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  • EPISODE 469 DID WE REALLY TRADE 50 MOOSE FOR 274 WILD TURKEYS? (YES, WE DID IN 1984)

    EPISODE  469     DID WE TRADE 50  MOOSE FOR 274 WILD TURKEYS?  (Yes,,,did so in 1984)


    Alan skeoch
    nov. 2021

    alan skeoch
    november 2021

    MARJORIE SPOTTED THE FLOCK…BUT THEY SPOTTED HER FIRST

    “Alan, quick get your camera…whole flock of wild  turkeys in the south field.”, as Marjorie got the
    window down on a rainy Oct. morning.  The flock was immediately alert.
    “They see us slowing down…they are moving away…FAST.”
    “They have great eyes…better than ours.”
    “And they have 360 degree vision…neck can swivel… hard to fool them.””
    “How many are out there?”
    “Maybe a dozen.”
    “Can you spot the big Tom turkey…the male?”
    “No, and in a few seconds they will be gone…they know we are not as quick.”
    “They can run at 25 mph and fly at 55 mph.  Not many people know that.  They
    think turkeys are toO fat to run and too big to fly.  Wrong on both counts.
    “Strange how we see these flockS so often these days.  They were extinct in Ontario
    for much of the 20 th century…Now they are almost common.”
    “How many are there in Ontario do you think?”
    “Professionals estimate 100,000…common.”
    “How come?  How did wild turkeys get re-established while so many other
    birds and animals are in decline?



    HOW DID WILD TURKEYS GET REESTABLISHED IN ONTARIO?

    “Was the return  of the wild turkeys natural?”
    “Natural?”
    “Yes, did they swim or fly across the river from Detroit or across the St. Lawrence River to Brockville?”
    “No.  They got here in 1984 due to Dr. David Ankney, a retired biology professor at Western University…he
    argued for a trade with American states that wanted some of our wild animals.. The trade took some time
    but in 1984 it happened.   We got 274 wild turkeys.

    1) traded 18 river otters to Missouri for wild turkeys
    2) traded 120 Hungarian partridge to New York for wild turkeys
    3) traded 50 moose from Alginqin Park To Michigan for wild turkeys

    “That moose trade was expensive…50 moose for a few wild turkeys…Yuk!”

    Then we released them in small groups in southern Ontario.  Only real wild turkeys…no  mixtures or domesticated turkeys.
    The wild TOM TURKEYS Would not accept domesticated females as wives so those 274 had to be trapped in the forests of the USA.

    “Let me see…you say 274 wild turkeys came to Ontario in 1984 and there are more than 100,000 here today.”
    “That’s right.”
    “Sounds untrue.”
    “Not so.  Look around…easy to spot them if you look hard enough.  Some have even moved
    to Muskoka and North Bay…northern places that had never had populations ever before.
    They are here to stay.”
    “What happened to our 50 moose and those river otters.?
    “I have no idea…we could find out though.”

    Wild Turkeys were worshipped by the Inca and Aztec people; 

    In no time the whole flock melded into the fall field colours.  We never got close. 




  • EPISODE 468 Power EYOND BELIEF FOR1905…STEAM TRACTOR AND 40 PLOWS



    EPISODE 468    POWER BEYOND BELIEF FOR 1905…STEAM TRACTOR AND 40 PLOWS

    alan skeoch

    oct. 2021
    (courtesy of friend Thom Norris)


     This is a departure from my regular Episodes in that I did not make the video but

    I think readers will be impressed.   Congering the prairie was done by three steps.

    Two of the steps were quite disturbing to any thoughtful person.  The third step
    is the subject of this episode … POWER !

    1)
    First the land
    was cleared of its rightful owners…the indigenous peoples

    2) Then The great herds of buffalo Were slaughtered…THEIR bones sacked like chordwood. They had provided food for those indigenous people.
    But they also got in the way of railway construction.

    3) And only then could The prairie soils be turned over and harrowed….and that
    is where this story takes off.





    Subject:  Powerful Steam Tractor
     

     

     
      
      
      
     


     

     
  • EPISODE 465 BLACK WALNUTS…WHAT CAN WE DO WITH THEM?

    EPISODE 465    BLACK WALNUTS…WHAT CAN WE DO WITH THEM?


    alan skeoch
    oct. 2021



    Every year someone gets conked with a falling black walnut.  Like getting hit with a world series hardball.
    This year it was Marjorie’s turn.  She got wopped on the bare upper arm as she diligently tried to gather
    the walnuts before the cursed red squirrels got hem hidden away in the barns.  

    Now we differ on black walnuts.  I like them and have planted a number of trees on our farm.  Marjorie does 
    not like them at all.   A subject of some tension each year as the walnuts fall.   they are edible but getting to
    the walnut meat requires a sledge hammer and careful hand picking the walnut meat from the tooth breaking
    shards.   Red squirrel teeth are better at this than human teeth.  A walnut shard is capable of breaking the
    best of human teeth.  So walnuts are just wasted.   We race to get as many as we can before
    the red squirrels.  Then what should we do with the baskets of nuts?   There was a time when I 
    pitch walnuts along the Ontario side roads like Johny Appleseed did.   Now I take credit for a lot of walnut
    trees in full growth with their progeny ‘whopping’ a few cars no doubt.




    what to do with this year’s crop?   “Let’s put them in Andrew Skeoch’s fire it.”  “Not far enough away, the red
    squirrels will find them and bring them back.”   “What should we do with the red squirrels.?” “Call Jackson Skeoch, he
    may have an answer.”

    In short black walnut season is a troubled time.





    Yes, black walnuts float.  Ghastly site each year on our small pond nearest the house.

    Black walnuts are killers.  Their root system is toxic to other trees.  I made the mistake of planting a hickory tree
    within 20 feet of a walnut tree.  For three decades the two have been sparring beneath the ground.  This year
    the hickory died and the black walnut celebrated by filling the pond with nuts.   I hope the floating nuts do not
    hurt our snapping turtle as he or she sleeps for the winter at the bottom of the pond.



    Marjorie is smiling.  A forced smile as she made me look at her bruised arm.



    Math problem for you…what speed can a falling walnut reach before it hits the ground…or before it got Marjoie?


    Here is one cache of the red squirrel…we got them 





  • EPISODE 466 LEAVES CHANGE COLOUR …MEANS WINTER IS COMNG

    EPISODE  466    LEAVES CHANGE COLOUR…MEANS WINTER IS COMING


    alan skeoch
    oct. 2021

    The older we get there faster the seasons change.  Seems like no time between the autumn leaves
    of 2020 and those of this year 2021.  Maybe that is because we have been mentally caged up by Covid 19.
    Or maybe it is just a function of age