Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2003-06, Page 8),berth Dust Control Applies Environmentally Friendly Dust Suppressant Great for parking Tots, driveways, construction sites, farm lanes, etc. • NO LEACHING • NO CHLORIDE • NO RUST • NO OIL Non-toxic and non -corrosive. Increases the load bearing capacity of all roads and creates a tightly bound surface that improves traction and skid resistance. Approved by the Ministry of the Environment, Canada Food and Agriculture and the Ministry of Transportation. It provides the safest, most effective dust control available. Perth Dust Control uses versatile, calibrated equipment that ensures a hard, durable surface. We can apply close to buildings -- or wherever you need it. For a Free Estimate Call STEVE KUEPFER RR 1, Newton, ON (519)595-8025 Mobile (519) 272-5296 Fax (519) 525-4441 24 hr. Personal Answering Machine Specialists: • ALL FARM BUILDINGS • GALVANIZED STEEL • COLOURED STEEL • WOOD SIDES • FENCES • AIRLESS SPRAY PAINTING • SANDBLASTING • BOOM TRUCK We Power Wash Everything Before We Point ltd 519-848-3184 1-800-837-0246 R.R.#1 ARTHUR, ONTARIO NOG 1A0 4 THE RURAL VOICE Keith Roulston Memories of a `heavenly' childhood Keith Roulston is editor and publisher of The Rural Voice. He lives near Bluth, ON. Sometimes we know things but it takes someone else talking about it to remind us. The recent death of our next door neighbour from my childhood brought me together with my best friend from those days growing up on the farm in the 1950s. We were reminiscing about our near -insep- arable boyhood when he mentioned that he had already experienced the closest thing to heaven: growing up in our Kinloss Township farming community in the '50s. I'd thought it was just me who felt that way. A country childhood is one of the greatest privileges a child can be given, and farm families who can't give their children the latest video game terminal or $150 name -brand sneakers should never forget that. Our childhood is not so fondly remembered because we had the toys that some of our town schoolmates or city cousins would have had. Instead, we had what you couldn't buy with money: the freedom to roam unhind- ered and unsupervised most of the time without our parents having to fear we'd cause problems for others. And roam we did. From the time we were old enough to be on our own 'til the time we were expected to carry more responsibility, we were explorers, inventors, hunters, voyageurs — pretty much whatever excited our imaginations. There were five boys nearly the same age in our extended neighbourhood (from a mile west of us on the concession to a mile and a half east) but it was the two of us who spent the most time together. From school's letting out in June to Labour Day, we came inside only to eat and sleep. We explored the upper reaches of the 18 Mile Creek that ran through the back of my friend's farm. Spurred on by school history lessons that told of native civilizations and the early French explorers, we searched for arrow heads we never found and were sure we found burial mounds in the woods which were likely the remainders of upturned roots of fallen trees. Parents today would be appalled at many of our adventures. We cobbled together rafts of old fence - posts and whatever was handy, to float on the frigid water of the spring flood in the meadow on our farm. Lord knows what would have happened if we'd fallen into that water which was deeper than our heads and still had floating ice in it. On rainy days one or the other of our barns became our indoor gym- nasium. We scampered along the heavy beams 25 feet in the air and, when the hay was new and fluffy, in those days before balers became prevalent, we'd launch ourselves from the highest beam, using the hay rope, to plunge into the perfumed hay below. I doubt our experience was unique for farm kids of the time. Certainly our perfect childhoods could instantly have disappeared had one of our adventures gone wrong. I don't remember hearing of any youngster who paid the price for the kind of risks that were an accepted part of our lives then. Why were our parents less concerned about our every danger than parents of my generation or the parents today? Certainly parents are more aware, between better media coverage and plenty of warnings, about the dangers kids face — from falls to being kidnapped by sexual predators. Parents who let kids out of their sight these days would be filled with guilt at being unfit parents. But our parents, who had so little cash they couldn't give us much else, gave us a precious gift of letting us be free. I'm sure the greatest computer- ized learning tool could not have developed our imaginations or our self-reliance as much as those carefree explorations of boyhood did. I can think of no greater wish than hoping other kids could have as happy a childhood as we did.0