Monday, April 20, 2026

From testaments to Marbles

 



From Testaments to Marbles



As I get older it seems my memories of my early school days become more focused. I also have a high school reunion coming up and it has made me think of school days gone by. Not so much the structured class time, but the unstructured time, when left to our imagination and our own devices, often spent in the school yard planning and finding variations of universal games.  


In class things of course were different.  The day even started in a more structured fashion.  We began with the standard announcements usually from a tone deaf administrator, followed by the Lord’s Prayer and God Save the Queen. We sang with a rote-like emotion as we faced a picture of the Queen that changed with the decades.  


We got our vaccinations, with total compliance.  Received a copy of a red bound Gideon testament, including Psalms and Proverbs, in grade five.  This was before the separation of church and state was properly thought through.  Also in grade five, and more pivotal for me, we received our first ball point pen as we made the worldly transition from pencil to pen and entered the exciting experience of cursive writing. Over time my pen eventually went dry, ironically, I still have that testament.


Out in the school yard, at Prince Phillip Public School, in St Catharines, it was a place of social excitement, and kinetic energy, of pure joy.  Yes, we all had that one friend with the leg braces worn due to polio, but it was part of life and acceptance at the time.  We were outside for the games, the fun, the companionship and competition.


Each game seemed to have a season and a lesson.  My personal favourite was marble season in the spring.  We had many games of gambling, challenge, loss and gain.  There were fortunes in marbles made and lost each day. Our school had a sheltered area for lining up after recess where we set up our marble boards.  A small piece of hand held plywood, with personal art designs to lure in the hesitant customer.  Each board had a row of holes along one edge, each forming an arch of different sizes.  The contestant would flick his /her marble with their index finger from a predetermined distanced marked by a chalk line. 


Should the marble pass through one of the arches that represents a win.  The smaller the arch the higher the level of difficulty and therefore the larger the reward.  For example if one got the tossed marble through the widest arch, the reward was to keep your original marble and score one more from the board owner, the dealer.  


Marble season coincided with card season when a variety of activities transpired from simply trading cards, given the market conditions of the day, to gamesmanship, in a game called flippsies, for obvious reasons.  Player one holds a card against a wall releases it and lets gravity flip it to the ground.  Player two does the same, but tries to land his card touching the first card.  If this is accomplished the player picks up and keeps both cards.  Play continues until this is accomplished.  Sometimes a player might walk away with a dozen cards.


The play-yard had the atmosphere of a medieval market place.  Activity abounded.  Shrill children's’ voices and laughter formed the surround sound of active play. Walking through the yard one had to watch their step being careful not to crowd out a pair on ground level playing Jacks.  In some cases people gathered in circles and talked in fast motion, with animation and passion, telling stories and jokes, or the latest episode of Leave it to Beaver.


Each part of the yard, both the tarmac and the field, was designated for different activities.  Further out from the card and marble sharks were the hopscotch and skipping junkies.  If space allowed there were also the ball bouncers if there was wall space available.  The skippers often did double dutch, with a double rope often with rhymes relating somehow to kissing boys, as the skippers were always girls. 


“…all she wants is a nice young man

Barbara!

I’m telling your mother

For kissing Ronnie

In the parlour

How many kisses did you give him?


The rope then turns faster and faster until the skipper counts until she is out. That number answers the romantic question of the day.


Out into the field and past the soccer posts one finds the tag players, and those throwing baseballs, or footballs, along with the occasional random walkers.  For the bold of spirit there were teams playing Red Rover or British Bull Dog, soon to be banned.  Some recesses were lengthened for bike rodeos to practice and demonstrate skills of daring and skill on the bicycle.  Teachers set up bike routes to follow with obstacles to manoeuvre around in terms of testing balance, speed and stopping skills.


By summer there were more team sports, including soccer, touch football and baseball, all organized by students.  Teachers walked the beat, broke up the occasional disagreement, or fight but generally life was peaceful.  In winter there were snowball fights between teams, but that was strictly limited to territory beyond the soccer posts, in the remote part of the yard.


