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The Rural Voice, 2003-09, Page 38Bucking the trend Clinton -area farmer diversifies and makes a dairg bg-product, bull Jerseg calves, into a sought-after niche product Story and photo by Bonnie Gropp Gary Haak turns Jersey bull calves, once an unwanted by-product of the dairy industry into a valuable niche product. Gary Haak is one beef producer who has not been hurt by the recent BSE issue. Haak, who sells organic beef direct says, "I have a lot of customers who come in and comment on the beef industry, but I don't really feel part of it. I'm not selling a commodity, I'm selling what people are putting on their barbecue. "I'm trying to find a niche, to fit in and provide for my family. I'm glad at this point that I have taken this direction. If I hadn't I don't know ..." It was actually another crisis in the 34 THE RURAL VOICE agriculture industry that set Haak on the path to direct beef sales. When the crash hit the pork industry in 1998, he realized his vulnerability — and as a result completely changed the way he farms. Haak had worked on the family farm all of his life, helping out as a youngster and teen, then working in partnership with his father in 1994. When he and his wife Yolanda bought his parents out in 1997, they had a 115 -sow, farrow -to -finish operation. Though he did some custom work as well, the hogs were the primary source of income. "We had all our eggs in one basket," he says. "After the crash we felt very vulnerable." Rather than struggle along with the status quo, however, Haak began to consider making some changes. In the fall of 1998 he bought 90 ewes with the intention of getting hay and pasture into rotation. "That was the other thing. With the sows I was never comfortable about having no hay for the soil. Without that I felt my yields had peaked." Around the same time, Haak was developing an interest in organic farming. He began to investigate, mainly, he said, because he didn't think he could afford the sprays and fertilizers for the 1999 crop. The result was interesting. From the 350 acres he was then working, corn averaged just under 120 bushels an acre and the weeds were low. The wheat crop was 65 bushels per acre. The soybeans, he admits, did not fare as well. Yields were 32 bushels and "as far as weed control ... it was a nightmare combining." Haak also began to look at other livestock options. "Yolanda's parents were dairy farmers near Woodstock and I was considering whether there was any way I could get into dairy. I thought starting with a few Jerseys might be the way to do it." . As he had no quota and was not set up for milking, he decided to buy some retiring cows from a friend with the intention of building a herd. In 1999 he bought two, one of them expecting. With the arrival of the first calf, Haak bought a bull calf. When they were old enough to be weaned he bought two more, bringing the total to five. "I found Jerseys to be adaptable for fostering," he says. While that point has made owning Jerseys over other dairy cattle favourable, Haak initially chose them for other reasons, one of them being economics. "When I was buying the price at the time was $25 or $30. A Holstein was $120." The Jerseys' size was another bonus. "The reason a lot of people don't buy Jersey bulls is because they tend to be small. They don't fit into most feedlot situations."