Phosphorus Conference Provides Forum For Understanding (Continipd from Pag* A 34) concern over the use ot commer cial fertilizers. Subsequent research and advice to farmers was to soil test and then use standardized book manure nutrient values and application rates to substitute manure for a portion of the commerical nutri ents being applied to raise crops. Previously, the manure was being spread, but not effectively used. In many cases it was applied to the nearest field, whether it needed it or not Further, even with today’s man ure testing, soil testing and time specified applications based on crop yields and rotations, teal world conditions can prevent time ly applications or ability to spread upon an intended field. The research on effectively using the nutrients available in manures was seen as a way to help fanners save money and stay in business while at the same time ameliorating a growing public environmental concern. Under former Gov. Robert Casey, Pennsylvania committed itself to a 40-percent reduction in the flow of nutrients down the Sus quehanna River into the Chesa peake Bay. While efforts were begun to upgrade declining waste water facilities and to deny on lot septic systems, and construct larger capacity and new waste water treatment plants, more needed to be done, according to those sup porting and leading the effort. fWt.I Spade Cultivators Are An Innovative Alternative To Conventional Plowing. They Work On The Principle Of A PTO Driven Crankshaft Connected To Steel Spades Which Vertically Penetrate The Soil One At A Time. The Operation Is Very Similar To A Person Digging With A Spade Shovel [□VANTAGES: * Low HP Requirement Compared to Mold Board Plows * Greatly Reduced Compaction And Eliminates Creation Of Plow Pan * Allows For Working Wetter Ground For Earlier Preparation * Works Equally Well In Hard, Dry Conditions * Produces Small, Porous Clods For Better Water Absorption * Ideal for Incorporating Compost, Crop Residue & Fertilizer At Proper Depths * Leaves Topsoil On Top And Does Not Bring Sour Subsoil Or Rocks To Surface * Will Fracture Hard Pan Left By Conventional Tillage FEATURES: ’ Machines Available For Tractors For 20 to 190 HP * Tillage Widths From 32” to 144” * Depths Up To 16” * Top Quality Components For Long Life In Hostile Conditions * Over 8000 Machines Sold Worldwide For More Information Please Contact: ASK US ABOUT CZ FLEX FINANCING circulation and root growth. [ill] CUMMINGS and MUCKER, Inc. 100 Stover Drive Carlisle, PA 17013 717/249-6720 1-800-222-8969 1-800-252-1552 Serving Farmers Through Farm Equipment Dealers Since 1961 A little later, the poultry and swine industries rapidly changed over to almost being entirely “inte grated” businesses previously independent, small scale produc ers went out of business or con verted to contract production on a larger scale in coordination with feed companies and/or slaughter and meat packing businesses. Under the integrated system, while the producers benefited from establishing a guaranteed income, as long as a contract was not broken, production houses increased in number and size rela tive to the size of the farms on which they were sited. hi the poultry business for example, the contractual business arrangements normally provide birds and feed to the farmer who supplies the raising facilities, with loans to build such facilities sec ured on the basis of the contract and life expectancy of the building. The farmer receives a set amount of income per live bird. What the farmer is also left with is the poultry manure, or litter (lit ter contains mote than manure, such as feathers). This is important, because now the farmer is being told to dispose of the manure properly, and not to put too much on the land. And, according to one of the speakers of the conference, Dr. Lcs Lanyon, a Pom State University research and extension professor of soil fertility, it isn’t the farmer’s fault that there is too much pho SPADE CULTIVATORS Hard soil in depth. Difficult water circulation and root growth WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS 100-120 Lehigh Ave -PO Box 928 Batavia, New York 14021-0928 716/343-5411 iperating cycle. BEFORE .i Digging with a Cell! spading machine. AFTER Soil after digging. Excellent water sphorus on his farm. Lanyon said that, especially since World War 11, humans have become too good at having adequ ate phosphorus. He said the system of agricultur al production has changed dramat ically and it is a global system, though the local farm is still seen parochially as an independent entity. It has been coming for some time. Nationally, a fast pace of protec tive or aggressive business mer gers followed a relatively short, but widely affecting period of hos tile takeovers. That trend of mergers and con solidations spread into American mainstream agricultural produc tion, especially after the 1996 Farm BUI. Since production support prices were set to be eliminated, it became apparent that mergers, and technology allowing larger scale production and smaller