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The Rural Voice, 1990-07, Page 12FARM SAFETY FACTS FROM THE WEST WAWANOSH MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY SUMMERTIME AND CHILDREN ON THE FARM Safety Tips: • Know where your children are at all times. • Never allow passengers on any piece of farm machinery. • Shields and guards on machinery should always be in place. • Equipment that might fall such as front end loaders should be left in the down position. • Always remove the keys from self- propelled machines. FARM SAFETY WEEK Myr 25th to My 31st When you need Insurance call: Frank Foran R.R. 2, Lucknow 528-3824 Lyons & Mulhern 46 West St, Goderich 524-2664 Kenneth B. MacLean R.R. 2, Paisley 368-7537 John Nixon R.R. 5, Brussels 887-9417 Donald R. Simpson R.R. 3, Ripley 395-5362 Delmar Sproul R.R. 3, Auburn 529-7273 Laurie Campbell Brussels 887-9051 Slade Insurance Brokers Inc. Kincardine ..396.9513, Port Elgin 389-4341 Dungannon Ont. NOM 1R0 CO 519-529-7922 8 THE RURAL VOICE RAIN OR SHINE: COUNTRY MEMORIES Keith Roulston, a newspaper publisher and playwright who lives near Blyth, is the originator and past publisher of The Rural Voice. It was dark when I heard the rain start to fall one night late in May. I'd spent part of the afternoon planting a little garden — all the farmer I have time to be these days. I felt good, knowing the rain would be soaking into the soil and beginning the miracle of growth which would end up putting food on our table. The major difference between urban and rural people, I think, is the role weather plays in their lives. For urban people, the weather report is just something to tell them whether or not to take an umbrella to work or wear a sweater. Weather is something you build cities to avoid. In Toronto you can walk miles underground without having to suffer blasts of icy wind funnelling between the skyscrapers or broiling heat radiating off the asphalt. Climate control is the word. You rush from an air-conditioned house to an air-conditioned car, and curse as you rush across an unair-conditioned parking lot to an air-conditioned of- fice. Along the way you do some shopping in an air-conditioned mall. Rain, to the urban person, is something to be avoided. If you have a patch of lawn, you might like an overnight rain to keep it green, but there is always the lawn sprinkler as long as things don't get so dry there is a watering ban. Weather, to the city person, is peripheral. But weather to the country person is essential to existence. It affects everything you do. After years of being so attuned to the weather, it becomes part of your soul. I can remember the sick feeling as a youngster of watching a crop wither in the field because of a summer when it never seemed cool and never rained, knowing that the family's economic prospects were withering with it. A couple of years later it was the oppo- site, as the swathed grain rotted when we desperately needed a good crop. Yet thinking back, some of the moments of true contentment involved weather. Is there anything that can match the feeling of taking off that last load of hay on a field, hurrying because you can see the storm clouds gathering? You pull the wagon into the barn, shut off the tractor, and hear the first big drops hammer on the steel above you, knowing the job is over and you couldn't possibly have done it better. If there is a feeling to match it, perhaps it's the moments after doing the chores in the winter. There's a friendly, steamy warmth in the barn and a quietness — just the sound of the animals munching contentedly away on their feed. Is there a farmer who hasn't been late getting into the house because he just couldn't tear himself away from that sense of well-being? There is another feeling I re- member from childhood — one I haven't quite been able to recapture. It was in the days when our house was heated by a big box stove in the kit- chen, a stove that made us its slave from October to April — we were forever feeding it. But on a stormy night as the wind howled around the house and the frost thickened on the single -paned windows — with the wood box full and the chores done and knowing not only that we didn't have to go anywhere, but we couldn't pos- sibly go anywhere — that big stove was the centre of all the universe that mattered. I don't earn my living from the land anymore, but that little garden is my tie with my father and my grand- father and the rural way of life that goes back to the clearing of the bush. The rain that seeps into the garden and swells the seed makes something grow in me too. It's what reminds me that I'm still a rural person, not an urban one.0