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The Rural Voice, 2001-10, Page 14FALL CATTLE SALES AT KEADY LIVESTOCK Tuesdays to Dec. 18 @ 10:00 a.m. 1000. 1200 local calves and stocker cattle Friday Oct. 5 & 12 0 10:00 a.m. 1000. 1500 yearling steers & heifers each day, selling ONS Friday, Oct. 19 0 10:00 a.m. 1200-1500 vaccinated presorted Charolais calves ONS Friday, Oct. 26 0 10:00 a.m. 1200 - 1500 vaccinated presorted calves featuring Limousin, Blonde, Hereford and Angus including Bluewater Angus selling ONS Friday, Nov. 2 0 10:00 a.m. 1000 - 1200 vaccinated presorted Charolais and Simmental calves selling ONS Wednesday, Nov. 7 0 7:00 p.m. 250 Black heifers bred Blk. & Red Limo. due March/April 2002 Friday, Nov. 9 010:00 a.m. 1000 - 1500 Yearling Steers and Heifers selling ONS Friday, Nov. 16 0 10:00 a.m. 1000 vaccinated local calves, preweaned or right off cow, selling owner lots - NOT presort Friday, Nov. 23 0 7:00 p.m. Bred heifer and cow sale RR 4, Tara, ON N4111 2' O 519-934-2339 KELLY PORTABLE SEED CLEANING Available to Clean Fall Wheat Convenient and Economical Serving Mid -Western Ontario Ripley, Ontario NOG 2R0 395-5960 1-888-844-1333 10 THE RURAL VOICE Mabel' s Grill "Good to see they're holding the International Plowing Match in Ottawa," said Dave Winston a while back when all the news about the match was on the radio. "Maybe then the politicians will remember there are farmers in the country." "Heck, you'd have to have the plow- ing competit- ions on the lawn of Parlia- ment to get the attention of some of those politicians," said George McKenzie. "Maybe at least a few of them will go down and find out what all the fuss is about " said Dave. "Oh yeh and they'll find out all about miracle kitchen gadgets and pizza by the slice," said George. "You ever looked at how much farming there is at that show?" "I see there's a new poll out that says 78 per cent of people support farmers' need for financial help," said Cliff Murray. "Who'd they poll, farmers' wives?" wondered George. "I mean they may tell some pollster they think farmers should have more government support but if their taxes gu up they'll be saying something else at the polls." "What I'd really like," said Dave, "it to wake up some morning and finll out that from now on I was going to get a decent price for all my crops. No worry about subsidies. Think of what it could mean if farmers actually made money." "Maybe they could actually tip," said Molly Whiteside as the deliver- ed Dave's bacon and eggs. "They'd bury the country in corn and soybeans," said George. "Not with weather like this year's," offered Cliff. "Or last year's," said Dave. "What I mean is that if farmers could make money on every bushel they could grow they'd keep growing so much there'd be more than the The world's problems are solved daily 'round the table at Mabel's market would bear," said George. "And they'd bid up the price of land until they couldn't make a profit on what they did grow," sighed Cliff. "The guy who bought the farm beside me paid so much I thought he must have won the lottery." "Maybe he's got an extra special cash crop growing back by the bush," said Dave. "I saw the OPP helicopter flying by the other day." "Now those marijuana growers are the guys who know how to make money," said George. "You take your ordinary farmer and he rents land at $10O an acre to grow a crop that can make him, at best, $200 an acre. A marijuana farmer doesn't even rent the land, he just plants his crop on somebody else's property. And if the cops don't catch him, he makes a killing." "Yeh, he doesn't even have to buy crop insurance," saysCliff. "I'm surprised they're still growing pot outside anymore," said• Molly. "The stuff they grow hydroponically is much stronger." "And how would you know about that?" George asked. "The news. It was on the news," said Molly. "Though being around you guys all day might make me want to bliss -out at night." "Better watch out," said Dave. "I hear pot also makes you hungry." "How would you know about that?" George asked. "I read about it," Dave said, the corners of his mouth hardly turning up at all. "I was just worried that Molly might spoil that figure of hers." "Mabel," called out Molly, "there's sexual harassment going on out here." "Wait 'til I come so I can get some," Mabel called from the kitchen. "Look, I just didn't want you to blow up and be like that lady who's suing the airlines claiming she's being discriminated against because she's so big she won't fit into one seat and they want her to buy two" "The way things are going for the airlines these days, they might want to make everybody buy two seats," said George. "Of course they've got plenty of room to make the seats bigger, too," said Dave.O