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The Rural Voice, 1998-07, Page 28diet is sweetened with oats and barley and some peas to get them ready for market. Mostly, however, they turn pasture and hay into meat in a traditional way. "If you take the meat from the animals we raise and the animals raised more in a feedlot manner you can tell the difference just by looking at it, even if it's ground up," says Arlene. Athree-year-old market animal dresses at about 600-650 pounds. Despite the fact the buffalo have a very heavy head and a heavy hide, they still yield well since they don't have as much trim as cattle because they don't put on a fat layer. Buffalo meat prices are more than double beef prices. One rule of thumb is that a pound of buffalo is worth about the same as a kilo of beef. The Mountains sell their ground buffalo meat for $4.50 per pound. Stewing meat is $5.35 per pound. Sirloin buus are $10.13 and tenderloins are $21 a pound and in high demand. Coming from a beef background, Aaron didn't know what to charge when he first got into the business. He talked to a larger, veteran producer who gave him a price list. "I looked at the tenderloin. It was $21.08 a pound and I thought 'how can I ask this?' So I went to the Grey Rose restaurant in Hanover and the chef asked me `do you have any tenderloin?' I thought 'Oh no, now I've got to tell him $21.08 a pound." But the chef, far from being startled by the price, ordered all the tenderloin Aaron had in stock. "It's been that way ever since. You can sell your top and your bottom (cuts), but you might have to 24 THE RURAL VOICE work to get rid of something like inside rounds." Many producers help each other meet demand by selling product to each other, either whole animals or specific cuts. Often, for instance, a restaurant will want a specific cut meaning there could be a shortage of that cut, but a problem getting rid of other cuts. Marketing is a big part of buffalo ranching, the Mountains say. Raising the animal is only half the job — the other is finding customers for your product. For small producers in high - traffic locations that may be as simple as putting out a sign by the road. For larger producers like the Mountains, with little roadside traffic, it means hustling the meat to restaurants and consumers across the area. Aaron generally looks for the top restaurant in an area, then asks to meet the chef, taking along samples. "When Aaron walks into a restaurant and looks at their menu then he will suggest to them what they should buy," says Arlene. "When I see a chef I'll tell him `You're going to like everything about my product but the price'," Aaron says. After this ice -breaker he asks the chef to look over his price list but not to order anything unless he thinks he can make money from it. After all, if they're going to have a long-term relationship they both have to make a profit, he says. Also, because it might be hard to provide a consis.tent supply, he suggests starting with a special, rather than adding it to the menu. Restaurants are supplied with different cuts than the consumer market. "The chef wants the whole tenderloin, the whole strip loin and the whole sirloin." He wants to cut In a miniature stampede, the Mountains' herd rushes to get food. the steaks to his own requirements. The other side of the business is the breeding stock market, says Arlene, who is the secretary of the Ontario Bison Association. "The interesting thing with our industry is that we have established a meat market before we increased our breeding stock. At this point in time there's much more demand for the meat than there is a supply, which in turn raises the price of the breeding stock because we can't fulfill this demand." The price of breeding stock has been rising steadily since they got involved in the business, he says. Today six -month-old heifer calves are regularly selling from $4,000 to $6,000 each, even more at specialty sales. At the recent Wild Rose Classic Show and Sale in Camrose, Alberta, one bull was sold for a record price of $32,000 to an Oklahoma buyer. The average price was $6,595 for yearling bulls, up 75 per cent from last year's average price. Top price for a heifer was $15,200 paid by a Texas ranch for an Alberta animal. The average of 18 animals offered was $6,639, up 29 per cent from last year. While breeding stock prices are high, the initial investment can be paid back over a long period. Buffalo live 30-40 years. The Mountains still have producing cows that they started with in 1984. Buffalo really seem to be catching on in Saskatchewan and Alberta. Reversing the trends of the past, western producers are now calling east looking for breeding stock. Faced with such a request, Arlene