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The Rural Voice, 2001-08, Page 246 Sheep as part of the mix For Chris and Gabriele Boettcher, their 200 -ewe high-performance flock is an integral part of their whole farming operation 4 Some people might call Chris and Gabriele Boettcher sheep producers, but as biodynamic farmers they see sheep as inseparable from the rest of their production. As Chris explained to about 40 people taking part in a tour of the Boettchers' Brussels -area farm recently, he can't separate his returns from his high-performance sheep, operation from the rest of the 350 - acres of crops and pasture as some experts would who look at each portion of a farm as a different enterprise want to. "Sheep help our crops. The crops help our sheep," he says. "The whole farm works as one entity. I don't have to allocate as much forage and grain specifically for sheep." For instance, he says, last year he sowed red clover into his winter wheat and spelt and with the plentiful rain, the clover took off after the crop was harvested. He put sheep into the fields to graze from early September until the end of October and their gain amounted to about $ I00 per acre. "Where do you allocate that MO an acre, to the livestock part or the crops?" he wondered. Grazing is a big part of the Boettcher operation. Chris purchased a solar -powered, high-voltage netting system from England that can be easily moved for rotational grazing. He calls it his "electric shepherd". Though expensive, at 90 cents a foot, it keeps the Iambs in and the predators out. "It's almost as expensive as regular outside fence but it's so flexible." It's very quick to put up or take down, he says. Grazing (top) provides the major nutrition for the Boettcher flock. Manure from the flock's winter housing is composted (above left where Chris explains the process) then used to fertilize crops (below, where Chris talks to visitors on a recent farm tour). 20 THE RURAL VOICE