May 8, 2025
May 8, 2025
Donald Cameron Azar
JANUARY 30, 1931 – MAY 8, 2025
Dad died peacefully at the age
of 94 in Burnaby, British Columbia.
Predeceased by his father, Joseph George Azar (1961), his mother, Marion
Gordon (Forbes) Azar (1975), his brother Joseph Gordon “Buddy” Azar (2011), his sister Marjorie Ellsworth (2014), and his former wife Jacqueline (Maukonen)
Azar (2023). Dad was always the last one to leave a party!
He will be forever and greatly missed by his children - Linda, Carolyn, and Heather (Richie), his nephews back east, his close and
amazing in friends Campbell River – Bob & Veronica, Joe & Zdenka, Hella
& Dave, and Gary, Liz and family, all of whom always looked out for
him; Bob, a special thank you. All of his many, many friends and
co-workers back in Ontario; everyone up at “the Lake” and from Armtec/Westeel
days – too many to mention, but two that do need to be mentioned; John Cooper
and RM. John, his partner in crime for over 60 years. Inseparable during the
summers, and kept in touch right up until the end. And RM... Always there,
and always had a piece of his heart, you know that.
So many years to cover….
Dad was born and raised in Sydney, Nova Scotia, the youngest
of three. His father emigrated to Canada as a teen and established roots,
owning a car dealership, selling Austins, Studebakers and Rolls Royce (a total of three
before he died), among other business ventures. They moved into their house
on Rigby Road, which his father built on a double lot so
grandma could have a large garden, just after dad was born, and was always full
of people, with lots of local aunts and uncles and cousins. He spent a lot of
time on the family farm off Mira
Road. Cows, chickens, turkeys, strawberries. He would go picking
strawberries and eat more than he came home with, and be covered in hives due
to his berry allergy!
Dad attended Central Academy, Sydney Academy, Pickering College, St. FX then finally Nova Scotia Tech to finish off his P. Eng.
He started his career with the first gold mining company in
Glace Bay, then moved to Toronto and started with the Toronto Public Works then
Westeel Rosco in 1954. After many years there he followed a colleague who
started up Canada Culvert for a couple of years.
In 1984 he made the move to the beautiful West Coast. He ran
the west coast office of Armco/Armtec,
where he retired from at 67 years old as the Sales Manager. They weren’t ready
to get rid of him at 65! His unexpected retirement project was rebuilding his
cherished ‘Play Pen’ that sunk during a snow storm. And then he was hands-on
building his house in Campbell River, with some help but he was in charge of
every step. On the Island he enjoyed all the boating, golf and downhill skiing he
could pack into a day. He even took a ride in a glider in 2013 over the Comox Valley,
after Carolyn jokingly sent him a Groupon. A bucket list item that he was
thrilled to do. He explored all the nooks and crannies of northern Vancouver Island.
Many, many adventures were had on that boat; many fish were caught, sunsets and
Orcas witnessed, and naps were taken. It’s why he moved west and never looked
back.
But it was second only to his days in Ontario. The cars –
the many Thunderbirds (1967 with suicide doors!), Lincolns, and the Trans Am (yes, the ‘Knight Rider’ Trans Am in his
50’s). Dad always had to have the newest and the best. The boats - his pride
and joy the ‘Najla’ that he had built in his late teens, named after his Aunt.
A mahogany beauty built in Nova Scotia which dad, of course, had to switch out
the maximum recommended 140hp engine to a powerhouse 215hp to accommodate all
the activities to come. More on that later below… Then the 'Booze Scruiser'. I
swear that boat was over capacity more times than not. And always a bottle of Beefeater
gin aboard. Again, many adventures enjoyed on both of those boats in the waters
of both Nova Scotia (trailering the 20’ Cutter bowrider from Muskoka to
Sydney for a week-long trip) and exploring everything the Trent
Severn Waterway had to offer. The cottage(s) - always within sight of
his oldest and dearest friend-to-the-end, John Cooper. The slalom course, the
ski jump, the 2nd ski jump, the sauna, the floods in the boat
house, the sunken J Craft... always something to be worked on. Snowmobiling in
the winter - walking in waist deep snow to grab a snowmobile and the sled, then
coming back to the car after what seemed like an eternity in the dark, cold car
to get us kids and mom, and the dog. Any time he could spend time at the
cottage, he was there. He even got his pilot’s license so he could fly around
in one of Cooper’s Cessnas.
