He's a backup goat-tender.
Vachon is nine months into country living, having left the bustle and gridlock of Los Angeles after more than 40 years to settle under the big, unhurried sky of Montana, where he shares a spacious home with his son, Nick, daughter-in-law, Renee, and his granddaughter, Chloe.
On their eight-acre spread are three Nigerian Dwarf goats, six chickens and soon, a horse on which Chloe will train to be a barrel racer. Sixty years after he left his family's dairy farm in rural Palmarolle, Quebec, a teenager taking his first steps toward a 16-season NHL career, Vachon is delighted to be back on the land.
"It's not my job to take care of the animals, it's 'Coco's'," he said of Chloe, laughing. "If she can't, Nick does. But if the family takes a trip for a few days, the goats and chickens are my responsibility.
"It feels great to be here. I can go out and smoke my cigar, cut the grass, work in the garden and breathe fresh air all the time."