Grandpa was a doctor in Saskatchewan and he delivered babies at peoples homes in winter. The car would get stuck in the snow drifts so he used a sleigh with two horses and a big fur coat! He also helped start free medical with Tommy Douglas. Thanks grandpa and grandma for working so hard .
@bobbeytv10 ай бұрын
Grandpa was a boss
@peterschancel722310 ай бұрын
Thank you ,, your Grandpa helped Canada in a way most don't understand with Tommy Douglas.. Remember we can help each other on small scale..as well
@brieb431710 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing!
@CanadianMapleleaf10 ай бұрын
I miss that generation dearly...
@Gigachadly9 ай бұрын
That’s prolly the coolest doctor story I’ve ever heard in my life. Pulled up on a slay to deliver a baby that man was something else!
@aavvcc10 ай бұрын
My mom’s mother’s parents came to Saskatchewan in the early 1900s, at the direction of the Federal government. They were told that if they wanted to live in Canada, that’s was where they had to live (to farm). They had no idea how cold it could get - they almost died their first Canadian winter were it not for a nearby indigenous group that showed them how to survive. She always recalled how lovingly she spoke of Canadian indigenous peoples because of that.
@Winnas10 ай бұрын
Where were they originally from?
@NirtieDigger10 ай бұрын
And now look at the indigenous 😂
@aavvcc10 ай бұрын
@@Winnas They emigrated from what is now Poland near the Polish/Ukraine border
@gregwalker191310 ай бұрын
That's how you do history in Canada. Don't forget either cultures, don't belittle either cultures. History is complex, challenge your viewers.
@McLKeith10 ай бұрын
My grandparents homesteaded in Saskatchewan in 1906. My grandmother told us kids that she really liked living in a sod house. It was warm and comfortable.
@SerumFromThere9 ай бұрын
My family on my mothers side came over from Hungary in the early 1900s and ended up in Saskatchewan. Eventually moving towards BC/Shushwap area and settling there eventually.
@carlyar528110 ай бұрын
This is why historically the culture in the prairies is one of self-sufficiency and hard work, BUT also one of community and social responsibility! People were hardy and tough, but they looked after each other and relied on each other. Because you could not survive as an individual, you had to be part of a community, and everyone had a role to play. Division and infighting comes with disastrous consequences. Much of this culture still remains, especially in the rural communities, but modern conveniences combined with technology has made it so that it’s no longer a survival issue… which is a good thing. But this culture is evolving and sadly I don’t recognize some aspects of the province I grew up in.
@SonoftheWest31610 ай бұрын
i'm not so sure that it's a good thing look how ungrateful everyone is today.
@ericcartmann10 ай бұрын
I see lots of similarities with the Tower of Babel and the Noah's Ark from the Bible. I think God will purge in the not to distant future.
@SA-wj1jo10 ай бұрын
@@ericcartmannwhat an insight!
@patricktruelove46410 ай бұрын
Yup. That's the difference between Alberta then and now. They didn't spend their time whining to the federal government.They went ahead and got the job done.
@mw92979 ай бұрын
@@ericcartmanndefinitely the star people are showing up more and more. The ufos.
@marianfrances495910 ай бұрын
My grandmother was a midwife in early Saskatchewan. She told accounts of newborns, particularly "preemies", kept in the (coal) cookstove warming ovens.
@dbmuir868310 ай бұрын
doesn't surprise me at all that people on the Prairies were born-and-raised inhaling coal fumes, explains their neurotype
@andrewboore389910 ай бұрын
This was literally my grandfather and his siblings. Born triplets and preemie babies they were put in a shoebox and put in the wood oven as an incubator. My grandfather lived to the age of 99, amazing.
@filmic110 ай бұрын
That was really nice! Thank you. I have a dear friend in Alberta who welcomed me into their life when I was going to UofC. Their Grandparents, the Grandfather (homesteaded) would go courting the Grandmother in horse and buggy in the winter across that Alberta plain. At quite a distance. I was so privileged to know them and hear the stories. Calgary was bitter cold enough midwinter, but on the prairie....? brrrrrrr.
