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The Rural Voice, 2002-07, Page 26Tractor & Combine Parts New, Used and Remanufactured Phone 1-800-372-7149 Fax 1-800-372-7150 • Standard 8 Reground Crankshafts ®. Remanufactured Cylinder Heads . Engine Overhaul Kits . Used Engines - Huge Inventory www.fawcett.cc e-mail sales@fawcett.cc FAWCETT Tractor Supply Ltd. St. Marys Ontario DAVID E. GREIN LOGGING Buyer of Standing & Felled Hardwood Timber & Bush Lots • Competitive Pricing • Quality Workmanship • Over 20 Years Experience R.R.#1 Neustadt (519) 799-5997 } Holstein Rodeo 2002 i July 12, 13 & 14 Team Penning (Free) 7 p m -9 pm Beer Gardens & Entertainment 7 pm -1 am Saturday Grounds Open 12 noon Rodeo Show 2 pm - 4:30 pm BBO Dinner 4:30 pm - 7 pm All Welcome! Advance Tickets at Holstein General Store Adults 512.00 Children under 12 55.00 Cowboy Dance at Rodeo Grounds 9 pm -1 am Adults 510.00 Sunday Rodeo Grounds Open Rodeo Show 10:00 am 2pm-4:30 pm For More Information Contact: 519-334-3794 or 519-334-4016 01. 22 THE RURAL VOICE market, it has made it to the radar of the OMAF where Martin was named lead for organic crop production with OMAF last fall. Martin explains that the extension work carried out by OMAF is generally based on research and there hasn't been a lot of research in the organic field. But Ontario's move to appoint an extension lead. is just part of a gradual change across North America to greater recognition of organic production, he says. Dollars for org- anic research are slowly increasing. Martin's job will be helping make information on organic agriculture more accessible. collecting it up and making it available through OMAF's call line and website. Those wanting to learn about organic farming can get general information from the help line, he says and there are some information sheets on the OMAF website. Generally, however, the approach of organic farmers has been one of learning a craft, more than a scientific model that can be easily duplicated farm after farm after farm. It's this approach of learning how to react to what nature throws at you rather than conquering nature that makes the apprenticeship model apt. Dixon, has been learning how the McQuails deal with the challenges of changing weather and pests. He'd like to follow in the McQuails' footsteps someday, he says. He hopes to have his own farm but growing up in town he doesn't have a lot of University of Guelph's course gives introduction to organics Dr. Ann Clark's 12 week course at the University of Guelph beginning last fall has, the first time, allowed students to learn about organic farming at a main stream agricultural college. The course study, according to the University's website, includes the following schedule: Weeks 1-2: Definition of organic farming; discussion of how basic ecological principles inform and guide farming practice; discussion of national organic standards, the transition process, and certification in Canada; allowable sources of livestock, seed, and other inputs to production - and why. Weeks 3-4: Internalizing flows of natural resources to reduce dependence on purchased inputs and minimize off-site impacts; e.g. using year -around ground cover not just for yield and soil conservation, but to immobilize and conserve labile nutrients and to channel energy to ecosystem maintenance functions; "feeding" the soil to serve as a repository and medium supportive of timely water and mineral nutrient retention and release, but also as habitat for favorable (plant health protective) soil microbes; composting to immobilize labile nutrients, enrich biotic activity and reduce weed and pathogen burden, and to return nutrients in slow- vs. quick -release forms. Weeks 5-7: Harnessing the ecological resilience of natural biota; e.g. problem avoidance by design, including enterprise mix (livestock as well as crop), crop rotation (including grassland leys), fizld dimensions, and hedgerow composition. all of which are designed to employ macro- and microbiota to retard pest proliferation; timing and cultivation practices, using weeds as indicator species; avoiding human -induced disease, insect, and weed problems; homeopathy and animal health; woodlot/wetland management. Weeks 8-11: Designing Ecologically Sound, Organic Production Systems; e.g. to capture positive synergies amongst enterprises, internalize costs of production, and regenerate natural resource endowments; examples of how this is done in practice, with emphasis on generalizable vs. site- specific decision-making. Week 12: Marketing Organic Produce; e.g. opportunities and constraints of wholesale, retail, and direct producer -to -consumer marketing approaches; quality standards, including GMO-free, for local and export markets; relevant government policies; the future of price premia.0