In May of 1949, 20 year old Barbara Kingscote and 15 year old Zazy, her little black mare, set off from Mascoushe, Quebec for Vancouver, British Columbia. Barbara planned a year long journey across Canada while awaiting placement at the Ontario Veterinary College in Guelph. They were sent off with good wishes, a map, provisions and $100.00. Along the way, Barbara would stop at small towns to renew her provisions, send and collect mail from her parents or sister. She and Zazy grew ever closer, listening to each others excitement or hesitations.
They encountered many hardships: storms drenching them with cold rain, attacked by black flies in Ontario and other as determined insects on the prairies, the draining heat on the prairies where there was little cover, some unsavoury characters that she fended off bravely. But she loved her journey, met many Canadians who welcomed her into their families with meals and much needed rest, travellers who gave her rides or directions. Occasionally she slept on a porch, a floor or in a hay loft. On these happy visits, Zazy was stabled in a barn, sometimes with a stall. Many times they slept outdoors. Only once did they hear a cougar, but didn’t see it. She was always concerned that Zazy have oats, a farrier as often as possible to tend to her shoes and the ‘galls’ (saddle sores) that she suffered from. Because of the sores, Barbara finally sent most of her tack back to her home in Quebec and rode bareback the last 500 miles. In the winter of 1949, Barbara was able to get employment at a lumber camp as a ‘cookie’, assisting the cook with preparing and serving the meals to the men. Zazy was stabled there, not without some dissent. When the head man tried to get her stabled elsewhere, the determined little mare left to find her Barbara. Helen, the cook made sure that Zazy always had an oatmeal cookie and kiss on the nose. The men could get rowdy from time to time, with alcohol involved in stirring the pot. She described some of the difficulties there, but she was never injured and differences were resolved among the men.
Immediately after their ride, Barbara did enter Veterinary School and graduated in August of 1955. Zazy remained in B.C., with good friends for 3 years until Barbara could pay for her fare by rail to Guelph. This is a second read of this fascinating this coming of age book. Barbara Kingscote describes parts of Canada that most of us have never known. Her descriptions of the land, the wildlife, and the people they met along the way are poignant. It took me on the journey with her, a journey that ended in August of 1950.
“How did you ever take your first step out?”…….
“I didn’t know how far it was?”
Barbara Kingscote, Ride the Rising Wind:
one woman’s journey across Canada
Author’s note: no cell phones, no internet. Just paper maps, dial telephones in homes and towns, and the good will of strangers and intuition.
Title: Ride the Rising Wind: one woman’s journey across Canada
Author: Barbara Kingscote
Publication Date: 2006
Publisher:NeWest Press
Type: Memoir
Format: Paperback
ISBN - 13: 978-1-897126-05-9
ISBN - 10: 1- 897126-05-0
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