AKKjocntor FaraUnfl, Saturday, Hay 23, 1992 OPINION The Whitetale Deer Problem The whitetailed deer is commonwealth property, which means the state deer herd belongs to every resident of the state. And if everyone owns them, then everyone is liable and responsible for the damage caused by them. In other words, crop-damaging deer are a problem for the entire state not just hunters and not just fanners seeking to preserve crops. It's time for the state to either start addressing the deer problem meaningfully, or start coughing up some dollars to pay for deer damage. The state Game Commission has the responsibility for the prop ogation and managment of game animals and birds (public property). It does this through guidelines, which are law. The program is supported almost entirely through hunter’s dollars. However, the commission does not have full authority to do its job. It is not allowed the tools to fully manage public property (deer) on private property. The failed attempts by the Game Commission to reduce problem deer herds by opening up special seasons and hunting areas reinfor ces the fact that the problem deer are untouchable the fields of damaged crops are not where the deer spend most of their time. They hide-out, typically, on neighboring land which is posted against trespassing. Posting is the problem. If the public had proper access to its property (deer), there wouldn’t be a problem with large populations of deer coming off of private property to eat a farmer’s cultivated crops. Therefore, the whole issue should be legally considered as a matter of private property rights conflicting with the public’s right of access to public property. Some possible solutions would be to: • Identify those posted private lands which harbor nuisance deer herds and condemn the privacy to allow public access for deer hunting. This is not a proposal to open up farmland where the deer are causing problems. Instead, it’s a proposal to allow hunters to go onto those posted lands which surround the damaged farmland. Private landowners whose properties haibor nusiance deer populations, as identified by the Game Commission, would have to allow hunters on their land, outside of safety zones, for the duration of deer hunting seasons. Think of it this way: If someone’s land is harboring large popu lations of disease-carrying, crop damaging rats, the state would come in and condemn the site for cleanup. Large populations of disease-carrying (ticks with Lymes disease, bovine tuberculosis, etc.) deer should be considered the same in these situations. Or ... • Allow, as the Pennsylvania Farmers’ Association (PFA) requests, a permit system to allow those who suffer crop damage a way to reduce the damage. PFA asks that the Game Commission provide farmers suffering crop damage with deer kill permits. The permits would then be given to friends or strangers who would harvest nuisance deer prior to the regular hunting season. Stipulate that the deer damage must be authenticated by com mission personnel; and that damaging deer populations must be migrating daily or seasonally from adjacent posted lands. If a land owner purposefully allows deer to be protected on his own land and they cause crop damage on his land, that landowner shouldn’t have any relief. As an incentive, personal injury liability should be released against private landowners who allow hunting. It could be done similarly to what the insurance companies do now with auto insurance if the hunter would sign a waiver of his right to sue, he would be allowed on the property to hunt. Or ... • Make the private landowner liable for damages caused by not allowing the public to harvest its property (deer). In this case, financial retribution for deer damage would be levied against those private landowners whose posting allows deer numbers to grow unreasonably and ravage neighbor’s crops. When the bill for damages would come due, it would be interest ing to see how many of those landowners (especially nonresidents and those who have created large private hunting preserves at far mers’ expense) would continue to post their land against hunting deer. No one wants to see private property rights abridged recklessly. However, something must be done. The PFA permit proposal seems to be the most reasonable and acceptable method for control. now is THE TIME By John Schwartz Lancaster County Agricultural Agent To Reduce Crack Eggs Crack eggs are costing the egg producer money. Cracks reduce the number of Grade A eggs you produce. This reduction in Grade A eggs will reduce or eliminate the bonus you receive from your contract To make egg production profit able. you need to be making your bonus payments. In addition, crack and broken eggs will increase the number of dirty eggs produced, increase your cleanup time, and cause a breeding area for flies and bacteria. There are several easy things you may do to reduce cracks. Slow down the egg packing equipment as the flock ages. As speed increases, the number of cracks increase. Keep equipment adjusted on a daily basis. Do not wait until the equipment breaks before making adjustments and repairs. Remove all dead birds from cages. A dead bird may cause an egg jam that will break eggs and place a lot of eggs in the pit. By paying attention to details and handling eggs gendy, you will be able to keep crack eggs to a minimum. To Think Child Safety Tuesday’s front-page story in the USA Today was titled “Fields of Danger.” It was an article on the number of children hurt or killed on farms. As we start the spring and sum mer farm activities, we need to be constantly thinking safety. A Purdue study found children from the ages of 2-4 were most at' risk as bystanders and ages 12-1 S were another high risk group as they begin to tackle farm chores. As a father of two small child ren, the last thing I want to have happen is for them to be in a seri ous accident or killed. I also know they are very curious people and have no understanding of danger. As a result, adults must take the time to minimize