John
Doonanco:
My
teacher,
my
friend
I
was
thrilled
to
read
the
article
on
John
Doonanco
in
your
interesting
fall
issue
of
the
Alberta
Game
Warden.
It
tickled
and
awakened
my
nostalgic
bones
and
resounded
in
the
deepest
echoes
of
my
heart,
to
view
and
read
this
particular
article.
John
was
a
very
close
friend
of
mine
over
a
period
of
many
years.
I
first
met
him
in
Cold
Lake,
on
his
"Conservation
Yacht".
Then
when
he
moved
to
St.
Paul
in
‘66,
a
place
where
I
lived
for
50
years,
I
got
to
know
him
much
better
and
we
became
close
friends.
John
was
a
conscientious,
intelligent
and
witty
man,
whose
heart
and
soul
dwelled
in
the
forest.
The
flora
and
fauna
of
the
forest
ran
through
his
energetic
veins.
He
was
an
extremely
competent
officer,
but
could
occasionally
write
poetry.
In
moose
camp,
I
frequently
became
the
target
of
some
of
his
poems,
hilarious,
most
of
them.
Together
we
camped
in
the
forest
in
my
16
foot
trailer,
then
in
forestry
cabins,
in
tents
and
even
under
the
stars,
as
we
penetrated
further
into
the
forest.
We
used
to
carry
our
moose
out
on
pack
boards
in
those
days.
John
taught
me
how
to
live
in
the
forest,
how
to
call
moose,
the
intricacies
of
hunting
them
and
how
to
look
after
the
animal
once
it
was
on
the
ground.
He
even
taught
me
how
to
make
shoe-laces
or
strings
out
of
the
hide,
and
lest
we
forget,
how
to
make
moose-nose
stew.
Nothing
went
to
waste.
John
and
I
hunted
moose,
deer,
fished
together
over
water,
through
the
ice,
and
on
the
rivers
for
arctic
grayling.
It
was
always
such
a
pleasure
to
be
under
his
tutelage.
I
learned
an
awful
lot.
Due
to
his
influence
over
the
years,
at
81
years
of
age
this
year,
I
am
still
going
on
our
annual
moose
hunt,
where
I
will
once
again
speak
to
the
mighty
beasts.
In
August
‘91,
my
son
Maurice,
wife
and
family
were
cruelly
murdered.
The
following
year
my
close
friend
John
was
murdered
at
the
end
of
October.
I
felt
that
my
world
was
collapsing
and
coming
apart.
Somehow,
life
went
on.
In
my
house,
two
of
my
most
prized
possessions
are
a
timber
wolf
skull
(teeth
and
all)
and
a
processed
wolf
pelt
from
the
same
animal,
products
of
John's
trap
line,
both
given
to
me
by
him
in
'89.
They
hold
a
place
of
honour
in
my
home.
I
will
treasure
them
forever.
I
will
never
forget
this
very
special,
talented
man,
who
I
was
honoured
to
have
known.
I
still
miss
him
a
lot.
As
written
by
Shakespeare:
"Good
night,
sweet
Prince,
and
flights
of
Angels
sing
thee
to
thy
rest."
Dr.
Louis
G.
Mandin
Sherwood
Park
The ALBERTA GAME WARDEN magazine encourages the submission of letters,
articles, and photographs from anyone interested in conservation. Letters
to the editor and other material submitted for publication should be mailed
to:
THE ALBERTA GAME WARDEN
Jason Hanson
5201-50 Avenue
Wetaskiwin, Alberta, Canada T9A 0S7
or
THE ALBERTA GAME WARDEN
Sharie Cousins
WPM Place, 530-8 Street South
Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada T1J 2J8
Articles or correspondence may be submitted directly to the editor's
desk by FAX: (780) 352-7220 OR E-MAIL: sales@gamewarden.ab.ca
Deadlines for all submissions: December 1st, March 1st, June 1st
and September 1st for inclusion in subsequent issue.
The magazine shall not be responsible for unsolicited materials.
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