EPISODE 562 RED PINE FOREST — STAGGERING TO DEATH

EPISODE 562    RED PINE FOREST STAGGERING TO DEATH



alan skeoch
April 15, 2022

NOT ALL PLANS WORK OUT AS ROBBIE BURNS SAID

Take our plan to create a forest refuge on our farm.

Seemed like a good idea 60 years ago.  

“We will reforest the farm by planting 10,000
Red Pine seedlings.”
“Why would we want to do that?”
“The fields are not good….full of stones and pretty well worn out
from too many crops of hay. “
“You really mean there are no animals to eat the hay now that
Grandma and Grandpa are gone.”
“Could be both reasons.   When we plow the hay fields we turn up 
enough boulders to build a stone house.  Better to reforest the land.”
(Decisions made around 1963)

And so the government arrived with 10,000 seedlings and a motorized
planting machine.  Covered the farm except for two tiny fields.

Now we have a dense forest.   Hard to push through as dense cedars flourish under the canopy
of the red pines.

Another reason for the planting was to create a refuge for wild animals.
There were already two ponds….one small near the barn and one huge
in the middle of the farm.  We added two more ponds where the land was
really wet.  Got them excavated by Ron Saunders from across the road.

“Wasting your time, Alan…never hold water.”

Dad was wrong as usual.   One pond was big enough for Andrew to motor in smalll circles. The ponds are fine fringed with the backdrop of
a growing forest of towering red pines.  But others now dominate…cedars, maple, walnuts…And wild animals thrive.  Wild turkeys
are present but not seen too often…startled about 30 last summer..

And deer love the density of the forest and presence of water.  Unfortunately 
some hunters decided to set up a shooting platform…high up in a tee.  Hardly sporting
And, worse, an act of trespass.   Hunters even had a night camera tied to a tree
so they knew where the deer would walk.  Cleared the $%^%$  out.   but police
were no help.

Sadly the multi decade project of establishing a forest has not been a big
success;    One stand of red pines picked up a root disease and about two
to four hundred have died.  Maybe more.  Right now we are trying to clear the dead
trees.  Not an easy task as you can see.    Must try to get the disease stopped. 


Stumps and slash and fallen rees make the land almost useless except for rabbits to find hiding places from coyotes..

Now I wish we had planted maples and other hardwoods.  

EPISODE 570 RAVENS — TESTING OUR TOLERATION

EPISODE 570      RAVENS TEST OUR TOLERATION LEVEL


alan skeoch
april 14, 2022

Ravens are intelligent!  Right?   Appaently have an I.Q. of 111…which is more than
many humans if the measurement is the same.  We have two nesting in our drive shed.
Big nest.   And they seems to know us.  They can tell one human from another.. a nice
human from a bad one.  Edger Allan Poe wrote about ravens.  I am not sure whether
he liked them or was afraid them.  Something sinister in the way they look at me.  Is
it love…hate…or just amusement.  At first they were cautious.  Rarely even saw them.
Then they began to hang around.  To hop from machine to machine while I worked.
Dare I turn my back on them?

The eat lots of things including baby birds.  LIKE baby pigeons which are not welcome
in the barn.

EPISODE 569 WILL FARM SALES EVER RETURN IN ONTARIO (loss due to Covid 19)

EPISODE 569   WILL FARM SALES EVER RETURN TO ONTARIO (loss due to Covid 19)


alan skeoch
April 13, 2022

For the past 40 or 50 years we have been attending farm sales just about every Saturday.
Our territory extended as far east as Napanee … as far north as Orillia and Alliston…as far south
as Fort Erie … as far west as Kitchener and assorted Amish and Mennonite communities even
moe distant.  There seemed to be no end to these sales.  Sometimes we had to choose from
a list of 10 or 15.  To our boys, Kevin and Andrew, they thought these sales would never 
end.  They loved them as much as we did.  All kinds of weird and wonderful machines were up
for auction every week end.   Often we filled our truck and trailer with things that no one really
wanted anymore.

Three summers ago Andrew, Jack and I drove west to the Amish School Auction.  
This auction sound modest but it is one of the biggest auctions in Ontario, especially
if you are interested in patchwork quilts, wagon wheels, cream scpearadtors, threshing
machines and a huge cowboy boot.   Only one boot!


Some people think the Amish are dour…i.e. do not smile a lot.  Well, this picture
sure disproves that.  Husband and wife laughing along with their horse who seems to
find me amusing



One of the sad results of the Covid 19 fear is the end of the Amish School Auction.    Will it come back this July?
Hope so.



This is our grandson Jack.  He is unpredictable st times.  And this auction was one of those times.  While Andy and I
were bidding on machines, Jack bid and won a care full of rabbits.  Rabbits?  We had no place for rabbits.   NO room in
the truck unless we left something more important like a fanning mill behind. Which is what we did.   At home Jack built
a rabbit run and enjoyed his rabbits for a short time.  Then one night a fox got them all.  Jack heard the rabbits screaming
and ran out in his underwear but no luck.  All dead.







That’s our son Andrew….dead centre in blue…looks Amish for sure

Just in case you did not know him…that’s Ivan with the head tag.  Need met him before and have no idea why he had
that bold red tag on his hat.   Amish rake pride in modesty.  But not Ivan.

