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The Rural Voice, 1982-05, Page 10Making room for a farm office by Gisele Ireland BEFORE AFTER Office space in this home was just a 4 x 12 room, everything is within easy reach. Keeping comprehensive and accurate production records is as important to your business as your feed conversion in your livestock or the number of bushels you harvest per acre. The feed conversion and bushels per acre harvested cannot be calculated without good records. Perhaps there are records, but they're not easily accessible when you need them. One of the extension courses offered this winter in conjunction with OMAF and local colleges was titled Farm Finances. This course dealt with the importance of record keeping and bookkeeping practices as well as instruction in the various methods that can be used. They can be as simple as Targe envelopes, which contain the month's business and are stored, or as complicated as computer readouts which are taken from cancelled cheques. How PG. 8 THE RURAL VOICE/MAY 1982 detailed you want to get is up to you: some have double entry methods; some single entry and some are on accrual basis. Not every system is good for everyone. It is up to you to find a method that works for your operation. If it takes hours to find last year's chemical requirements, and if you can only guess at what seed purchases were made, you are a candidate for a better system. Some farmers have a "bill box" into which everything is thrown, and it's rifled through once in a while until the year's end. Some farmers write every- thing down in a little book they carry around in their back pocket, and if this happens to get lost or washed in the machine, you are without a lot of important farm data. Your attitude towards bookkeeping is a key factor in how successful your system will be. More and more women are taking over this job in the business and dedication is required. Trying to remem- ber what you wrote a cheque for six months ago could be a problem unless it is noted on the cheque or in the stub portion of the cheque book. Working with your farm records should be a pleasure and a challenge, not a despised chore. Do the book work in the morning if you must when your mind is fresh, not at the end of the day when all of farming's little hassles have given you mental fatigue. One major factor in the success of bookkeeping is where you do it. Having a pleasant, orderly place to work and store things makes the job so much easier. There need not be a lot of expense or room