The Rural Voice, 2001-07, Page 6QUICK -FIT
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2 THE RURAL VOICE
Guest Column
Wet feet drove creativity
By Arnold Mathers
The Maitland River ran through
the farm that my dad and mother
bought the spring after their
Christmas wedding. Buying the farm
was definitely a second choice
occupation for
dad. He was a
part-time station
agent for the
Canadian
National Railway
and helped his
father and brother
on the home
farm.
When dad and
mother planned
their wedding,
Christmas
seemed the best
time since mother
was a teacher at
the local rural school. The about -to -
be -married couple made an offer to
purchase the village general store and
were about to become store
keeper/teacher/station agent
entrepreneurs. The plan was just
about excellent. Dad's work at the
station was mainly late afternoon to
early evening and on Saturdays and
mother's school teaching was the
traditional day shift with no
weekends. The storekeeping was six
days a week from early morning until
late evening, an ambitious schedule
but with a little help a guaranteed
pattern for success. However, fate
intervened.
At the last minute the owner of the
store decided not to sell and retire.
Mother and dad were left with a
wedding plan and no home. The
wedding went off on Christmas day
as planned and after a brief
honeymoon the newlyweds settled
into dad's home with his father,
brother and three spinster aunts, a
highly unsuccessful arrangement.
Early in the spring a farm just a
little way down the road came up for
sale at a reasonable price. Thus dad
became a farmer, an occupation
somewhat down his list but they had
a home of their own and a job
compatible with the school
teacher/station agent combination.
Having lots of fresh water is an
asset to a farm but having the river
run completely across the property
caused a major problem since the
pasture land was north of the river
and the house and barn were south of
the river. This meant that all summer
the cows had to be brought across the
river twice a day for milking. So dad
also had to wade across the river.
Often after heavy rains the voter was
over the rubber boot tops and one
either got wet feet or took off the
socks and boots to wade the river. Of
course dad had to carry the socks and
boots with him to wear on the other
side to chase the cows through the
wet pasture grass.
Dad soon tired of the daily routine
and, ever the young inventor, he
hatched an idea to build a bridge over
the river. He would dig a post into the
soft ground on each side of the river
and fasten a length of page wire
between the posts parallel to the
water. He then put a second length of
page wire perpendicular to the lower
wire to serve as a side or handrail for
his briuge. With the bridge complete
he waited for mother to come home
from school to show off his
remarkable invention.
At chore time dad and mother
walked together down to the river and
as mother stood on the bank watching
dad made his way carefully across the
woven wire swing bridge.
Somewhere about the middle, the
bridge began to swing from side to
side. As dad tried to slow the
swinging, the bridge did a complete
flip. Now dad was hanging on, upside
down with his head jigging in and out
of the water. After a couple of
unsuccessful attempts to right the
bridge he did the only thing possible
— he let go and dropped into the
water.
This ended any attempt to bridge
the river and by the time mother
came home from school the next
afternoon all evidence of the
swinging bridge had disappeared.0
Arnold Mathers is retired and lives
in Exeter.