I think we bought this 1890’s cone sheller and the stove.  not sure as already have two.  Why?   Good question.



Love this wood seed drill but resisted buying it as fear wood wheels would rot in field. No room in barn.  


Bought this wood water trough…perfect condition…never used.  



We did buy this baby carriage circa 1870…never know when such will be useful



See…I told you the carriage would be useful…for a saddle….

The is Andrew’ truck and trailer….we filled both.







These young Amish girls passed by…close…I think they thought Andrew and Jack were potential husbands.  Auction sales
are perfect places for Amish to meet each other.


april 20…cold with snowflakes…”WHY DON’T WE STOP IN ERIN FOR ICE CREAM?”


A SMALL MINI ADVENTURE THAT WENT MUSHY AS KEVIN DROVE


The plan was to stop in Erin for ice cream.  Seemed a good idea…except kev sort of overdid it.


ALL seemed fine as we left Erin…ice cream cones in hand.  Then Kevin pushed the cone too hard…popped his
finger right through the cone.  The huge mound of ice cream fell on his other hand.   No hand
to drive the car.  “Here Dad, you take it.”   What to do?   The loaded cone was dribbling on the
rented ttruck seat.  “Pitch it!”  So I did.  Empty road shoulder now has two or three pounds of ice
cream for a wandering raccoon.
  Not really littering.  Edible.
alan, April 10, 2022

EPISODE 567 VINLAND…THE HYSTERY OF L’ANSE AUX MEADOWS…”Alan, we are going to die!”

EPISODE 567   VINLAND…THE MYSTERY OF L’ANSE AUX MEADOWS…”Alan, we are going to die!”


alan skeoch
April 5, 2022



Imagine living here…under a sod covered roof…in a house buried in the snows of winter.


VINLAND — THERE IS NO MYSTERY QUITE LIKE THE VINLAND SAGAS

Vinland is to me, the consummate mystery in Canadian history.  And it will remain
a place of mystery and wonder forever because very few Canadians will
ever visit L’Anse aux Meadows except, perhaps, in their imaginations…place where 
the ice of endless winter gets mixed up with the its opposite….the fires of hell.

I just found a few pictures taken of this mysterious Unesco site….pictures we took
on  a very risky flight to L’Anse aux Meadows a few years ago.   If you want adventure
and history rolled together with the addition of loneliness and mystery then
plan this trip.


Westviking: The Ancient Norse in Greenland and North America by Farley MowatWestviking: The Ancient Norse in Greenland and North America: Mowat,  Farley: 9780771065798: Books - Amazon.ca

VINLAND — AN ADVENTURE

My trip occurred first in my mind.  I never ever expected to get there in real life.
I took a lunch hour trip that lasted for 20 or more lunch hours sitting at my desk
in Room 218 at Parkdale Collegiate.  What a wonderful adventure that was.
Reading  Farley Mowatt’s book, West Viking, which recounted all the Viking sagas
in  the year 1,000 A.D. when the world was a lot warmer and Greenland was habitable
and Viking sailing ships got lost and landed on the northern tip of Newfoundland.
Almost 500 years before Christiopher Columbus ‘discovered’ the Americas.

Was the Viking land called Vinland a real place? The search for Vinland was difficult
..i.e. a land of grape vines and fine wine.  Certainly not near St. Anthony where ice, snow
and floating iceberg cathedrals float by and no trees grow.  Grapes? On this desolate tip of Newfoundland?  Get serious.  Then again maybe the
name Vinland was a marketing scheme.  The same kind of marketing scheme
that gave Greenland its name.   If settlers are wanted then they will be attracted
more to a land of milk, honey and fine wine than to a place where people freeze to
death without benefit of fine wine.  Right?

I have an answer to explain the name Vinland.  Wine can be made from any kind of berry or fruit,
Remember hard liquor, vodka, can be made from potatoes which defies imagination.
On our summer visit to Vinland there were all kinds of berries growing on the stunted
shrubs….close to the ground.  Edible berries.  Hence wine.  And also, more important,
the climate was very different in 1,000 a.d. which was very warm compared to today.
Climate change. Affected Europe. A period of food in the tummies of most people. And a period 
of exploration and settlement of Greenland.   Warm in Newfoundland when compared with
today.  Maybe the Climate Change that we are living through will allow grapes to grow in St. Anthony
once agan.  That’s a guess on my part.



