THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF KEITH MALCOLM HUNT
Part One
CHAPTER ONE
THE LAND OF SONG— WHICH LAND? No not England; no not Scotland; no not Ireland [though most would pick Ireland]. The LAND OF SONG is— WALES! WHY? Because everyone in Wales sings. The Welsh men’s choir are World-Famous. Why do you not hear Welsh music? Because the Welsh still sing their songs in the Welsh language.
I was born in a small sleepy village called Crynant, in south Wales; near the town of Neath, which is near Swansea. Not too far from the sea and the beach of Porthcawl.
The name Hunt is not Welsh, but Anglo-Saxon; in fact it is one the oldest Anglo-Saxon names on record in Britain. Yet at the same time, the “Hunt” clan lived on the border of England and Wales; so there is a good mixture of English and Welsh in our ancestry. In the 20th century my Dad’s parents were from London, moved to south Wales for work. My Mom’s mother married a Welshman. My Dad and Mom were both born in this Crynant village in south Wales, and I was born there also, on September 11th 1942. Born in my Grandmother’s house.
My Mom said I did not start walking till I was 18 months of age, she wondered if I was ever going to stand up and walk, guess I liked crawling around. Then she said when I was walking she could not keep me from getting over the fence surrounding the house. Back to what she did about it later.
As a toddler, the first thing I remember like it was yesterday—— my Mom holding me in her arms and saying, “This pacifier your sucking on has to go, into the fireplace— there it’s gone.” I was sure upset for a few minutes.
I can well remember the garden my Grandma had— loved digging up a carrot and washing it to eat— wow super sweet they were. And I recall loving to eat the pea pods, they were sweet also. Well everything was organic back then, right from your back-yard.
Can’t remember how I came to love coco with brown sugar, but I sure did.
I do not remember anything about the buddy down the street I played with; my Mom would often ask me when older if I remembered playing with him, I would say no I do not. I often thought that was kinda strange, not remembering playing with him.
I do remember being fascinated with all the small and big live creatures, from the lady-bug to horses. I can remember having lady-bugs on my hands, and the tingling feeling of the caterpillar walking over my arm. The birds I loved, and their singing. I loved the couple of horses in the field only a literal stone throw away. I do remember going into that field with other kids, and seeing the small river going by; I had great respect for moving water, and kept a safe distance away. It was just natural for me at age 4 and 5 to respect water, yet some toddlers sadly do not, and some end up being drowned.
One of the outstanding memories I have like it happened yesterday—— the milkman in 1945 used a horse and buggy. He would deliver the milk to the back door of the houses. He had his horse trained that with a “click” of his mouth it would start moving, when it got to the next row-house he’d say “wowww” and it would stop. He had gone to the back door of the neighbor’s house, and I “clicked” with my mouth, the horse started to walk—— there was no “wowww” so it kept going down the street—— O did I get a tongue lashing from him. Never did that again.
I also remember very well a wedding in the village. I was there outside the church to see them come out. Now it must have been the custom in South Wales, to not throw confetti but coins of money. Wow was I scrambling to pick up as much as I could; I knew what money was, and I’d be off to the “sweet-shop” in the village to satisfy my sweet tooth.
Now back to the time after I learnt to walk. Well Mom could not keep me in the yard, so she told me she said, “Okay Keith, your off to kindergarten.” And I just loved it, anything to move about and see things and other kids. But I do not remember much of it, guess nothing real special happened to keep any memories in my mind about kindergarten.
One more thing I do remember. I was 3 and there was this big party taking place out on the street close to our home—— I realized in later years it was a celebration of the end of World War 2. Nobody told me what this part was all about.
I do remember very clearly the day my Dad came home after the war.
There was this knock on the door; it opened, and there was this man with this neat Navy dress uniform on, and a huge “nap-sack.” It was my Dad. While my Dad and Mom were hugging, I was busy diving into this nap-sack to see what goodies there was for me. My Dad would sometimes tell people that his son Keith was more interested in his nap-sack than seeing him.
The first December my Dad was home, they pulled this on me. It was near to Christmas Day, well the night before, but I did not know what “Christmas” was. The evening before, they stood me in front of the fire place, and said “Now up on this ledge we’ll put a shilling [something like a quarter], and this man in white and red [Santa] will come down in the night and leave you a sweet.
Ya you guessed it, so it was. In the morning they had me again before the fireplace; my Dad put his hand up to the ledge, and out came this candy for me. Wellllll….. you guessed it also—— I fully believed there was indeed a real Santa-Claus. Believed it for some years—— was angry when I discovered it was all a lie.
That’s about it in remembering my first 3 years of life.
My Dad could not find work around this small village; relatives in Halifax, Yorkshire, told him there was plenty of work in the factories there. So we were off to a new town and country.
What made a huge impression on me, was the Steam-engine Train. We had no car; it was travel by bus or train. Standing at the train station and seeing this massive iron train, with all that steam billowing out of it, was breath-taking to me. Then getting inside, the chug to pull away, and then the rhythm of the “chug-chug” was captivating. I loved to run up and down the side corridor. It was great, but I never ever thought about being a train-driver.
Well we arrived in Halifax, at my aunt’s home. I can remember having to walk to the school they put me it, but I do not remember anything about the short time in that school. It was my Dad who years later would sometimes, among friends, tell them about the school-teacher phoning him and saying, “Mr. Hunt, would you please come to school, I need to talk to you about your son Keith.”
My Dad said he thought “Now what has Keith been up to.”
He arrived at school and the teacher said, “Mr. Hunt we asked your son, like other kids, to sand up and count up to ten. Keith stood and counted up to ten in Welsh! We were so mesmerized by his Welsh, all the teachers had him do it again before them all. But could you now please explain to him he must now learn to count to ten in English.”
My Dad had a good laugh. Apparently I had no trouble learning to count in English.
One incident after school was very unpleasant when I was walking home and the main street I had to cross. A dog was run over; I can still see the poor thing lying on the road and blood coming out of its mouth. I had never seen any animal hurt up to this time in my life. I was really sad for that poor dog.
We did not stay long in my aunty’s home.
We were moving into a house that was made for two families, well not quite, we had to share the bath-room.
So now it was off to a new school. I remember the day my Dad walked with me to show me the way, then I would be on my own going and coming home. It was many years later that I found out it was my Dad’s doing to send me to that school—— it was in the domain of the educational system under the CHURCH OF ENGLAND, or ANGLICAN CHURCH.
I was now 6 years of age. I remember just about nothing of the one year I would be in that school.
But one incident sticks in my mind like it’s branded there.
One day in the afternoon, the lady teacher said, “Okay kids we are going to have a race, put your running shoes on.”
A girl and myself were last to leave the room. I said to her, “I’m going to show you all how you run fast.”
What on earth made me say that—— I had never had a running race with anyone. I somehow just knew I could run fast. It was like a still small voice said to me, “you are a very fast runner.”
The race was on, to the wall at the bottom of the school yard and back. I flew off like a bullet; I knew how to do the correct union with arms and legs, like the world-class sprinters do.
I was at the wall and on my way back, while all the others were still heading towards the wall— I had left them as they say, in the dust.
Nothing was said to me. But a few days later I was taken up to the very large grass playing field, near to where I lived. And there were all these other teachers and this tall lad….looked like 12 inches taller than me. They put me on the spot to start to run and him also. They said “When we say ‘go’ then run to the rope 60 yards away.
GO….. I was off as fast as I could—— I tied with the other lad.
It was later that I found out what this was all about. The next school I would move up to at age 7 was the middle-school of the Church of England, ages 7 to 11. They had taken the fastest runner from that school, to see if I was as fast as my teacher must have told them I was. I did see a few teachers smile after the race was over. Guess they kinda knew what to expect from me when I was in the 7 to 11 age school.
I did not disappoint them, for after one year in the middle school, I could easily beat this fast runner in a 60 yard dash race.
During the summer my parents took me to see a cowboy movie—— no TV yet. It was a color movie of ROY ROGERS AND TRIGGER! I just about fell off my seat. Here was this fancy dressed Cowboy on a golden horse with mane and tail of white flowing in the wind, as they flew across the range to rescue a lady on a run-away horse. My eyes were as big as saucers.
I was hooked and captivated. I knew right then and there what I WANTED TO BE WHEN GROWN UP—- THE SECOND ROY ROGERS!
I knew I was born to do that, just as I knew I could run fast when in that race when I was 6 years old.
YES MY MIND WAS MADE UP—— AT AGE 18 I WOULD GO WEST AND BE A ROY ROGERS, AND GET A HORSE LIKE TRIGGER. THERE WAS NO DOUBT IN MY MIND; I COULD AND WOULD DO IT.
………………..
CHAPTER TWO
I was now moving up to middle school, in the Church of England educational system, that is ages 7 to 11.
I have told you how I found nature all around me fascinating.
I entered the class room, we all sat down. We were all handed a book; the lady teacher said this book was the Holy Bible. She told us to open to page one. She began to read….. “IN THE BEGINNING GOD CREATED THE HEAVENS AND THE EARTH.”
Wow….. my mind; it was like a switch had been turned on—— there’s my answer to the wonderful creation all around me—— a being called “God” had made it all!
As the teacher continued to read Genesis chapter one and also chapter two, my mind was in utopia. Yes a being, greater than anything, made all there was, and made the first human beings called Adam and Eve.
I BELIEVED IT!
I knew it had to take a being of unreal reality, so powerful the human mind could not come close to the reality of such a being.
BUT I BELIEVED FROM THAT DAY—— GOD DOES EXIST!
AND in believing God could make all I could see and even things I could not see, there was no problem for me to believe the book I held, the Holy Bible, was the inspired WORD of that God to tell us about Himself, and to instruct us how to love and serve Him.
I WAS IN JOY!
That first year in middle school was fantastic in learning more about this God.
Then within weeks of that school year, there was this neighbor girl, a little older than me, who invited me to Sunday school, at a nearby church. It was a “Congregational” church by its official name; they still had the priest/minister with the “dog-collar” as we kids called it; so it was also for the priests of the Church of England. The Church of England was a break-away from the Roman Catholic church; it was Henry V111 who took England out of the Roman Catholic domain.
In Sunday school I soon learnt about Jesus the Christ. I had no problem accepting Jesus as the Son of God, for I already believed the Bible was fully inspired as the word of God the Father.
I also remember our lady teacher of my class, being super good at teaching us to write; her drawing of how the letters should connect with each other in writing was beautiful, real artistic, and I tried my best to copy her. As the days went on I could match her and began to discover I had some artistic talent. Those were the times when you had an ink-well in your desk-top, and used a reed type pen; some years later I did that fancy pen work….I think called calligraphy [yes look it up] and was pretty good at it.
Through years 7, 8, 9, and 10, I was always entered in the 100 yards dash, come inter-school competitions in the summer time, just weeks before be broke up for the holidays. I never lost a race, in my heats and then the final. My Dad told me once when he came out to watch me run, this man was standing nearby, who did not know my Dad was there next to him; this man with amazement said, “Look at that boy go, his feet don’t touch the ground.”
There are three other things I clearly remember. It was when I was in the second year, so aged 8. It had a man teacher, and a class of 44 students. One thing I both hated and dreaded—— reading out loud through a book, yes for our age, but I was a terrible sight read, just terrible. I would, when it was getting close to my turn, try to figure which paragraph I would have to read—— I usually got it right, and I would be busy reading it over a few times before I had to read it out-loud, yes out loud in front on 44 students. O yes, forgot to tell you this was an all boys school, and it was so embarrassing not to read well with 44 lads hearing you. So sight reading for me was very difficult. I do not know why, just hadn’t got my mind around the English language to read smoothly. I struggled for some years with it.
Once I remember the man teacher wanting to do a little front of the class “play”—— not long. Of course he chose the top of the class boys in reading; guess he thought being so fluent in reading they would make great actors. Well did he ever have a surprise—— they were 100 percent hopeless, actually embarrassing for them; got embarrassing for us listeners also. I was just itching to put my hand up to give what they had to say, a try—- actually I kinda knew I could do it 100 times better than those kids—- but never got the chance.
Another great memory was, I met this kid my age, and me being outgoing, I think he thought I could be the leader of the good side in his pantomime play he would invent for our play-ground play time. So he approached me on the idea—— I said ya why not. Well this kid, I mean was a marvel at making up stories, and directing them. He’d tell us the story and the ending, and I was always to play fight him and kill him for the end of the show. O it was just great fun. Then a little later he invited me to his home on Saturday. He’d made some simple costumes and sticks for sword; there’d be maybe 4 of us. He would always be the villain, and me the super hero. We had some wonderful times. This friend was talented at script writing and directing; he should have grow up to be a movie writer and director. After middle-school I lost touch with him as he moved to another school.
After about a year in middle school, the teachers sorted out the quick bright learners and the ones….. wellll….. no so quick in learning; I was in the latter group. They did correct by moving us into classes that were more suited for our learning abilities. And I was actually very glad, a slower pace with more basics. It was the answer for me, and was soon moving along much better, and near the top of my class, but still not a good sight-reader.
I only remember two other things about my last year in middle school.
It was time to do the dreaded “Eleven-plus Exam”— this one really divided the sheep from the goats. Everyone in Britain had to take this exam. If you passed you went on to “Grammar Schools”— if you failed you stayed in “the regular schools.” Now Grammar schools were the stepping stone to Oxford and Cambridge. The problem with this exam was simple, it was not based on your school work, but on a crazy stupid “IQ” exam, where 3/4 of the questions made no sense to me and to many more. Needless to say most of us did not pass, and I was in, the most of us.
Some few years later when I discovered what these “Grammar schools” were like I thanked the Lord I did not pass that exam, I would have been a fish out of water, and would have hated every minute. But in the “regular” school I was at home, and loved every minute. And by age 12 I was moving educationally very well, and I was always in the top 8 of the 40 student class.
O Yes, some years after I had left for Canada at age 18, Britain “did away” with “Eleven Plus Exams.” I shouted out ABOUT TIME! But is was good for me they had it so I could fail and stay in a “regular” school. I was a cowboy and the next Roy Rogers, so did not want a stuck-up-nose grammar school.
