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The Rural Voice, 1995-09, Page 58Support Organic Farming where it counts! ONTARBIO ORGANIC FARMERS Co-op INC. The grower members of OntarBio invite you to supply your certified organic crops for processing and distribution. The time is right! Join us! • Cereals, Grains, Beans • Product Development • Marketing • Processing • Handling • Grower Information ORGANIC FEED GRAIN GROWERS URGENTLY NEEDED! A no obligation prospectus will be sent to you on request. ONTARBIo ORGANIC FARMERS CO-OP INC. R.R. 1, Durham, Ont. NOG 1R0 Phone (519)-369-5316 Fax (519)-369-3210 • Heat Pumps • Radiant Floor Heating ENERGY EFFICIENT Ground and Water Source Heat Pumps ENERGY EFFICIENT Hot Water Radiant Floor Heating by W IRSBO Convert From Hydro to WARM FRIENDLY FLOORS ENERGY EFFICIENT Hot Water Baseboard Heating ENERGY EFFICIENT Hot Water Boilers Call Or Visit our Showroom Fax/Phone 371-0605 1325 2nd Ave. E Owen Sound I 54 THE RURAL VOICE Book Review Tales from the country REVIEWED BY KEITH ROULSTON While thousands of rural young people leave the farm for jobs in the city every year, a smaller, but dedicated group of people reverses the direction of the flow, leaving city life for the country. Marsha Boulton was one of those, and she has used her writing skills to �'rl educate the urban friends she left behind to a little of country life. Boulton led a heady life in Toronto 15 years ago. As editor of the People section in Maclean's magazine, she got to rub shoulders with the cream of society and the stars of the arts and entertainment world. But she gave it up for the world of sheep and cattle and horses on a Mount Forest -area farm. Well, not everything. Her ties to the media world in Toronto helped persuade CBC Radio to have her tell her stories of rural life, first on the weekday afternoon program Later The Same Day and more recently on Fresh Air. Much of the book is a collection of pieces she wrote for those programs. Written as they are for mostly urban consumption, it's hard to know just how the book will be received by farm audiences. Most rural readers will probably enjoy the anecdotes about using roosters to catch worm pickers illegally poaching night crawlers or the scheme of her stock- broker friend to make a fortune off farming, but some will worry that Boulton isn't portraying the true commercial farm of today to her urban readers. After all, former urbanites who now raise sheep will always be regarded with skepticism by "real" farmers. But anyone who gives the book a chance will find some fun moments, and a few that are moving. Anyone (like me) who has ever been involved in a plan to grow cucumbers for dancing in her head, she plants two and a half acres of cucumbers in her first year on the farm. After months of planting, weeding and picking and trucking the cukes off to Teeswater, she still has more than she can sell and gives them away. In the end she realizes a total profit of $23.16 — and gets a valuable lesson in the economics of food production. Many farm people will nod in recognition at some of the experiences Boulton portrays, such as the early -morning, pajama - clad chase to get livestock out of the flower bed (The Soaking Baby -Doll Defence) or the problem of going to the beach when your tan marks you unmistakably as a farmer (The Farmer Gets a Tan). Owners of farm homes will see themselves in stories about combatting cluster flies (Fly Wars) or stripping woodwork (Wainscoting of Many Colours). There are tributes to some of the small pleasures of rural life, like Santa Claus parades (Santa Claus is Coming To Town) and the local village (The Humps of Holstein). Urbanites, indeed, might be put off by just how countrified Boulton has become. Tales of her taking up hunting (A Hunting She Will Go) and the difficulty of plucking and cleaning a duck (Glasnost Can be Ducky) aren't likely to be pleasant reminders of the life -and -death country world. Mostly the book is another addition to the grand old country art of story telling. There are some larger than life tales (Elwood's UFOs) and some good tales like selling a lamb of questionable sex for a premium price (Winners, Losers and llermaphrodites). The book is rounded off by a touching tribute to the loss of a majestic maple tree in the last story, Maple Memories.0 Letters From The Country by Marsha Boulton, 247 pages, paperback. Published by Little, Brown Canada, $14.95. profit (but definitely not fun) will enjoy The Pickle Summer where, with visions of $2,000 an acre profits