For Better or For Worse by Lynn Johnston for July 19, 2012

  1. Ximage
    Jogger2  about 12 years ago

    I see he keeps that old-fashioned tractor in good condition.

     •  Reply
  2. 705px china xinjiang.svg
    arye uygur  about 12 years ago

    @Snakemama: I also shovelled manure on a kibbutz. When I returned to the US, my aristocratic cousin-in-law asked me what I did on the kibbutz and I told her, I think she thought I was a wiseguy.

    @SUSAN NEWMAN: Ezo kibbutz hayit? Ha shem shel hakibbutz sheli haya DOVRAT, al yad Afula.

     •  Reply
  3. Missing large
    robm  about 12 years ago

    @gmartin997: I mowed lawns at 9. My sisters (they were a few years older) and I were walking door-to-door to see if we could mow, wash their cars, rake, anything to make a few bucks. It was a different time back then, though. I grew up in the 70s.

     •  Reply
  4. Missing large
    psychlady  about 12 years ago

    Definitely a working vacation!

     •  Reply
  5. Missing large
    woodwork  about 12 years ago

    shucks..when I was 11, I was DRIVING the tractor and breaking horses

     •  Reply
  6. Photo  1
    thirdguy  about 12 years ago

    On mine, it says John Deere!

     •  Reply
  7. Aj icon60
    Dr_Fogg  about 12 years ago

    there was a tan dear in my yard this morning. :-P

     •  Reply
  8. Picture 001
    rshive  about 12 years ago

    We moved from town to the “suburbs” of our town of 10,000 when I was about 12. In town we had a lawn about the size of a throw rug that I was able to cut with an old push rotary mower. The new place had a 1/2 acre lot, so the lawn was a bit bigger. My Dad bought a power mower. It was one of those strange old Sears models that had a crank instead of a pull rope. You turned the folding crank to tighten a spring. Then when you tapped the crank down, the spring unwound and pretty much did the same thing as a pull rope does. Sometimes though the catch on the crank didn’t hold. And when you let the crank go, it would spin backwards using the force of the spring. If you weren’t careful, it would whack you in the knee. Ouch!

    I too sometimes wonder how we survived. Seems like a good chunk of my childhood was spent do things that today would be “no-no’s”.

     •  Reply
  9. Missing large
    jcm1655  about 12 years ago

    I know, ther called the PC POLICE.They want to tell everyone what to do. Because they rely on the government for everyyhing. Its so sad.

     •  Reply
  10. Missing large
    charliesommers  about 12 years ago

    I grew up in the country back in the 40s and can insure everyone that many types of “weeds” are edible. I don’t know of any pesticides offhand that can be eaten safely.

     •  Reply
  11. Smokey stover
    sjsczurek  about 12 years ago

    Another boring lecture?!!Now you look here, gmartin, you bla bla bla bla bla bla bla bla bla bla bla bla,And also zabba zabba zabba zabba zaba zabba zabba zabba zabba zabbaAnd another thing – yada yada yada.yada yada yada yada yada yada yada,- and besides that, natter natter natter natter natter natter natter natter natter.So THERE!

     •  Reply
  12. Jason lunford
    bt  about 12 years ago

    I know the strip is 30 years old, but this kind of mindless caricature of organic agriculture is misleading, especially in Manitoba, where farmers have had their crops cross-polinated by GMO Franken-seeds, and then are being charged a usage fee Monsanto for this pollution.

     •  Reply
  13. Solange
    ewalnut  about 12 years ago

    I’d rather eat the stuff without the pesticides and herbicides. The only part of the grain that you eat is the seeds, so the rest of the plant, and the weeds, gets separated out anyway.

     •  Reply
  14. Imagesca66di1a
    Thehag  about 12 years ago

    Nah, it is so much more complicated than that. Today we are learning what we did wrong and working to use what went right. Remember what worked and stop the over use of what is harmful long term. Avoid monoculture so we don’t end up with famine. Replenish the soil and keep the microbial life so we don’t end up with dead ‘dust bowl’ soils. Unfortunately the last hundred years we ignored what we learned over the 12,000 or so years we’ve been cultivating.

     •  Reply
  15. Missing large
    tuslog64  about 12 years ago

    I have twin sisters, one lives in central Washington and the other at one time lived in BC, first house north of the border near Eureka, Montana. She later moved to near Cowley (near Lethbridge) Alberta. When we visited, we expected to help out.(and conversely when they visited us)

     •  Reply
  16. Bull shirt archie
    underwriter  about 12 years ago

    Every part of the dandelion seems to be very healthful.

     •  Reply
  17. Missing large
    tuslog64  about 12 years ago

    Here in the midwest, we’re in one of the worst droughts ever.But have no fear, we always get rain in time to save the weeds!!

     •  Reply
  18. Missing large
    tuslog64  about 12 years ago

    In reference to yesterdays jewelry comments:Jewelry is discouraged while farming. When she was a little girl, my mother one time jumped off a wagon, and a ring caught on a bolt head. Fortunately, she suffered only a bad cut but did not lose a finger.A fellow GI was not so lucky at Sinop, Turkey. While playing basket ball, he made a jump and a ring caught on the basket. He came down minus a finger, thus ending his ASA career.

     •  Reply
  19. Missing large
    iced tea  about 12 years ago

    ♫♫♪Life on a farm is kinda laid back now!You never seen a country boy you didn’t like!♫♫♪♫♫♪

    Thank God I’m a Country Boy by John Denver. 1975

     •  Reply
  20. Missing large
    mdyson  about 12 years ago

    Not funny !

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From For Better or For Worse