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The Rural Voice, 1998-01, Page 31 R.V. Editor: Keith Roulston editorial advisory committee: Bev Hill, farmer, Huron County John Heard, soils and crop extension and research, northwestem Ontario Diane O'Shea, farmer, Middlesex Cty. George Penfold, associate professor, University of Guelph Gerald Poechman, farmer, Bruce Cty. contributing writers: Gisele Ireland, Cathy Laird, Wayne Kelly, Sarah Borowski, Mary Lou Weiser -Hamilton, Ralph Pearce, Susan Glover, Bob Reid, Mervyn Erb, Darene Yavorsky, Peter Baltensperger, Sandra Orr, Carl L. Bedal, Kevin Shillinglaw marketing & advertising sales manager: Gerry Fortune advertising representative: Merle Gunby production co-ordinator: Joan Caldwell advertising & editorial production: Dianne Josling Anne Harrison laserset: with the Macintosh LC printed & mailed by: Signal -Star Publishing, Goderich, Ontario subscriptions: $16.05 (12 issues) (includes 7% GST) Back copies $2.75 each For U.S. rates, add $5 per year Changes of address, orders for subscrip- tions and undeliverable copies (return postage guaranteed) are to be sent to The Rural Voice at the address listed below. — Canadian Magazine Publishers Association All manuscripts submitted for consideration should be accompanied by a stamped, self- addressed envelope. The publisher cannot accept responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts or photographs, although both are welcome. The opinions expressed here- in are not necessarily those of the publisher. Editorial content may be reproduced only by permission of the publisher. Published monthly by The Rural Voice, Box 429, Blyth, Ontario, NOM 1HO, 519-523-4311 (fax 523-9140). Publication mail registration No. 3560 held by North Huron Publishing Co. Inc. at Goderich, Ontario. The Rural Voice makes every effort to see that advertising copy is correct. However, should an error occur, please notify The Rural Voice office within 30 days of invoicing in order to obtain a billing adjustment. Behind the Scenes New ways, old ways There's a song that says "everything old is new again". That could be a theme in this month's issue. As Dr. Sid Pobihushchy, director and president of the Fredericton Direct -Charge Co-op and of Co-op Atlantic told the recent annual meeting of the National Farmers Union, farmers have a choice: either perpetuate the status -quo or play a vanguard in moving to a new paradigm. Farmers must take control of their economy and produce an alternative to the status quo, he said. An example could be the work done by the producers who formed the Farm Fresh Poultry Co-operative which opened a processing plant in Harriston recently. Not content to wave goodbye to their product when the truck pulled out the lane taking the chickens for processing, these 35 farmers have anted up $20,000 each to buy a plant to process their birds. They're part of a new breed of co-ops through which farmers commit themselves to the idea of further processing their farm products. We talked to some of the people involved. There was a time when most pigs were raised in straw -bedded pens. The heavy workload of cleaning pens, however, limited the number of pigs a farmer could keep. Liquid manure systems made clean-up easy and the number of hogs a farmer could look after swelled. But Jack and Marg Kroes decided they felt best raising their pigs on straw, and they've designed a new finisher barn that minimizes the work load. They're slowly filling up their 900 -head barn with the litters from their farrowing operation, pigs they think will be happier and more productive in their new barn. They aren't criticizing other farmers, they insist, just taking a different road that suits their independent nature. Our Profit$ section this month deals with farm and financial management. How does a young farmer find the money to get into the business? How do you plan for the day you want to leave farming? These arc two of the issues we deal with. Arthur Kirkby adds a humorous, yet helpful guide to how to select a lawyer. Bonnie Gropp has chosen recipes this month for sandwiches — with a difference. The recipes have an international flavour from Mexican fajitas to French country sandwiches to Bangkok pork wrap.0 Comment We went the extra mile(s) Not all our readers got their December issue of The Rural Voice on time because of the postal strike, but a large number did, thanks to hundreds of kilometers of driving by our dedicated staff. The 15,000 copies of the December issue of The Rural Voice were due to be mailed out the day the strike hit. Through efforts of staff at Signal -Star Publishing, which printed the magazine, we were able to dig out copies for many of the small post offices which remained open during the postal strike. Our staff tried to get your magazine to those post offices if possible (through confusion we didn't get some of the magazines we sought). We then sent our four staff members in different directions to try to hit as many post offices as possible. Our thanks to all the post office staff who welcomed the magazines with open arms. Many seemed excited to have some work to do during the strike. Thank. too to the rural route drivers who delivered whatever mail they could get. To any members of the postal union who read this, we can understand your frustration with a bureaucratic employer, with having wages frozen for years and the fear of downsizing, but the victims of your strike, such as most farm customers and our staff at The Rural Voice, also worry about their futures. They earn much less than you do and your strike made their futures less secure.0 —KR