One more big thing for me, and a learning curve, was the last “final” one hundred dash race, for 11 year olds. I had never lost a 100 yard sprint. What starters did black then was to have an even count to fire the gun. There was just this “on your marks” “get ready” “fire”—— all just smooth. So some worldly wise kids knew things, there’s always some who can figure things to get that head start. I’m down waiting for it, the one, two, and three, all nice and even—— two kids knew it; they started just that split second before the gun— they got the two strides advantage.
Of course the starter wasn’t going to call us back, or disqualify them….. I mean to him this was just a kids race, whose bothered who wins attitude. I gained a stride, but came in third.
It was again some years later I found out the sprinters were doing this in the Olympic games for the 100 metre sprint.
Then this was noticed—— and by then they had fancy machines to see how long the top world Sprinters would take to get out of their starting blocks when the gun sounded. They got whatever it is, and knew no Sprinter could do it any faster, if they did it was a science “false start” for them, and two false starts and you were out, off the field, disqualified. Now to make it even fairer the starters deliberately hold the firing of the gun for ex seconds, no longer a one, two, three rhythm. None of the racers know when that gun is going to be fired.
Could I have won my last final race in the middle-school competition that summer, with todays starting methods—— and have been undefeated, maybe, a good chance, but yes it would have been a very close race. I was learning there were other kids as fast as me. It never bothered me as I was not at all interested to be in the Olympics—— I was a cowboy, a Roy Rogers cowboy.
The summer was over, and time to head to the Church of England High School. Four years of school was in front of me. We would normally finish High School at nearly 16 years of age. In Britain back then you started grade one at age 5.
My Grandpa on my father’s side was slowly dying of cancer in south Wales. The day before school we received word he had died; it was a rush to get to our village of Crynant. By then Dad had a car. The driving down to Crynant was 220 miles; no large Interstate Highways then. Winding roads, having to go over the Yorkshire Moore, which could be fogged in and slow driving, then the city of Manchester, a real mess to get through in the early 1950s. It was an 8 hour drive, stoping for lunch along the way.
We arrived; had the funeral.
Back to Halifax, Yorkshire. I was a few days late in school. A Scottish lad was also late. David was his name, a very nice lad. He became by best school buddy, though we did hardly anything together after school. Him and I were put in the C class lower than B which was lower than the A class. Within the half a term, up to Christmas and the first exam, the lady teacher said to David and I, “Boys you have shown we need to put you in class A. After the Christmas break.”
You know in such a situation, with such a huge jump up, I think we were both a little intimidated as what we would find—— like we would end up near the bottom of the class. I admit I was a little scared on that first day in the A class. The man teacher [maybe with help from our previous teacher] did not put David and I on the front row, but actually not far from the back.
It was not long for David and I to realize we belonged up near the top of the class. And when the first exam test came around, we had placed ourself in the top 10 of 44 students.
Now began a wonderful 4 years, well as we shall see, actually 5 years of High School—— and I enjoyed every minute of it; Studies, Athletics, and now learning to play FOOTBALL [you in North America— SOCCER]; and learning CRICKET! Look it up, a great game.
Obviously my male teacher had my background from middle school years. He already knew I could run like a bullet.
Before the Inter-school Athletic Competition came just at the end of the school year. My teacher tells me to meet him on the huge grass playing field Saturday coming at such and such a time. Thought I was going to practice 100 yard sprints. But here I find about 100 kids from my the age of 12 to age 15, again some looking 12 inches taller than me.
My teacher said, “Keith this is a 3 mile cross-country race; you live around here so this is where you’ll be going.” I knew exactly the route from playing all over that area. Manor Heath the huge grass area was called, and our house was not far from it, a stone throw away. There as a big old Anglican church there, and is still there today.
I could not believe he had entered me in a long distance race. I protested, “Sir, I’m a sprinter not a distance runner; never ran any distance race; why are you entering me?”
He said nothing but, “Keith, just get in line and do your best.”
It was READY——GO!
Well everyone shot off like a bull was chasing them; I’m way behind, near the end runners, saying to myself, “I just can’t believe he put me in a cross-country race, this has to be crazy, I’m a sprinter.” I was shaking my head as I ran along, thinking I would probably be in the last 40 runners, even lower down than that, I thought to myself.
About half way many dropped out; they probably had come for the lark of it, to see how far they could get, many just not trained distance runners. Knowing the area, I knew there was this one real steep hill, a cobble road hill, it was horribly steep. I was able to run up it with the pace I was setting for myself. There were lads 1/4, 1/2, way up holding the side of their chests, some bent over, just about stopped, with faces in total agony.
I passed them all, and headed for the school yard we were to finish in for the end of the race. There was this man standing at the entrance and telling everyone their position.
“Ya, you bet” I thought, get ready to hear somewhere around 50th or 60th, or lower still.
I JUST ABOUT FELL TO THE GROUND IN A FAINT WHEN HE CALLED OUT TO ME—— 6TH!
“Whatttt….. I finished 6th out of at least a hundred runners—
I could not believe what I heard him say, I was 6th, but I was!
Again my teacher said nothing to me. A week or so later he did come to me and told me he entered me in a cross-country race for my age group. I was still taken back some—— still trying to convince myself I was only a sprinter.
The day came, nice and mild and sunny. We were off, I was staying up to the leaders this time; then I moved into the lead; made a wrong turn and so the judges had to call me back. I was about 60 yards back; I had to put on a sprint to get up with the leaders again; I made it. We turned the last bend and I saw the finish line. It was time—— my kick snapped in and I was gone—— won the race quite easily.
Don’t ask me why but that teacher never entered me in a long distance race ever again. Maybe he was just trying to see if I had some legs and heart that could do moderate distance. And I guess he had his answer.
Another shock in athletics came at the end of my first year High School and once more the Inter-School Athletics Competition.
I was fully expecting I would be entered in the 100 yard dash. What did my teacher do? He enters me in the 220 yard race.
“Sir, Sir, I’ve never run such a race; I’ve only done 60 and 100 yard dashes.”
Once more he said nothing; he was a somewhat quite man out of the class room.
So now I’m in a race I know nothing about running, and you have no straight starting line— it was the strangest position start I’d never done, a staggered start, like I’d seen in the Olympics.
So here I was again—— we were off, I ran what I thought I should run, until you get around the bend and get to see where you are, who might be in front of you or behind you. I just put myself into high gear and went for it; I had no trouble winning and beat the record time by 4 seconds. Then as I thought afterwards there probably had been no good 220 yard runner, if I could beat it by 4 second. My time for a 12 years old was 26.1 But in those days there was no electronic eye to give you the real time; it was stop-watch and the eye, as to when they thought you had crossed the finish line.
THAT WAS IT—— my teacher never entered me again for the 100 yard dash—— from now on out I was the 220 yard runner for my school, and for the team 440 yard relay.
I was thinking by now that maybe I did have the gift of running fast. I never allowed myself to get vain about it; that was through my number of years now reading the Bible and attending without fail [but for holidays in south Wales or some other place Dad and Mom would take me] the Sunday school classes, and going through the Gospels.
Dad, Mom, and I went off to visit relatives in London. My cousin who was my age, had a few friends in the neighbourhood; we were out on the street playing; someone said “Let’s race back to that wall over there.” Off we all went—— well I was surprised that this one friend of my cousin was neck and neck with me; I was actually stunned some. I requested we do that again, and all agreed. This same lad was neck and neck with me once more right to the wall. I realized there were indeed lads that could run as fast as me.
Then that summer there was an open-air fun day in one of the nice parks near by to where we lived. I was there, and heard they had a foot race for kids ages such and such; I fell into that age group. There was just one other lad to race against. Off we both shot and once more this other kid was right up with me. The judges could not decide who won; they had us do it all over again. Still the second time, the other boy was right next to me. I personally did not know who was the winner. I would have called it a tie once more. I think the judges were still undecided; there were shouts from the spectators—— “the boy with the Holy Trinity vest on is the winner.” Holy Trinity was the Church of England school I attended. They gave the victory to me…but I sure did not know if I won, looked to me like a draw. It was now the first experience of meeting a lad that had a hard time with not winning. When it was time to give out the prizes, he stood with me and said, “I think I won that race.” I realized this really bothered him, kinda felt sorry for him, and looking back now, I should have taken the price they gave me and I should have given it to him. I was a Christian lad and winning was not a big deal, I mean I was not ever going to do anything with my running and athletic ability after High school—— I was a cowboy at heart and the next Roy Rogers.
Being in High school it was now time to put my energy into learning to play Football [Soccer] and Cricket, and learning to swim, as once a week we boys and girls had a swimming class; the boys went on one day and the girls on another day.
Our main teacher was also our gym and sports teacher, well he over-sighted us, never was much good at being a coach of anything, as what coaches usually do. He was a nice guy but basically just watched as we taught ourselves how to play Soccer and Cricket, and learnt to swim. He did have a good eye to see who was doing good at those sports.
Because of my speed he thought I would do good on the “wing” playing Soccer. I did good but for one thing, I could not yet lift the ball up in the air for a corner kick. He soon decided that position was not for me. He could also see I had a natural aptitude to defend; so I was put as “right-half-back” as it was called then; now I think it is mid-fielder. It was the right position for me, and I stayed as mid-field-man for the rest of my High school days—— O yes within another year I did learn to lift the ball up very well and accurate to the front line players.
Now of course when in grade 9 I was now and again put on the school’s Soccer team, but did not do very much, the other kids were older, taller, and more skillful; but I enjoyed and was determined to get better and better. So it was for Cricket and swimming—— getting better and better. Then they started to develop Soccer teams in age groups for all the schools in town.
I practiced and practiced, often by myself, with the Soccer ball, kicking it against a wall and learning to control it. We kids who loved Soccer played it in the school yard at each break time, morning break, lunch break, and afternoon break. We got better and better each week and each month.
Our teacher was watching, as I said he had a good eye, he knew the best kids with the skills for the different positions on a Soccer team. Soon he had our team picked out. We would as class A, B, and C, have an afternoon of Soccer once a week. From there he could make sure who he picked for each position, was the correct one.
I, like may Dad, had a natural leadership ability; I was picked as “captain” of the team, and stayed captain all through High school in our now “Soccer age group teams.” Our team got better and better. The last year of school, grade 12, we were beating just about every team we played against. Unknown to us the powers that be had a knock out time for teams, so the two top teams would play for the championship. Could never figure why all this was never told us, but back then things were done different than schools in North America. Well we got to the semi-final. Now we were told that if we beat the next team we were in the final. Word got around, we’d never played this team. Other kids not in our school would tell us we had no chance of beating them. We were most definitely the under-dog.
The day arrived to play. Half way into the game our team realized the other team was not that super great. Our defence was holding up good; our forwards were doing nicely. I kicked the ball up and out to a forward, our striker was in the correct position, the ball was passed to him; he had a break-away and SCORED— the ball was in the goal net. Our defence held strong—— WE WON THE GAME, one goal to nothing! Wow I thought as captain, we showed all those who said we had no chance of beating this team, that we were good and deserved to be in the final.
So we got to the final—— no we did not win, the team we played did have a real coach who taught them, as I said our teacher-coach was good at picking the right lads for the right positions but he was not a good coach. I look back now and can see that as captain I should have taken more charge in sitting down with the players and going over the art of positioning and playing as a team. We were honored by the Headmaster for getting to the final, and the whole school gave us a big clapping of hands.
Well time to back up now some. I was about 13, and had learnt to swim. I was very good at the “breast-stroke” but did not know how good per se. There was one lad who was a super swimmer, he was not much good at any other sport, but he was a fish in the water. Our teacher did enter him in competitions both in the “free-style” and in “diving.” He always won; I used to love to see him swim and dive, and would go to see him when the competition was local.
We were at our weekly swimming lesson and our teacher said to us, “We are going into a competition; I know who 3 of the team will be; but the 4th….. Keith and….. [forgot the name of the lad]….you will now race for the 4th position on the team.”
My fastest stroke was the breast-stroke, all others did the crawl as it was called then, feel-style it is called today.
We were off, and I was doing my stroke and actually beat the other lad. I was on the swim team. We had not yet developed into young men, so I was able to beat a lad doing my Breast-stroke. A few years later never would have happened.
The day of the event. Our team led off with our great never loose boy, we had a good distance out front; but our next two swimmers, well they just could not keep us out front. Coming up to my turn, the 4th of the team, we were behind about ten feet. I dove in and swam as fast as I could. I was catching up to the front swimmer; those from our school were shouting “Go Keith, go Keith!” Yes I was catching up but just not enough length left; we came second in the competition. Now if the age grouping had been 15 year olds, I probably would not have made it on the team. For boys there is quite the body change from age 13 to age 15. But it was fun for me—— me doing the breast-stroke against the free-style, must have looked odd.
With the sport Cricket, we did not have any inter-school competitions, it was just all the boys divided into what was called “houses”—— so there was the “York house” and the “Barry house” etc. We would then play against each other; so a mixture of ages from 12 to 15 in each “house,”
My local friend in the neighborhood and I would play and play, lots of Cricket over the summer times. I got not too bad at batting, but I did great at “bowling”—— you may have to go on the Internet Youtube and see what I’m talking about. I delivered a good fast ball with a spin. I got very good at fielding, diving and catching Cricket balls being hit by the batting person.
It was in the last year of school that our same man teacher put a team together to play another school team at Cricket. I was again picked as captain. It was a good fun game that we did not win. I was happy to give another lad the bowling job, and did not take him out so I could do it, though more pro teams would have do the change, as our lad was not holding them back from beating us. But I was happy to let him keep enjoying the spot of being bowler till the end.
