DlB—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, July 14,1984 Modem agriculture is doing some tremendous things, producing at levels not even dreamed of a few years ago. Average yields continue to in crease and more and more acres are brought into our modem Knowledgeable experts point to system of intensive cropping. Over major changes that need to be the past few decades, small farms made in the way we farm our soil, have given way to larger ones, and And yet other knowledgeable the old ways have yielded to abservers point to new yield and modem mechanization. productivity levels across the Prior to World War 11, the country and say that the con typical farm included quite a few servation collision talk is a bunch animals such as beef and dairy of baloney, cows, draft horses, hogs and No matter which side of this maybe even some sheep. But then conservation issue you line up on, came the era of bigness and it’s hard not to recognize that there specialization and those little is a growing national concern farms were merged into larger about soil erosion. Maybe they’re units. That meant fence rows and ill-informed but a lot of folks are pastureland disappeared. And wondering about increased erosion rolling hills once suited only for that’s polluting our streams and grazing and hay production came lakes with silt, fertilizers and under the plow. chemicals. And they’re wondering As this kind of intensive whether this erosion, if left un agriculture continues, some checked, will eventually reduce conservationists are starting to the nation’s ability to produce food, worry about the future, and they’re Knowledgeable or not, these asking some pretty serious concerned citizens know that soil questions. Some policy makers say erosion reduces agricultural we are on a collision course with productivity while at the same disaster. Our water supplies are time polluting water and air. And being reduced, with whole those factors have serious con 7IMMFRMAN hollander '« d -r*>3 # ||Y||T|U' ,TIMM NEW HOLLAND, PA MANUFACTURING CORP. 717-354-9611 Jy Wall fan with Hood and Cabinet A Versatile, Economical Portable ** y-;' n Elevator for |H Bales and *' Ear Corn UTILITY TRAILERS pt Rugged, Heavy Duty WAGON GEAR ZIMMERMAN AUGER SYSTEMS FOR EMPTYING MANURE PITS Efficient Economical and requires less Horsepower than most systems ; Portable Stationary CALL FOR PRICES AND YOUR LOCAL DEALER Farm Talk Jerry Webb Delaware Extension watersheds where the ground water reserves are being depleted, and we have mined our soil. In fact, the erosion of America’s farmalnd is probably at a record level. AIR-O-MATIC VENTILATION SYSTEMS sequences for our future security and well being. Locally, soil erosion may not be a big deal, although I suspect it’s a bigger factor than most farm people want to admit. Nationally there are some downright disgraces going on. I’ve seen land being farmed in lowa, for exam ple, that had no business being tilled. Fields that once proved excellent pasture and hay crops have been plowed and planted to com and soybeans, and the erosion is obvious even to passing motorists on the Interstate. Former secretary of agriculture Earl Butz urged fanners to plow their ground right *' l, ie fence rows. That was his way of saying we needed an all-out push to in crease food output to meet domestic and foreign demands. Some farmers took him literally, plowing land that should have been left in grass. A little erosion here and a little there adds up to one gigantic erosion problem one that may require government action. It took the government and its many programs to stop the erosion abuses of the 1920’s and 30’s, and that may be just what will be required again. When farm prices were low, land relatively cheap, Gross Cap. 3,000 to 24,000 lbs. Variety of Sizes Made to Order C; Specializing In Dairy Systems: Tie Stall & Free Stall Complexes Heifer & Veal Barns Machinery Sheds Republic Steel Buildings For Commercial Use NEED RENOVATIONS... OR A NEW BUILDING? DON'T DELAY - CALL TODAY FARM & COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS RD 4 EPHRATA, PA 17522 LOCATED IN FARMERSVILLE PHONE 717-354-4271 government incentives strong, and when there was a surplus of farm products, it was fairly easy to change farming habits and em phasize soil conservation. Programs that encouraged far mers to terrace, plant cover crops, provide drainage systems, and build waterways were effective. But can that be done again when farmers are anxious to till every possible inch of ground and not be worried with man-made obstacles that stand in the way of large tillage equipment? Those in the forefront of the current soil conservation movement feel that farmers and landowners aren’t apt to bite the conservation bullet on their own, and they’re calling for some completely new approaches to promote better conservation. That includes: Direct government rules and regulations on how land can be farmed. More government incentives to use conservation practices. Cross-compliance with commodity programs wherein a farmer not using approved practices would not qualify for government loans. There are two key points that must be dealt with in any national dialogue on conservation. First, is erosion really increasing significantly; and second, if erosion is increasing, what’s the best way to deal with it? The most widely quoted statis tics on soil erosion come out of a study conducted by the Soil Con servation Service following passage of the Soil and Water Resource Conservatin Act of 1977. That study points out that of the nation’s 413 million acres of cropland, only two-thirds of 272 million acres are considered at a safe level of erosion, meaning that those acres are losing less than five tons of soil per acre per year. Conservationists believe on those acres, soil is being rebuilt about as fast as it’s being lost. That means that another third of our cropland is losing soil faster than it’s gaining and eventually it will be worn out. Of course, these are only estimates and there is con siderable room for error. And you can find experts on both sides of the soil conservation issue. It’s my guess that soil conservation will be an important item on the national agricultural agenda during the upcoming farm bill debate.