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The Rural Voice, 1978-12, Page 13Two horses, one wagon Basic equipment when Bill Millen started By Alice Gibb When Bill Millen of Teeswater bought his farm in 1944, his basic farm equipment included two horses and a wagon. Any other equipment he needed, he shared on a co-operative basis with family members working neighbouring farms. Today, retired from active farming. 64 -year old Bill Millen can look back over some of the changes which have taken place in the agricultural commumity over the past 35 years. Certainly one of the major changes Mr. Millen has witnessed is the mechanization of agriculture. Mr. Millen said when he started farming on his own, there was " a lot more manual labor and I think farmers were just as happy." In the 1940's, combines were scarce, and threshing machines were the order of the day. Some people stooked their grain before threshing it, and othersstuffed their crops into the barns and then took them out again to have them threshed. Whatever method was used, threshing meant some good, hard, manual work. Farmers in a neighbourhood hired one custom thresher to come in and Mr. Millen recalls one machine might thresh 30 farms or more. Threshing Dinner While there was lots of work involved, threshing also produced one of the farming community's most sociable events -the threshing dinner. Mr. Millen said a farmer's wife could usually expect 17 or 18 hungry men in for a meal and usually had a dozen pies baked to prepare for the onslaught. If farmers were threshing oats, the dirt and dust often affected their appetite, so they "weren't quite so hungry, "Mr. Millen recalls. However, men whowere harvesting corn could be depended on to really work up an appetite. The feast was the best part of threshing, Mr. Millen recalls, "Except at the odd place where they were a little stingy." Today the threshing bee is almost a thing of the past and farmers rarely need more than two or three others to help them at harvest. Mr. Millen feels there used to be more of a neighbourly spirit in the farming community when he started up his dairy and hog operation in the 1940's. He said farmers helped each other morre then, changing work back and forth for harvesting, threshing and wood.'itting. Now Mr. Millen said, farmers tendtohelp each other only in cases of a disaster. The farm population also didn't travel as much in Mr. Millen's younger days since daily chores tied the family to the farm, particularly families who couldn't afford hired hands. The farmer said while his dairy herd tied him down seven days a week, and he just didn't take trips, he always found time to visit the neighbours - either in the afternoons or evenings. Now he feels the only time some farmers see their neighbours is when they run into them in town. Farm Forum Teeswater area farmers however, have preserved one tradition of the rural community which ensures they still socialize with their neighbours - the Farm Forum. Mr. Millen and his wife, who now live in town, still attend weekly meetings of the group during the winter months. When Farm Forum groups were originally organized, members listened to an educational radio broadcast over CBC and then discussed ideas or issues raised on the show. When this format ended, many farm forum groups tried to Feeding Chickens continue as social gatherings only, but gradually disbanded as other organizations assumed the original education goals of the forum. Today Mr. Millen knows of only two other active farm forum groups in the province - one in eastern Ontario and the other in Lambton County. The 30 member Teeswater group has survived by remaining true to the original intent -they still invite guest speakers to many of their meetings to discuss a variety of subjects. When Mr. Millen started farming in 1944, he had eight dairy cows and three brood sows. Looking back, Mr. Millen said, "1 started milking by hand, got lazy and got a machine and got lazier still and sold them all." Automatic When Mr. Millen first switched to an automatic milker, he said some people thought he was crazy. But Mr. Millen wasn't the only one in the neighbourhood who had made the switch. One neighbour had made the changeover before hydro was available and ran milkers with a gas engine. But even more unusual was the case of another neighbour who pumped the automatic milker system by hand, instead of "pumping the cow's tail," Mr. Millen said. After running a mixed dairy and hog operation for years, in 1972 Mr. Millen sold his dairy herd to a Brucefield farmer and went into beef cattle. Then four years later, when one of his five sons decided he wanted to take up farming, Mr„ Millen sold the farm to him. Today, although officially retired, Mr. Millen spends most days back on the farm - working either for his son or other area farmers. Specialize Today Mr. Millen said not only does it take a great deal more capital to start farming, but young farmers "can't seem to start small, they have to specialize." Also, when he started farming, Mr. Millen said land sold for about ten times less money, people didn't go into debt the same way to buy a farm, and most changeovers in farming operations occurred when a farmer went broke or else sold his farm. Although Mr. Millen did change to a beef operation four years before retiring, he said he still preferred dairy farming which was more of "steady, safer bet." In the time he ran a dairy operation, Mr. Millen sold his milk to the Teeswater Creamery and the Blyth Co-op. When the dairy chores became too much for him, Mr. Millen made the changeover to beef and while "beef was easier. it was a real gamble." Now Mr. Millen shakes his head in amazement when he sees younger farmers making changes in their THE RURAL VOICE/DECEMBER 1978 PG. 13