There was one running event I was really practicing hard for. I was in grade 11. A grade 12 lad had been the champion for two years at the 1/2 mile. He was tall, and pretty vain about it all. I had never entered the 1/2 mile race in our school June track and field competitions. This year our teacher, same man, wanted many of us grade 11 lads to enter. So I was practicing every school noon lunch break. I would run home, it was about 1 mile, and sprint like crazy the last 200 yards or so. Then run back to school. I did this for about two months. I was feeling really great when the day and time came for this 1/2 mile race. The vain champion said, “Is this 4 times around the tack?” He was told no it was twice around [the track was a 1/4 mil]….. his face looked like--- this is easy, only twice around, a breeze.
As I knew he would do, no sooner were we off, he jumped out and into the lead like there was no tomorrow; I sprang into action and did the same, right on his heels. Lap one, I kept on his heels, we had left the other runners well behinds. Now into lap two; around the first bend and down the straight, on his heels. Coming towards the final 220 yards, my domain for four undefeated years in inter-school competitions. I knew I had him; I was still full of packed up energy. This was it….. I said to myself….. time to fly Keith—— and away I went passing him and leaving him in the dust. It was for me the greatest win in my years of track and field. I worked real hard, real hard for it and it payed off.
I’ll finish this part of my sporting life in school with our last inter-school Athletics competition. I was still the school’s 220 yard dash lad. Just before my race was called, this lad walked in front of me with a few buddies of his. He muttered, “We’re coming after Hunt today.”
I knew what he was meaning—— of course he was trying to mentally psyche me out. I knew he had practiced hard for this race, just as I had practiced hard to win that 1/2 mile race.
For the first time I was on the outside lane. You do not see the other runners till the straight-away, and so do not know how the stagger will form as you head for the finish line. We were around the bend and heading for the tape. I could see he was right up with me….. 30 yard to go…..20 yards to go…..10 yards to go….. he was right up with me. All I could do now was to move my legs as fast as I could, and only a yard from the tape push out my chest….. I broke the tape before he did; I had won, but just, only just….. it was the closest 220 yard dash I had ever been in during all the years in High school.
I had to admit I kinda felt sorry for him; no doubt he had worked and worked hard to beat me; he just about did it. I know he must have felt terrible to come so close and not win the race. I was going to do my best, as I do in all things I’m doing, but if he did beat me I was okay with that. My school life was just about over, and my next phase was soon to begin; I was a cowboy at heart and the next Roy Rogers; running and racing for me was now over, it did not matter for me if I lost or won. All my sporting stuff was fun while I had to put in time to grow up and head out West, but my goal in life from age 7 was to be the next Roy Rogers.
Time to move back to my younger years.
………………..
CHAPTER THREE
I’m going back over my childhood to my upper teens in my music life.
My Dad had records, the old carbon type, so I was born into parents who loved music. Both my Dad and Mom were good singers. My Dad had super rhythm— he could play the spoons [yes those you have in the kitchen with knives and forks] like terrific. So not really surprising I found at age 8, 9, 10, I had a good singing voice, and loved to sing songs from movie musicals I saw at the movie house. There was this British guy called George Formby, a comic guy. He made lots of movies and would sing these nice silly songs and strum on his uke-banjo. It was like a regular banjo but had a much shorter neck.
I turned 9 in September and requested for Christmas a uke-banjo.
I was not disappointed, my parents did buy we one. It was one of the very best Christmas gifts I was ever given. It came with a nice case and a music book with George Formby songs; the chords above the words. I set about learning all the basic chords.
I payed on that instrument till I was 11 years old.
Then came this man on TV who played the guitar, lead guitar as it is now called. His name was Bert Weedon. He played guitar in this popular Dance Band, and now and again because he was so talented at picking the guitar, they would feature him playing a song or tune. He was masterful. Then he would show up on the radio backing up singers. Then the early days of Rock’ n Roll came into being. Bert left the Dance Band and formed his own quartet. They played all over the place—— TV, radio, night clubs around England and Wales. He loved playing jazz. So Rock’ n Roll gave him his outlet to just rip-it-up on the guitar. The electric guitar had come into being. Bert was a hit everywhere.
I wanted to learn the guitar Bert Weedon style. He also had a masterful unique sound playing love songs. So I was even more impressed.
I told my Dad I wanted a guitar. He said, “Okay we give you pocket money, save up for one.”
My parents did not spoil me as an only child.
I had seen a guitar in the music store down town. I walked in and asked the guy if he would keep it for me, as it would take about 4 or 5 weeks for me to save up the money, he said, “Sure thing I can do that for you.” And he did. About 5 weeks later the guitar was mine. I got a Bert Weedon guitar instruction book and set about learning. I was also taking music in school, which helped a great deal.
I was about 13 when my “voice broke” as we would say. I could no longer sing, and knew it would be a few years or so before my voice would come back to me as an adult voice.
At the same time in Britain there was this man yodeling cowboy songs, and love songs with a falsetto like from another world as some music critic would say. His name was Slim Whitman from the USA. My Mom brought home some of his big hits, the old carbon 78 records. Well I thought he was the greatest, and immediately became a loyal fan, as I am to this very day. Back then he had this guy in his band playing the Steel Guitar [you play it with a steal bar on the strings like they do for Hawaiian music]. This guy had a sound on the Steel guitar that was unique. Now I wanted to learn to play the Steel Guitar.
There was an ad in the paper from a Music School in London that would teach you to play just about any musical instrument, and yes, they had a course for me on the Steel Guitar. Wow…. That course was fantastic. It taught me how to play from regular piano music, and a whole lot more.
So for my middle teenage years I was busy learning to play both the regular guitar like Bert Weedon, and the Steel guitar, and music to boot.
Those music years were just super, and not knowing then, but they would come handy in my future young adult life.
There was one more great experience for me in my teen years.
I was doing a little song in front of my “church” audience for a fun night—— The Little Lady who swallowed a Fly—- a comic song. I was about 12 or 13 at the time. Unknown to me there was a lady in the audience who was looking to replace her son in her charity “concert party”—— many young ones doing funny skits, singing songs, reading nice poems, and some dancing girls. A few days later she asked me to come and see her. She explained about her concert party, and how they went by coach to different churches around the area, some close by and others further way, to give them entertainment. Mrs Storey was her name. She asked me if I would be interested in joining her group. I said yes I would.
The concert party acting was great, and I loved doing the skits.
Then some months later she told me she was an “Elocution” teacher. That is the skill of pronouncing words correctly, it was the “Queen’s English” as Queen Elizabeth took elocution lessons to speak the way she does; the Queen was not born speaking like that. So when you hear her speak, that is from having elocution lessons.
Mrs. Storey wanted me to take elocution lessons from her. I said okay. It was quite the experience for the next number of years, I think till I was about 16. She taught me to recite long and short poems, and just general acting abilities. I went in for elocution exams and was always in the top 90s. I won some competitions along the way. And still have my diplomas, through the various grades.
My teenage years with sports, athletics, learning music, learning the guitar, and steel guitar, lessons in speech, and acting, was far from boring, far indeed. My teen years were a huge learning curve. And I enjoyed every minute of it.
And remember through all of this I was a dedicated Church and Sunday school attender. I loved the word of God, and the teachings of Jesus in the four Gospels.
More to say on all of that and another large regular part of my teenage life, next time.
………………..
CHAPTER FOUR
There was another important influence on my life as a youngster and into my teens—— the Boy Cubs and especially the Boy Scouts.
I do not remember anything from my few years in the Boy Cubs, I guess nothing happened of any importance to stay lodged in my mind.
The Boy Scouts was a different matter entirely; also the length of time in that organization was much longer than the Cubs.
First I loved the Boy Scout uniform, kinda fancy I thought it was, and so reminded me continually of the fancy cowboy clothes Roy Rogers would dress in. The Scouts had this neck piece that was to me a kind of cowboy neckerchief. I guess some of all this was the romantic mind-set of a fine uniform you could wear.
I was as faithful in attending Boy Scouts night in my local church, as I was in attending Sunday school. Back then most Boy Scout clubs were part of a church’s outreach to young kids and to teens.
I well remember all the practical things I learnt while in the Boy Scouts. Basic first aid; different rope knots; nature things we would study and draw. There was the regular camping trips in the summer time to far away places over the Yorkshire county. How we cooked on wood fires; dug holes in the ground for when nature called; dug small trenches around our tents so if it rained the water would not come inside the tents. There was the hiking we would do, actually that was the only part of the Boy Scouts I did not like. I was never into hiking. May seem odd considering my activities in sports and athletics; but I just did not like the miles of hiking we would do at times. Once we had a week in the “Lake District” of north-west England, a lovely scenic area, where the mountains not of great hight, but they are rugged, and people come from Europe to practice their skills with ropes etc. to get to their summit. We did a day hike to the top of one mountain; it was rocky and rugged at the top and not very wide, I remember being somewhat scared and was glad to get down to the valley again.
Our Scout hall was the bottom half of our church, where we also had a stage for entertainment times. We would play energetic games, one was having a broom and a ball; it was one on one, you were to get the ball into your opponent’s goal, a couple of chairs spaced about 4 feet apart. I can remember having many a context with the Scout master, my speed made me a strong opponent, and I sometimes won.
We learnt to use a compass, and many other things over the years. There was this one competition our Scout master put me and some other lads into. I was made head of our little group, think it was 5 of us. Well just about all the Scout groups in our town were entered; that must have been about 40 groups. So we started through the course they had laid out for us, to do certain things as we moved along, I know one was using a compass, forget what all the others were. When finished I thought to myself, “Don’t think we did very well.”
It was about a week later, and I was at some function of our church with the other lads who were at this competition with me. An adult came in and said, “Are the Scout kids here who were in the recent competition?” I answered, “Yes we are here.”
“Well get yourself up to….. [forgot the name of the building up the road from us] …. You WON the competition!”
I was astonished, I thought we’d not come anywhere near winning.
We did not have on our Scout uniforms. What an embarrassment it was going up and on to the stage to receive our first place certificates.
I remember very well one Scout night. I was walking to our Scout hall, when the 2nd in command Scout leader came alongside me on his motor bike.
“Come on jump on behind me, I’ll give you a ride the rest of the way” he said to me.
I did just that…..but wow…..I was sorry I did. I was only about 12 and never been on a motor bike—— the speed he went [nothing over the speed limit] just about scared the pants off me.
There were many “badges” you could get in the Boy Scouts. You did certain things of some skill and time, and you got a badge to put on your Scout shirt. One badge I went for, can’t remember what it was called. You and another Scout friend were to go for two days camp in some farmer’s field, no one there only the two of you. The Scout master arranged with the farmer to have you. It always included a bus trip and instruction how to get to this farmer and his field. You never met the farmer; you were both on your own. The lad I went with was a buddy of mine for many years, so we thought it would be fun to get this badge. It all went well; got to the farmer’s field okay; set up our tent at the bottom of a slight hill; dug trenches around it in case of rain. Good job we did, for no sooner had we done this and down came the rain—— for the whole 2 days. We were like drowned rats as they say, after two days. And we somehow had to build a fireplace to cook our meals on. We got through it and received our badge but it put me off trying to get other badges.
There was the yearly “Bob a job week”—— You dressed in your Scout clothes and went from door to door, asking if they had a job to give you for a bob— shilling— back then maybe 50 cents. This was done in the summer time when out of school, for a few weeks. One summer I was determined to really go at it and bring in the most money anyone had ever done in our Scout group. I had great weather that year, and a great response from people—— got all kinds of job offered to me, and I did indeed reach my goal; largest amount of money brought in; it all went to charity; that was the idea behind it all—— money for charities.
The Boy Scouts was terrific overall, really enjoyed all the years I was with them. I was 16 when I left the Boy Scouts.
It was during the 3rd year of High school, and my Dad knowing I liked fitness, said to me about 3 times, “You should send away for the Charles Atlas Health and Strength course.” Atlas had ads all the time in British papers about fitness. He was the first Mr. World way way back. And a famous “strong man”—— pulled a huge iron steam train ex number of feet once, and did other strong man stuff. He was 5’ 10” but had a 47 inch normal chest, big powerful arms and shoulders.
I finally did send for the Atlas course and it was super good, and made me a pretty good body over a years time. He was also strict on eating good wholesome foods, one point he really emphasized—- stay away from white flour products like the plague, there is no norishment in white flour. And sure enough then and today you have millions upon million eating white flour products—— white bread, white buns, white cakes, white donuts, white flour spaghetti, white flour this and white flour that—— it’s all over the place and we wonder why we in the Western world are overweight and obese, and sick. I have stayed away from white flour products since I was given the light through the Charles Atlas. His 12 lesson course is still available—— look him up on the Internet.
The 4th year of High school we had a new teacher, a lady, maybe near 30 years old, and very attractive. She discovered my ability in speaking and acting and music. She wanted me to join the local actors gild. She asked me three or four times. I kept saying no. Yes I could have joined and could have gone on to maybe London Arts and Acting. Maybe a Welsh-English new kid of fame on the British acting circle. But what I did not tell her was, “Thanks and I know you mean well for me, but I’m really a cowboy and the next Roy Rogers.”
So I have covered all the physical stuff I did from a kid to finishing High school. Just one thing to cover in the context of High school.
The last year— the 4th year would normally have been it, finished. But during that last year, the headmaster came to our class of 44 kids [boys and girls - class of 1958 - a small High school], and said to us, “Well students the educational system is going to introduce a certificate called ‘College of Preceptors’—— now if your interested you will need to come back for another school year after summer. I’ll give you a day or so to think about it.”
We thought, he came back a few days later, “Well who would like to go for this certificate and another year of high school?”
We ALL put our hands up, not one student said no.
I think back now and see that education in that Church of England school was fun. The teachers were great. The sports stuff was great. Well not one student said no. We all came back for one more year in High school. And we all got the knowledge from the teachers to get that certificate.
The exams were at the end of the school year and we’d get our certificate in the mail. Any subjects where we got honors would be marked in red next to the subject. I received mine some few weeks into the summer—— I did honors in English and Music.
The English one was a real surprise to me, never thought I’d get honors.
But when I stopped to think about it, the English stuff we did in that extra year was nothing to do with spelling, and technical stuff on verbs and adjectives and nouns, some yes, but more on composition, writing, sentencing, getting things across to others like being an author, and I had for most of my High schools years enjoyed all of that part of “English.”
