Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, September 29, 1979, Image 132

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132:
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Delawareans fight inflation with home gardens
NEWARK, Del. -
Delawareans are finding
that a home vegetable
garden can be a welcome
buffer against today’s rising
food costs. Though it would
be bard to get a handle on the
number of gardens planted
around the state this Sum
mer, there’s no doubt that
growing one’s own produce
has become a very popular
and ofUnpnflMflftfrftfei ,
Dr. Willie G. Adams,
Extension-garden and home
improvement agent working
out of Delaware State
College, has been sharing his
expertise with about 25 home
gardeners in the Dover area
this Summer in a special
program sponsored by the
Delaware Cooperative
Extension Service. He also
lends a hand with a number
of community-type gardens
and feels most of these food
growing efforts have been
quite successful.
His clients include retired
couples trying to manage on
a fixed income, as well as
suburban families who’ve
discovered that a home
vegetable plot can be a
relaxing hobby as well as a
way to cut down on trips to
the grocery store. Besides
the fresh fruits and
vegetables they enjoy over
the growing season, many of
these enterprising people
will also be eating their fill of
canned or frozen home
grown produce this Winter.
Belasco (“Jack”) Bossard
is probably typical of many
of today’s suburban
vegetable gardeners. He
lives in one of the com
fortable developments that
have sprung up, recently
around Dover. Bossard, a
career counselor for the
Capital School District, says
it all started a few years ago
when his wife suggested they
grow some tomatoes in a
small strip of vacant land at
the back of their lawn.
Every year the strip gets
wider as the family tackles a
greater variety of crops.
This summer was their
biggest effort yet, with
onions, cabbage, lettuce,
snap beans, limas, squash,
cukes, peas, sweet peppers,
collards, mustard, sweet and
white potatoes, okra, sweet
corn, melons, radishes and
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of course—tomatoes.
Bossard’s 12-and 16-year-old
sons are in charge of weed
control. He shares a
rototiller with a friend for
turning the ground over at
the beginning of the growing
season.
To find out what and how
to plant, since he’d never
done any gardening like this
before, Bossard consulted
with Adams. He also began
exchanging ideas with a
neighbor Who has had some
experience at growing
vegetables. And he started
reading up on the subject.
Like many other begin
ners, he learned the hard
way not to overplant, and
sticks to those vegetables the
family likes to eat. He’s
found out, too, that giving
the excess away isn’t always
as easy as you might think.
“People can be pretty
choosy-even about hand
outs,” he notes wryly.
With a freezer full of
homegrown food, Bossard
says the family has gotten
far more from their garden
than they ever dreamed they
would. “I figure we’ve had a
return on our investment
four, five or even six times
over,” he says.
If you’re retired, a
productive vegetable garden
can be of particular value in
combating rising food costs;
as many folks have
discovered. A large, well
managed plot can yield
enough to drastically reduce
the number of trips you have
to make to the grocery store
over the year-especially if
you preserve what you can’t
eat fresh.
Mr. and Mrs. James
Thomas have been growing
and preserving their own
vegetables for the past 50
years, so retirement means
they have more time to care
for their half-acre plot just
north of Dover. There they
“fight the battle of weeds
anji bugs” side by side-with
the help of- an old In
ternational Harvester Super-
A Farmall. During the
growing season, you’re
likely to find James Thomas
out cultivating part of the
plot with this in the early
morning, while his wife Lulu
is inside fixing breakfast. At
harvesttime, they work
>
together to can the abundant
yields.
Their flourishing garden
boasts a remarkable
assortment of fmt and
vegetables, including sweet
com, yellow squash, zuc
chini, vegetable soybeans,
lima beans, onions,' okra,
tomatoeSj two kinds of peas,
S2OOOFACTORY
AL
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INIS- MF7SO
Ml 760.
. -s>
These combines have earned their reputa
tion the hard way, by doing the bigger jobs
better and faster. Now you can buy a
new Massey-Ferguson 750 or Massey-
Ferguson 760 at a price that’s hard to beat.
The Big Combine and the Big Savings are
both waiting for you now at our dealer
ship during Action Time ’79.
We’ve been given a factory allowance
of $2,000 on the MF 750 and MF 760,
which means extra savings for you.
Both combines feature Perkins fuel
efficient diesel engines, and exclusive
hi-inertia cylinders that maintain constant
SOLD 20 NEW COMBINES THIS YEAR
MF 760 Hydro V 8 Diesel 4 Wheel Drive with 6
Row 30" Corn Head and
14’ Grain Head 44,000
MF 760 Hydro 354 Turbo Engine 14 ft Gram
Head 6 Row 30" Corn Head.. ..... 28,000
MF 760 Gear Drive 354 Turbo Engine 16 ft
Gram Head 6 row 30” Corn Head . . 27,000
MF 760 Hydro 3541urb0 Engine 15 ft
Floating Cutter Bar 4 row
38” Corn Head
MF 750 Hydro 354 Turbo Engine 14 ft
Gram Head 6 row 30” Corn Head .
MF 510 Gear Drive Diesel 13 ft. Gram
Head 4 row 30” Corn Head . . .
MF 510 Gear Drive Diesel 13 ft Gram
Head 4 row 38" Corn Head
M.M. WEAVER & SON
N. Groffdale Rd., Leola, PA 17540
two kinds of grapes,
cucumbers, watermelons,
lettuce, cabbage, castor
beans, and gourds. Mr.
Thomas also has a pumpkin
patch and hopes to grow a
400 pound pumpkin one of
these days. They also raise
chickens for their own meat.
Another successful
IN STOCK 4 NEW COMBINES READY FOR TOP
PERFORMANCE - ONLY 1 LEFT AT '7B PRICES
USED COMBINES
1 -
Delaware vegetable gar
dener is Pat Saunders. Pat
lives in Wyoming, m a
comfortable franje house
she’s rennovated with the
aid of lots of helpful advice
from extension agent
Adams.
With his help, she’s also
been instrumental in con-
*
threshing speed to put more clean, whole
grain in the tank.
Our factory allowances make it easier
than ever for you to own a Massey-
Ferguson combine. See us for full details
or call.
y4cnm
“IFimT?
Expiration date,
September 28, 1979
MF 510 Gear Drive Gas 13 ft. Gram
Head 4 row 38” Corn Head
MF 410 Gear Drive Gas Engine 13 ft
Grain Head
MF 410 Gas 14 ft. Grain Head
MF 300 Gas 13 ft. Gram Head 2 Row
38” Corn Head
IH 315 Hydro Gas 13 ft. Gram Head
2 row 38” Corn Head
29,000
J.D. 55 Gas Cab 12 ft. Gram Head 3 row
30" Corn Head
41,000
Gleaner “K” Cab 10 ft. Gram Head
J.D. 45.
26,000
14,500
~ f*- * *v., \
verting the large vacant lot
next door into a successful
community garden that
produces enough to feed her
and half of the neighborhood.
Since early spring the lot has
yielded a succession of crops
that would make many a
novice gardener green with
(Turn to Page 133)
MP
Massey Ferguson
Ph: (717)656-2321
i
13,000
5,400
3,200
8,500
9,000
8,200
5,500
1,000