A ruined church of Vikings who travelled to Greenland.images.theconversation.com/files/395630/original/file-20210419-23-1hiebyz.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=30&auto=format&w=600&h=450&fit=crop&dpr=2 1200w, images.theconversation.com/files/395630/original/file-20210419-23-1hiebyz.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=15&auto=format&w=600&h=450&fit=crop&dpr=3 1800w, images.theconversation.com/files/395630/original/file-20210419-23-1hiebyz.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=45&auto=format&w=754&h=566&fit=crop&dpr=1 754w, images.theconversation.com/files/395630/original/file-20210419-23-1hiebyz.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=30&auto=format&w=754&h=566&fit=crop&dpr=2 1508w, images.theconversation.com/files/395630/original/file-20210419-23-1hiebyz.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=15&auto=format&w=754&h=566&fit=crop&dpr=3 2262w” sizes=”(min-width: 1466px) 754px, (max-width: 599px) 100vw, (min-width: 600px) 600px, 237px” srcset=”https://images.theconversation.com/files/395630/original/file-20210419-23-1hiebyz.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=45&auto=format&w=600&h=450&fit=crop&dpr=1 600w, images.theconversation.com/files/395630/original/file-20210419-23-1hiebyz.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=30&auto=format&w=600&h=450&fit=crop&dpr=2 1200w, images.theconversation.com/files/395630/original/file-20210419-23-1hiebyz.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=15&auto=format&w=600&h=450&fit=crop&dpr=3 1800w, images.theconversation.com/files/395630/original/file-20210419-23-1hiebyz.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=45&auto=format&w=754&h=566&fit=crop&dpr=1 754w, images.theconversation.com/files/395630/original/file-20210419-23-1hiebyz.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=30&auto=format&w=754&h=566&fit=crop&dpr=2 1508w, images.theconversation.com/files/395630/original/file-20210419-23-1hiebyz.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=15&auto=format&w=754&h=566&fit=crop&dpr=3 2262w” src=”https://images.theconversation.com/files/395630/original/file-20210419-23-1hiebyz.jpg?ixlib=rb-1.1.0&q=45&auto=format&w=754&fit=clip”>
The last written records of the Norse Greenlanders are from an Icelandic marriage in 1408, which was recorded
 later in Iceland, at Hvalsey Church, the best-preserved of the Norse ruins. WikimediaCC BY-SA
The thriving population of Greenland in its best years only totalled 500.

NOTE:  THE SKEOCH CONNECTION WITH MODERN ICELAND
This is also a mystery.   Dr. Lawrence Skeoch, a distant relative, was a Professor of Economics at
Queen’s University some yeas ago.  We met once or twice.  My cousin Ken Skeoch got to know
Dr. Skeoch much better.  The Iceland connection:  Lawrence Skeoch married a daughter whose father
was once the prime minister of Iceland.  Lawrence and his wife lived on an historic Icelandic farm that
I believe is now an Icelandic historic site.  Wish I knew more.  Perhaps a reader will know more than
I do.    (alan skeoch, April 10, 2022)

Summer is very short at L’Anse Aux Meadows.  Few if any tourists arrive in late winter was we did on our first trip.



Not much to see in winter.  Vikings huddled around their open fire pits in these sod roofed homes.   I am not sure they built
these fences but perhaps the restoration people knew more than I do.



“Roughly 1,000 years ago, the story goes, a Viking trader and adventurer named Thorfinn Karlsefni set off from the west coast of Greenland with three ships and a band of Norse to explore a newly discovered land that promised fabulous riches. Following the route that had been pioneered some seven years before by Leif Eriksson, Thorfinn sailed up Greenland’s coast, traversed the Davis Strait and turned south past Baffin Island to Newfoundland—and perhaps beyond. Snorri, the son of Thorfinn and his wife, Gudrid, is thought to be the first European baby born in North America.

Thorfinn and his band found their promised riches—game, fish, timber and pasture—and also encountered Native Americans, whom they denigrated as skraelings, or “wretched people.” Little wonder, then, that relations with the Natives steadily deteriorated. About three years after starting out, Thorfinn—along with his family and surviving crew—abandoned the North American settlement, perhaps in a hail of arrows. (Archaeologists have found arrowheads with the remains of buried Norse explorers.) After sailing to Greenland and then Norway, Thorfinn and his family settled in Iceland, Thorfinn’s childhood home.



George Decker … his rugged face  and his warm smile are two  things I will never forget.  Without him, L’Anse Aux Meadows
may never have been discovered.  “just a fe sounds over there that might interest you,” he told the Ingsteds.  Which 
uncovered a great mystery.


No need to say that life is tough around St. Anthony.   In this picture you can hear the wind blow if you read carefully.

MYSTERY…THAT IS THE ESSENCE OF L’ANSE AUX MEADOWS.

1) The language used by the Greenlanders is extinct.  Gone.  Not ever used
again.  That is the language of the Sagas…the stories of these mysterious people.
They lived in  a special historic moment when Greenland was actually green in places….
a time when domestic animals could exist…and humans had farms. T he population
grew as the temperature increased for a few hundred years from he 10th to the 15th century.

2) Then another ice age slowly descended.  Living got harder and harder.  Where fields of
hay had thrived short grasses grew.  And sometimes no grass could be harvested for winter
months and animals starved.  As did the Greenlanders.  Population fell.  There is even
evidence of inbreeding…multiple handicaps…bad times.  

3)
The same happened in Europe.  Eventually no trading ships were sent to Greenland
from Norway.  Even Iceland was cut off at times.  But the Greenlanders were forgotten.
And by the time contact was resumed they were gone.  No Greenlanders.  Some evidence,
i.e. occasional blue eyed Inuit, that some Greenlanders of Norse background mixed with 
the Inuit population.  But only a small suggestion as to the fate of the Greenlanders.

4)  Records were carved into planks…these are the Vinland sagas…written in an extinct
language.   Some differences that are hard to explain.  Not all viking ships reached
Newfoundland for instance.  The ships were open to the elements.  Somewhat like
trying to sail through Atlantic storms…ferocious storms…in a huge rowboat.

