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Village Squire, 1978-09, Page 4"You're going to what? You're going to a plowing match? What's that? You mean people actually go watch farmers plowing their fields? You've got to be kidding. Sounds about as exciting as watching a snail race." That might be the ordinary urbanite's view of a plowing match until you've seen the Inte,rnational Plowing Match, the biggest event of its kind anywhere. Every year in a matter of weeks a huge city grows in a field somewhere in Ontario to briefly host a population the size of London, then in an equally short time, it disappears until it springs up again somewhere else in the province the next September. Like the Canadian National Exhibition, the I.P.M. has grown a long way since the first one was held in 1913. Today few of the quarter million or so people go there to watch farmers from around the world test their skills at plowing. Instead they go to walk the "streets" and browse in the tents where consumer goods of every kind are sold and advertised. You can see gigantic tractors and combines, or the latest gadget all being hawked, in one way or another. This year that tented city will be bigger than ever and will be situated just off Highway 86. just east of Wingham. Jim and Carol Armstrong are the host farmers for the 1978 I.P.M. They will provide about 196 acres of the 1200 acres needed to provide space for all the activities at the match. Surrounding farmers will provide the rest. The tented city will take up 130 acres of the total. It is arranged in streets and this year for the first time a seventh street will be required to find enough space for the more than 500 exhibitors who want to take part. There will be 60 caterers on the site to help look after the huge crowds that are expected to flock to the site between Sept. 26 and 30. If all goes well a record total of 250.000 people could attend the match, eclipsing the old record set two years ago when the I.P.M. was held near Walkerton, just a few miles away. The match is a huge undertaking and requires a huge amount of planning. Match sites are picked four years in advance to give the local committees a chance to prepare. The planning began for Huron county in 1974 when the local Huron County Plowmen's Association, supported by Huron County Council was awarded the match. Huron had made four presentations to the Ontario Plowmen's Association which sanctions the match, before it was awarded the event. Next advertisements had been placed in local newspapers asking for farmers interested in giving their land for hosting the event. A farmer has to give a lot of thought to the decision to offer to host an International Plowing Match. It can effect his farming operation for several years. The farmer must change his crop rotation so that he can still grow the crops he needs but in such a way that this won't interfere with the match site. Then there's the fact that heavy equipment and huge crowds have been known to damage the soil, perhaps effecting the yields of crops grown on the land after the tented city has moved on to a new location. The biggest danger, however, is what wet weather and the resulting muddy conditions can do to the land. These dangers, real or imagined, are not offset by any particular financial gain by the host farmer. Land for the tented city is rented at a rate of only $70 per acre and plowing sites are rented at $25 per acre and parking lots for $22 per acre. On top of that a farmer has to think about making sure his farm is in top shape and expenses like painting the barn are necessary. Then the farmer has to be willing to devote endless hours to meetings, giving speeches and talking to reporters in the years leading up to the event. In short, being "major" of the tented city is a huge responsibility, not taken on lightly. Four Huron county farmers thought over the consequences and decided to take the chance. One of them was Jim Armstrong. Jim and Carol Armstrong had come to the county only six years earlier after their "almost century farm" outside of Bramalea had been sold. Two years later, Jim joined the local Plowmen's Association and was there when the initial idea of hosting the match was talked about. Inspectors from the Ontario Plowmen's Association were sent You are invited to come to the factory and see the quality for yourself. FACTORY OPEN FOR INSPECTION WEEKDAYS 8:30-11:30 a.m., 1-3 p.m. OR 13Y APPOINTMENT. 7°14.m • NORTHLANDER A complete line of 12 and 14 wides now available. Now also building Commercial/Industrial Units. An alternate form of farm housing, custom designed and built to your requirements. —Canada's ttnest— Manufactured in Canada by Custom Trailers Ltd., 165 Thames Rd. E. Exeter, Ontario [Box 190] [5191235-1530 Telex 064-5815 VILLAGE SQUIRE/SEPTEMBER 1978. PG. 3.