keep moving.
    What if I stopped and could not start again?  Keep cool.

    YUKON Travel Guide


    Population of Stewart Crossing is ten.  Ten people with most of those ten living
    in lonely cabins hidden away in the wilderness.


    We reached Stewart Crossing and rolled to stop on the gravel.  I had expected  A small village.
    instead I found about the loneliest place on earth.  One tiny white wood clad place with a sign 
    reminding  drivers this was the last place to get gas before Dawson City one way and Whiteouse
    the other.

    Not open.  So we sat in the bus until the Dawson us rolled to stop at 6 a..M
    And that was the end of Mayo Landing adventure  and the beginning of another.

    When I write these episodes I try to be self-deprecating.  No one wants to read a puffed up ego.  I doubt there would be many
    readers of that kind of episode. The bus episode is different.  Seems a little too self centred… Seems to have a load self-glorification.  Sorry about that.
    For that I apologize .  It was a big event in my life.  Fondly remembered.

    alan skeoch
    Nov. 109, 2022

  • EPISODE 675 ESCAPE FROM THE YUKON PART 2

    Note:  This episode may offend.  I am trying to draw an accurate picture of our Yukon job in 1961which
    stood out in sharp contrast to the summer of 1960 in Ireland.  My Irish readers will be amused I imagine.
    This is a long read…next will be shorter.  Of course some of you only look at the 
    pictures anyway.

    Episode 675     The Great Escape  — Part 2  Leaving the Yukon


    alan skeoch
    nov. 4, 2022



    Page from my diary and picture of Bill D in front of one of our cabin campsites.


    Another campsite…less lusxurious..messy…
    Best Camping in and Near Kluane National Park
    There was a thin skim of ice cross the Yukon swampland around Wernecke, a tiny mountain top mine town near Keno City.  Hardly a City
    Keno may have had a population of 50, likely less, today 20l.  In its glory days it accommodated a clutch of hookers 
    who had arrived to exploit the sexual fantasies of the Wernecke Miners. Their presence only offended Mr Wernecke himself.
    The arrival of the girls confirmed the comment I had first
    heard at Elliot Lake.  

    “You can always tell if a mine is going to be successful.”
    “How?”
    “If the hookers arrive.”
    “No hookers now…Keno is almost a ghost town.”
    “They came here when Dawson City lost its stone pockets full of gold dust.
    “Yukon Lill and her clutch of similar minded girls”
    “One of those girls returns every summer…rents a house in Mayo Landing. 
    Real nice lady who will lend a few bucks for beer or an O.P. if she likes you.”

    Lots of local colour in the Yukon. We were working around Wermekle, now long abandoned. The nearby Elsa mine
    was booming. Silver Ore by the ton was being blasted and sacked.   The year was
    1961 and Dr. Paterson had sent me to the Yukon for s summer of geophysical
    exploration.  Simply put,  Listening to beeps on his rand new Ronka invention….a machine that could
    detect conductors beneath the ground….deep down.  The 1950’s and 1960’s were heady
    years for mining exploration.

    i.cbc.ca/1.4157382.1497298669!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/original_460/mayo-hall.jpg 460w, i.cbc.ca/1.4157382.1497298669!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/original_620/mayo-hall.jpg 620w, i.cbc.ca/1.4157382.1497298669!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/original_780/mayo-hall.jpg 780w, i.cbc.ca/1.4157382.1497298669!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/original_1180/mayo-hall.jpg 1180w” sizes=”(max-width: 300px) 300px,(max-width: 460px) 460px,(max-width: 620px) 620px,(max-width: 780px) 780px,(max-width: 1180px) 1180px” src=”https://i.cbc.ca/1.4157382.1497298669!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/original_780/mayo-hall.jpg” class=””>

    This is Mayo Landing in boom times…a thousand or more sacks of silver ore waiting for the arrival of a steamboat to take the raw ore from Elsa halfway across North America to be refined.  You probably did not
    see the sacks of ore at first.  Mayo Landing was not much of a  town even in boom times.  That’s Luigis greasy spoon restaurant on raw the left…attached to the Mayo Landing hotel neither of which buildings
    are stunning.   We spent a lot of time in that hotel as did most of the village .

