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The Rural Voice, 2002-05, Page 24Safe & Professional Dismantling of Barns & Wooden Structures • Insured • NOSTALGIC SALVAGE INC. Danny Farrow 519-323-0175 565 Perth St. N., Mount Forest 1-888-643-8410 SMALL TOWN FEEL...BIG CITY DEALS! Well Come To Your Door To Prove It! Matching cap. at a work ready price 4.6 L, V8, auto, air, work ready priced at s„,„,,,t1 26,995■ Pius taxes) 1990.35O CUBE VAN 16' van body, only 132,000 kms., V8, auto 58,995. 1Ptustaxes) 1984 CHEV 1 TON Cab and Chasse with 10' box and racks. Good condition, STK« 2519A recently certified. Peninsula Ford Lincoln Ltd. Sunset Strip, P.O. Box 894 Owen Sound, Ontario N4K 6H6 Tel (519) 376-3252 Fax: (519) 376-8030 Email: by@pcninsulaford.com 20 THE RURAL VOICE was consistently turned down in his request until the mid -'90s when permission was given for an experimental pool• of six producers to have their milk picked up specially and taken to Pine River Cheese and Butter Co-operative, south of Kincardine, for processing into the first organic cheese. At long last the first cheese went on the market late in 1994. Andres praises the far-sightedness of staff at what is now Dairy Farmers of Ontario. "We have built that market with the generous support of the milk board, and especially the staff," he says. Staff continue to be very supportive, he says. "If it hadn't been for them we would have lost precious time." Jn fact DFO has formed a committee to identify ways to meet the growing demand for organic dairy products. Peter Gould, DFO marketing and production co- ordinator pointed out in a recent issue of Ontario Milk Producer.that the 5.4 million litres of organic milk produced in the year ending November 30, 2001 represents about one-fifth of one per cent of the total Ontario market for dairy products. By comparison, Gould pointed out, organic milk makes up three to four per cent of the total market in the U.S. and five to seven per cent in Europe. "We don't know what that translates to in Canada." Meeting the booming demand will be a problem because of the lengthy procedure of meeting organic standards. First of all, a farm must have used no chemical inputs for three years for the crops grown on it to be certified organic by one of the province's two certification bodie$, the Organic Crop Producers and Processors and the Organic Crop Improvement Association. Even then it takes several more months for the milking herd to qualify. When the initial group of six producers came together to market organic milk for cheese production there was a difficult transition period for some, Andres recalls. These producers had been certified organic for their crops but they were still buying inputs to feed to their cattle. To qualify for organic certification they had to stop using feeds from conventional sources and replace