What do you give a seven-month-old?

I’ve got a young nephew in Whitehorse who’s just about seven months old.  His name is Elias.  I wanted to give him something nice for Christmas, ideally something home made.  So here it is – a box with different shapes that fit through holes in the sides:

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I didn’t want to do anything too complicated since (like everybody else) I seem to have so many other pressing things on the go already.  Still it ended up being a bit of a process.  Some pieces were cut indoors:

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Some of the jigsawing and most of the sanding was done outside since it’s been so (relatively) warm lately:

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All of the wood is recycled maple from a local condo development.  It’s been sitting around my place for at least six years, so some of it is kind of warped.  That’s why it took so many clamps to hold it in shape while I glued the pieces together:

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In the end I think it turned out alright – mostly thanks to borrowing Byron’s belt sander to smooth out all my poor joinery.  Now hopefully I can get it to Whitehorse in the next three days!

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Whitehorse

Just got back from a whirlwind tour to Whitehorse, where I played a house concert with my brother Darcy, his wife Erica Mah and Yellowknife’s Old Town Versifier, Anthony Foliot.  After a set on my own, I was joined by Darcy and fiddler Sammy Lind for a few tunes.  Check out Sammy and his partner Nadine as well as the Foghorn Stringband.  Here’s our impromptu stringband:

House Concert Whitehorse with Darcy and Sammy

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February 2013 – Doug Kershaw

I’d never heard of Doug Kershaw before I stumbled across some videos of him. Here’s a tune called Diggy Liggy Lo, played Cajun style. Something tells me he might not actually be playing on this recording, but, well, he probably could, and anyway, what a showman! This song is also popular in the North, and you can find some good Metis versions.

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January 2013 – Trent Freeman

This month, check out Trent Freeman from Vancouver Island, describing and demonstrating some of the unique aspects of Metis fiddling.

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Riding the Rails in Mexico – Part 2

The yard worker tells me there’s a freight headed west out of Chihuahua city every night at three in the morning. That’s a pretty awkward time. Either rent a room and get up really early, or stay out late sitting around the freight yard and hope not to miss it. It’s about three miles from downtown to the yard, too. I decide to ride the passenger train back into the Copper Canyon – it’s just more reliable.

The Clase Economica Turistica pulls out of the station at seven in the morning. The First Class leaves at six, and the only advantage of it is the extra hour of daylight in the real scenic sections of the trip. I think that’s outweighed by the disadvantages – you can’t eat in the cars, you pay twice the price for the ticket, and you’re stuck with a bunch of rich white snobs. Both of them are nice though for standing in the vestibules, leaning out the windows, enjoying the crisp morning breeze and the phenomenal countryside.

I won’t bore you here with all the details, just the basics. I rode west to Temoris, a station that’s about ten kilometres by road and some thousand metres vertically away from the village of the same name. It’s the site of an incredible feat of railway engineering – a 180-degree loop inside a tunnel, followed by a horseshoe curve over two large trestles. I’d been there before, but wanted to go back and take some photos.

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So I spent a night there, then caught the cushions east back to Creel in the morning. Creel’s a nice spot, and the gateway for lots of remote canyon villages. I spent a week there looking around, then caught the second class west to San Rafael, which is the only division point on the whole ChePe line – a trip that takes about twenty-two hours from Chihuahua to Los Mochis.

As soon as the passenger trains left (one in each direction) I checked out the scene. You can be pretty bold about talking to workers – they’ll help you catch a ride. One told me the next eastbound would be at midnight, close to the same time as the first one I’d ridden from San Blas to Chihuahua ten days earlier. It was 3:00 PM now, so I had some time to kill.

I scoped out the yard a bit first – it’s just small, but it has a wye and some servicing facilities. There was a freight on the siding, and three engines idling, but I trusted the worker that it wouldn’t be going east. Sure enough I saw it go west later in the evening.

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I walked out of town to the west just to look around and kill time. It wasn’t long before San Rafael was in the distance, as you’re out in the countryside within a mile. For a while I sat by some weather-sculpted rocks, reading a bit, writing a song about riding the rails on the ChePe, and generally killing time. When the sun started to dip I packed my bag and started walking, further down the line, to keep warm.