The last day of school was kinda sad but kinda good; one section of my life was now over. I would be 17 in a few months, and only one year away from heading West to work with western horses and western songs and be the next Roy Rogers. Back then there was no “graduation party” —- it was, well this is the day to say goodbye to High school. Walk home and look for a job for a year, before going to the Canada Immigration Office.
O yes I had started horse back riding lessons during my 4th year of High school. Yes never been on a horse’s back till then, but no worries I knew it would come easy to me. Like when I was 6 and knew I could run fast. I knew I could be super good on horse back; one ambition was when I got out West, was to learn to trick-ride.
There is yet the most important part of my young life to explain in some detail—— next time.
………………..
CHAPTER FIVE
I told you early on that at age 7, I moved up to the middle school of the Church of England educational system, and it was on that first day of school, that we were given a Bible. The teacher read to us Genesis chapter one and two. I told you when she read “In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth…..” A light bulb went off in my head—— it was the answer to all the wonderful creation I could see around me. It was all made, created by a being the mind could not really grasp, a being called “God.”
From that very day I believed there was a God being. And if He could create this whole universe and our earth with all its beauty and massive array of creatures in the sky, earth, and sea, then He could inspire people to write down His words in the Holy Bible— His word then would be fully inspired, without contradiction, and it would not only tell us about Himself, but also how we should live.
The creation around us should tell us someone, some being, brought it all into existence, just having it evolve even over billions of years, as I found out some believed when I was about 10 years old; that idea made no sense to me, I actually laughed at it when first presented to me. I thought how on earth do you have an apple seed evolving and different from an orange seed; how do you have a seed that grows into an oak tree, evolving differently from a seed that grows into a thorn bush; how do you have a banana seed tree growing differently from a coconut tree; how do you have a seed that grows into a blueberry bush evolving differently from a seed that grows into a raspberry bush; and how do you have a caterpillar telling itself to devise a cocoon and melt itself into a butterfly????
On and on my mind would reason, and even more so as I grew in age, I laughed at evolution.
I was shocked at age 9 when a teacher in this Church of England school in one class, started to tell us about how modern mankind came about by a gradual slow transition from a monkey to an ape to mankind. I could not believe what I was hearing from this guy who was a teacher in a “Church” school trying to tell us we evolved from apes. I just about went to him after the class to confront him on his teaching compared to Genesis chapter one. I was a kid who never backed down….I was disgusted at his teaching, and I had no respect for him from then on out. Fortunately I did not have to sit in his class very often, and eventually not at all, as they moved us around to separate the “gifted” ones from the not gifted; I was in the latter group, which thinking back now, God had it all planned for me that it was to be this way. Certainly at age 9, I could see my only gift was running fast, and getting to be good at writing and at artwork.
As the years moved along in that middle school, we were taught by our main teacher we had, to move through the book of Genesis; some great stories in that book. Then we moved into Exodus when I was 8 years old. O indeed the story of Moses and the children of Israel coming out of Egypt. We arrived at chapter 20 of Exodus. We read the 10 Commandment—— I do remember how I thought they were terrific; my mind could imagine how wonderful the world would be if all nations obeyed the Ten Commandments.
Our lady teacher said, “Okay boys [this middle school was only for boys; guess the girls had their own middle school], I want you to memorize the Ten Commandment, every word as it is here in the King Jame Bible.”
I set out to do so and only in a day or two I had every commandment memorized word for word, and that of course included the 4th one [see it in Exodus 20]. Will come later to the incident in Sunday school about the weekly Sabbath commandment.
Through ages 9 to 11 we covered Exodus, Joshua, some of Judges, the stories of Gideon, and Samson, first and second Kings; the story of Samuel, Saul, David and Goliath….well of a David’s life. We covered all of those interesting lives of men and women. All the things that a young child up to age 11 would really get into with their imagination.
From ages 7 to 11 the first half hour of school was in the Bible—— I loved it!
Then at the same time, over those same years, I was attending a local Sunday school in a “Congregational” church [that was its official name].
We naturally were learning about Jesus Christ, and reading parts of the Gospels. We had cut-outs of Jesus and his disciples.
As we got older—— 10, 11, 12; our Sunday school man would get us talking about things in life; asking us what about this situation and that situation, what would we do. I well remember by age 12, 13, 14, we were into some really great deep conversations about Christian life. O yes must back up a little—— by about age 11 I had accepted Jesus as my Savior. I indeed had a deep relationship with the Father and His Son Jesus. I loved the Bible.
I well remember Billy Graham the evangelist coming to Britain. Now remember Britain at the time was quote “religious”—— towns closed down on Sunday. Billy Graham came on TV and preached Jesus as Savior. I thought to myself, well you ain’t telling me anything I do not already know. He would speak about Jesus becoming very personal to you. I thought to myself, you ain’t telling me anything I do not already know.
I already had a personal relationship to God the Father and with Jesus Christ.
I thought well okay it is good someone like you is teaching that, in a huge stadium with thousands in attendance, and all this on TV all around the British Isles. But it ain’t news to me, I’ve believed this for years. So Billy Graham was no big happening to me. Kinda put him out of my mind and got on with my Christian life and school and sports.
It was I think at about age 12 that what I’m going to relate to you happened.
Sunday school was starting; we were all in our various classrooms. The teacher was marking the attendance sheet. This kid next to me said, “Sunday is not the 7th day; my dad told me Sunday was the first day of the week.” I could not believe what he said. I replied, “O that is crazy, just not so.”
“Yes, my dad told me Sunday was the first day of the week; and Jews keep Saturday.”
I thought who on earth are Jews to observe the 6th day of the week.
Then I said to him, “Your dad is wrong, can not be correct, for the 4th commandment says we are to observe the 7th day of the week, clear and simple.”
The teacher at my words, looked up with a shock on his face and immediately got us all changing the subject.
I walked away from that class, still believing Sunday was the 7th day of the week, and the lad’s dad was very wrong—— I put it out of my mind and never thought about it till I was 20 years old—— come to that later.
I think it was about age 14 that I started to attend the regular church service, after Sunday school. So I became a regular 11 am church attender.
In the Church of England school we would at certain times of the year, like Easter time, well a day or two before, all of the school go to the Anglican church for a service. We would all walk because it was only about half a mile away. From the beginning of that, well maybe it started when I was about 8 or 9. Anyway whenever, I was somewhat amazed at all the fancy dress the priests were in, all the rituals, and all the mumbo-jumbo [found out in time] of the Latin being spoken. It all just did not sit well with me. I could not see anywhere in the Bible, well New Testament [the Old had its Temple and priests] for sure, that such rites and dress and mumbo-jumbo talking was part of original apostolic Christianity. But I was there as was the whole school, so I would really enjoy the hymn singing, and put my heart and soul into it, so much so that after one service [where adults were there also] this lady came up to me after the service and said, “You really liked singing those hymns, I could see you just putting your all into singing them.”
I thanked the lady and told her, “Yes I do enjoy singing the hymns.”
She walked away with a smile on her face.
So I was now attending regularly the local church’s 11 am service.
It was about a year later, so I’d be 15, that a lady member, who knew me from way back attending Sunday school, came to me after one Sunday service and said, “Keith I’ve watch you for years attending so regular, so I have a little gift for you. Here is the New Testament, with red letters for the words of Jesus.”
Wow O wow!! Was I thankful to her. I had never seen a Bible with the words of Jesus in red. It was a treasure to me for the rest of my teenage years. It was now so simple to read the words of Christ—— they were in red—— WOW GREAT!
That New Testament was my close companion; I would read some of the words of Christ at bedtime, reading it and then lights out and sleep time.
I must have read the four Gospels dozens of times over my years to age 18, when I left to come to Canada.
I never heard from the Church of England or the local church, that Jesus was going to return to earth one day. Not any person, priest or teacher, ever talked about the return of Christ.
I was now reading over and over the words Jesus in red, and reading into the book of Acts. I could see that Jesus and the angels in the first chapter of Acts, said He would return in power and glory— Matthew 24 I read many times.
I was standing in the local church congregation one Sunday, a friend of mine next to me, and adults all around. I told my friend the New Testament tells us Jesus is coming back to earth one day—— this man looks around at me with a shocked look on his face—— I knew he did not believe it would be so. The man never came to talk to me about what I had said, but I hope he went away to think about it and maybe look for himself.
The God in heaven showed me a number of things during my teen years that the Church of England and the local church never talked about. For instance, here I was going to the “Holy Trinity” Church of England school, but never had anyone tell me what the Trinity was. I was reading the New Testament red letter edition, and never, just never ever, saw the Holy Spirit as an individual person up in heaven, next to the Father and Son. O I saw where Jesus ascended back to heaven after His resurrection, and was sitting on the Father’s RIGHT HAND! But I never saw where a third individual called the Holy Spirit was sitting on the Father’s LEFT HAND, or sitting ANYWHERE in heaven!
It was not till I was in Canada and going to a Baptist church, and the minister came to visit me and somehow we got talking about the Holy Spirit, and he said it was the third person of the Trinity in heaven. I literally LAUGH AT HIM! He got a little embarrassed and never continued that part of our conversation. He seemed happy to drop the subject.
I was 17 and had to work for a year or so before setting off for western Canada.
I worked for a short time in a leather factory; interesting work it was, and I learned some shoe-repairing from a man there who was skilled in that work.
Then I worked in an office with two young ladies my age. They were very nice and one was engaged to be marries in the not too distant future. Maybe into 6 months working with them [just us 3 in that office] I told them I played the guitar and sang cowboy songs, and I loved the singing of Slim Whitman. It was only a few weeks before leaving for Canada I told them the news. They said “Please bring your guitar and sing us a song.”
I did do that, and sang them a Slim Whitman song called “WHY.”
The first part goes like this:
“Why am I lonely when I’m without you; why am I blue when we’re apart; Why does my heart feel a fool about you; why did I love you from the start”
Weeellll..... I sure had two huge fans for two weeks.
Six months before singing to the two girls I had gone to the Canada Immigration Office, to put into action what I had planned from age 7.
………………..
CHAPTER SIX
It was a few days after my 18 birthday; I caught the bus to Leeds, Yorkshire, I was on my way to the Canadian Immigration Office.
I walked in to be greeted by two middle-age men.
I said to them, “I would like to immigrate to Canada, BUT to WESTERN Canada”
“WUPEEEE! A young man wanting to go to Western Canada, and not Toronto or Vancouver” they smiled with enthusiasm, “Are you willing to work at anything?”
“Yes indeed I am” I said with confidence.
Back in 1960 it was as easy as pie to immigrate to Canada.
They talked to me a little while, and finally said, “We’ll probably send you to Winnipeg. We will be in touch with them; come back in two weeks for your medical.”
Two weeks later I was back in their office.
“Well we’ve been in touch with Winnipeg, and they don’t want you. They told us to send you to Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.”
Well that sounded great to me, I mean it sounded so Cowboy and Indian—— took me a few days to learn to say Saskatchewan.
They gave me a “small-pox” vaccination, as it was around here and there.
That was it, as simple as that. I guess I must have told them later I was going to go by ship, and the date of arriving in Montreal, then on the train immediately to Saskatoon, arriving on such and such a date, for the immigration guys in Saskatoon met me at the train station—— but that’s getting ahead of things.
I booked with Cunard ships Southhampton on May 16th and to arrive at Montreal May 23rd.
Till then I was working in that office with the two young ladies, enjoying our working time together.
I was taking horse back riding lessons once a week. As I knew, it all came natural to me, like I was born on a horse. We did a few “trecks”—— 3 or 4 days staying overnights at Hotels with horse stables. It was all fun, though it was English riding, that’s all there was back then, now they have Western Stables in Britain. But English was okay and it stood me good for decades later when I wanted to do some show jumping.
So the time came for my parents to drive me Southhampton.
Dad said we should go a few days earlier, to visit relatives in London; I had a few cousins there. And so it was. We went to see Buckingham Palace. I was surprised to see how dirty it was the large iron fencing and the Coat-of-arms— just dirty.
I then realized of course it would be because of all the famous “smog” London had in those years—dirt form industry and coal fires from people’s houses. When I came back to visit 12 years later, they had brought in the “green zones”— no burning of coal, all industries had to have no smoke coming out of their chimneys, and so all buildings were sand-blasted. Buckingham Palace being one of the first to be sand-blasted, and have all the iron fence and Coat-of-arm re-painted— it now looks terrific.
So came the day I boarded the Cunard ship. I waved a goodbye to my parents and I was off to start my long plan from age 7, of going West and being the next Roy Rogers.
I had my guitar with me, and settled into my kinda small bunk bed quarters. We only had about 200 people on that ship. What do I remember? Well first of all we had sunshine for all 7 days crossing the Atlantic, and the sea was as smooth as a baby’s bottom. Second—— wow, the food was out of this world! And I at age 18, could eat three big meals a day and not gain an ounce. Then lastly I remember they had a movie theatre, and I went to see a movie each day. I did meet a few people I got friendly with, who were surprised a kid of 18 was going so far away from home. I’d entertain them with a few songs on my guitar.
I do not remember much else about that 7 day sea crossing.
When we arrived at Montreal I was told to go over to the Immigration people right on the dock-side. I remember the man saying to me, “How much money do you have?” I told him I had 60 Canadian dollars, and was happily surprised to hear him say, “Well done, very good.” Guess $60 in 1961 was a lot, or at least enough for him to give me encouraging words.
He stamped my pass-port as landed immigrant!
I was out on the street waving down a taxi—— to the train station please. Thinking about it now, I must have already had my train tickets through the immigration office in England. I was on the train for Saskatoon, the same day I birthed in Montreal.
I had a bed-birth on the train, for it was going to take 3 days to arrive at Saskatoon. I had never seen a train like this one. A sleeping cabin, and a dinning coach for meals….. it was great, as I’ve told you I loved train travelling.
I met some folks heading my way and further. They were all shocked that I was only 18 and heading out by myself. I realized later that in North America 18 is just finishing High School and thinking about University, not heading out of your country into another one, where you have no relatives, where you know not one person, and then have to find work of some kind. Of course they obviously knew I was not a “University” minded young man.