School in those elementary grades was invigorating.  It was active and creative. There was also a highlight at the end of the week when our beloved custodian, Mr Love,  went up on the school roof and threw down to the crowds all of the balls that had accumulated there for the week.  It was a time of revival and celebration before going home for the weekend.  There were no school buses.  We all walked or biked the distance, retrieving our bikes from the hundreds parked unlocked next to the school’s basketball courts.


Today, retired I Iive by two elementary schools and enjoy the shouts and sounds of playing children.  I think the joy and enthusiasm of the outdoors and fresh air is still there. I hope technology has not suffocated these tendencies. I believe red light/green light, tag, freeze, dodgeball and other imaginative games live on in the lore and legacy of today’s exuberant players.


Marty Rempel




Sunday, April 19, 2026

Backyard Rink Construction 1960's. (revised)




 Clandestine Rink Construction


If I moved too quickly across the branches of the plum tree and down the trunk of the tree, which faced the kitchen window, where inside my mother diligently worked over the oven, close to the window; she could easily detect my motion in her periphery vision. Should she see me I would be busted, my mission aborted.  I had to proceed with stealth and secrecy.  I hugged the tree watching her every move waiting for my first opportunity to jump the remaining distance to the ground.  As she put her wooden stir spoon down, 
She paused giving me a further moment of anxiety.  If she turned right she woiuld see me dangling in front of the window.  She turned left away from me and walked toward the living room giving me my opportunity to move.  Getting back up later would be a challenge to be faced when the time came.

Once down the tree my brother and I were off along Vine street, about seven houses, to the edge of development on our street where the frame of the newest house was being erected.  For us, as kids, it wasn’t just the plundering of the orchards by developers that upset our equilibrium; but equally the disappearance of what we called vital range land once open for play and exploration.  Mine is an environmentalist story.

Keep in mind this current construction site was a source of natural resources for our many projects. It therefore offered compensation for our spiritual and moral loses.  We felt as victims watching the plundering of our childhood environment disappearing before our eyes.  True. But for us to move forward in our fort construction, to progress we needed a constant stream of quality lumber products.  Ironically our development depended on their development. 

We were also out shopping this Fall evening for suitable boards for our future hockey rink to be built in our backyard.  The construction site we were about to visit was to be our Beaver Lumber Store of choice.  We felt at the time it as our moral imperative.  Writing this more than 65 years later, we were just determined kids who wanted to build some cool things.

Since we walked past this particular site each and every school day we had a very complete idea of the inventory available and where it was located. We made a mental map of the progress of the construction each day and were cognizant of the optimum entry and exit paths we would need to take once we procured our allotment of lumber and various supply items.  

This evening we needed a few sheets of plywood for the underground fort currently under construction by us in the vacant lot across the street from our house.  Basic fort construction involved digging an elaborate labrinth of, what looked like to the casual observer, shallow graves.  These trenches we covered over with several rows of planks and two by fours.  We typically laid sheets of three quarter plywood over the framework before covering it up with dirt and sod to blend it back to the natural appearance of the surface prior to excavations. We were highly environmentally conscious. 

To enhance breathing for those inhabitants inside the fort, at three foot intervals, we inserted portions of eaves troughing down spouts to let in air and some light.  Inside each room we further dug shelves into the walls to allow for storage of vital supplies.  The floor space was covered by layers of straw and newspaper to keep out the dampness as occupants crawled from one section to another.  We later discovered it was also a fire hazard and a very bad and dangerous design feature. All in all the design made for early affordable housing on a clandestine level.  It afforded us a huge strategic and logistical advantage for our eventual nefarious bid for territorial advantage in the neighbourhood. 

Off course in addition to land based forts there were also tree forts to consider, which for the moment our own father seemed pleased with building from his own lumber supply, in trees right in our own backyard.  I’m sure he had his own supply chain. We left him that duty without filling him in on the over-all strategy of how his structures fit into our Maginot Line.  He was just happy to participant without seeing the big picture, so we just left it at that.  

We also needed boards and stakes for outlining the perimeter of our future hockey rink. Even in summer our planning did not lose sight of the fact that “Winter is Coming.” It was best to get these supplies early in the season so that the rink size could be laid out before the ground was frozen.  The best laid plans.

