Onward to Ontario

2011/08/19

Stopped off at the Mint in Winnipeg and took the tour – I had done this once as a kid but couldn’t remember anything about it.  It was moderately interesting.  I didn’t know that this mint produces only circulation coins (including coins for many countries other than Canada) and the one in Ottawa produces the fancier commemorative type coins.  Also didn’t know what the core material of our coins is these days – for most, it’s steel, including pennies.  Pennies are steel with a microns-thick copper coating.  Cheaper than solid copper.  Even so, about half the pennies made disappear from circulation.

They have this nice display out front of the flags of the countries they do business with:

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I bought a nice coin set from the gift shop for my collection.

Then, onward.

Final impressions of Winnipeg:  It has nice parks, some nice old buildings and is nicely treed, and has a great dessert place.  It has a weirdly high concentration of Tim Hortons franchises and also a high number of small burger joints.  Other than that, it’s about as attractive as a cinder block.  I do not want to live here.

Drove to Dryden today – not a long haul.  Northern Ontario has weird town spacing, if like me you prefer to stay at upscale sleep establishments.  I could do it in ~700km hops or in ~400km hops.  I prefer the latter, since it gives me time to stop and see the sights along the way, so the next few days will be short drives.  And then I’ll be in Toronto for several days.

Dryden is a sad place.  Its skyline consists of one thing: an enormous pulp mill.  Nothing else is more than tree height.  It has a road, a railway, a tiny commercial section and that’s about it.

I have a bad history with this town too.  I’ve been through northern Ontario four times before – twice by rail and twice by road.  One of those road occasions, weather was poor and hotels were more full than usual, and we had a really hard time finding a place to stay.  It was late at night when we finally found a room here in Dryden, and it was crappy.  Not a good night.  We did take in a movie at a nice old theater they have downtown – with original wooden seating and all.  It’s still there, but it wasn’t open today.  I went to the town’s faux Chinoise restaurant for supper and had Combo #5 – sweet & sour chicken balls, rice and steamed veggies.  The chicken balls were good, the rest not so much.

I passed the longitudinal center of Canada today – it’s about an hour east of Winnipeg.  My west-to-east trip isn’t quite at the halfway point though, since I’ll be detouring down to Niagara falls and will also be spending multiple nights in Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal.

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Brandon to Winnipeg

2011/08/17

Not a terribly eventful day; just a short drive to Winnipeg, where I plan to spend two nights as there are some museum type things I want to do there.

Some of the farmers in this area grow sunflowers:

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I took a detour to check out the Spirit Sands desert in Spruce Woods park, but sadly the access road had been washed out – apparently the Assiniboine river flooded rather badly this year.  I did get to check out another, non-sandy hiking area nearby though. Weird landscape:

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Just grass, sage and trees – almost no mid-size shrubberies.

I like this area.  When we were shopping around for our farm, my mother and I looked at property near here.  I thought it was neat that it was basically just small trees growing out of sand, and there was sand everywhere.  Obviously we didn’t buy the place since it would have been impossible to grow anything there, but it was neat anyway.  I found the iron foot of an old claw-foot bathtub near a ruined house on that property, and it might still be in our shed on the farm to this day.

Continued on to Winnipeg, and made the mistake of driving downtown at rush hour. Aggravating.  Got a room for the night, then got a dessert from Baked Expectations at the recommendation of a co-worker – and boy was it good.  I will get more desserts there tomorrow, the next day and on my return trip.

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Russell to Brandon

2011/08/16

Concluded my business in Russell and Angusville this morning.  I dropped by the Russell nursing home to see if I could find Wanda.  She wasn’t there but I left my card for her.  Also: I really do not want to end up in one of those places! Horrible.

Rossburn

Brief stop in Rossburn to document the usual places.  Here’s main street:

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This town is actually holding on better than I expected; only a couple fewer businesses in operation than last time I was here.

Most prairie towns have at least one faux Chinoise restaurant, as a result of the railway work and the forced resettlement of Japanese during the war.  This down has two.  We often ate at this one:

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They had good sweet & sour chicken balls (I didn’t know chickens had balls!) and best of all, a game room.  Played lots of Donkey Kong Junior here.