5) Imagine yourself on board one of those Viking trading ships.  Perhaps 60 people…mostly
men but always a few women.  Strong women capable of leadership.  At least one woman
pregnant with a baby due.   Sixty people trying to keep the ship afloat.  And in the centre
of the boat were the animals…cows, one bulll, sheep, one ram…other creatures necessary
for a colony  to survive.

6) We know this story to be true.  Although the actual facts are not always true.  These
sagas were told from parent to child for 250 years before they were ever written down.
And when they were written they were written in a language that no one understood because
with the death of the last Greenlander the language of the people also died.

7) The history of L’Anse Aux Meadows is clothed in mystery.  And it is 
mystery that that makes the place so exciting to visit.  Visit?  So few Canadians
will ever see the place…perhaps these pictures will help.

8) Our First Trip:  Marjorie was terrified.   Here is a shortened description.
I hired a pilot in Cornerbrook who said he would fly us north to 
L’Anse Aux Meadows one cold spring day when snow was coming and 
great chunks of ice floated down the Strait of Belle Isle.  Marjorie was
wedged in the back of the Cessna.  On each side were cans of gasoline
for the return trip.  The pilot used a road map.  Fog on the ground obscured
the thread of the highway he was trying to follow.  “What happens if
we miss the landing field?”  “Short death among the icebergs!”
Marjorie commented often, “Alan, we are going to die!”
We did not die.  But the pilot had trouble finding the tiny airfield at
St Anthony.  And when he did land he got out tools to repair the engine.
…while winter winds soured the airstrip.  “Must we fly back, Alan?”
“Only way out.  No bus service until summer!”

And that is a short version.

9) Marjorie proof read these notes.  “But, Alan, you forgot to mention
that the pilot tried to land at the wrong place… an abandoned airfield.”
“Just trying to write a short version.  “And you forgot to mention that
his tools were blown all over the ground while he took the motor
apart.”  “Just trying to shorten the story.”  “And you forgot he nearly ran
out of gas while searching for the real airstrip.”  “You are right…those
additions improve the story…true events…I will add them.”

PICTURES OF L’ANSE AUX MEADOWS —AND THE TERROR


SOMEWHERE down below there were two airstrips…lane abandoned and one real.  We found
both of them.


This is the face of terror.  Not pretending.


These pictures were taken on our second trip to L’Anse Aux Meadows in the short summer.   That was also an adventure as described in earlier Episodes.





Just imagine trying to thread your way to land through a sea filled with chunks of ice.   The people of the
Vinland sagas faced ice but not nearly as much as we do today.  They lived in a period of warmer temperatures
around the world.  A period when trees grew here…where today only scrub plants survive along with some badly
beaten trees where shelter is found.

Like I said.  If you want to put some mystery in your life, take this trip.  Funny thing…try dropping the “t” out of the
word ‘Mystery”.  The result is ‘Mysery’…i.e. “Misery”

No one has ever asked me to lead a trip to L’Anse Aux Meadows.  Little wonder.  There was only
room for two passengers on our first trip along with gas cans filled to the brink with gas for
the return trip.  And a motor that kept burping.

alan skeoch
April 10, 2022



WHO WAS GUDRID?

Gudrid Thorbjarnardóttir (Old NorseGuðríðr víðfǫrla Þorbjarnardóttir [ˈɡuðˌfriːðr ˈwiːðˌfɔrlɑ ˈθorˌbjɑrnɑrˌdoːtːer]Modern IcelandicGuðríður víðförla Þorbjarnardóttir [ˈkvʏðˌriːðʏr ˈviðˌfœ(r)tla ˈθɔrˌpja(r)tnarˌtouhtɪr̥]; born in 980–1019) was an Icelandic explorer, born at Laugarbrekka in SnæfellsnesIceland.
She appears in the Saga of Erik the Red and the Saga of the Greenlanders, known collectively as the Vinland sagas. She and her husband Þorfinnur Karlsefni led an expedition to Vinland where their son Snorri Þorfinnsson was born, believed to be the first European birth in the Americas outside of Greenland.
” According to The Saga of the Greenlanders, after their marriage, and at Gudrid’s urging, the two led an attempt to settle Vínland with sixty men, five women, and a cargo of various livestock (while it is implied in The Saga of Eirik the Red that she accompanies him, Gudrid is never actually mentioned in the account of the journey). While in Vínland, the couple had a son whom they named Snorri Thorfinnsson, who is the first European reported to be born in the Western Hemisphere. There is speculation about the birth date of Snorri with birth years such as 1005, 1009, and 1012 being postulated, but all sources agree that he was born between 1005 and 1013. According to the Vinland sagas, when Snorri was 3 years old, the family left Vinland because of hostilities with indigenous peoples (called Skrælingar by the settlers, meaning “barbarians”). The family returned to the Glaumbær farm in Seyluhreppur, Iceland.[4][5][6]

The sagas vary in the number of men and women who sailed to Vinland.  Some say 60 in one saga..and hundreds in another.  What the sags agree upon is he fact that both
men and women sailed to Vinland along with their domestic animals.  The intent seems to have been settlement.  Why did it fail?  Was there just t oo much killing of local inhabitants…the skraelings (barbarians).
The full truth will never be known.


