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The Rural Voice, 2001-08, Page 31 1 R.V. Editor & Publisher: Keith Roulston editorial advisory committee: Bev Hill, farmer, Huron County Diane O'Shea, farmer, Middlesex Cty. George Penfold, associate professor, University of Guelph Gerald Poechman, farmer, Bruce Cty. contributing writers: Bonnie Gropp, Ralph Pearce, Bob Reid, Mervyn Erb, Sandra Orr, Janice Becker, Andrew Grindlay, Mark Nonkes, Larry Drew marketing & advertising sales manager: Gerry Fortune advertising representative: Merle Gunby production co-ordinator: Joan Caldwell advertising & editorial production: Dianne Josling printed & mailed by: Signal -Star Publishing, Goderich, Ontario subscriptions: $17.12 (12 issues) (includes 7% GST) Back copies $2.75 each For U.S. rates, add $5 per year Changes of address, orders for subscrip- tions and undeliverable copies (return postage guaranteed) are to be sent to The Rural Voice at the address listed below. Published monthly by: The Rural Voice, Box 429, Blyth, Ontario. NOM lHO Telephone: 519-523-4311 (fax 523-9140). e-mail: norhuron@scsinternet.com Canadian Publication Mail Agreement Number 1375016 held by North Huron Publishing Co. Inc. at Blyth, Ontario. All manuscripts submitted for consideration should be accompanied by a stamped, self- addressed envelope. The publisher cannot accept responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts or photographs, although both are welcome. The opinions expressed here- in are not necessarily those of the publisher. Editorial content may be reproduced only by permission of the publisher. The Rural Voice makes every effort to see that advertising copy is correct. However, should an error occur, please notify The Rural Voice office within 30 days of invoicing in order to obtain a billing adjustment. Behind the Scenes Learning A hidden theme for this issue might be `learning lessons". Farmer members of the Mornington Heritage Cheese and Dairy Co-operative Inc., for instance, in the past year have been learning what it takes to turn raw milk into a finished food ready for the retail shelf. Some of the members who milked cows before turning to goat milk production, admit it's been a revelation learning what goes on after the milk truck goes out the lane. While many farmers look at the retail price for a product that started out on their farm and think they should be receiving a bigger chunk of the consumer dollar, these farmers now know that producing milk is just the first step in a long road to the market. Nancy Lidster is a former pork producer who has spent a lot of time trying to think like a pig. Alarmed by the frustration created among the staff whenever it was time to move pigs on the Saskatchewan farm she ran with her husband, she set out to learn more about what pigs like and dislike. Not only did the new approach sooth staffing problems, but lessons it created a new career. Lidster and her husband now train other pork farmers. She spoke, along with Australian animal welfare researcher Paul Hemsworth, at the "Stockmanship, Swine Behaviour and New Sow Housing Designs" conference in Shakespeare in July. Also from the same meeting, a number of leading pork producers are proving there may not be as much to fear as some think if animal welfare concerns lead to the elimination of gestation stalls in Canada as has happened in Europe. Loose sow housing has worked for producers like Chris Cockle of Heronbrook Farm in Embro and Dave Linton of Lindell Farms, Brussels and they relayed their stories to those present. Fifty years is a long time in any business. To survive that long, a business has to adapt to a lot of change. The trucking business is no different and as Luckhart Transport Ltd. of Shakespeare celebrates its 50th anniversary, staff writer Mark Nonkes discussed how the business of livestock trucking has changed in a half-century.0 Update Fascination with Donnellys continues Back in our June issue, Mark Nonkes wrote of the continuing fascination with Lucan's Donnelly clan and their death at the hands of a vigilante mob one cold night in 1880. Obviously the fascination continues because theatre director Paul Thompson's most recent examination of the tragedy, The Outdoor Donnellys, sold out every single seat in June before it opened at the Blyth Festival. Thompson's third play on the subject, this was a huge event requiring a cast of some 60 amateur actors as well as a core of nine professionals. The event, and it's more than a theatre presentation, began each evening at 6:00 p.m. with audience members being taken by "stage coach" (actually tractors and wagons), to locations throughout the town where vignettes were acted out by the professionals or community volunteers. Audience members could choose to attend three of nine different scenes: everything from a wedding feast to the trial of one of the Donnellys. The whole audience came together for the outdoor show at the fairgrounds at dusk where the professional cast performed a rowdy, yet poetic, retelling of the legend, complete with live horses tearing past the audience pulling a stage coach. Weather dampened the success somewhat, with one performance being cancelled altogether and three being moved inside a nearby shed. Still reviews were strong with Bob Reid of the Kitchener -Waterloo Record saying: "The Blyth Festival should be proud of this magnificent achievement, which in so many ways is the glorious creative culmination of the work of one of the most innovative artists in Canadian theatre — Paul Thompson."0