Assuring the accuracy NEWARK, DE - A soil test is useful only if it’s accurate. And the key to accuracy is quality control in the laboratory which analyzes the sample. This ensures that the numbers generated give reproducible results which of the ALFALFA and CLOVER leaves because of leaf shatter. Some rotary head tedders can beat much of the protein-rich leaves off the stems - leaving them in the field. (That can cost you money in lost nutritional value because 80% of the protein is in the leaves.) GRIMM "Leaf-saver" TEDDERS answer to preventing leaf-loss and making more palatable, nutrient-rich hay while cutting drying time up to 50%; 8 ft. wide. Pto-driven thru gear box and V-belt that protects against shock or damage from stones or other obstructions. New simplified design and rugged construction cuts maintenance, lengthens life. “Made in Vermont’’ assures reliable, fast machine and parts availability. Priced very competitively. Distributed By correlate with research. Without this assurance, fertilizer recom mendations based on the test are meaningless. A recent sample exchange among mid-Atlantic area soil laboratories shows that University HAMILTON EQUIPMENT, INC. 567 South Reading Road P.O. Box 478 Ephrata, PA 17522 Telephone (717) 733-7951 Plea so Contact Us For Your Nearest Dealer of soil tests of Delaware Agricultural Ex periment Station soil test results agree closely with those from university labs in Maryland, New Jersey and Virginia. This should reassure fanners who use these labs. Scientists at all four labs belong to a regional soil test work group established in 1975. Soil specialists from Pennsylvania, West Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina also belong to the group. Once a year the labs # analyze identical soil samples and com pare results to check accuracy. Several commercial labs in the area participate as well. Besides reporting results of a soil analysis, as part of this quality control process each laboratory also submits a set of fertilizer recommendations based on that analysis for common crops grown in the region. Members of the group then compare testing procedures and discuss the reasons for their recom mendations. “When we differ,” says Dr. J. Thomas Sims, head of the University of Delaware soil laboratory, “we try to find out why.” Soil variability and problems in soil sampling are the main reasons test results differ. Fertilizer recommendations-even those based upon identical results-- may vary because of different concepts of plant nutrient needs and attitudes on the economics of fertilizer use. There are far fewer differences now than in 1975, and group members continue to work toward greater uniformity. In the days of cheap fertilizer it was common to advise farmers to apply potassium and phosphorus on even high testing coastal plain soils, as a kind of yield insurance. Since then, Sims says research at the Delaware Agricultural Ex periment Station and elsewhere fl READ LANCASTER FARMING FOR COMPLETE AND UP-TO-DATE MARKET REPORTS LOANS JUST FOR YOU Penn Savings Bank will give you a special rate on our already low 10.75% home equity loan. • Save 'k % when you maintain a $4OO average monthly balance in a Penn Savings Bank checking or savings account • Save another %% when you authorize convenient automatic payment from your checking or savings account It’s the biggest bargain in money we know. Ask for details at our nearest branch, but hurry rates are subject to change without notice What? You don’t havo an account with us? Opon ona now. For more Information call: 3*3-0601. Or battar (till, stop in at your nearest Pann Savings Bank branch. *APR-simple interest, maximum farm 5 years Minimum $5,000 Longer terms available at slightly higher rates You’re the reason we want to be the typennSavlngsßantf Deposits Federally Insured up to $lOO,OOO Equal Opportunity Lender ' wi_, Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 31,1956-Al7 has demonstrated that this practice is often unnecessary. Soil test interpretations may also differ, depending on how a crop is grown. Thus, though phosphorus can often be omitted on corn, in certain situations such as no-till it may be useful as a starter fer tilizer to stimulate early seedling growth-especially in cold soils. Phosphorus may also help achieve high com yields under irrigation. “This year,” Sims says, “all our Delaware recommendations are for specific crop yield goals, based on soil texture and whether the crop will be irrigated.” Because fertilizer is one of the most costly production inputs, the soil scientist suggests that, once farmers receive their soil test reports, they consider having these interpreted by more than one source-just as they would get another opinion before deciding on a course of medical treatment. Membership in the mid-Atlantic soil test work group is a great help to the University of Delaware soil testing program, Sims says. It provides a means of group members to share much relevant information which can be applied to local crops and soil conditions, thus stretching research dollars at each participating institution. This kind of cooperation is possible because of similarities among many of the region’s coastal plain soils. 25 of Lancaster County