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The Rural Voice, 2002-08, Page 69People Perth 4 -Hers visit Saskatchewan An enthusiastic group of 10 Perth County 4-H members and two chaperones left Ontario in mid-July for a week-long visit to members of the 4-H Homecraft Club of Kelleher, Saskatchewan. Taking part in the trip west were: Evan Baker, Philip Biihler, Laura DeKroon, Laura Hutton, David Kolkman, Matthew Kolkman, Laura McKenzie, Erica Murray, Andrea Neubrand and Shannon O'Rourke. They were accompanied by chaperones Barb Elg and Nellie Van den Hoven. The trip is part of the 4-H Youth Exchanges Canada program, funded by a grant from the Department of Canadian Heritage. On August 13, 10 members of the Kelleher 4-H program along with one chaperone will visit Ontario, staying in homes mostly in the Mitchell and Monkton areas. Objectives of the program include improving the knowledge and understanding of Canada among Canadian youth enabling them to learn first-hand about the history, geography, economy, institutions, cultures, communities, languages and other aspects of their country. To help pay for their trip the Perth County group conducted barbecues at the Mitchell Farmers Market, sold chili at Midnight Madness and held a car wash in Mitchell with the facilities of the Mitchell Car Wash donated by the owner. Other businesses were also strong in their support of the group. When the Kelleher group pays their return visit they'll visit St. Jacobs and the farmers market, the corn maze near Newton as well as Niagara Falls, Goderich and the Stratford Festival. According to Elg and Van den Hoven, the 4 -Hers have shown a mature and positive attitude beyond their years in preparing for the trip.0 Helmut Sieber back in Canada Helmut Sieber, who amassed huge acreages in the 1980s in northern Huron and southern Bruce Counties, the Thedford Marsh area as well as 20,000 acres in Manitoba is back in Canada and ready to start buying again, Ontario Farmer's Jim Romahn reports. Sieber's ambitious plans to create several vertically -integrated farming and agri-businesses imploded in the 1990s following a $350 -million lawsuit by on-time partner Christian Straube and the bankruptcy of his publically-traded company Canadian Agra Foods Inc. Sieber told Romahn he had spent the last two years in Dubai because all his assets were frozen by the courts due to the Straube lawsuit. He couldn't buy or sell anything and couldn't set up new businesses in Canada so he went to Dubai and got involved with "food and beverage companies". That led him, he said, into acquisitions and mergers and he made a lot of money. Though he returned to Canada July 1, Sieber said he will continue to do business in Dubai where there are 28 million people within 100 km and 228 within 1,000 km. Sieber said he has reached an out- of-court settlement with Straube and aims to settle all the remaining lawsuits and outstanding issues with his old businesses by the end of this year. That way he expects to be in a position to start buying up land again when a price crash he's predicting arrives in the next year. Sieber sees interest rates rising and says those farmers who paid high prices for land based on low interest will be squeezed. With prices for grains and oilseeds already low, the rising costs will force bankruptcies, he predicted. Farmers nearing retirement will want to sell out. Sieber said that though western Ontario farmers at first were hostile to him in the 1980s, they came to realize that he provided a floor under local land prices because he put millions of dollars into the local market. Sieber said he stopped buying land in the 1990s when farmers started bidding higher prices for land for their own expansion plans.0 Wayne Stoltz heads Dealers' Association for 2002 Wayne Stoltz of Stoltz Sales and Service in Listowel is president of the Ontario Retail Farm Equipment Dealers' Association (ORFEDA) for 2002. Wayne and his younger brother Keith started Stoltz Sales and Service 25 years ago on July 1, 1978. At the time Listowel was an open point so the brothers began their business as a Case IH tractor and farm equipment sales and service outlet with four employees. Today the business has 18 employees at its Listowel location, just north of town on Hwy. 23. The company also has a store in Elmira, operated by brother Marlin and at Mildmay, operated by Glen Schierholtz who was their first employee, who is a co-owner of that location. The company also has a sales staff of 10 covering an area from Kitchener -Waterloo to Tobermory. Stoltz succeeded Jerry Martens of Avonbank Farm Equipment as ORFEDA president.0 Home creates interest in alternative power sources If you buy an old feed mill to convert it into a house, it stands to reason you're willing to look at alternatives and a Teeswater couple is looking not only at alternative living accommodations but ways of lighting them as well. Bert and Stella Metcalfe purchased the old feed mill in Teeswater four years ago and decided they wanted to use the power of the Teeswater River nearby to generate power. Now their home is also the outlet for their business of selling wind and water turbines and solar panels, particularly to those who are beyond the power grid. The old mill was gutted and now the grain storage area has been turned into bedrooms and the bagging room into a kitchen.0