The first 2 days I found to be boring, nothing but trees and lakes, and the trees were all the same kind. It was the third day as we were approaching Winnipeg, the tree line stopped and the wide open prairies were around us. I remember looking out my room and shouting “Wupppeee! I’m finally HOME!” I had waited since I was 7 years old to greet this day—— finally OUT-WEST!
It was a Friday morning when the train pulled into Saskatoon, the local immigration guys , two of them, met me at the train station. They took me to their office, where you could look down on one of the main down-town streets.
“We have got you board and room, they will be expecting you. Look out this window, that is 2nd Avenue. You walk down there till 2nd Avenue and 3rd Avenue meet; look to your right and find house number 820; they will be expecting you. O yes and as you go, you will pass the Hudson Bay Company Store, go in and fill out an employment form.”
That was it with the two men, never saw them again.
I did indeed fill out an employment form with the Hudson Bay Company.
I was greeted very nicely by the elderly couple running the board and room house. There were also some other young guys there, two of them from Germany [forgotten now why they were in Canada], and a few men thirty-ish in age.
I could not wait to get to the Western Stables and horse ride in a Western saddle. The next day I found out where it was and out I went. It was a wind-storm, blowing the dust around like I’d never seen before. The lady [the wife of the owner] must have thought this wannabe cowboy English kid is nuts, who would come out in a dust storm to ride.
Margaret was her name, and so very kind and polite. She showed me how to cinch up a western saddle on the horse. I was out in the wind of a dust storm—— well out for about 100 yards, and it came to me I was crazy doing this; turned the horse around and it was very happy to run back to the stable.
I was invited in to the trailer where Margaret and her husband lived, their last name was Spence. Mr. Spence was away doing something. Margaret and I had a nice conversation. She was one of those cowboy ladies that make you feel right at home, we hit it off as they say, They had no children I found out, and maybe they kinda adopted me, for I became one of their kids that hung around their stables, when it was not a dust-storm.
I told Margaret I would be back tomorrow if the weather improved. It did and I was back and I then met Gordon Spence; everyone called him Gord. He was I learned “Mati” - half Indian and half Anglo-Saxon white. I soon found out over the next months, what he did not know about horses and could do with horses, was not worth mentioning. It was the very best place the immigration could have sent me—— to Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
Monday morning I had a phone call from the Hudson Bay, they wanted to see me. Tuesday I was there. They wanted a young fit guy to work in their “receiving department” where the boxes come down the rollers from the trucks above. I was to unpack them and hand the packing slip to a lady who would file and invoice it all. Then the merchandise I would send on down the rollers to the ladies you stamped the price on them.
I did get the job. And the next day I was working. Four days in Saskatoon and I had a full time job. I was told by the immigration in England that the cost of living was about twice as much as in England. I was getting about $12 a week in Canadian money when working with the two girls in that office. So I figured I would be paid about $24 by the Hudson Bay. When they told me I would be paid $42 a week to start, I thought I was a millionaire.
That summer a young lady was selling her Thoroughbred 6 year old mare, a beauty to look at, for $150 I bought her. Then I bought a Western saddle, all engraved, for $150. I had a horse and saddle by the end of that first summer.
I was in seventh heaven!
Just the start of my living in Saskatoon.
………………..
CHAPTER SEVEN
I was only four days in Saskatoon, Canada, and I had found a full time job, working in the receiving department of the Hudson Bay Company.
The man in charge of the department was a Mr. Kincade, he was about 30 years of age, had a wife and two small children. The ladies down the rolling-lines were very nice and there was 7 of them. I ate my lunch with them so got to know each one.
There was another lady right across from me, just my roller line separating us. She was technically not under my immediate boss, but some other boss up in the office section of the Bay.
First day I saw her, she looked like she had never smiled for 20 years, she was I would say in her 50s, well she sure looked like in her 50s and cut out of stone, sullen and like she always got out of bed on the wrong side, which was against a wall.
It was not long before I knew her plan—— hold up the line by not getting the paper work to match the packing slip I would hand her—— just going about as slow as a turtle crawling over honey.
It was a real mess to say it politely, and the dictionary would be hard put to say it un-politely.
I had only been there maybe a month, maybe two, and Mr. Kincade [whom I got along with fine] called the ladies and myself to a meeting [not the lady I just mentioned].
“Look all of you, we have to get doing better, doing things faster…. My job is on the line if we do not.” Kincade told us.
The ladies talking at lunch said, “O he’s only bluffing about loosing his job.”
Two weeks later Mr. Kincade told us all he had be relinquished of his job—— fired to put it bluntly.
Everyone was shocked, and as he was a nice guy we all wondered what kind of a man was going to replace him. I really felt sorry for Mr. Kincade, he was a good guy to work for, we got along just great. He also knew where the problem lay, and I believe tried to tell the “high up” people, but apparently they would not believe him or do anything about this “strange and difficult” lady, that had been with the Bay for many years, I guess in various positions.
I knew what the problem was, but as the new kid on the block, I thought well maybe the new guy to come will see it and get something done about it.
The new boss was also very nice and him and I hit it off immediately.
But the problem continued, now and again this “strange” lady would do what she was supposed to do and everything flowed nicely. Sooner of later that would all stop and she would be back to being slow, slow, and slower; she kinda knew how far she could push things, then she’d speed up again. It was like she was playing a game with us; the rolling lines for all the ladies would just about be empty and away she’d speed up the paper work, so I could unpack and get the merchandise on pallets and down the lines for the ladies.
This went on for months. I’ll come back to it after I tell you this——
That summer of 1961 was a heat wave summer, hot and hot, in the 90s F all summer. We guys were sitting at the supper table one evening, in the middle of July, and our Landlord said, “Well fellas I sure got something to tell you today. You all know how hot it’s been down town Saskatoon today, ya 98 F. Well this car pulls up to me as I’m walking the sidewalk, a USA car, snow skies on top of the roof; the window rolls down and a voice shouts to me, ‘Hey can you tell us how far we have to go north before we get to snow?’” We had a hard time believing some USA people knew so little about Canada. Guess they thought when they hit the Canadian line they’d be in snow.
Now it was winter. It was a morning in January 1962, and I had the radio on for the weather. I heard this guy say, “Well folks if you are going out this morning, you make sure you dress real real warm, it is -54 and with the wind-shield it is -72 F.”
I had about half a mile to walk to the Hudson Bay Store, and would you believe the wind was blowing right at me. I was dressed in everything you could buy for a Canadian winter, but I still had to walk most of the time with my back to the wind; looking around now and then to see if I was still on the side-walk. I’m not exaggerating but with 100 feet to go, I did not know if I was going to make it, I was that frozen!
Decades later I won a door prize at a meeting. The question was, who has experienced the coldest weather. I asked if it included wind-shield, they said yes. I told them -72 F. There was a gasp in the room, everyone thinking I was going to say I was in the North Pole, but I said “The winter of 1962 in Saskatoon.”
Okay back to the “strange” difficult lady.
It was coming up to a year that I had been working for the Hudson Bay Store. It was coming Spring time, and I could no longer take any more of the antics this stone-faced miserable lady was playing. I saw an ad in the local paper for a young guy for farm work. I gave my notice to the Hudson Bay.
On leaving them I planned to hand them a hand-written letter from me to the big guys upstairs. I did. I told them what the problem was, and that until they got rid of that certain lady, things would never run smooth.”
Hold on to that, I will come back to it.
I was now a year in Canada; what about my Cowboy life?
The first week I was at the Western Store buying some fancy Roy Rogers type shirts and cowboy hat. Saskatoon had a weekend show on TV that anyone could participate in. I was on the show singing a few cowboy songs, playing an instrumental guitar song called “Wheels” [it had been a big hit in Britain]. Then I also did a popular 1950s reciting number called “The Shifting Whispering Sands” also a big hit of the time. When I was in Mrs. Storey’s Concert Show [I told you about when I was a middle teenager] I did this “Sands” reciting and always got a huge applause—— these are the words——
I discovered the valley of the shifting, whispering sands
While prospecting for gold in one of our western States
I saw the silent windmills, the crumbling water tanks
The bones of cattle and burros, picked clean by buzzards
Bleached by the desert suns
I stumbled over a crumbling buckboard nearly covered by the sands
And stopping to rest, I heard a tinkling, whispering sound
Then suddenly realized that even though the wind was quiet
The sand did not lie still
I seemed to be surround by a mystery
So heavy and oppressive I could scarcely breath
For days and weeks I wandered aimlessly in this valley
Seeking answers to the many questions
That raced through my fevered mind
Where was everyone
Why the white bones
The dry wells
The barren valley where people must have lived and died
Finally I could go no farther
My food and water gone
I sat down and buried my face in my hands
And resting thus, I learned the secret
Of the Shifting, whispering sands
How I managed to escape from the valley I do not know
But now to pay my final debt for being spared
I must tell you what I learned out on the desert
So many years ago
When the day is awfully quiet
And the breeze seems not to blow
One would think the sand was resting
But you'll find this is not so
It is whispering, softly whispering
As it slowly moves along
And for those who stop and listen
It will sing this mournful song
Of sidewinders and the horn toads
Of the thorny chaparral
Endless sunny days and moonlit nights
The coyotes lonely yell
Of the stars seem you could tough them
As you lay and gaze on high
At the heavens where we're hoping
We'll be going when we die
Yes it always whispers to me
Of the days of long ago
When the settlers and the miners
Fought the crafty Navajo
How the cattle roamed the valley
Happy people worked the land
And now everything is covered
By the shifting, whispering sands
How the miner left his buckboards
Went to work his claims that day
And the burro's broke their halters
When they thought he'd gone to stay
Wandered far in search of water
On to old sidewinder's well
And there, their bones picked clean by buzzards
That were circling when they fell
How they found the ancient miner
Lying dead upon the sand
After months they could but wonder
If he died by human hand
So they dug his grave and laid him
On his back and crossed his hands
And his secret still is hidden
By the shifting, whispering sands
This is what they whispered to me
On the quiet desert air
Of the people and the cattle
And the miner lying there
If you want to learn their secret
Wander through this quiet land
And I'm sure you'll hear the story
Of the shifting, whispering sands
Shifting, whispering sands
I had it all memorized and did a very fine job of reciting it, with the teaching I received from Mrs. Storey.
I was out to Gordon and Margaret Spence’s horse ranch every spare time I could find. I was learning the Western horse world as fast as I could. I had not been there to the ranch but maybe a month or so. There were a few guys around my age that were already hanging out there. One evening I was going to see the horses in the barn, there was this other kid there, three or four inches taller than me; here I was this 18 year old with this English accent; he was going to put me in place; he comes at me grabs my shoulders, maybe going to push me to the ground or something. Well what he did not know was I had taken self-defence classes back home. One point is use your attackers weight to throw him to the ground; so with a side step and twist of my body and leg, over he went and hit the ground. I was already standing legs apart waiting for him to try something else; he got up and ran out, into Gord and Margaret’s trailer.
When I got there, Margaret pulls me to one side and with a little smile says, “I just heard from …. [forgot his name] that you put him on the ground.”
“Ya I did.”
She smiled some more.
Never had any trouble from that lad again.
It was a great hot summer; rode many horses and led out trail rides and did some teaching, mainly girls, who had not ridden a horse before. Did some painting for Gord, we decided on red and white.
Gord took me over to a piece of ground and said, “Keith I’m going to build a stable here next year, and want to find the heart of where to put the well. He picked up this long piece of iron like a crow-bar, and starts to walk around. He comes to a spot and the bar dips downward. He walks away and does it again. “Yep, this is the spot for the well” he says.
“O come on your kidding” I said.
“Nope, not kidding—— here you try it.”
I put this long piece of iron on my fingers some distance away and begin to walk where he’s standing. I get to Gord and ….. down dips the iron bar. I would not have believed it, but it did happen.
We dug the well, all by hand back in those days; 6 feet down hit water and that well in that barn never ran dry no matter what the temperature was outside.
I did some fence post hole digging for Gord, all by hand, sweat and muscle work.
During the winter of 1961/62 I did not spend a lot of time at the ranch, just way to cold to do anything.
So we are now back to my leaving the Hudson Bay Company in the Spring of 1962, and going out to work for a farmer. I mean I had never done any farming.
I can’t remember the man’s name now, but let’s call him John.
He picks me up in Saskatoon and it is about one hour drive east to his farm. He is a grain farmer only; has one cow for milking, some chickens, and that was about it. John is married to a very nice lady and had two small children, about 7 and 5 years old. John and his wife, maybe they were in their early 30s.
We arrived and I was shown my bedroom, nice and comfortable. Then the run down of the day—— up at 6 am, and I was to first milk the cow….well I thought something new for me, as I’d never milked a cow, guess John thought I was a farm lad who knew how to milk a cow, never told him I’d never done it before; again, just said to myself, can’t be too hard I’ve seen people do it in movies.
Then after breakfast we’d be out on the machines preparing the ground for seeding etc. Lunch would be noon; 1 pm till 6 pm out on the land again. Then supper and the evening.
So the next morning before breakfast I was out with the milk pale to Mrs. Cow…. just waiting for me. Sat down and said to myself, now do what you’ve seen them do in movies. I did, and bing-go…. not hard at all. Filled up the pale and back to the house for breakfast.
Now the early morning and fresh air—— I sure had an appetite for a good breakfast. Mrs. John was quite the cook.
It was a different story when John took me out to the machinery; I did not know one bolt from another bolt, or what this or that lever did; I was lost. John took me out on this machine into the field and showed me what it did——
He was kind, but I guess he could see on my face….. well I was thinking he was thinking I was not really a farm lad. He was expecting to see, a lad grown up around grain farming machinery.
For the first week I said just about nothing, what could I say. At the end of the week, he said, “Keith, I don’t think this is going to work.” He was very nice, real nice as I knew he knew I was not a grain farming lad.
