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The Rural Voice, 1982-02, Page 23GISELE IRELAND Keeping the home fires burning Heat generated from any source these days is very welcome. Long underwear generates some, husbands cuddled up to you generate some, but the best source has to be wood. There has to be something about it or people wouldn't be knocking holes in expensive panelling and putting cement slabs over plush carpeting to install a wood stove. The only way you can afford comfortable temperatures in a big old house is by using wood. When we moved on the farm ten years ago and put a heating system in, we put in a combination wood/oil furnace and have never been sorry. We burn a lot of trash and keep the bushes on the farm cleaned up. A day in the bush with Dad and the saw is a big thrill for all the kids and when they come home they'll eat anything that doesn't move. This year, our modern day Scrooge decided that NO OIL would be put in the tank since we had abused this last year. The oil kicks in at 65 degrees, and this led to a slack attitude by the kids and myself in trundling downstairs and stoking the old burner. More often than not, when Dad came in, he would have to start the fire, and the jolly little elf he was not. We got a lecture and a tongue lashing but evidently things didn't improve much because he laid down the law concerning oil. If you are cold, says he, keep the fire burning. This poses a variety of problems. I can't chop wood. I get the axe stuck in the block and there it stays until help arrives. If Brian is gone all day I either find all the chips on the cellar floor or sucker someone who comes looking for him to chop a few blocks. This means he has to get the axe unstuck first. The hardest part has got to be the morning. Someone has to get up and put wood in so that the house is tolerable. It is usually around 50 degrees or sometimes below when you get up, depending when you went to bed and out the last block in. Dad is pretty good about starting it, because he seems to be the only one that can get heat and not a lot of smoke. The kids are in the meantime fighting over the big square upstairs register about who gets to sit on it while dressing. I am trying to make lunches with butter that if thrown, could kill at forty paces. I put off brushing my teeth or washing my face until the room temperature rises to the point where my toothbrush won't freeze to my teeth. You don't flop around in a fancy housecoat either, just jeans and a sweatshirt with several sweaters on too and then you out a slow moving vehicle sign on your rear in case you get hit while you are unseizing all frozen joints. If there is a reason to stay married, it has to be winter, for the comfort of a cuddler and someone to start the fire in the morning. Why do 1 market my grain Et corn through my Co-op? Well there are several mighty good reasons neighbour. I have CONFIDENCE in the abilities of the staff at my Co-op elevator. I can be certain they will give me proper, accurate weighing, moisture -testing and grading. I know that every bushel of grain I market through my Co-op means more CONTROL of the Grain Market for farmers like you and me. Then there's the matter of SERVICE. I know that my grain will be conscientiously handled, through well equipped facilities and as fast as is possible. I'm also kept up to date with last minute market information and prices. And let's face it, neighbour, it's our business, we OWN a part of it, the Co-op is working on our behalf, so why shouldn't we patronize it ... why, we benefit from the very existence of our Co-op. We now have a transfer unit on our feed truck and can move grain from one farm to another or market it for you through our Wingham Co -Op Feed Plant. Before you sell, call us first for a price. LUCKNOW District Co-operative 529-7953 THE RURAL VOICE/FEBRUARY 1982 PG. 21