RD Pot Luck April 2017

The fat lady is singing her heart out…
    Guess what. After 40-plus years, DvL is no longer owner-publisher of the company that grew out of the need to find some way to pay dental bills. It was April 1976. I had published Papeek, a children’s story, with JB Lippincott seven years prior. That must have sold a dozen copies. Following that, the fiction well was plumbed to greater depths and found dry. There were odd jobs.

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RD Pot Luck Jan-Feb 2017

Welcome two thousand seventeen!
    Growing up, as much as I accomplished in that department, we always anticipated what was known as “the January thaw,” a few days of spring-like weather such as we’ve just experienced – and that the weatherperson says will come to a sudden end this evening. Mother would say “winter’s letting go for a new hold.” We will soon have our shoulders pinned to an icy mat and be begging for mercy from beneath drifts of snow.

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RD Pot Luck December 2016

The death of couth
    Sandy Bay, November 7: Picked the last three zucchini squashes and planted garlic for next year. The wheel of life keeps turning despite upheavals south of the border. In the long run – should there be a long run – what will this U.S. presidency mean or do for Canada or democracy? No good, for regardless what he does from here on, Mr. Trump got the top job by bullying everyone who got in his way.

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RD Pot Luck November 2016

Bye-bye Matthew
    The couple of Matthews I know are such gentle souls it is obvious the storm that blew through Cape Breton and Newfoundland in early October was not named after them. Here in southwestern Nova Scotia, Matthew huffed and puffed some, blew away a lot of colourful leaves, but was really no big deal. In fact, we benefitted from a welcome 70 to 80 mm of rain.

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RD Pot Luck October 2016

Smelling roses
    A new heifer calf born among the ferns last evening is a joy to behold. While there is a guarantee of good food in the smallest-scale farming and gardening the likes of which we practice here, there’s no money in it. There are profits, though, like coming on a new calf, the arrival of a box of chicks, and time to smell a rose or two. There was none of that for the dairy farmer asked if there were any cats on his farm.

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RD Pot Luck September 2016

Crunchy lawns and wizened berries
    When the lawn crunches underfoot and your blueberries dry on the bush and second-cut forage does not materialize, it’s dry times in the Maritimes. When the jet stream shifts to break this drought, break out the boots and sump pumps. As noted before in this column (by a little-known yet brilliant amateur meteorologist), climate change is curdling the weather.

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RD Pot Luck July-August 2016

Dry times in the merrytimes
        For the second year in a row a rabbit is helping itself to my vegetable garden. Like Elmer Fudd, I find myself outsmarted by the long-eared imp who, in fact, is not a rabbit but a Snowshoe hare and one that can find the tiniest hole in chickenwire enclosing the garden. There is little vegetation to spare right now after three weeks without rain – super weather for making hay, for those not thwarted by the odd thunder shower.

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RD Pot Luck June 2016

Forty years and counting

    The tomatoes are well started and peas are in the ground, the cows are bred and pastures are greening up nicely. The Harrison Lewis Centre on the hill above the house is coming alive with the arrival of two summer assistants, university students Leah Strople and Abbie Hudson. Yesterday they were joined by David Boehm and Richard and Phyllis McBride, chipping in as volunteers cleaning and generally readying cabins and main building for upcoming workshops. (See pg. 48.)
    Readers will recognize David Boehm’s name. He has written a lot for Rural Delivery over the years and this year was an Atlantic Journalism Awards silver medalist for “Enterprise Reporting, Print,” in recognition of his story in the Oct. 2015 issue titled “Lobster on a roll.” 
    Life is good. We feel for the dry bones West contending with drought and fierce wild fires and in Fort McMurray especially for hundreds of homeowners who lost everything. 

