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The Rural Voice, 1989-12, Page 27A PERFECT PARTNERSHIP Down Memory Lane: Bill and Gertie Mackey have been farming together since they married 61 years ago. They remember hard times and funny times, but most of all they remember a good life shared on the land. by Cathy Laird I n 1835, Bill Mackey's grandfather walked down into the Beaver Valley after hiking from Barrie. Today, the Beaver Valley region produces 20 per cent of Ontario's apple crop, or about 2 million bushels of apples a year, exporting them as far as Scotland. And Bill Mackey and his wife of 61 years, Gertie, are still sharing a farming career. Their home, Glencairn Orchards, just outside Thornbury, is a half -mile from the original farmstead where Bill Mackey's grandfather ended his walk 155 years ago. Bill's father, John, bought the "new" farm in 1894, adding 200 acres of pasture to the original 50. This year, Bill Mackey says, the apple crop was "pretty disastrous. There are lots of apples but they're smaller." The Mackeys have had long experience with the ups and downs of the apple industry. Recently they, like all other apple producers, witnessed the controversy over Alar, a spray that helps keep apples hanging on trees longer. "We never did use Alar in our orchard," Bill says. "But you could never get to all those apples soon enough. One day they'd be hanging there, waiting to be picked, and the next day one would let go at the top and take a basketful with it on the way down." This year they're asking at the juice plant if the apples have been sprayed with Alar," adds Gertie. "Apparently, the plants are refusing Alar -sprayed apples this year." "But if anyone's poisoned, it's Bill," she says. "He's been spraying apples for 60 years." "We used to use lime sulphur for apple scab," adds Bill. "That's pretty miserable stuff when it got in your eyes!" The Mackeys have been working together since they married in 1928. "Gertie has driven all the farm implements and worked right along with the boys and me," Bill says. "She was born in Ravenna. I married the shopkeeper's daughter, not the coal miner's daughter," he jokes. Amends Gertie: "I've never plowed." In addition to the ten acres of apple orchard on the home farm, the Mackeys milked cows for 25 years. "Then we bought 40 Hereford cows, and went into cow -calf," Bill says. "With that set-up, along with the orchard and 75 ewes, we couldn't miss!" But shortly after they married, the Mackeys, like everyone else, were "dumped into the Depression.' "There was simply no money," Bill says. "And there was no way to get money. If a fellow had a farm and $8,000 to $10,000, he was a million- aire then." "Neighbours traded back and forth a bit and merchants gave credit when they could," recalls Gertie. "When we got back from our honeymoon at the Royal Winter Fair, we didn't have a stove. So we went to Collingwood and bought a "Happy Thoughts" cook - stove for $75." In early 1928, a cow went for $80. A year later, the same cow would have brought $15. Bill remembers when pigs brought $3.40 liveweight. "At the time, we were milking six or seven cows," Bill recalls. "A cream can of milk brought two dollars. One dollar went for the gas for the car and the rest bought the groceries. We had pretty good credit with the storekeeper downtown." "We were pretty self-sufficient in those days," adds Gertie. "We had a few hens, so we had our own eggs. I baked bread; we had milk. Also, we had our own wood. We used coal -oil lanterns. All the farm work was done with horses." "And they don't use much gas- oline," chimes in Bill. "I washed with a washboard and hung the wash outside all year long," says Gertie. "I remember bringing the diapers in frozen stiff." "She didn't try to put them on the boys that way, though," Bill says. DECEMBER 1989 25