    The grey buidling is the Mayo Landing Hotel…..centre of town…only place to get beer
    or a double OP.  Or bacon and eggs at Luigi’s tiny restaurant.   Spartan living.

    EPISODE 223 YUKON DIARY 1953 DODGE POWER WAGON ROLLS OVER AND OVER IN 1962  – Alan Skeoch

    This was our Dodge Power Wagon…looks good but that good appearance did not last when one of the boys rolled the truck off a mountain road.  Rolled
    like a bowling ball ending up vertical and able to claw its way back up to the road which was really a track.   Hard to kill a Power Wagon.





    I was just a kid really.  Twenty one years old.   Fresh grad from University of Toronto,  History grad
    although I kept that fact quiet .  “Pretend you are a geologist..or a geophysicist…no one will know”
    For almost a decade I spent my summers in the Canadian wilderness.  Punching my way through
    the immense boreal forest called  Canada.   Black flies, sow belly, oatmeal raw, gmn rubbers with holes
    wet socks and feet boiled and pock marked from the water turned to tepid slop by my  own bloodstream.
    This was tough work.  Doubt many of my friends would want to be Instrument Men. Most quit. The pay was 
    four hundred dollars a month which included room and board.  Room and board!  That’s a laugh.  Rooms
    were tents. Nondescript tents ripped and rotten from being backpacked across the wilderness.  Beds were wire
    strung pics of canvas that soon collapsed and were no longer.  The alternative was pine boughs.  Not soft, lumpy 
    and prickly.  Food was bad most of the time.  On one job we had to slice off a half inch from
    a slab of the sowbelly every morning.   Burned it in the fire.   Why?   Bsude the blow flies lay their eggs in it.  Given a short
    time and the sowbelly began to move on its own.  Wormy.  Maggots.  Sowbelly?  Yes, complete with the sow’s tits.
    Smoked sowbelly did not spoil fast as long as kept in a slab.  Just the end attracted the blow flies.  At least
    I liked to think that was true.  I suppose a worm or two would not hurt me.

    Now That paints a worse possible scenario.  The other extreme also occurred.  Motels, hotels. prepared meals,
    warm beds,  Sometimes even luxurious living conditions as on the Irish job in 1960.

    That’s the setting for anyone reading this recollection.  Why write it? This is November, 2022.  My Yukon adventure was
    hte summer of 1961.  A long time ago.  But the memory of my escape from the Yukon is as fresh as the rain water in
    a moose track in spongy moss.  Swamp?  Canada has miles and miles of swamps. Matched by
    miles and miles of exposed rock.  A lot of land that nobody wants…swamp and rock.  Both have their terrors.  One summer day
    I was parched…saliva as dry as popcorn from slogging across rounded rock intrusions and was overjoyed to find a swamp.  Flopped down on
    hands and knees and sunk my lips into a patch of that water where a moose had passed by.  Closed my eyes.  Our bodies are 90% water. 
    We cannot get along without it.  Delicious cool water slaked my thirst.  How did I know a moose had passed by before me?  I opened my eyes to discover
    a moose had taken a shit in the same small pool.  Pile of turds the size of shotgun shells.,,beige and grassy in a neat pile of 20 or so.
    How did I know that?  Because moose left these little piles as evidence of their presence.

    God, the Yukon stories are as numerous as the stars in the sky.  Take the assayer Gerald Preist who lived in a company
    cabin with his wife and two little girls.  Lovely family.  True.  Were it not for the  fact Gerald was’ high grading’ (stealing)
    tons of galena and hiding it in an abandoned part of the mine.  Later he was caught.  He hired trucks to haul the stollen 
    galena … planned to claim he had his own secret mine.  He got caught when one of his truckers stopped in Elsa for
    a coffee and a nosy mine executive sliced open a sack.  All happening while we were there.  Unknown to us.   (Now a
    book written by his daughter titled A ROCK FELL ON THE MOON.  Should be a movie.

