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The Rural Voice, 1989-07, Page 48FREY CALF CREEP All steel construction for extra durability, completely portable. Available in 4', 6', & 8' single and double sided creep fronts. — priced from $599 Portable Cow Pen Panel J.7 REID Manufacturing & Sales Ltd. R.R. 1, Moorefield, Ont. NOG 2K0 519-638-355 Formerly Frey Livestock Equipment WICK WEEDERS Contact Herbicide Applicator — any size available — front -mount hydraulic kit — hand-held models - - 3 -wheel or 4 -wheel ATVs — front mount — trail behind Manufactured by PAUL VOGELS R.R. #2, Kippen Ontario, NOM 2E0 519-522-1030 46 THE IRAL VOICE NOTEBOOK ........................ . bpi edam Sorrel our years since I left this place — four, four, four, four — since I left home, the farm. And I'm going to trudge, by myself, to our other barn, just a little down the road. Please, no gushy reminiscence, please. I live in a city, three different cities since I left home, all the same. I walk out the house door and the outside world greets me immediately. There is a bright sun in the sky, and mud underfoot. I rush away from the house and want to get on with the journey. I need to take a walk. I need to leave the house behind me. My brother Doug and his friend are taking turns shooting tin cans with a pellet gun as they lean against a hydro pole. They shoot steadily, patiently, waiting for the loud "ting" that broadcasts success. I slowly distance the scene, not wanting to be noticed. There are small islands of snow — vulnerable to the sunlight. The lane - way is spongy. Nick, enthusiastic as ever, comes along (I guess I'm not alone). He bounds far ahead of me, always ex- pecting a long trip; I hate to disappoint him. Down the hill, down the hill, I walk down the low-grade hill. The wide gravel road is dependably hard and smooth. I remember nothing while walking; nothing stands out in my mind as something to remember. I spent eight years of my life here but no distinctive vignette comes to mind. This lack of memory doesn't trouble me, though — nothing does. All I feel is the pleasant warmth of the sun. Looking to the right: clean, rolling brown-green pastures lay smooth, wet enough for cows to soon walk on and blacken. And further ahead on the same side I see golden corn from the previous autumn. The wind bathes me warm and cool. Not cool. Not cool. Caressed. I don't want to go to the other barn but there's really nowhere else to go. If I do go there, I want to go alone, where there'll be no one else around when I see it. I turn left up the laneway, which is so muddy one must negotiate alongside it on tip -toes. On the left, in the barn's front lot, there is a clearing. Different trailers in succession had sat there. When Bill, the hired hand, was 16, he started to live in the trailers every summer and a few falls. Ahead looms a grey barn, unevenly