This evening’s excursion was of great importance to our planning protocols and supply flow chains.  We were highly cognizant of the dangers and perils in our line of endeavour.  In a pervious excursion several months prior, on a house now completed, which sits  complacently adjacent to the evenings target; we had almost been caught.  It had been a rough and dangerous mission.  

That night there were five of us, as lumber supplies had run low and demand was high.  There was much pressure.  As we were gathering our normal allotment of two by fours and sheet plywood when we were mercilessly attacked for no apparent reason.  Later when we could catch our collective breaths and think the problem through we realized it must have been either the contractor, or the home owner who came for an unannounced and therefore unexpected site visited.  He must have been hiding in the orchard because we never saw a vehicle approach.  It was a total surprise attack, likely in violation of the Geneva convention, but nothing we could do about it at the time. All of a sudden a bright flashlight shone in our faces and like guilty little racoons we froze on the spot.  The man with the light shouted, “What are you little bastards doing with my wood?” He obviously had a vested interest in our proceedings.  We dropped the wood. We ran.

We had prepared for this moment and in our intensive pre-raid training sessions. We knew to run each in a separate directions to make tracking us more difficult.  Therefore, instead of chasing one group of five our oppressor now had to choose between five unique trajectories.  He chose mine and was gaining like a race horse out of the gate. 

 I was running through a rough orchard between trees, trying to look over my shoulder to determine the gap between us.  He was rapidly gaining.  In turning, I stumbled and tripped and fell hard.  My pursuer was almost upon me.  He grabbed me by my shirt.  I was hoping even then please don’t rip it I’ll have to explain that to my mom.  He was distracted and loosened his grip as a clod of dirt hit him squarely on his back giving me the brief distraction and opportunity to make good my escape. 

 My brother who had  just saved my life and my shirt was now running at warp speed in another direction.  We did not get any lumber that night, my shirt was soiled not ripped, the mission a failure, yet we lived to strike another day. 

Given our past experience, there was only my brother and I on the current raid. We had to limit our “take” and get in and out quickly. We removed one of the splendid planks from the scaffolding on the backside of the house. It was ideal, as was its location out of view from the street.  We removed one ten foot plank eased it to the ground as quietly as physics and our bodily strength would allow.  We each grabbed an end, and considering I was only ten at the time, a very heavy load to carry at speed through the orchard that backed onto the construction site and to our backyard.  We covered the distance in record time being careful not to alert the farmer’s dog. We successfully reached the fence defining our backyard and again gently eased the long plank over the fence, onto the ground.  

We both scaled the fence in double time, without speaking, knew our well rehearsed roles.  We stowed the plank with others from previous sites, from previous nights, over previous months, between the garages.  That is the space between our garage and our neighbour’s garage. Here we had a selection of lumber that would have had a significant market effect on the regional supply chain had we ever chosen to flood the market.

The area designated as “Between the Garages” was known as our warehouse. Also the place where Candy, the girl next door, and I traded intimate secrets, but that’s a whole separate story for later.  For some mysterious reason only known to our God and my own father, our stash of lumber and various building supplies, remained a secret.  To this day I have often wondered why my father never asked, “Marty, I looked between the garages just the other day and well I was just wondering what you boys are doing with the 12 planks, 7 sheets of plywood and all that eaves troughing and those two by fours.  Are you building an ark?” He laughed.  He never said a word.  Not once. We knew we were safe and kept accumulating.  It was ordained.  It was God’s will that we should build. If we build they will come, but we had no idea what that actually meant.

After this particular raid was successfully completed we couldn’t exactly enter the house coming in through the back door.  This was the risky part.  We had to climb the plum tree past the kitchen window, up to the porch roof and get into our bedroom on stealth mode without mom seeing us.  My dad may have turned a blind eye to our enterprising ways, but we knew mom, a baptized member of the Mennonite congregation, would not have a similar perspective.  She would be moved by the holy spirit to act it ways detrimental to our planned outcomes.  Once past the kitchen window we could live and breathe again.  From the bedroom we could then casually come down the stairs later and join the family in watching the Ed Sullivan show which broadcast on Sunday night.  It was always best to do raids on a Sunday night, on the Lord’s day, when construction sites were not occupied.  God willing.

