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The Rural Voice, 2001-01, Page 27in hot water for the first time. Everyone battles in a washtub. Without hydro, it is quiet, peaceful, and cheap. The only noise is the battery clock ticking and the frogs singing. May 20 — We tear out the old siairs, so use a stepladder to get to bed. Douglas's face is covered with mosquito bites. The kids arc: startled by a snake near the garden and run screaming back to the house. May 23 — Donna Jean says, "I know why Dad wanted to come here. Because it looks like we have the whole world." May 25 — We install a used oil tank on a platform in Donna Jean's bedroom that will be our indoor water supply tank, bury a water line from the well to the house, and thie generator pumps water up' to the tank. Gravity does the rest. It is great to have running water instead of runnin g for it. May 29 — Two deer are in the front field until the bus comes to pick up Donna Jean. I kill two snakes, and killdeer nest in the garden. May 31 — We have a cool shower in the rain on the front doorstep. June 1 — A major outing to town. The TV is battery-operated, so when it runs down, we install it in the Jeep, and it charges up by the time we get to town. Donald buys two horses, a cow, three calves. and nine heifers. They are content here. So am I. June 4 — I put buckets under the leaks in the roof. June 5 — Donald's brother Jamie, who farms 10 miles away, brings his tractor to help work on the house. He hooks a cable from the tractor to the corner post of the deteriorating back porch and yanks. We now have a nice deck instead of an e yesore. New windows are installed, insulation done, and a new front porch and greenhouse built on the south side. The bathroom sink, tub, and toilet are in place, but not hooked up to any septic system yet. June 7 — We go cahnoeing and see a bittern, baby ducks, and hear lots of grouse thumping. The propane system is installed, so we now have functioning propane -powered fridge, lights, and stove. The fridge is from an old camping trailer, small as a bar fridge, with a miniature freezer. When we go to town, we buy a box of six ice cream bars and eat them in spots on its back. The meat is much like veal, being so young and tender. August 11 — I finally have kitchen cupboards! August 13 — We swim in a waterhole at the' river. The water is six feet deep, so Donald and Donna Jean wear life jackets, and Douglas wears water wings. I can swim. Everyone has a good cool off. August 14 — No mosquitoes in the house now, just flies. They are easier to kill. Douglas worries that we don't have any wood piled yet. He didn't notice we don't have a stove yet either. September 11 — We get a used, 1,000 -gallon, steel, underground fuel tank. I paint it with tar as it was kind of rusty. It will be our septic tank. Donald gets some used railway ties to build a barn. There's been a fox around, so we'll soon have to protect our chickens or we won't have any eggs. We sure miss the folks at home. October 15 — So many things I'd like to get finished, but it's a good job I have lots of patience. We get the barn started — put railway ties in for posts, and Donald pulls tamarack poles for the roof out of the bush with the three-wheeler. We get the septic tank and weeping bed buried, and the bathroom drains hooked up. The septic system is crude and homemade, but functional, so I am grateful. We hope to get the hot water heater and more propane lights hooked up soon. It is pretty hard to get up these mornings when it's dark. The kids use battery lamps and we have a coal oil lantern. We move the washing machine down cellar so the pump wouldn't freeze. Donald calls a moose from the deck one night, and gets pretty excited when he hears it crashing through the willows north of the house. November 7 — The hens are now chicken soup. Two froze to death, so Donald butchered the rest. We've one woodstove going every day, and some days two. November 12 — In the bush northwest of the house, Donald finds nice high, Sandra and Donald and their young family Donna Jean, six, and Douglas, three, found time to relax amid their busy edule renovating the house. find a the parking lot. June 10 - Donald goes looking for Saskatoon berries and blueberries. He brings home a big bouquet of wild roses, snowball blooms, buttercups and lupins. June 14 — Something growls in the bush and scares the cattle — probably a bear. June 16 — I bake for the first time in my propane stove, and go looking for wild strawberries. As we round a curve in the river in the canoe, a moose raises his head from grazing on water lilies. Big thrill! June 19 — Eight pelicans land on the river. Gather four eggs from our hens which wander around the yard. The kids catch butterflies. August 9 — We go to the dump and see a mother bear and her cub, cute from a distance, and the baby crawled to the very top of a big poplar tree. On the way home, a small deer jumps right out in front of the Jeep and is killed. The kids are quite upset. Donald slits its throat and Toads it into the back, telling the kids not to look. It was a big fawn, with white JANUARY 2001 23