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The Rural Voice, 2002-02, Page 37News Harold and June Woodhouse (centre) receive their Agricultural Heritage Award from Karl Chittka (left), president of the Grey County Federation of Agriculture, and Don McCausland, mayor of Grey Highlands. shopping. They would take a five - gallon pail of cream that they could sell for $10. For five or six dollars they could buy their week's supply of groceries, and June points out that $6 could buy a lot of groceries. The movie cost 45 cents each. They would spend a dollar on gas, and still have money left over. The Woodhouses have worked and raised their family on the farm on Concession 1 in Euphrasia Township that Harold's father acquired in 1931 and like most young couples of that era they had very little. June's father gave her a Jersey cow and from that cow, and one Harold bought for her, she raised all her heifers and built up her milking herd. Harold had the dual-purpose Shorthorns that they also milked along with some Holsteins, and from time to time an Ayrshire, Angus and Hereford. They were milking 22 cows by hand before acquiring a milking machine. June was recognized as the milker in the family and with Harold's help they shipped cream for 47 years. A few years after being married Harold acquired his first registered Clydesdales, which were to become, as he put it, "the love of my life". For almost 50 years he raised, showed and sold many champions. He has many ribbons to show for his achievements including the Couple recalls when pail of cream bought a week's groceries By Greg Brown Since they began farming together 52 years ago; Harold and June Woodhouse have seen many changes in farming and rural living. Add to that the years they helped on their parents' farms, they have probably witnessed more changes in the rural way of life than any other generation. Before he was married, Harold recalls picking apples (something everyone in the Beaver Valley did at one time) for 25 cents an hour, or $2 for an eight hour day. June was raised on the farm on the Old Mail Road that her great- grandfather received from the Crown, and when she started working at the creamery in Meaford she earned $14 a week and paid $7 a week for board. They remember going to the Rocklyn Fair as children and paying a nickel 'Tor a hot dog (that was before the days of hamburgers), a nickel for a pop and a nickel for a candy bar, so they could have all kinds of fun for 15 cents. After being married they continued the Saturday -night tradition of going to town for Champion Stallion at the Toronto Exhibition and the Reserve Grand Champion at the Royal Winter Fair. Harold would .also truck some Shorthorns to Toronto for his daughters to show. June recalls him being away for a week or more at a time travelling to fairs all around the province. They imported a stallion from Scotland in order to maintain the high quality of Clydesdales for which the Woodhouses have earned a reputation. When not showing their horses, Harold is at judging, which sometimes includes a class of mules, on which he admits he is not an expert: Harold talks about how farming is so different today than in years past. When reminiscing about his days as a youngster Harold recalls the steam engine that came around to do the threshing. He would help draw water from the river with a team and wagon, making sure the steam engine didn't run out of water. The owner of the steam engine provided two men, one on the engine, the other on the separator, for $1.25 an hour and the farmer had to provide the firewood and water. Harold remembers his father having the second rubber -tired tractor in the area. It was a 1938 Fordson which they bought from Lake's Garage in Clarksburg. His father must have been a little skeptical about the tractor because he purchased it, and a plow, on the condition that it could pull the three - furrow plow up the hill on their farm. He put the tractor in low gear at the bottom of the hill and it pulled right to the top without hesitation, so he had to buy the tractor. Their family had the first rubber -tired wagon and were one of the first to start field threshing. The Woodhouses feel the biggest change they have witnessed is in the makeup of their community. For many years they knew all their neighbours for miles around. People didn't move. They often lived their entire life on the same farm, or in the same area. More important was the co- operative spirit that existed among FEBRUARY 2002 33