Pierre Girard
Curious about Wooden Canoes
This would be about guilt. That would be the guilt I feel every time I buy or spend money on a canoe. The guilt was instilled by my father, mother, grandparents on both sides, and the sliding scale. That would be the sliding scale of depression era priorities.
Like many folks my age, my parents lived through the "great depression." I'm not sure what was so great about it, but I was raised with sayings like, " A Penny Saved is a Penny Earned, " and "Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do with out."
This has always been a problem when buying or making canoes, toboggans, snowshoes, packs. I'm the proud owner of a dozen Duluth packs. Is it because I spent a lot of money on them? No, It's because I inherited them or got them cheap and patched them.
Building tobaggons, when I was young, we'd snap three or four boards before we got one to bend into shape because we could only use the boards full of knots. The good boards had to be used for furniture or something useful.
The only reason we were able to build a lot of canoes when I was a teenager was because my father was able to get cheap gov't surplus fiber glass, and we were able to tear down a redwood water tower and salvage the redwood timbers for canoe planking.
The worst thing you could be when I was growing up was a "play-baby." That would be someone who was only interested in fun. Life was about work, and a "play-baby," was a useless thing and deserved only contempt. The only reason we were able to build canoes is - we could sell some and make some money. It was a fight to keep a few for our own use.
Turns out I've always been a "play-baby," much more interested in canoeing, camping and snowshoeing than working all the time. but I live with the guilt.
SLIDING SCALE OF DEPRESSION ERA PRIORITIES:
If it is a project for the betterment of the community or for the church you can spend a lot of money
If it is for work, or it will "Make You A Buck," you can spend a reasonable amount of money
If it is for something around the home - you can spend a little money
If it is for recreation - or "play," it is almost sinful - and you can spend no money without guilt
Like many folks my age, my parents lived through the "great depression." I'm not sure what was so great about it, but I was raised with sayings like, " A Penny Saved is a Penny Earned, " and "Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do with out."
This has always been a problem when buying or making canoes, toboggans, snowshoes, packs. I'm the proud owner of a dozen Duluth packs. Is it because I spent a lot of money on them? No, It's because I inherited them or got them cheap and patched them.
Building tobaggons, when I was young, we'd snap three or four boards before we got one to bend into shape because we could only use the boards full of knots. The good boards had to be used for furniture or something useful.
The only reason we were able to build a lot of canoes when I was a teenager was because my father was able to get cheap gov't surplus fiber glass, and we were able to tear down a redwood water tower and salvage the redwood timbers for canoe planking.
The worst thing you could be when I was growing up was a "play-baby." That would be someone who was only interested in fun. Life was about work, and a "play-baby," was a useless thing and deserved only contempt. The only reason we were able to build canoes is - we could sell some and make some money. It was a fight to keep a few for our own use.
Turns out I've always been a "play-baby," much more interested in canoeing, camping and snowshoeing than working all the time. but I live with the guilt.
SLIDING SCALE OF DEPRESSION ERA PRIORITIES:
If it is a project for the betterment of the community or for the church you can spend a lot of money
If it is for work, or it will "Make You A Buck," you can spend a reasonable amount of money
If it is for something around the home - you can spend a little money
If it is for recreation - or "play," it is almost sinful - and you can spend no money without guilt