Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2002-04, Page 10"Our experience assures lower cost water wells" 102 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Member of Canadian and Ontario Water Well Associations • Farm • Industrial • Suburban • Municipal Licensed by the Ministry of the Environment DAVIDSON WELL DRILLING LTD. WINGHAM Serving Ontario Since 1900 519-357-1960 WINGHAM 519-664-1424 WATERLOO N 0 I I r I I i I i 6l Ir' i# • CABLE • ROPE • CHAIN from CABLE • Galvanized Aircraft Cable 1/16' to 5/16' • Wire Rope 3/8' to 314' • Stainless Steel Cable 1/16" -1/4' • PVC Cable 1/8' -3/16' Gear 8 White Coat ROPE • Polypropylene - 114" to 112" • Nylon 1/4", 112", 5/8", 1" • Hemp 1/2", 3/4", 7/8" 1" CHAIN Grade 30, 3/16" to 1/2" 111 Custom-made414 .: LOGGING ,t CHOKERS1. Wide range o1 thimbles, shackles, cable clamps, etc Above are stock items Other sizes and grades available by order 519-524-9671 Fax: (519) 524-6962 53 Victoria S.,Goderich, N7A 3H6 Suppliers of... *VANGUARD STEEL ;` 6 THE RURAL VOICE Keith Roulston Nature in a man-made world Keith _ Roulston is editor and publisher of The Rural Voice. He lives near Blyth, ON. On my way to do the chores on my tiny hobby farm this morning I was stopped dead in my tracks. From overhead came a strange honking -whistling sound and as I looked up, I saw two flights of low- flying tundra swans: Watching their powerful breast muscles flexing to make their wings beat and keep those huge bodies in the sky is one of those truly inspiring rewarding experiences of living in the country. And it got me thinking, coming as it did a day or so after the urban media trumpeted the fact that 2001 census results show more and more Canadians live in three major urban regions, about how our nation's consciousness may be altered because a smaller percentage of the population will witness a stunning natural sight like this, instead being impressed by man-made achievements like new buildings. I've lived in city and country and I'm living in the country now because I don't feel alive if I'm not surrounded by natural things. When cur indigo buntings put in their annual appearance in April (hopefully), their sight is as precious to me as the rarest of jewels is to an urban sophisticate. Though I know they're close to becoming pests, I'm still in awe when I see Canada Geese fly at low altitude and while I know from hard exper- ience the penalty for having too many deer around, my heart still leaps when I see one in our field. Increasingly people in our cities are cut off from the natural environ- ment. A city park may have trees and squirrels and, yes, those pesky Canada Geese, but that doesn't make it very natural. So how are your perceptions altered if you live in a manmade world and you're seldom in the presence of nature? And how are those perceptions, multiplied by millions, reshaping the culture and politics of the country. Watching media coverage over the past 10 years or so, it seems to me urbanites are both romanticizing nature and fearing it. Both trends hold dangers for farmers who make a living in partnership with nature. Betty Zyvatkauskas, a freelance travel writer, suggested at a recent rural tourism conference that there's a sense of urgency that nature is disappearing, which it certainly is in the Golden Horseshoe where cities creep outward like an oilslick on water. On one hand this creates opportunities for country people to offer natural activities like bird watching or nature walks but on the other, it means that city people want to preserve what's left of nature. While they make their living from selling shares in forestry companies that have stripped the land bare or building cars that pollute the air, the urbanites expect those still living in .he countryside to preserve what's left of nature, even if it means economic hardship to the farmer who owns a piece of land where a rare animal or bird has been spotted. At the same time as people romanticize nature they seem to fear it, used as they are to their man-made world where everything is under control (except other people). So we have a terror of germs that makes anti -biotic soaps hot sellers. We have demands for tighter food inspections' (do you not think OPSEU knew what fear buttons to push when they went on strike?) though there's no evid- ence food poisoning is more preval- ent today than a generation ago, and it's probably less so. We have urban- ites who have come to think that spreading manure on fields is a dang- erous, unnatural thing to do. After all, isn't some man-made process like sewage treatment more effective? I feel sorry for city people who don't see incredible sights like those swans but I worry that, cocooned in their manmade world, they may control the way the rest of us live.0