WHAT’S WORTH WHAT
A few days ago, I pointed my kayak into a gusting north wind kicking up a lot of chop. I can’t put a dollar sign on what the effort was worth to me, which makes me wonder how monetary values are assigned to things with no quantifiable or practical value.
A couple of kilometers of hard, non-stop paddling brought me to a sheltered area at the head of the lake, and a quintessential “cottage country” tableau. A father and his two sons were drifting slowly in matching canoes, casting lines into the water lapping against the sheer face of the granite shoreline.
The lake is home to trout so big one of them can be a meal for four. However, they lurk, elusive, in the deep, dark depths.
The more likely catch for the trio were small, inedible rock bass.
But that was of no consequence.
What mattered was the quiet, unhurried doing of it: cast, reel in, and do it again. Over and over. Incredibly (wonderfully to my mind), the two youngsters weren’t interested in amassing that most ubiquitous form of modern memorabilia, selfies.
Compare that to the anonymous memorabilia collector who laid out a record $24-million dollars for an old shirt.
Okay, it was the one Babe Ruth wore when he (mythically) “called” the home run that won the New York Yankees the 1932 World Series.
Even so, it’s still just an old shirt.
Calculating the ratio between price and value is subjective. But what makes being able to claim something purely for your own private enjoyment worth enough money to fund, by way of comparison, the education system of an underdeveloped country?
PRICELESS
The boys in the canoes were staying at a nearby cottage for one week, collecting memories that I know from similar experiences at their age, will change in scope and details over the years, but never waver in the way and depth they are treasured.
When the boy on his own drifted too close to the rocks, his father told him to “just paddle backwards”, both saving the bow of the canoe, and imparting a bit of Canadian lore.
Designed to go forward and backward with equal ease, light enough to be portaged, and in the original birchbark hull days, easily repaired using handy and omnipresent material, the canoe made it possible for European settlers to explore and open up — or exploit and colonize, depending on your point of view — the vast Canadian wilderness.
It was, and remains, the perfect vehicle for a country of uncounted rivers and more than two million lakes that hold 20 percent of the world’s fresh water.
The price of learning to paddle even the newest high-tech versions competently in all conditions is sore knees, aching shoulders and dedication.
The rewards, canoeists will tell you, can border on the sublime.
TOO PRICEY?
I wonder how someone assessed that a podcast in which the Kelce brothers, one a former the other still active pro football players, sit around and discuss, among other things, a visit to the White House, sports and, believe it or not, aliens, is worth $100-million over three years.
I’m willing to bet the three kids I came upon later, fishing from a boat below the second highest rockface on our 40 km long shoreline, went home with stories as entertaining as any the hulking former athletes have to tell.
One of them was wearing a polar bear suit, which was a lot more fun than the massive amount of facial hair the two podcasters have chosen as a costume.
I grant that my interpretation of “the best things in life are free” certainly doesn’t apply to everyone, nor should it.
In economists’ terms, the value of something is how much someone is willing to pay for it.
But as the renowned American publisher Alfed A. Knopf Sr noted: “An economist is a man who states the obvious in terms of the incomprehensible.”
From that perspective, it could be argued that the price tags for “collectible” sports and movie memorabilia, and nine-figure remuneration, for people with no expertise beyond playing a game well, to opine on anything and everything, are on an acceptable and fair level, as opposed to somewhere between absurd and obscene.
But the people who buy into that probably never paddled a canoe or a kayak, or took kids fishing.
If they did, I wonder which one they’d end up assigning the higher value?
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5 thoughts on “WHAT’S WORTH WHAT”
You need better fact checking. Kelce is the correct spelling of the football brothers and one is still very much playing.
Thank you, I will correct it.
so True
Just look at the genuine smile of the kid holding up the fish he caught, and compare it a posed smile if he’d photographed it in a selfie using $1,000 iPhone or Android.
And…I didn’t shave to say “Smile” to any of the kids in those pictures, they were doing it even before I pointed the camera.The kid holding the fish and wearing the bear suit is a little girl, by the way.