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The Rural Voice, 1999-02, Page 44L Where Hopper Goes the Water Flows. Call Collect Neil 522-1737 , Durl 271-7860 W.D. HOPPER & SONS LTD. R.R. 2, Seaforth i) WATER WELLth DRILLING . IF Flit rir' Since 1915 I DIETRICH FARMS INC. BR.R. 1, Shakespeare, Ont. • Yorkshire U !, • Hampshire • Landrace S1• Duroc 4° r • Crossbred Boars T ~��O, "" R.O.P. 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Box 1, Goderich, Ontario N7A 3Y5 (519) 524-2082 • FAX (519) 524-1091 40 THE RURAL VOICE Book Review A tempting taste of an interesting life Reviewed by Keith Roulston First of all a confession. Until I'll Never Marry a Farmer landed on my desk, I had never heard of author Lois Hole. After reading the book, I'd like to know a lot more about her. Obviously I am showing my ignorance here. According to the biography supplied with the book, she appears regularly on CBC Television's Canadian Gardening, she writes columns for the Edmonton Sun and the Globe and Mail, she has written six other gardening books and she speaks, on average, to 100,000 people a year. In a country where 5,000 in sales makes a best seller, this book had an order of 10,000 copies from the Chapter's book chain alone. This is a strange book, difficult to pigeonhole. It's part autobiography, part a guide to family living and part a recommendation about vegetables. And so for someone like me with no knowledge of the author before picking up the book, there are only maddening hints of the fascinating history of Lois Hole and her husband Ted, the farmer she swore she would never marry. Their early struggle, and ultimate success is a story that deserves more exposure. Hole does reveal that she grew up in tiny Buchanan, Saskatchewan thinking farms were the loneliest places in the world and vowing never to marry a farmer. And indeed when she met Ted Hole he wasn't a farmcr. Though studying agriculture at the University of Alberta, in Edmonton, he had no background in farming, being a plumber's son and trained as a plumber himself. But he had a dream of being a farmer and spoke about it with such passion that her misgivings were overwhelmed. They were married in 1950 and moved to the 200 acres he had bought near St. Albert, just outside Edmonton — close enough to the city that Lois didn't have to fear isolation. In early years they struggled trying to find what was the right line of farming until Lois' prolific garden and the fact they were on a main highway close to the city brought customers to their door seeking produce, and introduced them to the market gardening business. That operation grew and later they switched to a wholesale vegetable farm, specializing in carrots (they sold over six million pounds over the years) and they introduced a garden- ing centre selling plants from their greenhouses. Whcn their sons Bill and Jim decided they wanted to be part of the family business, they felt the garden centre operation had the best potential and decided to phase out the carrots. The book also contains stories of the interesting people Lois Hole has mct along the way, people likc Virginie Durochcr, the illiterate Metis neighbour who raised eight children in a two -room log cabin. She had learned so much from experience that she became Lois's best teacher over the years as thcy worked side-by-side on the Hole farm until Durochcr was 80. Through meeting pcoplc like Mrs. Durochcr, Lois Hole has picked up wisdom about life as well as vegetable growing and she imparts that in her stories. She begins each chapter, for instance, with paragraphs that relate life to growing plants, like finding the best location for each plant — and each person — to grow. And she briefly goes through each vegetable group, talking about growing tips, ways to cat them and her favourite varieties (although for Ontario gardeners this information may be less valuable). In all it's a fascinating book, complete with plenty of full -colour photos by Akemi Matsubuchi. Still, it's just a teaser for a full account of the success of Lois and Ted HoIe.O I'll Never Marry a Farmer: by Lois Hole, Hole's Enjoy Gardening, $40. Internet site: www.telusplanct.net/public/holes