The Vinland sagas are two stories recorded 250 years after the events they describe.  The stories are different but describe the same event which was the
Norse settlement of Vinland around the year 1,000 AD.  So the sagas are hearsay evidence.  Stories told year after year for two and a half centuries Stories
told in a language that became extinct when the settlement of Greenland was abandoned in the 15th century.  Stories that got exaggerated,  The stories were carved in an
 ancient language.  Now extinct.  Why was Greenland abandoned?   Some source say drought was a problem.  No  grass to put in barns.  No grass meant that farm animals starved to death in the long inters.  Other explanations
including the suggestions of inbeeding our to the small population.  I seem to remember an excavated grave where the body was odd.  Not normal.

What a mystery?  Little wonder that it is possible to lose oneself while reading Farley Mowat’s book, WestViking.

Below are both of the Vinland sagas…1) the saga of the Greenlanders and 2) the saga of Eric the Red.

THE VINLAND SAGAS — TRANSLATED

[edit]

The beginning of The Saga of Erik the Red

The main sources of information about the Norse voyages to Vinland are two Icelandic sagas, the Saga of Erik the Red and the Saga of the Greenlanders, which are known collectively as the Vinland Sagas. These stories were preserved by oral tradition until they were written down some 250 years after the events they describe. The existence of two versions of the story shows some of the challenges of using traditional sources for history, because they share a large number of story elements but use them in different ways. A possible example is the reference to two different men named Bjarni who are blown off course. A brief summary of the plots of the two sagas, given at the end of this article, shows other examples.
The sagas report that a considerable number of Vikings were in parties that visited Vinland. Thorfinn Karlsefni‘s crew consisted of 140 or 160 people according to the Saga of Erik the Red, 60 according to the Saga of the Greenlanders. Still according to the latter, Leif Ericson led a company of 35, Thorvald Eiriksson a company of 30, and Helgi and Finnbogi had 30 crew members.[17]
According to the Saga of Erik the Red, Þorfinnr “Karlsefni” Þórðarson and a company of 160 men, going south from Greenland traversed an open stretch of sea, found Helluland, another stretch of sea, Markland, another stretch of sea, the headland of Kjalarnes, the WonderstrandsStraumfjörð and at last a place called Hóp, a bountiful place where no snow fell during winter. However, after several years away from Greenland, they chose to turn back to their homes when they realized that they would otherwise face an indefinite conflict with the natives.
Saga of the Greenlanders

[edit]

Church of Hvalsey, one of the best preserved remnants from the Norse settlement in Greenland.

Simiutaq IslandGreenland, as seen from the Davis Strait. This has been suggested to be a suitable starting point for a crossing to Canada[18]

Baffin Island, possible location of Helluland

Leif Ericson U.S. commemorative stamp, issued 1968

In Grænlendinga saga or the ‘Saga of the Greenlanders’, Bjarni Herjólfsson accidentally discovered the new land when traveling from Norway to visit his father, in the second year of Erik the Red’s Greenland settlement (about 986 CE). When he managed to reach Greenland, making land at Herjolfsness, the site of his father’s farm, he remained there for the rest of his father’s life and didn’t return to Norway until about 1000 CE. There, he told his overlord (the Earl, also named Erik) about the new land and was criticized for his long delay in reporting this. On his return to Greenland he retold the story and inspired Leif Eriksson to organize an expedition, which retraced in reverse the route Bjarni had followed, past a land of flat stones (Helluland) and a land of forests (Markland). After having sailed another two days across open sea, the expedition found a headland with an island just off the shore, with a nearby pool, accessible to ships at high tide, in an area where the sea was shallow with sandbanks. Here the explorers landed and established a base which can plausibly be matched to L’Anse aux Meadows; except that the winter was described as mild, not freezing. One day an old family servant, Tyrker, went missing and was found mumbling to himself. He eventually explained that he found grapes/currants. In the spring, Leif returned to Greenland with a shipload of timber, towing a boatload of grapes/currants. On the way home, he spotted another ship aground on the rocks, rescued the crew and later salvaged the cargo. A second expedition, one ship of about 40 men led by Leif’s brother Thorvald, sets out in the autumn after Leif’s return and stayed over three winters at the new base (Leifsbúðir(-budir), meaning Leif’s temporary shelters), exploring the west coast of the new land during the first summer, and the east coast during the second, running aground and losing the ship’s keel on a headland they christen Keel Point (Kjalarnes). Further south, at a point where Thorvald wanted to establish a settlement, the Greenlanders encountered some of the local inhabitants (Skrælings) and killed them, following which they were attacked by a large force in hide boats, and Thorvald died from an arrow-wound. After the exploration party returned to base, the Greenlanders decided to return home the following spring.
Thorstein, Leif’s brother, married Gudrid, widow of the captain rescued by Leif, then led a third expedition to bring home Thorvald’s body, but drifted off course and spent the whole summer sailing the Atlantic. Spending the winter as a guest at a farm on Greenland with Gudrid, Thorstein died of disease, reviving just long enough to make a prophecy about her future as a Christian. The next winter, Gudrid married a visiting Icelander named Thorfinn Karlsefni, who agreed to undertake a major expedition to Vinland, taking livestock. On arrival, they soon found a beached whale which sustained them until spring. In the summer, they were visited by some of the local inhabitants who were scared by the Greenlanders’ bull, but happy to trade goods for milk and other products. In autumn, Gudrid gave birth to a son, Snorri. Shortly after this, one of the local people tried to take a weapon and was killed. The explorers were then attacked in force, but managed to survive with only minor casualties by retreating to a well-chosen defensive position, a short distance from their base. One of the local people picked up an iron axe, tried it, and threw it away.
The explorers returned to Greenland in summer with a cargo of grapes/currants and hides. Shortly thereafter, a ship captained by two Icelanders arrived in Greenland, and Freydis, daughter of Eric the Red, persuaded them to join her in an expedition to Vinland. When they arrived to Vinland, the brothers stored their belongings in Leif Eriksson’s houses, which angered Freydis and she banished them. She then visited them during the winter and asked for their ship, claiming that she wanted to go back to Greenland, which the brothers happily agreed to. However, Freydis went back and told her husband the exact opposite, which lead to the killing, at Freydis’ order, of all the Icelanders, including five women, as they lay sleeping. In the spring, the Greenlanders returned home with a good cargo, but Leif found out the truth about the Icelanders. That was the last Vinland expedition recorded in the saga.

