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The Rural Voice, 1983-07, Page 39Pay Only Once & Never Pay Again! Superior Muffler. OVER 1000 DEALERS IN NORTh AMERICA Lifetime Guarantee AVAILABLE on the muffler, tailpipe exhaust pipe and labor! (for as long cis you own your car) Larry' s Cycle World 435 Durham St. E. Walkerton 519-881-0984 Direct!) across from Brewers Retail) KEITH ROULSTON Chicken City Keith Roulston Congratulations to the city fathers of Toronto for the bold and courageous move they made in May to rid the city of a horrible nuisance, little backyard coops of chickens and pens of rabbits and goats. In the face of numerous (well, one or two) complaints about the presence of these pests, particularly in the backyards of immigrant neighbourhoods, the city has decided to take action and passed a by-law that no farm animals can be kept in the city. And a good thing, too. I mean for one thing, chickens just don't fit with the image of Tcronto. Toronto is "People City" not "Chicken City." Heavens, it took a hundred years for the city to bury the "Hogtown" label and now people want to keep rabbits and goats. The city fathers worked so hard to get shining steel and glass buildings like the Eaton Centre and then somebody wants to ruin the whole manicured look of the place by keeping chickens in a backyard. Yuk! Toronto is supposed to be a city filled with the brightest, most fashionable people in Canada. There is definitely nothing fashionable about keeping farm animals. Our Toronto-based media has been telling us for years that the only people who are still out on the farms are those who aren't smart enough to move to a gleaming city like Toronto. Farming is passe. It's old fashioned. I mean a few people have to stay out there on the farms to provide food for the fancy city restaurants and cafes but let's keep them safely at a distance, a hundred miles or so away from the nearest condominium. Now there were, horrors, some city people who argued that these animals weren't doing any harm and for the sake of individual liberty, people should be allowed to keep them if they kept them in a sanitary way that didn't offend neigh- bours. Even some of the chic people of the city argued the case. A famous columnist who reviews fancy restaurants for a newspaper even admitted she kept eight chickens. But one alderman rightly dismissed all this talk of growing your own food as "romantic clap -trap" and led the vote to ban the animals. There will be people who argue that if dogs and cats can be kept in the city, even in apartment buildings, then why shouldn't chickens, rabbits and goats be allowed. Well, cats, after all can be trained to go in a kitty litter. This means more retail sales for stores selling kitty litter and more jobs making kitty litter. Rabbits, on the other hand, don't go in kitty litter. You usually put a tray under them to catch their droppings. That doesn't create jobs for anybody but the person who has to empty the tray. From a sanitary point of view, goats stink up the backyard with their refuse. Dogs don't. They do it in the park. While chickens infest the yard of their owner with their droppings, the owner of a dog can keep his yard perfectly clean by training his dog to do it in the neighbour's backyard. Yes, gentlemen and ladies, you have done a great thing for the city of Toronto, perhaps all of Canada, by banning these small animals. If city people get too close to these farm animals, if they have to get rid of their own manure and feed the little beasts twice a day, they might start feeling sorry for the farmers who have to do it on a much larger scale and be willing to pay more for their food which would wreck the whole economy. I know there are those who will say that these are only a few animals and what's all the fuss about, but you may have nipped this in the bud. I mean if people find out that chicken farmers really are making those exorbitant profits the Consumer Association and the Globe and Mail keep claiming, who knows, we might have developers wanting to turn their condominiums into chicken barns. E Keith Roulston has been writing this column since 1977 and is the originator and former publisher of The Rural Voice. He has written several successful plays and is connected with the Blyth Summer Festival. He lives with his family near Blyth. All grades of nuts and bolts Epps Pressure Washers KETO Abrasives Westward Tools Scott's Industrial & Farm Supplies R.R. 4, Tara 519-376-0283 8 miles west of Owen Sound off Highway 21 THE RURAL VOICE, JULY 1983 PG. 37