Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, October 18, 1986, Image 35

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    Lebanon Manure Program To Spread Nutrient 4 Wealth 9
(Continued from Page Al)
Conservation District manager,
Doug Goodlander. In areas where
manure production is high, fields
tend to get an overdose, while in
areas where little manure is
produced farmers may not have
the equipment to haul the manure
and spread it, or the money to have
someone else do it.
According to 1983-statistics, says
Goodlander, Lebanon County is
producing just about the right
amount of manure for its crop
acres, but the manure isn’t getting
to all the places it’s needed.
With the help of a financial boost
from the Chesapeake Bay
Program, the conservation district
directed the construction of a
truck-mounted spreader to help
remedy the problem. The project
was a team effort involving
Evergreen Tractor Company of
Lebanon and Osterlund Truck
Services of Harrisburg.
The unit employs a John Deere
Hydro-Push spreader capable of
distributing any type of solid
NATIONAL DAIRY COW SALE INDEX
(c 1986 Lancaster Farming Newspaper
This sale index can help dairymen place a value on the dairy cows in
their own herds. Breed organization sales and private dispersal sales
reported in Lancaster Farming are included in the dollar averages.
Year to date
Nation
Pennsylvania
Four previous weeks
Nation
Four previous weeks
+ /-year to date.
Year to date:
Nation
Pennsylvania .
Four previous weeks
Nation
Four previous weeks
+/-yearto date;
Superhopper
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designed to reduce wind drag. When there’s
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M.H. EBY, INC.
P.0.80x 127
manure. A radar sensor links
ground speed to the spreading rate
so that nutrients are dispersed
evenly regardless of variations in
the truck’s speed.
Mounting the unit on a truck
made it versatile, says Goodlan
der, pointing out that the truck can
move quickly from farm to farm
wherever it’s needed.
Goodlander said the district is
compiling a list of those who want
to sell manure. “We have people
desperately looking to sell this
stuff,” he said. The district intends
to coordinate the county’s manure
management, linking those who
have an excess to those who need
more. If the manure is purchased,
the new truck will be used to
spread it free of charge. According
to Goodlander, the service will be
available to neighboring counties
where travel time doesn’t become
prohibitive. Those interested in
finding out more about the free
spreading service should call
Goodlander at the conservation
district office, 272-3377.
Brown
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1065
87 higher
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Red and
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2837
2010
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Blue Ball, PA 17506
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Guernsey Jersey
1131 910
569 1040
1506 1188
375 higher 278 higher
Milking
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1212
362 higher
——
I <1
Before manure is applied to any
field, though, farmers need to be
aware of its nutrient levels, said
Russ Wagner of the Department of
Environmental Resources’ Bureau
of Soil and Water Conservation. “I
would encourage all farmers to get
a manure test done,” said Wagner,
cautioning farmers against relying
on “book” nutrient values on their
particular farm. “Yours can be
tremendously different than the
average,” he said.
To illustrate his point, Wagner
noted that in tests done in Lan
caster County, the range of
nitrogen content in a ton of manure
went from a low of .88 pounds per
ton to 11.42 pounds per ton, for an
EPA Suspends Use Of Pesticide
HARRISBURG - The Penn
sylvania Department of
Agriculture is warning farmers to
immediately discontinue using
dmoseb because exposure to the
pesticide may pose serious health
risks.
The warning follows action by
the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency to halt all sales, use and
distribution of dmoseb through an
emergency suspension order.
EPA issued the emergency
suspension, the strongest action it
can take by law, because studies
show dmoseb causes birth defects
and sterility in laboratory animals.
Exposure by skin absorption or
inhalation during and immediately
after field application of the
pesticide is the source of greatest
risk to those applying it, according
to the agency.
EPA also has a limited amount
of evidence that exposure, m ad
dition to causing adverse
reproductive affects, may harm
the immune system and damage
eyes.
Dmoseb is primarily a contact
herbicide used to control broadleaf
weeds. It is not registered for
homeowner use.
