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The Rural Voice, 1990-11, Page 14Dry Up With 0% Financing* For that perfect heat control and fast gentle drying action, choose an Inglis or Kitchen Aid propane clothes dryer. Features 3 temperature options, and 2 time cycles: normal and permanent press. And with Superior Propane's financing you pay absolutely no interest for one year. Simply make 12 equal payments from the date of purchase. Come today to your local Superior Propane Branch and ask for all the details. Offer expires November 30, 1990. Superior tr.p.ne rK. Walkerton Hwy. 9 W. 519-881-1270 Owen Sound Hwy. 70 519-376-6735 Stratford Goderich 519-271-0810 519-524-2661 1-800-265-4915 AO models may not be available at all Branches. While supplies last. Models shown may contain options that are available at extra cost. 10 THE RURAL VOICE QUEBEC'S DOMINANT DAIRY INDUSTRY Robert Mercer is editor of the Broadwater Market Letter, a weekly commodity and policy advisory letter from Markham, Ontario, L3P 3A9. I had the opportunity this past month to take a fairly extensive crop tour in the province of Quebec. Because of the geography of the province most of my time was spent in the eastern townships and down as far south as the U.S. border. I also spent two days in old Quebec City and toured the National Assembly building, a very impressive architectural structure. What really struck home when travelling through rural Quebec was the absolute need for a dairy industry to provide some areas with employment opportunities where there are none. Without a milk quota, and the stability it gives the dairy industry, there are areas of rural Quebec that could slide easily into oblivion. To some extent this could also be said for broilers where other alternatives are uneconomical. These farms, supported by supply management, are the pearls of the countryside. The countryside itself is often scenic and beautiful and full of heritage, but not full of prosperity or richness from the land. Further south and to the east the story is different. There is excellent soil, some drainage problems, but crops are as good as could be grown anywhere else in Canada. There are grapes and vineyards, apples by the bushel, and a corn crop that looks as good as often as it looks poor. Much of the poor crop is destined for the silo. There are good crops of hay, with some third cuts still in the fields, and even some small grains yet to be harvested. If anything, the provincial estimated yield for corn could be a little on the high side from what I saw on this short trip. The August Statistics Canada provincial yield was given as 100.2 bu/ac. This is possibly 4-5 bu/ac. too high. Even with this suggested revision, feed grain and roughage supplies look to be ample for the start of this new crop year, as long as the weather holds for a reasonable harvest period. For anyone who has not visited the eastern townships and the country to the north, the experience is very educational. It is quite obvious why Quebec farmers and politicians are so strong in their defence of supply management. The dairy industry in Quebec is as important to it as wheat is to Saskatchewan. It is this dilemma that faces the Canadian negotiating team in Geneva when trying to explain Canada's position in the agricultural trade talks. We want open markets for grain and beef industries (western Canada), and controlled markets for dairy and feather industries (eastern Canada). That is, of course, the realities of soil and climate as well as politics. To compare wheat farming in the prairies to broiler raising in Quebec in a single trade agreement is like saying manufacturing computer chips is the same as manufacturing steel. They are two completely different industries. Quebec, however, does have one major advantage over Saskatchewan. It has a large population base and demand for agricultural products within the province. This gives it the ability to diversify. That isn't possible in Saskatchewan. During the crop tour, that diversity was evident from the grapes and apples, to vegetable growing, greenhouse, and specialty crop production. The fall display of flowers was magnificent as rural homes took pride in their front gardens — in villages, towns and in the country. Some people may still think of Quebec as a poor cousin, but it didn't look that way to me.0