    Gerald Priest on the right…squatting on the doorstep of a typical abandoned Yukon cabin.

    Just a sample …The Yukon was more than an adventure.  It was an education.

    PLANNED ESCAPE

    I loved the job.  Even when conditions were terrible there was the exultation … the sense of victory over nature.
    Victory over the worst human nature could pitch.  Survival;  Hard to describe this feeling unless personally experienced.

    Sadly there was not much for people to do in the Yukon…normal social life absent.  What to do on those long winter 
    nights in the land of the summer midnight sun and winter darkness?   Drink booze…alcohol was available not matter what the season.
    Acceptance of rampant alcoholism in the Land of the Midnight sun.  Acceptance that there was nothing much I could do to mend the broken
    lives of those with whom I worked.  Joy shared by men who found small joy in a case of beer or larger joy in a glass  of over proofed rum.
    Overproof rum?  The is rum the contains more that 50% alcohol.  Some over 60%  Common in Yukon in 1960’s and in gold rush days.

    Dr. Aho, one of our contractors Dr. Aho’s loved treating newcomers to ‘double OP’s’ in the Mayo Landing bar.  A good joke…falling down
    drunk on one drink.  Just enough to make the world topsy turvy fast.  Little wonder that so many half ton trucks were bashed up.
    We bought a GMC power wagon that had been rolled more than an eight pin bowling ball.   We lost a man one day and had to backtrack down a stream bed 
    since there was no tracks to our camp other than the rock strewn river.  We found him and the GMC Power Wagon stranded mid stream
    where he had run out of gas.   He was falling down drunk…sleeping it off in the sure knowledge we would find him and there would be
    no consequences other than a good story shared by miners in the bar at Mayo Landing.  I cannot mention his name because his kin
    still live in Mayo.  Dr. Aho baptized me with a double OP and I was glad there was a wall to hand on to.  One was enough.  Well, maybe
    two just to prove I was one of the gang.  Best to fit in.

    No body died on the job.  Being drunk was a kind of twisted badge of courage.  Like Taking a leak wherever convenient, alcohol was de rigour.
    We only had one death on that job.  Our pilot’s wife, Yvonne, committed suicide.  She had two delightful
    little girls who took a shine to me whenever I arrived in Mayo.  Her death saddened me when I heard about it.  Yvonne did not drink.
    She was a wonderful mother…gregarious and warm hearted…French Canadian.  I suppose it happened this way.  She was
      Surrounded in the darkness of the Yukon winter by men and a few
    women who were quite content to spend the star studded blackness of the winter months boozing it up using the Northern Lights
    as street lamps to their cars and trucks.  Or, more likely, living in the Spartan rooms in the Mayo Landing Hotel.  Upstairs from the bar.

    Tragic.  Yvonne’s death puts too much of a shadow on my Yukon days.  there were so many good times that summer. 
     Good times as defined by a 21 year old quasi adolescent male making his way in an 
    world filled with unusual adults.   Like Pete who had memorized the Holy Bible just so he could argue with religious people
    who likely had never opened the holy book.  Funny guy.  Must have been over 60 years old…really too old for bush
    work but he had no other choice.

    PLANNED ESCAPE

    The job ended early that September.  Cold and rain…even ice and snow began to blanket the Yukon.  No more work to do other
    than crate up the equipment and ship it to Toronto by truck in the sure and certain belief it would arrive. Not so sure, really.  My company, Hunting
    Technical and Exploration Services, expected me to fly home about the same time.  I had no plan to do so.  I had a planned escape of
    my own.  So I cashed in my flight ticket then plotted my escape from the Yukon.




    Mammoth tooth…this kind was  found in Dublin Gulch




    Caribou Antleers, wind scoured logs of Yukon Spruce…better than any sculptor could do…done by fire and wind.,

    Three Mayo kids playing in an ancient truck.  Beside them is the Stewart River.  Moses Lord eating his lunch from
    a can of peaches gave me the idea of a diet of cold pork and beans.   