@benjaminedelman352310 ай бұрын
Finally! CBC is doing a cool story for once
@bowbender110 ай бұрын
With the state media allowing comments
@cwp258010 ай бұрын
Hallelujah @@bowbender1
@arunchaturvedi196010 ай бұрын
Its so inspiring to hear these stories; makes me think we have it so easy these days.
@Dam-a-fence10 ай бұрын
I heard a joke in a stand up comedy show once. Family of settlers on the prairies see a familiar first nation tribe making their way toward the valley and asks the nearest where they've been all winter. He looked back, a bit bewildered and answered, "South".
@woodenpints10 ай бұрын
I'm really enjoying the recent short content CBC has been uploading lately. Keep it up, peeps!
@becayebalde38209 ай бұрын
Indigenous people seem so peaceful They did not deserve to be harmed
@shopnstuff822810 ай бұрын
grandma grew up on the farm in saskatchewan and has great stories to tell..she is 96now :) still goin
@_The_Captain10 ай бұрын
I would love to hear those stories. You should record as many as you can, it's important history and things that should not be forgotten. ☺
@DjWellDressedMan10 ай бұрын
20,000 Years in Northern Turtle Island aka: Canada, my cousins the Navajos got smart and moved to modern day Arizona!
@DS-lk3tx10 ай бұрын
Bunch of colonizers. 😂😂
@DjWellDressedMan10 ай бұрын
@@DS-lk3tx LOL
@smalltownhomesteadAC10 ай бұрын
Our ancestor’s were amazing!
@SM-fe1dh9 ай бұрын
The plural of ´ancestor´ is ´ancestors’, no apostrophe required. Basic English grammar.
@prairiehorse61689 ай бұрын
@@SM-fe1dh calm down, grammar police!
@jq897410 ай бұрын
Lots of stories from my relatives... many kids sleeping in one bed (happily - until someone peed!), long johns and wool clothes, small houses, chamber pots (yep, tough to use the outhouse on days like these), straw and sawdust helping insulate. Lots of card games and singing before TV :)
@TRUEC4N4DI4N10 ай бұрын
They weren’t whinny little kids. They were men and women who just handled what was given to them pushed through.
@gospelpreacher122510 ай бұрын
Let's accept it. Our ancestors were both physically and mentally stronger than the current generations.
@DS-gt1ft9 ай бұрын
Well, at least they had a much lower expectation of quality of life and life expectancy.
@flowerpower87229 ай бұрын
They would have had a lot more first hand knowledge of how to survive. One or two generations of too much comfort loses that knowledge. I think that is the great threat to human survival, if that cosy little bubble in history we live in collapses - anywhere in the world. Hot climates have their own survival problems. Those people look at places like Canada and say, well at least they've got plenty of water. I'm in Australia, and am amazed at the generation of pansies that have emerged since home airconditioning has emerged. I think that's the root of 'climate change'.
@conorm18719 ай бұрын
The lives we lead are incomparably different.
@davehenderson68969 ай бұрын
Yes each new generation is getting weaker and weaker, that's why we are turning to robots to do our dirty work.
@lorian43669 ай бұрын
Not really. If Canada offered free agricultural land like it offered to the settlers, you'd still find a lot of takers.
@gordonwebb173410 ай бұрын
My great grandparents arrived in Grayson Sask, one of the Bukavinian (now part of Ukraine) families who were recruited from Eastern Europe in 1900. They had 9 children. One died at 2 years old, but my great grandparents and their children all lived into their late 80's and 90's, most in the prairie cold. My grandmother told me about playing with the Indigenous girls on the nearby reserve after they moved near Fort Qu'Appelle, and doing beadwork together. I still have three of her finished pieces, a beaded loom belt, a purse, and a net necklace. Yes, beadwork was very popular with Eastern Europeans and my grandmother made and sold beadwork most of her life. I inherited her supplies. My father's father and his two brothers came to Regina in 1918 from Bristol, after fighting in the First War. All three of their wives died from the flu, not the cold, months after arriving, leaving the 3 men with about 9 kids. They did laundry and delivered groceries to live. All of them would have agreed that the only way they survived was sharing knowledge and resources, food and outgrown clothes and shoes. They were proud, determined people, but they wouldn't turn their back on others in need. There was always an 'extra potato to throw in the pot' to extend a meal if company arrived. I feel sorry for those cynical, disparaging people who can only complain about the gifts they have inherited from our past. The common goal used to be to build our country, not spend a lifetime tearing it down. What are you contributing to the future?
