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The Rural Voice, 1999-04, Page 36Dairying under the big top Atwood couple takes the plunge with a free -stall barn under a fabric shelter Story and photos by Keith Roulston When the cows came home to Ken Dolson and Karen Galbraith's new fabric - Lo erect barn they quickly voted their approval. The cows, which had been at another farm miles away from the Dolsons' Atwood -area Legacy Holsteins farm, were trucked in January 29 and settled in immed- iately. They quickly either began eating or went to sleep, Karen says. By mid-March the Dolsons too were settling in, and liking their new surroundings. While there has been talk about dairy operations under shelters, the Dolsons are the first in western Ontario to actually set up their entire operation in a fabric -covered shelter. Two Cover -All shelters are attached end to end. The larger 62 -by -160 - foot structure (that's the outside dimensions) houses the free stall area while a smaller 40 -by -60 -foot houses the milking parlour, bulk tank, and box stalls for a maternity area. Other than the roof over head, the barn is very much a standard modern dairy barn with a large drive-through feed alley, two rows of stalls and a central alley with manure scraper. There are thermostatically -controlled full -wall curtains on the sides. Some days in February those curtains were wide open, Steve says. The structure has created a lot of Inside and out of a Cover -All barn, two different shelters were combined to provide space for freestall barn and milking parlour. 32 THE RURAL VOICE