He was also known for his fondness for Jack & Jill sundaes at Dairy Queen (buying
the gallon cans of hot fudge and marshmallow to have at the cottage), quarter
chicken dinners at Swiss
Chalet (always a drip of sauce on his sweater by then second
bite), Weber’s on the way home
from the cottage, and Torpitt burgers late on Friday nights (IYKYK), just so we
could get to the lake and a get a ski run in before dark. Jack & Jill’s
were discontinued years ago, Swiss Chalet left BC in 2022, but hot fudge sundaes
and a burger remained his staple until he passed.
The first home he and mom bought on Valentine Drive had a huge backyard that he would turn
into a skating rink in the winter. One of dad’s claims to fame was, along with
a couple of his neighbours, he played pickup hockey with a few of the Maple
Leafs back in the day. One of which was the ‘infamous’ Bobby Baun.
Dad would still chuckle decades later when he recalled being late to work one
morning, driving down the DVP and a car was beside him honking. Dad looked over
to see Bobby laughing hysterically and pointing. He had missed the previous
pickup game but heard about the shiner dad got. This was just before the Leafs
won the Cup.
Dad had received so many emails and stories from dear
friends in the days leading up to his death, and he heard every single
word.
And I will let those words speak to how everyone remembered
our dad…
“I first met Don and Jackie in a most interesting way.
Don kept his boat, the Najla, at marina at the narrows between Lakes Simcoe and Couchiching.
The next slip was a runabout owned by a friend that I knew through business.
Bill and Don often took their boats on the weekends to enjoy the two big lakes.
One day, I believe it was 1964, Bill said to Don that he was going up to McLean Bay to
see what Cooper was up to, do you want to come along?
So on a Saturday early afternoon, the two boats arrived
and I was introduced to Don and Jackie and “Stoop” (alias Suzie (- yup the one
standing on the back of the boat above!)) their delightful dog. So the skiing
started, and the two boats left in time to make it through the locks. And the two boats arrived the next Saturday, with a
repeat of the previous Saturday. Don and Jackie met some of the local folks and
saw that this was a really active area. So Don said to me, "why don’t you
invite Jackie and me to stay with you? To go all the way back through the locks
to our slip and then drive to Don Mills and then back the next day, is a lot of
driving." So, I said why not, and Bill and his wife Karen drove back to
Orillia alone. They had a farm near Orillia.
In no time, Don and Jackie met some of the local, very
active folks, and were immediately included in so many events and activities,
as if they had been there forever. Many years later I was still referred to as
“the new kid on the block”, and Don and Jackie were treated as if they had
always been there “forever”! And the rest is a wonderful and delightful
history!” - John
“in the 70"s I had the great pleasure of hanging out
with your Dad and learning how to use the jump and flat kites. Don always kept
us amused with his colourful stories and wit. My Dad also enjoyed sailing
against Don (and Tommy G) and at all the après sailing parties held at the
various cottages on Sparrow Lake.” - Marten
“Wow, I have so many memories of your Dad! I had a
special bond with him and we had a common interest in all things
mechanical. "Big Dad" was also a good business mentor and he taught
me about hard work but maybe his best business advice was "don't dip your
pen into office ink". I heeded that advice and that kept things a lot
simpler…” - Steve
“One of my favorite stories about your dad is the time he
gave us a good scare late one night when we were underage drinking at the Hale
cottage down the river. We suddenly heard a loud voice coming from a sound
system on a boat at the dock, announcing, "This is the police..." I
immediately hid under the cottage, only to soon hear the laughter of the
announcer standing on the bow of his Booze Scruiser – Mr. Azar himself.”
- Mike
“It was especially humorous to me as a teenager when Azar
would be begged into the triple jump scene but it was already cocktail hour. So
he had his drink glass out on the dock while he put on his skis, vest &
helmet. The rope would be going out & the boat's taking off and then he
puts down his drink, just as the boat left the dock.... funny guy.”