@suemiller950610 ай бұрын
The sod hut at Heritage Park always made me feel claustrophobic as I imagined living in that tiny dark hut for months during the bitter prairie winter. As as to the warming oven on the wood stove in the farm house, I heat with a wood cook stove and I use my warming oven to keep my socks nice and toasty ;-)
@stuartkerr587210 ай бұрын
Not like Canadians now, drive their kids 500m to school 2 minutes away and start the car 20 minutes beforehand
@WayToManyAssassinsАй бұрын
remote start, heated garage... could go on
@shaneelvis16999 ай бұрын
God bless our country
@ME-hm3tc10 ай бұрын
My ancestors are Indigenous Brazilians who would have passed down through Western Canada on their way from Siberia to South America. It’s wild to think that whether they came on foot or by boat, they had to pass through some of the harshest terrain in the world.
@krazyinthekootenay71210 ай бұрын
Whom told you that they your ancestors went through Canada
@mohammedgharbiyah656610 ай бұрын
@@krazyinthekootenay712 the first human inhabitants to the Americas arrived through the Bering Strait (between Russia and Alaska) during the last age ice. Indigenous Brazilians likely travelled their way down from modern-day Canada and US to South America
@krazyinthekootenay71210 ай бұрын
@@mohammedgharbiyah6566 nope you need to look a little deeper. Go down the rabbit hole hole but Brazilian and southern American society was established long before any inkling of the northern passage
@j.tt.487710 ай бұрын
@@krazyinthekootenay712 How did they get there from Africa?
@witchking678710 ай бұрын
They actually would have passed down on the west side of the Rocky Mountains, not the east.
@Dr.Dumpnpump10 ай бұрын
You forgot to turn the comments off on this one CBC!
@HussainDaveham10 ай бұрын
Respect for the people who lived without furnace and boilers and hot water tanks !
@amazingandrea99839 ай бұрын
And UGG boots and Netflix and Door Dash!
@HussainDaveham9 ай бұрын
@@amazingandrea9983 Absolutely!
@canagapay291410 ай бұрын
The incredible cold here always makes wonder about the toughness of the pioneers. How they made this their home and country. I imagine what it took for the Canadian people to make a nation of this land. You all got my respect.
@JustPassinThru7010 ай бұрын
These two gals are way cool and their knowledge and presence is warm and educational.
@toybarons10 ай бұрын
It's noon and -30C out. I often wonder how humans managed on cold days like this. Of course back then they managed with what they had because they knew no other way. I know me if I had to I likely wouldn't.
@hunterslaptop702410 ай бұрын
Its the reason people in temperate zones are good farmers and savers. We know winter is coming. I have starved with no shelter. Now I have scrimped and saved so I have food to last many many months and savings for years. I dont drive a new vehicle, I dont buy any cloths new, I barely buy anything new as winter is always just around the corner. However with Justin, its a Blizzard and many simply wont make it.
@SonoftheWest31610 ай бұрын
There are still people that work outside all day my friend.
@hunterslaptop702410 ай бұрын
I used to own a farm, cut wood all day or freeze at night. Now @60 I work 7 till dark all summer no matter the temp. Been a lot hotter summer in the past than its been in the last few years. @@SonoftheWest316
@tomfilipiak351110 ай бұрын
Worked outside and heavy wool ,keep you warm even when wet!
