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The Rural Voice, 1992-05, Page 3Editor: Keith Roulston editorial advisory committee: Bev Hill, farmer, Huron County John Heard, soils and crop extension and research, northwestem Ontario Neil McCutcheon, farmer, Grey Cty. Diane O'Shea, farmer, Middlesex Cty. George Penfold, associate professor, University of Guelph Gerald Poechman, farmer, Bruce Cty. contributing writers: Adrian Vos, Gisele Ireland, Cathy Laird, Wayne Kelly, Sarah Borowski, Mary Lou Weiser -Hamilton, June Flath, Ian Wylie-Toal, Susan Glover, Bob Reid, Mervyn Erb, Darene Yavorsky, Peter Baltensperger, Sandra Orr, Yvonne Reynolds, Dorothy Smith marketing & advertising sales manager: Gerry Fortune advertising sales: Merle Gunby production co-ordinator: Tracey Rising advertising & editorial production: Rhea Hamilton -Seeger Anne Harrison laserset: with the Macintosh Classic printed & mailed by: Signal -Star Publishing, Goderich, Ontario subscriptions: $16.05 (12 issues) (includes 7% GST) Back copies $2.75 each For U.S. rates, add $5 per year Changes of address, orders for subscrip- tions and undeliverable copies (return postage guaranteed) are to be sent to The Rural Voice at the address listed below. Canadian Magazine ILblislicis As,� niaunr All manuscripts submitted for consideration should be accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope. The publisher cannot accept responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts or photographs, although both are welcome. The opinions expressed herein are not necessarily those of the publisher. Editorial content may be reproduced only by permission of the publisher. Published monthly by The Rural Voice, Box 429, Blyth, Ontario, NOM 1HO, 519-523-4311 (fax 523-9140). THE RHYTHM OF THE SEASONS May—May weather is the strangest of weather. Some days it feels like May should be included among the summer months. Heat can be intense, bringing blossoms on early. Suddenly, the weather can resemble March again, setting the birds shivering as they sit on their nests trying to keep their eggs warm. But the signs of spring are overwhelming now and even the odd setback can't hurt the conviction that summer is inevitably coming. The March winds and April showers have brought the May flowers. The daffodils are in full bloom and the tulips are starting to show off their beauty. In the bush the wild flowers are putting on their show. The trilliums turn the forest floor white, their carpet broken here and there by a dash of their blood -red cousins, the yellow of dog -tooth violets, the green and purple of the proud jack-in-the- pulpit. But nobody is there to see the show. Farmers, who may have been in the bush cutting wood during the winter months, or gathering sap for maple syrup, are busy elsewhere now. The days are long as they hurry to get the crops in. There is as much beauty in the warm feel of the soil in their hands as they stop to let it run through their fingers, as there is in a bush full of trilliums, as sweet a scent in the smell of the earth as in any flower. It's the season of endless possibilities: like the new season for baseball teams when all can dream of their chances in the world series. As the seeds drop into the soil, a farmer can see the crop as it should be: waving across the horizon, not a weed in sight. No drought. No insects. No wet to ruin the harvest. He can dream that this year, at last, there will be that perfect combination of high yield and good prices that will make up for all those bad years. May is the time when farmers climb off the tractor on rubbery legs at night, unsteady from the long hours riding back and forth. Yet is a weariness that sits lightly because May is when all is new, and all is possible. 0 BEHIND THE SCENES Every now and then we need to find out from our readers what they're liking about the magazine, what they don't care for, and what they would like to see added. This month we're conducting a readership survey which you'll find on the back inside cover. Please fill it in to help us to help you. As an added incentive, two of the entries will be chosen to receive tickets to the Blyth Festival. Meanwhile, we are trying to add new features to the magazine. Last month we added a travel story. Not everybody can take the time to travel to foreign lands, but we can take a few hours now and then for a daytrip. This month we introduce a new feature on daytrips to points of local interest. Some farmers these days are looking for crops and livestock that will give them a unique niche in the marketplace: something they can produce where they won't have to compete with thousands of other farmers. Former pork producer Jerry Wilder of the Zurich area turned to raising emu (a member of the ostrich family from Australia) and got in just in time to see the business boom. The idea of clearing up the lines of jurisdiction on who pays what for services like roads and welfare sounds like a good one, but some local political leaders fear that rural Ontario may get hit with a huge tax bite if current proposals go forward. It's a classic rural -urban confrontation and if rural Ontario loses out, the cost can be in the hundreds of millions.0 —Keith Roulsion