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The Rural Voice, 1985-11, Page 18SHIFTING GEARS Staying on the farm — with a new focus Steve Hodges wants to stay in farm- ing. In an attempt to streamline his operation, he is shifting from a con- ventional operation to a more inten- sified farm management program with the help of an off -farm job. by M.L. Weiser -Hamilton 16 THE RUP \L MCE T Steve Hodges is a farmer with a simple, basic objective. He wants to make a living off his 100 -acre Egremont Township farm. Unfortunately, the economics of farming today are preventing him from doing that, and in an attempt to streamline his operation he is shifting his primary focus away from conven- tional farming methods to a more in- tensified farm management program. Hodges purchased his farm in 1983 and hoped to use the profits to build up his flock of sheep gradually. It hasn't worked that way, and despite cash cropping his totally workable farm and managing his 60 ewes, he has had to take an off -farm job as a self-employed masoner and plasterer to help pay his mortgage and bills. "From what I've got off the farm just since 1983, I don't see how some peo- ple can survive." People still give Hodges strange looks when he tells them that he raises sheep for a living. It's not the conven- tional beef or pig option that most farmers choose, but it is part of Hodges' plan to make his farm as viable an operation as possible. He believes that farmers should supply the demand for agricultural products, producing where there is a need and not glutting the market with already over -abundant produce. Not only did he realize that all but 30 per cent of Iamb is imported to Ontario, but he also saw that he could get established in the sheep business with a minimum of overhead. Hodges had also spent several years in the United Kingdom where the sheep population far outnumbers the human population. "I got to know the sheep business when I was in Wales. There's very little invested in them and you can carry ewes over the winter for very little. The lambs can be fattened very readily for the Easter market." Hodges' long-term goal is to build his flock to 350 ewes and maintain them on his 100 acres. He currently crops 40 acres in barley and on the remaining 60 acres bales hay and grazes his sheep. His grazing fields are split into two -acre lots to ensure maximum feeding from his land base and to minimize pasture waste. Each lot of land supports the 60 ewes and 35 lambs for about a week. "I took them to the middle of August on four acres. That's about eight weeks of pasturing," he says. The six years that Hodges spent in the United Kingdom gave him a new perspective on farming techniques.