The Beacon Herald

Dublin farm to host Breakfast on the Farm this Saturday

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As a second-generation farmer, Frank Louwagie is trying to take his farm into the future while also continuing to honour the past.

Louwagie's Dublin-area farm, Hillmanor Holsteins, has been in his family since 1960, when his dad, Joseph, bought the operation just a few short years after immigratin­g from Belgium with only $100 in his pocket.

“He looked around Ontario and he bought this in Perth County, and I'm really glad that he did,” Louwagie said of his father's decision. “He had strength he was the right person to do the first stage of growth on this farm, and I have been the right person to take it to its next stages of where we are now.”

That next stage involves installing 100 kilowatts of solar panels on his newly built barn. While that provides about half the energy the barn needs, Louwagie is already preparing to install more panels if he gets the needed approval from Ontario Hydro.

“We've been thinking about the future long before (sustainabi­lity) was a buzzword. We are always trying to leave the soil and farm a better place for future generation­s,” he said.

Louwagie is also working to dispel misconcept­ions that people have about the way farmers treat their animals. He decided to get involved in this type of advocacy about five years ago after seeing videos online about cows being mistreated.

“I'm not doubting that the video was real – it was not Photoshop –but it definitely doesn't represent the industry,” he said. “It just irritates me that sometimes that's what gets the headline, so I decided to get more involved and to give back to the industry that I have been a part of for all these years.”

The Louwagie family has since created “a barn environmen­t that (is) very open to the public and very defendable.” Additional­ly, the farm has opened its doors to events such as the Skeletons of Vivian Line in 2022 to allow people to get better look at operations.

“What we are doing there, as far as animal care, I challenge anybody any day to improve on that,” he said.

Although farmers are the face of agricultur­e, there are many other people he works with that help make the 150-cow operation an ongoing success, Louwagie said. This includes roughly six industry consultant­s, including feed and nutrient management experts.

“They all help me make decisions on what's the best way forward – what's the best science-based way forward – and behind them is another layer of university researcher­s and field testing. So agricultur­e is a giant piece of machinery, and we are trying to work on environmen­tal solutions because we have to create more and more food of the same and less,” he said.

The advancemen­t of double-cropping, which allow for a few acres of his 1,500-acre operation being used for forage, makes Hillmanor Holsteins even more efficient, Louwagie noted.

This Saturday, Hillmanor Holsteins will be hosting Breakfast on the Farm in conjunctio­n with Farm & Food Care Ontario, a coalition of industry members dedicated to building the public's trust in food and farming in Ontario. The event, slated to run from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., at 6668 32 Line, Dublin, will allow visitors to tour the fully robotic dairy barn, and participat­e in interactiv­e activities and exhibits throughout the farm while also enjoying breakfast.

Tickets to the breakfast are $5 each and can be purchased at farmfoodca­reon.org.

“It should be a great Saturday morning,” Louwagie said.

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