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The Rural Voice, 1980-09, Page 16Centralia graduates FIVE YEARS LATER BY ADRIAN VOS WITH RESEARCH BY DONNA THIEL AND GISELE IRELAND Skilled people are in short supply in all sectors of Canadian industry. Governments and industrialists have been urging everyone else to do something about the lack of competent 'workers. For a time this lack could be filled by trnmigrants, but it has become more and more difficult to attract foreign labor, due to increased prosperity in the supplying countries and the lagging Canadian economy. In agriculture, training on the job has been a way of life for centuries and the need for better education in order to improve one's income has not been stressed till recently. It used to be that an agricultural graduate, with a B.Sc. from university, or with a diploma from a college, moved immediately to industry. Almost all older ag graduates became attached to feed or fertilizer companies or are now civil servants with Agriculture Canada or OMAF. The last five to ten years has seen a change in the attitudes of the grads. Most are now using the skills they've learned to run an actual farm. Skills not considered to be necessary a short ten years ago. Gerald Kolkman, who graduated in 1974, from Centralia College of Agricul- tural Technology, bought a 100 -acre farm three years later. in Logan township in Perth County. As in every business he needed a down payment and in the three year gap he earned money as a trucker for Stacey Bros. Dairy Products, Kolkman bought his farm with a mortgage from Farm Credit Corporta- tion (FCC) and feels that he would have had difficulties obtaining the loan if it wasn't for his formal education. Today he has 90 sows and he sells all the weaned pigs. It is not profitable, he asserts. Not all grads are males. Carol Coughlin of RR1, Atwood, graduated in 1973 fhe first yeat out she worked as a typist and file clerk for the Friesian Association of Canada. It is much more difficult for a girl to get a farm related job than it is for a boy. After applying to several jobs that were farm related, she got a job with Bob Miller Photography in Waterdown. She is a secretary there and is now taking courses in photography so she'll be able to photograph farm animals at fairs and shows. Both these grads agree that a college education gives a person a more rounded education, something that can't be gained through short courses, however valuable they may be. Kolkman says flatly that a farm boy educated on the farm and with addition- al short courses ends up with bits and pieces. Coughlin is more careful and says a farm boy could get the same education by practical experience and courses. "But", she says, "the social aspects (of a college course) are just as important. This helps us operate in the world outside college." The Ontario Agricultural College keeps close records on the directions their grads take. It found that in the last ten years, graduates returning to the farm increased from nine per cent to 26 per cent. Among college grads who farm are Robert and Phyllis Hammell of RR#1 Tara, in Bruce County. Phyllis didn't encounter any difficult- ies obtaining a farm job. She married Bob and as every farm wife knows, being married to a farmer is more than a full time job. Both graduated from Centralia in 1973, Bob in agricultural business management and Phyllis in home economics. Immediately Bob got the responsibil- ity of running a farm. His dad had died the previous year and he managed the farm for his mother. In 1975 he bought the 150 acre farm from his mother and married Phyllis. She had been the field representative in Bruce county for the Ontario Federation of Agriculture until that time. Bob says that it is not easy to make a decent living off the farm. The Hammells feed beef cattle on contract and are paid according to the pounds gained. To buy his own beef is too expensive with today's interest rates, this farm business manager asserts. Bob would like to work on the farm all the time, but he finds that he needs an off -farm job in the wintertime to make ends meet. From fall to spring he works for a firm of chartered accountants. The Hammells think that a college education is needed for today's farmers. Bob doesn't think that it such a good idea to depend on father's experience. The older people are set in their ways PG. 14 THE RURAL VOICE/SEPTEMBER 1980 and often resistant to new ways of doing things. Short courses are good, mainly because they help keep a farmer up-to-date on new developments. This applies to the college-educated farmer as well as the one who relies on practical experience. He thinks that large farms have more of a future because they have the capital to expand and to modernize continuous- ly. For the same reason he thinks that small farms, 150 to 200 acres, are becoming more backward. Nevertheless, if he had his druthers, he would prefer the smaller farm.One advantage of the small farms is that they are more solvent, while the big ones are debt ridden. But the trouble with the small farm is that a person has to work outside in order to augment his income. That means that the partner must be available to do the chores. Kolkman grows 54 acres of corn and 36 acres of alfalfa on his 100 acres, and keeps close records of his production in barn and on the field. He is able to rent machinery from his father at custom rates, which helps to keep capital investment down. Like Hammell, Kolkman thinks that a small farm is beautiful, but that it should return a decent income. HYBRID GILTS YORK—LANDRACE CROSS can supply in large orders. Also PUREBRED LANDRACE BOARS and CROSSBRED BOARS. 1 BRANDY POINT FARMS Willy and Kurt Keller RR#1, Mitchell 519-348-9753 or 34S-8043