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The Rural Voice, 1991-02, Page 26Alta TOURS MRO TRAM LID WORLD WIDE ESCORTED TOURS Uc. 1594982 Yon: WA SITED... 577/,4RD TEXAS • CALIFORNIA • ALASKA 18 DAY TEXAS RIVIERA & MEXICO Departs: March 23 Price: $1,500 per person (twin) Houston, Galveston, Corpus Christie, Brownsville, San Antonio & Dallas. 10 DAY LAS VEGAS & CALIFORNIA COASTLINE Departs: April 16 Price: $1,399 per person (twin) Fly to Vegas, Coach to Los Angeles & San Francisco &-Fly Home! See the Best of the West. 27 DAY ALASKA & YUKON Departs: June 11 Price: $3,199 per person (twin) Whitehorse, Anchorage, Fairbanks & Dawson City, Cruise the Inside Passage. 18 day tours available also. June 8, 15 & July 6 Senior Price: $2,799 per person (twin) OWEN SOUND MITCHELL LISTOWEL 519-371-3281 519-348-8492 519-291-4100 MOUNT FOREST 1-800-265-2131 _ 519-323-1545 A Now's the time for a ... COMPLETE PHYSICAL Come visit the motor doctor, and he's sure to have a cure for BARN FANS \I FURNACE MOTORS Electric Motor Repair ❑ repairs and rewinding to all makes ❑ motors, welders, transformers ❑ standby generators and alternators NOW IN STOCK Winpower Standby Generators New and reconditioned and up to 100 H.P. MOTORS 519-524-2869 In Emergency call: 524-2908 or 393-5955 LEESON ELECTRIC MOTORS PRIESTAP ELECTRIC 1990 Ltd. Ron McCann, Manager 224 Suncoast Dr., Goderich (next door to Fisher Glass) 22 THE RURAL VOICE Zurich. Dr. Earl has a special interest in small ruminant medicine. "Not exciting" is Earl's description of the procedure. The stag is sedated. A local block makes the operation even more humane. The base of the horn is tied off to restrict the blood supply, and the antlers are carefully sawn off above the pedicle, to ensure regrowth the next year. Application of a clotting agent and an arousal injection complete the process. Velvet must be handled properly. The antlers are held with the cut edges up for a few minutes to prevent blood loss, then wrapped and frozen until sold. The velvet was removed in the morning, and Steve's stag was back eating by evening. The vet bill of $90 included the basic fee for a call, mileage from Zurich, and the time involved. Sale of the velvet will easily cover the bill. Steve expects his venture to be a long-term affair. "I hope it's a life- time thing, but it definitely has a future. It's nice to get in on the ground floor," he enthuses. Norm Eckel Stanley township cashcropper Norm Eckel first read about red deer two years ago. Like Steve, he too visited the Coldstream farm and did his own research before deciding that raising game was the answer to his quest for an alternative to conven- tional farming. Norm took the plunge in May 1990, investing a total of $40,000 in 10 hinds, two female elk -deer hybrids, and a stag, fencing off his barnyard and a three -acre paddock, and adap- ting part of the former dairy barn to open housing. The animals are fed free choice good quality alfalfa hay, a 50-50 mix of shelled corn and oats, and a sheep supplement with selenium and copper. Norm maintains his herd is "a real treat to have on the farm," describing them as quiet, clever, observant, and requiring hardly any day to day care. Norm's confident the deer farming industry will take off if properly pro- moted. "There is some risk, but I feel excited about this challenge," he adds. The Heyinks Gerald Heyink and sons Ray and Allan are also convinced of deer