    The things I shipped home by cartage company were a joke in camp.   Three wind scoured trees hollowed out after
    a forest fire swept through years ago.  Pretty to me.  And a large set of caribou antlers that a local aboriginal said I could have
    if I wanted them.   And a large tooth of an ancient hairy mammoth washed outl by an hydraulic hose   in Dublin Gulch.
    Could have bought some gold nuggets at $35 an ounce but didn’t want to waste my escape money.  Gold?  I had already sent
    Marjorie sprinklings of gold dust stuck on black electrical tape.  Gold dust gleaned from abandoned barrels of concentrate panned
    in evenings with Bill D. (best to not give his full name, he may be alive … may be a priest or Sunday school teacher and would not
    like to be reminded of his past)

    Bill D.  Let me tell you a bit about him.  He was about my age and became a good friend in spite of his misdemeanours.  We each had women
    in our lives.  Marjorie sent me big boxes of home made cookies…
    crumbs by the  time they reached Mayo Landing post office.  And lots of love letters.  Bill did not get letters or cookies.  For good reason.  No love letters.

    “She does not even know where I am….and I bet she does not give a sweet goddamn anyway.  Can’t say as I blame her.”

    This is his story which could be true even though it sounds fabricated.  He came from Peterborough, Ontario, arriving in the Yukon in early June, 1961.
    About the same time I arrived. Similar?  Not at all. 

    “The night before my wedding, my friends got me really drunk and drove me to Toronto … booked me
    on a flight to Edmonton on my wedding day”
    “What about your wedding?”
    “Don’t know…never checked.”
    “Left her at the altar?”
    “She’s better off without me.”

    The story is a little hard to believe.  Perhaps Bill just left the poor girl at the altar…bad enough.

    Bill D. and Alan Skeoch doing a little rafting

    Was this true?  Sounds fictional.  Who booked and paid for the flight to Edmonton…then on
    to Whitehorse?  An expensive and insensitive practical joke.  Perhaps exaggerated with 
    a kernel of truth.   Over the summer Bill got into a lot of trouble.  He took the drinking culture
    seriously and sometimes did not show up for work.  That was hard to take but Bill was not
    alone;   If men were sent to town, i.e Mayo, I was never sure they would get back. But Bill aways came
    back.  He was a joy to have around.  Lots of stories.  Outlandish.  For instance he got in serious difficulty
    with a local Mayo girl.

    “It was dark in their house but we still managed to roll around on the floor. Mind you the term
    Roll around on the floor is just a figure of speech.”
    “I get it.”
    “When I woke up the whole family were sleeping in the room…scared the bejabbers out of me.
    They must have been there all night while we were rolling around “
    “Serious affair, Bill?”
    “Not by me but she thought so.  Took a knife to me in the truck one night.”
    “Hard to believe.”
    “True.  We had been drinking and for some goddamn reason she hauled out a knife 
    and tried to cut me up.  Too drunk to do any serious damage.”
    “What happened after that?”
    “I got the hell away … not going back.”

    So many Yukon stories,   they have bounced around my brain for more than 60 years.  
    Never will be able to get  them out of my head.  Never want to.   

    But this is a story about my escape from the Yukon.  Not the Yukon job which is the subject of
    other episodes l I made detailed plans of my escape all that summer.
    I would not leave the Yukon by air as Huntech and Dr. Paterson expected.  When the job was
    over I would make my exit slowly.  There were places I wanted  to see.I had a bit of cash stashed
    but most of my escape money would come from cashing in my return air fair.  No one would
    get upset.  The job was over and the money was mine.  I figured no one really cared whether 
    I got back to the Huntech office on a Monday or a Thursday,  Job was over.

    ALONE

    I would be alone.  Travelling alone is not pleasant.  Goddamn lonely…and sometimes frightening
    when the sun goes down.  I do not recommend lonely travel.  Sometimes though it is the best
    way to meet people.  And the fastest way to get to places.

