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The Rural Voice, 1982-03, Page 30COMPLETE FERTILIZER SERVICES Prescription Blending Bulk Spreading Bag and Bulk Supplemental Nitrogen CHEMICAL HEADQUARTERS SEED VARIETIES CO-ORDINATED PROGRAMS GRAIN MARKETING HARDWARE FARM SUPPLIES Feeding Programs co-op PETROLEUM PRODUCTS FUEL 011 PROPANE GASOLINE GREASE OIL LUCKNOW District Co-operative 529-7953 PG. 28 THE RURAL VOICE/MARCH 1982 GISELE IRELAND The day the house froze Company in the winter time is always a treat, especially this year when you never know if they will get back home or not. My brother and his family dropped in for a visit on Saturday night. He is the kind of person who while he's sitting talking to you. has to know what is going on outside and this means running to windows to see who just came in. Our windows are covered with a couple of inches of frost and the visibility is nil. This naturally means you have to open doors. He did just that. and opened a door we keep locked for a very specific reason. It is very exposed and blows open easily in gusty winds. He closed it all right . but failed to lock it again. It blew open of course, not while we were there to notice it. but sometime through the night while we were all tucked in our bed dreaming of sunshine and T-shirt weather. The first indication I had that something was amiss came when I woke up around five in the morning with my nose frozen to the bedspread. I woke the Oil Sheik and told him that cool temperatures for sleeping were healthy but this was ridiculous. He unwound himself from the half-dozen blankets and trundled downstairs to the furnace. The ensuing roar when he hit the bottom step could be heard three counties away. The door was wide open and there wasn't a thermometer in the house that could register the temperature. When 1 went down the warmest place was inside the refrigerator. The first thing I always head for when I get up is the coffee and of course all the taps only sprouted long icicles. I had to go outside and scoop some snow into a dish to boil for coffee. We have two dogs and I had to be careful to get snow that they hadn't already used. I chipped my favourite cup with my chattering teeth. Our youngest daughter has a gold fish named Abraham. He was fins up in a gold fish bowl awash with icebergs. He either succumbed to the frigid temperatures or got a concussion from the floating icebergs. What were once beautiful plants. were now limp spaghetti hanging in pots in the dining room. The sinks and toilet bowls had hockey rinks for the mice to play on. The only time I snatched a bargain on bananas was that week. Three pounds for a dollar. and there staring at me from the fruit bowl were black objects among petrified oranges and apples. By eight o'clock we had managed to raise the temperature to 40 degrees with the help of the oven and a portable heater. The Oil Sheik didn't have to coax anyone to fire the furrace. We scrambled around looking for the smallest and driest stuff to generate some instant heat. It sure was a good decision not to have any oil. We informed him of this frequently. I phoned my brother to tell him of the havoc his visit had wrea ked and he guffawed so loudly 1 had to hold the receiver a foot away from my ear. I will find it hard to forgive him for Abraham and the plants. The next time he visits 1 plan to tie him to a chair and keep him there with my piggy prod. Sundays being the day that radio programs devote the well being of the spiritual mind, we turned the radio on. The first song they played was "Lord I Hope This Day is Good". We couldn't help but look at each other and try a semblance of a grin through our frozen jaws. Gisele Ireland. a Bruce County pork producer has the ability to laugh at situations that would make us cry.