The other place across the road:

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I didn’t like the food or the game selection quite as much, but they had one real oddity: the Hercules pinball machine, which had oversized balls.

There was also a proper pool hall and arcade, in the foreground building here:

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I don’t remember playing any notable games there though.

On one of the side streets was one of the town’s two grocery stores, which I think was called M&M.  I liked going there because they sold lots of interesting collectable cards and stickers; I bought a lot of Wacky Packages stickers plus some video game themed ones that would be good on Ebay today if I hadn’t actually, you know, stuck them.  Inside the now-ruined camper on the farm.  The Wacky Packages were a major inspiration for my parodical sense of humor.

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Interestingly, the M&M storefront now bears a sign identifying it as an arcade.  I didn’t know about this change.  Sadly, it is in the past; I looked in the window and the store is empty.

Wasagaming

One of our favorite getaway destination when we lived in Manitoba was the town of Wasagaming, on Clear Lake in Riding Mountain National Park. There is a huge and excellent campground there which we used often.  It’s only about a 90-minute drive from the farm so it was pretty convenient.

I find Wasagaming a really relaxing place.  Most of the commercial buildings are log cabin style, and there are lots of nice big trees around – it feels more like a resort than a town.  There’s a nice beach with sand perfect for making castles (a favorite activity when I was young).

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Beside the tennis courts they had these giant chess/checkers sets that were great fun for kids:

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Sadly the chess pieces seem to be missing, and the boards are no longer in very good shape.  Down at the other end of the tennis courts was a playground that I really liked, and while there is still a playground there none of the original equipment remains.

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The lobby of the theater had a Gauntlet machine in it for a while – I spent many hours and quarters in there playing co-op with other kids – co-op video games were a rare and novel thing back then.

Wasagaming is also where I had two of my most unpleasant dining experiences, which affected me for a long time.  Across the road from the theater was a restaurant/deli that is no longer there.  I got a ham sandwich that turned out to be spoiled, though it tasted fine.  In the middle of that night I suddenly sat bolt upright and painted the inside of the camper with it.

The second one was at this place, just around the corner:

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I loved milk, chocolate or otherwise, when I was a kid.  But the glass of milk they served me here had a… thing… at the bottom.  I have no idea what it was.  It was a transparent, gelatinous blob of something.  Sort of like an egg white.  That didn’t belong there and I was grossed out.  I didn’t drink milk again for two years, and actually rarely ever drank it again at all.  Actually, I recently found a very similar blob in a carton of milk in Vancouver.  Didn’t disturb me quite as much since I only use milk for cooking now – there was no danger of drinking the thing – but it brought back the bad memory.

Another bad experience I had in Wasagaming concerned a comic book.  One camping trip I hadn’t brought anything to read with me, so I begged some money from my parents and went into one of the tourist shops to buy a comic.  Their selection was really weird though; everything they had either didn’t interest me or I already had.  So I took a chance on a title I had never seen before.  I don’t remember what it was, but it was awful; violent with graphic blood and gore.  I had never seen anything like that before and it really upset me.

Despite these bad experiences that really stand out in my mind, I still love this town and plan to stop here for a night on my return trip.

Just outside of town is this weird conglomerate establishment called Sportsman’s Park.

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It’s a campground, ice cream & burger stand, amusement park, car wash, weekend flea market, arcade and who knows what else.  We actually attended the flea market a few times, and once I foolishly sold some of my books and comics for money.

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But the real highlight of this place was the arcade.  It was a really good arcade.  Lots of games.  The one I remember as most characteristic of this place was the underrated classic, Pengo.  But I also played a lot of Double Dragon and Street Fighter 1 & 2 here.

Surprisingly, the arcade is still here.  Sadly it’s about one quarter the size it used to be, and the game selection is pretty poor, but I dropped a quarter into Wonder Boy and actually did better than I ever have before.

After having a stroll around Wasagaming and enjoying an ice cream from the same store I did as a kid, I headed on down to

Brandon

Brandon is Manitoba’s second-largest city, and being just under two hours from the farm it was where we went for our semi-monthly big shopping and supply runs.  We always stayed overnight at the Colonial Inn, and I did the same this time.  They used to have games in the swimming pool area, and I played a lot of Klax there, but this time around there was nothing.