John had a machine he could not fix, tried many things but it would not start. He had to call out the expert from Saskatoon. Well this gave us a little more time to see if I was any good or not. The expert arrived the next day and fixed the problem, it needed a new little part, small it was, but essential for the machine to work.
It was not hard for me to catch on to using the plowing disc machine, or the tractor; I was a fast “catcher on” as they say. And by the end of two weeks I was just blazing down the field doing what I needed to do with the machine I was on, which was the plowing machine. Then after all that the seeding machine.
So it all worked out real nice for Mr. John’s family and myself. We were now relaxed and all kinda one family. John I could tell, was really happy with me. And they were very fine people.
So we got all the Spring seeding in the ground. It was about three months I had been with John. I was getting restless for horses and Gord’s ranch.
I had to tell John I was missing the horses. He immediately said, “Keith I can buy you a horse and we can get some cattle.” My O my….. I was stunned for a few seconds. I knew for sure he really wanted me to stay. I knew his family loved me and I loved them, but I just missed the horse ranch too much. John finally understood. And on a set day he drove me back into Saskatoon. I was to meet him again some years later but under way different circumstances, when he lost a leg from farm machinery; it can be dangerous work.
I came back to Gord and Margaret, they were happy to see me. I was able to bunk into Margarte’s mother’s home, she was elderly and by herself, so it was a win win situation.
It was I think July, when an ad came in the Saskatoon paper, a young lady wanted to sell her horse. It was a registered Thoroughbred mare, six years old. I met her and she took me to see the horse out in a pasture with 3 other horses. Never did ask the girl why she was selling. Well the horse was a great looker—— sorrel, radish-brown, with flaxen tail and mane. She was quite the looker as they say. I paid the young lady the $150 she wanted for the horse, and was pleased I had myself such a fine animal.
I went back to the pasture on another day to catch her and ride her to Gord’s ranch. Some of the things I was doing was pretty naive as I looked back on it all some months later. I go out with a lariat; the 4 horses all came to me no problem; I put the lariat around my house’s head, and woof….all four ran off.
I’m standing there thinking what on earth do I do now; what chance have I got that they will come back to me….. so I stand and I stand and I stand. Wow…. The four horses come back to me. I am able to reach out and put my hand on the lariat. The horse came walking up to me, as if to say, “Well glad to meet you, are you my new owner?”
I was able to swing up on her back and ride her through some of the Saskatoon streets out to Gord’s ranch. Talk about naive or I think it was help from some angels.
I called her “Laso”—— everyone who saw her would go “O Wow…. She is lovely!”
And she had a nature as good as her looks—— sweet, kind, let you do anything with her.
That same summer I also bought my first Western saddle; there was a Western Tack shop on the way out to the ranch. It also was $150 but all nicely tooled and engraved.
During that summer I leaned to ride bareback on Laso, I mean not walking, I mean everything above a walk. I could do any speed, any turns, any up and down hilly spots—— I was at one with Laso. When you can ride bareback full out, you feel your horse as “right-at-one” with you. Roy Rogers could ride bare-back super well; as a kid his family could never afford a saddle, he had no choice but to ride bare-back. So now I could ride flat-out bare-back as if I was born on a horse.
There was one thing I still had to master, wanted to do from age 7—— trick-ride!
Could it be that this second summer in Saskatoon would see me trick-riding?
Well you need a special horse for that; only a few horses will allow you to move around on them in trick-riding.
More on my horsemanship later, must back up now and bring you up to speed with my “spiritual life” in the first 15 months of my living in Canada.
………………..
CHAPTER EIGHT
I have told you that the heavenly Father and His Son Jesus Christ, were very important for me, the most important, from the time I attended a Church of England school at age 7. It was wonderful to have the first 1/2 hour of each school day in the Bible, through my age 7 to 11. It was also wonderful to attend regular Sunday school from age 7 at a nearby “Congregational” [that was its official name] church. Those were the years of learning about the Gospels and Christ Jesus as Savior. By age 11 I had a personal relationship with both the Father and Jesus. In the local church I went in for some “Scripture Tests” and always did very well, up into the 90s for marks.
I’ve told you about the lady in the Congregational church giving me, at about age 14, a red letter New Testament. It was the first time I’d seen one, probably new idea back then, to put the words of Jesus is red. It was wonderful, and I would read a portion of the Gospels each night before turning off the light and going to sleep. I read the Gospels dozens of times during those years up to coming to Canada at age 18.
So now I have arrived in Saskatoon, the last week of May 1961, it was a Friday.
I had found out from the local church I grew up in, that the equivalent church in Canada was “The United Church of Canada.” One of the priests greeted me at Montreal, when the ship I was on docked.
Where I was living in Saskatoon, there was a United Church of Canada just a few blocks away. And as it had been my custom since age 7, I was off to “church” that every first Sunday after arriving in Saskatoon.
I did this a few Sundays, and then my Landlord and his wife invited me to their church. I found out they called it a “Baptist” church; specifically “Ebenezer Baptist Church.” I accepted the invitation. I noticed immediately it was quite different in that the “minister” was in a suit and did not wear a white “dog collar” around his neck as the priests of the Churches I attended back home. I enjoyed the hymns they sang, which many were new to me. The people were friendly. And right away I was invited to “the young people’s group” which was great. The first week I was with them this young guy, but older than me, maybe late 20s, said to me with all the young people around, “Your from England, okay, what is the difference between a Buffalo and a Bison?” I thought for a few seconds and said, “They are both the same animal.” He replied, “Ah no, a Buffalo is what we have roaming the prairies, and a Bison is what you English wash your hands in.”
I laughed and everyone laughed. He was picking on the English accent.
I noticed right up front, certain “religious” phrases used by just about everyone in this Baptist church—— “Are you born again?” - “Are you saved?” - “Have you accepted Jesus as your personal Savior?”
These phrases were used all the time, like…. well you constantly heard them by someone in the church.
I was somewhat taken a-back by such phrases constantly being used. I had to ask myself why are they always using these phrases? Are they not sure if the others as “saved” or not sure if people in the church have Jesus as their Savior. I thought well I have walked with the Father and Jesus from age 7, and just never put it into words or phrases like I was now hearing. In time I discovered the Baptist churches and other churches were classified as “fundamental” which word was also new to me. But as I discovered it was all what I had been from age 7, a believer in God’s word the Bible as divinely inspired.
I eventually put my thoughts about all these phrases to one side, and thought well they are more expressive in their Christian religion, than the Church of England and the Congregational church, and the United Church of Canada.
I enjoyed the young people’s group and their activities. I soon made close friends to one of the lads who was about my age, and we started to do some things together. His name was Collin. It was during that second summer and Collin said to me, “Keith what about us going on a camping trip together; up to Edmonton and over to the Canadian Rockies at Jasper, down through the Rockies to Banff, and back to Saskatoon.”
“Wow…Collin, that would be great, love to do that” I replied.
I did not have a regular full time job, so off we went on our adventure.
I remember when I first saw the Canadian Rockies as we drove towards them in Collin’s car, west of Edmonton…. They just appeared, majestic and grand. I only remember a few things about that trip. Collin was a fine buddy, really enjoyed him; he had a number of questions about “Christian religion”—— I think he knew without a big explanation from me, that I had been a Christian just about all my life. The questions he asked me were not new to me; as a 12, 13, 14, year old back home in Sunday school, I had a teacher for years who would get us thinking about life in the context of Christianity. So when Collin would as me about—— is dancing sin?; is card playing sin?, is going to a movie theater sin? I could answer him, like saying about movie theatres, “The building is not sin; going to see a good movie within the Christian boundaries is fine.”
Yep Collin was real nice and I thoroughly enjoyed him and he enjoyed me.
When we got to Banff, we went on some boat ride, no it must have been Lake Louise; this lady who was from the USA, standing next to me said, “Oh wow….this is just unreal, look at those wonderful mountains!”
I said to her, “Don’t you have such in the USA?”
“Well some but not as big as these” she exclaimed, and was just memorized by them.
Well our camping trip was just about over; Collin and I would head back to Saskatoon.
There was another guy in the Baptist church around his late 20s. He found out I was here to be a Cowboy. I never told anyone I was going to be the next Roy Rogers. One day he said to me, “Keith, do you want to see a real cowboy town?” I said I would love to see one.
“Okay, I will take you to see one; it’s called Maple Creek, down near the USA border.”
Sooooo…..off we went in his car. It was a considerable distance, but eventually the farm land opened up to cattle ranching and no more barb-wire fences. My heart was loving it all, wide open spaces—— Don’t fence me in, land.
Getting to Maple Creek was unbelievable, I thought there was no more real cowboy towns in existence, only in cowboy movies. I mean it was like stepping back to 1861 and not 1961. The main street was dirt, and wide; the stores were all up three or four feet, with hitching rails for the horses. All the stores were Western front and so it was inside. It was breath-taking, I could have said, “Is anyone wanting a cowhand to hire?” I would have been happy to have settled there, for a few years. But reality had to take first place, nobody was hiring anyone.
Back to Saskatoon it was—— O yes by the way, Maple Creek today is all modern, even with parking metres on the paved main street—— no cowboy town at all.
During that first winter in the Baptist church, they had their “minister” leaving and they had to look for another man. I learnt they would bring in two or three to “preach” to them, and then by a vote decide who they would offer the position of “pastor” for them.
They chose “their man” and he settled in to be their pastor.
He was a very nice man, when I got together a few times at his home by invitation. I met his wife and children. There was something I could sense about him, that drew him to me. I could sense he was open to discussion on the Bible. We talked about Jesus returning some day, and why He was returning, what He would do when He returned. It was kinda strange, at least in that Baptist church, they talked about Jesus coming again, but that was it, no more. This new minister and I agreed Jesus would set up the Kingdom of God over all the earth, the Kingdom of God was not just in your heart, a spiritual something, but there was more to it than just your heart.
Within about a month he brought a sermon on the Kingdom of God, to come on earth at Jesus’ return, a literal Kingdom and Jesus would rule all nations. Well some in the congregation did not think he should have brought such a sermon.
I was happy he was a studier of the Bible, I knew he knew things that most of that Baptist congregation did not know.
So things went on pretty smoothly that first year in the Baptist church.
It was now early summer, and “mean-while back at the ranch” as they say, I had people pushing me to be in this “Rodeo” on the Indian Reservation—— just a fun day Rodeo.
Yes they got me to attend and quite the story to tell you on that, next time.
………………..
CHAPTER NINE
The first summer of 1961 at the horse ranch was quite the teaching experience. I’ve told you that Gord’s working with horses was the best I’ve ever seen from anyone. What he didn’t know and didn’t do, you could put in a match box and throw it in the lake.
His ranch was first a general riding stable— people came to go out and ride; some came for trail rides, they were limited horse riding people; some came to learn how to ride a horse; young guys came to run up and down the trails. I and some other regular lads took out the ones for trail rides. We had small little ponies for small little kids——leading them around, getting their first experience on the back of a pony, which to them looked big.
People boarded their horses with Gord, another way to have money coming in.
Gord bought and sold horses——many never being touched by human hands——the real true wild ones, and they are way different to handle and to break; but Gord showed us young bucks every way possible to break a horse, from the fast way [in a bucking shoot, slap a saddle on and let them go till the buck is all out of them].
Then you had the slowest way to break a horse; slow, slow, and more slow. Getting the horse to trust you; letting you brush it; putting a saddle blanket on, then a saddle, then slowly tightening the cinch.
There were still methods of breaking after that was done; tie the left front leg [pastern] with a strong soft rope, to the saddle horn; get up and down in the saddle many time, a horse can’t buck on three legs. Or you hitch up a broke horse and snub it close to the one your breaking, it gives that horse some peace of mind and assurance.
Gord taught us how to lay a horse on the ground—- he’d say, “When you have a horse in this position, and you sit on its neck, he knows YOU are the boss, not him.”
He taught us how to throw a lariat around the back legs of a horse that’s moving.
We learnt the way to stay on a bucking horse—— one hand on the horn of the saddle and the other hand rapped around strong leather strips you try your sleeping blanket to when going over-night. After learning that I never came off a bucking horse again.
On my own I bought a Farrier book, studied it well, and from then on I could trim my horse’s feet, and became skilled at it; trimmed many a horse and never had a lame one. I did not learn how to shoe a horse, scared of those nails—but Gord knew how to shoe and did it when he saw a horse needing it.
He had the expertise of what saddle fit what horse, and what bit was for which horse. He had a variety of them—— some regular snaffle; some tom-thumb; some straight bit; some rubber bit; some curb bit, and some no bit at all, they were in a hackamore.
Gord’s ranch was close to a cattle stock farm; now and again they would phone him to have him come on his horse and lasso the long horn cattle, or whatever their breed was that “got loose.” He’d be off on his roping horse to do what needed to be done.
Gord also bred some of his mares to a stallion he had, and that horse was off limits to everyone but himself. So we always had two or three foals each year; it was fun getting to know them and they knowing us; they are inquisitive creatures and will not be afraid of you, but come to you to check you out. Over a couple of years being around humans there was not one bit of trouble to break them for riding— easy as putting on your cowboy boots.
I was out one day before anyone else arrived, it was Saturday morning. Margaret said to me, “Keith, our Daisy mare cannot deliver her foal, Gord wants you to help him, at the stable, he’s there now, waiting for you.”
I thought what on earth can I do, I know nothing about trying to bring a foal into the world—- well a huge experience I was about to get.
Gord puts his arm inside this mare, in about ten seconds he pulls his arm out and in his hand are something six inches long; I was stunned as to what was going on, I’d never seen even any photos of a foal being born. Gord takes the rope he had in his other hand and with both hands ties it around this six inch of whatever it was [it was the legs of the foal], then he turns to me and says, “Okay Keith I want you to pull with me; ready….pull!”
We pulled out this foal—— it was a “she”—— in a minute or so it was sucking its Mom’s teats. I was amazed!
Everything was just fine, Mom and baby—— that foal grew up to be the sweetest filly; breaking her at two years of age was easy as easy can be. She became part of the string of horses for the trail rides we did with people.
I worked for Gord that summer.