    A LITTLE MORE MONEY WAS WELCOME

    “Alan, you might need some extra cash.  Your escape will cost more than that air  ticket.”. said Bob Gilroy, one night in the hotel bar.
    “I know that.  Figure to save money by not eating much…few cans of cold pork and beans.”
    “How will you cook them up?”
    “I won’t .  Cold cans of pork snd beans have already been cooked.  So all I need is a can opener
    and a fork.  No dishes.  No costs.”

    ‘How would you like to spend a couple of days tagging climate…give you some extra cash.”
    “Never staked claims before.”
    “No staking involved…just put fresh tags on the old claims….easy.”
    “Count me in.”

    Tsgging claims was not as easy as it sounds.  First it was necessary to find the old claim posts 
    by blazes barely visible… made years ago..  Not easy to do.  And if the blazes were not found then the
    claims posts would not be found and I would  spend my last two days circling and circling. Lost getting in…worse, lost 
    getting out. And I was alone.  

    Our earth is so heavily populated today that most people have never
    got lost in a boreal forest.  Never had that sinking feeling of being absolutely alone.

    A thin layer of ice covered the swampy land.  Not enough to hold my weight so that each step the ice shattered like
    window glass and the shards marked  my pathway in and might help me get back out.

    .  After three months of trekking back and forth in our surveys my gum
    rubbers were worn thin.  No longer waterproof so the cold water got sucked into my boots whereupon my bl00d 
    and friction heated my wet socks ‘… a dirty soup.   My feet were boiled every day with the result that they looked
    like London after a Hitlerian bomber raid.  Pock marked, blanched and pealing.   I should never have taken this
    extra job.  Needed a man with good boots and dry socks.  A better man than me.

    Then there is the creeping fear when alone in the bush. Hard to tell  where you are unless the blazes line up correctly.
    The sure and certain presence of bears had to be considered.  Hopefully the pebbles in the tin can around my
    waiste would alert wild creatures of my my presence.  Peter, the Bible reader, shot a grizzly bear near this  very  swamp… a pointless
    act of violence.  

    Let me conclude this long but of memory with three pictures

    1) All our gang of six for seven men took a two day week end holiday and drove in a
    half ton ruck to Dawson City….a long haul from Mayo.  “Bunch of the boys were hooping
    it jus” as RpovertService said . Remember sleeping in a bathtub in a two bit hotel.
    We had fun….juvenile fun with new found friends.  There of us had to like in
    raw back of the truck.

    2) Panning for gold dust in the evenings when we discovered several 45 gallon drums
    of concentrates abandoned in the bush.   Gold pans had to be burned to incinerate any grease.

    3) And then there were the flies.  Billions of them.  Summer along the Stewart River is not 
    pleasant unless a strong wind blows.  I gave lots of blood that summer.  Enough for a Red 
    Cross blood bank.

    Enough!   See pis below.










  • EPISODE 672 ESCAPE FROM THE YUKON IN 1951 == ADREAM – NIGHTMARE LAST NIG

    EPISODE 672    DATELINE 1961: ESCAPE FROM THE YUKON: A DREAM / NIGHTMARE LAST NIGHT TOLD AS I REMEMBER

    alan skeoch
    biv, 6m 2022

    The Yukon seemed  good place to grow a beard.  Made me look older.


    Mom, DAd and Marjorie at Pearson Airport in 1961.   Mom and Marjorie would later pin me to the ground
    at the farm and snip off my beard.  Same thing happened to Samson when Delila snipped his beard according to the Bible.




    My next story was triggered by  a dream last night….bit of  a nightmare really.

