C4—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 25,1984 While environmentalists press for an end to agricultural chemicals and naturalists talk about food production without chemicals, researchers continue in their effort to find a better way to produce our food supply using chemicals in a safe and sensible way. If you doubt the continued need for agricultural chemicals, par ticularly pesticides, consider this: Food producers worldwide battle against 10,000 harmful insects, 1500 damaging diseases, 1800 noxious weeds, and 1000 tiny nematode species. Obviously it will take a lot more than a sharp-eyed bug picker to deal with crop damage potential of that magnitude. Beyond the usual problems of oesticide handling and application Reserve corn is released Washington, D.C. Com placed in the farmer-owned reserve from Oct. 6, 1981 through June 30, 1982 (reserve IV) has been released for dedemp tion, effective im mediately, by Everett Rank, executive vice president of the U.S. Department of Agricutlure’s Com modity Credit Cor poration. Rank said this means farmers now may sell but are not required to sell their reserve IV corn after repaying their CCC price support loan. The reason for the action, he said, was that the national average price received by far mers for corn had reached $3.16 per bushel, 1 cent above the $3.15 per bushel release level for reserve IV com. USDA makes storage payments to farmers with grain in the reserve. Upon repayment of the loan, farmers can keep the storage payments earned through the date of repayment. Release of reserve IV corn will continue through Sept. 30, Rank said. If the five-day national average market price remains at or above $3.15 on Sept. 30., storage earnings will stop and interest on the price support loan will begin to accrue. If the Sept. 30 price falls below $3.15, reserve IV com no longer will be in release status and farmers will continue earning storage payments. Farm Talk Jerry Webb Del e Extension is the burdensome task of disposal. What does a farmer or commercial applicator do with leftover pesticides and with the residues from pesticide containers? There was a time when they simply dug holesand buried them, or stored diem in large containers and then buried the large con tainers. But environmentalists are rapidly putting an end to that kind of behavior, and rightly so. They’re saying to pesticide users that they must clean up their act, and that includes safe disposal. So what is a safe way to get ride of pesticide residues? Researchers at the lowa Agricultural Ex periement Station are working with the Environmental Protection Agency, testing a system that PJ^D! Ford TW with fronts „„deis. from 1° b f ..| tractors Fo '° e most WIlt . wf ,eel dm*. e quipp ed w lime and to 20°/oi eSS^=,-ssa ts^Ssss^^ :3Ssfc£ss3SJS— — .• Bugged TW-2| olus- fea‘ ur f u lf irst three SfigSS&c*^ holds great promise. It's simple, can be accomplished on the farm, and seems to be quite safe. A research team of agronomists, engineers, botanists, entomologists, horticulturists and bacteriologist, using funds from the En vironmental Protection Agency, has converged on a concrete pit that is yielding a lot of information about pesticide disposal. The project involves a 12 x 30- foot pit that slopes from 3 to 4-feet deep. It’s lined with a layer of gravel, followed by a layer of soil and another layer of gravel. A tile line underneath the pit allows researchers to sample ground water, and a movable ~ntr nr <- thc pit during ram. This setup allows the researchers to see what does happen to pesticides that are disposed of in such a manner. The researchers were looking for a system that would be leaking proof and overflow proof, that would provide an environment in which chemicals could degrade or decompose into harmless sub stances. And they wanted something that would allow water evaporation to make room for more waste. During the research effort, more than 40 pesticides have been disposed of in the pit, usually in the form of rinse water from applicator equipment. Here’s the interesting part. Researchers found no chemical buildup in surrounding ground water and no contamination in a well, located only 240 feet from the pit. They discovered that the CLOSEOUT SPECIALS ON ALL 1984 FORD LAWN 8 GARDEN TRACTORS chemicals did break down through chemical and biological processes, and that the atmosphere around the pit contained less than one part per billion of chemical con tamination. According to one researcher, that amount of con tamination is equal to a speck of dandruff on a hair stretched from the earth to the moon. At another site, the lowa researchers looked at a number of small pits made of plastic garbage cans. These also produced en couraging results. The researchers say that while the soil has an amazing ability to absorb and break down pesticides, man has the ability to produce r "j I THMKII | i BWLDI | I | I I READ LANCASTER FARMING'S ! I ADVERTISING TO FIND ALL I | YOUR NEEDS! j See The New Ford Tractors In Stock And Ready To Go I NOW...GET ON NEW FORD EQUIPMENT! Buy and take delivery of any new Ford industrial tractor, tractor- loader or backhoe-loader before June 30,1984 We’ll help ar range low 9%% FIXED ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE financing for qualified buyers for up to five full years through Ford Motor Credit Company OR DELAY YOUR PAYMENTS UNTIL SEPTEMBER 1,1984! Prefer to delay payments in- stead 9 We can help arrange up to 6 months waiver of payments for qualified buyers, followed by up to four full years of 9 3 A% FIXED ANNUAL PERCENTAGE PARTS ★ SALES ★ SERVICE I HAS ■ 8 SBS BSS 18 78SS 8 8 B i^k since j TRACTOR CQ.^^^ 2l^ 717-949-6501 NEW TOLL FREE NO. 1-800-822-2152 Rt. 419 Between Schaefferstown & Cornwall, Lebanon County chemicals faster than Mother Nature can dispose of them. That means seme form of containment, perhaps the concrete pit or maybe even the small plastic garbage cans, are the answer to this “pesty” problem. Environmental purists will probably find some way to object to this solution to pesticide disposal, but surely they will admit it’s better than what goes on now. And until they’ve carefully analyzed the results of this agricultural research, maybe they should withhold judgment. Perhaps this is an environmentally good way to dispose of pesticides chemicals that are necessary if we are to continue to feed ourselves. 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