A4B-lancaster Firming, Saiurffay, August' 15*, T 992 Water Study Impacts Farmers (Continued from Pag* Al) Reed. As a result of this barrage, sedi ment load at the dams which line the Susquehanna will teach a peak in 15-20 yean. Right now, at one dam, there are about 23 million tons of soil, 32million tons of coal, 49 million tons of silt, and 62 mil lion tons of clay. There may be upward of a bil lion pounds of nitrogen shored up at the dams, according to the hydrologist. Extensive surveys In all, the RCWP conducted extensive surveys with the 210 cooperating farms in the north Lancaster County region, with cooperation from 12 federal, state, and local agencies, according to Donald Unangst, U.S. Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service. The project, begun in 1981 and ended in September 1991, was out lined in the July 13,1991 issue of Lancaster Farming. It encompas ses 110,000 acres, of which 'A area is cropland, acccording to Robert Heidecker, U.S. Soil Conservation Service (SCS). Approximately 63,000 acres are farmed, and include6s,ooo cattle, 34,000h0g5, and three million chickens, for a total of 1.23 million tons of man ure generated yearly. Heidecker emphasized that the study was “not trying to point the fingers at farmers to say they are the only ones causing the problems in the area,” he said. “There are other urban and suburban prob lems out there” the study needs to address, he said. - * But Heidecker said that the study, which linked high rates of manure spreading and nitrates in ground and surface water, indi cated some farmers were ing 25 tons or more per acre, and Robert Heidecker, USCS, spoke about the RCWP at a meeting In Lancaster last week. some up to 40 tons per acre. Also, higher animal densities around bams and streams are causing a great deal of stream and other water pollution. Problems ran into Some of the problems the study ran into involved many of the farms that would not agree to long term contracting with the agencies for study, including Plain and Alnish sects, which make up more than half of the farms under study, according to Jeff Sloltzfus, project assistant However, many nutrient management plans were ccventual ly drawn up and put into effedt, he said. Stoltzfus said that there was a great deal of voluntary participa tion by the farms surveyed, and many of them paid for mpst of the conservation practices put into place. Farmers should learn that a great deal of the feed purchased for the farm will end up as soil nutrients about 70 percent of it Only 30 percent gets converted to farm pro ducts, according to Leon Ressler, Lancaster nutrient management agent One of the lessons learned by the study is that farmers must adjust the nutrient needs of the crop with the amount of fertilizer available as one way to promote good nutrient management on the farm. Ressler said that burgeoning manure marketing attempts will help some farmers defray the heed less worries of “manure police” punishing them for not following good nutrient management practices. In all, 175,000 people use the water in the study area, according to Jeff Mahood, SCS. And, of the 1,250 farms contacted, many “were not used to dealing with the government, let alone entering in a long-term contract with the gov ernment,” said Mahood. But most of the farms, although apprehen sive about the study, made an A LESSON WELL LEARNED... LANCASTER FARMING'S CLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS! Patricia Liatman, hydrolo gist with USGS, who helped set up the Morgantown RCWP testing site, explained that terracing, while prevent ing soil erosion, did not help increase the recharge of groundwater. effort use “word of mouth" to spread information about the study. “These farms have a strong resource stewardship ethic.” he said. ATTACH-MATIC . Hook-Up Your Wagon Tongue Automatically Stay In The Drivers Seat With Attach-Matic v See It Demonstrated At Ag Progress Days East sth Street QUIK-HITCHi Not-sign agreement Aaron Stauffer, Ephrata, a cooperative farmer in the RCWP said many of the Amish and Men’ nonite farmers in the study would not sign a long-term agreement with the agencies because they felt fear of getting in trouble for prob lems with possible runoff. Eventu ally, however, according to Stauf fer, with the help of the conserva tion district, many of the farms signed on and have since benefit led from doing so. Patricia Lietman, USGS hydro logist tvho helped set up the Mor gantown RCWP testing site, explained that terracing, while pre venting soil erosion, did not help increase the recharge of ground water. Also, nitrate levels in sur face and groundwater actually increased after terracing. The site itself registered 12 to 17 milligrams/liter of nitrate well above the DER permissible 10 milligrams/liter. David Hall and Edward Koerk -Ic, both with USGS. also spoke about nutrient management of ground and surface water at the field sites. William Hunt, Pennsyl vania deputy conservationist, SCS, concluded the meeting by emphasizing the importance of the tests. According to Hunt, the results should provide the means to make all farmers and agency per sonnel involved with the study “educational ambassadors.’’