My father was a farmers son and an architect and a sailor. What he didn't know he could figure out.
I think that perhaps he favoured me to my 5 years younger brother.
Maybe because he brought me to do stuff, and my brother got jelous so he took him to a similar experience with a less good experience for both of them.
He taught me surviving in the wild, eg digging into the snow to survive a blizzard high up in the mountains.
He taught me sailing (he had sailed on a schooner across the Atlantic when ~16 yo, so not just the basics).
He taught me long distance ice skating and how to judge the ice conditions (important skill when you're 10 km away from shore).
He taught me woodworking at a basic level (he could get things done, but wasn't a cabinet maker).
He tried to teach me driving cars, forklifts and bulldozers, but didn't push it when I showed no interest.
When I instead showed interest in drawing (something he couldn't do, except for blueprints of buildings) he encouraged me.
He trusted me to near stupid extent.
I remember once, we were canoeing (he had built the canoe) in some rapids and put me up front in charge of steering away from dangerous rocks.
He encouraged me to climb mountains and ships riggs without any safety equipment.
He loved sports, but sacrificed one of the most popular weekly events to take me swimming since there would be less people there then.
And soo much more...
He passed in 1999, a month after my mother.
I miss them both, but I have to say I miss him more.
/Mats
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Interests: Comic books, Manga; most things to do with Handicraft, wood, textile, metal etc, modern materials; horror, true crime; languages, art, and history to an extent
Uninterests: All things about motors; celebrities; fashion; sports; career; stock market
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