By late November, just after my birthday, my brother and I and often with a few friends   measured and surveyed where the rink would be placed and its final dimensions.  We had approval for this project from my dad, but at no point did he help, give advice or get involved at any level.  We thought we were lucky enough having his tacit approval in storing the lumber that seemed to magically multiple between the garages. 

Using string and stakes, as one would measure out a new garden, we measured out the maximum size of our rink.  By early December we brought out some of the long planks and staked them into place along with two of our sheets of plywood. The plywood served as backboards for the goals.  Now it was just a waiting game for snow and freezing conditions. 

Once the snow began to fall and was permanent on the ground, we began to shovel it, beginning with the driveway and transporting it to the rink area using toboggans, wagons and cardboard boxes for transport.  We dumped the snow in the rink area over many days and compacted it with sheets of plywood. The snow was shovelled out evenly then using a half sheet of plywood we would stomp on it to compact the snow beneath.  Eventually, when we had about eight inches of compacted snow within the boards we waited for the colder weather for watering to begin. This next phase was the challenging part.

It's an act of courage and faith to stand for hours with hose in hand spraying the rink surface as the packed snow absorbs water and gradually, after nightly waterings, transforms from crusty snow into solid thick, smooth ice.  Often, I would come into the kitchen with numb fingers barely able to move them.  Slowly, and inevitably water from the hose dribbled down into my gloves freezing my fingers.  My face was so cold I could no longer pronounce words clearly.  My mom would provide us with hot chocolate and warm us up during our breaks all the time marvelling at the great job we were doing.  Occasionally she would comment, “Boys where did your dad get all the wood for the rink.”  Not waiting for an answer she would add,  “Aren’t you boys so lucky to have a dad that does that for you!” 

Today, when I drive through some upscale neighbourhoods to my great satisfaction I still see some road hockey being played with dads out with their kids trying their best to keep up.  In addition, at least in my daughter’s neighbourhood, there are about 6 or seven home backyard rinks.  Although I have rarely seen anyone actually skate on these rinks, I’m sure it happens as soon as I leave the area.  I mean I have never seen a comet before either.  The thing is though the construction methods used now versus what I went through as a kid to construct the perfect ice surface just doesn’t compare.  

Today, a father, I assume, can purchase a large plastic bag from Canadian Tire, called a”rink in a bag.”  This involves placing the bag on a level spot in your yard, install boards in the form of a rectangle to contain the liner, fill the liner with water, let the water freeze. While on one level I applaud the simplicity, the ingenuity, I mock the lack of challenge.  This quite literally is child’s play.  There is no clandestine initiative whatsoever.

Growing up in my neighbourhood it was a badge of courage to go through a process of suffering, involving stages of exposure, hypothermia and exhaustion while completing the construction of a backyard rinks. We risked our lives getting the boards and in the process brought the project in way under budget.  Our rinks were also on average larger, had better boards and were based on a  process and history of challenge, sacrifice and adventure.  Sadly what happened to integrity, history and valour in mid-century rink construction.  Sadly, all is lost. 

Friday, April 17, 2026

Clandestine Backyard Rink Construction

 



Clandestine Rink Construction


If I moved too quickly across the branches of the plum tree and down the trunk of the tree, which faced the kitchen window, inside my mother diligently worked over the oven, close to the window. She could easily detect my motion in her periphery vision. Should she see me I would be busted, my mission aborted.  I had to proceed with stealth and secrecy.  I hugged the tree watching her every move waiting for my opportunity to jump the remaining distance to the ground.  As she put her wooden stir spoon down, turning left away from me, she walked toward the living room giving me opportunity to move.  Getting back up later would be a challenge to be faced later when the time came.

Once down the tree my brother and I were off down the street, about seven houses, to the edge of development on our street where the frame of the newest house was being erected.  For us, as kids, it wasn’t just the plundering of the orchards by developers that upset our equilibrium; but equally the disappearance of what we called vital range land once open for play and exploration.  

