AlO—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 28,1981 Lancaster Farming says... In any meeting between two farmers, the conversation quickly turns to prices and costs One of the first questions asked is, “What’s an acre of land around here worth 7 " Given today's prices the figure is likely to be between $l5OO and $7500 an acre for typical Pennsylvania farmland Even the most optimistic land owner or dealer could hardly have predicted the skyrocketing value of farmland m the past decade or two But there are signs it will continue This week Austin Ktplinger, in his respected Kiplmger Washington Letter, projects farmland prices will triple by 1990 on a national average Kiplmger says two-thirds of the gam will be due to inflation, the rest a real increase resulting from higher demand and better yield on farm crops A bit of quick work with a computer shows the current inflation rate HARDNESS OF HEART March 1,1981 Background Scripture: Matthew 19. Devotional Reading: Deuteronomy 30 - 15-20. “For your hardness of heart.” That, said Jesus, is the on ly reason that a man and woman are even-allowed to terminate their marriage in divorce. Divorce is plainly not God’s purpose, for as Jesus puts it, “the two shall become one.” What God in tends for his children is the unity of marriage, but, as in NOW IS THE TIME By Max Smith, Lancaster County Agricultural Agent Phone 717-394-6801 'Mfx ■■ J -4i\Z'Va<:£- .<<,s TO KNOW YOUR TIMBER Don’t close the deal on the sale of timber from your woodlot until you are sure that the price is right, and that the buyer will not do con siderable damage for the future. In too many cases the owner will sell because he thought “it sounded good” or because “I needed the money”. In either case real value may not have been received We do not have too many acres of forest or woodlots in southeastern Pennsylvania, but there are a number of farms with good woodlots. In these areas there are often good trees that are worth money. The owner should be sure of what he has and it’s market value before selling to anyone. Professional help from the Service so many of God’s other inten tions for his children, that in tended unity is lost m marital conflict Divorce, therefore, is sin because it fails to ac complish God’s purpose But it is not a unique sm and too often religious people and particularly religious authorities have been legalistic in this one area of human relationships As Jesus makes clear in the Gospels, God’s purpose for his children is also honesty, purity, charity, humility, self-sacrifice, and love toward all of God’s children When we he, cheat, and strike out against others we are sinning no less than when we fail to fulfill God’s purpose m marriage Many Americans cheat on their in come tax, for example, but that does not remove them beyond the bounds of God’s mercy. ■* VC,. y&X, S; v’% Forester of the Penna Depart ment of Forests and Waters, or from the Extension Service is available Don’t sell too quickly and then be sorry TO BE CAREFUL WITH FUELS Mishaps in the handling, use, and storage of gasoline, kerosene, and diesel fuel result in many fires and explosions During these tunes when we are all trying to conserve fuel, there are many opportumtes for accidents The best place to store fuel is in an underground tank. Small quantities should be stored in labeled safety cans Do not store fuel in glass or plastic containers Our safety specialists say that most of us are in danger when we haul gasoline in a safely can in ihe trunk of our cai fumes Land cost vs, land value alone will do the trick of tripling the cost of an acre of farmland by 1990 That means an acre of prime farmland will be selling for over $20,000 in less than a decade Not too long ago that figure would get an entire farm for a soldier returning from World War II It is difficult to justify today’s cost of farmland with the value of a farm business and the products it produces Investment firms mail brochures describing farms which start at 1000 acres and go up Price tags run over a million dollars Surely this is not the property average young farmers seek as they get out of school Nor is it for their parents The sales pitch is aimed at the investor Giant investors, or mutual funds, lick their chops and eye vast tracts of our best farmland as blue chip investments What God Has Joined What I am saying, then, is not that divorce is "ok” it isn’t but it is not the ultimate tragedy or sin in jrnman life Divorce is not “o k. r ’ and neither is our ex ploitation of one another