There was a tunnel – I think it was labelled number 37. It wasn’t too long, so I walked through it. Not far past the other end there was a second tunnel. This one was marked as being over 400 metres long, and it curved sharply. That would take about five minutes to walk through, in the pitch black – a bit beyond my limits of risk.

By the entrance to the tunnel there was a nice little glade of pine trees, up against a cliff, and just right for waiting on a train. There was lots of wood around too, which is rare near settled parts of Mexico. I got a fire going, and really settled in, reading, letting the sun go down behind me, and once in a while stomping out the fires that started in the dry pine needles. I had a couple beers and it was really a pretty comfortable way to spend the early evening.

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Well after dark there were footsteps on the tracks, and I shut off my flashlight. He obviously would have seen my fire, but I still tried to avoid drawing his attention. Strangely enough, the footsteps just kept going, right into the tunnel, never losing a beat, and gradually fading away in the distance. At this point it was dark enough outside the tunnel that I couldn’t see him, and he went inside. Not too long after that, the train that had been parked in San Rafael went by too, following the invisible man westward.

When I ran out of beer I walked back to town. It was maybe 8:30, and I hoped to find a place to eat. The prospects looked dismal in this dark village of empty mud streets, but continuing through town paid off – there was a house that served food in their living room (advertised as a restaurant) that was still open on the east end of town. The mother cooked a great dinner, and pulled her daughter away from homework to serve it.

I spent as much time there as possible, since it was getting cold out, but eventually had to go, back down to the yard, to scope a place to try and get a bit of sleep.

There was a little shack with a security guard, but he wouldn’t care about me, especially since I saw his girlfriend show up by flashlight to keep him company. Still though there was nowhere very discreet to have a nap, and it seemed like every dog in town was barking at me.

The spot I settled in was in the shadow of a pile of rails, and I somehow fell asleep there, to the sound of at least three dogs barking at their echo under a full moon.

I woke up to a low rumble, more surprised to have slept than anything. Without getting my hopes up too high I checked the time – almost midnight. The rumble was, to my practised ear, most likely a train in the distance, but I couldn’t be too sure because it would sometimes cut out completely. It took nearly half an hour, but finally that sound became visible as the bright lights rounded the curve into the yard. The reason the sound kept cutting out was that the tunnels along the way muted the engines’ roar completely.

I caught a grainer maybe ten cars back when the train stopped. It seemed like it wasn’t at the station yet though, and sure enough it just pulled forward and stopped a second time. This time I walked towards the rear, looking for an open boxcar, but not wanting to be too far from the grainer, which was a sure thing. There didn’t seem to be anything else back there, and when I heard voices I got onto a different car – maybe twenty back.

At San Rafael they do an inspection of the train. Workers checked brake pads, air lines, hand brakes, and some guys even walked the roof, looking into the hatches on the grain cars. I hid out in the hole and watched all this from the shadows, but I’m pretty sure they wouldn’t have cared if they’d seen me.

Finally the whistle blew and we were off, picking up speed almost immediately. Full moon overhead, but it was too cold to watch the scenery. As soon as we started to move I could feel the biting chill. My feet got cold and I stomped them on the steel for a while so they would at least be a bit warmer before trying to sleep. I’d bought a Tarahumara blanket that morning in Creel, and it was better than nothing, but it’s not that warm.

I settled down in the hole, cramped in there as usual, trying to use garbage to insulate the cold steel. I had all my clothes on – boots, gloves, toque, coat – but still I froze. I managed to get some sleep I guess, but was grateful for the first light. I got up and started stomping my feet, which I couldn’t feel at all.

This trip it warmed up a bit quicker in the morning than on my first ride to Chihuahua. There was ice everywhere, but the sun worked a bit harder. We stopped at the same grain loading facility near Cuahtemoc, too, and again I got my bags ready in case they set my car off. Standing there with my bag on my back and blanket over my shoulders, and freezing, wishing they would move out of the shadow of a string of freight cars on the siding, I was totally humbled. A man came from the back of the train, stumbling a bit, and visibly shaking. When he got to me I said something about the cold. “Si,” he said, then picked up some cardboard and lit it with a lighter. As it burned he threw on a bit more, and tried to warm his hands and feet over the flame. He’d been riding the same train overnight, but while I was freezing in all my layers of clothes, here was a guy who’d toughed it out in a ball cap, light jacket, no gloves, and sandals.

