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The Rural Voice, 1980-09, Page 25A MATTER OF PRINCIPLE A look at crops out West BY CARL HEMINGWAY This news is a little late but I think I should finish up our trip "West." When I sent in the last news, "dead line" July 6th we were in Vancouver, and it was raining. However, the last couple of days were sunny and we enjoyed a visit to Buchart Gardens in Victoria and of course we had clam chowder on the ferry. We also visited Stanley Park as the main attraction in Vancouver. We flew back to Winnipeg where Don met us and took us out to his farm near Melita -some 200 miles. Crops were much the same the whole trip -some barley and mixed grain, very short headed out with very short heads. Other fields ranged from just sprouted to six inches high -if there is an exceptionally good fall, some may yield fair grain and the others will make "green feed." In Don's immediate area, they had about three inches of rain a couple of weeks before we arrived, and the pasture was green and growing well. Since we left they have had some rain every day for eight days. It wasn't very good for some hay I cut the day before we headed back to Winnipeg, but I'm sure it was welcome as it will mean plenty of hay for winter. Don carries on his veterinary practice from the farm which doesn't leave much time for farming. I went with him on a call out about 15 miles to treat a sick cow and learned that they had 11/2 inches of rain since last September and very little snow. They got 1 inch of their rain shortly before we were there and were able to turn their cows out to pasture. RENTED OUT Don didn't put in any grain this year, but rented out some 50 acres to a neighbour in order to get it worked and re -seeded to alfalfa. The neighbour hopes to make some money out of crop insurance at least. Don runs a cow calf herd about half beef and half Holstein and Holstein -beef cross -bred. All of the cows are nursing at least two calves and some of the Holstein up to four calves up to weaning age at a time. All the "dairy" cows are quiet and can be hand -milked. He raises his replacements and has found that with the ever increasing price for fluid milk, there is an attractive market for hand -milked cows. He finds his "milking machines" appreciate in value with a minimum of labour and he can "steal" plenty of milk for the house. THE WHEAT CROP 1 forgot to mention the wheat crop. There was a lot of wheat about eighteen inches high with what looked to have short but rather good heads but was being disced down in order to qualify for crop insurance. Apparently it was planted early, sprouted and hit dry weather. Instead of the grain filling it just dried up. BACK TO WINNIPEG On our way back to Winnipeg by bus, following a route about half way from No. 2 and the U.S. border, crop conditions were very much the same. The only reasonably good crops were a few fields of barley as we got close to Winnipeg. On our trip home from Toronto, July 13 1 was disappointed to find that crops weren't much better than in the West until we got close to Listowel and of course when we got into Huron County I was happy again. BAYFIELD LUMBER Bayfield, Ont. 565-2990 Complete line of building supplies and rental equipment W.D.HOPPER &SONS Water Well Drilling R.R.2 SEAFORTH Members of the Ontario Water Well Assoc. . Prompt Reliable Service . Free Estimates . 4 Modern Rotary Rigs Call Collect Neil James Durl Seaforth Seaforth Seaforth 527-1737 527-0775 527-0828j 'Where Hopper Goes the Woter Flows' SINCE 1915 THE RURAL VOICE/SEPTEMBER 1980 PG. 23