@davidwhitworth60309 ай бұрын
Minus 30 was the average winter day in sunny Manitoba in the early 70’s
@dawittucker874910 ай бұрын
This was nice and cakming to watch. Also learned alot from it.
@carollehince847210 ай бұрын
I love winter and the snowstorm it’s part of our 4 seasons
@ryanjack995810 ай бұрын
Ancient humans were actually tough. They could endure hardship. Unlike people today who are weak lazy whiners.
@bradbrown565910 ай бұрын
Finally a great story . did they say Furs ? yes they did. they are some of the warmest items you can wear.
@Talksin4039 ай бұрын
Humans were different back then
@WildKat2510 ай бұрын
My great, great, great grandparents were one of the founding pioneer families that lived in the Winterburn area, just outside of Edmonton in the 1800s. Their homestead stood between what is considered Winterburn and Parkland County now. A lot of them wore sheepskin coats, and boiled wool garments to keep warm. They always kept a small but healthy amount of sheep along with the dairy cows & beef cattle. Just so that my great, great grandmother and my great aunts to make more winter clothing for the kids as they grew up. I either wear layers or I wear some vintage sheepskin coats that I have found over the years at thrift stores. Nothjng beats a good sheepskin coat in my opinion.
@PhillipHavin10 ай бұрын
great video. glad its pure information and not a lecture to anyone on politics once in a while.
@AustinLutz019 ай бұрын
When my great great grandparents came over from Romania with the entire village, they were told by agents that bread was so plentiful dogs used it to play with and the acorns fell so large they had to be hoisted with pitchforks. Needless to say when they arrived at Strathcona station to make the ox and cart trip to what is now Two Hills, many settlers died during the first winter
@CplLe52irRC10 ай бұрын
People just died, and only the strongest survived making a tough society. No wokeness in the old days.
@JetSetRadiumFuture10 ай бұрын
Great story! I thought this was a documentary! I wanted more :) very awesome!
@LiveInnerCity10 ай бұрын
They are built different😎
@bowbender110 ай бұрын
They were tougher and more prepared
@davidjohnmiller484910 ай бұрын
23 years living in southern Alberta the coldest winter day -45 with a wind chill of -55 that’s cold
@primehouari912810 ай бұрын
comments allowed,thank you . very interesting subject
@SonoftheWest31610 ай бұрын
comments should always be allowed Canadians provide most of their funding.
@amo_res92669 ай бұрын
More historic stuff like these pls
@albertawildcat316410 ай бұрын
A great many early settlers on the prairies were Ukrainian/Eastern European and were used to these types of weather conditions. They also only had a 45-50 year life expectancy so they didn't have alot of time to endure the hard life!
@sunnybizz485710 ай бұрын
Exactly! Can we please stop portraying European settlers as feeble babies who came over unprepared and ignorant of what they would be facing?
@guymiller284210 ай бұрын
Don’t forget the Germans and Norwegians too…
@catherinehoy554810 ай бұрын
the 40-50 year life expectancy includes infant mortality stats.
@fomo110 ай бұрын
The thing is, this type of cold is only seen in Siberia Ukraine does NOT see cold like the prairies. Neither does Germany, Poland etc
@kamalpreetsinghgill139610 ай бұрын
Maybe they had 45-50 year life expectancy because of the bitter cold? Not to mention moving into another country leaving your home , communuity and tools behind to this harsh climate, its still impressive because we humans are not capable to survive this weather without our communuity and tools i.e. stoves, houses, drinking water, means of transportation and knowledge of your surroundings which early settlers didnt had.
@oliverclothesoff414210 ай бұрын
Many people died in the winter
@dinvsl10 ай бұрын
They didn’t pay weather tax.
@NarutoUzumaki-jw4kw10 ай бұрын
They didn’t produce any fossil fuel emissions either
@krazyinthekootenay71210 ай бұрын
Lmao awesome
@carlyar528110 ай бұрын
@@NarutoUzumaki-jw4kw well they did but it was a very tiny amount compared to the emissions created by individuals today. Burning wood and coal produces emissions but it’s nothing like what’s produced by internal combustion engines.
