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The Rural Voice, 2003-08, Page 31Eweville Station, the name given to the Lewis feedlot operation, is run by (left to right) Chris Meulensteen, Jay Lewis and Alan CapeII. enough is enough and I get rid of all the sheep, in two or three days the barn could be made into a cattle barn or a driving shed." The Iambs start in a pen at one end of the barn and are on medicated feed and water for the first seven to 10 days then work their way, pen by pen to the last two pens. One of those pens normally holds the heavy Ontario Iambs, while the other would, in normal times before the closing of the U.S. border, hold 200-300 heavy American lambs awaiting shipment. They aim to shear lambs at the 90- 105 pound range before they go to market. There are a number of advantages. The Iambs feed more efficiently when they're cooler and more comfortable, he says. For the U.S. market there was also a premium for shorn lambs that were clean and tidy so there were no manure tags to worry about on the kill floor. As well a large lamb can have seven or eight pounds of wool and buyers don't want to pay meat prices for wool. The extra advantage is that more shorn Iambs can be loaded in each truckload, both because they're smaller and because they're cooler. And finally, the wool is worth a bit of money, but not much, he says. "Last year was the first batch of wool we sold where we actually made money." Shipping is aided by one of only two automatic Iamb sorters in Ontario and the first one to come into North America. Manufactured in New Zealand but bought from Alberta, it allows two or three people to sort 400-500 Iambs an hour. The Iambs come through a race to a weigh scale then gates send them in one of three directions depending on the weight. The farm runs on what he calls "just -in -time delivery" shipping 70- 80 Iambs at a time to Newmarket Meat Packers which takes most of the Ontario production. As he tours the farm he explains that a phone call may come later in the day to have a anywhere from 40 to 100 Iambs delivered the next morning. "I rely on my cellphone, that's my lifeline." "With what we do we pretty well have to deal directly with the packer," he says. "You can go to a stockyard — we sent some to Kitchener today — but you have to send the right Iamb there. As soon as you go over 100 pounds the packers don't want them — they're too big. Like beef farmers, Lewis has been hurt by the closure of the U.S. border because he depended on one U.S. packer for a major part of his market. "We put a load in the day the border closed in the morning. We're always across at 7:00 a.m. We were lucky we got it through." "It's not a good time for us right now with the border being closed," he says, "but I'm no different than any other farmer that exports cattle or whatever." "The American market is the market that kept us going here for quite a while. The Ontario market is an excellent, growing market but Sheep & Lamb Buyer & Feeder Eweville Station Division of Lewis Farm Holstein 519-334-3794 OG -gist Wheat, Wheat, Barley, Corn & Beans Elevator 519-366-2749 519-366-2666 • syngenta _'1" Seed Dealer Les Young Jr. David Young 519-366-2749 519-366-2709 CANADIAN CO-OPERATIVE WOOL GROWERS LIMITED Now Available WOOL ADVANCE PAYMENTS Skirted Fleeces Well -Packed Sacks For more information contact: WINGHAM WOOL DEPOT John Farrell R.R. 2, Wingham, Ontario Phone/Fax 519-357-1058 AUGUST 2003 27