Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2000-08, Page 42.11 ouNo s Marvin L. Smith B Sc,F (Forestry), R P.F. Farm Woodland Specialist 570 Riverview Dr. Listowel, Ontario N4W 3T7 Telephone' (519) 291-2236 Providing advice and assistance with: • impartial advice/assistance in selling timber, including selection of trees and marking • reforestation of erodible or idle land • follow-up tending of young plantations • windbreak planning and establishment • woodlot management planning • diagnosis of insect and disease problems • conducting educational programs in woodlot management • any other woodland or tree concerns Roundup® Herbicide and Custom Application... Roundup Effective quackgrass and perennial broadleaf control Economical rates Pre harvest and post harvest applications Custom Application Save time at harvest Experienced operators Accurate sprayer Superior weed control for no -till and reduced till crops. w ;0 u 0 I X111 1 • w 10 CALL US FOR MORE INFORMATION HOWSON & HOWSON LTD. Blyth 523-9624 or 1-800-663-3653 Roundup' is a registered trademark of Monsanto Company, Monsanto Canada Inc., registered user 38 THE RURAL VOICE not mean that the summer kitchen was no longer useful — far from it. The back kitchen gradually became a depository for all the flotsam and jetsam of our lives through the autumn. When the snow came, we left the skis and sleighs and skates there, handy. The empty cans, bottles and old newspapers accumulated, waiting for the snow to melt so we could dispose of them properly. In short, it became a place to stash things that we did not want or need in the house proper. "Put it out in the back kitchen" was a familiar phrase. Family and visitors swept boots there or removed them if too muddy, and a broom always stood by the door. t was through the back kitchen that almost everyone entered our home. A visiting child once expressed astonishment upon learning that the front door was ours too. He thought it must certainly belong to some other family, so seldom was it used. By March. Mother could be heard to mutter "First warm day, I have to get at that back kitchen," the entrance way having become a bit of an embarrassment to her when visitors arrived. The clean up progressed gradually as the spring days became warmer. Cans and bottles were sent to the dump (no recycling then); skis and sleighs were banished to the shed; cupboards were sorted and scrubbed. At last the room with its dark wood paneled ceiling regained its inviting homey appeal. Now when we drive by country homes I wonder how farm families use their back kitchen. Do they call it something else, the mud room, the sun porch? Has it been winterized for use all year round? Has it become home to a hot tub? Do interior decorators write articles about how to organize and beautify it? Would that household guru Martha Stewart have edicts to hand down concerning function and decor? Do owners use it to display kitchen artifacts, old butter churns or antique rolling pins? Is it still a depository for all sorts of items in the winter, and do farm women still mutter, "First nice day, I have to get at that back kitchen"?0 Barbara Weiler is a freelance writer from St. Catharines, ON