We also lived in Brandon for a while, in the winter of 1992-1993.  Having left Toronto due to the recession having cost both my parents their jobs, we ended up back at the farm but didn’t want to spend the winter there, and hoped my father could find work in Brandon.  So we rented this trailer in a trailer park at the south end of the city:

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It was miserable.  It was cold, my room was completely unfurnished and really ugly, and there was no money to spare – seldom even a quarter for a video game.

This being on our way back west after Toronto, I did have my ‘386 PC at this time, and I spent this winter and the follow couple of years writing programs in an attempt to make some money in the shareware marketplace.  One other good thing that happened here is that I discovered a local radio station that played some pretty decent techno at night – that helped get me through the horrible depression of that winter.

On today’s return visit, I can no longer find our tailer; the part of the court it was in has been overwritten by shopping and industrial businesses.  The trailer court itself, though, has grown and is actually pretty nice now, as trailer courts go – decent yards with fences and hedges and lots of large trees.

Just north of the trailer court is one of Brandon’s largest malls.  It’s even bigger now, but it is remarkable only in that it’s where we used to walk for groceries when we could afford them, and I occasionally got to play Trog and Aeroboto in front of the Safeway there. Trog was a good game even though it was basically just Pac-Man with humorous claymation.

And north of that mall – actually sandwiched between the mall and the Colonial Inn – was an arcade in the basement of this building (left of the McDonald’s):

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It was a dark, smoky place and I never ventured to the back, but I did enjoy the unconventional soundtrack and gameplay of Mad Planets and also played lots of Mappy – still one of my favorite games from the era, both for its gameplay and its catchy music.

A few blocks further north, on the other side of the Colonial Inn, was yet another arcade.  I can no longer finds its location, but the best game they had there was Super Dodge Ball, which turned out to be surprisingly fun for a sports game.  I was attracted to it by its use of the Double Dragon character art style.

Continuing the arcade tour, at this still-extant but mostly empty mall downtown:

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I played some Flicky and Pooyan in the mall, and there was also a chain arcade here called Long John Silver’s.  They had a couple other locations including Portage La Prairie.  I played a bunch of Street Fighter II there, plus a unique game I haven’t seen anywhere else: Blob. It must be pretty rare since the KLOV doesn’t know about it and I can’t find any screenshots in GIS. I quite enjoyed it though.

Oh yeah, and at a campground at the north end of the city they had Granny & the Gators and The Pit, which I played because it was weird but didn’t really approve of because the graphics were merely C64-quality – I suspected it wasn’t really an arcade game because of that.  Brandon was a great city for arcades back in the day.

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Here’s the old passenger train station – my father and I bid a sad but hopeful farewell to my mother here one winter, as she went to Toronto on her own to try and find work and establish a beachhead there for us.  It seems to be undergoing renovations now.

Brandon was also home to the restaurant that provided my all-time favorite dessert, but as I blogged previously, that site is now a smoking crater.

One last thing about Brandon – this downtown corner:

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The camera store where my parents bought me my first SLR (a Pentax ESII) is a few blocks from here, but that’s not the interesting thing.  For some reason I associate this corner – actually a particular view of it that I could never have seen in person – with date and time manipulation while programming.  Whenever I work with dates and times while programming – especially with the C# DateTime and TimeSpan types – this corner of Brandon pops into my head.  Weird, huh?  I have no idea how that association could have been formed.  It might have even been formed by a dream.

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My first late friends

2011/08/15

Many fond memories of my time at the farm in Manitoba have to do with the friends I made in the area.  Two of them were Mark and Sonia, siblings born a year apart, from the nearby Olynyk family – close neighbors at 1.5 miles away.  They were also very close to my age.  Sadly, this is my only surviving photo of them, taken from the attic window of our house:

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Cropped:

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Left to right, Mark, Sonia and me.

They were good kids – Mark was earnest and good-hearted, and Sonia had an uncommon intelligence that she mostly hid but you could see in her eyes.  We often went to each others’ places for play dates, but most often they came over to our place, because primitive though it was, it was a better place for us to socialize.