He walked up the train and got on the car in front of mine, bringing some more cardboard to burn along the way. We picked up a few cars from the siding, then aired up and were off. The only other stop was just east of Cuahtemoc. The other guy had climbed off in town, either to warm up or maybe that’s where he was going. We picked up some cars near the sewage treatment lagoons, then waited a few minutes for the westbound First Class.

Again the scenery in the little pass between Cuahtemoc and Chihuahua was the best part of my freight ride, and I made sure to get some pictures on the big curves. The crew that was painting one of the trestles on scaffolding my first couple trips through didn’t seem to be there this time, but we crawled across it anyway, giving me a good look at the twin bridge a ways down the valley.

After slipping through the slot canyon and the last two tunnels, I laid down on the deck and basked in the sun. I fell asleep right away, but it didn’t last long. There was one more discomfort to endure, and it didn’t show itself till we hit the wide open plains near Chihuahua: when the train really got moving (maybe fifty miles an hour) the car I was on started to rock – like a speed wobble. You could see the wheels wobbling on the rails, and it shook so much it was impossible to lie down. Mostly it was just annoying, but I was thankful it wasn’t like that the whole time. As it was I willed the train to slow down, to end the agony.

We hit Chihuahua around eleven in the morning, and again I jumped off at the passenger station. This time some workers asked if I had just come in on the train. I told them yes, and they said I better not walk through the yard, since there were guards there. Sure enough, as I left from the west end of the yard there was a guard. They might be a little more serious around the passenger station than in the freight yards, but this guy had no problem.

I walked into town, heading for the first taco shop I could find. A woman asked for my help carrying car batteries from a shop out to her car. What I remember most though is the blissful warmth of blood pulsing through my feet for the first time in ten hours as I walked down the city streets, back in palm and cactus country, with the hot sun high overhead.

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-2005

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Album Release!

Album Cover for CD Baby

Almost a year in the making, my first album Westbound was released October 25th, 2014 at the Top Knight Pub in Yellowknife.  Huge thanks to everyone for the support – the house was packed! I think lots of fun was had by all.  Shout out to the Old Town Sound (Andrea Bettger Fiddle, Jeff Dineley Bass, Devin Lake Drums, and Don Mackay Mandolin), they were great! Also to Special Guests Becky Davis, Anthony Foliot, Chris Pyke and Wade Carpenter.

The album was produced, engineered and mixed by Adrian Dolan.  Mastered by David Travers-Smith at found sound toronto.  Recorded at Erickson Sound Labs in Buellton, California.  Album artwork and design is by Katie O’Beirne.

It features my brother, Darcy McCord, on Cello, Percussion and Vocals; Ben Russo on Mandolin and Vocals; Adrian Dolan on Violin, Viola, Accordion, and Vocals; and Bear Erickson on Electric Guitar.

The ice saw was recorded by Janna Graham on Great Slave Lake, an hour before the flight to California.  Want to know more about cutting ice? Check it out on Fran Hurcomb’s blog.

The whole project was made possible by the generous support of the NWT Arts Council.

If you’d like to buy the album online, it’s available here.

Album Release Photo 1 Camilla

 

Album Release photo 5 Camilla

 

Photos: Camilla MacEachern

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Snake’s in the fiddle

Em                                                                                         B7       Em

Shake that rattle around ol’ boy you gotta shake that rattle around

Em                                                                                         B7        Em

Shake that rattle around ol’ boy you gotta shake that rattle around

.               Am

Well the snake’s in the fiddle an’ the devil’s in the bow

Em                            B7      Em

Rattle ‘em up for a do-si-do

.               Am

Well the snake’s in the fiddle an’ the devil’s in the bow

B7

Rattle ‘em up now here we go

 

Spider’s in the fiddle an’ he’s webbin’ up a den

Shake around the rattle an’ he’s gone again

 

Well I learned to play the fiddle ever since I was-a ten

Reeling in the lessons of the older fellas then

 

