Friday, December 12, 2014

The Lansdowne Letters: The Order of Good Cheer


This Friday my father’s Lansdowne Letters
have me thinking of a time centuries ago
when the first Europeans ventured into the New World.

I'm talking post Vinland Vikings here ~
At the time my father began writing his letters,
Newfie George Decker had just led two Norwegians, 
explorer Helge Ingstad and 
archaeologist Anne Stine Ingstad,
to the Old Indian Camp mounds
at the tip of the Great Northern Peninsula of Newfoundland.


L'Anse aux Meadows
UNESCO World Heritage Site
2011


Once excavated, the mounds
became the most famous Viking settlement 
in North America outside of Greenland.

But these are not 
the Europeans settlers on my mind.



A "Viking" Walks to the Settlement
at L'Anse aux Meadows
2011


I’m talking November 14, 1606,
when the Order of Good Cheer had its first meeting 
in Port Royal, Nova Scotia.



Replica of Champlain's Habitation 
at the Port-Royal National Historic Site of Canada, Nova-Scotia





Samuel de Champlain
Wikipedia
   

Samuel de Champlain 
organized the order 
as a premptive strike 
against land sickness or scurvy
which was thought 
to be caused by idleness.

Champlain’s weapons?  
Food and entertainment. 








As someone whose ancestors
have lived near Port Royal for some three centuries,
it is only natural that Dad’s letters reminded me
of Champlain’s Order of Good Cheer,
then and now.



Champlain and the Order of Good Cheer




To hold back the blackness of nights in the wilderness,
people have always turned to making their own fun.
The fourteen white people in Lansdowne House
were really not that different
from the fifteen Frenchmen of birth
(sufficient social standing) 
who founded the order in the wilds of Nova Scotia 
on the shore of the Annapolis Basin.





On Friday, September 30, 1960
my father wrote about
the social scene in Lansdowne:

Hello There!
How’s everyone tonight?  
Another nice long week has just ended, 
and I am looking forward to 
some peace and quiet on the weekend.  
I love children, but sometimes 
one would rather love them at a distance.

I received nice letters from Sara, ‘Mac,’ and Mother, 
and I will be expecting Aunt Maude to write me 
as soon as she is better and feels like writing.  
The rest of you, however, keep up the good work, 
for mail from home is awfully important up here.


Lansdowne House (Mainland), 1960



Uno and I are going over to the MacRaes'
for bridge this evening, 
and I am going over to Mitchells' with the Brother 
for bridge tomorrow evening.  

One of you, I forget who, 
told me to try to make a couple of Baptists 
out of the Father and the Brother.  
I’m afraid this wouldn’t be possible, 
but I keep them aware of the fact 
that I am Baptist every chance I get 
without being too difficult.  

For instance when I came up here first, 
I was invited over to Mitchell’s for bridge on Sunday night.  
The first time I went because I didn’t want to refuse 
the first invitation I received at Lansdowne, 
but the next time I was invited on a Sunday, 
I asked in a diplomatic manner to be excused, 
because Baptists don’t enjoy playing cards on Sunday.  

Actually, I enjoy a good game of bridge any time, 
but I just thought I would let them know 
what Baptists think about the matter.  

As you can see, I shifted the bridge night 
from Sunday to Saturday by my mild protest.  
Bill Mitchell was telling me 
that it was the Father’s suggestion 
that the bridge night be changed to accommodate me.



 Map of Lansdowne House
Fall 1960
2 ~ Dad's and Uno's Shack
12 ~ Hudson Bay Store
14 ~ Mitchells' House
18 ~ MacRaes' House
29 ~ Usual Path of My Canoe


I also bow my head and say grace 
when everyone else is crossing himself.  
Actually, it is a good experience for me living with a priest.  
I find myself paying more attention to my own religion 
than I would normally.
 
Today was mail day, 
but other than that, it was uneventful.  
There was considerable suspense at first, 
because the sky was heavily overcast, 
and there was a chance that the plane wouldn’t get in. 

