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The Rural Voice, 2005-03, Page 34Smelling the flowers Long-time Rural Voice columnist Gisele Ireland now runs a flower shop and cafe in her home town of Teeswater Story and photo by Jim Brown Gisele Ireland of Teeswater wrote a column for The Rural Voice for 25 years. Today, she operates First Class Flowers, a combination flower/gift shop and cafe, on the main street of Teeswater. After being a columnist for The Rural Voice for 25 years, you might say Gisele Ireland took time off to smell the flowers. After all those years in which she made her husband Brian, a.k.a Super Wrench, infamous, she's now running a flower shop and cafe in her home town of Teeswater. Gisele's wry sense of humour and appreciation of the sublime and the ridiculous in every day farm life, made her columns a favourite in several counties. As well as writing a column, she 30 THE RURAL VOICE published five books, the first of which, The Farmer Takes a Wife, was a psychological study of stress on farm families during financial crisis. This venture was in conjunction with the Concerned Farm Women, a group that emerged during the 1980s high -interest -rate farming crisis. Now, some 20 years later, things seem to have come full circle once again. Farmers are again on the front page of the media, suffering financial hardships on several fronts. The other four titles were hilarious romps through the Irelands' own farming experiences, along with some borrowed from family and friends. Neighbours slipped in every now and then just to keep things stirred up. Gisele chooses to exaggerate the controversial, the odd and the downright hilarious aspects of farm life. Due to her outlook, she became a popular speaker in Ontario as well as making several trips to Prince Edward Island, Quebec and New Brunswick. "Farmers are a unique brotherhood, countrywide," she says. At the present time she still does as much speaking has her busy schedule allows. Today, Gisele is helping Super Wrench and son Douglas manage Teeswater Agro Parts, which is located on their original farm, near the village of Teeswater. Last summer they purchased a heritage building in the village and operate it as a combination flower/gift shop and cafe. It's called First Class Flowers and although Super Wrench bends over backwards to avoid the flowers and the kitchen, he's hating fun renovating the old building. When he's not doing that, he is playing with his big toys at Agro Parts, she says. All four of Brian and Gisele's children are married and have gifted them with 11 grandchildren. As their 40th wedding anniversary looms on the horizon, both feel grateful for the gifts they have been given and for the richness of their life. Gisele says she hopes she imparted some of that richness to the lives of those who read her work or listened to her presentations.0