I lost touch with them when we moved away to Toronto, and I don’t recall if we re-stablished any contact during the brief period we returned in 1992.  A number of years after we again left and moved to Calgary, I heard that they had both passed away.  Sonia had needed a liver transplant (cause unknown, but I doubt she was a drinker even in her adult form) and her body rejected the transplanted organ, killing her.  Mark fell off a roof he was working on, and suffocated as a result of the severe asthma attack that ensued.

On today’s return trip, I learned from a neighbor that almost the entire Olynyk family had been wiped out one way or another.  Their older sister Laureen had died, though I don’t recall the cause of death now.  Their father Peter fell down a well, was unable to climb out and died of exposure.  The remainder I don’t know about, but apparently only two of the youngest children survive and are living in Alberta.

I was given the location of their graves – within sight of their home – and went to visit them one last time. The cemetary:

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Turns out they all were married before their deaths.  Not surprising; being single in your late 20s is unheard of here.

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Mark’s grave is just off to the right. His headstone:

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Grave marking technology has advanced.  Thanks to their headstones, I now have more recent photos of them both. Sonia:

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And Mark and his wife Victoria, whom I never met:

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When I received the news of their deaths in Calgary, it didn’t really have much impact on me; I had been out of touch with them for most of the last ten years already.  It was sad, yes, but it didn’t upset me all that much – I feel kind of crummy saying that, but I’ll trust that you know what I mean.

Standing there in this little country graveyard, knowing their bodies were just a few feet away from me under the dirt, was a bit different.  It was a little creepy actually, but it also reminded me much more strongly of how vibrant and alive and physically real they were when I knew them, and of how easy it is to associate self with embodiment.  I have to remind myself that the bodies buried here are empty and useless now; it was the information content therein that made them the people they were, and the sad thing is that that information is now irretrievably lost.  All I can do now is try to hold onto what remaining memories I have of them.

Occasion to once again curse our greatest enemy, death.

 

On a brighter note, the other neighboring family I hung out with, the Melnyks, are doing fine.  My old playmate Joey is married, working in Brandon and buying a house in Forrest.  One of his elder sisters, Jackie, is working at a flax plant south of Angusville and has three boys and the other, Wanda, is working at the nursing home in Russell.  Joey’s older brother, Wally, is still running their farm and is married and has three daughters.  I talked to Wally on the phone and his wife and eldest daughter in person, and visited Jackie briefly at work.  Will try to establish contact with Joey before moving on.

The Farm

2011/08/15

As previously mentioned, in 1982 we bought and moved to an 80-acre plot of land near Angusville, Manitoba.

Roughly half of it is covered by poplar trees, 10% by marshland and the remainder is cleared and arable.  There is a ~hundred-year-old log cabin with a small shed at the northwest corner.  When we arrived, the house was formatted as three small rooms downstairs and two in the attic, and was insulated with a mixture of mud, manure and straw.  There were barn swallows nesting inside since there was no glass left in any of the windows.

We moved in one trip using the largest U-Haul truck available. Here’s us unpacking – you can see the original state of the house to the side:

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Remember when I mentioned the nice wooden camper my father made in an earlier post?  He made it modular, so it could be removed from the truck and replaced with something else.  So we took the camper off and made it a permanent fixture of the lot, and used it to sleep in while making the main house liveable.  My father built a new cargo box for the truck:

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We knocked out all that mud insulation and put in Fiberglas, and put plywood around the outside to block the wind, and glass in the windows.  We also knocked out all the inside walls to make it just two big rooms – one downstairs and one upstairs.  Roof leaks were repaired, telephone installed (at great cost) and a wood stove bought at action and installed.  Then it was mostly livable.  Here’s the furnished interior after all that:

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Keep in mind that we had no running water – we couldn’t afford to have a well professionally drilled, and our attempt to dig our own was fruitless.  No electricity either, and the phone was a party line, shared with two neighbors; the rings were coded to identify the recipients of calls, which meant we all knew when someone else was getting a call, and when making a call we had to check that the line was clear first.  Heat was from the wood stove.  Light from oil lamps, a Coleman kerosene camping lantern, and one electric light run off a car battery and recharged in the truck every few days. Oh, and we never completely eliminated the occasional mouse getting inside – and in the summer, sometimes even the odd garter snake.  The cat loved those – automatic strings!