I helped him build his new stable, so that was interesting wood-work, and shingling the roof was new to me, but not very hard.
He called his ranch “Buckhorn Stables.” I painted a lettered sign in red and white, on some wood about 8 feet long— Buckhorn Stables—— then we nailed it above the stable door.
He had this old one horse buggy; I painted it red and white; and he taught me how to harness a horse into it; I would then often ride around the stable land in this now lovely red and white buggy.
I was getting good experience at trimming my horse’s feet, as well as some of Gord’s horses and ponies.
He would still be buying and selling; buying these wild horses never touched by human hands. He taught us how to halter break them with a lariat nerve line. You take a lariat put the loop around its head at the back of the ears, then down and around the top of the nose area. It now acts as nerve line; when a horse pulls back and it tightens he is held like being frozen stiff. As the horse moves a tiny bit forward the pressure is released. If he pulls back again the whole process begins once more. Within about 3/4 of an hour you are leading this horse around. Then you begin to slowly get closer and closer to this wild horse. After a few days of this you are finally up to its head and neck; the horse is no long petrified of you. You then eventually reach out to put your hand on its neck; then eventually on its head, stroking it slowly and speaking soft words to it.
Everything from there is slow and easy, when breaking a wild horse, real slow and easy. After you get the fright of the horse out of itself, you body brush. When the horse is now fully calm around you, has accepted you as a friend and not the enemy to eat it up, you continue with the slow and easy breaking, using all the methods Gord taught us.
Ya now and again we’d do it old cowboy style—— ride the buck out of the horse.
One day the boys my age and a few older guys said to me, “Keith you have to come to this rodeo on the Indian Reservation; yep you gotta come.”
So being still naive I went to it.
One of the first events was to pair up with another cowboy, one had the lariat the other the saddle. The horses, tame ones, were all crowded into a good size corral where they and us could move about feely. We were to lasso a horse and put the saddle on. Well I had the lariat—— this was the first time for me to throw it on a horse—— to my amazement my very first throw went over the horses head and down its neck. I think more luck than skill. My other cowboy partner put on the saddle. I can not remember if we came in first or second—— that was great fun!
Of course all the cowboys were saying I just had to ride the bare-back event.
I did, but lasted about 4 seconds only and I was on the ground.
Then came the saddle bronc riding. This is where I was really naive, and the cowboys took advantage of it. I had heard that some times a cowboy comes off and his foot gets caught in the stirrup—— dangerous!
They bring in these wild horses. They chose a heavy horse for me about 1500 pounds. The large coral where the bucking shoots were, was very soft dirt in the middle but hard a concrete around the middle.
I’m ready— the gate is opened— the horse is bucking away— after about 5 seconds I’m getting thrown off. I’m coming down to the ground and—— O no! My foot is caught in the stirrup! The horse was in the middle of the arena. He puts his back foot into by back just below the shoulders; I am pressed into the soft dirt, I feel the dirt coming up as I’m pressed into it; as the horse continues on my foot comes out of my cowboy boot, and the cowboy boot stays in the stirrup! I’m getting up, and three or four cowboy Indians are running towards me. The one in the lead get to me and with a frightened look on his face says, “O my, O my, you are one of the luckiest cowboys I’ve ever seen!”
I walked away with only a few scratches down my back!
Everybody was thinking what would have happened if I’d come off not in the centre but on the hard as cement ground around the center.
I knew the Lord would look after me, even as I now realize I was so naive. I have somehow known the Lord was with me, and had plans for me….well my plans for myself, but would find out they were not at all the plans God had for me.
I watched these cowboys try putting a saddle on another wild horse in the shoot. It must have taken then at least 20 minutes; the horse was going wild with them. Finally they had the saddle on, the rider was ready—— out the horse comes—— this is when I now saw how a wild, not so heavy a horse, bucks. It bucks like a bull! There is no bucking in a straight line as you see in pro rodeos, where the cowboy can get into a rhythm. A wild horse bucks like a bull, every which-way; nobody can ride a truly wild horse, a wild horse young and healthy.
The Calgary Stampede has a horse in its “Bucking Horse Fame”—— just about no cowboy could ride it. When I saw a film of it bucking I knew why— it bucked like a bull, and it reminded me of what I’ve just told you at that rodeo on the Indian Reservation in 1962.
That was it, that was my first and last rodeo ride.
I did continue to break horses for Gord, but had learned to have one hand on the saddle strings at the back and one on the saddle horn.
Gord bought a 14 hand pony that had been in small town rodeos as a bucking horse. He was hoping we could get the buck out of him and use him for a trail riding pony. That never happened— he would go fine for 1, 2, 3, 4, days, no bucking, then out of the blue one day along the trail he would start bucking. He was completely unpredictable.
I arrived one morning and was greeted by Gord, “You know Cody [the name of the bucking pony] just bucked me off—— pulled himself back and the saddle and I came off over his head, the cinch still done up.”
“O tell me another story; your kidding me.”
“Well go saddle him up and see if he will do the same as he did with me.”
“Ya okay I will.”
And I did.
Cody is bucking away towards the wooden fence, I’m wondering what he will do when we get to the fence. We got there—— he sucks himself back, the saddle and I go over his head, my arms are over the top rail, the saddle is under me, with the cinch still done up, and Cody is long gone!
I would never have believed it unless it happened to me, which to my shock happened and as smooth and quick as the blink of an eye.
It was a very good summer I had in 1962 at the Buckhorn Stables; especially learning to ride bare-back on my Thoroughbred mare Laso.
And to top it all off there was the “Pioneer Days” in Saskatoon; they now call it “Saskatoon Stampede.” Back then there was no rodeo; there was lots of wagon horses, all fancied up, horse and wagon. I remember this one cowboy had…. It must have been 15 or so pairs of horses pulling a wagon; I have never seen since a cowboy driving such a long line of paired horses; it was truly an unreal sight.
I did end up working that Saskatoon show, working for a few wagon drivers; painting their harnesses. It was “Brazilian Dye” a deep purple-ish dye that was real good for leather. The harnesses had all those fancy chrome pieces, and you painted the leather between them. The dye dries with a little shine—— O those harnesses looked good, and the guys I did it for were sure pleased with my work.
During that summer I tried some of Gord’s horses out to see if any of them had the wherewithal to be a trick-riding horse. The ones I tried did not.
The winter was coming upon us and it was time to slow down at Buckhorn Stables and prepare for what was back in those years, a long Saskatchewan winter.
I found a few part time jobs over the winter and helped out some with Gord as needed, but the horse world came to a full stop in those early 1960s.
I was listening to the radio in the evenings, and there was one local station that played a number of 1/2 hour Christian religious programs; I enjoyed listen to them all; there was one I especially enjoyed. And I did send for their magazine during that cold 1962/63 winter.
It was in the Spring of 1963 that something really got my goat and made me sit up straight with Christian religion.
That’s for next time.
…………………………
CHAPTER TEN
During the winter of 1962/63 I was busy listening to religious radio programs. One in particular. The preacher was powerful and dynamic. I sent away for their magazine. In the early part of Spring their magazine arrived and I was kinda shocked to see an article entitled “Will you get to heaven?” I thought this is a strange named article, I mean everyone knows that if you are a Christian you go to heaven when you die.
I read the article very quickly and very superficially—— I got very angry and threw it down on the table, got my cowboy hat and headed for the Buckhorn Stable. I was very upset; who would even question a long held and all the time talked about in the Christian world— questioning getting to heaven on death.
BUT a small quiet voice [not literally but in my head] said to me, “You have not read the article slowly; you have not looked up the Scriptures given; you have become very emotional, you need to study the article slowly when you get back home.”
I set it in my mind to do so.
That night I did so do—— looked up all the Scripture verses; some I had never seen before in my entire young life. Those verses hit me like a tone of bricks. John 14: 1-4, a famous one used by all to say we go to heaven with Jesus on His return. It was explained carefully; I realized the explanation was the truth; others verses like in the book of Acts, about David not being in heaven—- well the whole house of cards, the false teachings of men, came crashing down.
By the end of my 3 hours of study, I was OVERJOYED, ECSTATIC with PLEASURE that I had found a truth in God’s word, that was new to me. I always tried to have the mind-set of being willing to grow in truth with God’s word. I was dancing around my little room.
This truth did not affect my life in any way as far as living went; it was just my mind being changed from something I took for granted, never proved, but just accepted, to understand a truth of God, that for me now, was light, I could hardly imagine the world of Christianity as I KNEW IT, raised in it, was so wrong on the subject of death and going off to heaven, and also the wrong idea of those alive at Jesus’ coming again, going back to heaven with Him.
I studied that subject of death and what happens to us, fully and in-depth for a few months—— I had come to a wonderful truth, and that I had been misled about, all of my Christian life.
Now we were well into late Spring and early summer of 1963. I was still looking for that SPECIAL TYPE OF HORSE that would allow you to trick-ride on it. I had already received a photo by photo book on trick-riding; it contained no words, just step by steep photos on every trick invented. Very easy to follow and understand how to do each trick.
I tried a few more horses Gord had, but as soon as I moved out of the saddle they were scared, and ready to freak-out.
I then got thinking—— now Gord uses a horse to rope from when the cows get out of the feed-lot. It was a mare, and about 15 hh tall. She was used to the lariat twirling around her head; maybe I thought, she would let me twirl around on her.
I saddled her up and out on the trail we went; got her into a slow run and off the saddle I went—— she did not bat an eye!
MY O MY, WUPEEEE! I had found my trick-riding horse!
And what a horse for trick-riding she was—— you could do any trick invented and she never batted an eye; just as calm and confident you were not going to hurt her! And her name——
Would you believe is was TRIXIE!
I put some leather straps on the kind of saddle I needed to do the many tricks I wanted to do on her. One strap was for the “suicide-drag”—— you took out your left foot from the stirrup; you already had your right foot in the strap, and away you went right off the left side, hanging only by that right foot in the strap; your head and arms were nearly touching the ground.
I did the spin around in the saddle, and also around the swell or bridge of the saddle, that needs to be high and wide for that trick.
I did the trick of riding under her neck, and some others—— O what fun I had with Trixie, we became quite the buddies.
Now the summer was here, it was July, and the Saskatoon Pioneer Days was upon us. They had an outdoor pretty large corral for horse games. I decide that when no one was using it, to do an exhibitions of trick-riding for the public to see.
I had just finished a trick and was near the corral wooden fence, and there was a man there with his family—— I recognize him, it was the man that took over from Mr. Kincade when I worked in the Hudson Bay Store for that first year in Canada.
“YOU WERE RIGHT KEITH” he said to me, “THE LADY YOU TOLD US ABOUT, BEING THE PROBLEM IN THE RECEIVING DEPARTMENT IS GONE, SHE’S OUT OF THERE.”
I was sure happy to know my letter to the big bosses up stairs got through to them, yes I was happy to know.
The summer was marching on and I was soon to have my life turned upside-down and inside-out!
That’s for next time.
…………………………
CHAPTER ELEVEN
It was a sunny evening that summer of 1963. I was listening to the radio and the religious programs the local station aired. I had one particular program on. I needed to ask my Landlord about something. I was upstairs standing in his kitchen, my door downstairs was open, his kitchen door was open. He says to me, “What do you think of that guy on the radio?”
“I like listening to him” I replied.
“Well he’s a seventh day observer.”
“So are we not also?” I replied.
“No Sunday is the first day of the week.”
YOU COULD HAVE KNOCKED ME OVER WITH A FEATHER!
I was dum-founded; I could hardly believe what he had said.
Immediately my mind went all the way back to that Sunday school kid, when I was about 10 years old, who said his father had told him Sunday was the first day of the week, and Saturday was the 7th day of the week.
NOW MY LANDLORD WAS TELLING ME THE SAME THING!
I WAS TRULY STUNNED AND SPEACHLESS!
I went back to my room and thought and said to myself, “I was raised on the Ten Commandments; I was taught we should obey the Ten Commandments. The Sabbath was instituted in the first week of Genesis 1 and 2. Jesus said in the Gospels He was Lord of the Sabbath. Jesus said to the rich young man who asked Him the way to inherit eternal life; Jesus replied “keep the commandments” and went on to quote from the Ten Commandments [Matt. 19]. I was in UTTER SHOCK!
My mind could not believe that Sunday was not the 7th day of the week; but I had just heard it was not from an older adult man; I technically had to admit he must be correct……BUT HOW COULD ALL OF CHRISTIANITY I KNEW, ALL MY LIFE, BE SO WRONG IN OBSERVING SUNDAY?
IT WAS VERY DIFFICULT FOR ME TO ENVISION ALL THAT I KNEW ABOUT CHRISTIANITY WAS VERY WRONG, VERY WRONG, ON OBSERVING THE FIRST DAY OF THE WEEK, AND NOT THE SEVENTH DAY.
The next day I was down at the Public Library, heading towards their “theology” section. I saw a book called “Christian Feasts and Customs” by a Roman Catholic bishop. I opened to his chapter on the Sabbath day. To my further AMAZEMENT AND SHOCK I read his first paragraph. He openly said, “You can read from Genesis to Revelation and you will not find where the first day was ever made holy, sanctified, or became the New Testament Sabbath. We the Roman Catholic church, as the true church, with apostolic succession, have the authority to change the Sabbath from the 7th day to the 1st day of the week.”
I LEFT THAT LIBRARY IN NUMBNESS OF MIND. IT WAS INDEED TRUE, SUNDAY WAS NOT THE 7TH DAY OF THE WEEK.
I WENT HOME AND SAID TO MYSELF, THERE MUST BE OTHERS WHO KNOW ALL THIS, AND ARE OBSERVING THE SEVENTH DAY. Well of course the guy on the radio program I liked listening to each evening, my Landlord had said to me he was a 7th day observer.
That radio religious program was sponsored by “The Radio Church of God.”
I wrote to them and asked if they had a church in Saskatoon; they said they did not at that moment. They taught a number of things that I had over my lifetime come to see was the truth. Then they were challenging me to study other things in the Bible that was new to me.