or our deceit of one another 1 emphasize this because often we are given the im pression that there are only two possible norms for the Christian to accept in this society: (1) divorce is wrong and should not be permitted, or (2) divorce is quite accep table I believe there is a third position open to the follower of Christ, (3) divorce is not what God wants of us, but it may be the final recourse open to us when reconcillia tion seems not to be possible That means we will upnold the sanctity of marriage, we will continue to hold divorce as failure, but, as with any other area m which we fail to (current Farm Credit rate) to plant a crop which at best will return six or seven percent on his investment The average person, even the average family, can not afford the cost of getting into farming So, farmland becomes con centrated in the hands of giant-size farmers or absentee landowners, simply because those who want to farm can’t afford to compete live up to God’s will, we can find forgiveness and redemption even in the midst of this tragic ex perience Yet, it is "the hardness” of our “hearts” that is usually at the roots of marital discord. Sometimes it is willful, other times it is ig norance people simply not HAV HAWS.,/ /// 'f'o u //// // /// A (/ / /j // /Ai/\ '/ / / /'z can build up, or a rear-end crash, 7 7 7 l\ 7 / / // „ . . '.// could cause an explosion The best / place to haul that can of gas is on 7 // the floor behind the front seat, 7 / then open windows for good ven- / / Illation Be extra careful at this , time when handling all types of ‘ft fuels j ' TO STOKE SUPPLIES SAFELY f Many farmers nave bought and f f accepted early delivery on seeds, / / fertilizers, and other supplies / /! Some attention should be given to / / / the proper storage of these items I 7 7 n have seen bags of fertilizer stored ff f too close to a barn door, or to an / open window, the same with farm // / / seeds Extra moisture on these ' 7 / materials, oi under them on a // // damp floor, can cause trouble ' /. Also, it is very important to keep j// / f. seeds away from weed-killer / chemicals These herbicides may / f reduce, or kill, the germination of , / / the seeds Also, children, pets, and ' // / livestock should not have access to 7 stored seeds or farm chemicals 7 All ot these materials get more \ %J 7 / expensive each year It is only * / s~\ 7 good management to store them / Q j / carefully TO BEWARE OF GYPSY MOTH INFESTATION » Ij © It appears that parts ot our area I'm iucf il - wa^7hlfatr s tersro^a? d r PerS Back in 1977 Continental Illinois Bank and Trust of Chicago had its Ag Land Trust Fund program nipped in the bud when Congress protested its potential impact on the family farm system and farmland prices But with rates of return ap proaching 15 percent, the investor with sizable capital and patience can ill afford to put his funds in a bank, common stock, or even urban real estate Meanwhile, the farmer is borrowing money at 12 percent ' The Hardness Of Your Hearts BY CURT HARLER, EDITOR realizing what is wrong with their lives It is the same kind of "hardness of heart” that leads us to he, cheat, bear false witness against our neighbor, resist the needs of the poor and helpless, participate in war fare, and waste the resources that God has plac ed at our disposal. In each one of these instances of "hardness of heart” we must ft ''//,% IAUhITK /' n,' > r i]~L V/, ■/////' W * If It may not be too many years before the nation finds itself with a two-tiered agricultural system seen in primitive nations a large group of farm workers, peasants, tilling soil owned by a relatively small group of wealthy landholders The reason is the land’s value as a productive-resource is not as great as its inflated cost Ag districts may slow speculative rises in price But as long as speculators and farmers continue to buy land ex pectmg inflation to increase their net worth, farmland values will soar Relying on inflation to provide a growing credit base adds fuel to the fire Only by breaking the credit inflation cycle will farmers be able to call themselves truly independent A first step is to distinguish bet ween land cost and land value find ways and means of ex periencing God’s redemp tion. So it is in the tragedy of divorce What the divorced person needs from us is not our condemnation, not our legalistic self-righteousness, but the same forgiveness and love that God offers to all of us who experience failure to living the Christian life f . . / / !> / \\ /' /O/ ' /// v /// f/f I ''O,