Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1991-06, Page 38PRIESTAP ELECTRIC J WORLD WIDE Ont. Reg. 1694982 IW�Ct1IMCS < ESCORTED TOURS �S IIID I,'Ifl IID HAVE YOU PLANNED YOUR SUMMER VACATION? DO YOU WANT TO BEAT THE G.S.T.? WHY NOT TRY A MOTORCOACH TOUR? 21 DAY FRONTIER WEST FEATURING: The Calgary Stampede Departs: July 1, 1991 Price: $2099 per person (twin) Features: Banff, Yellowstone Park, Mount Rushmore, Vancouver, Victoria - includes transportation, first class accommodation, admissions & fully escorted. 7 DAY BOSTON & CAPE COD Departs: July 21 and August 5 Price: $799 per person (twin) Whale watching, Cranberry world, Provincetown, Newport & much more . . a great summer holiday! OWEN SOUND 519-371-3281 MOUNT FOREST 1-800-265-2131 519-323-1545 18 DAY NEWFOUNDLAND & THE ISLAND OF ST. PIERRE Departs: July 30 Price: $1649 per person (twin) A unique look at the East Coast and Canada's newest province. France is closer than you think when you visit St. Pierre. Transportation and accommodation included. 2 DAY DEARBORN AND GREENFIELD VILLAGE Departs: July 13 and August 24 Price: $299 per person (twin) A great getaway. A walk into the past! MITCHELL 519-348-8492 LISTOWEL 519-291-4100 Now's the time for a ... COMPLETE PHYSICAL Come visit the motor doctor, and he's sure to have a cure for Ni BARN FANS \I POOL PUMP MOTORS Electric Motor Repair — All Makes — All Sizes — All Service repairs and rewinding to all makes motors, welders, transformers standby generators and alternators NOW IN STOCK Winpower Standby Generators New and reconditioned and up to 100 H.P. MOTORS 519-524-2869 In Emergency call: 524-2908 or 393-5955 LEESON ELECTRIC Walla 1990 Ltd. Ron McCann, Manager 224 Suncoast Dr., Goderich (next door to Fisher Glass) 34 !NE RURAL VOICE RURAL LIVING PINK PEARLY RHUBARB: THE FIRST TASTY TREAT OF SPRING By Rhea Hamilton -Seeger Once the snow leaves the cold ground on the south side of the garage, I watch vigilantly for the first signs of rhubarb. It never fails to amaze me just how fast it grows when a hint of spring sunshine encourages it. From then until the fall, we enjoy fresh rhubarb custard pies. Our fairly large patch of rhubarb was rescued from the back side of a rock pile, hidden in the front corner of our lot by towering cascades of lilacs filtering the light. I was determined to save some of the old abandoned patch and managed to secure a few roots. I promptly put them into a south garden with plenty of compost and well rotted manure. It must be happy there, since that was 18 years ago and it's just now showing signs of needing a bit of thin- ning. The stalks are getting spindly. We are fortunate to have this Asian native here in North America. For many centuries, rhubarb was found only in the local apothecary's garden. To get a good patch of rhubarb going it's important to prepare a good bed for the roots, as once this plant is happily established, it will last for years. Work a good portion of well rotted manure and compost into a well drained bed of sandy loam. Make sure that your root stock has two or three good buds as well as part of the root attached, and set out plants about two feet apart. Avoid harvesting the first year and pull only a few stalks the second year. For a family of four to six to enjoy rhubarb all year, six healthy plants should be started. Rhubarb grows from a crown and should never be harvested with a knife, but rather gently twisted and pulled. By the end of May, our patch has great showy heads of flowers shooting up and I quickly pull them out forcing energy