AIQ-Lincastw Farming, Saturday, May 16, 1992 OPINION Get Things In Order American agriculture is graying. According to the 1987 U.S. Department of Agriculture Census, between 1982 and 1987 the number of farmers under the age of 25 fell by 42.5 percent. Twenty-one percent were 65 or older, and nearly half the nation’s farm assets were held by farmers who were at least 55. According to the spring issue of Farmland Update, the newsletter of the American Farmland Trust’s northeastern office, in 1969, retirement-age farmers accounted for only 12 percent of the farm population. By 1987 the digits had reversed to 21 percent. Meanwhile, especially in the north east, urban sprawl and development pressure drove property values beyond the reach of commercial agriculture. Estate and other taxes made it even more difficult for regional far mers to stay in business. Fanning takes a huge personal and financial investment. This makes farm transfer a very difficult issue. A farmer needs an estate plan to lay out a framework for a smooth transition of ownership and management. A will alone does not secure the future of a farm. Inheritance taxes are one big reason why a will is not enough. Although land values once may have been low enough for typical farm earnings to cover taxes, this is rarely true today. Since inheritance taxes are assessed at death and based on the “highest and best use" of land, property values are often appraised well above farm earnings. Estates worth more than $600,000 are subject to federal taxes on top of state and local taxes. With only a will, heirs to a 250-acre dairy farm appraised at $2,500 per acre could be liable for taxes beginning at 37 percent on the land value alone! Estate plans can save unsuspecting families from having to sell their farms to settle with the Internal Revenue Service. They can offset the settlement problems that arise because land is not a liquid asset, and provide for family members’ needs even those who leave the farm. Good plans allow farmers to retire, provide for unforeseen disability and even protect their land forever. Professional advisors, from attorneys and financial planners to conservation organizations, can help create estate plans tailor-made for farmers’ special needs. No one likes to think about death, but for farm families a child is not enough to keep the farm in the family. You need to get things in order now. Farm Calendar tor Company, East Troy, 9 a.m.-noon. Bedford County second annual Sheep and Wool Field Day, Bedford Fairgrounds, Bedford, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Pa. Draft Horse and Mule Associa- lion annual spring clinic, Man Clearfield Co. Horse Show, Clear- Lancaster Fanning Established 19SS Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St. Ephrata, PA 17522 by Lancaster Farming, Inc. A Stmnrmn Entoprh* Robert G. Campbell General Manager Everett R. Newswanger Managing Editor CapyHght IMI by Lancaster Farming Solanco Young Farmers Bam Meeting, Ed Hamish farm, 7:30 Hay Field Day, Joe Ferris Farm, Wilmington Township, Mercer Co., 2 p.m. Rural Issues Forum, Mansfield (Turn to Page A 37) To Avoid Soil Compaction Soil compaction, whether on the surface or in the subsoil, may reduce yields and rob profits. With compaction, plant growth may be significantly reduced. In one study at Purdue Universi ty, plant height was reduced by 20 per cent with moderate soil com paction. The increased size of Geld equipment used on Gums, several wet seasons, and the lack of cold winters have contributed to soil compaction. Compaction will show up in many ways, including reduced drainage, increased runoff, increases in denitrification, increase in the power requirements to work the soil, damage to a grow* ing crop, and reduced yields. Plants growing on compacted soils will ha ve reduced root growth often limited to horizontal growth, uneven plant height, show signs of herbicide injury when proper rates are used, and nitrogen deficiency when adequate nitrogen is present in the soil. Improving soils which have been compacted takes time and may involve spending money to achieve deep tillage. The most cost-effective way to treat soil compaction is avoidance. To reduce soil compaction, avoid tillage and traffic on wet soils, avoid deep tillage in the spring on poorly drained and somewhat Farm Forum Editor: I almost entered the June Dairy Month Recipe Contest I changed my mind when I looked at the pic ture of the prizes on 84, May 9 issue and realized I wouldn’t know what to do with a prize if I became a winner. Here at Raiaine Jerseys we don’t have those black and white (gener ic?) cows. Ours are the basically brown kind that produce the high percentage of protein that adds the quality to milk and especially the cheese and yogurt Those who make country crafts invariably use the black and white cows for their focus. I understand that the crafters are probably not (Turn to Pag* ASS) poorly drained soils, limit or con trol traffic in fields, and avoid unnecessary tillage which hastens organic matter