Couple gears down to enjoy nature, sports

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Published: February 21, 2002

PADDOCKWOOD, Sask. – John Dinius could put out fires, parachute from

planes and shoot a gun to fend off enemies, but modern farming

practices eluded him.

He and his wife Marge began farming in the 1970s “with a great

ignorance” despite their upbringing and numerous odd jobs in rural

Saskatchewan.

“I had never seen hydraulics,” said John, a 28-year veteran of the

Canadian army who got a quarter-section of farmland through the

Veteran’s Land Act. He served in the Korean war with the Princess

Read Also

Dairy cows on a Canadian farm eating at a feed bunk. Ventilation fans are shown over top of them.

U.S. farm group supports supply management

U.S. grassroots farm advocacy group pushing new agriculture legislation that would move towards supply management like Canada has for dairy industry

Patricia’s Light Infantry, and also worked in army intelligence and

with the Airborne Forest Fire Fighters.

The heavily treed Paddockwood farm was chosen because John had grown up

nearby on a mixed farm. The Diniuses were stationed throughout the

world but the family regularly brought their two sons, Danny and Doug,

back home to their Saskatchewan roots. The sons and their families, now

in Edmonton, return each summer to their retreat in the Dinius

bunkhouse, which is full of mementos from army days in places like

Cyprus, Pakistan and Arizona, U.S.A.

The Diniuses started out growing grain, first buying good used

machinery and a demonstrator tractor – “I was not a mechanic and didn’t

want an old clunker,” John said.

Cattle were added because they had plenty of feed, but dropped when the

Diniuses’ income tax became too high.

In recent years, farm life has slowed for John and Marge, now 68 and

72. Some close calls operating an air seeder and a mountaineering

accident suffered in India that keeps John on painkillers led them to

switch to custom farming.

John still handles much of the work, like grain drying and stone

picking, but hires a neighbour to plant and harvest the grain, oilseed

and pea crops on their 320 acres.

Barley is doing well and the farm’s recent try at peas yielded as much

as 55 bushels an acre on grey-wooded soils. John said the payback is

good, and often better than it was when he did all the physical work.

He prefers custom farming to cash renting because he has more control

over the land.

“I’m fussy about weed control,” he said, expressing concern that

anhydrous ammonia could destroy valuable micro-nutrients in the soil.

Less physical work means more free time, they both agree.

“I have more time for other things,” said Marge, a horse enthusiast and

snowmobiler who remains active in local service clubs.

She regularly rides into Paddockwood on her horse and has introduced

many local children to riding. The couple also takes horses to the

nearby national park for rides.

John, like his wife, has always embraced the outdoors. They are members

of natural history and environmental societies, keeping on hand many

copies of nature magazines.

Their yard features dozens of winter bird feeders, a long line of

bluebird houses and a flourish of flowers in the summer.

People often bring strays and injured birds to the Diniuses, who have

been rewarded for their conservation and volunteer efforts in their

community.

They are known for their work teaching local youth about carpentry, gun

safety and horsemanship.

The Diniuses are relentless in their promotion of ethical hunting

practices and both are active in the Saskatchewan Fair Chase League. It

favours tracking and hunting in the wild, instead of baiting animals

and game farms.

“We are not the only ones doing this,” said Marge, who cited the amount

of garbage left along woodland trails by baiting outfitters.

“We don’t know why anyone doesn’t do something about this.”

John said baiting congregates animals and could lead to the spread of

disease to domestic livestock herds.

“I do not pretend to be a scientist, but just an old bugger that

cares,” he said.

John is an avid hunter and angler, and this day, sits down to eat meat

taken from two deer he recently shot. A bedroom wall shows off the bear

and deer from past hunts.

“I take no pleasure in killing, it’s harvesting,” he said. “I like to

eat.”

It’s their passion about maintaining their community and the species

that inhabit it that got them involved with promoting fairer hunting

practices more than 10 years ago. He was equally passionate about an

11-year fight to save the local elevator, which eventually closed.

“I live here because this is where I want to be,” said John.

“I got a lot of enjoyment and privileges out of this world. Somehow I

have to put a little back into the kitty.”

About the author

Karen Morrison

Saskatoon newsroom

explore

Stories from our other publications