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By 1985, Saskatchewan-born Jim Lang (guitar) and his wife, Ontarios own Mary Ackroyd (fiddle), had been living their dream in the music business on the road from Los Angeles to Whitehorse to Frankfurt for ten years. During that time, Jim and Mary had a son, Johnny, who, although only an infant, encouraged them to hang up their instruments and slow down a little. So, Jim dusted off his old teaching certificate and headed the family north, way north. The Langs moved to Nahanni Butte, Northwest Territories. Jim took a job teaching in a one-room school. The only year-round access to the isolated community was by airplane so he bought one. Then he learned to fly. Over the next three years, Jim led the family on airborne adventures that would last a lifetime. Papa X-Ray is the story of those adventures. The book title comes from the registration letters of the trusty old Lang airplane, a Cessna 172, Charlie Foxtrot Uniform Papa X-Ray. It is an exciting, entertaining and amusing tale by a master storyteller. Ride with the family as they fly through the land of the midnight sun and midday moon discovering wildly spectacular scenery and gentle people while living their own sagas of the north. Papa X-Ray represents a light-hearted change for Jim as an author. His two other books in current international release, "Make Your Own Breaks" and "Great Careers for People Who Want to be Entrepreneurs", deal with the more serious issue of taking control of ones life and work in an uncertain world. Papa X-Ray - $14.95 CDN / $12.95 U.S. Sample chapter - Papa X-Ray Chapter one / Air taxi "Just pull the truck up to the hangar. Well unload it on the floor there first and then into the plane," a young ramp man shouted to my open window. I drove up to the Simpson Air building next to the gravel air strip and we created a neat pile of suitcases and boxes on the hangar floor. "Now, what about the freezer?" I mused. "The freezer?" He was startled. "No, no, I dont mean the whole freezer," I laughed, "just the three or four hundred pounds of meat, milk and other stuff in it. Frozen." He jumped into the big GMCs box, opened the freezer door, looked in, dropped the lid, jumped out and pointed at the aircraft. "Two loads," he pronounced. "No way well get you there in one load." Seeing my look, he added, "Dont worry, the Department of Education will pay for the move. Its part of your contract. Now who and what goes first?" I thought for a few seconds. "Mary and Johnny go first with the frozen goods. The food would just thaw out here while we waited for your return trip. Lets get the goods into the freezer at Nahanni Butte as quick as we can okay?" Mr. Simpson Air nodded. "Okay. And, by the way, its pronounced Nahanni, to rhyme with granny. You dont want to sound like a southerner, eh?" A southerner! I pictured dozens of campsites from Red Deer to Regina, Dallas to Los Angeles, Guelph to Edmonton mental postcards from our years in the music business. And now, August, 1985, the period at the end of our nomadic sentence: Fort Simpson. Whos he calling a yokel? After more than two years on the road, our son Johnny was a veteran traveler. He was weaned, potty-trained and spoke his first word, "Babu!" in our 32-foot Glendale travel trailer. I was glad he was too young to feel any sense of loss when wed unloaded the amplifiers, speakers, cases, light stands and boxes, all stenciled, "Lang & Ackroyd Band." Our sound equipment would not be coming with us on this gig. This time my audience would be a gaggle of elementary school students in a place called Nahanni Butte in Canadas Northwest Territories and Marys would be an audience of one. "Oh, boy, Johnny! An airplane ride! I can hardly wait!" Mary bubbled as she bundled Johnny into the Britten-Norman Islander and took her place in the right seat while the ramp man continued loading our boxes. Trim, athletic and ready for any new adventure, Mary fairly beamed with excitement. A proper husband would likely have taken this moment to be grateful for being blessed with such a fine mate. And I would have too, had I not been transfixed by the prospect of getting a ride in this lovely airplane. I felt a strong pang of envy. "You Jim Lang?" a woman shouted from the office. "You got a telephone call!" I ran into the Simpson Air waiting room and took the phone. It was Margaret from the Department of Education office up the hill from the strip. "Jim, I just talked to the store in Nahanni and theyre hoping you could fly in some pop they ordered." "No problem, Margaret, let em know Im bringing it in!" Pop for the kids! That would get me off on the right foot. I visualized their grateful faces, no doubt starved for the exotic soft drinks that I will have ferried in more than a hundred miles by air just to make them happy. I scooted back to the plane and helped the ramp man finish piling in the last of the cross-rib roasts. "Say, do you have some pop thats supposed to go to Nahanni?" I asked, glancing into the hangar, innocently. "Yeah, theres some here, I think." "Lets throw it on, whaddaya say? I said wed bring it in." He stopped and eyed me coldly. Oops, I thought, I think Ive crossed some kind of line here. But, what could the problem be? This was a big plane with a little room left and, well, a few cans of pop shouldnt be a problem. I followed him as he walked over to the hangar and pointed to twelve flats of no-name cola and orange soda. "I see," I said. He turned to me and in that moment I realized that he was not only the ramp man, he was also the pilot. This was the north, after all, where pilots still got their hands dirty. "I dont want to be rude, but lets be clear here," he said coolly. "I say what goes on the plane and what doesnt. Pop is heavy. It goes with your trip, not this one." He smiled a forced smile and strode off toward the plane. Yikes, that hurt! Just like some over-zealous fan in the music business days. I yearned to be an "airplane groupie" and now that I was about to get a ride in a plane, the pilot had to put me in my place. Ah, well. I sat down on the GMCs tailgate to watch the Islander line up for takeoff. I could see Marys smiling face through the windshield and Johnny strapped in behind her, his head rotating like a periscope. The offended pilot applied full power and with prop-blasted gravel spraying behind the two engines, the high-wing twin roared down the strip, climbed out, arced to the west and flew out of sight. I looked at my watch. Hmmm. Two hours to kill. I might as well head back to the Department of Education office and get some more orientation. It had been ten years since Id set foot in a classroom. I couldnt very well get up in front of my students next Monday and announce, "And now heres a little tune we stole from Charlie Daniels hit it, Mary!" It was a short stroll back up to the ugly, two-story, corrugated steel government building. Function obviously spoke louder than form up here at least when it came to industrial construction. I took in the community as I sauntered up the hill. There were small, pleasant houses, Honda trikes, dogs barking and occasional evidence of the thirteen hundred souls who inhabited Fort Simpson. Of these the Dene formed the largest group. The Dene had called this land home for more than ten thousand years ten thousand years. To the east, I could see the sun glinting on the mighty Mackenzie River, fat with silty water from the Liard and Nahanni Rivers, flowing north to Inuvik and the Arctic Ocean, thousands of miles away. As broad as a lake, it was a huge river, which was likely why the Dene called it Deh Cho "Big River." It was the ribbon that bound dozens of bands throughout this part of the Northwest Territories. Altogether they numbered fewer than 15,000 people. Their villages and towns dotted a mass of land larger than most countries on Earth, this great northern land Denendeh. I took a deep breath of the cool clean air. I had a very good feeling about our decision to move here. Link to Jim Langs web site: www.jlang.com
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