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The Rural Voice, 2002-09, Page 46Four Wheel Drive Compact Tractor BOYD FARM SUPPLY RR 6 Owen Sound 519-376-5880 PUT SOME MUSCLE INTO1YOUR LIFT HydauIic�Cylinders Manul urctl, Reworked, Repaired 42 THE RURAL VOICE part because of their diversity. While Canadian farms have been moving increasingly toward specialization, the successful farmers he knows in New Zealand run from three to five enterprises: say sheep and wool and beef and maybe apples and timber. "They have enough enterprises going on that one or two can be down and they survive by having one or two up." That is partly the model of D. McQ. Shaver Beef Breeding Farms Ltd. itself. The farm sells breeding bulls, semen and embryos as well as crops and even has a woodlot managed to provide regular harvests of timber. Shaver worries about retaining small farms and he sees his franchise system as a way of helping some farmers develop additional income sources. A co- operator who sells 10 bulls a year at $2,500 each will have an additional half -million dollars in 20 years, he says. He'd be delighted "if 1 could have•20 guys in Canada all making a h\ ing from selling Shaver BeefBlend bulls and having less stress in their lives." The western Canadian drought is a really humbling experience right now, Shaver says, because the really big operators which can accumulate huge profits in good times, can also be swamped with debt in bad times like these (look at companies like Bell Canada and Enron to see evidence outside of agriculture, he says). "How long in unfavourable weather conditions can these really huge operations survive. I don't think very long." The problem is that both government and the big banks see bigger as better for farms, he says. They're sold on the idea of farmers contracting with large companies so it's hard to sell an alternative model of farming. But if government and the banks won't buy in, perhaps consumers need to be given the chance to show they want greater food security. He acknowledges it would be tough to mobilize public opinion, but he notes that public opinion in Europe changed the way farming is carried out. In Switzerland it's against the law to raise a chicken in a cage now.