This current construction site was a source of natural resources for our many projects. It therefore offered compensation for our spiritual and moral loses.  We felt as victims watching the plundering of our childhood environment disappearing before our eyes.  For us to move forward in our fort construction we needed a constant stream of quality lumber products.  We were also out shopping this Fall evening for suitable boards for our future hockey rink to be built in our backyard.  The construction site we were about to visit was to use our Beaver Lumber Store of choice.  We felt at the time it as our moral imperative.  Writing this more than 60 years later, we were just determined kids who wanted their own way.

Since we walk past this particular site each and every school day we had a very complete idea of the inventory available and where it was located. We made a mental map of the progress of the construction each day and were cognizant of the optimum entry and exit paths we would need to take once we procured our allotment of lumber and various supply items.  

This evening we needed a few sheets of plywood for the underground fort currently under construction by us in the vacant lot across the street from our house.  Basic fort construction involved digging an elaborate labrinth of, what looked like to casual observer, shallow graves.  These days would be covered over by rows of planks and two by fours.  We typically laid sheets of three quarter plywood over the framework before covering it up with dirt and sod to blend it back to the natural appearance of the surface prior to excavations. 

To enhance breathing for those inhabitants inside the fort, at three foot intervals, we inserted portions of eaves troughing down spouts to let in air and some light.  Inside each room we further dug shelves into the walls to allow for storage of vital supplies.  The floor space was covered by layers of straw and newspaper to keep out the dampness as occupants crawled from one section to another.  We later discovered it was also a fire hazard and a very bad and dangerous design feature. All in all the design made for early affordable housing on a clandestine level.  It afforded us a huge strategic and logistical advantage for our eventual nefarious bid for strategical and territorial advantage in the neighbourhood. 

Off course in addition to land based forts there were also tree forts to consider, which for the moment our own father seemed pleased with building from his own lumber supply, in trees right in our own backyard.  I’m sure he had his own supply chain. We left him that duty without filling him in on the over-all strategy of how his structures fit into our Maginot Line.  He was just happy to participant without seeing the big picture, so we just left it at that.  

We also needed boards and stakes for outlining the perimeter of our future hockey rink. Even in summer our planning did not lose sight of the fact that “Winter is Coming.” It was best to get these supplies early in the season so that the rink size could be laid out before the ground was frozen.  The best laid plans.

This evening’s excursion was of great importance to our planning protocols and supply flow chains.  We were highly cognizant of the dangers and perils in our line of endeavour as in a pervious excursion several months prior, on a house now completed, which sits  complacently adjacent to the evenings target. We had almost been caught.  It had been a rough and dangerous mission.  

That night there were five of us as lumber supplies had run low and demand was high.  There was much pressure.  As we were gathering our normal allotment of two by fours and sheet plywood when we were mercilessly attacked for no apparent reason.  Later when we could catch our collective breathes and think the problem through we realized it must have been the contractor, or the home owner who came for an unannounced and therefore unexpected site visited.  He must have been hiding in the orchard because we never saw a vehicle approach.  It was a total surprise attack, likely in violation of the Geneva convention, but nothing we could do about it at the time. All of a sudden a bright flashlight shone in our faces and like guilty little racoons we froze on the spot.  The man with the light shouted, “What are you little bastards doing with my wood?” He obviously had a vested interest in our proceedings.  We dropped the wood. We ran.

We had prepared for this moment and in our intensive pre-raid training sessions training sessions. We knew to run each in a separate directions to make tracking us more difficult.  Therefore, instead of chasing one group of five our oppressor now had to choose between five unique trajectories.  He chose mine and was gaining like a race horse out of the gate. 

 I was running through a rough orchard between trees, trying to look over my shoulder to determine the gap between us.  He was rapidly gaining.  In turning, I stumbled and tripped and fell hard.  My pursuer was almost upon me.  He grabbed me by my shirt.  I was hoping even then please don’t rip it I’ll have to explain that to my mom.  He was distracted and loosened his grip as a clod of dirt hit him squarely on his back giving me the brief distraction and opportunity to make good my escape. 

 My brother who had  just saved my life and my shirt was now running at warp speed in another direction.  We did not get any lumber that night, my shirt was soiled not ripped, the mission a failure, yet we lived to strike another day. 

