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The Rural Voice, 1981-02, Page 10Gail and Alex Glanville review the diary they've kept on crop planting and harvest dates and weather conditions so they can compare fanning in Saskatchewan and Ontario. [Photo by Gibb] Saskatchewan, a farmer's province BY ALICE GIBB Even in the Dirty Thirties, when drought and dust drove many Saskatche- wan farmers off their land, they still harvested crops around Melfort. This summer, when drought again plagued the province, the old adage, "it always rains around Melfort" proved true - a source of great relief to Alex and Gail Glanville. A year ago. the Glanvilles sold their cash crop farm outside Walton, in McKillop Township, Huron County, and decided to tackle a new challenge -a 640 acre farm outside Melfort, a city of 6,200 residents in central Saskatchewan, south of Prince Albert. Alex Glanville said he'd always wanted to do something different, so the couple decided to make the move while their three children were still young. Originally they considered settling in the Peace River country, then learned about the Melfort area farm from a neighbour who was often in the west. The farm offered rich, black topsoil, no stones and fewer PG. 8 THE RURAL VOICEIFEBRUARY 1981 weeds than found on many Saskatchewan farms. It was also located in an area where the locals assured them the rains always fell at the right time. After surviving a dry spring, and planting and harvesting his first crops, Alex Glanville has no regrets" about the family's decision to branch out. The Glanvilles found their neighbours live up to the celebrated Western friendliness and are more than willing to offer good advice on cropping practices, they like the province's school system, and per- haps most of all, the fact, in Alex's words, that "Saskatchewan is far more a farmer's province than Ontario." When the Glanvilles farmed outside Walton, their main crops were corn, beans and some rapeseed. In Saskatche- wan, although researchers are working on developing varieties which can be grown for sileage, corn is still very much an exception rather than the rule. This summer, Alex Glanville planted 160 acres of rape, barley, rye, flax and spring wheat. He finished spring seeding by May 7, and harvest by October 7. This year, some of the Glanville's neighbours, who anticipated a dry spring and summer, started sowing in April. But they weren't overly concerned about the drought conditions which plagued the south - as Gail Glanville said, "a lot of them have so much faith we'll get rain in Melfort, they never worried." The Glanvilles weren't quite as opti- mistic. Their farm recieved one quarter - inch of rain on May 23rd and not another drop until a month later, fortunately at a time when the barley most needed the moisture. The heavy winter snowfall in Melfort area does provide a residue of moisture which stays in the land until the crops get a start. Windstorms are also far less a problem here, and Alex Glanville said farmers in the area seldom get hailed out -. which means crop insurance rates are lower than in other parts of the province. The Glanville's farm, divided into three