    Took me back to my last two days in the Yukon in 1961.  All that summer I made
    plans to escape the Yukon by back tracking  the route taken by gold seekers of 1898.  To
    follow their route into the  Yukon but do it in reverse.  from the ghost town of
    Wernicke south to Keno City (Population almost nil) to Mayo Landing in our battered GMC Power Wagon.  A few beers
    with the boys in the Mayo Landing hotel then a night bus ride to Stewart Crossing
    where the morning bus from Dawson City would take me to Whitehorse and
    from there the White Pass Railroad through Dead Horse Gulch where the glistening
    bones of dead hoses horses marked the insanity of the Yukon gold rush.
    Then a stopover at  Skagway  before looking a ride on a water taxi though the Inland
    passage to landlocked Juneau,  And from there I would catch a flight to Seattle with a short 
    hop to Vancouver and a final flight home to Toronto.  All this fuelled by cans of cold
    pork and beans and raw oat meal and occasional other staple food like salami and rye.

    All that summer of 1961 I lathered  myself with the words of Robert Service.

    On every exploration job done each summer I selected 3 or 4 books to pack with extra socks.
    In 1961 it was the collected works of Robert Service. His words became the beacon
    of my escape from the Yukon. 

    Getting to the Yukon in June 1961was easy but also an adventure.
     e threaded our way north  in an
    overloaded DC 3.  Lots of freight and a few passengers.  My seat was close to the 
    cursing pilot. 

     “Bastards oveerloaded us sgain…can’t get altitude so we will have to
    thread our way through the mountains to Mayo.” 
    “What’s Mayo Landing like?”
    “Asshole of he world.  Tiny outpost on the Stewart River.  Aboriginals mostly with one hotel
    for people like you… Luigi’s greasy spoon attached.   Take 60 seconds to see the sights
    of Mayo.”
    “Is that the Stewart River down there?”
    Nope , that’s the Yukon River….backbone of the Territory.  See that other river…the Stewart
    joins the Yukon at Stewart Crossing…big rivers.”

    This was going to be a big adventure.  Little did I know that Stewart Crossing would be
    visited in the darkness of a Yukon night in mid September in a ramshackle bus that I had
    to drive because the driver was asleep or drunk or both and his dogs would not let me close enough to wake him.
    Maybe sleeping off a binge.

     I made my escape driving his bus and passengers west to Stewart Crossing.  µet the Dawson – Whitehorse bus
     then an
    empty White Pass Railway to the lawless town of  Skagway…and from there I had no idea.  But I sure enough
    was not going to fly directly home to Toronto when there was a slower route.  I had
    Robert Service and Pierre Berton as guides. Years later My boss, Dr. Norman Paterson of Huntech would 
    describe me to an audience as ‘precocious’ whatever that means.

    This story is long.  It will be broken into several Episodes.  You will either hate it or love it.
    I do not give a sweet goddamn which you choose.  Some may even think the Episodes are
    fiction.  No so.  These stories are part  of my life.  Why write the stories?  Do not really know.

    alan skeoch
    Nov. 5, 2022

    P>S>  The previous summer of 1960 I had been sent to Ireland.  Living there was easy.
    Our landlady in the tiny village of Bunmahon, Mrs. Lill Kennedy, commented to me
    “We had another Canadian mining crew in the village a few years ago.  They were
    drinkers and caroused a lot.  You are different”
    .  If Mrs. Kennedy had been in the Yukon she might have reconsidered her comment.
    Must write a story about her…a great woman.  She is long gone now.


    A FEW ROBERT SERVICE QUOTES


    “There’s a race of men that don’t fit in, 
    A race that can’t sit still;
    So they break the hearts of kith and kin, And they roam the world at will.
    They range the field and rove the flood, 
    And they climb the mountain’s crest; Their’s is the curse of the gypsy blood, 
    And they don’t know how to rest.” 
    ― Robert Service“Let us probe the silent place

    “Let us probe the silent places, let us seek what luck betide us;
    Let us journey to a lonely land I know.
    There’s a whisper on the night-wind, there’s a star agleam to guide us,
    And the Wild is calling, calling…let us go” 
    ― Robert W. Service, The Spell of the Yukon and Other Verses

    “There’s gold, and it’s haunting and haunting; 
    It’s luring me on as of old; 
    Yet it isn’t the gold that I’m wanting 
    So much as just finding the gold. 
    It’s the great, big, broad land ’way up yonder, 
    It’s the forests where silence has lease; 
    It’s the beauty that thrills me with wonder, 
    It’s the stillness that fills me with peace.” 
    ― Robert W. Service, The Spell of the Yukon and Other Verses

