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The Rural Voice, 1998-03, Page 54News alliances, and to meet in round table groups to see if there were needs that could be met by working together. The panel included Judie Glen of Glen Farms, a specialty food processing company near Ethel; Shirley Hazlitt, who is working with the Maple Seal of Quality program with the Ontario Maple Syrup Producers and Murray Switzer of the Kirkton-Woodham Farmers Buying Group. Moderator was Reg Cressman, general manager of Bingeman Park in Kitchener and a member of the Canadian Business Network Coalition. Glen said her experience with alliances ranges from simple one-to- one co-operation with other small businesses to their mutual advantage, to working with organizations like the Blyth Festival and Maitland Valley Conservation Authority on fundraising and promotion projects. She stressed it was important to enter arrangements not just thinking about what you could get out of them. Hazlitt emphasized it was important to have goals clearly stated when getting into an alliance such as the one the maple syrup producers were involved in. And, she said, "in an alliance everyone has to win." Switzer said his group began in 1916 at the time many other farmers' buying groups were organized, but it is one of the few to survive (many became full co-operatives). Last year it did $3 million in business with 290 farmers as members, buying farm inputs such as fertilizer from 18 different suppliers. It has no buildings and only one employee. If there are profits at the end of the year members get dividends. Discussion groups were held on such topics as expanding markets and distribution. The organizers of the meeting, Huron Business Development Corporation and Women and Rural Economic Development (WRED), hope that the food producers and users in Huron will build alliances to assist them in increasing the value of food production in the county. WRED will provide facilitators to try to help the alliance grow. Anyone interest can contact WRED at 273- 5017.0 50 THE RURAL VOICE Advice Conserving forage in a shortage By Douglas Dickie Livestock Advisor, Markdale OMAFRA In dealing with a shortage of forage, the place to start is to take an inventory of both feed and livestock. This is simply estimating the total amount of feed on hand, whether it is hay, silage, grains, or alternate feeds. If you don't have it, you can't feed it! For this inventory estimate the total amount of dry feed available. The next task is to try to figure out how much longer winter is going to last. On Groundhog Day, "Wiarton Willie" suggested that just six weeks of winter remain. Last year Willie's prediction was just half right for the cow herd; winter lasted another 12 rather than six weeks after February 2, 1997. In other words, winter feed was needed until the early weeks of May. Believe it or not we are at the middle of the winter feeding needs rather than getting close to the end. If you have already fed more than half of your winter's feed, then some budgeting of feed may be necessary. How do we do this? Can feed be budgeted without reducing the productivity of the herd? The answer is yes! First the real feed needs of the herd need to be assessed. Dry cows late in calf need about two per cent of body weight as dry feed. Cows with calves at foot need about 2.4 per cent of body weight as dry feed. Thin cows require much more feed than cows in good condition, primarily because they lack insulation from the cold. Clean well bedded cows or cows kept outdoors require less feed than cows that are not kept dry. Methods of limit feeding forages: One method is to provide enough hay to last for three feeding days. By using this method, all cows get an opportunity to eat over an extended time. This method works because the period is so long. The more aggressive cows stop guarding the hay supply and the less aggressive cows get an ample opportunity to eat. Chopping hay increases its digestibility by over 30 per cent. This is particularly true with young cattle, and when using lower quality forages. At the present prices being asked for hay, grains can be very affordable sources of feed for beef cows if short on forage. Alternate feeds are many. Some are affordable, some are not. This winter some producers have grazed stockpiled pastures into December and grazed corn stover to the present time. Some alternate feeds used in cow herds this year have included carrots, onions, soybean straw, canola straw, oat hulls, soybean hulls, screening pellets, shorts, wet brewers grain, barley bran, and flax. All of the above alternates are specialty feeds and should be used with some caution. It is good advice to consult with someone familiar with their use before adding them to a cow ration.0 Enterprise analysis pays off It's now the time of year when many farmers are getting their books in order in preparation for income tax filing. This year, why not consider using this information for something more than just tax purposes. To evaluate financial and production strengths of your operation, why not plug this information into the Ontario Farm Management Analysis Project (OFMAP)? The project provides you with both an income statement and a balance sheet for your business. It can provide financial data for a number of different enterprises in Ontario. Using your documents, an analysis is done to show the performance of your business. Profit is calculated as a return on capital and labour, and cost efficiency of the business can be determined for each enterprise. It is possible to look at individual overhead and variable costs, and by comparing these to the provincial averages for a similar type farm, identify both strengths and weaknesses within your farming business. For example, you could compare your feed costs per