- Dave
“…endless highlights and events over the years, with your
dad, including the 1967
World Water Ski tournament where Lloyd Gilbert had asked us to
volunteer, as they required those who understood sufficiently about jumps and
slalom courses to be contributors.
For world records to be authentic, the courses had to be
validated and certified by a P/ENG. As well as your father being a graduate
Civil Engineer, he was, and still is, a Professional Engineer. When that was
discovered, he worked his way around the entire course with a surveyor’s
transit, for hours on end, to validate, and sign off, that all the courses were
laid out perfectly.
Don J. was there on behalf of Mercury to ensure that all
boats and motors for the tournament were running perfectly.
It was there that we first met George A. who was 15, and
Willie H., as he came from Barbados because of his keen interest in water skiing.
The entertainment for the tournament was the hottest group anywhere at the
time, called the Merrymen,
from Barbados.
The first week was the Canadian championships, that
resulted in the selection of the Canadian team for the world’s championships,
in week 2. We were all lodged at the University of Sherbrooke dorms.
Don and I had the best seats available, as we drove the
pickup boats used for safety purposes to pick up any fallen skiers. We had a
Royal life saving qualified lifeguard sitting in the front of the Boston
Whalers that we were driving. We started very early each day to fit in
every event. One cold morning a jumper from Mexico took a bad spill. Don
quickly had his boat right where the skier had fallen, and he was struggling
from being out of breath from his fall. The lifeguard was looking at the skier
but was reluctant to go in (the water) as it was cold. Don put his foot on the
lifeguard’s butt, and pushed him over the edge, where he should have been, much
to the amusement of all the onlookers! - John
“my most vivid and most-often told story is when we
decided to see how many skiers we could pull behind Don’s beloved Najla.
We gathered together 21 skiers, 21 sets of skis (‘thank you’ brother John), 21
ski jackets and 21 ropes of different lengths. After much to-do and much
hooting and hollering, we successfully started off from John’s dock on a
staggered take-off…one, by one, by one, by one (you get the idea – 21
times).
Jackie was at the helm and pulled us up the river,
with 21 skiers doing wild criss-crosses the entire way. While making the
big wide turn up the river to return to the dock, one skier (I forget whom)
fell in the middle of the channel. There was nothing to do but to go back
to pick him up. Pulling 21 skiers out on a deep-water start was no
problem for the mighty Najla …but it was too much for the tow hitch,
which was bolted to the keel. The bolts ripped out of the keel and the
solid steel hitch dragged down Najla’s long, sleek, beautifully varnished
mahogany stern…and we all sank back into the channel.
With Najla’s tiny 4-passenger cockpit, already
occupied by Jackie and our obligatory ski watcher, Jackie could ferry only two
skiers at a time back to the dock, while the others floated aimlessly in the
middle of the channel, trying desperately to not get run over by the weekend
boat ‘traffic’. It took 10 trips back and forth to get all of us
back to the dock and it took much sanding and many coats of varnish to restore
Najla’s mirror-like finish. But restored she was.” -
Donald C.
“Toodie” (he had no idea how this childhood nickname
came to be), “Don”, “Azar”, “Big Dad”. And of course, just “dad”. He
was known by a few names and loved by so many. We thank everyone who
contributed to and was a part of Dad’s life. You all made him who he was and
why he lived such a full, long, and happy life. And he’s got a lot of people
waiting for him on the other side! Mom, Willie, Eldon, Bill, George, his
parents....and a few of our dogs.
There will be no formal service or funeral. Dad will
cremated and then retrace his journey back east, escorted by his daughters.
First, back to Toronto in June, where he has his youngest daughter’s wedding to
attend, then up North for a gathering of his closest friends at the lake for
the goodbyes, and then to Nova Scotia for burial with his parents at Hardwood Hill Cemetery in Sydney.
Take a run through the course for him, have a DQ sundae in
his honor, or raise a Beefeater and OJ to toast all the good times.
As dad would say when he ended a phone call… “good ‘nuff”.
We love you more, dad, and will miss you forever. Give mom a big hug for us. your kids
You are invited to leave a personal message for the family.