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Pot Luck May 2016

Whopper schools for Hub City

    May 7 we’re heading down to Halifax for dinner with writer David Boehm at the Atlantic Journalism Awards dinner and gala. David has been nominated for best “Enterprise Reporting, Print” for his “Lobster on a roll” feature in the Oct. 2015 issue of Rural Delivery. Congratulations to David who has written a number of outstanding stories for RD over the years, including a fisheries-related follow-up titled “Keeping independent fishermen afloat” (Jan-Feb 2016).
    Another good story close to home is about Bertie and Bill Nickerson, Canada’s longest-married couple, 80 years this past December, whose grandson Stephen Nickerson is our longstanding production and graphic design person, one of their closest relatives by blood, and their closest by geography. When Stephen, whose parents died several years ago, is not laying out a magazine or creating an ad, you may well find him across town shopping for his grampies or checking in to see how they’re getting on. Bertie and Bill, age 98 and 101 respectively, are still in their own home, fixing their own breakfast, and getting on with life. Stephen’s devotion to his grandparents’ well-being is inspiring.

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Pot Luck April 2016

April - no foolin’ 
Planting season’s on its way

    While I have crocuses blooming in a sheltered corner of the house and Barred owls hooting at night in the tree outside my window, all signs of spring, Prince Edward Islanders have another way of heralding the change of seasons: the annual Easter Beef Show and Sale that brings out scores of Islanders ready for a good time. That is especially what the sale is all about, as friends, neighbors, and the business community enter into friendly competition to see who can out-bid the other for the the winningest cattle.
    Four generations of the Sanderson family on Prince Edward Island have been raising cattle and showing the cream of their herd at the show and sale that this year took place March 3 and 4 in Charlottetown. And so it was fitting that Randy Sanderson’s Spud Island Farms’ steer was judged grand champion (and went on to sell for $5.75 a pound to a couple of P.E.I. businessmen). Trevor MacDonald’s story about the show and sale can be found on Atlantic Beef & Sheep’s webpage at www.RuralLife.ca.

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Pot Luck March 2016

Barn swallows and the Zika virus
    The same week our provincial daily published a story about Brazil stepping up measures to control the Zika virus carried by a species of mosquito and suspected of causing a birth defect resulting in babies with small heads (microcephaly), it carried another about the disappearance of Barn swallows.
    Swallows and other birds that sweep insects (including lots of mosquitoes) from the air while in flight are in serious decline. We are encouraged to do what we can to provide Barn swallows nesting sites, and many do. But is the population of swallows dwindling because there are not as many old barns around as once was the case – as some believe – or is it mosquito abatement programs in Latin America where our birds spend their winters? Already, in the panic over a suspected link between Zika and microcephaly, pressure builds to release more genetically modified male mosquitoes in more countries to breed with Zika-bearing females and cause them to lay eggs that die, and there are calls to unleash DDT.  

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Pot Luck Jan-Feb 2016

“Year in Review:”  It’s free!
    Happy New Year! In celebration, a first issue of DvL Publishing Inc.’s “Year in Review” has been included as a bonus with your subscription to Rural Delivery. This first-ever review is a collection of stories, photos, commentary, and other gleanings from 2015, intended to provide a taste of all four of our rural life magazines. The idea for the review came from Chassity, our general manager, who marshalled the help of everyone else in the organization to put it together. Our thanks to advertisers who made it possible to publish and distribute the “Year in Review” at no cost to readers.

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Pot Luck December 2015

Fall harvest
Lingering doubts about global warming have been dashed once again on this shore. A foot of snow, we hear, struck  Riviere-du-Loup last week, but here cattle are still on pasture and, but for a couple of mornings, there has been no need to break out the windshield ice scraper. Hot dog.
    Ducked into the garden last evening to harvest late carrots, leeks for dinner, and to dig up a clump of parsley to move to the greenhouse where we might have a fresh sprig or two longer into the season. The greenhouse is not heated and before long most of the vegetables growing there will take a frigid bow and exit the stage. New lettuce may survive beneath row covers.