Saga of Erik the Red[edit]

In the other version of the story, Eiríks saga rauða or the Saga of Erik the Red, Leif Ericsson accidentally discovered the new land when traveling from Norway back to Greenland after a visit to his overlord, King Olaf Tryggvason, who commissioned him to spread Christianity in the colony. Returning to Greenland with samples of grapes/currants, wheat and timber, he rescued the survivors from a wrecked ship and gained a reputation for good luck; his religious mission was a swift success. The next spring, Thorstein, Leif’s brother, lead an expedition to the new land, but drifted off course and spent the whole summer sailing the Atlantic. On his return, he met and married Gudrid, one of the survivors from a ship which made land at Herjolfsnes after a difficult voyage from Iceland. Spending the winter as a guest at a farm on Greenland with Gudrid, Thorstein died of disease, reviving just long enough to make a prophecy about her future as a far-traveling Christian. The next winter, Gudrid married a visiting Icelander named Thorfinn Karlsefni, who, with his business partner Snorri Thorbrandsson, agreed to undertake a major expedition to the new land, taking livestock with them. Also contributing ships for this expedition were another pair of visiting Icelanders, Bjarni Grimolfsson and Thorhall Gamlason, and Leif’s brother and sister Thorvald and Freydis, with her husband Thorvard. Sailing past landscapes of flat stones (Helluland) and forests (Markland) they rounded a cape where they saw the keel of a boat (Kjalarnes), then continued past some extraordinarily long beaches (Furðustrandir) before they landed and sent out two runners to explore inland. After three days, the pair returned with samples of grapes/currants and wheat. After they sailed a little farther, the expedition landed at an inlet next to an area of strong currents (Straumfjörð), with an island just off shore (Straumsey), and they made camp. The winter months were harsh, and food was in short supply. One day an old family servant, Thorhall the Hunter (who had not become Christian), went missing and was found mumbling to himself. Shortly afterwards, a beached whale was found, which Thorhall claimed had been provided in answer to his praise of the pagan gods. The explorers found that eating it made them ill, so they prayed to the Christian God, and shortly afterwards the weather improved.
When spring arrived, Thorhall Gamlason, the Icelander, wanted to sail north around Kjalarnes to seek Vinland, while Thorfinn Karlsefni preferred to sail southward down the east coast. Thorhall took only nine men, and his vessel is swept out into the ocean by contrary winds; he and his crew never returned. Thorfinn and Snorri, with Freydis (plus possibly Bjarni), sailed down the east coast with 40 men or more and established a settlement on the shore of a seaside lake, protected by barrier islands and connected to the open ocean by a river which was navigable by ships only at high tide. The settlement was known as Hóp, and the land abounded with grapes/currants and wheat. The teller of this saga was uncertain whether the explorers remained here over the next winter (said to be very mild) or for only a few weeks of summer. One morning they saw nine hide boats; the local people (Skrælings) examined the Norse ships and departed in peace. Later a much larger flotilla of boats arrived, and trade commenced (Karlsefni forbad the sale of weapons). One day, the local traders were frightened by the sudden arrival of the Greenlanders’ bull, and they stayed away for three weeks. They then attacked in force, but the explorers managed to survive with only minor casualties, by retreating inland to a defensive position, a short distance from their camp. Pregnancy slowed Freydis down, so she picked up the sword of a fallen companion and brandished it against her bare breast, scaring the attackers into withdrawal. One of the local people picked up an iron axe, tried using it, but threw it away. The explorers subsequently abandoned the southern camp and sailed back to Straumsfjord, killing five natives they encountered on the way, lying asleep in hide sacks. 
Karlsefni, accompanied by Thorvald Eriksson and others, sailed around Kjalarnes and then south, keeping land on their left side, hoping to find Thorhall. After sailing for a long time, while moored on the south side of a west-flowing river, they were shot at by a one-footed man, and Thorvald died from an arrow-wound. Once they reached Markland, the men encountered five natives, of whom they kidnapped two boys, baptizing them and teaching them their own language.[19] The explorers returned to Straumsfjord, but disagreements during the following winter lead to the abandonment of the venture. On the way home, the ship of Bjarni the Icelander was swept into the Sea of Worms (Maðkasjár in Skálholtsbók, Maðksjár in Hauksbók) by contrary winds. The marine worms destroyed the hull, and only those who escaped in the ship’s worm-proofed boat survived. This was the last Vinland expedition recorded in the saga.[20]


Why Didn’t They Stay?

