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The Rural Voice, 1993-08, Page 6Mobilrap SILAGE FILM The Stretch Film for Bale Wrapping Benefits of Mobilrap®SILAGE FILM • Reduces storage costs. • Excellent puncture, abrasion and tear resistances for outdoor storage. • Specially treated to resist ultraviolet light degradation. • Reflective white film to reduce heat build-up. • Excellent cling to wrap bale tight. For best results, it is recommended that: • Mobilrap®Silage Film not be prestretched to more than 55%. • Bales are wrapped with a 50% overlap and a minimum of 4 layers. Mobilrap®Silage Film is available in: • 1 mil thickness. • 20' and 30' widths. • 4500' or 6000' per roll. Distributed by CALHOUN AGRI SERVICES LTD. R. R. #2, Chesley, Ontario NOG 1L0 1-800-265-3994 Leonard Calhoun 1-519-363-3037 mobile 1-519-372-6101 The only silage film that's MADE IN CANADA Mobilrap 2 THE RURAL VOICE Gisele Ireland Just what's safe anyway? The main emotion guiding me on a scorching summer's afternoon as I drove the tractor and baler between the rows of hay, which by the way had never been rained on, was fear. Before I'd ever ground the gears to find third iow or jerked the clutch giving Super Wrench and Son whiplash, I was warned. Terrible things would befall my person were I to be inattentive in watching for those craters that groundhogs dig just for the express purpose of catching the wheel of an unsuspecting hay wagon. A couple of hours and a filled hay wagon later, my fear began to fade. I was getting preuy confident and let my mind wander. Other fears we are bombarded with daily came to mind. Fear of the sun popped up. I glanced back to see the men on the wagon, shirtless and sweating, and myself, wearing as little as I could decently get away with, and thought of the dire skin cancer warnings. Would those UV rays penetrate and do hor- rible things? I beat that fear down with the logic that farmers being afraid of the sun is like asking an oceanographer to be afraid of the wa- ter. Use caution and common sense and there would be nothing to fear. Another fear popped up when I eyed the water jug hanging beside me. Were there little creatures in that water, visible under a micro- scope and of the kind science fiction movies are made of? Hah, I un- capped it and had a swig and passed the jug back to the men. They drank thirstily, likely never thinking what I had just thought. I just barely swung in time to miss another hole when other fears occurred to me. Would the steak I planned for supper clog our arteries and seule in dangerous places? After all, experts have claimed where you carry your excess determines how long you live. If you get portly around the middle, you might as well think of cemetery plots right now and if you carry it in the legs and rump, you've got a little more time to think about where you'd like to rest in peace. The whipped cream, sitting in the fridge, just waiting to crown the fresh berries, is also to be feared. Better to top them off with alfalfa sprouts and live as long as medical science has predicted we are capable of, provided we pay attention to the fears instilled in us. A few years ago, coffee was to be feared, and then other experts changed their mind. My biggest fear then was facing the morning without a coffee to jump start me. Another morning item, the timeless egg, became a thing to be feared. If you must eat them, we were warned, throw the yolk away. I tried it for a while, and found bacon and meringue were not popular items around here. We're still eating cackleberries and are alive to tell about it. The same goes for dairy products. The cows go to a lot of work to produce milk, and it would make them feel bad for me to replace it with a synthetic oil product that lasts for weeks without rotting or souring. If one were so inclined, you could catalogue enough fears to prevent you ever leaving the house. Furthermore, your house is to be feared also. Are the floors and walls giving off noxious odours, is there dead air waiting to attack you? Do you clean with products that are friendly to the environment? If not, there's a whole gamut of fears you can twist your thoughts around. You can fear going places. Will some deranged creep try to steal my grandsons if I take them to the mall? Will my next vacation leave me beaten and robbed because I strayed off the beaten path to explore? What exactly is in that ice cream cone that's dripping off your chin and running down your shirt? What are those additives doing to your tongue that's in overdrive trying to catch every last runnel of flavour?