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The Rural Voice, 1979-06, Page 22Family picnics My name is Karen Beecroft. I am an average everyday person. 1 have no real hobby except that I love to play the ukulele. I like to share my personal thoughts with friends and I especially like it when they come to me for advice. Then when I give it to them I feel like I have done my good deed for the day When I grow up I would like to be a big city lawyer that everybody knows about and comes to for advice. If I can't be a lawyer I'll settle for a highschool guidance counselor. Either way I will be sharing my thoughts and making people happy and that's really all I want to do. FAMILY PICNICS The choice is yours! Stay home and be talked about or go and, have a really good argu ment. Have you guessed what I'm talking about yet? Try think of something that usually happens every summer. Something that takes that hideous frown from your face and brings an ear to ear smile to your lips. A place where there is enough food to keep an elephant living for a whole year. A family picnic of course! Every year my family has a picnic, we started this tradition in nineteen fifty-four. Relatives from all over come for this very important event. To give you an idea of what some of the family gatherings I attend are like I would ask you to sit back relax and listen very carefully. The day is bright and the birds are singing. Things go very slowly until about nine a.m. but then do the orders ever fly. There are salads to be made and meats to be prepared. By about twelve noon we head for wherever the picnic is being held. When we arrive there are the usual hello's then the fun starts. When all the cousins, nieces and nephews arrive we usually go for a walk. I remember one year we went to a bush. We found this great big old tree to climb and when we were all wrapped up in the news to be heard something was brought to our attention. It was a cry forhelp! The cry became louder and louder and all of a sudden we heard a great big snap! There was my cousin lying on the ground. We didn't go up in that tree anymore. After the walk we go swimming and when there is a group of children like us who needs a supervised pool? We prefer a small secluded lake. The lake that we swam in last year was small and surrounded by trees. It had once been an old gravel pit. In the middle there was black mud and seaweed. Well, my cousin decided that he was going to get even with this girl on the with some black mud. She had been bugging him. There were screams and hollers to be heard all over! When she came back she was covered from head to toe in black mud I must say though she did deserve it. For sometime now 1 have been talking mostly about the children and what fun we have. But the adults have their fun to. It is possible for one family to carry on a conversation for about an hour without having a disagreement. But put our family together and we could have an arguement going in ten minutes. No need to worry though because they all usually end up laughing when they finally realize that they were all wrong and so ends the argument. By about five o'clock we all begin to get a little bit hungry. There is always lots of pushing and shoving around the big table of food. It may sound boring but when the children get a food fight started it can get very exciting. Especially when we try to By Brenda Finch, 8, R.R. 1, Clinton keep the adults from seeing what we are doing. I must say it is very funny to walk into a room after everyone has cleared out and see a piece of meat in the corner, some potato salad, on the carpet and a bit of icing sticking to the wall. After the meal is over the older children gather around and when the younger childen aren't look ing we hop in the truck and head for the lake. When at the lake we take out the paddle boats. For those of you who do not know what a paddle boat is,it is a small boat with a rudder on the back. It has peddles at your feet like the ones you would find on a bicycle. It has two seats and in between the two seats there is a handle so that you may steer the boat. "Sound boring?" Well it really isn't. We have wars with the boats and that is fun. At our picnic last year my cousin and I took out a boat. We would let someone cat,'-. up with us and just before they smashed into us we would move the handle back and forth as fast as we could water would splash all over them! Nobody came near our boat after that. The sun is setting in the sky and the good-byes are being said. I have that sad feeling although I know that this year we will have a family picnic even bigger and better than this one. Karen Beecrof Brookside, Ont. Age 14 PG. 20 THE RURAL VOICE/JUNE 1979