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The Rural Voice, 1979-08, Page 41Fran & Tony McQuail with Wilfred Ntiamoah Different foods and the farm machinery are two things Wilfred Ntiamoah of Ghana noticed when he came to Ontario. But Wilfred, a farmer, isn't here to learn about big machinery. He's on an OFA sponsored visit to learn about unmechanized farming methods that can be transferred to his native Ghana. At the time of his interview with the Rural Voice. Wilfred was staying at the home of Tony and Fran McQuail of R.R. 1, Lucknow. Wilfred's home town is Kwab- eng in the Eastern Region of Ghana while his family's farm is in Abosu a village 60 miles from Kumas in the Ashanti Region. Wilfred came here through the Canadian Embassy channels and it is through the Agriskills Abroad Committee of the Ontar- io Federation of Agriculture (OFA) that Wilfred will be able to visit different kinds of farms in the area. Wilfred will be working for six months in Ontario and he wants to see a variety of farms here. Mr. McQuail said the OFA Committee had been at the farm one night lining up other places for Wilfred to stay. Wilfred is interested in sheep and poultry and the committee is making arrangements for him to visit several poultry farms in the area. He will be spending several weeks on the farms so he can get an idea of management and the committee is also hoping to arrange for him to spend a week or two at the University of The Young Farmer A Chance of a Lifetime Ghana farmer learns Canadian agricultural skills BY DEBBIE RANNEY Guelph. 1 he McQuail farm will remain as a sort of home base for Wilfred where he will be able to pick up his mail. There is still one particular type of farming operation that Wilfred would like to see: a small hatching operation, owned by somebody with about 200 eggs. It would probably have to be a specialty operation Tony says which raised exotic breeds of chickens. Wilfred is also interested in purchasing a small incubator somewhere in the 200-500 egg range, a scale that's sensible in Wilfred's country. Then his family could raise their own chickens and sell the surplus. Wilfred would also like to look at the raising of vegetables. His family farm in Ghana is newly established and onions, tomatoes and peppers could be grown there. If Wilfred were to go into poultry he would also be interested in raising his own concentrates for feed. Anyone who might have the sort of farming operation where Wilfred could learn something useful to farming in Ghana could write either Tony McQuail at R.R. 1, Lucknow or Bordon Hill at Varna. From Wilfred's experiences here, he hopes that a smaller version of the Federation of Agriculture will be formed over in Ghana to provide support for the farmers. While at the McQuails, Wilfred has been working on the corn as well as with the sheep, goats, pigs and poultry. He has also helped out with barn building. Wilfred has three brothers and three sisters and he lives on a 40 acre farm where they mainly grow corn. Tony decided to volunteer his farm as one of the ones Wilfred could stay at after hearing at the OFA's provincial convention last year that the Agriskills Abroad Committee was interested in sponsoring somebody's visit to Ontario to help them learn about our farming skills. They were interested in farms that weren't too highly mechanized. Tony is involved at the county level of the Ontario Federation of Agricul- ture. Wilfred said that at the start of his visit Canadian food was a little different but now is used to it. Big machinery used here contrasts with Ghanian farm operations done mostly with a hand tool called a cutlass which is used for weeding, planting and hoeing. While staying with Tony and Fran, Wilfred plans to attend some auction sales to see if he could find some small tools to take back with him. He and Tony will also go to the Huron Pioneer Museum in Goderich to get an idea of some old farm tools. On the day of the interview, Tony and Wilfred were going to do something for fun, and attend a local auction sale so Wilfred could see how pigs and other livestock are sold. THE RURAL VOICE/AUGUST 1979 PG. 39