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The Rural Voice, 1987-04, Page 14LIQUID MANURE Maximize your Potential Retums with this Valuable Resource • Fast, timely, economical service • Operator with 16 years' experience • Complete line of agitation equipment • 4 Terra -tired vacuum floater spreaders • No job too large or too small • For competitive rates and superior service, call us. BOOK NOW GREENER ACRES Owen Sound 519-371-2345 Evenings call George — 519-371.2323 OFIFBATCH FEED BLENDER MIXER 141 1 000 or 2000 Ib. capac ty Heavy duty motor Electronic scales 80 drive chain 2" shaft LYNN LOWRY FARM SYSTEMS LTD. R.R. 1, Kincardine, Ont, 519-395-5286 We Handle Everything (Almost) 12 THE RURAL VOICE AN ADDICTION, NOTA BUSINESS For years people have been saying that farming is a business. This is the time of year that proves it's impossi- ble to treat farming like making shoes or selling condominiums. In business, people are supposed to make coldly rational decisions. There may be some who can be coldly ration- al about the basics of farming, but for most it's impossible to separate reason from the passions that call up our love of growing things or raising animals. This is the time of year that drives people outdoors looking for a piece of dirt to dig up, for sun -warmed soil to run between their fingers. It's a time of year when millions of people across the continent plant tomato seeds in peat pots or styrofoam coffee cups. It's the time of the year when the most booming business in the city is the nursery. Warm weekends send people in the thousands to the urban outskirts to buy rosebushes and potted trees, even pre -started lettuce and corn. You might be able to take the country out of the boy, but you can't take his feeling for the soil, no matter how urbanized he becomes. People festoon their highrise balconies with planting boxes and hanging plants, desperately trying to put a little nature into their sterile lives. In the suburb where my in-laws live, the houses are now about 15 years old. One can see the effects of the planting mania that the first own- ers of those houses had. In some cases they stuck in so many trees that now the houses are nearly lost in a jungle. One house has a miniature orchard in its postage -stamp yard, leaning right out over the sidewalk. The fascination of human beings with animals is equally as strong and much more expensive. Visit a pet shop these days and get a glimpse of how much people will pay to have warm bodies around. Parrots sell for sums farmers would hesitate to spend for a prize cow (and the farmer can look on his expense as an investment). Next to owning a nursery in the suburbs of a large city is owning a shop catering to the extravagances of pet owners. People will gladly pay more to have their poodle's nails clip- ped than to put groceries on the table. Anyone questioning the compara- tive profitability of serving the real farmers or serving urbanites dreaming of touching nature need only look at what percentage of graduating veteri- narians goes into doggy doctoring rather than large -animal practices. They might also look at how many farm equipment companies are depen- ding more on selling garden tractors to city farmers with 50 -foot -wide estates than they are on farmers who find it hard to afford tractors for 500 acres. Farming is not a business, it's an addiction. Farmers are just addicts out of control, like the raving drunk. The urbanite is the controlled drunk, able to drink a little and then leave it alone. Farmers can't leave it alone. Like junkies who will do anything to sup- port their habits, farmers will send their wives out to work, even take one or two jobs themselves to stay on the land. Junkies will borrow from loan sharks, not caring about the terms be- cause they can only think about get- ting their next shot. Farmers will bor- row from banks, signing legal forms without knowing what they entail be- cause they think if they have their one more shot at growing a crop, at put- ting pigs through the barn, at a feedlot - full of cattle, they'll be all right. There are people who feed off the junkies of skid row and there are peo- ple who feed off farmers. In fact, near- ly everybody benefits from the farmer's addiction. As long as there are addicts who want to raise sheep or cattle or pigs, we won't have to worry about starving, no matter how little we want to pay the addicts for their efforts.° Keith Roulston, who lives near Blyth, is the originator and former publisher of The Rural Voice.