I 84-Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, March 21, 1998 On Being a Farm Wife (and other hazards) Joyce Bupp Spring came. Did ya’ notice? Good grief. What a goofy year. Makes one wide-eyed-curious about what the next months might bring, weatherwise. My calf nursery sink spigots froze up for the first time. Last week. That usually happens at least once or twice during winter’s worst, normally through some mid-January, week-long stretch of near-zero nights, with a hefty wind blowing. The sink is in the northwest comer of the calf nur sery, where the wind roars be tween the bams with all the subtle ty of a wind tunnel. But, it’s rarely a problem in March. Normally meaning most years, but not this one we keep a poultry-brooder type light under there all winter. A single, hundred-watt bulb gives off enough heat in that confined, met al and concrete space to keep the pipes from freezing. On really, really cold nights, with heavy winds. I’ll lay a couple of heavy paper calf-feed bags over the top of the sink as additional insula tion. So when I bumped the light and the bulb died several weeks ago, it was no big deal. Why waste the electric when it was so naturally warm and no danger of the pipes freezing? All it was accomplish ing was to keep my bottle ot bquui detergent from getting too chilled and thick to squirt out easily when I squeezed the bottle. Diluting the stuff with water accomplished the same purpose. After having to haul hot water up from the dairy bam to toss around the underside of the sink to thaw pipes last week, a new light bulb went under the sink that everv day. The same night the calf nursery spigot froze, so did the daffodils. (And die fruit tree buds.) It was nearly bedtime when I remember bed the clump of daffodils at die comer of the house that had opened blooms a day earlier, creamy-white blossoms with ruf fly, pale-yellow centers. Snagging a paring knife from the kitchen, I made a hasty dish from the edge of the porch into the bitter night Too late. The stems and some of the blossoms were already rigid with interpal ice. I lopped off the blooms and carried them inside anyway, plunking them into a small vase filled with room Technology, Quality, and Value- That’s Morton Buildin Basic Morton Machine Storage 60’x xlos’ jsed Chord with . • 27'x14’6” AlumaSteel* Double End Door • 50-year Column Warranty (including labor) • 1 -White Walk-In Door (no glass) • 50-year Snowload Warranty (no weight limit) • Heavy-Gauge Commercial Quality Steel • 10-year Wind Warranty on AlumaSteelVDoors • G-90 Galvanizing (no MPH limit) 004 4AC • White Polyester Paint Finish • 5-year Wind Warranty (no MPH limit) 1 JWrj • KYNAR 500*/HYLAR 5000* Color Trim • Free Morton Weathervane t w " ww • Heavy-Gauge Aluminum Gutters & Downspouts • Fully Erected, Tax Included OFFER EXPIRES 4/30/98 Deluxe Morton Machine Storage 60’x13’x105’ Raised Chord with 7’6” Truss & Column Spacing • 1 -27’xl 4’6” AlumaSteel* Double End Door • KYNAR 5007HYLAR 5000* • 1 -22’6”x13’ AlulmaSteel® Double Sidedoor Paint System on Sidewalls • 1-3'x6’B” 9-lite Walkdoor • Revolutionary FLUOROFLEX 2000* AAAP • 1 - 4'x3' 9-lite Sliding Window Paint System on Roof MMifliftfll with Screen and Shutters • 20-year Red Rust/Fade Warranty twwj w w w • Heavy-Gauge Commercial Quality Steel (including acid rain) OFFER EXPIRES 4/30/98 • Continuously Vented Ridge • 50-year Column Warranty (including labor) • 2’ Gable Overhangs • 50-year Snowload Warranty (no weight limit) • 1 ’ Vented Eave Overhangs • 10-year Wind Warranty on AlumaSteel* Doors • Interior Protective Liner (no MPH limit) iS95\ MB AAfA * ■ • Exterior Steel Wainscot • 5-year Wind Warranty on Ml||r|llnl • Heavy-Gauge Aluminum Gutters & Downspouts Entire Structure ¥!■ • Free Motor BUILDINGS • Fully Erected, Tax Included po. Box 399, Morton, IL 61550 All warranties include materials and labor, and are not protected Special pricing includes taxes, © 1997 Morton Buildings Inc materials, delivery, unloading, and labor to erect within 40 miles from a Morton Buildings, Inc 747/eoyi 0004 nnO/ACA -7 and construction center Customer must provide a site prepared to Morton Buildings, Inc Site 1 1 / /o£4*uoJl 9Uw/4!)4*i 9vU Specifications From 153 a(I e a level site without underground obstruction) and participate in Morton's v ._ . .. . ... progressive payment plan Prices may vary because of local buldlmg codes Due to local price 3368 YorK Ha. P.o. Box 12b, variations, these prices do not include concrete Offer expires April 30,1998 Prices may vary for every Gettysburg, PA 17325 Phillipsburg, NJ 08865 1,000 feel over 6,000 feel of elevation KYNAR 500® Trademark of Elf Atochem, NA HYLAR 5000® Trademark of Ausimont, USA O/l fk AAH 7 A 9/? Illinois only, call FLUOROFLEX 2000® and AlumaSteel® Trademarks of Morton Buildings, Inc /“/ TW O 1-800-426-6686 temperature water. By morning, ' some had poked up. Two morn ings later, most of them looked as fresh as if they had just opened. Apparently hypothermia hadn’t quite set in completely. A few re maining outside, which I missed in the shadowy dark (and being in a big hurry), didn’t fare so well and looked plenty droopy in the sunshine a few days later. None of these extremes, how ever, has bothered the potted bulbs for forcing, tucked safely into boxes filled with insulating leaves and left to chill out Or in the case of a box or two, left out to chill. Hyacinths, daffodils, tulips, all have been recently unearthed from hibernation and relocated to the cool greenhouse floor to green-up their foliage and push buds. And, once again, some of’em got ahead of me. A couple of pots of tulips were uncovered sporting spindly, yellowed foliage poked up through the leaf-insulation in des perate search of daylight. They knew it was spring. Even if we arent’ so sure. In a year which has seen New England’s electrical grid crashed under ice, houses on both coasts slip-sliding into the oceans, dairy bams in New Mexico’s deserts collapsing under snow, cattle dead in feedlots behind Plains states blizzards, and Florida about to float away, a frozen pipe in March and droopy daffodils are just no big deal. Come to think about it, how many months of March do we get that aren’t goofy? And, would that make El Nino currently normal?* Now there’s a sobering thought