@kaikaitbsat10 ай бұрын
omg I was thinking about this today morning!
@gobills25710 ай бұрын
whoa whoa whoa wait a minute, they never explained the part "white privilege" played in all this.
@tendy10110010 ай бұрын
Wow didn't know winter existed that old
@yosemitesam-ux5ir10 ай бұрын
Did you notice she hesitated when she said -35 was not to be spoken but was actually -45 so she could not go there.
@MJ-tl3el10 ай бұрын
loved this !
@dylanr84819 ай бұрын
Come to Inuvik, NT and we can discuss your appreciation for cold weather.
@CurrentlyOnLV-42610 ай бұрын
I grew up in Calgary. I miss the winter there.
@marvinyo59 ай бұрын
I've seen a house with like 5 feet deep walls of insulation and the minimum temperature inside was like 18C. Its a lot of work to construct such a building but worth for the life time
@nonasmith240510 ай бұрын
Our ancestors migrated to warmer wintering grounds lol 😆
@nonasmith240510 ай бұрын
The hunter gathers migrated with food sources
@kylepelland159810 ай бұрын
They travelled south to warmer climates. There were no borders Pretty simple concept.
@SonoftheWest31610 ай бұрын
a little too simple. That way of life kept those who lived it in the stone age for millennia.
@marcinhibner950710 ай бұрын
I bet people enjoyed it more then, then now. They had more freedom with wild landscape and fires as camping and fishing and hunting gathering was for everyone that wanted it in seasonal moments and no fences with ownership and property papers. TRUE FREEDOM 500 years ago.
@carlyar528110 ай бұрын
LOL. Fishing and hunting wasn’t a recreate, it was a survival skill. Also, it wasn’t called camping, it was living.
@gooddognigel999210 ай бұрын
I dare you to return to that lifestyle. Eschew your cell phone, internet service, indoor plumbing, electricity, automobile, modern medicine, and all the other modern appliances and conveniences we enjoy today. Have fun.
@CooreValues9 ай бұрын
You guys saved me
@polo44310 ай бұрын
It's wonderful to know of both Indigenous and pioneer perspectives, kudos for that.
@donschutte141810 ай бұрын
Go north they work outside 12 hrs a day at 45 50 below I know I worked with them I saw a guy get off the plane he was Jamaican he walked into his room changed his clothes walked outside in 40 below zero and worked 12 hours unloading fuel at a tanker base.
@gerardpully76210 ай бұрын
Who are you trying to BS?
@krazyinthekootenay71210 ай бұрын
Yup been there done that.. it's not fun but it was good $$$
@gajorg6910 ай бұрын
@@gerardpully762Used to work in the Arctic in the trades can confirm we did 12 hour shifts at well below -30 coldest I recall was -48 before wind chill one year. We still went out to site.
@SonoftheWest31610 ай бұрын
Lot's of men do 12s in the cold, you obviously go to your heat source/truck/doghouse/trailer to warm up at regular intervals and if the job is physical that will keep you warm. It's actually the best way to keep warm is to just work harder.@@gerardpully762
@AlbertaleoAlbertalei9 ай бұрын
Folks were a tougher breed back then. They knew how to work and do for themselves. This lot nowadays doesn't hold a candle to the work ethic that those who had to really give their all to survive.
@CaddieSmooth10 ай бұрын
Inspiring stuff!!
@adamlanglois56310 ай бұрын
Yet we have schools telling people to be ashamed of their heritage and ancestors. Those people were tough as nails.
@ibrahimm201229 күн бұрын
I remember when attended a conference in a hotel in Dhaka organized by a Canadian university. And they showed you 2.5 hours of video about Canada and Winnipeg city in general . They didn’t show any snow or winter video except the last closing statement that it harsh on winter sometimes. And I remember he said winnipeg has a same vibe and infrastructure as New York 😂 just little but smaller .
