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The Rural Voice, 1980-09, Page 24FARMING IN THE PAST Is bigger always better? BY ADRIAN VOS It has never been easy to determine how large a farm should be to fit the capabilities of the operator. One hundred years ago John Read, a farmer/author, wrestled with it, and 50 years ago, Louis Bromfield, another noted American writer/farmer and representative for his government abroad, also had trouble with it. Bromfield said that the desire to become bigger is part of our Western ambition. But he warned that a farmer and his wife, who can comfortably run a certain size farm, often buy more land to double their holdings, in the belief that their income also will double. What often happens, he warned, is that the machinery is not large enough and the farmer and his wife work themselves into an early grave trying to do the impossible. They may well be able to work all the land, but the yield per acre suffers because not as much effort per acre can be put in. Read said: "In order to buy a farm safely and manage it successfully, a man might to have some money at his command. That some men who have bought farms almost wholly on credit, then were trusted for the stock and tools which they needed have eventually succeeded in paying off their debts, and thus becoming the owners of the property which they had nominally held, is true, but they are exceptional cases, and should not be taken as examples." That is a far cry from what is happening today where almost all farms are bought with borrowed money. Read went on: "In many instances (at the time of old age) men have made many improvements on the land, but by reason of ill health or Toss of crops are unable to keep up the interest, and the mortgages are foreclosed, leaving the farmer and his family without a home. It is much pleasanter to own a farm than it is to work for another man, but it is not as safe a thing for a man to do. On this account we would not advise the buying of a farm without considerable ready money." MORE IN TROUBLE Now that farmers in general don't adhere to Read's philosophy any more, we also see them in more trouble when adversity strikes, just as he wrote 100 years ago. It is not that Read didn't recognize the advantages of large production units in relation to the cost of equipment. He noted that it costs as much to take 100 pounds of butter to the market as it does to take ten pounds, but then he had no experience with pick-up by cooperatives. He remarked also that the cost of tools and equipment is much higher per acre for the small farm than it is for the large one. But he also was not acquainted with custom work, where one combine can do the work for a number of farms. SMALL FARMS Read writes: "It is eminently safe for a farmer never to buy land which he doesn't need and which he cannot make immediately available. There are certain advantages in having small farms. They require less capital, less hired help, Tess teams and tools, and there is less care and anxiety about their management than there is in the case of large ones. Many a man can buy a small farm, cultivate it well, himself and his family doing all the work, and obtain crops enough to make him comfortable. If he gets the idea, as many men do, that he must get rich, and that in order to secure this end he must have a great deal more land, the chances are that this pernicious idea will run away with him, and that his days of happiness are past. "In the great majority of cases the owners of medium sized farms can do a great deal better by improving their methods of culture, and choosing more profitable crops, than they can by enlarging the area under cultivation. Read said: "If farmers were in the habit of following the principle embodied in the old tailor's plan of cutting a coat according to the supply of cloth, there would be no necessity for a consideration of this subject." Thames Bend Lady 1979 Pork" Congress Bred Yorkshire Gilt Back Fat 10.5 m.m. 2128K Champion 161 Days 136 index — Top quality, Yorkshire, Landrace Duroc, • Hampshire and various Hybrids. Ontario's largest selection of Government R.O.P. tested and Veterinary Inspected boars and gilts raised under commercial conditions. ` Minimal disease closed herd health program. THAMES BEND FARMS LTD. R.R.8, Woodstock, Ontario N48 TW1 819-655-2942 or 482-2704 RICHARD AND WARREN STEIN PG. 22 THE RURAL VOICE/SEPTEMBER 1980