'Mom, where does food come from?' Montour County farmers Herb ami Margaret Zeager prwide young city Ms Mth some !(bod far thought' BY MARGIE FUSCO Staff Correspondent LIMESTONEVILLE - When the boys and girls from Wat sontown Elementary School scramble off the bus, their remarks are familiar. “Pe-yew. It stinks.” On this humid morning, with air so thick it sticks to skin and clothes, the scent of farming is more cloying than clean. Melissa, who just turned six, is unusually quiet this morning. Like most of the children in her kin dergarten class, she lives in town. For many of them, this will be the first visit to a farm. Six years ago Herb and Margaret Zeager began tours at Shady Hill Farm, near Lunestoneville, Montour County. “It started out as a request from one class,” Margaret recalls. And it grew. This week alone, five groups have come to visit. It’s been a hectic morning for the Zeagers. Until the first group of children, a preschool, arrived the Zeagers were in the fields trying to get the last of their snap beans planted before the rain. A ship ment of 11,000 chicks, due at 7:30 this morning, was delayed when the driver got a flat tire. The chicks and the preschoolers arrive together at 9 a.m. The children are delighted, even if the Zeagers aren’t. When the Watsontown Elementary students arrive, Herb begins his presentation, showing a chart of ten things the children will Watsontown Elementary students examine feed in the hayloft. see on their visit. As he points to a picture of a pig, the children again offer “Pe-yew” remarks. Margaret laughs softly behind them. It’s a secret laugh. She knows the magic that’s coming. The children inspect a pair of white rabbits, then race to the paddock fence to see Daisy, the horse, and the ewe that is her pasture mate. The childish touches are tentative. Even the boldest hands, George’s and Chad’s, hestitate a second before they stroke Daisy’s velvet muzzle. Jennifer, a shy child, can’t bring herself to touch the horse. But she comes away from the fence smiling, delighted just by the sight. The animals know they’re the center of attention. Daisy departs with her tail flying and prances once around the paddock like a Kentucky Derby contender. The children break into applause. Lassie, the farm dog, prowls the crowd jealously, pawing likely candidates to beg a handshake. She tries to draw attention with a bark and a cat chase, but finds little interest. Finally she catches the eye of three-year-old Sabrina, who hugs Lassie, despite arms too tiny to reach around the dog's huge white ruff. Cassie becomes Sabrina’s companion for the rest of the visit. The children are moving single file into the bam. Five thousand chicks are ready to be admired. The room is warm and com fortable, filled with the clean smell Johnny and Anna hold the new chicks. of sawdust and new life. It feels good against the gathering cold and portending clouds outside. “It’s a good day for starting chicks,” Herb tells the children. Now there are plenty of questions. What’s that light for? Why are they drinking Kool-Aid? Are they eating sawdust 7 An unlucky beetle, hoping to escape the rain, has flown into the George and Chad reach tentatively to pet Daisy. • • y rff pen. One chick pecks boldly at its back. A second follows. Soon there are a dozen, in a hail of cheeps and chirps, doing battle with the thick black carapace. The comedy goes unnoticed by the children, hanging on Herb’s answers. Finally a little girl has to ask, “What do they feel like?” Herb hesitates only a moment before he decides to let 120 children touch his new chicks. “We’re big on promoting the farm image,” Margaret has said. “We like to do public relations.” Indeed the Zeagers are committed to education. Herb is president of the Warrior Run School Board and serves on the regional Agriculture in Education Task Force. It was a discussion on how to educate the public about farming that made him invite a reporter to experience a farm visit. “That’s how it starts,” Herb said. And now he’s making good on his commitment. Herb and Margaret circle the pen, picking up chicks and placing them in eager hands. There’s no fear now, only happy curiosity. “I like them,” Melissa finally says. Her eyes are glowing in the dim light. “They’re cute.” The hayloft is the next stop. Herb explains the feed, including silage, which he describes as “tossed salad for cows.” The children step up to examine the feed. Set apart from the others by his vision and coordination problems, Todd finds a special experience here. The other children pass by the feed with slight interest. But Todd lives in. His fingers come alive in the NEWARK, Del. - There has been considerable publicity about the relationship between low in take of calcium-rich foods and the bone-thinning condition called osteoporosis. But researchers also have evidence that calcium can affect blood pressure. Adding calcium to the diet has been found to reduce blood pressure in people with high or normal blood pressure, Dr. Sue Snider says. It has a greater effect on hypertensive individuals than on those with normal blood pressure. In a pilot study, scientists ob served that 46 hypertensive per sons consumed 20 to 25 percent less calcium than 44 individuals with normal blood pressure. Except for shell corn and soybeans. His nose delights in the hay and silage. He beams, his senses alive. At the next stop, the steer pen, he invites a heifer over to feel her sticky nose. The other children are con cerned with their own noses, holding them as they prepare to enter the hog house. The rain is about to break, and the smell of hog manure has become over powering. One teacher drops back, excusing herself in a whisper and saying she’s getting sick. The children persevere, entering the building. But the inside is a surprise. The smell is gone, carried away by good cross ventilation, aided by the deluge coming down at last. The hogs press forward, reaching with curious snouts, as if they were the observers and not the observed. The animals are pink, brown, spotted, and most of all clean as they compete for a place under the shower spray. “Hey, that wasn’t so bad,” one boy says as the group leaves the building. “Naw. It didn’t even smell,” another agrees. “I liked it," a girl chimes in. The children climb into my hay wagons for a final trip that will end at their school bus. As they settle down, Melissa suddenly stands up and announces loudly, “My Pappy raises pigs. He has rabbits, three little ones, too.” She’s found out something im portant, something of value in her own family. And she’s proud of it. Calcium helps control blood pressure calcium, the diets of the two groups were the same. Similar results have been noted in other studies comparing calcium intake and blood pressure, Snider says. For example, in a study of pregnant women ranging in age from 20 to 35, adding calcium to the diet reduced blood pressure. During the last three months of pregnancy, those who had con sumed more calcium had lower blood pressure. Much remains to be learned about the relationship between calcium and blood pressure, Snider says. But research con tinues to reinforce the recom mendation that adults should have the equivalent of two to three cups of milk daily.