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The Rural Voice, 1992-10, Page 8Copper Base ROYALEp�+ BULBS made by PHILIPS Guaranteed 6000 hours Also Available • Energy Saving Lights • Heat Bulbs, etc. THE DUTCH STORE 519 482-7302 55 Albert St. CLINTON CANADIAN CO-OPERATIVE WOOL GROWERS LIMITED Now Available ADVANCE PAYMENTS Black Face 200 White Face 300 Skirted Fleeces • Well -Packed Sacks For more information contact. RIPLEY WOOL DEPOT John Farrell R.R. 3, Ripley, Ontario 519-395-5757 4 THE RURAL VOICE Gisele Ireland Our spirits sinking under water Any rewards we might have real- ized in farming this year have been watered down to the point where they are too few to mention. The punish- ment for us on our waterlogged acres this year has been what we've been trying to fame with — the machinery. No matter where I look, I can't get away from it. Not only is the crippled stuff choking off entrance to the shop and shed, it's scattered elsewhere too. The pockets of the workpants carry an assortment of things that even a junk dealer would have trouble identifying. They thunk in the washer and clunk in the dryer. There is something resembling an iguana with wires on the shelves above the stove, drying out. There is a head for something vital, I'm sure, dropped on the mat in the entrance- way. My trunk has housed the most incredibly greasy assortment of parts either on the way to getting another one just like it or getting the one in the trunk fixed. At no cost if possible. The grease marks are permanent and a constant reminder. In a normal year, the repairs seem to have been taken in stride. Not this year. The machinery is well on the way to being admitted to the Smith- sonian Institute and gets cantanker- ous in the damp weather. When there are a few short hours of sunlight, one would expect enough mercy to hope nothing breaks down. Somehow, this year, it didn't work that way. Super Wrench's conversations inevitably drift to the quirks devel- oped in the combine or the arthritic performance of the swather. The piece of equipment I teamed to hate most this year is the grain auger. On Saturday evening, just about supper time, Super Wrench tore into the house, breathless. "You'll never guess what we did," he panted. "We've got three grain wagons full and the combine is still running." I was impressed and asked when they wanted supper. They didn't. They were on a roll and all they needed was me to help load the grain into the trailer. If we did that, we might actually sell it and get some money. I didn't need any further urging. We sped to the field. The first load went off and getting the wagons just right to the auger was tricky. Super Wrench was up for the challenge and did a superb job. I didn't. I was so excited hearing the combine purr in the field I let the wagon tongue drop on my foot, clad only in a flimsy running shoe. As I lay beside the wagon, doing my ver- sion of the funky chicken, Super Wrench hovered over me solicitous- ly, unsure whether to bawl with me, shoot me or call 911. I recovered enough to hook up the second wagon. The grain flow balked within minutes and Super Wrench pronounced in ominous tones that the flighting in the auger was broken. We moaned and beat our chests in frustration. At 8:15 on a Saturday night, the only option left was to shut the works down until Monday morning. We did that, and since hindsight is such a wonderful thing, should have done a bit more. But we didn't. Before dawn on Sunday morning I awakened to the sound of rain against the bedroom window. The grain sitting uncovered in the field rose like a haunting spectre. We hastily grabbed anything resembling clothes and sped to the field. We got the tarp over the trailer with no problems. The first wagon we hooked up and tried to back into the barn. The tongue bent back on it. We unhooked it and pushed it in. I got a lesson on how to use a bunting pole while slipping on a greasy incline and wiping torrents of rain out of my eyes. The second wagon was quickly hooked to the pickup and taken home. We backed it into the shed with a sigh of relief. Our son climbed up the side of it to test the wetness of the grain and nearly fell off it laughing. "You are a real pair of heroes," he chortled. 1