THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF KEITH MALCOLM HUNT #7
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 stop 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 his 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 so 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 he could’s see what 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. If I remember I will tell you.
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 come 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.
………………..
To be continued
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