But thank goodness the sky cleared 
and the plane arrived three hours late; 
but better late than never, I always say.

There have been no more misadventures 
with the canoe to relate.  
I have been getting along quite well in it lately.  
I can actually get where I want to go now 
and not end up half a mile from my destination.

That’s all for today.
Bye now,
Love, Don





Till next time ~
Fundy Blue.

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree


Colorado has piles of snow 
in the mountains.



Snowy Slope
Breckenridge


But on the high plains, 
not so much.



Sunset
Aurora



Inside it's looking 
a little more like Christmas:


Christmas Tree, 2014















This year it's all about silver and green,
Frostie Friends and penguins ~ 
Yes!  I know the Arctic doesn't have penguins,
but they're so darn cute,
I can't resist!









If you celebrate Christmas or the season,
have you gotten your tree up?

Does decorating a tree excite you,
or do you groan at the thought of it?

Do you decorate the same way every year,
or do you like to change it up?

Here's a toe tapping Glee performance
to get you rockin' around your Christmas tree!



You Tube ~ by Khanh Phan



If that doesn't do the trick
and you need a lift,
go check out Linda's Peaceful Place,
the heartwarming and uplifting blog
of a Montreal blogging buddy of mine ~
who shared these Christmas Tree lessons.






I'm wishing you Happy Holidays
during this special time of year!

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

A Walk in the Breckenridge Woods with the Lovable Labs


When I visit my sister-in-law in Breckenridge,
one of my favorite things to do
is walk along the Burro Trail
in the snowy woods
with her two lovable labs:
Gracie and Rufus.



Along the Burro Trail
Breckenridge, Colorado, USA



On the times I go by myself,
it's a challenge to manage two labs 
with leashes wrapped around one of my hands
while shooting with the other.


Gracie (Blonde) and Rufus (Raven)
as we set out





Snowy Breckenridge on Thanksgiving Weekend


Gracie and Rufus are really good dogs ~
and Gracie waits patiently for me 
to remove Rufus's leash
at the inviting trailhead.


Trailhead


Rufus runs all over the place with pure abandonment!


Rufus


Gracie likes to know where I am,
and she will often come and wait
while I take photographs.


Gracie



Off to Explore



Which Way, Weesie?



You're Making Us Wait
for Another Photo?



Winter Wonderland



Say It Isn't So ~
Time to Go Already!



Black Rufus is so hard to capture!



Breckenridge Ski Slopes



Almost Home



We were soooo good!
How about a treat, Weesie?



You know I can't 
since I've been banned 
from giving you treats.  :(

All those soulful looks aren't going to help ~
Your mom has hidden those treats from me!
She knows how you two
have me twisted around your big paws!




  







We'll go on another walk soon,
my furry friends.

Friday, December 5, 2014

The Lansdowne Letters: Grounded


It’s Friday! 
Time for another trip back in time
via a letter my father wrote
during his time in Lansdowne House.

In a remote bush community
weather impacts everything.
It shapes your life.



Whiteout on Lake Attawapiskat
Painting by Don MacBeath,  Fall of 1960
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue
All Rights Reserved



If you lived in Lansdowne 
or other northern villages,
you knew there would be times
when you opened your home to travelers
at a moment’s notice.

If you were a pilot
forced down by weather,
you could count on northern hospitality
for you and your passengers
until it was to safe to fly again.



Historical Photo of Two Float Planes
Location Unknown
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service


The food might be Spam and powdered potatoes,
and the bed a couch in the livingroom
or a sleeping bag on the floor,
but people generously offered what they had.

There was lots of tea and coffee,
late night conversation,
and warm companionship
while you waited out the weather.


