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The Rural Voice, 1987-08, Page 23i HOSTING A FARM VACATION by Sharon Grose 0 perating a guest house on your farm requires one essential quality: you have to like people. Grey County host farmers Harry and Ruth Bender should know. This is the eleventh season that they've been hosting guests on their dairy farm near Neustadt. The business got started when the Benders bought their second farm. Until that time, Ruth had been working for the Rural Development Branch of the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food. The second farm put more demands on the family, and Ruth decided to stay on the farm to devote more time to the operation. But she still wanted her own interests and the financial benefits she received from her previous job. Becoming a farm vacation host pro- vided just the type of challenge she was looking for. The Benders are one of the 20 families that were involved with the Ontario Vacation Farm Program when it started 10 years ago. In the early years of the organization, Ruth served as a director. Since the formation of the Ontario Vacation Farre, Associa- tion (OVFA), Ruth notes, membership has expanded to the 90 farms listed in the 1987 brochure. The OVFA hosts offer various types of accommodation, from "at home" lodgings which in- clude meals and rooms in the family home to separate cottages or second farm houses. The Benders offer visitors an apartment on the upper level of their farm house. Guests have their own cooking facilities and a private entrance. When they arrive, Ruth spends about an hour with them walking through the dairy barn and explaining the operation. After the tour, guests are free to come into the barn and watch the Benders doing chores, with the stipulation that chil- dren are accompanied by their parents. "We raise purebred Holsteins and have a lot of money invested in them. We don't want just anybody handling them. This is a viable farm operation, not a petting zoo," Ruth notes. "I have a routine in the barn," Harry adds, "and I don't like to have it disrupted once I'm started — but guests are welcome to watch while we chore." Harry compares the bam tour with a factory tour. You can talk to the people during the tour and they will explain how the product is manu- factured, but you don't actually get involved in the production. The Benders enjoy answering questions about their operation: what is this crop? why do you grow it? Harry and Ruth Bender what is that machinery? And their guest book illustrates just how much people have enjoyed their stay: "a week ago I couldn't spell farmer — now we are ones," "friendly hospitality," and "feels like home — takes me back to my childhood." "We have met marvellous people over the years," Ruth says, "We get Christmas cards from many of our guests, and several repeat customers." "Many people who no longer have a relationship to a farmer but remem- ber one in their childhood are willing to pay for their children to experience it," she adds. The OVFA was started in 1967 under the Ontario Federation of Agri- culture. It became an independent organization in 1977, at which time 23 families were involved. This year, the OVFA is celebrating its 10th AUGUST 1987 21