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The Rural Voice, 2006-02, Page 54People in Agriculture Lucknow's Brad Gilchrist wins $1,000 CKNX FAB bursary •r. tt 2-1111 J Brad Gilchrist (right) accepts a CKNX Radio Farm Advisory Board bursary $1,000 bursary from Andrew Campbell, the station's farm director. Madill Secondary School. He has worked at Wingham Veterinary Clinic and weekends and summer holidays ever since. "I was really surprised when I found out (I had won the bursary)," Gilchrist told The Lucknow Sentinel. "They called me at school to tell me." Gilchrist is currently in his second year of the Agricultural Science program at the University of Guelph and hasn't decided on his career path when he graduates.0 A young Lucknow-area farmer who has already made his mark in agriculture by winning the 2003 Queen's Guineas competition at the Royal Winter Fair has received a boost to help complete his education. Brad Gilchrist, son of Grant and Denise Gilchrist, R.R.5, Lucknow received the $1,000 Farm Advisory Board bursary from CKNX radio. He was nominated by Wingham veterinarian Allen Hawkins, with whom he served a co-op placement while a grade 11 student at F. E. Walton girl collects coats for homeless Abby McGavin may only be 10 years old but the daughter of Walton - area residents Brian and Shelley McGavin, already has a remarkable record of helping people. It began with a family trip to Toronto to see The Lion King when Abby began to ask about the homeless people she saw in the streets. She had a hard time falling asleep. Her parents contacted a minister at a downtown Toronto church who used to preach in Brucefield. Abby collected 72 coats the first year which were distributed through the church's drop-in centre. The next year, it was 79. This past year the total 82 coats were collected with help from her church and her hockey team. Father and daughter spent a day delivering the coats to Toronto.0 Visiting student gets a chilly view of Canadian agriculture The weather provided just one of the startling changes witnessed by Australian farm girl Hannah Arnold when she arrived in early December for an exchange visit in Canada, staying with Christina and Paul Scott of Exeter. While Ontario at that time was covered with snow, back home in Gregory Downs the temperature was 40 degrees Celsius. "There are no seasons, it's just hot," she told the Exeter Times Advocate. The scale of farming in Ontario is also considerably different for Arnold. Her parents, three sisters and one brother have a 268,000 - hectare cattle station six hours from Australia's north coast. A typical day for the family starts at 4:00 a.m. and ends at 8:00 p.m. caring for 24,000 head of cattle, she said. Much of the work is done on horse back, although a neighbour's helicopter is available if needed. Checking the miles of fences is a regular job on the farm and her 13 - year -old brother camps out for several days at a time to carry out the task. Arnold found southern Ontario more crowded and compact than her homeland. Not much wonder. The closest town to the Arnolds' home is six hours away and they only visit "if something breaks." Mail for the family is flown in once a week with groceries trucked in once every three months. Medical care comes from the flying doctor in emergencies. The children are home -schooled until they are 13 when they attend boarding school. Arnold hopes to go to university and study medicine to become a flying doctor. Dangers can be exotic compared to Ontario. Her brother stands watch with a shotgun while they go swimming in case a crocodile arrives. Their house is build on stilts so that in flood season crocodiles and snakes can't get in.0