The Viking presence in North America had dwindled to nothing long before Columbus began island hopping in the Caribbean. Why did the Norse fail where other Europeans succeeded? After all, Vikings were consummate seamen and peerless raiders who populated marginally inhabitable Greenland and who would push their way into the British Isles and France. And with their iron weapons and tools, they had a technological edge over America’s indigenous peoples.

Several explanations have been advanced for the Vikings’ abandonment of North America. Perhaps there were too few of them to sustain a settlement. Or they may have been forced out by American Indians. While the European conquest was abetted by infectious diseases that spread from the invaders to the Natives, who succumbed in great numbers because they had no acquired immunity, early Icelanders may not have carried similar infections.

But more and more scholars focus on climate change as the reason the Vikings couldn.t make a go of it in the New World. The scholars suggest that the western Atlantic suddenly turned too cold even for Vikings. The great sailing trips of Leif and Thorfinn took place in the first half of the 11th century, during a climatic period in the North Atlantic called the Medieval Warming, a time of long, warm summers and scarce sea ice. Beginning in the 12th century, however, the weather started to deteriorate with the first frissons of what scholars call the Little Ice Age. Tom McGovern, an archaeologist at Hunter College in New York City, has spent more than 20 years reconstructing the demise of a Norse settlement on Greenland. In the middle of the 14th century, the colony suffered eight harsh winters in a row, culminating, in 1355, in what may have been the worst in a century. McGovern says the Norse ate their livestock and dogs before turning to whatever else they could find in their final winter there. The settlers might have survived if they had mimicked the Inuit, who hunted ringed seal in the winter and prospered during the Little Ice Age.

With sea ice making the routes from Iceland to Greenland and back impassable for Norse ships for much of the year, the Little Ice Age probably curtailed further Norse traffic to North America. Iceland also fared badly during this time. By 1703, weather-related food shortages and epidemics of plague and smallpox had reduced Iceland’s population  in 1250.




EPISODE 568 GEORGE DECKER — AND THE DISCOVERY OF L’ANSE AUX MEADOWS

EPISODE 568    GEORGE DECKER — AND THE DISCOVERY OF L’ANSE AUX MEADOWS


alan skeoch
april 6, 2022

DO YOU HAVE PLANS FOR A SUMMER VACATION?



IF, after you read this Episode, you decide to visit L’Anse Aux Meadows, be ready for a wind swept, cold, rather hostile experience.
Wonderful if you have imagination and love discovery.  Terrible, if you expect crowds of people and Tim Horton’s or Starbucks coffee shops.
And getting there…getting to the northern tip of Newfoundland, is an adventure in itself.  Just remember the comforts of urban life
will be absent.  If, however, you long for a sense of adventure, then this is a place you must visit at least once in your life.   Not many
people will believe me and those longing for the soft life will be utterly and completely disappointed.

I was lucky enough to have shaken the hand of George Decker.

George Decker as we met him at L’Anse aux Meadows — The man who showed Anne Stine Ingsted ’some old Indian mounds’ that
turned out to be the most important historical site in North America.

GEORGE DECKER

Very few people live on this windswept barren tip of Newfoundland.  Devoid of just about everything.  Hard to believe
it is the most significant historical site in North America according to UNESCO.  IT was here that we met George Decker, the
man who directed the Ingsted’s to a few mounds of earth “where I think some Indians once lived.”   Not Indians of course.
This site, L’Anse aux Meadows, was where a Viking open decked sailing ship landed sometime between 950 AD and 1050 AD
How do we know that?



The History of the Vikings' Innovations - HISTORY

imgur.com | Viking longship, Viking ship, Longship
HOW DO WE KNOW VIKINGS LANDED HERE?


Viking Ring Headed Pins by Thorthor's Hammer

Viking pins that held their clothes in place.  This pin, found in Newfoundland in 1960, was the tiniest proof the Vikings
landed at L’Anse aux Meadows in1,000 AD.   There were other clues.

Several other clues.  Charcoal bits could be Carbon14 dated with accuracy. So around 1,000 AD people had fire pits here.  Why?  To keep
warm of course but also to smelt iron.  The swamp around the site contained lots of bog iron…. precipitate of iron rich water.  Bog iron
could be smelted by fire into iron.  Not much iron but enough to repair a wooden ship or enough iron to be pounded into weapons i suppose.

