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Wayfaring #22 - ACGAS - Frank Metcalfe Traditional Cache

Hidden : 1/14/2023
Difficulty:
1.5 out of 5
Terrain:
2.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

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Geocache Description:


In memory of Yugsirap

Republishing this series (originally put out by OpalandYugsirap) in an easier format. 

Yugsirap was a veterinarian in this area for nearly 50 years and certainly from my childhood perspective the typical  “work with dad day” was kindred to the James Herriot stories.         

 ***

James Alfred Wight OBE FRCVS (Order of the British Empire and Fellow of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons) enjoyed a 5-decade career as a Veterinary Surgeon in a rural Yorkshire veterinary practice starting in 1940. 

He is better known world-wide for his second career as the author of numerous books and for the films and television series that were developed from eight of his written works  set in the 1930s–1950s Yorkshire Dales about veterinary practice, animals, and their owners. His first two books, If Only They Could Talk and It Shouldn’t Happen to a Vet were published in England in 1970 and 1972.  They were combined into one novel and released in North America as All Creatures Great and Small. 

While there were 8 books in the series in the United Kingdom, the first seven were combined into a trio of books, with All Things Bright and Beautiful and All Things Wise and Wonderful following All Creatures Great and Small.  The final book in the series, Every Living Thing, was published in both the United Kingdom and North America.

Over the decades, the series of books sold some 60 million copies.

The first three North American books were published in the year Yugsirap started University, the year he started his Veterinary studies and the year preceding his graduation.  Yugsirap was expecting to be able to make reference to All Creatures Great and Small in the interview component of his Veterinary College Application where it is known that the interview team will enquire about your reading choices outside of textbooks.  The interviewer that was covering that aspect of the proceedings switched things up by asking him if he had read Richard Bach’s Jonathan Livingston Seagull, a novel that had spent most of that year on the New York Times Best Sellers list, and one his mother had given him to read because she enjoyed it.  His memorable answer to the question was that he had read the first chapter and didn’t anticipate reading any more.

Yugsirap has been known to comment that most of the characters in Herriot’s books are living right here in the Kawartha Lakes region but is reticent to putting names to them.

As a thank you to a man that lay bare the highs and lows of life in a rural veterinary practice, we are placing a series of caches along the rail trail named after characters in the books.

Enjoy your hike!

 

Frank Metcalfe

James works with young, hard-working farmer Frank Metcalfe, who has relocated from the city. Unfortunately his herd is diagnosed with brucellosis, which has both immediate and long-term effects.

 

Yugsirap’s comments:

Brucellosis is an incurable disease that is able to infect many species of animals, including humans caused by the bacterium Brucella abortus as well as a few other strains of bacteria in the Brucella family. 

Diseases that can infect animals and man are called Zoonotic Diseases.

In people the symptoms are one or more of fever, chills, loss of appetite, sweats, weakness, fatigue, headache, joint, muscle and back pain.  Symptoms may disappear for weeks or months and then return.  Symptoms may return periodically even after treatment.

In animals the disease is treated as incurable and is a federally reportable disease.  Infected animals are euthanized and the carcass disposed of to help prevent the spread of the disease.

 

In the 1970s and 1980s there was still some Brucellosis in cattle in Canada. 

A few farms were still vaccinating calves to prevent abortions later on, but that practice ended as the incidence of the disease lowered.  Vaccination didn’t prevent an animal picking up the disease, it just prevented them from aborting once bred.

Yugsirap would be involved in annual testing and recording of all animals on a farm to allow them to be certified as Brucellosis Free.  Most dairy herds and purebred beef herds would participate in this federally run program as well as some mixed breed beef herds.  That program also ended once the rate of disease detection in the country approached zero.

Additional Hints (Decrypt)

jnvfg uvtu va byq nccyr gerr AR bs genvy

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)