WILD DUCKS use Weavers’ ponds to raise their young. Roy and Mrs. Weaver enjoy having them around, and throw out liberal handfuls of feed for the feathered brood daily. L. F. Photo Farm Ponds has to keep after excessive (Continued from Page 8) growth of waterweeds and fih ~ , mentous algae. Weaver has Then, if you manage to deal - . , effectively with all of these “ ze ‘ hat and weed coitrol Sodue? vou chemicals takes care of this £ V e to worry about muskrats P roblem - As Houseknecht ex ruining the pond itself by bur- ed ’ fertilizer (either a 20- “ ~ 20-5 or 8-8-2 analysis) applied rowing holes in the walls so J the pond won’t hold water. early in the spring encourages In addition, the operator the growth of microscopic al- The ONE,TWO PUNCH that KNOCKS OUT Haymaking Problems 816 MOWER-CONDITIONER Mows, conditions and windrows in one simple operation. Because it uses a rev olutionary new Flick-Bar instead of a reel, the 816 costs less at the start... costs less to maintain . .. and works in any thing from clover to tallest Sudan hybrids without bunching or tangling. You also Pflake full use of. good hayma'king hours with the 27 Baler. You’ll pack, your crop away at a rate of up to 14 tons per hour. -With a big 52" wide pickup and 2 1 /z" flare, you take the entire windrow without driv ing over any of it. Feeder tine? gently See the new International Harvester Haymaking Combination at... ' S ■nttMMWMAv mwiitu L - C. B. Hoober INTERCOURSE 768-3501 Messick Farm Equip. ELIZABETHTOWN - 367-1319 Kauffman Bros. MOUNTVILLE ' 285-9151 lakes us about two sea produce a marketable 'w,” he said, adding that heard of it being done time by some, but that isn’t managed it. fish are fed twice a day ■ them growing faster, itched Mrs Weaver mix - a batch of “home-made” ior one pond which con sisted of meat scrap, cotton seed meal, middlings and wa ter Sometimes this is fed wet, and other times simply scat tered in dry form on the wa ter. The fish are sold to bait stores for resale to fishermen Most of Weaver’s customers come to the farm and haul the bait in their own containers, but in some cases Weaver has to deliver the order. The fish are “harvested” by tossing in metal fish traps tied to a line. These traps arg two NAL get balanced-head mower action, full width conditioning rollers with quiet poly V-beltdnves and a new three-knuckle PTO drive assemblythatdelivers smooth power in the tightest turns. In 7 or 9-foot cutter bar models. [INTERN A TIP N A I- | 27 BALER move the hay into the baling chamber with no damage to protein-rich leaves. And just like bigger IH balers, the 27 has a big heavy-duty power train and fa mous 3-phase knotters that tie bales 17% stronger. International Harvester Sales and Service EPHRATA - 733-2283 Cope & Weover Co. NEW PROVIDENCE 786-7351 icKptonMert.' If these ex to a depth of about 18 , they shut off sunlight ation necessary to the of waterweeds and fili >us algae. You can tell you have a satisfactory ition of algae and plank [ouseknecht said, by the ish-green appearance of ater. FISH PRODUCTION Ides dealing with all the factors which try to ie bait-fish producer out ;iness, Weaver has the hemselves to contend Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 2, 1966—9 basket halves which lock to gether. He may pull in 50 to 150 minnows with each cast. The traps are then emptied into a homemade, portable grader which sits in the wa ter where the operator is working. The screen on the grader is designed to hold only market-sized fish, permitting the under-sized fish to escape. When do you market fish 7 Weaver said he gets calls for fish as late in the season as December and as early as Feb ruary. "It pretty much follows the fishing season,” he said, adding that “with ice fishing getting so popular, it seems the fishing season is getting longer each year ” The Weavers have also been raising shiners, a larger bait fish, but have found they are consideiably haider to grow than fatheads WATER SUPPLY One vital ingredient m a Weeds Choking Your Pond? We’ve got just what you need to clean ’em out fast: ORTHO Diquat Use a little Diquat in that choked-up pond of yours, and in ten' days you’ll have clean clear- water for. irrigation, swimming or even a fishing* hole. Diquat kills aquatic weeds like nothing you’ve ever seen before. You name it; water lettuce!, water fern, pondweeds, coontail, southern naiad,' waterhyacinth, elodea. They’ll all wilt, collapse and die. Diquat is easily applied Use it as directed. It is non-hazardous to fish. In fact, it would take twenty times the maximum recommended dosage to be at all harmful to fish. After ten days, you’ll even be able to swim in the water or use it for spraying or irrigating. That’s all it takes for Di- quat to dissipate completely. The best news is the economy, A little Diquat goes a long way. See use right away . . . I we’ll be glad to tell you exact- ly how little you’ll need for your pond. You’re in for a happy surprise. T.M Reg. U.S. Pat Off.: Oitho. On All Chemicals. Read Cautions and Directions Before Use. P. L. ROHRER & BRO., INC. SMOKETOWN successful fish business is a reliable supply of pure water. Weaver has a spring deliver ing 15 gallons per minute. This is piped into the 20x20- foot, concrete holding pool, and from there, successively, to five ponds in a row. Weaver said this was not the safest way to handle the water sup ply since contamination in any one of the upper ponds would be passed to all of those be low it through the continuous water supply. Another important ingredi ent in successfully operating any pond is a nearby creek. Weaver doesn’t use his creek as a water souice for fear of some contaminant killing the fish However, he does use it to handle by-pass water from the spring when necessary, or when draining one of the ponds (Other picture on Page 12) DISTRIBUTED BY Phone Lane. 397-3539