When the Ingsted’s carefully excavated the site they found a few other things.  Small things.  So small that most of us would
ignore them.   And it is these tiny things that conclusively proved this was a place where Vikings lived long long ago.  Almost 
500 years before Christopher Columbus landed in the West Indies

Let me just talk about one of these discoveries.  A pice of stone.  Round. with a hole in the centre.  Small…fits comfortably in
the palm of a human hand with lots of flesh left over.  It is called a spindle whorl.  A key piece used in the making of woollen thread…in the ultimate manufacture
of cloth.  Or the repairing of cloth.  The stone will twist .. will spin … if held correctly.  I am not sure how but have been assured
it is a simple thing to do.  These stones can be traced back to Norway.  Artefacts that could be dated around 1,000 A.D.

This spindle whorl had another meaning.  Women used spindle whorls. Not men.  Making and mending cloth was women’s work.
Think about it.  This spindle whorl meant that women were living on this god forsaken tip of Newfoundland a thousand years
ago.   The presence of women hinted strongly that this was not just an accidental landing of a Viking ship lost in a North
Atlantic gale.  This was a settlement.  Women.  The Icelandic stories handed down from generation generation had much
to say about these women.  One woman in particulars.  One tough women.   If the tales are as accurate as most people
believe.  For the present I will keep her out of this short Episode.  She is a separate story, perhaps told later.




Bog iron - WikipediaBog Iron: Iron ore

So this place was once a settlement.  No doubt  Bog iron and spindle whorl and dateable charcoal are facts found in
the rubble of the mounds.    Then why is this site not well known?    Some people reading this short Episode have likely 
never heard of L’Anse aux Meadows.  Why not?   Because the Vikings did not stay here long.  Several years at most.
They may have had no intention of living here for long.  Maybe they came to get lumber.  There was no wood in Greenland
and a thousand years ago the temperature was warmer…trees grew here on the tip of Newfoundland.  Then again the Vikings
may have hated the isolation of the place.  They could not get along with the anti people…called the ’Skraelings’.  Had some
bloody confrontations.




Viking Spindles - Northern Lace

Soapstone spindle whorl | Dawn's Dress DiarySpindle whorl - Stock Image - C045/1956 - Science Photo LibraryViking spindle whorl - Stock Image - C043/0588 - Science Photo Library


How do we know they did not stay long?  No graveyards found on the site.  Very few artifacts.  No deep mounds
of charcoal.  No domestic animal bones.  Lots of seal bones but no domestic animal bones.  Vikings
took animals on board their open ships normally.  No evidence of such found yet at the site.  No barn for
instance.  Just a couple large sod covered structures where people lived.

Lots of mystery here.  Why on earth was this empty land called Vinland?  Was this just a real estate
dodge.  Talk about a place as if it was heaven on earth to sucker somebody into 
buying and settling?  Maybe.  Or maybe grape vines once grew here a thousand years ago
when Climate Change brought about a glorious heating of lands in the North Atlantic.  The Vikings
landed here when times were good.   They got the hell out of here before times became bad.
They did not stay long.  Then they were forgotten for a thousand years.


DISCOVERY…A PERSONAL WORD

The word ‘discovery’ is misleading.  Often a discovery is not world shattering
because it has been present for some time and known about by people who
never get full credit for the discovery.   Christopher Columbus, for instance, gets credit
for the discovery of North America.  Columbus may well have been the first European
to find North America in 1493.   But there were millions of people living in North America
for centuries before Columbus.   

The Viking explorers found North America nearly 500 years before Columbus.  But even
they were not the first to find Newfoundland.  Others were there long before Eric the Red
and his kin.  The Vikings called them ‘Skraelings’.  They were really people of Asian origin
that followed hairy mammoths across the Bering land bridge in the last Ice Age when
the Bering Sea was dry land caused by the Ice Age that imprisoned water as solid ice
on the Arctic and Antarctic ice caps.

So discovery is a personal thing.  From birth to death we have so many discoveries in our
lives.  I fear your discovery of L’Anse Aux Meadows will disappoint most of you.  But for
those of you who can strip the present to reach deep into the past and are able to look upon the world was a thousand
years ago, you will be thrilled.  But do not say I did not warn you.



This was my view as I looked seaward from L’Anse Aux Meadows in the late 1960;s.   When the Vikings looked seaward the ocean was not nearly as harsh
as it is today.   At their backs were the skraelings ready to kill them.  Who were the Scraelings?  Likely they were the Beothuk native people of whom
not a single one survives today.

alan skeoch
april 8, 2022

NEXT EPISODE…A PICTURE GALLERY OF L’ANSE AUX  MEADOWS AND VICINITY


EPSODE 569 SET DECORATION FOR MOVIE ‘ASYLUM FILMED ST KINGSTON PENITENTIARY

EPSODE 569       SET DECORATION FOR MOVIE ‘ASYLUM’  FILMED AT KINGSTON PENITENTIARY


alan skeoch
April 7, 2022






“Alan, we need four old tractor tires.”
“What movie?”
“Title is ASYLUM.”
“Where is it to be filmed:
“The old Kingston Penitentiary at Kingston.”

Now here is a chance for imagination.  How do you
think these four tractor tires will reinforce the 
script for ‘Asylum?”

I have no idea.  I am sending this episode because
my cousin Owen T. believes many readers would like
to know more about the things we provide the movie
industry.

Unfortunately I forgot to put the digital chip back in
my camera.  Spent day loading truck and taking
nonexistent pictures.

alan