We brought drinking water in from Rossburn in five-gallon pails.  Bathing was done by pouring water over oneself by cup-fulls while standing in a kiddie pool, and the toilet was a pail with a seat on it that had to be emptied every few days.

Reading by oil lamp has its charm, but its perils too – in the summer the attic sleeping area would have dozens of brown moths making their kamikaze attacks on the lamps, occasionally even succeeding in damping the flame through noble sacrifice.  While the roof was waterproof it wasn’t moth-proof.  Eventually I set up a small camping tent inside the attic, put my bed inside, and read with just my head and arms sticking out of the zipper.  That actually worked really well.  It was also nice because my father installed larger windows upstairs and at night I could lay in bed looking out and up at the stars.  The night skies here are fantastic.

As are the summer thunderstorms.  Sometimes it was like having giants pounding on the roof.  Proper storms are something I really miss in Vancouver; they almost never occur there.

We listened to either music or CBC radio all the time.  Peter Gzowski, Arthur Black and Lister Sinclair are the voices of Canada for me.

Here’s what the exterior of the house looked like after the renovations:

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Note the second chimney.  My favorite story about this place concerns the single winter we stayed here.  On Christmas morning it was -50c outside, -30c inside, and we woke up with icicles where our breath had landed during the night.  I spent much of that Christmas with my winter-booted feet in the oven to warm them.

So we installed an oil drum furnace and made part of the downstairs floor concrete to retain the heat.  That worked really well, but it meant we were burning that much more wood.  Poplar grows like a weed, but it’s still a lot of work to cut and chop it.

My father also built a greenhouse on the south side of the house so we could grow vegetables earlier and later in the year, and my mother and I had gardens in the yard. I was particularly proud of my sunflowers, the tallest of which eventually reached almost 14 feet.

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Roughly in the middle of the property on the east field, there is a rise.  Our plan was to build a new house here.  It would have had this view to the east:

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However, it turned out that there was very little work for my father in the area, and money was always very tight.  This plan never materialized, and eventually we went elsewhere looking for work – one winter to Winnipeg, and the next year to Toronto, where things worked out a bit better.

Oh, that’s Sporty bounding through the cut alfalfa in that photo.  I mentioned in a previous post that I would give his origin story.

Sporty was originally the dog of a neighbor in this area whose name I don’t recall.  That person had trained him as a hunting dog, but was abusive towards him.  He was then adopted by the closer-by Olynyk family, whom we often visited, but there was competition from stronger dogs there and he wasn’t getting his share of the food.

So, presumably at the recommendation of my dog Coal, one day Sporty jumped ship and signed on with our crew.  Gave us a start too – it was a semi-blizzard and we were out for a walk on the road, when we saw a canine shape trotting over the hill behind us.  Thinking it a hungry wolf, we picked up the pace but he eventually caught up.  Imagine this scene, but with a blizzard reducing visibility drastically:

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It wasn’t until he was about this close that we recognized him, with relief.  He stayed with us from then on, and would happily see us off to town by chasing the truck at great speed until he got winded, and gave us equally enthusiastic welcome-homes.

There are tons more stories about this place, but some other time.

Now, to the present. Here’s the state of the house and camper now:

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Some animals (probably lynx or raccoons) have broken into the house through the roof and destroyed everything inside, leaving piles of shit everywhere.  The camper I’m surprised is still standing – ants had already hollowed out the wood a while back.  There are huge ant colonies in this area.  I was afraid to try going inside the house – better to come back another time with automatic weapons and hazmat suits.

 

I got a good feeling of closure from visiting the farm again.  I really like the property itself – it has a nice mixture of trees, clearings and ponds, and nice rolling hills that give it some variety.  It’s a really nice piece of land, but the location is not.  The region and the towns here have nothing to offer me anymore.  I’d rather have this piece of land closer to a major city – I’m not sure I would even want to come here on vacation if there were a nice house on the property.

So: I have lots of fond memories of this place and the area, but they’re memories from my adolescence.  The things that made the place fun for me then are no longer here, and the area has nothing to offer my adult self.  I’m glad I did this, because it has eliminated an uncertainty.

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