Given our past experience, there was only my brother and I.  We had to limit our “take” and get in and out quickly. We removed some of the splendid planks from the scaffolding on the backside of the house. They were ideal as was their location out of view from the street.  We removed one ten foot plank eased it to the ground as quietly as physics and our bodily strength would allow.  We each grabbed an end, and considering I was only ten at the time, a very heavy load to carry at speed through the orchard that backed onto the construction site and to our backyard.  We covered the distance in record time being careful not to alert the farmer’s dog. We successfully reached the fence defining our backyard and again gently eased the long plank over the fence, onto the ground.  

We both scaled the fence in double time, without speaking, knew our well rehearsed roles.  We stowed the plank with others from previous sites, from previous nights, over previous months, between the garages.  That is the space between our garage and our neighbour’s garage. Here we had a selection of lumber that would have had a significant market effect on the regional supply chain had we ever chosen to flood the market.

The area designated as “Between the Garages” was known as our warehouse. Also the place where Candy, the girl next door, and I traded intimate secrets, but that’s a whole separate story for later.  For some mysterious reason only known to our God and my own father, our stash of lumber and various building supplies, remained a secret.  To this day I have often wondered why my father never asked, “Marty, I looked between the garages just the other day and well I was just wondering what you boys are doing with the 12 planks, 7 sheets of plywood and all that eaves troughing and those two by fours.  Are you building an ark?” He laughed.  He never said a word.  Not once. We knew we were safe and kept accumulating.  It was ordained.  It was God’s will that we should build. If we build they will come, but we had no idea what that actually meant.

After this particular raid was successfully completed we couldn’t exactly enter the house coming in through the back door.  This was the risky part.  We had to climb the plum tree past the kitchen window, up to the porch roof and get into our bedroom on stealth mode without mom seeing us.  My dad may have turned a blind eye to our enterprising ways, but we knew mom, a baptized member of the Mennonite congregation, would not have a similar perspective.  She would be moved by the holy spirit to act it ways detrimental to our planned outcomes.  Once past the kitchen window we could live and breathe again.  From the bedroom we could then come down later and join the family in watching the Ed Sullivan show which broadcast on Sunday night.  It was always best to do raids on a Sunday night, on the Lord’s day, when construction sites were not occupied.  God willing.

By late November, just after my birthday, my brother and I and often with a few friends   measured and surveyed where the rink would be placed and its final dimensions.  We had approval for this project from my dad, but at no point did he help, give advice or get involved at any level.  We thought we were lucky enough having his tacit approval in storing the lumber that seemed to magically multiple between the garages. 

Using string and stakes, as one would measure out a new garden, we measured out the maximum size of our rink.  By early December we brought out some of the long planks and staked them into place along with two of our sheets of plywood. The plywood served as backboards for the goals.  Now it was just a waiting game for snow and freezing conditions. 

Once the snow began to fall and was permanent on the ground, we began to shovel it, beginning with the driveway and transporting it to the rink area using toboggans, wagons and cardboard boxes for transport.  We dumped the snow in the rink area over many days and compacted it with sheets of plywood. The snow was shovelled out evenly then using a half sheet of plywood we would stomp on it to compact the snow beneath.  Eventually, when we had about eight inches of compacted snow within the boards we waited for the colder weather for watering to begin. This next phase was the challenging part.

It's an act of courage and faith to stand for hours with hose in hand spraying the rink surface as the packed snow absorbs water and gradually, after nightly waterings, transforms from crusty snow into solid thick, smooth ice.  Often, I would come into the kitchen with numb fingers barely able to move them.  Slowly, and inevitably water from the hose dribbled down into my gloves freezing my fingers.  My face was so cold I could no longer pronounce words clearly.  My mom would provide us with hot chocolate and warm us up during our breaks all the time marvelling at the great job we were doing.  Occasionally she would comment, “Boys where did your dad get all the wood for the rink.”  Not waiting for an answer she would add,  “Aren’t you boys so lucky to have a dad that does that for you!” 

