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The Rural Voice, 2003-06, Page 44Before the days of luxury Before the dabs of refrigeration, food preservation was a serious business. Canning and root cellars were common for fruits and vegetables, but it took ingenuity and community action through the 'beef ring' to enjoy fresh meat in the summer months By Barbara Weiler think it is only in retrospect that we who lived on farms in the forties and early fifties can fully appreciate the great many changes in farm life in the post war era. These changes involved new machinery that made farm work easier and more efficient, improvements in outbuildings and barns, as well as more living amenities for the farm family. It was sometimes said jokingly but with some ring of truth that you could tell who was boss in the family by whether conveniences came first to the house or the barn. The farm my parents purchased in 1939 had a solid brick house and good farm buildings along with 100 acres of land, but had no hydro, running water or indoor bathroom. My father was determined that our city born mother should have all the conveniences as soon as possible, but also wanted to update his farm and equipment. One of the problems on our farm was that of keeping food cool in the summer. My grandparents in Toronto had an insulated wooden ice box and ice was delivered regularly, 40 THE RURAL VOICE keeping their milk, butter and meat cool in the summer months. Some farms may have had ice harvested from nearby lakes and ponds, cut in the winter and stored in an icehouse for summer use. In our area only businesses such as the butcher shop and perhaps some village dwellers had these kinds of luxuries. In the winter, we kept our meat frozen in the unheated back kitchen, and milk and butter were stored in the cool cellar in a cupboard with screened doors. At meal time one of us kids was regularly asked to "Run downstairs to get the milk and butter." It was after my mother, pregnant with her fourth child, fell down those cellar stairs with a coal oil lamp in her hand that hydro was installed in our house and barn in 1941. Even when hydro had been installed, we could not afford all the modern appliances at once. The electric wringer washer was deemed to be the most necessary piece of equipment to begin with, and a refrigerator had to wait a little. By the end of the war, taps replaced the hand pump that brought water from the cistern and a storage room upstairs that we had referred to as "the junk room" was converted to a bathroom. Refrigeration of food in the summer presented a problem. Hard working farmers needed meat and could not spend time making daily trips to the butcher. Why buy meat from a butcher anyway, when you have a field of beef on the hoof? The solution was the co-operative beef ring. A number of farmers got together and made an agreement to take turns each week supplying an animal to the beef ring members during the summer months. A local butcher slaughtered the chosen beast, and the meat was divided amongst the members, each receiving the allotted number of steaks, roasts, ground meat etc. This required a lot of organization, weighing and dividing of cuts. As a child, I was never quite aware of exactly who did this or how it was arranged. On Saturday morning someone drove through the countryside delivering the weekly portion to each member. We had Holstein cattle and there was discussion about whether a dairy