@amazingandrea99839 ай бұрын
My Mom was born in Winnipeg Beach in 1938. She was a competitive figure skater, practicing outdoors in minus-crazy temperatures. I have pictures of her performing outdoors in sequinned skating dresses, wearing only leotards on her legs to stay warm. I stand (indoors, in my Ugg boots, on heated floors) in awe.
@redman95810 ай бұрын
Nice video but the title reminds me of the sad fact that soon that vast majority of Canadians won't have an historic connection to this land. The idea of "our ancestors" will refer to people from India or China not Canada.
@estherzhu841310 ай бұрын
20 years ago, zero degree was extremely cold to me… now even minus 20 won’t bother me too much… but minus 40, minus 50 still unimaginable 😅
@Averageguy510 ай бұрын
Wow great video. I was just thinking about the same thing 😅
@Fadesign10010 ай бұрын
I love the -35... We are a bunch of babies now with zero skills or sense of environment, it's sad. Respect to the people who know how to live off the land and create products from nature that actually work and are truly environmental sound.
@Al-lv7vg10 ай бұрын
I spend a lot of time working outside in the winter. Most who say they love minus 35 temperatures don't work in it. In 35 years of working in Northern Alberta winters I haven't talked to any coworkers who said they loved negative 30 temperatures. I've heard people say they do who don't have to be outside in it but none who actually have to endure it for hours each day. Good on you if you do but I have to call bullshit.
@carlyar528110 ай бұрын
@@Al-lv7vg I only worked in Saskatchewan for a couple of years, but I completely agree! I’m in the aerospace industry and I can tell you there is not a single ground crew who likes working in the -35 on the airfield. Not a single one.
@Fadesign10010 ай бұрын
The funny part is you don't know who I amend the other part is who said anything about working ? @@Al-lv7vg
@hunterslaptop702410 ай бұрын
Mom lived on a modest piece of property that no Canadian kid would dare. They would call child services to be taken anywhere but. There was another demographic that had something like that happen, but the whites didnt have a choice back then. You stuck it out no matter how tough it was.
@TheWolfHowling9 ай бұрын
Even with "the door left open", the idea of placing a newborn infant into the pie warmer on top of the wood/coal. ired oven makes me go "What?!!😱"
@Faithfulfamily10 ай бұрын
People wore fur in the past. Simple as that. Fur is far superior to any kind of synthetic available today.
@patricktruelove46410 ай бұрын
Back then, the people were tough. They took care of themselves and others. What a difference from Alberta today! Richest province in the country and they never stop whining to the federal government.
@guymiller284210 ай бұрын
Didn’t realize Alberta covered the entire prairie……
@angelanderson951510 ай бұрын
My question exactly
@cryptidian35309 ай бұрын
People were simply tougher and more resilient. Nowadays, people have a garage so they don't have to feel the cold when they go to work. We, as a species are avoiding any kind of inconvenience and it's making us softer. People were just tough back in the day, simple as that.
@MythsScamsLies10 ай бұрын
They didn't have social media to sit around and whine on 7/24. They just went and did what they had to do. Kids went to school, the mailmen walked their route, everything went on normally.
@zg604510 ай бұрын
And they didn't have to drive to work and all kind of stuff what we have to do. All our luxury and snow plows etc were not even necessary. I love how they were able to live a simple live, while we live in a hamster wheel
@klovenkane598210 ай бұрын
Wow, very interesting..
@lucmarchand61710 ай бұрын
This same northern manitoba.i work at ruttan lake,leaf rapids 1976 they told stop working due cold snap,so they refuse.well he drop-60 below zero with wind.they broke most mining equipment.so sit idle 2 days yup.cost sherritt gordon lots repair after due ego right.the native south indian knew best.loram was doing work they close 4 days.fred mannix knew they was right.today lots don't understand what happen pass sad.thanks cbc video.😊
@hendecourt10 ай бұрын
It’s winter in Canada! So what’s the big surprise that it’s cold. To one degree or another, it happens every year. Some people might be surprised but I’m not. Not even a little bit.