I went back to the Public Library and took out that book “Christian Feasts and Customs”—— reading it all blew me away!
I discovered where Christmas came from; where Easter came from; where all kinds of traditions of the Western world came from—— it was mind-bending!
It was extremely hard for me to accept so much of Christianity was FALSE—— built on pagan traditions and customs that were gradually over time introduced into the Church of God….well into a Roman Catholic church, that obviously CAME OUT OF the apostolic first century A.D. Church of God.
I was truly STUNNED but also very ANGRY!
I now had the simple truth of which was the 7th day to be observed. I did not want to accept it——I stayed away from Buckhorn Stable for a few weeks. I finally went back on a Saturday, still bewildered in my mind. I was not there that long, and a still small voice said to me, “GET YOUR FOOT OFF MY SABBATH.” I put away what I WAS DOING AND LEFT FOR HOME TO START OBSERVING THE 7TH DAY SABBATH AS THE 4TH COMMANDMENT PLAINLY SAYS TO DO.
YES AND I WAS ANGRY AT A FALSE CHRISTIANITY.
NOW EVERYTHING CHANGED; MY MIND AND LIFE WAS TURNED UPSIDE-DOWN AND INSIDE-OUT.
I NOW KNEW WHAT I WAS SUPPOSED TO DO WITH MY LIFE. YES GOD ALLOWED ME TO BELIEVE FROM AGE 7 THAT I WOULD BE THE NEXT ROY ROGERS; ALLOWED ALL TO GO ACCORDING TO MY PLAN; ALL SO NEAT AND ON TIME IT SEEMED. ALL GOING MY WAY—— BUT GOD BROUGHT ME OUT TO CANADA NOT TO BE THE NEXT ROY ROGERS, BUT TO FIND HIS MANY MORE TRUTHS OF HIS WORD HE HAD FOR ME—— I WAS TO SERVE HIM WITH ALL MY HEART, LIFE AND MIND—— I WAS TO BE A PART OF HIS WORK AS IT WOULD GO OUT INTO ALL THE WORLD.
PUTTING AWAY MY BIG DESIRE AND MY DREAMS, BEING THE NEXT SINGING COWBOY RIDING A GOLDEN PALOMINO ACROSS THE MOVIE SCRENE, WAS NOW EASY TO DO—— ALL OF THAT DID NOT MATTER ANY MORE. GOD HAD BROUGHT ME UP ON HIS WORD, AND HIS WORD AND TRUTHS I WAS TO PROCLAIM IN WHATEVER WAY GOD WOULD LEAD ME TO DO FOR HIM.
MY LIFE WOULD NOW MAKE A HUGE TURN IN DIRECTION.
HORSES WOULD BE A SMALL PART OF MY LIFE, A SMALL HOBBY ONLY.
FOR THE NEXT YEAR I STUDIED THE BIBLE AS NEVER BEFORE, NIGHT AND DAY, AS MUCH AS I COULD BESIDES HOLDING DOWN A FULL TIME JOB. BUT I HAD NO IDEA WHERE THERE WAS A FULL TIME JOB I COULD BE HAPPY IN, NOW THAT I PUT AWAY BEING THE NEXT ROY ROGERS.
THEN IT WAS THAT GOD ONCE MORE WORKED WITH ME, TO GIVE ME A JOB I COULD BE HAPPILY SKILLED AT DOING, WHILE I STUDIED HIS WORD EVERY SPARE MOMENT I HAD.
That’s for next time.
…………………………
CHAPTER TWELVE
I was now observing the correct 7th day of the week; I knew my attendance at the Baptist church had to come to an end.
I had my good friend Collin; I had to tell him the reason I would not be attending the Baptist church any more.
I explained how I grew up in the Bible from age 7. That I was taught we should all be observing the Ten Commandments; that I had been taught to memorize them as in Exodus 20 in the KJV Bible.
I fully believed Sunday was the 7th day of the week; all Christianity around me was observing Sunday, so I just took it for granted that Sunday was the 7th day of the week. And not one person ever told me differently.
As I knew now that Sunday was the 1st day of the week, I just could no longer observe Sunday, but I must now observe the true 7th day of the week.
I think Collin understood, he said very little….well can’t remember if he said anything. We shook hands and our friendship came to an end at that point; yet about 7 years later I did meet him again, can’t remember how it happened; I also met his wife, and they invited me over to their home for an evening. Collin told me about a young lady in that Baptist church when I was attending that I had somewhat of a crush on. I remember he told me to phone her and ask her out on a date. And I did so. She was older than me by 5 years; back then it was the custom that girls would marry a lad older than themselves. She was very nice but said, “Keith I’m 5 years older than you…..” So we never had a “date.”
She did find a nice man in that church and they were married.
Collin reminded me of that time and that young lady. He then went on to shock the socks off my feet. He said, “You remember…..[forgot her name now] and you had a crush on her; well if she had gone out with you, and if the two of you had got married, you would be a widower today. Only a few years after she was married, and you had left that church, she came down with cancer; it was a horrible cancer, very painful, and she died.”
I was just dumbfounded….. I was in shock…..I felt so sorry that it had happened to her.
After leaving that Baptist church it was time for me to find a full time job; a trade I could be happy doing.
I was looking in the Saskatoon paper under job opportunities—— there was one that read, “Looking for a young man with some shoe repair experience.” It was an ad from “The Council for Crippled Children and Adults.” I phoned the number and was granted an interview. I had learnt some shoe repairing in a Leather Factory after leaving High school; the very first job I had.
The day for the interview arrived; I was invited into the office; the fellow interviewer said, “Well it’s not shoe repair we are doing; come with me and I’ll show you.”
He led me down a hallway and into a room—— O my words…..my eyes opened up wide…..the interviewer whose name was Ed, said, “We here are making hand made shoes and boots for people with various foot problems from minor ones to feet that do not look much like feet.”
Ed told me it would be a 4 year apprenticeship and the pay scale I’d be on over those 4 years.
I told him I observed the 7th day Sabbath so could not work on Saturdays. He had no problem with that as it was a Monday to Friday work week.
I GOT THE JOB!
Wow…..what 4 years that was. Ed and another shoemaker by the name of Charles [he was an older man], had come over from England to start up this shoe making section of this Council for the handicapped; they already had a “brace” and “limb” department, and they now needed to add an Orthopaedic shoe department.
Over those 4 years, I was taught to do everything from seeing the patient, taking if needed plaster casts, and everything right up to handing the patient their shoes or boots. I mean everything—— look at a pair of shoes and I was taught to do everything from A to Z on those shoes or boots. I designed them, patterned them, cut out the shoe uppers from different leathers, stitching them on a post-bed industrial sewing machine, lasting them on the last [all shoes and boots are put on a last as it is called; it’s the shape of the foot or shoe you are making] by hand; putting on the sole and heel, trimming it all up, and finishing as shoes are finished.
I was taught to make “build-ups”—— for people with a shortage in one leg. So it could be 1/4 inch to many inches. You carved it out of cork, light and strong. You covered it with leather, and you placed it on the shoe [the sole and heel of the shoe taken off] and added the sole and heel.
We did small jobs like someone needing just a leather wedge on their shoe/s to get the foot in the correct level for walking as normal as possible.
It was mainly Ed who taught me all these things over the 4 years. He had gone to Orthopaedic Shoe Making school in England. The last thing Ed taught me near the end of the 4th year was making a shoe last from a block of hard wood, say oak wood. Most of the time we had stock plastic lasts that we reshaped or added leather to make it like the problem foot of the patient—— you know like people with hammer toes, or deformed feet from the crippling type of arthritis.
Now you can see what I’m saying by going to my facebook—— go to facebook, type in Keith Hunt, Calgary. Then move down to my photo section and you’ll find the photos to show you exactly the trade of Orthopaedic Shoe Making. But thinking now, you may have to become "friend" before you can see all those photos.
We also did regular shoes/boots like in the stores, nothing wrong with the patients feet per se, but just large long feet, like most pro Basketball people will have. Yes when you look at those guys on the basketball-court, tall guys, very tall guys, you must remember for playing basketball that is great, but they have to have all clothes and footwear specially made; you cannot go into a store and find a shirt or pants or jacket to fit a 6 foot 8 inch man or someone yet taller still. They can’t go into a shoe store and buy a pair of shoes say for size 18 feet. Everything for those of extreme heights have to have everything custom made.
There was one more skill Ed had—— orthotics!
Many people today have to have shoe orthotics; as we live in a concrete world; walking and working on hard surfaces, it is natural that such floors damage our feet and the arch of our feet. Some people get “heel spurs” under the heels or the tendon that comes down the back of the heel and into the bottom of the foot, is strained somehow; they need orthotics also.
Ed was probably one of the first to make orthotics in the Western world, and his was at that time, very inventive on his part. He had super success with plastic orthotics. He made them from a plastic that had strength but also some flexibility.
He took a plaster cast of the feet; he shaped them to some degree; he placed the plastic on a cloth into an oven, let it melt the plastic [that plastic he used changed color when hot enough], brought it our and quickly placed over the plaster cast and had a plastic bag over it; switched on the suction machine from the store that sold them, and let it be so for about 10 minutes.
Then of course came the finishing; cutting the plastic to fit the plaster cast, edges smoothed on the sand grinding wheels.
It was highly successful when you developed the skill for it.
Over a period of time Ed taught me to do all this and I did indeed get as skilled as he himself.
Ed was also, as far as we could determine, the first to ever make plastic face masks for hockey goal players.
One guy needing those plastic orthotics Ed made, said to him, “Could you make me a face mask with that plastic, as I’m a goal keeper?”
Ed said he thought he could. So he placed cloth over his face and put plaster bandages over the cloth, and from that impression made a plaster cast; melted the plastic over it with the suction machine—— bingo, you had a plastic face mask for the goal guy in a hockey game. It was quite something and did the job pretty well, until the big pro Hockey business started to make the masks that you see today.
I stayed on with that Council Company after my 4 years of apprenticing for another six years.
I should tell you more about that Council for the Handicapped.
They were involved in many aspects of the handicapped. They had “shelter workshops” for those with moderate mental and physical handicaps. It is where I first met “down-syndrome” people; they were always so happy and pleasant. Not a care in the world to get un-happy about; always ready to give you a hug. Others with this or that physical problem—— they worked in the “pottery” workshop.
Then there was the section where parents brought their severe handicapped children for the day; it was really a baby-sitting section.
The guitar had always been a big part of my life from age 11. I had learnt dozens of songs over the years, as instrumental solos, all by memory. On Fridays I would bring my guitar and small amplifier. At noon lunch I would spend about 1/2 hour in the Sheltered Workshop, playing all the songs I knew; and many of the people working there would get up and dance in their way of dancing, moving to the rhythm of the music; I was always a hit with them.
I would then go to the severely handicapped section, only about 6 or 7 there. I well remember this little crippled girl in body and mind, always looking like she was never there, with no reaction to what the staff were doing or any movements of anything. I would start playing a song on my guitar—— well this little girl’s eyes would open up wide, and a lovely smile would come on her face. As long as I played she would be with me, her mind, her eyes, her smile, she was thoroughly enjoying my music. It was heart-warming, but yet so sad, I wished I had the healing gift God gave to some in the first century apostolic church—— I wanted to say, “Little girl, be healed, get up and walk.”
Some day we will not have such sorrowful sicknesses; all handicaps, physical and mental will be gone. But that is for the age to come, when God’s Kingdom will be on this earth under the rulership of Christ Jesus.
O yes, nearly forgetting to share with you one more time that was a blessing to me, and I guess especially to a young lady that was 14 years old. She and her mother came to see if I could help them.
Forgotten her name but we will call her Jane. She was born with one short leg—— I mean short; it was perfectly formed, a nice good looking leg but her foot only came to her knee of the other normal length leg. Not sure how she managed over the years up to 14, I never asked. I remember she was a pretty girl, and now at age 14 very embarrassed about her short but perfectly nice looking leg. The young lady and her Mom were so hoping I could help.
I said I thought I could help her. I took a plaster cast of her ankle and foot of the short leg, with the foot in a down position, not like a ballerina up on her toes, kinda half down.
I would need to make a long, extra long cork stand for the top half; grinding the cork away with our tools we have for doing that, all by hand. I needed to make it that her foot would sit nicely in the form I was sculpting. I had the plaster cast of her foot and it was not too difficult to do. When all that was done I added more cork under it all to get the correct length, to match her normal leg. Then you add more cork on the bottom of that to make the shape that would fit into a regular shoe. It was all covered with leather. And where her foot would rest in the cork, I covered with leather that went up about 4 inches above her ankle, with a tongue. Eyelets installed for lacing up real tight, giving support; like you buy ankle supports and knee supports.
It was all finished—— I was very pleased with what I had done; I knew it would work.
The day came—— the young lady and her Mom came into the shop. They had brought good everyday shoes, as I asked them to do. I slipped the shoe cork end into her shoe; she put her foot into the top part; I laced up the leather around her ankle and calf of her leg—— she stood up and just about bust into tears; a great huge smile of relief from her mother—— it was all perfect—— the young lady could have kissed the ground I walked on. She could now wear a pant suit or slacks, and no one would ever know she had a one very short leg.
That was one of my best rewarding works in the trade of Orthopaedic Shoe making.
I hope it has lasted all her life, of course some renewed leather at times, but hope it took her through life with happiness; I’m sure she will still remember me with fondness. Looking back at all those years in that trade, which I also did later in my life, after arriving in Calgary in 1998. It was a joy to see people walking away in their shoes or boots, or with orthotics, and a big smile on their face, just thanking me so much, and saying it was wonderful, and that they never felt better in a long long time.
The stories of all that would take another book; but I felt blessed I could help and serve people in their physical life from their ankle down. Most of us take for granted our feet; they are a remarkable invention by the Creator; 26 bones and two arches, the outside arch and the large inside arch.
That was a trade I used from time to time over my lifetime, which now, as I write this, is 78 years.
Now time to go back over those years in the context of my spiritual life with God, Christ, and the Bible.
That will be next.
…………………………
No comments:
Post a Comment