The McGuinness Logging Camp
No
one seemed to know much about him. He
had worked at this camp longer than any of other the men I spoke with, some of
whom had been there for several years.
He spoke infrequently, kept to himself and apparently had no friends
except for the team of horses with which he worked every day, and in whose
company he spent his evenings.
His
name was George Longcott and he was 70 years old, but
in remarkable condition for his age. He
had been called "Longcock" for so long that
some of his coworkers believed that to be his true name. Some even insisted that this was the name
that appeared on his pay checks.
He
was the type of chap that would have drawn attention anywhere, even in a
logging camp. He was a tall lanky man with a fierce visage - not the kind to
invite idle chatter or probing into his background. His head was topped by a large unruly mass of
hair that had probably been black in earlier times, but was now a mixture of
grey, white and black. It was unkempt
and he wore it long at a time when this was very uncommon. He had a beard that was at least twelve
inches long and was just as scraggly as his hair. He also had a huge walrus
mustache, which completely covered his mouth and blended in with his
beard. It was impossible to tell just
exactly where one ended and the other began and his mouth was completely hidden
by them. It became visible only at meal
times or on the rare occasions when he spoke.
He reminded me of a painting of Moses delivering the Ten Commandments.
George
wore clothes typical for a logger - a woolen plaid jacket, woolen trousers held
up by heavy suspenders, and a plaid shirt, as well as woolen Stanfield underwear
commonly called "long johns."
In George's case there was one major difference. He reputedly put on a new suit of long johns
each autumn and kept it on until he discarded it the following spring. Needless to say, one could often smell
George's presence.
Frank
had been out on his own for over a year. He was in some ways worldly, but in others
still quite naive. For a
seventeen-year-old though, he was very mature.
He was a gutsy young fellow who dearly loved partying and having a good
time. He also appeared to be very
popular with the opposite sex and had at least one steady girlfriend back in
Creston.
Frank’s
father had farmed a small orchard in Creston before being killed in World War
II. His late grandfather had been a
cabinet minister in the coalition government of BC and had acquired his wealth
during the nineteen twenties smuggling liquor into the United States during Prohibition.
As
camps go this one was not particularly noteworthy. The food was excellent, at least it seemed so to me. It was placed in large serving bowls on a
table, which stretched from one end of the dining hall to the other. The
food was passed from one person to the next and one had better help oneself the
first time around because no one wanted to interrupt their eating to pass it a
second time. Such requests were usually met with smart retorts such as;
"shut up and eat you dinner."
Much
of the food had colorful, but logical as well as highly descriptive names. You would hear commands such as; "pass
the iron cow," (canned milk), "send
down the cackleberries," (eggs), "have some CPR strawberries," (prunes), "pass the mush," ( oatmeal porridge) etc. Until I learned this new
jargon, I was sometimes rebuked for being too slow in responding.
Back
in 1951 there was very little mechanization in the logging camps. The loggers felled and bucked the trees with
crosscut saws. It was brutally hard work
and the men ate huge amounts of food to fuel their bodies from one meal to the
next. I have never since seen anyone eat
such prodigious amounts at every meal!
We
quickly discovered that each worker had his own place at the table and that
newcomers had better wait until everyone else was seated before choosing their
seats. I learned the hard way that
taking someone else's place at the table was not tolerated. The chair’s rightful owner came and stood at
the table glowering at me until someone nudged me and whispered that I was
sitting in his chair. It was no fun to
find my self with proverbial "egg on my face," but for Frank at
least, the worst was yet to come.
It
wasn't until the first morning at breakfast that Frank got to meet George Longcott up close for he was seated directly across the
table from him.