@SonoftheWest31610 ай бұрын
Most people these days spend 95% of their time indoors so it is surprising when they've been working from home for a week and step outside without proper winter clothing which they likely dont even own.
@josephkay778510 ай бұрын
By not incessantly whining about, or being afraid of the weather. They just got on with it.
@rabzjatt359010 ай бұрын
Very cool❤🎉
@kenpierard516110 ай бұрын
The stories of Manitoba winters and my father waiting on the street for the King and Queen back in the 1930s only to see their car pass by because of the extreme cold
@17kcotsdoow8610 ай бұрын
Same way we stay warm. Fire and layers.
@audilecreations9 ай бұрын
i was replying to someone saying modernity is not a good thing because of our lack gratitude, but my response was disrespectfully long... however I stand by it so im gonna just leave it here: i think modernity is a good thing, the old times are nothing to be romaniticized. people were hardy but that because it was really damn hard. i think technology and modernity is a good thing, but pluralism is also a reality of our future in this interconnected world. we as a planet need desperately to strike a balance within our own local communities as well as the world at large. we have heard a lot of talk about hardiness recently, and theres something to be said for resilience, but its not the only answer - by and large those were not good times... despite the selectively sampled studies of scholars like Stephen Pinker, prior to agriculture/civilization violence and toughness was actually incredibly rare, only 5% of such hunter-gatherer remains show signs of violent deaths compared to the 15% of remains of Pinkers samples from after the dawn of agriculture... war and toughness is the hallmark of civilization, not our nature (many point to chimpanzees, but bonobos tell a different story) what is truly lost on modernity/society is resilience, yes, but also community, social care and common ownership of necessities. technology is not going anywhere, so the conversation must look at how we can reject the commodification of essentials and the division/stratification of society, and instead preserve our social and communal nature, not only in our local communities but in our inevitable future as an interconnected planetary organism.
@rodgood10 ай бұрын
I Googled how to survive in the cold with no electricity , it told me to burn carbon producing products . But CBC has told me not to do it... unless i travel in an aircraft , to a warmer area . seems wrong .
@bobrussel5249 ай бұрын
How did they survive in the past, through sheer determination, hard work, and self-sacrifice. Today Gen Z generation is far removed from the attitudes these settlers had to endure the hardships they faced. Can't whine your way out of life's struggles and succeed.
@Infinitespinach10 ай бұрын
You build a wall towards the worst winds and build a wall high enough to protect horses and tipis.
@blaineboyle599710 ай бұрын
The tough ones moved to Manitoba where it’s way worse
@sergeanttibs63459 ай бұрын
I thought she said they were "undauntable...yet pathetic for staying" lol I feel exactly the same as that living here
@Sjalabais9 ай бұрын
"Imagine living in your garage" is such an apt comparison here...*shudders* But what where these small, 100% insulated houses made of? Didn't quite catch that.
@kjova2518 ай бұрын
Sod
@davefreckleton79629 ай бұрын
This might be the one worthwhile story the cbc has ever done .compared to the trash they normally put out there
@venm915510 ай бұрын
Well they have fire wood at home, now u have condos with fire alarm
@hirsch415510 ай бұрын
Why don’t people wear fur coats on the prairies anymore? Or do they. Seems perfect for the winter.
@biker137310 ай бұрын
They were a whole lot tougher , then us .
@dalriada9 ай бұрын
They were tough as nails that’s for sure. Frozen moccasins and all.
@daytonshuflita220110 ай бұрын
Let’s ask the homeless, they seem to have it figured out
@mzareer237610 ай бұрын
they are our ancestors now? i bet they beg to differ
@nickyc8299 ай бұрын
I am so wirry the animals ,pls give them warm place
@nicodemusblackbird56179 ай бұрын
Our people our tough and respect the Earth,Live in Harmony with mother Earth .Our ancestors taught the New comers as brothers ,to live in this harsh Land.However their greed and arrogance almost destroyed us as a people.