Wanna make a rattle then you gotta get a snake

Throw ‘im in the fiddle then you give it a shake

 

Snake’s in the fiddle make a mighty pretty charm

Gives a little drop of honey in your fiddling arm

 

Some folk claim the fiddle sound a-mighty good

with a Rattlesnake rattling against the wood

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The Last Time I Rode a Train

¾ Time Jimmie Rodgers style – key of D but I play it in C, capo 2

 

.       C                                          F                        C

The last time I rode a train, I rode it back to you

.       C                                                               D7                     G7

I rode it through the rain and snow, back to the skies of blue

.  C                                                       F                                   C

I rode it over soaring heights and through deep valleys too

.       F                C                       D7         G7         C

The last time I rode a train, I rode it back to you

 

I waited seven hours, standing in the rain

Waited by the railroad tracks, for an Eastbound train

When early in the morning, I heard the engine’s roar

I swung aboard that freight train, right through the boxcar door

 

I left that rainy city, down on the western coast

Rode it through the mountains to the girl I missed the most

I found her there in Cowtown, out on the open plains

And told her that I rode to her upon an Eastbound train

 

A ride upon the railroad, can leave a poor man’s soul

High up in the mountains, or crushed like dirty coal

I told her that I loved her, told her it was true

The last time I rode a train, I rode it back to you

 

She said you weary hobo, come in and sit ye down

You rode so many miles, to see me in this town

I’m happy for the gesture, it’s good to be with you

But that is all there is, dear, I’m sorry if you’re blue

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The Bargain Barber

.           I                    II                           IV             I

Well I went to the barber cause my hat don’t fit

I                    VII                    V              I

Shave and a haircut that’ll cost two bits

.              I                           II            IV               I

But you know when you live in a one horse town

.        I                    VII                  V                 I

Two jobs for one man and the other way around

.                           IV

.           Well the barber is the butcher and his razor’s sharp

.                          I

.           And the butcher is the barber but it’s not too smart

.                             IV

.           Cause the barber is a bargain till the end of the day

.                       I                                                                                V

.            If you bargain on a barber then you’ll never get your way

 

He opened up a cupboard and he pulled out a book

All the different cuts and you can pick your look

Page 27 that’s the one I like

Cause I wanna look good when I’m riding on my bike

 

He said that’s fine but I’ll tell you what

You’d like much better with a clean crew cut

So he fired up the clippers and before I knew

I was all done up with an army ‘do

 

He started with the razor and he nicked my face

Blood started spraying all over the place

I said “Oh Henry” won’t you please just stop

I came to see the barber not the butcher shop

 

So I left the old barber and I walked down the street

All chopped up like a slab of meat

If you’re looking for a bargain then you’d better beware

Cause you don’t want a butcher trying to barber your hair

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Manitoba Blues

A

Up in Manitoba, don’t know where to go

A

Going back to T.O. down in Ontario

A                   D                                     A

I’ve been defeated, in my western quest

.            E                                                                  A

Gonna head back to Toronto, place I love the best

 

Left a factory job, spent my only dough

On a third class ticket out of Ontario

I can’t believe it, that they would treat me so

Stopped me at the station, said that I can’t go

 

.               D                                            A

.     Manitoba, you make me feel so blue

.              E                                     A

.     Manitoba, what’s a man to do

 

Don’t know where to go now, can’t afford a room

I’m stuck here in this flop house with a mop and a broom

I feel so cheated, it makes me want to scream

Life here is a nightmare, far from the western dream

 

Spent the night in prison, charged with vagrancy

Bulldogs and the bedbugs kept on biting me

I’ve been unseated, from my native home

Never will I ramble, never more to roam

 

They dragged me down to skid row, told me where to go

Threw me on a freight train back to Ontario

I’ve been mistreated, I’ve been misunderstood

Left behind the sorrow, tried to make it good

 

Up in Manitoba, don’t know where to go

Going back to T.O. down in Ontario

I’ve been defeated, in my western quest

Gonna head back to Toronto, place I love the best

Gonna head back to Toronto, nevermind the west

Gonna head back to Toronto, oh what a mess

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