    Yet it isn’t the gold that I’m wanting
    So much as just finding the gold.
    It’s the great, big, broad land ‘way up yonder,
    It’s the forests where silence has lease;
    It’s the beauty that thrills me with wonder,
    It’s the stillness that fills me with peace.” 
    ― Robert W. Service

    NEXT EPISODE 673   — ESCAPE FROM THE YUKON REMEMBERED






    This sluice box miner gave me the 10,000 year old tooth of a Hairy Mammoth.  The tooth was a great
    prop when I begin teaching history at Parkdale C.I. until some student to teacher stole it. 



    An aboriginal family another dogs rafting to their hunting grounds down the Stewart River at Mayo Landing in 1961


    Dodge Power Wagon could go anywhere…even up or down fast flowing creeks where there were no roads


  • EPISODE 670 DROUGHT — PONDS DRY UP — AND A STRANGE DISCOVERY

    EPISODE 670 DROUGHT — OUR PONDS DRY UP — AND A STRANGE DISCOVERY SENT BY ‘ROOTER”
    alan skeoch nov. 1, 2022
    {CAPTION}

    For my lifetime tis pond has always been a source of wonder. Alinve with creatures. Tis year the pond has dried up. A muddy mess. Can our turtle colony survive? Marjorie caught one paned turtle vacating its home and searching for a watery living space. She let it go. But no place to go.

    {CAPTION}

    We have five ponds on the farm. Most often they are filled with water all summer long. This year the main pond is a mudhole and even front pond is reduced and reducing. This picture was taken midsummer. Today the pond is mud fringed and getting smaller and smaller.
    “All seven acres of our main pond are now mud.” “What about the turtle colony on eastern edge?” “Gone. moved to the western edge where Andrew used an excavator….water still there.” “What about the leopard frogs, a few of which have survived the disease….and some of them are easy pickings for the Blue Herons with those stiletto beaks….and the garter snakes, blood suckers, mink, all the little wiggly thing that make a pond alive?” “Gone. Seems the muskrats have survived in the front pond but their living area is getting smaller and smaller.” “I found a snake in the green houses sunning itself.” “Thank Heaven for that…but can the frog population survive when its living space is decreasing to the point of unsustainability?”
    Drought was a big killer…a slow killer tha packed the farm pond population into a smaller and smaller living space like that story of Edger Allan Poe and the collapsing room.
    Then along came an email from Robert Rloot. “Rooter’s” story is hard to believe. I thought it was a joke and even asked Rooter if the story of the living fish in a long dead lakebed was a cruel fake. Rooter says it is not a fake. Life persists even when conditions are terrible..
    what you are about to see is startling….I couldn’t believe it at first. So asked Rooter again if he believed it. He said he does. And he was head of science at Parkdale C. I. where we both taught. Even so, I bet few readers will believe this video.
    alan Skeoch

  • EPISODE 559 A COVID 19 HALLOWEEN EVENING OT. 31,2022

     EPISODE 559   A COVID 19 HALLOWEEN EVENING   OT. 31,2022


    alan skeoch







    “What will we do on Halloween?”
    “Give away as much chocolate as we can.”
    “Danger of spreading Covid19!”
    “I am now negative but weak…while you Marjorie are thinly positive….perhaps
    more dangerous than me.  You take the pictures, I’l do the giveaway.”
    “Where?”
    “At the front of our city lot….sitting on a chair with half a  bushel of chocolate bars.”
    “You also bought a lot of yogurt.”
    “Yes….give the kids a voice  bars or yogurt…see what they choose.”

    Begin forwarded message:















    Sitting on the street was  a good idea.   Got about 60 kids with

    their hands dipping into the bowl.  Most picked chocolate bars but

    seven picked the tubs of yogurt which was the best choice…cost
    us about 50 cents a tub.  We have three left for breakfast .









    Sent from my iPhone