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The Rural Voice, 2001-11, Page 30Jack Wilkinson OFA President concept is modeled after an approach used in Sweden which convinced consumers to pay slightly more to support Swedish farmers. The concept not only gets consumers listening to farmers, but has farmers more aware of consumers' concerns, Wilkinson said. Through this system, Swedish farmers got financial benefits for reducing the use of pesticides to meet consumers' concerns. Since the early 1990s Ontario farmers have cut pesticide use by 50 per cent but few people knomi it, and farmers were not rewarded with higher prices, he said. In order to convince the consumers of the value of supporting Canadian agriculture OFA is going to trumpet success stories, he said. Agriculture has been denigrated as an "old" economy in the computer age but at a time when "new" economy high-tech companies are laying off 50 per cent of their workforce, Ontario's greenhouse industry is exploding, exporting fresh vegetables to the U.S. "If we can beat California growing tomatoes, what's more to be said," Wilkinson said. Meanwhile in Quebec, where there is more support for pork processing than in Ontario, the workforce has expanded 50 per cent. If the Ontario government wants to stimulate the economy then get the Nutrient Management Act in place 28 THE RURALVOICE News quickly and many farmers who are holding back on new barns will start to build because they'll know the rules, Wilkinson predicted. While farmers here look at the U.S. and worry about higher subsidies there for farmers, in comparison to the rest of the world Canadian farmers still have clout, Wilkinson said. He pointed to Britain where Prime Minister Tony Blair announced the abolition of the ministry of agriculture saying that there was more money in agri- tourism than in agricultural production. The National Farmers Union in Britain, once one of the most powerful farm groups in the world, now is ineffective, Wilkinson said. But in the pork price disaster of 1998, the only farmers in the world that got additional government help were. in Canada. "The farm community knew how to lobby," Wilkinson said. He promised to keep on fighting for farmers. "We're where we are today because we're involved," he said.0 AALP class sees a different kind of farming in Costa Rica One of the purposes of the annual international tour for the graduating class of the Advanced Agricultural Leadership Program is to challenge class participants with different views of farming and the class 8 participants who visited Costa Rica certainly had that opportunity. From growing bananas to raising butterflies and iguanas, Phil Anwender and his classmates saw farming from a totally different perspective during their visit to the Central American country where farming is carried out by huge corporations on one hand, and. tiny farms on the other. Anwender, who runs a farrow -to -finish hog operation on 400 acres in Perth East, described his observations to the annual meeting of the Perth County Federation of Agriculture in Milverton, October 10. Costa Rica is divided into three climatic zones from east to west. The east side of the narrow peninsula between the Pacific and the Caribbean is tropical and bananas are grown in this region. The central plateau contains the cities while the west coast has most of the tourist resorts and beaches. Ecological tourism is a big industry with visitors wanting to see the 850 species of birds and visit the rain forests and the cloud forests where the tree canopy is 150-200 feet above the ground. For tourists it can be difficult to really see much of the wildlife in the trees, Anwender said. One of the small farms the class visited was a butterfly farm where native tropical butterflies are kept for breeding. Cocoons are then gathered and shipped to butterfly conservatories like those in Niagara Falls and Cambridge where the butterflies hatch out. Ecological tourists also pay to visit the farm and see the butterflies. Another farming oddity Anwender and his class visited was an iguana farm. Originally the farm was set up to produce iguana meat but now it supports itself from tours and donations and releases iguanas into the wild. The native iguana population has been depleted over the years as the rainforest is destroyed. But locals resent questions about the destruction of the rainforest, Anwender said. If a North American asks about it he's likely to be reminded that eastern North America was covered with trees until our ancestors cut them down 200 years ago. Today 11 per cent of Costa Rica's land is protected in national parks. Though butterflies and iguanas are colourful niche farms, the main crops are bananas, sugar cane and coffee. Coffee farmers seem to have followed similar trends as North American farmers, Anwender said. When prices were high, they expanded production, then surpluses drove down prices. Yields of coffee beans at higher elevations are not as large as in the lowlands but the flavour is better. One coffee plantation had keyed into the eco -tourism business