A26—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 10,1980 LITITZ - The con servation of productive sod, water, and related resources on the privately-owned lands of the United States, which was never an easy un dertaking, is becoming more critical. In the 45 years since the nationwide conservation program was launched, a great deal has been ac complished. But steady changes in land use and management, the in troduction of bigger farm machinery, and the evolution of new attitudes toward the land have now compounded the difficulties of the task. Soil stewardship, the spirit of responsible man at work i the land, is going to be i ,sted as never before. Northern Lebanon tops soil, land judging JONESTOWN - Close to 120 students competed in Lebanon County’s vocational agriculture land judging contest on Tuesday. Rained out the previous week, the students had a beautiful day to be outside, enjoying the sun and land, this week. The contest was held at the Paul Maulfair farm, near Jonestown. The favorable weather must have had a good effect on the concentration of three young men in the contest. Mike Bare and Todd Propt of Northern Lebanon High School, and Jeff Riegel of Annville-Cleona High School tied for first place. They each scored 229 out of a possible 300 points. Joe Harvatine, another Little Dutchman, had a score that ranked fourth in the contest. And there was a three way tie for fifth place between Ed Ditzler and Dale Zimmerman of Northern COMIN Soil Stewardship week begins available for agricultural use, help farmers survive economically and en vironmentally so they can profitably produce from them, and insist that they be used in such manner that soil depletion is minimized.” “The new ethic,” Sampson adds, “must be a product of education and social evolution. It can’t be written, legislated, or imposed on people. It must change, first, the way we Americans think about land. Only then will it successfully alter the ways we use this vital resource.” There is more here than a The dollar costs of ap plying conservation measures, as well as maintaining conservation systems of farming, are - rising. The size of farms is increasing while the number of farmers is shrinking. As one result, the traditional intimacy bet ween the farmer and his land is diminishing in too many places. Increasingly, far mland is being regarded as a commodity to be bought and sold rather than as a very special and vulnerable resource tied to the land scape a resource with a productive capability on which all life depends for all generations to come During the 10 years prior to 1978, an average of nearly Lebanon, and Donald Baer of Annville-Cleona. David Bomgardner, the Little Dutchman that topped last year’s contest, had a score that fell m at eighth place, followed by Ronald Rembold and Mike Gingrich of Northern Lebanon, for ninth and tenth place respectively. The top ten placmgs received a monetary award from the Lebanon County FFA Agricultural Society. In the judging contest, the students looked at three different test pits, dug to about four feet in depth. They looked at the slope of the land, the stomness of the soil, the soil texture, the depth of the topsoil, and whether the soil was well drained or wet. They were also judging whether the land had erosion occuring and whether it war subject to flooding. Then the students had to Uuec million acres of rural land were converted each year to urban uses. A third of this was “prune” farmland the very best we had. The demand for maximum "yields to offset accelerated production costs and ever rising land valuations has led to more intensified farming which in turn has depleted attention to con servation and in some places increased the rates of soil erosion beyond all ac ceptable levels. On thousands of acres, for example, annual . f soil from cropland now exceed 25 tons per acre or five times what some ex perts regard as a “safe” loss. Such losses are triply damaging. Not only do they evaluate whether the land needed conservation practices, such as strip cropping systems, sod waterways, and the like. They also determined if there would be any special limits on building a home on the land, installing a septic field, or building a lagoon. Schools participating in the contest included Nor thern Lebanon, the host, Cedar Crest, ELCO, and Annville-Cleona.—SM UNE7 reduce productive capacity and add enormously to the pollution of lakes and rivers; they cut seriously into the opportunities for oncoming farm families to earn a respectable livelihood in agriculture. What we need is a new land ethic, “forged of our twin concerns for the land’s proper use and its proper care,” says Executive Vice President Neil Sampson of the National Association of Conservation Districts. “We must begin to treasure the prune far mlands...keep them Treating your grass or alfalfa silage this year with SILO GUARD® can substantially increase the feeding value of your silage. Since the goal of making silage is to preserve the ensiled forage as near to the crop har vested, any loss is undesirable. If protein is lost or becomes heat damaged during fermentation, the ensiling process was unsuccessful Also, the development of high temperature during fermentation means the process was wasteful of energy. Heat developed during fermentation is energy that is lost for feeding. ENSILING TEMPERATURES 90 •f Treated Untreated Trested Untreated ALFALFA SILAGE SORGHUM SILAGE Research at the University of New Hampshire on wilted orchard grass silage showed a 3% increase in available crude protein with SILO GUARD versus untreated silage. SILO GUARD reduces dry matter loss. Kansas State data on sorghum silage treated with SILO GUARD reduced total dry matter loss during fermentation This means there was 8.5% more dry matter in the treated silage. PROPRiONICACID i so I.oo— .05— Green Chop Silo Guard Treated Test data: In 2,000 lb of 45% dry matter alfalfa silage, 13 lb of propnomc acid was produced by the addition of SILO GUARD This "extra” level or propnomc acid also increases the “bunk life” of silage and inhibits the growth of yeasts and molds in silage after it is removed from the silo All these benefits and more can be realized when you treat your silage this year with SILO GUARD SILO GUARD works on all types of silages, including corn silage and high moisture corn Save more of the valuable nutrients in your silage with Silo Guard Richard E. Houser Lebanon, PA Serving Lancaster, Lebanon, Dauphin & Berks Co. Silo Guard* An Aid to Fermentation INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD CORF Untreated Silage If we missed calling you, call collect today! Roy L. Coover Carlisle, PA 717-766-1053 Serving E. Cumberland, York & Adams Co, Waverly, N Y 14892 plea for a fresh point of view about the land. It is a call to break from traditional habits of social procrastination of delaying what is hard but necessary until costly crisis is upon us. If we value nature we will do these things and start the process soon, but if we are callous about life and measure it only by the day at hand we will be acting the coward and the fool. In the judgment of nature, this is a crowning test of our maturity and resource stewardship. SILO GUARD reduces heating research at Kansas State University on both alfalfa and sorghum silage showed how ef fective SILO GUARD can be in reducing heat. DRY MATTER LOSS 15 8 9 Treated Silage SILO GUARD increases acid production. Alfalfa silage test results at the Cargill Research Farm showed how SILO GUARD influences the production of beneficial Propnomc Acid Lester D. Burkholder Shippensburg, PA 717-532-4203 Serving Franklin, W. Cumberland & Perry Co. Untreated Silage M7TH