scale admi nistration, would be a solution to the overall reduced profits expected per commodity unit in order to position for national competition. A longer term trend of mergers among farmer cooperatives had been occuring, but mostly from diminishing numbers of fanners, a result of many other factors, in addition to low profit margins. In reaction to business mergers and other service industry mer gers, the global direct ordering of perishable and non-perishable THE FEEDER’S PARADISE lW ww *»■ ** **"** ■4.. ■ - ECONOMY SKID FEEDER ★ All Schedule 40 Pipe BARTVILLE WELDING SHOP 1318 Mount Pleasant Rd Quarryville, PA 17566 RON REINFORD Dealers: SEWARD COLLARD New Bethlehem, PA Oswaco, NY (814) 275-3033 (315) 784-5524 AG IND. Equip AUKER AG. PROD. Rising Sun, MD 21911 JOHN KING Oakland Mills, PA 50 N. Greenmont Rd Box 42, Greenpark, PA 17031 (717) 463-2394 410-658-5568 Perry Co Ijncmif Fuming, Saturday, April 11,19MA35 ‘ goods and services now available through the computer and the Internet (such as happened with the Dairy Herd Improvement Association), producer coopera tives began a quickly accelerated merging and consolidation process. For other industries, integration allows for essentially setting a future price on a commodity «nd then working with less volatUe cost fluctuations than what has become an sharp rise and fall in the non government influenced mark et pricing system. What that all has to do with agri cultural phosphorus and the nutri ent balance of the Chesapeake Bay may not be readily apparent from a local and non-historic perspective. But Lanyon explained the dra matic changes that have happened in global and ccntinential nutrient flow. The bottom line of Lanyon’s talk was that whereas the world was phosphorus poor prior to the World Wars, especially since World War II man has been able to get lots of it We have mined it from sediment loads made up to2somillion years ago, adding significantly to the existing amount of phosphorus that is now cycling in the world’s ecosystems. Accenting to speakers, a lot of effort and money went into secur ing phosphorus for increased crop production and higher yields. Lanyon said that, prior to the World War technology that allows greater production and availability of phosphorus for fanning, the his- Meetings For Delmarva Horse Owners Set TRAILER FEEDER 11 Ga Metal Construction; 1 2% Heavier Than Competition 18, 24 & 30 Ft. Bearings Reflectors Tapered roller bearings (or long lasting & easy towing SKID FEEDER WITH V-RACK WITH ROUND OR SQUARE TROUGH L-. 18 HOLE 3 PIECE ROUND BALE FEEDER ★ Heavy 11 Gauge Steel Troughs tory of fhe world was that it sought out phosphorus where ever it was to be found the United King dom had dug up the bones of the dead from wars in Europe to use for fertilizer, and common here mote recently woe fertilizer com panies in the United States, such as in Lancaster County and Berks County, that converted animal bones and blood into phosphorus fertilizer. In the United Stales, the origi nally fertile fields lost phosphorus to heavy erosion and continual removal of the nutrients in crops raised and sold, or fed to animals and then sold. Effectively export ing the nutrients. The soil needed to be replen ished with nutrients. Manure was returned to the soil to help replenish the nutrients in a farm’s soils, but the manure did not contain enough nutrients to keep up with the demands of crops. Lanyon called that period of freely available phosphorus for fanning as die cxploidvc years. Following those were years with out enough phosphorus. Further, Lanyon explained that while the nutrient flow on a farm was slightly imbalanced toward a deficit, it was more or less a balanced ecosystem unto itself the flow of nutrients could be fol lowed and accounted for in a cycle. With farm specialization and integration and transportation, now, the system brings phosphor us from various parts of the world to grain and feed crop growing areas. (Turn to Page A 39) DOVER (Del) In I response to requests from concerned local horse owners. Dr. Beteh Valentine, Department of Pathology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., will speak on the symptoms of £PSM, a muscle disease in horses, tell how com mon it is in various horse breeds and share their research regarding a cure. This meeting will be gin at 7:30 p,m., Friday, April 24, at the Modem Maturity Center, Rl 8, Dover, Delaware, in the Longwood Room, (use back entrance from parking lot), and is free. All interested persons are welcome. Dr. Valentine is donating her time, to come inform local horse owners of her Endings, at the invitation of the Delmarva Driving Club and The Delaware Equine Council. She will also be speaking at the Farm Plow and Field Day, on the Miller farm, 962 Dennys Rd., Dover, Del., Saturday, April 2S at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Working the ground with horses will begin at 7 a.m. until 3 p.m. For more informa tion, call Organizer Ed Banning at (302) 628-0100 or 337-3900. SMV sign for safe towing on highways