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The Rural Voice, 1990-06, Page 3R.V. general manager: Jim Fitzgerald editor: Lise Gunby contributing writers: Adrian Vos Gisele Ireland Keith Roulston Cord Wainman Wayne Kelly Sarah Borowski Mary Lou Weiser -Hamilton June Flath Ian Wylie-Toal Susan Glover Bob Reid Mervyn Erb Peter Baltensperger Darene Yavorsky Sandra Orr marketing and promotion: Gerry Fortune advertising sales: Merle Gunby production co-ordinator: Tracey Rising advertising production: Rhea Hamilton -Seeger office: 519-524-7668 laserset: with the McIntosh Plus printed by: Signal -Star Publishing Goderich, Ontario subscriptions: $15 (12 issues) Back copies $2.50 each For U.S. rates, add $3 per year Canadian Magazine PubI,shers Association All manuscripts submitted for consideration should be accompanied by a stamped, self- addressed envelope. The publisher cannot accept responsibility for unsolicited manu- scripts or photographs, although both are welcome. The opinions expressed herein are not necessarily those of the publisher. Edi- torial content may be reproduced only by permission of the publisher. Second Class Mail Registration No. 3560. The Rural Voice Box 37, 10A The Square Goderich, Ontario N7A 3Y5 BEHIND THE SCENES by Jim Fitzgerald General Manager "Everything that goes around comes around," as the old clich6, more or less, has it. Whether it's styles in clothes or colours in decorating, everything seems to operate in cycles. My in-laws, for instance, bought a home about eight years ago. It had hor- rible grey tiles and a pink marble counter- top in the bathroom. They talked for years of chiselling off those tiles and replacing them and the sink with a modem colour. Well, guess what? You're right: grey and pink are "in" again. So a few weeks ago they had some new wallpaper put up to match the tiles and sink, and voila, an brand new bathroom! When I was a kid growing up in the fifties, reduction, re -use, and recycling were important in our house and on my uncle Mac's farm, where I used to spend summers. Of course, back then we had never even heard of the word "recycling." We called it "being cheap" — or being "frugal," as my Scottish ancestors would say in their lovely brogue. I can still see my grandmother, who journeyed to a strange, Spartan farming existence in Lambton County in the 1870s, saying: "A penny saved is a penny earned." And the "Dirty Thirties" only served to reinforce the Presbyterian certainty that bad weather always follows good. My grandmother could look at a gorgeous hot day in early May and say: "We'll pay for this." In those days, a "blue box" would never have made it to curbside. It would have made an ideal laundry basket, or a box for our cat and her new kittens. Besides, there wouldn't have bcen anything to put in it. The few jars we did get from "store bought" food would quickly find themselves in the fruit cellar filled with homemade jam or cord relish or red hot chilli sauce, while the cans were re -used in the pantry or sewing room or workshop. Each younger kid down the line wore the clothes of his or her older sibling (a really clever mother often bought unisex clothes), and when they were too wom out to pass on they were either rippcd apart and made into another outfit or "recycled" into quilts. My wife Lois, who comes from a large Perth County farm fatnily, can still look with nostalgia at an old quilt in the family room of our home and see bits of that old print dress she wore as an eight- year-old. Why, even the expired Eaton's catalogues were "re -used" in the outhouse. It must have become instilled in my bones, because I constantly feel guilty about throwing anything out, whether it be an old frying pan or a McDonald's styro- foam container. I'm still using an old lawnmower I rescued from the dump 10 years ago. It only needed a new spark plug, some minor adjustments to its carburetor, and a couple of four-letter words applied at the appropriate moment. Same goes for agriculture. In the old days, the manure from the chickens, hogs, and dairy cows was piled away and saved for late spring, when it was carefully worked into the com ground, which itself had been recycled from pasture (which had been hay fields, which had been under - seeded oats, and so on and so on). The weeds in the corn were carefully recycled as well, with a hoe or the scuffler. Out in the bam, all but the detergent wash from the milkers went to the hogs, as did all the edible scraps from the kitchen. And the old worn-out laying hens were recycled into soup, while the old axle from the Model T was hammered and re - tempered into a fine cold chisel. That's why I, like many others who remember those olden days of 40 years ago, am pleased to see a return to those old Scottish principles, now under a new guise of "organic" or "ecological" farming. Now I'm not suggesting for a minutc that a return to the sometimes back -breaking days of old could feed a now largely urban population, but it's great to see some sanity returning, albeit slowly, to agricul- ture. The time has more than come again to stop mining the soil and destroying the lifeblood of our planet, merely for a few more dollars of short-term profit. 0