A sheep farmer might have some cattle to spread the risk. Of course, the cattle might also be useful for other reasons, for example, to eat the rough excess growth the sheep will not cope with. For this strategy to work, the cattle and sheep output levels and/or their prices (meat and wool) must not vary together. That is, when wool prices are low, cattle prices, hopefully, are up. Similarly for sheep meat relative to beef, or for a range of cash crops. The variation does not have to be diametrically opposed, just tend in this way. Can you think of a range of products a case farmer could realistically produce? Cast your imagination wide, but still be reasonably realistic. Write down your answer. These are some of the possibilities: finished stock, stores, fruit, vegetables, tourists (ecotourism, adventure, hunting), fish farming, homestay, grazing, hay, silage, fibre, cattle, milk, sale time variations, breeding, cash crops of various kinds, investment, shares, apartments.