On Thursday, September 29, 1960
my father wrote of such a night
with stranded travelers at Father Ouimet’s mission:

Hi There, Everyone:
Here we go on another edition of the “Lansdowne Letter.”  
I hope it isn’t as full of mistakes as last night’s was, 
and I hope that you are able to read what I wrote.
Please excuse all the postscripts.  
It is just that Uno was using the typewriter, 
and I kept thinking of so many things 
I wanted to say before I forgot them.

The mail may not get in and out tomorrow, 
because the weather is closed in badly tonight.  
There are two planes grounded tonight at Lansdowne; 
and, I should be able to get this edition out 
with the pilot whose name is “Chicago Bill” Kranach. 



Chicago Bill
Photo by Don MacBeath,  Fall of 1960
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue
All Rights Reserved


However, I may not get 
my mail till the end of the week 
or the first of next week. 

That will bother me, 
because I sure look forward 
to mail day.  

It seems that I just live 
from Friday to Friday. 

Mail sure means a lot 
in an isolated post like this.











Father Ouimet was laughing at my worrying 
about the mail being one or two days late.



  Dog Team Near Hudson Bay
Little Churchill River, Manitoba, 1908



He was telling me that when he went to the bush 
the first time in 1940, 
he was at a mission on Hudson’s Bay 
and received his mail twice a year; 
once in February by dog team 
and once in the summer, about August, by steamer.  



Father Maurice Ouimet
Photo by Don MacBeath,  Fall of 1960
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue
All Rights Reserved



The first year his mail 
missed the dog team run, 
and he had to wait till August 
for his Christmas mail, 
including a Christmas cake 
that his mother sent him.  

The cake was in 
fine shape though, 
because she had used 
lots of fruit and wine 
when she was making the cake.










I took some pictures tonight over at the Father’s, 
showing the Father, the Brother, Uno, “Chicago Bill” 
and a Mr. Baker from Geraldton, Ontario. 



Mr. Baker
Photo by Don MacBeath,  Fall of 1960
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue
All Rights Reserved


This Mr. Baker
is an old time prospector 
who finally struck it rich. 

He and a partner staked 
a claim on some property 
that had been declared
worthless by geologists.
It turned out to have fantastically rich deposits of nickel and copper.  

So far, he and his partner 
have realized about $2,500,000.00 each, 
and the mine isn’t fully developed yet.  








He was telling me about it tonight.  
It was only in 1952 that he made his strike.  
Now he spends the summer running a large farm, 
(thereby fulfilling a lifelong ambition) 
and the winters travelling.  
Last winter he was in Australia, 
and the one before, he spent in New Zealand.




Brownie Hawkeye ~ Dad's Camera
wikimedia
I will be sending you 
the pictures as soon as 
they are developed.  

If you want any more pictures, 
you will have to send me 
some more flashbulbs. 

They are almost essential 
to picture taking up here in the wintertime.





Superflash
Google 


The kind to get me is 
SYLVANIA Superflash Blue Dot M-2 Flashbulbs.  
They come in boxes of twelve and cost about $1.50 a box.







Well, I have to wind this up and get to bed.  
It is quite late.
  
I spent a few hours playing cribbage 
with the Father and Mr. Baker.  
The Father skunked me, 
but I managed to beat Mr. Baker two out of three, 
though it was touch and go during the last game.




 Brother Bernier Skunks Uno at Cribbage
Photo by Don MacBeath,  Fall of 1960
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue
All Rights Reserved


Dad with Brother Bernier and Mr. Baker
Cribbage Wars
Photo by Don MacBeath,  Fall of 1960
© M. Louise (MacBeath) Barbour/Fundy Blue
All Rights Reserved


This concludes this week’s edition of the “Lansdowne Letter.”  
Will start the next letter tomorrow.

Bye now,
Love,
Don

P. S.  It was 15º above zero last night.  (15º F. = -9.4 Cº)



Lansdowne House 
West of James Bay
Ontario, Canada
The Attawapiskat River is traced in dark blue.
Lansdowne House is highlighted in yellow, just above the yellow sticky  note.






Till next time ~
Fundy Blue.