childrens’ risks. First, make safety a high priority in your life and set a good example for your family. Provide safety equipment for your children, such as goggles, steel toed shoes, respir- Farm Calendar Northwest Jr. Beef Classic Show, M (11111. n , \I. i \ ’5 MflllOll.il l),l\ Clearfield Co. Open Horse Show, Luthersburx. (Turn to Pago A3O) ators, etc. Next, it is up to farm parents to decide when and where children should be involved in farm opera tions. Fbr smaller children, child care may need to be more seriously considered. A group of farm fami lies may want to consider farming a babysitting cooperative. In the cooperative families, take turns watching each other children. Farming is a dangerous occupa tion. By thinking and practicing safety, we will be able to reduce the number of accidents. To Be Considerate Of Neighbors This weekend marks the begin ning of summer activities. Outside picnics, parties, and outdoor activ ities will be increasing. As more homes are being built around our farms and fields, we need to be more sensitive to our neighbors’ activities. This will require more time being spent on scheduling certain activities such as manure spreading and spraying. Spending this extra time could avoid serious and costly problems Hi lArtklHU W AIT HOU St ''sms MAY I REMIND YOU May 24, 1992 Background Scripture: 2 Peter 1:1-14. Devotional Reading: 1 John 4:7-21. In one of his books. Emmet Fox says that when people are offered a choice of a basic course in spir itual things or an advanced course, almost everyone wants the advanced course. No one likes to be thought of as being a beginner in spiritual things. But, actually, says Fox, in spiritual matters the advanced course is simply the application of the things we learn in the basic course. I think he’s right In my own experience, what I so often seek to team about advanced Christianity is nothing more than the applica tion of what I already know. Con trary to what many people think, there is nothing mysterious or hid den about the basics of Christian discipleship. For many of us, the problem is not that we don’t know enough, but that we don’t apply enough of what we know. Old Truth Applied I wouldn’t say that I never learn anything new m regard to Christ ian living, but that often what I “learn” is something I already know and have forgotten. If some one were to ask me, “Do you know such-and-such?”, I’d reply, “Oh, sure, sure, I know that.” But I tend to forget, even if just momen tarily, some of the most basic principles. So, very often Christian teach ing and preaching is a matter, not of revealing new truth about the gospel, but of reminding people of what they already have heard. That’s what Peter says in his sec ond epistle: “Therefore I intend always to remind you of these things, though you know them and are established in the truth that you have... I think it right, as long as I am in this body, to arouse you by way of reminder.” (1:12-14). All of us have been taught that, if we want God to forgive us our sins, we must also forgive the sins in the' future. (This year I received a call about a fanner spreading liquid manure on a Saturday night with the mist drifting onto the neighbor’s porch and dinner party. Needless to say, this person was not to happy.)’ If we want to continue farming, we must become more aware of our neighbors. Take time and visit to become acquainted. Be inter ested in them as people. Discover their birthdays, anniversaries, hob bies, etc. Encourage them to tell you when they will be having out door activities. Also, tell them when you must do certain famine practices so they may plan their activities. As one Delaware farmer told me. a weekend stay at a motel on him was a lot cheaper than legal fees he would have to pay to settle a neighbor’s complaint on noise that happens several times a year. By being a good neighbor and friend, and sensitive to neighbors’ concerns, you should develop a good environment to farm in. Feather Profs Footnote: "In the middle of difficulty lies oppor tunity." Albert Einstein. of others. Nevertheless, we often live as if our forgiveness was quite unrelated to the forgiveness of others. Often, when I pray the Lord’s Prayer, the words, “forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors,” strike me as if they were almost brand new. Known or Done? sn Maybe the reason we seem to forget these things is that we have grasped them only with the mind and not the will. They are ideas that we have entertained and thought about, but never really made a part of our daily living. Our minds can easily recall these ideas, but they have never been made operative in our lives. Once again, then, we see that the truth of the gospel is not so much a thing to be known as done. It is not a matter of knowing the right answers, but of experiencing the truth of them in our own-lives. I believe the theologian Kierke gaard said of a certain preacher, that when God would call him home it would not be his sermons on which he would be judged, but his life. Peter is reminding us of basical ly two things: (1) escape from the corruption of the world and (2) partake of “the divine nature" (1:4). Like his readers almost 2,000 years ago, we know both of those and, like them, we also need to be constantly reminded of them. It is so easy to become corrupted by the world’s standards. Every day, perhaps every hour, we need to be reminded to live by the gos pel, not the world. Peter’s second reminder is even easier to forget: that through Jesus Christ we can partake of the divine nature, experiencing the power and grace of God within. President Garfield once was asked why he nodded to a mere news paper boy on the street Replied the President: “Who knows what’s buttoned-up inside that boy’s overcoat!” Lancaster Farming Established 19SS Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St Ephrata, PA 17522 by Lancaster Farming, Inc. Robert G. Campbell General Manager Everett R. Newswanger Managing Editor A Stmnrmn Enhrpri i# CspyHfht INI by Lafiesator Parmlni