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The Rural Voice, 1982-03, Page 13"I've never heard them say they wished they lived in town", says Helen Merrifield of Grey County. use some of it to buy some clothes or a record." Ross leans more towards books and recently, a cassette recorder. He's also into snowmobiling. Carol has long been active in 4-H, and this spring she is in her twelfth club. Last summer for the first time, she worked on someone else's farm, as an Agri -crew member. There was a lot of commuting and some long hours, but she met some new faces and was introduced to other methods of farming. In the fall she's hoping to go to university. After that, who knows. And Ross, well he's lucky enough that he doesn't have to worry about decisions like that just yet. Huron County certainly isn't the only place where farm kids pull their weight, though many others are not as formally organized as the Mclntoshes. Wayne and Helen Merrifield run a cow -calf, hog operation at R.R. 4 Meaford, in Grey County's Euphrasia Township. They have one -hundred -and -fifty-five acres divided among two farms. And, like many farm families these days, they hold off -farm jobs as well. Wayne is a constable with the Meaford Police Department and Helen a Toronto -Dominion Bank employ- ee in the same town. She readily admits they would not be able to handle it all without the help of their sons. Scott, fifteen, a grade ten student at Georgian Bay Secondary School in Meaford; Stephen, thirteen, who goes to Meaford Community School; and eleven -year-old Dale, who attends St. Vincent-Euphrasia elementary school. "When Wayne is on four -to -twelve (the afternoon shift), they can handle the chores," says Helen. "They do it all; I never go to the barn." Scott and Stephen generally look after the feeding while Dale enjoys cleaning out pens and stables. After school each day they "fill up in the kitchen" and then head for the barn. Their work takes them about an hour and a half. After supper one of them goes back our and does a check of the animals. On weekends two of the three are usually around, while the third might be off playing hockey or broomball, or snowmobiling. In the summer they help with bringing in the hay and grain. "We don't keep them pinned down," says Helen. '`They do take part in other things. But the work around here gives them some responsibility and an interest in the place. Scott's in 4-H and Dale is in the junior calf club. Scott says he wants to farm but we would like to see him work away from the farm for a couple of years before he makes up his mind for sure." Helen Merrifield is neither rationalizing nor philosophizing when she talks about the education she thinks her children are getting by living and working on the farm. It's an education that involves everything from animal husbandry to the environ- ment and in a sense it's free. But it's not available to children who grow up in paved suburbs. "Our kids have a grandma and grandpa in town that they can visit and stay with overnight." says Helen. "And they sometimes do that." "The odd time they say they wished they didn't have to go out and do the chores, but I've never heard them say they wished they lived in town." If numbers count, John and Jean Groenestege, of R.R. 1 Sebringville, should know a great deal about kids working around the farm. On their Perth County operations they have raised (or are raising) eight of them. But it has been, and continues to be a two-way street. The roster reads like this: Marie, twenty-seven, married and living in Stratford; Anne, twenty-five, a secretary in Calgary; Theresa, twenty-four, an office -manager in Calgary; Ted, twenty- three, owns and operates the home farm (seventy-five acres) after working in construction for five years; Betty, twenty- one. married and a hairstylist in Mitchell; Henry, twenty, working on his parents' farm; Bob, twelve, in grade seven at St. Patrick's School, Kinkora; and Frank, eleven, in grade six at St. Patrick's School. Kinkora. The Groenesteges moved to their original farm in 1958, and switched from a mixed operation to pork in 1968. When Ted agreed to buy the home place, mom and dad bought another farm, one hundred acres, along the same mail route. "We were pleased that Ted went back to farming," says Jean. "If it hadn't been for the kids we never would have bought a second farm. Now they (Ted and his father, along with Henry, Bob and Frank) work together." For the Groenesteges the male help was slow in arriving but when it did they "always helped in the barn, cleaning pens and driving tractors." The girls contrib- uted most by driving machinery during the haying season. After they were sixteen or so, they started taking part-time jobs away from the farm because, as their mom puts it, "the boys came along." A full time hired man was never needed. Jean says her kids were always told their schooling came first and only rarely did any of them have to go to the barn in the morning. Most of their chores were (and are) done at night and on weekends. Their mother thinks they all came away a little better for the experience. "Really, they learned a trade without trying," she says. "They learned about animals and about how to handle equipment." And they all learned to swim, but that wasn't on chore time. That was during the week each summer that the entire family would pack up and head for a campsite at the Pinery, -or some place similar. "We made a point of having holidays," says Jean. "It was sometimes hectic. Actually it wasn't much of a holiday for us (mom and dad) but the kids liked it." As long as there have been farms, there have been farm kids. And, while today's operations and equipment have changed (progress is the word many like to use), it's hard to believe that there's been much of a shift away from what farms traditionally have been able to instill in their young. It has to do with hard work and discipline and a kind of freedom that may be hard to relate to in these times of high interest and low prices. The term- inology may have changed but the character -building rewards remain the same. And the best part of it all — it's an education that is free from tax. Thus far. anyway. THE RURAL VOICE/MARCH 1982 PG. 11