The common trade names for
dmoseb are: DNBP, DNOSBP,
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• weight- 20-30% less than steel and wood
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• Maintenance- aluminum construction won’t rust,
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built “Eby tough”, heavy structural, new
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• Durabillty-
If It's Aluminum
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It Must Be From By
M.H. EBY, INC.
Box 127, Blue Ball, PA 17506 (717) 354-4971
Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, October 18,1988-113%
overageui /.jj.
Wagner stressed that manure
testing should be repeated if
manure handling methods or feed
content are changed.
Wagner came to the field day to
introduce the Mobile Nutrient Lab
to Lebanon-area farmers. A joint
project of DER and Penn State
University, the lab conducts on
farm soil, water and manure tests,
and can develop a computerized
nutrient management program for
a given farm when the above data,
along with crop information, is
provided. Turn-around time for the
test results is 24 hours.
The mobile lab’s mission is to
encourage manure analysis and
“dinitro,” dmoseb (F-ISO),
Caldon, Sinox, Vertac General and
Selective Weed Killer, Basamte,
Chemox General and PE,
Chemsect, Dinitnx, Dimtro-3,
Dinitro General, Drexel Dynamite
3, Dynamite, Elgetol 318, Gebutox,
Hel-Fire, Kiloseb, Netropone C,
Siibdex DNBP, Vertac
Crop Residue Saves Soil
Crop residue is more than dead
plant material which some farm
ers call trash It is the key
ingredient of a conservation tillage
program, says John Akers, district
conservationist with the Cham
bersburg office of the USDA Soil
Conservation Service.
Crop residue has saved millions
of tons of topsoil on the nation’s
farmlands. The dead plant
materials protect the soil from the
impact of the ram drop and holds
the soil m place so it will not run
off.
Agronomists state that each
bushel of corn results m 56 pounds
of residue. With a 100-bushel-per
acre corn crop, there is 5600
ALUMINUM
GRAIN BODIES
soil testing, said Wagner. The lab
is available to all fanners within
the Susquehanna River basin, and
farmers interested in having the
lab visit their area should contact
their local conservation district
office.
Farmers attending the field day
also had the opportunity to view
manure management research
being conducted on the Hoover
farm by the conservation district
and the county extension service.
Test plots of corn were planted
employing various tillage and
nutrient treatments.
Field day visitors also had the
opportunity to tour the Hoover
dairy and beef operations.
Dinitro Weed Killer 5, Dynanap,
Premerge Plus with Dinitro and
Klean Krop.
Additional information can be
obtained from the Department’s
Bureau of Plant Industry at 717-
787-4843 or through a County Ex
tension Office.
pounds of residue produced per
acre. If this residue is distributed
over the field surface and remains
until after the next year’s corn
crop is planted, soil erosion can be
reduced up to 90 percent.
Although crop residue is ef
fective in reducing surface
erosion, there may still be a
problem m managing surface
water runoff, states Akers. On
shorter slopes of 300 feet and a 6
percent slope, contour strip
cropping is usually effective in
controlling surface water. When
slopes are larger and steeper, then
diversions and terraces may be
needed to reduce surface water
runoff.
Protect Soils
This Winter
“Don’t get caught
with bare soil in your
com fields this winter,”
states Stanley E.
Palmer, Soil Con
servation Technician
with the Chambersburg
office of the USDA Soil
Conservation Service.
Bare or unprotected
soil will erode or wash
off the fields and fill up
road ditches and nearby
stream channels during
the fall and winter ram
storms. During the
erosion process, organic
matter, chemical fer
tilizers, and pesticides
also run into the stream
channels. These are a
dollar loss to the farmer
as well as a dollar cost
to the public who have to
pay to clean up the
water in the Chesapeake
Bay.
Farmers can protect
their bare corn fields by
planting a cover crop
this fall, states Palmer
Annual ryegrass at 20
pounds per acre, winter
wheat to 120 pounds per
acre, or winter rye at
112 pounds per acre are
the most common
grasses planted for
winter cover crop on the
bare corn fields.