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The Rural Voice, 1982-01, Page 25Hands-on visit for Fiji farmer THE YOUNG FARMER Canada, at least southwestern Ontario, is a farmer's paradise -- but there's no place like home. That's the view of Sailasa Lutunaivalu, a thirty-year-old farmer from the Fiji Islands who spent last fall living and working on five farms in Middlesex, Huron and Lambton Counties. Lutunaivalu was his country's first agricultural participant in an exchange program administered at this end by Crossroads Canada and the Agri Skills Abroad Committee of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture. "I like Canada but I don't think 1 would like the climate," he said, just before heading for Vancouver and then home. "Actually, I really miss the climate of my own country." His own country is really eight hundred and forty islands, of which one hundred and six are inhabited. Located in the western waters of the South Pacific Ocean they total a little more than seven thousand square miles. That's about one-third the size of Nova Scotia or, if you want an Amercian comparison, about the same as the state of New Jersey. Population of Fiji, which gained its independence from Britain in 1970, is about seven hundred thousand. The island dominion draws most of i*s industrial strength from its shipyards and tourism, and the production of cement and molasses. Still, forty-four per cent of its labour force works in agriculture (in Canada it's five per cent), and the chief crops are sugar, ginger and coconut products. More than half of Fiji's land mass is on the island of Viti Levu, and it's divided among tropical forests, mountains and large fertile areas. It is on this island, near the village of Nadrau, where Lutunaivalu lives on the family farm with his five brothers (three sisters are married). It's a fifty -acre vegetable operation ("We're looking forward to getting another fifty acres," he says), out of which come cabbages, carrots, lettuce and long beans. The produce is sold fresh at the market in Lautoka, Fiji's second largest city (seventy -thousand people), about seventy miles from where it's grown. Lutunaivalu spent three years getting a general college education in Fiji and another year specializing in agriculture. Then he applied for the exchange program. "I'd heard about Canada in history and geography. I knew it was far away," he says, "But I didn't know anything about farming in Canada." He arrived in Montreal, August 23, to spend a week at a Crossroads -sponsored north -south dialogue youth conference. Then he headed for a month-long stay at the farm of Don Langford, R.R. 2, Kerwood. Then it was a ten-day stint with the Ron Whites at R.R. 4, Denfield. Then off to Lambton County and ten days with the Laverne Wrays at R.R. 1, Corunna and a week with Tony Hogervorst at R.R. 8, Watford. His month in Huron County was at the John Van Beers farm, R.R. 1, Blyth, just before he spent three days at the OFA convention in Toronto. In general it was a hands-on visit and Lutunaivalu logged plenty of time ploughing, bailing and unloading corn. He was fascinated by the machinery. "A farmer having six, seven or eight tractors is different from us," he says. "Canada is such a huge country and farming here is so commercialized." Many of the Canadian farms Lutunaivalu saw would be plantation size in Fiji. He was taken by the attention they demanded. "A farmer here works longer hours and harder than in Fiji," he noted, "ploughing and combining sometimes all night and all day." Farmers in Fiji "have the heart to plant but there is a lack of knowledge," says Lutunaivalu. "There is a lack of equipment and technology; they live so far away from the cities. And there's a development problem in Fiji because there are no processing plants." Crop rotation and mechanization were high on the list of intrigue for Lutunaivalu, but so was the raising of cattle indoors, in a barn. He says that's virtually unheard of where he lives and he's anxious to explore the possibilities. It just might help a land -short nation. But not all of the memories Lutunaivalu took home were sown on the farm. He visited the Metro Toronto Zoo, the CN Tower and the Pinery, where he made a mad dash in and out of salt -free but chilly Lake Huron. Because of a mix-up in plans he also got an extended trip to Western Fair. It lasted sixteen hours. He tried bingo for the first time, watched the London Knights play hockey on ice instead of on a grassed field, and soaked up as many television westerns as he could (no TV in his part of Fiji). And, as happens to all visitors to Canada if they stay long enough, he was introduced to real live snow. "The cold air bothered my nose," he said with a grin. "I liked to see the snow but not feel it." We're not so different after all. We are now dealers for Houle Equipment of Drummondville, Quebec Makers of HOULE LIQUID MANURE AGI -PUMP CHOPPER AGITATOR PUMP with 24" impeller for agitation it will move 18,000 gal. of water per minute plus the regular agitation outlet. CALL US TODAY FOR A PRICE ON ALL YOUR MANURE HANDLING, FEEDING & VENTILATION REQUIREMENTS Iow 7a'im 54tem4 zrs at Amberley IR.R.M1, Kincardine] Phone 395-5286 PUREBRED LANDRACE, YORK AND CROSSBRED BOARS R.O.P. tested and health approved Also HYBRID GILTS, YORK, CROSS LANDRACE - OPEN OR BRED Phone BRANDY POINT FARMS Willy and Kurt Keller RR#1, Mitchell 519-348-9753 or 348-8043 THE RURAL VOICE/JANUARY 1982 PG. 23