Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, June 15, 1974, Image 16

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    —Lancaster Farming. Saturday, June 15,1974
16
ORGANIC LIVING
By
Robert Rodole
EARTHWORMS TO THE RESCUE!
Wrestling with a problem of contaminated pulp and paper
sludge, a Japanese environmental research firm recently
called for reinforcements - earthworms! The wlggly little
creatures were found to thrive on paper sludge - cleaning
and purifying it as it’s digested and passed i’trough their
bodies. One million earthworms were promptly airlifted
from Osake to Tokyo to tackle that assignment.
To measure pollution near a busy highway. Fish and
Wildlife Service Biologist Charles Gish wielded a shovel and
started digging ... for earthworms. Specimens dug up at
various distances from the road were collected, ground up
and analyzed for lead, nickel and cadmium content. The
nearer the worms were to road traffic, the more heavily they
were contaminated with traces of those dangerous metals.
In West Germany, earthworms are protecting apple or
chards against fungus diseases which are spread by fallen
leaves, bark and broken twigs. Hungry earthworms quickly
decompose that debris before fungi can gain a toehold, ac
cording to Dr. W. Kennel of Hohenheim University’s fruit
research station. The worms also drag down into their tun
nels twigs of considerable length.
Unfortunately, this biological control method fails when
poisonous pesticides are used in the orchards. Sprays kill the
worms.
To some enthusiastic researchers, no job is too big for the
tiny earthworm. In Ohio, worms have been tested as
restorers of desolate strip-mined land. By digesting decaying
leaves and then mixing them into the coarse, rocky
spoilbanks, earthworms may slowly and laboriously rebuild
the topsoil.
Even more grandiose schemes are being proposed. Worms
might possibly solve the urban solid waste problem by eating
garbage, and excreting high-quality compost. It’s been
estimated than 100 tons of worms could process the garbage
from a community of 75,000 people.
Such startling plans for harnessing the earthworm come as
no surprise td organic gardeners and farmers. They have
known for years that the eyeless creatures have fantastic
power to “move mountains” in their slow but systematic
way.
Earthworms are tremendously efficient organisms
Whenlhe crew is you
Even in a one-man operation. Hesston makes it possible tar
include a moderate size haying program with the HESS
TON StakHand* 10 Yes, the StakHand 10 will get your hay
up and out of the weather at the hourly rate of four to six
tons And the stacks have self-storing, weather-resistant
capabilities Couple the StakHand with a StakMover 10 and
you can put up hay one day, then move it later on See us
for all the benefits of a StakHand right away We can even
show you how the StakHand 10 system lends itself to feed
ing programs
PuN a fast one
From its innovative Hydro Swmgi™ tongue to the hydro
statically driven header, the new Hesston 1014 pull-type
is all business yet agile as a cat Yes, the 1014 lets you
position the header on the go for partial or full cuts, cut
square corners without skips, and maneuver around road
or field obstructions with split second precision It swings
directly behind the tractor, for instance, to ease through
narrow openings Available with 10-, 12- or 14-foot head
ers, the 1014 has more new features than you can
imagine So see us today Pull a fast one tomorrow
DEUTX
Tractors 312 W Mam St
Call Us For Free Demonstration
of any Size Tractor 32 to 130 H.P.
STAUFFER
DIESEL, Inc.
New Holland, Pa
«i 717-354-41*1
because, like fish, they are cold-blooded. They don’t have to
burn up food energy maintaining their body temperature at a
certain level, but adapt their temperature largely to their
environment. All their work output goes to moving earth
through their efficient digestive system.
Because they digest organic matter (such as rotten leaves
and other dead vegetation) and turn it into humus, worms
are first-rate soil-builders and compost makers; Their
wastes or castings contain nitrates, phosphates and potash
that plants need. One worm will produce its own weight in
castings every 24 hours.
“Worms have played a more important part in the history
of the world than most persons would at first suppose,” said
Charles Darwin in his classic book on earthworms. “All the
vegetable mould (topsoil) over the whole country has passed
many times through, and will again pass many times
through, the intestinal canals of worms.”