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Pot Luck November 2015

Chin up, Stephen

    Good, the election is over. Blue is the color of a bruise on Harper’s chin and I can unpack my valise for Belize. 
    Archie Parsons, with Jim Slauenwhite riding shotgun, has delivered the winter’s hay. Garrett Blanchard, a neighbor high school student with a work ethic many might emulate, has shifted the bales about so that first-cut hay is in line to be first-fed. As long as pastures hold up, the cows couldn’t care less. 
    Just so, as long as supermarket shelves are filled with food most of us couldn’t care less where it comes from and therefore likewise about the recently crafted Trans Pacific Partnership trade deal. TPP delights some farmers while worrying and even threatening the survival of others, depending on commodity. Pork and beef, thumbs up; dairy, thumbs down, as supply management in that sector takes another hit following losses written into the yet-to-be-ratified European Union Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement.

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Pot Luck October 2015

Silly me
    No one took me to task for trashing pale, free-range eggs. Silly me was forgetting free range in this context does not mean access to the great outdoors, to greens, bugs and such that turn a yolk a rich orange color. Reading about McDonald’s pledge to phase in free-range eggs, however, I realized “free range” is not like “home on the range” where buffalo roam. It only means the birds are not penned up. They can be, and probably are, indoors all the time, fed commercial mixes – wheat-based for the most anemic looking eggs.

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Pot Luck September 2015

Rural Delivery and the Harrison Lewis Centre
There is a connection!
    More than once this summer a faithful reader of Rural Delivery attending a workshop at the Harrison Lewis Centre expressed surprise upon realizing there was a connection between the two. There is. Me, and when she is on duty lining up programs, cooking a fine meal or generally looking after guests, my former wife Anne. The two of us launched the Harrison Lewis Centre several years ago, and the facilities are located a slingshot’s range from my house, barns, garden, played-out pastures, and blacksmith shop. It is a non-profit, board-directed, registered charity.

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Pot Luck July-August 2015

Great radio takes a hit
Stan Carew dead at 64

    Stan Carew, who ruined sleeping-in Saturdays and Sundays for many years by providing one of the most entertaining radio programs on CBC, has died. He announced in May that he would be retiring in September. We were planning to invite readers to contribute to a tribute to Stan in a coming issue. 
    It never came across that Stan was just doing his job as he spun records and in later years CDs on his “Weekend Mornings” show. There was no microphone between him and his Maritime-wide audience. It was more like a great big family gathered around his kitchen table sharing stories, wishing family members well, and guessing the names of mystery artists – often on the basis of little more than a couple of notes or words to an old song. Over all those years I never guessed the name of a single Mystery Vocalist, yet around that table there was always someone of sharp ear and mind ready to nail the answer. 

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Pot Luck June 2015

She won “Gold!”
    We are pleased as can be over Rachel Brighton’s Atlantic Journalism Gold Award (Business Reporting: Any Medium) for her in-depth feature on the milk processing industry, “Big dairy comes east: Consolidation makes ‘local' elusive,” published in our June 2014, issue. Here’s a photo of Rachel with her three boys, (from left) Rupert, Harry, and Jesse Lillford-Brighton, shortly after receiving the award May 9 in Halifax at the annual AJA gala. (The complete list of Gold and Silver winners can be found by following the Atlantic Journalism Awards link at RuralLife.ca.)

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Pot Luck April 2015

NFU on the March, and other stuff

    Out on snowshoes for the first time in years I came across tracks I took to have been left behind by the cow and calf. The tracks came to a four-foot high pagewire fence – and continued on. Cow and calf maybe, of the endangered Mainland moose variety.
    Earlier this week our five miles of road in from the highway melted free of ice, iceholes, and ruts for the first time in six weeks. The blizzard now forecast for later today should make short work of the reprieve. 
    The Atlantic Farm Mechanization Show held every two years is behind us, Prince Edward Island’s annual Easter Beef Show and Sale is on, and the Nappan Test Station bull sale is just around the corner April 4. These are all signs that the winter of 2014-15 is behind. Gone but not soon to be forgotten. 

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