Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1978-12, Page 16have to specialize in order to do well." Les says. Some interesting farm price facts came out when Les looks at 90 year old accounting records from his father's time on the Fortune farm. "A bushel of wheat in those days was equal to a day's wage" Les says. "Today a bushel of wheat will not even equal an hour's wage." But in the last 20 years Les has noticed the most drastic changes taking place in farming. While on the district school board, Les noted that the salaries for teachers averaged $1,800 each. With the price of beef at 34c per pound it took approximately six full grown steers to pay for a highschool teacher's wages. "Today the price of beef is doubled to 65c or 70c a pound, but teachers' wages have more than doubled from 1948" Les points out. "Food is cheap in comparison to a lot of other products we buy now," he stresses. Forty years ago the 600 acres in the land block where the Fortune farm is located supported 12 families. Now there are only four. "There is really no way to avoid farms getting bigger" Les thinks. "The cost of machinery and land, combined with the low profit margin on products makes it necessary to produce more in order to survive." Les has noticed over the years that there is still a good neighbourliness and spirit among the rural people. "That has not changed." "There is quite a challenge to farming but you certainly won't get wealthy" is how Les Fortune sums up his fifty plus years on the farm . "By and large it's a good life." Walter Hamilton, 71 and still farming in Perth By Adrian Vos If Walter Hamilton is ever going to retire, he can look back on a life of experiences that are forever in the past. Today, at age 71, he still farms in Wallace township in Perth county, where he started some 30 years ago. Originally he came from Grey township in Huron County, where he began his farming career near the hamlet of Jamestown. At that time Jamestown was a thriving centre and Mr. Hamilton has some fond memories of the General Store, the blacksmith shop across the road, and the Community Hall. Today, one just whizzes through, hardly noticing the place. "At that time we did everything with horses." he said. "I had Clydesdales and Percherons and Suffolk -Punch, and I raised colts off them as well." A wistful look comes into his eyes when he talks about horses. 'I liked horses, but it became too slow; not economical anymore." So, in 1948 he bought his first tractor. Not that he did away with the horses right away; no, at first they were used side by side with the tractor. He also drew milk to the cheese factory in Molesworth. But in the end it became too expensive: "You know, a tractor you can set aside when you don't need it, but a horse has to be fed." Tractor He well remembers his first tractor. It was a Cockshutt 30 and it could pull a 3 -furrow plow. Next he bought a "Custom" tractor from Listowel Transport. For some reason they couldn't get along with it, but Mr. Hamilton used it for ten years. He believes that it was assembled in the U.S. from parts supplied by various manufacturers. After 1953 he went with the times and traded the first tractor in for one with a loader and hydraulics. A cultivator with hydraulic lift was also purchased. Disaster didn't pass Mr. Hamilton by either. In 1953 the barn burned down to the ground and the driveshed was severely damaged. Insurance coverage was minimal, so it was a real blow, particularly as there was a growing family to feed and clothe. The Hamiltons raised six boys and four girls and today they have also 18 grandchildren. On December 12 they will be celebrating their 47th anniversary. Like most farms of 20 years ago, theirs was a mixed farm with some 20 dairy cows, 1,000 hens, over 100 pigs and diary beef. The Holsteins he bred to an Angus bull, until the fire. After that calamity, he wis sold as a 17 year old. Draw Ing Milk When drawing milk to the cheese factory, he noted how the master cheese maker sniffed the milk: "If he didn't like the smell PG. 16 THE RURAL VOICE/DECEMBER 1978 it was set aside. You can't make good cheese if the milk is not perfect. Today the cheese is less good than it used to be. The Molesworth cheesemaker says it's because of the bulk handling. The cooling and all the stirring going on, doesn't allow for good Cheese." The Hamiltons used tohavea hundred or more pigs in one end of the dairy barn, but when milk inspection became more strict, they had to get them out. Staunch Supporter A long time member of the Federation of Agriculture, and involved with the local agricultural society, Mr. Hamilton is also a staunch supporter of the milk marketing board. He thinks that the dairy man would be nowhere without a board. He always had plenty of market sharing quota, and when he made a mistake and produced over quota, he fed calves. Only one son, Larry, follwed family tradition and has become a dairyman. Two other sons run the well-known Hamilton Construction Company in Listowel. All children live in the vicinity, the farthest away being a daughter in Kitchener. Asked to make a comparison between farming before the war and today, Walter Hamilton repeats his liking of working with horses, but the economy of the tractor can't be denied, even if they are more greasy. He always kept up with modern times. His tractors were his first modernization and the latest was a sealed silo for haylage. "It's a real labor saver," he says, " and the cows milk better too." The Hamiltons have shared things on the farm. "Without my wife it wouldn't have been worth it," he muses. Nell and Doc