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The Rural Voice, 1998-07, Page 32A NEW CONCEPT ' y FOR HANDLING BALES • two 5 1/2" augers provide positive gentle lift • eliminates troublesome chains • space saving vertical positioning • reverse for loading out of mow • low maintenance — durable Delron bearings • all drive and controls conveniently at ground level AUG -A -BALE also: Now systems—installation available WEBER LANE MFG. (1990) CO. R.R. 4, Listowel, Ontario N4W 3G9 519-291.5035 Specialists: • ALL FARM BUILDINGS • GALVANIZED STEEL • COLOURED STEEL • WOOD SIDES • FENCES • AIRLESS SPRAY PAINTING • SANDBLASTING • BOOM TRUCK We Power Wosh Everything Before We Point It! 519-848-3184 1-800-837-0246 R.R.#1 ARTHUR, ONTARIO NOG 1A0 op ri 5 55 55 GREY COUNTY R. FARMER J 50TH ANNIVERSARY July 25 & 26, 1998 Centre Grey Recreation Complex, Markdale Saturday • Square Dancing • Livestock Judging • Ball Tournament Saturday Evening -- 5:00 p.m. to 1:00 a.m. Bar -B -Q, Talent Showcase, Dance to Flashback Sunday Pancake Breakfast and Church Service euetcfane W etcam.e For Registration, Tickets and further information Ellen Batchelor 923-5193 Percy Moyer 665-7619 Kim Mullin 922-2084 Mary Milne 599-2066 Wendy Weir 923-2536 Mary Lou Weiser -Hamilton 323-1777 5 1:1,P LID 28 THE RURAL VOICE when the animals used to be allowed into a portion of the hardwood bush, they would pig out on wild leeks, he says. "I guess that was a way of them getting a natural wormer." They also learned from native people from Western Canada, that the buffalo liked to eat the bark of willows. At times they've used that remedy on their own farm, cutting river willows from their low land and taking it to the buffalo. Aaron is now trying before and after treatment testing of feces samples to get more scientific evidence of just how effective his remedies are. ntei"est in the bison industry is growing and Arlene, in her position with the Bison Association, fields many calls looking for information. Some, she says, come from non -farmers and show enough naivete to make her shudder. She chuckles about one call from someone who had just bought at hilly piece of land and wondered if buffalo, being native to the flat prairie, could manage the hills. "You try to give people as much solid information as you can," Aaron says. "I won't say you discourage some people from having them, but you try to make them aware of the consequences. They are wild animals." "Which is one of the attributes we love about them," Arlene adds. "They're independent. They take a low protein feed and put it into a high protein meat. They've never been pampered. They look after themselves. But to that you have to take the other aspect of it, that they don't want you to interfere." Interest in buffalo is coming from people with a wide range of backgrounds. Some dairy farmers, perhaps nervous about the future after supply management, are inquiring about buffalo. Speaking from experience, Aaron says beef farmers have to unlearn a lot of their experience with beef to be good buffalo ranchers because the animals are very different. "My boys are always saying 'Dad, these are buffalo, you can't cowboy them in'." Some of the most successful buffalo ranchers aren't even farmers, he says. Farmers have the advantage of having the land but preparing yourself for the fact that these are