"Without diversification we'd really be struggling. I don't know a single farm business that isn't diversified," he said.
Every year in Tobermory, members at the golf club play for the cup which carries Billy MacAllister's name.And his friend Stewart has a special reason to remember him.
"He had a big impact on my life really because, had Billy not enticed me to go and work over at Richmond, I would probably have not got to know my then girlfriend, who became my wife. My life would have been a very different one from what it became," he says."What a shame he didn't get a chance to go on and fulfil his potential."For Rose, Tim's early death has shaped the course of the past four decades for all those who loved him.
"I think the gift that Tim's given us is to live our lives. I always feel that I owe that to him. Get out and do it."Olive's death has had the same effect on Colyn and their siblings.
"Olive would have wanted us to live a good life, a full life. Like how she lived. Having a good time."
Pharmacists have warned that "one of the worst" examples of medicine shortages is affecting cancer patients."I'm really concerned about our democracy," said Dylan, a data engineer. "I hope we have the power to save it and make it greater than before. My vote is a piece of power."
"The next president needs to show people clearly and transparently what he is doing," said one man in his mid-20s. "We need to watch him carefully."If Lee is to win, and by the margin the polls suggest, he would have a solid mandate, as well as control of parliament, giving him three years to implement major political reforms.
That could be good for rebuilding South Korea's stability but would come with its own challenges, said the political analyst Ms Kim."If Lee wins, he will have a lot of power. {Given how Yoon behaved} he will need to be very responsible when using it."