decomposition. To Consider Rotational Grazing While pastures are not a major source of feed for many local far mers, they still have some beneGts. Pastures provide some fresh feed, a reprieve from concrete, and an opportunity to get some sun shine and exercise. To help pastures become more productive and something more than a muddy exercise lot, divide them into several paddocks. Then graze the paddocks on a rotational basis. To avoid overgrazing, fence off a small well drained area to be used as a barnyard or as a sacriGce lot. When the pastures are short or too wet to graze, cattle may be con fined to the smaller area in order to protect the pasture sod. LEARNING TO MEND May 5.1991 Background Scripture: 2 Cor inthians 1:12-2:17. Devotional Reading: Philip pians 4:4-13. Back in the 19th century, a denomination (which shall remain ngmeless) was tom asunder by a conflict that was fought under the banner of the theological disagree ment on the doctrine of "entire sanctification." Today church his torians acknowledge that essen tially this split was the result of a personal conflict between two bishops. Smith and Jones (not their real names) who refused to acknowledge their antipathy and elevated the conflict to the level of doctrinal dispute. Members divided into "Smithites” or "Jone sites" and a small denomination became two even smaller ones. In 1962, when I became pastor of a church in a small town in Pennsyl vania, I found that that conflict had split not only the community, but also whole families. And some of the wounds still had not healed. LIVING SKIM MILK Although church conflicts usu ally appear as matters of principle, all too often they are really clashes of personalities and they have done the cause of Christ a great deal of harm over the centuries. As someone had put it "we preach whipped cream and live skim milk . " Our professions of love and reconciliation are often negated by our examples of strife and aliena tion, for people expect a higher level of behavior from Christians. The problem is not just that churches are prone to the same personal conflicts as other human institutions after all, churches are composed of acknowledged sinners but that after almost 2,000 years they still are woefully To Deworm Pasture Cattle Unfortunately, pastures may be a place where cattle, especially young stock, may pick up stomach worms. Heifers infested with worms are unthrifty and do not grow well. For this reason, heifers should be dewortned about three weeks after being turned out to pasture. Just as important as the first deworming is a second deworming done three weeks after the first. This second deworming will do a lot to reduce worm buildups on pastures. Another good practice is not graze heifers on pastures that have been grazed by older cattle. If heif ers and cows share the same pas ture, it may be necessary to deworm the entire herd. Feather Profs Footnote: “A true friend is someone who is there for you when he'd rather be any where else." ten Wein deficient in healing their human conflicts. Church people, I have found, are much more likely to "fight for their convictions" than to "reconcile for the sake of Christ." Church disputes have been with us since the beginning and 2 Cor inthians give evidence of a serious one between the Apostle Paul and some, members of the church in Corinth. Unfortunately— for the sake of our curiosity, at least— Paul doesn't tell us what was the cause of that dispute. He knew what it was about and he knew the Corinthians knew, so we can only infer some of the issues from his letters. Apparently some of his cri tics had accused him of vacillating because he first planned to visit Corinth and then later called it off. Some of the Corinthians may have interpreted this as a slight At any rate, although we can only guess at what happotjed, the conflict r#as very serious. ' REAFFIRM LOVE But, although one of Paul's pur poses is to defend himself against some of these charges, his greater purpose is to effect reconciliation. It appears that someone in the Corinth church was punished in some way as a result of this con flict: "For such a one this punish ment by the majority is enough; so you should rather turn to forgive and comfort him...So I beg you to reaffirm your love for him... Anyone whom you forgive I also forgive” (2:6- 10). I have rarely seen congregation al conflicts end in reconciliation. Expulsion or walk-out is the usual result. Seldom, injhe midst of these conflicts, have I even heard the word "love," let alone seen it in action. (I hope my experience is the exception rather than the rule.) It is understandable that in our churches we should sometimes disagree and even that sometimes these disagreements might cause personal and congregational dis ruption. But in the midst of these conflicts we need to hear Paul say ing to us: "I beg you to reaffirm your love for him” (her, them). (Band on copyrighted outlined produced by the Committee on the Uniform Sorioa and used by panraaaion. Released by Community and Sub total Praaa.)