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The Rural Voice, 1985-11, Page 191 Steve Hodges' plan is to make his farm as viable an operation as possible. Right now, he needs his off -farm job to sustain hrm. He became particularly interested in intensive cereal management. "What interested me were the yields they were getting per acre," he says. Hodges is experimenting with ICM and has sown ten acres of hard red fall wheat. If a spring variety is licenced by the springtime, he will plant ten acres of it instead of barley. With growth regulators applied to reduce straw length, more nitrogen can be applied to increase yields. Hard winter wheat is selling at a premium of $200 per tonne, and Hodges believes that the profit margin will be greater than with the barley that he sells to local farmers. "Farmers are only supplying five per cent of the hard red wheat that millers can use in Ontario," he says. "It all comes back to supplying the demand." Hodges baled 6,000 bales of hay from 49 acres in one cutting this year and will be selling the majority of it for export to the U.S.A. and to meet local demand. "In the middle of winter, there's always a market for hay," he says. Despite careful farm management and maximum utilization of his land, Hodges has not been able to earn a living from his farm. His off -farm job is full-time during the summer months but dwindles to part-time in the winter. He sometimes finds it dif- ficult to juggle his farm work with his off -farm job. "I get up when it's dark. and 1 quit when it's dark." Hodges finds that he can use his farm- ing experience in his off -farm job, particularly when he is rebuilding barn foundations. He is also ar- tistically inclined, painting portraits and farm and nature scenes, some of NOVEMBER 1985 17