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The Rural Voice, 1983-07, Page 41ONE MAN'S OPINION Adjust shipping in short weeks by Adrian Vos It is always a source, both of dismay and wonder, when I watch the number of hogs shipped after a long weekend. It appears that the pork producers of the province expect the marketing board to do all the thinking for them. A long weekend means, of course, that all packing plants are closed for at least a day. One day out of five normal working days means that they will buy twenty per cent less hogs in that week. Nevertheless, while on a normal Mon- day producers ship some 22,000 hogs, on the Tuesday after a holiday weekend the number is invariably over 30,000. What do the producers expect from the packers? Do hey believe they will bid high anyway, just to please them? The marketing board tries to salvage whatever is possible, by refusing to sell below a certain level. This means holding hogs overnight at assembly yards and trying to sell them the next day at a better price. But that next day pork producers again flood the market as if there wasn't a short workweek in the city. Not that they are not warned. Weeks before a long weekend the pork board sends out notices with the cheques, asking producers to ship some extra hogs the week before the holiday and the week after. In the short week the volume should be cut back as close to twenty per cent as possible. But it doesn't change. Every holiday weekend is the same. The problem with giving information in written form is that so many people confess not to read. A notice is just casually thrown out. Another problem is that with a properly functioning marketing board farmers seem to have forgotten how to market their product. When they have wheat ready for sale, all they have to do is bring it to the nearest receiver; the wheat board will do the rest. Eggs will be picked up at the farm gat ; the_.,e,gg board will look after them from there on. When broilers chickens or turkeys are the right weight, call, and the marketing board will take it from there. But as can be seen from the beginning of this column, the pork board cannot do everything. If a pork producer wants top money for his product, he will have to begin thinking a bit. What is better, to ship a number of light hogs the week before a holiday, and a number of heavy hogs afterwards, or to ship stubbornly the same number, regardless of hog killing capacity? There are some indications that hog numbers are increasing and this could well mean the prosperous time for pork producers is coming to an end. This means they will have to pay special attention to barn productivity. This will be especially difficult for those producers, as mentioned above, who don't take the time to read. If one doesn't keep up with new developments, efficiency falls by the wayside. In the last year -and -a -half even poor managers could make a profit from pork produc- tion. But even today that is not always true anymore. For those pork producers who do read this prose. please, do yourself a favour and adjust your shipping in short working weeks. L. Adrian Vos, a regular columnist with The Rural Voice is a freelance writer from Huron county. DWR DRAINAGI Farm & Municipal Drainage Systems Clay & Plastic Tile Installations All workmanship guaranteed 10.4 R.R. 4, Stratford 519.271.4777 lots of luggage? BMA GETTA JETTA AUTO RUND Box 180 Main St., S. Exeter, Ont. Phone 2351100 Toll Free 1800-2857034 DAVIDSON WELL DRILLING LTD. 83 YEARS EXPERIENCE Member of Canadian and Ontario Water Well Associations • Farm • Suburban • Industrial • Municipal FREE ESTIMATES GUARANTEED WELLS FAST MODERN EQUIPMENT "Our experience assures lower cost water wells." Licensed by the Ministry of the Environment Wingham 357-1960 P.O. Box 486 475 Josephine "SERVING ONTARIO SINCE 1900" THE RURAL VOICE, JULY 1983 PG. 39