Sir Albert Howard, founder of the organic method of
agriculture, put it more blunty: “The earthworm is the
gardener’s manure factory.”
Earthworms aerate and physically mix the soil as they
Dutch School
Natural Foods
. LARGEST SELECTION OF
NATURAL FOODS AND VITAMINS
IN CENTRAL PENNA.
u' RT. 222, AKRON, PENNA.
■ PH. 859-2339
CHS© .
Wll SPRAY PAIKT YOUR BARNS A SHEDS with
Bruning Country Squire
INTRODUCTORY OFFER
$6.50 per gal. if you help. *
$7.50 per gal. if we use boom truck.
PAINT & AIRLESS EQUIPMENT
AT MOST REASONABLE RATES.
Phone (AC) 215-445-6186
PHARES HURST
RDI Narvon, Pa. 17555
VITREOUS ENAMEL
STEEL SILOS
Distributed By
STOLTZFUS SILO
EQUIPMENT
SEALED STORAGE
BOTTOM UNLOADING
SALES & SERVICES
RDI, Box 77 Kinzfcr, Pa. 17535
Phone 717- 768-3873
burrow. Their tunnels keep the ground well-ventilated, and
make it easier for rain to penetrate. Also, the worms’ dead
bodies furnish a considerable amount of nltrp|on t fertilizer.
That’s.hot 'realize fhatoiW acre of rich
farmland fertilized with manure often contains mow than a
million worms it any one time. ’, . ■ v - *
Earthworms can be Intensively bred indoors or outdoors in
boxes or'shallow, pits. They multiplyrapldiy. One mature
worm will beget more than ISO worms each year.
You can order from an earthworm hatduoy.
Some large breeder operations have well over 50,000 square
feet of worm beds.
Many people with small homesteads are getting into the
earthworm business on a part-time basis. “The worm
business won’t make anyone rich, but it’s a good, honest way
to make some money,” says Steve Dubie, who runs Steve’s
Worm Farm in Rogue River, Oregon.
“For the first couple of years,” he says, “our customers
were fishermen and bait outlets interested only in night
crawlers. But this changed. Now our customers include
farmers, gardeners, orchardlsts... ” <
With a capital outlay of $l5O for breeder worms and some
lumber, a backyard “earthworm farmer” can raise $5,000
worth of worms.
MX
Earthworms are just one part of any good soil-building
program. The keys to fertility are clearly explained in the 48-
page guide, “Best Ways to Improve Your Soil.” You can get*
copy by sending fifty cents to Robert Rodale, Organic Living,
in care of this newspaper. Be sure to ask for the booklet by
name, and please allow three or four weeks for delivery. >s
(Note: Nutritionists and other medical scientists may ,or
may not agree with the assertions made by Mr. Rodale. The
.views expressed herein are those of the columnist and do not
necessarily reflect the opinions of this newspaper.)
(c) 1974 by The Chicago Tribune. World Rights Reserved.
Sitj Dutchman.
Controlled
POUURT
CAGE'
Sy
Big Dutchman cage systems are the “stan
dard" by which all others are measured. So why
not start your cage shopping with the No. 1.
company in the field.
We can provide “all” the components that
make up a complete cage system and therefore
are able to guarantee reliability, control, cost
savings and one-source service.
Contact us for personalized information and
service concerning these systems.
• 4 DECK LAVER • FLAT DECK LAYER
• TRI-DECK LAYER • TRI-DECK CHICK-EZE
• DOUBLE DECK LAYER • FLAT DECK CHICK-EZE
lIEDCIIEV
VlEli9liE ■
EQUIP. CO.
THE SYSTEMS COMPANY
215 DILLERAVE. authored
NEW HOLLAND, PA. Ki’a D||Uffl9l(
PH. 1717) 354-5168 •'UlCflHlflll*
or |7l7] 872-5111 d^tributor
w