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The Rural Voice, 1993-04, Page 32and harvested in the fall. The root is held in a refrigerated storage facility until the grower is ready to force it. It's then planted in a sand bed or other light -textured soil. The lights are kept off and the plant is gown in the dark so it will produce a crown of new, white, blanched growth from the top of the root. The resulting vegetable is very delicate and very nutritious. "You can prepare it in many different ways. It tastes very much like dandelion or asparagus. Apparently there are places in Holland that produce it hydroponically." He has been introducing his students to spelt, a wheat -like cereal. For students from the corn and soybean predominant areas of Kent and Essex, he has been encouraging them to look at forage crops as an alternative. "There are almost one and a half generations of farmers who have never grown alfalfa." Hay for export can be a profitable cash crop, he tells his students. Alternatives in livestock, from emu and ostrich to wild boar and onghom cattle are explored. So are sidelines to increase farm incomes, Samples of evening primrose oil and seed, and spelt let students touch and feel these unusual crops, perhaps the first time they've even heard of them. from bed and breakfast to other ways of dealing with urban consumers. Scheifele is excited about the possibilities for "community supported agriculture", sometimes called community share farming. In it, a farm gets together with a group of consumers and an organization is set up where the consumers pay, in advance, a fee for food that the H&S BI-FOLDWHEEL RAKE - H & S Bi -Fold Wheel Rakes make easier work of handling your hay crop! - H & S Bi -Fold Wheel Rakes are available in 8 wheel, 12 wheel & 16 wheel V -Rake models. - H & S Bi -Fold Wheel Rakes are available in manual & hydraulic !old. - Three models offer you varied raking widths of up to 31' 6" (depending on model). - Gauge wheels provide for cleaner and gentler raking. • 1.,T equia,...,I dl.l,lbrls'. ROBERT H. LANING & SONS LTD. ONTARIO OUEBEC MARITIMES For more information, see your local dealer or contact Robert H. Laning & Sons Ltd. Waterford, Ontario NOE 1 YO Phone: 1-519-443-8601 28 THE RURAL VOICE farmer will grow. It's a system that is well developed in Europe and Japan and of interest to health -conscious consumers who want more input into how their food is grown. The farmer must be willing to share decisions about the running of his farm but if he doesn't mind that, there is a great potential. Scheifele points out the possibilities of community supported agriculture for young farmers with no money to start out. They can rent land on the edge of a city that is awaiting development, form their community group and have the money up front to support the planting and growing of their crops. A few years of doing this could help give the farmer the nest egg he needs to set up his own operation. While generally the concept has been used for vegetables to this date, there is no reason why it can't be turned to livestock farming, where consumers would contract for a side of beef or a pig or some chickens. Consumers could also support a specific tree in an orchard. "It's a beautiful concept," Scheifele says because it gets the consumer directly involved in food production. In some cases people can even put their labour into growing the food. Scheifele's research goes on, discovering new opportunities and challenging his students to broaden their horizons from just corn and soybeans to other possibilities. His job, he says, is to plant ideas. Whether the ideas grow is up to the students.0