A22-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 20,1990 CANTON, Peoples Republic of China Imagine 700 acres of wheat at harvest time. Now ima gine no combines. Grab your sickle and head out into the field. That wouldn’t work, you’d be harvesting until next spring. But what if you were surrounded by countless people, each with a sickle in his hand? That would work, if you had enough people. It wouldn’t be particularly efficient, but it would work. In the People’s Republic of China, where a majority of the agricultural production is done “the old-fashioned way,” the term “labor shortage” is probably not in their vocabulary. In fact, it’s quite the opposite situation, according to Steve Fisher, of Oley, Pennsyl vania, who recently returned from a tour of Chinese agriculture. Fisher, who serves on the board of directors of the Pennsylvania Forage and Grassland Council, says the technology for increased mechanization is there, but because of the abundance of peo ple, hand labor is an important part of the economy. “Mechanization isn’t the direc tion they want to go yet,” he explains. “There are more than a billion people in China, and approximately 80 percent of them are involved in agriculture. If they were to extensively mechanize their farming operations, a lot of people would be out of work.” The wheat fields he saw being harvested were in the western pro vince of Xinjiang, and were very large, he says, 600 or 700 acres. “They were filled with people, cutting the wheat with sickles, tying sheaves and making shocks.” Fisher was in China as part of a grassland management delegation \ N *s«ir , ♦ -*4 *. * % ' An excellent vegetable crop grows between Canton and Hong Kong. BRUSH VALLEY (Indiana Co.) The Indiana County Far mers Association (ICFA) voted recently to take a tough stand on the growing problem of white tailed deer damage in the area. The ICFA, which represents 422 farms and agribusinesses, officially adopted a policy recom mending that the Pennsylvania Farmers Association (PFA) initi ate a class action suit on behalf of the state’s farmers against the Pennsylvania Game Commission for the purpose of recovering crop damage done by wildlife, espe cially deer. with People to People Internation al, an organization founded in 1956 by President Dwight D. Eishenhower. Its Citizen Ambas sador Program allows Americans to visit and interact with people of other nations, promoting under standing and good will between people from different cultures. Fisher’s participation was made possible through sponsorship by FMC Corporation. He holds the distinction of being a “Master Sales Representative” for the ag chemical company, his employer for the past 18 years. John Steffel, FMC’s regional sales manager, saw the trip as a great teaming opportunity for Fisher, on both personal and professional levels. “I wasn’t representing FMC in any official capacity,” Fisher explains, “but when the leaders of the Chinese delegation discovered I worked for them, they went out of their way to treat me right. FMC does a lot of business in Chi na, and the Chinese hold the com pany in very high regard.” China is a very large country with a diverse heritage and many different climates. Expecting the agriculture to be the same throughout would be like walking onto a dairy farm in Vermont and assuming that all American agri culture is similar, he says. The agriculture in the area around Bejing provided examples of a wide variety of cultivated crops, he says. Vegetables, grain, and fruit are all raised in the pro ductive soil. Many different tech niques are utilized to help maxim ize production, including inter cropping, double-cropping, no-till and elaborate ditch irrigation systems. The quality of the crop was quite impressive, he says, espe- w X - Deer Issue At Forefront The recommendation, made during the association’s annual meeting in Brush Valley, is part of a package of proposals to be for warded to the PFA for possible legislative action by the larger statewide group of farmers. At least one farmer at the meet ing expressed a concern that the threat of a lawsuit might dampen What he felt was a new spirit of cooperation from the Game Com mission in trying to conhtrol the state’s deer population. The commission has announced some farmland may be designated “hot spots,” which have excessive Fisher Sees Chinese Agriculture cially when you consider that it’s all done with manual labor. They do have small tractors, which are the same everywhere, but they are not used in the Held, mostly just to “drag wagons around. They’re really not much more than a glori fied garden tractor,” he comments. It was very difficult from Inner Mongolia, Fisher says, where the nomadic Mongol plainsmen grazed large herds of sheep, goats, cattle, horses and camels. “They have vast herds of horses,” he says. “They raise them both for transportation and as a food source.” The grazing management is very labor intensive as well, he says. During the spring and sum mer, the Mongol herders are con stantly on the move, herding the cattle continuously to avoid over grazing. Fences are nowhere to be seen. While on the move, they live in little tents called “yurts.” Their winter months are spent in communities referred to as “collectives,” he says. They have small horses (“not much bigger than what we’d call a pony”) and dogs to help move the animals where they want them. Cultivated forage crops are somewhat rare, Fisher says, but what he did see was sometimes quite different from what you would see in the United States. They grow a high-protein legume called “stylosanhus,” which is similar to alfalfa, “but much stem mier,” he says. “They feed it green. I think if they were to dry it, it wouldn’t be very palatable; it would be like feeding sticks.” When the plant is mature they can get five cuttings a year, and it is often interplanted with lychee trees. These trees yield a small, sweet fruit a lychee nut that deer herds and which may be targeted for extended hunting sea sons after the regular seasons are over. But Brad Neal, vice president of the ICFA, said he personally believed the Game Commission was not doing all it could to reduce deer numbers, and agreed with the suggestion the class action suit might convince the Game Commission of the farmers’ resolve to reduce crop damage. Ted Godshall, public informa tion officer for the Game Com mission, said from his Harrisburg office that the state will offer Steve Fisher, FMC Master Sales Representative (right), visits with China’s Minister of Agriculture Xu. Steve Fisher visits the Great Wall of China. is very popular in China. “They’re very good to eat,” Fisher says. “I don’t know why they’re not more popular over here.” Other forages he saw were “ele phant grass,” and a crop they call “Mexican com,” which tassels like conventional com but does not produce a viable ear. “The ears will produce seeds, but the nutri tion of the crop is in the stalk,” Fisher explains. “It naturally pro duces multiple cuttings like sugargrass.” One problem he observed with the cultivated forages was that the soil was often quite acidic, and he saw no lime being applied. “It seems to me they’re attacking the problem backward,” he notes. “Rather than trying to change the Of Meeting 800,000 antlerless deer licenses across the state for the regular three-day season Dec. 10-12, but if a sufficient number of deer are not harvested, the commission’s executive director may authorize an extended doe season. The pos sible extended season could be later in December or sometime in January, Godshall said. The extra season might be held statewide, only in certain regions or just on the farmlands desig nated “hot spots.” To qualify their property for the extended hunting season, God shall said farmers must contact the acidity of the soil they’re trying to develop legumes that are tolerant to high acidity. “That’s probably because of the lack of mechanization, but I’m sure it will end up costing them production,” he adds. It’s kind of ironic, he says, that many of the forage crops seen in the United States today were orig inally brought over from that area of the world in the 1920 s and ’3os. And today, improved strains of some of the same crops are being brought back. “A lot of what was brought out of China to improve rangelands in the U.S. and Canada are now going back again,” he says. “We’ve been able to improve on these crops with selection and breeding. It’s gone full circle.” Game Commission by Oct. 15. Game protectors will inspect the property, verify crop damage, and possibly designate the land as a hot spot The farmers will be given spe cial signs which must be posted on the property before the regular deer season begins, alerting hun ters that they may be able to return to that same property later in the winter if the season is extended. Also, in order to qualify, far mers must agree to sign up for the Game Commissioners safety zone program which opens their (Turn to Pag* A3O)