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The Rural Voice, 1989-12, Page 34In the HEART A few years ago, Robbie Fine gave up his modern machinery for heavy horses and the Mennonite way of life. He found many helping hands. As Mennonite church elder Daniel Martin says, "The old way of farming requires working together. You can't argue with your neighbour because you need each other." of the COUNTRY by Lisa Boonstoppel At one time, Robbie Fine drove a car, used electricity, and worked like a conventional fanner. Then, about two years ago, he gave up his automobile for a horse- drawn buggy, his modern machinery for horses, and his Baptist upbringing for the Mennonite belief. Now Robbie Fine is living the life of a Mennonite. "I farm like a Mennonite because I believe it is more pleasurable to God," says Fine, who operates a 153 - acre rented farm near Whitechurch in Huron County with his wife Suzie and four young children. He grows wheat, corn, oats, barley, soys and white beans, using his own five heavy horses and five heavy colts along with four other heavy horses on loan. The farm supports the family along with an assortment of animals. The work horses and the two horses for the buggy share the barn with a herd of 16 Jerseys for shipping cream, some sows, a gaggle of geese, some laying hens, and a sheep. "I am a little too ambitious some say, but I have to pay the rent," says Fine, who rents the property for about $6,000 a year and finds he needs a substantial operation to cover costs. However, he does plan to plant fewer acres next year because he admits the work is too much for one man. "It's a lot easier when you have a large family because you can all work together," he says. His children are all under the age of six. If it weren't for the help of the Belmore Mennonites, with whom Fine is affiliated through the Mennonite church in Belmore, he would never have been able to harvest his crops. "I am in charge of my own farm but if I or another Mennonite isn't done his harvest, other Mennonite farmers will get together to help him finish up." "I can sow about eight acres a day with the horses and seed drill," says Fine, whose days are very long. Just sowing his 40 acres of wheat, for ex- ample, took five full days. Harvest is also time-consuming. The wheat is cut with a binder. The stalks fall on a canvas that leads to a binding appar- atus which ties the stalks into a sheaf. The binder then deposits the sheaf on the field. For single farmers like Fine, who may not be able to get into the field the next day to stook the sheaves, sheaves can be dropped in piles of three so they're easier and faster to stook than when lying individually. The sheaves are then picked up and made into stooks, usually of seven sheaves. This year, Fine got his field stooked on August 16 with the help of five Mennonite men who drove almost three hours from Belmore to help him. One of those men, Daniel Martin, estimates that "a good man can stook about eight acres a day." Since Fine's wheat had been lying unstooked in the field, the Mennonite crew planned on threshing the wheat the next day after it had been stooked only one day in the sun. In fact, had it not rained, Fine says they probably would have threshed the grain without stooking it. Daniel Martin says that stooks withstand the rain much better than the swathed rows of wheat in con- ventional farmers' fields. The next day, a three-man crew was ready to thresh the grain. One man took to the field with a pitchfork and horse-drawn wagon. With skill and strength, he loaded the wagon as high as square bales are stacked on wagons, except he loaded it from the ground. The horses were trained to stop and go on voice command. 32 THE RURAL VOICE