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The Rural Voice, 2002-03, Page 14Tractor & Combine Parts New, Used and Remanufactured Phone 1-800-372-7149 Fax 1-800-372-7150 . Standard 8 Reground Crankshafts Remanufactured Cylinder Heads . Engine Overhaul Kits . Used Engines - Huge Inventory www.fawcett.0 e-mail sales@fawcett.cc FAWC ETT Tractor Supply Ltd. St. Marys Ontario PACKERS: WE BUILD RUBBER TIRE PACKER SPECIALISTS Also large fold -up steel drum packers, lawn & estate rollers, custom manufactured HAROLD JONES somm•ENTERPRISES RR 42. Arthur. Ont. (519) 848-2799 LESLIE HAWKEN & SON Custom Manufacturing LIVESTOCK & FARM EQUIPMENT • Big Bale Racks • Cattle Panels • Headgates & Chutes • Portable Loading Chutes • Gate -Mounted Grain Feeders • Feed Panels • Self Locking Feed Mangers Round Bale Feeder S II Jtandrng Pard Disrder for- the best quality and service — Call Jim Hawken RR #3 Markdale 519-986-2507 10 THE RURAL VOICE Jeffrey Carter The gear the drain came Jeffrey Carter is a freelance journalist based in Dresden, Ontario. When my dad told me a drain was to be built on our farm it seemed a huge event. I asked him where it began and he told me but I didn't really understand. For a little kid on the farm, 100 square acres is a big place all on its own. The drain was built. It crossed diagonally through our farm, along the base of a gentle sloping field, and entered a little creek on a neighbour's property. It was, I think, part of a larger scheme to better drain the creek's small watershed which empties into the north branch of the Thames River. I once walked that way to view the juncture. It seemed a journey of monumental proportion. I recall very little of the benefits . from that drain. The ground along the bottom of that sloping field may have been a little drier in the spring and I remember dad talking about running a spike further up the slope to a wet spot. I remember more clearly a feeling of violation for other impacts the drain had, however. The little creek, the haunt of the neighbourhood boys, was dredged. Its meandering course straightened. In my mind, just a scar was left. The water ran shallow. Gone were the little pools and eddies. Gone was the "bottomless" hole where one of the neighbour boys nearly drowned. Gone was the sandy stretch that was good for wading. Gone too were the pike further up at the bridge. Even the amphibious song of spring was muted. The drain also emptied our swamp of water. It could now be easily explored in the height of summer but it seemed an empty, barren place. Brown grass in choked profusion had replaced the pools of still, dark water. The creatures that once inhabited that mysterious place left. Our swamp, before the drain, served yet another purpose. When the water had a chance to freeze in December before the arrival of snow, a small skating rink was created in its midst and there was a maze of skating paths around the bushes. Families from the neighbourhood gathered here on more than one occasion. There was room enough for a game of shinny. I remember the men sipping homebrew, a knot of women speaking quietly together, and children at play. With a blue sky above, it was, for a small while, a perfect, sheltered, little world. Things change — but not always for the worst. I drove back down the 15th concession a couple years back. I stopped at the old bridge where pike once sheltered. I didn't see any pike but there were panfish in the cool shadow. A meander had returned to the creek. I'm sure the frogs were back as well and somewhere on a rock a painted turtle was basking. The water of any creek will strike its own course, in time. As for the old swamp, well, drains – like all works of men – do eventually fail. Will progress suffer if the circle turns? Perhaps we should ask a child.0 RAISE MONEY FOR YOUR CLUB OR ORGANIZATION Sell subscriptions to The Rural Voice and earn money for your 4-H Association, Junior Farmers group or other rural organization. Substantial commissions offered. (opportunities particularly good in Wellington, Waterloo, Oxford, Middlesex and Lambton Counties.) For more information contact Keith Roulston, Publisher 523-4311