We jump back to Minnesota for a story about an old man, (J. Carroll Naish), trying to keep his raspberry farm going. He's in constant conflict with his son, (Lou Antonio) over how to do that. Lou wants to take an offer to build a motel on the place. Our heroes are on the sidelines, employed at the farm but wondering who they should take orders from: the father or the son? The most interesting aspect of the episode is their reaction to the dispute. Todd, who loved and respected his deceased father, sides with the old man. Linc, who, (as we saw in the episode that introduced him), didn't get along with his father, sympathizes with the son.
Alfred Ryder, a fine actor usually stuck playing bad guys, (such as "The Man In the Monkey Board" from season one), makes a meal of a philosophical Indian who is the old man's closest friend. One of the old man's character traits is that he likes to have fun when not working his farm or arguing with his son and he and the Indian spend some time in amusement park in a scene designed to make him seem a more endearing character. We also see him at the beginning incongruously piloting a borrowed speedboat at the beginning. What is with this series and speedboats?