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The Rural Voice, 1998-10, Page 21Working together with other attractions, farm gate businesses can provide something different for visitors to the county to do. Harvest Trail. As well as their traditional cash crop and custom spraying business, they have an equine business, giving riding lessons and an emu business. As an added attraction they have a lovely pond, and they sell pond products for people who admire their landscaping efforts. t all works together, Amy says. "Kids come for riding lessons and their parents can relax around the pond, then they might be interested in buying other things." Amy hopes to expand the traffic at the farm through the Harvest Trail tours. The farm has different activities it can offer all year round. But the Harvest Trail program aims to do more than just get visitors to the gate. To take part each business had to pay $145 for the first year (subsequent years will cost $90) which included the Huron Harvest Trail sign, a year's membership in the Huron Tourism Association and a one -day training session for one person. Farm businesses attended a session called "Opening your gates to tourism" while retail businesses took a course called "Being an ambassador". Courses will be offered throughout the winter to teach members how to give good service and good value to their guests. The project has brought all aspects of the food industry together, Bayley says. There has been an enthusiastic response from chefs at the county's top restaurants. Some have been seeking out new local food suppliers to offer unique local taste experiences for visitors. It's important that everybody work together, she says. "You have to sell the whole experience, the whole destination." That idea is what attracted Jacquie Bishop to join the program. She and her husband Kevin started Shayrina Sheep Farm near Bluevale in northern Huron County this past spring. The farm offers shows in a converted machinery shed to introduce people to the business of sheep farming. They have a corn maze, a petting zoo and a gift shop and they hope to sell freezer Iamb in the future. If you can package a fcw agritourism businesses together, Jacquie says you can attract bus tours from the U.S. and elsewhere. That's what the Tourism Association hopes, Bayley says. The group plans to use the Huron Harvest Trail, and the future cultural trail, as a basis to bring bus loads of visitors from Europe, the United States and other parts of Canada to "Ontario's West Coast". Jacquie Bishop sees agritourism as the wave of the future. "We're promoting primary agriculture. It allows people to get back to the farm." If people can actually step on to a farm they'll understand farming better, she feels. The Tourism Association is working fast to try to have both thc Harvest and Cultural Trails in place in time for the 1999 International Plowing Match at Dashwood in the south of the county with the hope visitors to the match might explore the rest of the county while they're here. And the Harvest Trail is just thc beginning. Bayley sees it as a catalyst to make other food -oriented events take place. She sees the connections made by members of the Trail leading to new business opportunities. It will give farm families new alternatives as they try to make a living from thc Iand.O Hitting the road to greater knowledge of • farming The Huron Harvest Trail is just the latest of a numbcr of initiatives around the area to take urban residents out into the country. Upcoming in October, for instance, arc two one -day , opportunities for people to see how the other three per cent earn their living producing food. Sunday, October 4 will sec the fifth edition of Perth County's Harvest Day Tour while Huron County will host its Farm Hiker Tour the same day. In Perth, you can get the day off to a rural start with a Breakfast in the Country at Brooklawn Farm outside Mitchell at a cost of S6 for adults, S3 for children. Those wanting to take the tour can purchase passports there (at 56 per vehicle) or get them at the parking lots at Claudes Electric on Huron St., Stratford or the Staffcns stores in St. Marys or Mitchell. Tours will be offered from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and on this year's itinerary are a diary operation, the county's only bison farm, a farm equipment dealership and the Stratford Perth Museum. Huron's Farm Hiker Tour will focus on the townships of Tuckersmith, Hullett, McKillop and Goderich as well as the towns of Seaforth and Clinton. Registration takes place at the Seaforth Agriplex where several commodity groups will have displays. Admission is an item for the food bank. Visitors will then be able to visit the new Quality Jersey Products cheese factory (noon to 3 p.m. only) and visit a market garden, swine, beef, dairy, sheep and emu farms and a quarter horse farm (where pony rides will be available). The day will end with a dinner featuring the products of the land at the Seaforth Agriplex from 4:00-7:00 p.m. at a cost of $8 for adults and $5 for children.0 OCTOBER 1998 17