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The Rural Voice, 1997-11, Page 20It's a multicultural experience when everyone gets together at the Canning farm in Bruce County. Currently living at the farm are (left to right) James Sinclair, Bernadette Arreola, P.W. Liyanage, Kim Canning, Nimalia Champika, Peter Canning and Jackie Canning, as well as two children away at school when the photo was taken. They come from different backgrounds but their time together on a Bruce County farm is a SHARED EXPERIENCE By Keith Roulston The sound of hammering and sawing comes from within the old driving shed. Inside a crew of workers, male and female, skins of different hues, is busy converting the building to a wool shed. This is truly a multicultural experience, Peter Canning chuckles later over coffee in the house. Of the group around the table, only Peter's wife Jackie is what you'd think of as stereotypically Canadian. Then there's Peter, who was born in Australia; James Sinclair, a native Ojibway from Selkirk, Manitoba; 16 THE RURAL VOICE Bernadette Arreola from Ottawa who was born in the Philippines. Then there are the two guests to Canada, Nimalia Champika and P.W. Liyanage. They're here to experience a cross-cultural exchange and they're certainly getting it. Arreola and Sinclair are the Canadian half of an agricultural exchange program sponsored by the Sri Lanka/Canada Development Fund under Canada World Youth. They're partnered, respectively, with Champika and Liyanage who are in Canada through the South Asia Partnership Canada. They'll spend 10 weeks in Canada, living on farms in Bruce and Wellington Counties, before returning to Sri Lanka where the Canadians will live in Sri Lankan homes and work alongside their Sri Lankan partners. In the Ontario part of the exchange, the eight Canadians and eight Sri Lankans are living on farms ranging from a cash crop farm near Elora to a dairy farm, a pig farm and an organic farming operation. The Cannings' is one of two sheep farms in the exchange and Sinclair says one of the reasons they picked this farm was because fall lambing is coming up and they felt it would be a new experience. In fact, for Liyanage and Champika sheep are a new experience. There aren't many sheep on the island of Sri Lanka and when they first saw sheep they wondered if they were wooly goats. Though the Cannings' 100 -acre farm is small by Canadian standards (and tiny by the standards of Peter's native Australia) it's huge by the standards of Sri Lanka where the average private land holding may be one-half acre to five acres (the large tea and coffee plantations may be 200-300 acres in size). Farmers there may keep a few cows, pigs and chickens, says Liyanage, thus it was an eye-opening experience when Sri Lankans saw the dairy operation of Ralph and Jane Dietrich nearby where 50 dairy cows are milked daily. Sri Lanka has a population of 18 million people on a land base slightly larger than Nova Scotia, so one of the surprises for the Sri Lankans is the space in Canada, the idea you can drive down a field and not see anyone. On the Canning farm they have had the opportunity to take part in Canadian farming practices like cleaning barns with a skid -steer loader and spreading manure. In Sri Lanka there isn't much use of such large equipment and most farm tasks are done by hand. They also get to see farming practices that are innovative even by Canadian standards. The Cannings, for instance, no -till winter rye into their fields and use it to extend the grazing season, getting up to two fall and three spring grazings off the land