Today, when I drive through some upscale neighbourhoods to my great satisfaction I still see some road hockey being played with dads out with their kids trying their best to keep up.  In addition, at least in my daughter’s neighbourhood, there are about 6 or seven home backyard rinks.  Although I have rarely seen anyone actually skate on these rinks, I’m sure it happens as soon as I leave the area.  I mean I have never seen a comet before either.  The thing is though the construction methods used now versus what I went through as a kid to construct the perfect ice surface just doesn’t compare.  

Today, a father, I assume, can purchase a large plastic bag from Canadian Tire, called a”rink in a bag.”  This involves placing the bag on a level spot in your yard, install boards in the form of a rectangle to contain the liner, fill the liner with water, let the water freeze. While on one level I applaud the simplicity, the ingenuity, I mock the lack of challenge.  This quite literally is child’s play.  There is no clandestine initiative whatsoever.

Growing up in my neighbourhood it was a badge of courage to go through a process of suffering, involving stages of exposure, hypothermia and exhaustion while completing the construction of a backyard rinks. We risked our lives getting the boards and in the process brought the project in way under budget.  Our rinks were also on average larger, had better boards and were based on a  process and history of challenge, sacrifice and adventure.  Sadly what happened to integrity, history and valour in mid-century rink construction.  Sadly, all is lost. 

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Time and Technology

 




Time and Technology


When I grew up in the 1950’s my bedroom was in the attic of our house.  My sisters each got a bedroom on the main floor as did my parents of course.  Their, master bedroom was strategically placed off of the kitchen.  The house had been designed by a farmer from the Eastern Block so as you can imagine was not filled with aesthetic embellishments.  It stands to reason my brother and I would be delegated to the attic, but in the end a place we cherished.  It afforded us space.  Our room, although shared, took up a third of the floor space of the attic once converted and insulated.  

It also gave us our own private entrance and exit, mind you it was through a window, across the porch roof down a plum tree, to ground zero in the back yard.  The only consideration or danger point in using this exit strategy was that the descent via the tree took us past the kitchen window which was my mother’s domain.  Knowing my mother’s position within the house at any given time made our movements safe and secure.  I’m not saying we were bad kids or up to mischief, but its always better to play it safe.  Suffice it to say, we were never caught and by writing this some 65 years later I have likely past any reasonable statute of limitations.  We did of course, with friends, roam the neighbourhood at night with a sense of adventure, no harm was done and no people or pets were ever harmed.

My brother and I did not have a radio, that didn’t come until the next decade when transistors became available.  I’m not saying we were poor but we did however have an upright, Edison Diamond Disk Sheraton Model 1919, Phonograph player.  With this we had about 50 to 60 vinyl disks, about a quarter of an inch in thickness with all of the hottest hits from 1910 through to 1920.  My brother, or I would crank the handle on the side of the cabinet in order to get the disk up to speed, so we could listen to songs popular some thirty to  forty years before we were born.  “What’ll I Do” by Lewis James, “It Ain’t Gonna Rain NoMo” Wendell Hall, “I’ve Had 57 Varieties of Sweethearts” by Bill Jones, the list goes on. We also had a wide selection of Hawaiian music, and dance music.  It’s all in the Library of Congress.  

Another unique musical feature we had in our house growing up, and ours is not a musical family, was an upright player piano. Ours was built sometime after World War I and ironically went out of popularity because of the Edison Phonograph player, the same standing in my bedroom.  In 1924 over 200 000 player pianos were sold during peak popularity.  Ours was a Baldwin and I have to say in enriched my fantasy world of becoming a world class pianist yet never inspired me to actually learn how to play for real.  I did however develop amazing calf muscles from the constant pedalling required to keep up the air pressure to make the music.  In a way the rolls of music with their many perforations was a premature type of computer programming.  The position of each slot in the roll of paper signals a flow of air which than triggers one of the 88 keys on the key board.  One becomes an expert in minutes. 

Sadly, having these modern miracles at my finger tips as a child did not turn me into a musical prodigy.  I never could hold a tune or play an instrument, but I do appreciate music.  I enjoy history and the progression of technology over time.  It raises the question what do young people have in their bedrooms today? What lessons are they learning from their various monitors.  I guess only time will tell. TIC TOC.