Eight municipalities, 241,026 people, 2,617 farms working 523,903 acres — one standing route from the 504 Imperial Road cardlock in Guelph.
Coloured diesel and propane for the dairy, poultry, and hog operations that anchor the County — 12% of Ontario’s dairy farms sit here.
The 504 Imperial Road cardlock is the only Petro-Canada wholesale-supplied cardlock in Guelph — paired with on-site refuelling across the County.
Propane and furnace oil for the rural homes outside Guelph — Mount Forest, Arthur, Drayton, the open country between.
Wellington County is Ontario’s livestock heartland — 12% of the province’s dairy farms, 10% of its poultry, and 8% of its hogs all sit between the city of Guelph and the towns of Mount Forest and Arthur.
The County’s 2,617 farms work 523,903 acres at an average of 200 acres, with $1,083M in farm cash receipts and 17% direct-to-consumer. Eight lower-tier municipalities sit inside the County boundary — Guelph 143,740, Centre Wellington 31,093 (Fergus/Elora, fastest-growing at 10.8%), Guelph/Eramosa 13,904, Wellington North 12,431 (Mount Forest, Arthur), Erin 11,981, Mapleton 10,839 (Drayton), Minto 9,094, Puslinch 7,944. Guelph runs Enbridge gas; everywhere else in the County, propane and oil are the heating fuels.
Wellington carries 10% of Ontario’s poultry — the first seven days of a broiler cycle.
The bright-line eligibility rules and the on-farm storage requirements across Wellington.
What the federal carbon-charge change meant for residential propane invoices across Wellington North.
A named rep takes the call — propane, furnace oil, diesel, lubricants on one invoice.
Standing routes across nine regions. Same rep year-round; off-hours emergency dispatch through the same number.
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