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The Rural Voice, 1994-04, Page 50Workshop FEATURING MENS WORKWEAR With Prices for the Working Man • Coveralls & Jackets • Work Pants • Hopsack Jeans • Work Shirts • T -Shirts • Jeans • Stanfield's Underwear • Straw Hats • and lots more Sizes to 5XL 152 Josephine St. 357-4503 Wingham SPRING TREE CATALOGUE Coniferous and Deciduous Seedlings, Potted Spruce and Pine varieties - 1-2' high Deciduous trees from 7-12' Cali or write for catalogue. ffie 527-1750 Lawn R.R. 2, SEAFORTH The tree people for variety & quality Why build a new home with an old heating system? Most traditional heating equipment use costly fuel or electricity to create heat. 4 The energy efficient WaterFurnace System uses the ground as an energy source to heat and cool your home. You'll enjoy living in a safer, cleaner environment while reducing your energy costs up to 65%. Each WaterFurnace System is designed for maximum comfort and reliability. Once you discover its many features and benefits, you'll agree that everything else, is history! Call today for your free in-home estimate. 71(nriettFurnace AUTHORIZED DEALER CLIFF'S Plumbing & Heating Operated by — Cliff 7v(ann Mechanical Ltd. LUCKNOW 528-3913 FAX 528-3125 46 THE RURAL VOICE Gardening Garden problem gnaws at you by Rhea Hamilton -Seeger I don't know about you, but I was truly delighted with the snow that swirled around our yard this winter and finally settled in great heaps on the garden. In the past, I have worried about my perennials being exposed to the intensely freezing winds that dry everything out and kill what is left. Sometimes I let myself become so concerned that I shovel the piddling bit of snow from the yard onto the gardens. I was so grateful for the snow cover this year that I truly forgot about the negative side of deep snow in the garden. As the drifts melted away this spring the evidence of a much greater threat was uncovered. The first items to lose their snow cover were my struggling flowering almond shrub and a spreading juniper. Rodents had been feasting, under cover, on the bark, nibbling it down to the quick. Lord knows what will be left of my new roses when the snow melts away from their unprotected stems. In the shadow of the east side of the house there is a ridge of grass and dirt where something has burrowed along the brick border. There is still snow in the garden itself and I can only imagine whatthe foxglove will look like after something has been grazing on it all winter. You could almost. say I invite this kind of damage. I leave all my plants untrimmed to face the winter. The tall, dried stems catch the snow and keep it on the flower beds. The seed heads feed the great flocks of birds that entertain us all year. Is it any wonder that the smaller, less cute members of this environment seek out this garden to live in? There is lots to eat and plenty of cozy spots to curl up in. What to do. Well the most com- mon sense approach is to prepare for this type of occurrence by taking pre- cautions in the fall. Avoid mulching with straw until the ground is frozen. Mice nest in the straw and feast on the tender shoots, bark, and roots easily dug up in the unfrozen ground.