Sunday, 22 April 2012

Night Flight

We left Toronto just as dusk fell, heading west. West is really a misnomer because you head north from Toronto but as the flight takes you on a curving path, the imaginary lines to the magnetic north pole, somewhere around or under Victoria Island in the Northwest Territories, keep changing in relation to the plane until at the end of the flight you are at the west coast but flying south.

Leaving to head at 472 miles an hour in the direction that the sun appears to be setting is neat because dusk lingers a lot longer and the sunset seems to hang on the horizon. We cleared the people-packed areas quickly and followed the north shore of Huron, with a twinkling of lights along the waters' edge, passed the Soo, and then along the northern shore of Superior. These aren't known as the Great Lakes for nothing; we were in the air for over an hour before we reached the western edge.

Flying over the prairies at night, at 36,000 feet, should be experienced at least once. If you peer out of your little window carefully, all the towns and villages of the prairies are laid out right to the horizon in little twinkles. Any town with an airport presents itself with a blinking strobe like a lighthouse on the dark ocean. Lots of lights coming into view on the starboard side; must be Saskatoon because Regina would be on the other side of the plane on the horizon.

In the day time, haze over the prairies prevents one from seeing the detail at six miles up. Oh,you can see all the great features, lakes, rivers, reservoirs and even larger buildings and roads, but not the sheer amount of habitation. But at night. Yowser! A reflection of the universe.

Dogs I Have Known

Sometime in 1952 or early 1953, we got our first house in Canada. To make it a real home, a pup soon followed. I think dad got him from someone at the Burns Bog peat company. He was a collie something cross - same colouring but short hair. We named him the traditional Finnish dogs' name, Peni.

That house was on the flats behind the Turf Hotel and close to Peterson Hill leading to Patullo Bridge. The river flats was nothing but a build-up of silt and peat. You could take a walking cane and push it easily into the ground right up to the handle. Outhouse holes never filled up but just kept turning into more peat. Anyway, Peni got to running around the house from back door to front door in an effort to catch either one open and wore a foot deep grove into the peat, all around the house.

When we moved to the fish & chips shop in Coquitlam, Peni would lie in the front entrance to the cafe and customers would just step over him to get in. He only roused himself to any excitement when Finnish speaking people came and he would rush down to the road to greet. We moved from the shop to a new house a street away and Peni would accompany all the kids in the block. Unfortunately, in his excitement to play, his tooth snagged a neighbour girl's leg while she was on a swing. The girl's parents weren't bothered by it but the mother of one of the other kids called the cops and we came home from school to find that Peni had been arrested, with no appeal.

In those days in Coquitlam, the cops were in the basement of the municipal hall. They had a couple of cars out back and a doghouse with a hose attached. I was probably eight or nine years old when I finally made the connection to that little house.

In 1956 or '57, we moved up to the end of Austin Road onto a couple of acres. A black and white, sheep doggish puppy came to stay for my sisters tenth birthday. He got the name Rusty because there was a freckle faced kid on some sit-com named Rusty. He was a guy to follow all of us kids around wherever we went. My proudest moment was when I heard a ruckus around the shed and two cats came streaking past in tandem, like Roman chariot horses, with Rusty in full pursuit. Old Rusty just wanted to be one of the gang but he knew the words "Go home Rusty" better than "Come here boy".

That was the last dog in my growing-up years until I moved to the Okanagan, and Sam and Vince from Camp Kopje brought a black puppy with a white star on his chest to stay. I had to name him Sam and he was brother (not in looks) to Fudd, who went to Dave Galloway. I don't remember where the pups came from but no doubt these needy kids had accepted the brothers from some farmer at the mall who had a litter to give away. Sam got to riding in the back seat of the '71 Super Beetle and he would rest his head between the seats and keep a sleepy eye on the road. Just can't trust those humans to drive properly.

I was coming from the Kootenays, down the Blueberry-Paulson hill, at the type of speed that a VW could do going downhill, when I spotted a black bear lazily walking away from the highway up a logging road to the left. The timing was perfect. I swerved off the road at speed, closing on the bear. Sam's eyes opened wide and he went "Woof". The bear looked over his shoulder and exploded into action and disappeared up a bank. Sam just smiled with his tongue hanging out. Great fun. Both brothers, within a year or so, met unfortunate ends. Sam crossed a busy road and got clipped and somebody shot Fudd in an elementary school yard.

To be continued......