Fun on the Pier
A guest post from W Keeler - to view the pic click on it
Occasional waves exploded two or three stories into the air, drenching girls who perched themselves, like sweet little seagulls, on the steel railing that perimeters the pier.
There were three boys and a girl in the frothing turbulence of the water, riding the surface currents of the waves. It was a wonderful display of mental alertness and physical strength and endurance of their prime-of-life bodies. The background ambience is Danger. Risky behaviour? Of course. How else does a human being test their abilities? The waves had a rough rhythm roughly learned by the teens, when they were climbing the ladder, the impact and withdrawal of a single wave ripped them off the rungs and pulled them back down in to the deep. One of the boys gripped the girl's arm to ensure her safety. She successfully made to the arms of a girlfriend.
Finally, everyone is safe and secure, drenched in a lifetime memories. They will eventually become responsible civilians, pass through two or three decades, and recall the sheer exhilaration if this day. One older woman admonished the teens, telling them the fine details of bashed heads, lungs full of water, etc. It reminded me of the words of Irving Layton in The Whole Bloody Bird: "It is cruel for the old to inflict their disillusioned wisdom on the young. Fortunately it is also impossible."




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Jumping from the pier is a time-honoured activity. When the ferries arrived in Cobourg, USAmericans would throw coins from the boat and be entertained by a few Cobourg outh who would dive in to retrieve them.
Years later, I was amongst the youths who used the derelict ferry dock as a platform for diving into the inner harbour.
Another venue during the early 60s was jumping off the roof of a shed located on the t-pier where the Coast Guard boat now ties up.
Last year, several young men would jump off the end of the pier with their surf boards attached to their ankles. They jumped into froth and turbulence.
What I remember most about diving off the dynamite shack at the T-pier is the extreme haste which characterized our emergence from the water.
We had a big eel problem then in Lake Ontario and we were terrified of the possibility of one of these metre long sucking machines attaching themselves to a leg or arm before we could get out.
AAGGGHHH!
Forgot to add a big thanks to Wally for this posting. It really brought back some lively memories of my carefree and careless youth.
There was a concrete bunker out near the end of the west pier. It was 1968. Safe place to smoke Manhatten Silver. To the amusement of a handful of girls, Zeke, took off his clothes, and standing there naked in the sunset, he played Reveille, on a trombone yet.
That was then.
Unfortunately now, Cobourg's waterfront has become a NO ZONE. Take a scroll and count the NOs, while at the same time Canada's Five Man Electrical Band plays in your head:
Sign Sign everywhere a sign
Blocking out the scenery breaking my mind
Do this, don't do that, can't you read the sign
-- Signs, 1971.
Pretty cool vibe we have going here, keep it going =]
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