AlO-Uncastw Farming, Saturday, September 5, 1998 -*af sC =Qb-= a OPINION This Means You Pennsylvania’s Nutrient Management Act went into effect back in October 1,1997. Under this law, operators of farms fit ting the definition of a concentrated animal operation (CAO) are to develop, submit, and implement an approved nutrient manage ment plan. Operators of CAO farms are to submit these nutrient management plans to their county conservation district for approval by October 1. 1998. This means that farms having an animal density of greater than ' 2,000 pounds of live animal weight per acre of owned and rented land used for manure application have only this month yet to sub mit the plan. That’s not very much time. Quite a number of farms are not yet in compliance with the law. And there is not much time to act. The farm community was active in the development of the Nutrient Management Act prog ram that is designed with the understanding that the agricultural community will come forward to comply as they are required. It is important that farmers be responsive in fulfilling their respon sibilities under this law because if this law is unsuccessful in get ting farmers to participate, a more aggressive approach may be imposed by the federal or state government to address manure and fertilizer practices associated with animal agriculture. From what we know, we believe it is important that farmers act now to participate in this program. Many opponents of agricul ture just can’t wait to put greater restrictions on our production facilities and capabilities. Certainly, we want to protect our local water quality. By com plying with the requirements of this act voluntarily, we protect the reputation of the agricultural community as being responsive to the efforts to protect our water resources. Everyone who farms must act now. Yes, we must say it. This means you. Northwest District Dairy Show. Crawford County Fairgrounds. Meadville. Mon Valley District Dairy Show, Washington County Fairgrounds. Juniata County Fair, Port Royal, Spartansburg Community Fair, Spartansburg, thru Sept. 12. 'ibr Ci W- 'her Waterford Community Fair, Waterford, thru Sept 12. Ox Hill Community Fair, Plumvil le, thru Sept 12. West Alexander Fair, West Ale- 1, poi ship, 7:30 p.m. Jamestown Community Fair, Jamestown, thru Sept. 12. Claysburg Farm Show, Claysburg, thru Sept. 12. Twilight Meeting For Produce Farmers, Karns Market, Lemoyne, 7 p.m. Dauphin County Farm Bureau Pol icy Development Meeting, Ag Luzerne County Fair, Dallas, thru Sept. 13. Pike County Fair, Matamoras, thru Sept. 13. Bellwood-Antis Farm Show, Bell wood, thru Sept 12. Agribusiness Breakfast, McCon ❖ Farm Calendar* - M' nellsburg American Legion Post 561, 8 a.m. Water Clinic, Fulton County Extension Office, McConnells burg, 10 a.m.-noon. Farm Field Day, East Neck Wild Prince George’s County Fair, Prince George’s Equestrian Center, Upper Marlboro, thru Sept. 12. Clear Spring Community Show, Clear Spring High School, Clear Spring, thru Sept. 12. Twilight Meeting For Produce Farmers, Oregon Dairy Market, Lititz, 7 p.m. Nittany Antique Machinery Asso ciation Inc. of Central Pa., Penns Cove, Centre Hall, thru Sept. 13. Small Grain Roundtable, Hilltop Restaurant, Shade Gap, noon-2 Hay Creek Fall Festival, north of Morgantown, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., thru Sept 13. Ballenger Community Show, Fre derick, thru Sept. 12. Wicomico County Fair, Wicomico Youth and Civic Center, Salis bury, thru Sept 12. Damascus Community Fair, Damascus Volunteer Fire Dept Activity Grounds, Damascus, thru Sept 13. Thurmont and Emmitsburg Com munity Show. Catocdc High School, Thurmont thru Sept 13. York Fair, Yoik, thru Sept 20. 34th Annual Steam and Gas Roundup of the Mason-Dixon Historical Society, Carroll To Use Cover Crops in Soil Management According to Robert Anderson, Lancaster County Extension Agronomy Agent, cover crops not only keep soil erosion to a mini mum m the winter time, they provide several other important functions. Cover crops act as anutnent bank. The nutrient of biggest con cern is nitrogen. Cover crops are capable of using left over nitrogen Irom the previous crop season be fore it leaches into the ground wa ter. In the spring when the cover crop is killed with a herbicide or plowed down, the nitrogen is re leased back into the soil during the growing season for the next crop. Cover crops add organic matter to the soil. Whether the en tire plant is left in the field or just the roots, this plant material adds to the organic matter m the soil. Organic matter adds water hold ing capacity to the soil, provides food for soil microbes, improves soil structure and adds to the soil's ability to hold nutrients. To Use Cover Crops for Feed Robert Anderson, Lancaster County Extension Agronomy Agent, reminds us cover crops can County Farm Museum, West minster, Md., thru Sept 13. New-Generation Coalitions For Value-Added Products and Marketing Opportunities, Christ Lutheran Church, Mill mont, 10 a.m.-ll:30 a.m. Bth Annual Hinkelfest, Fanner’s Pride Airport, Fredericksburg, Annual Membership Picnic, Honey Harvest Festival, Hashaw ha Environmental Center. Westminster. Equine Trivial Pursuit, Green Lane Reservoir Pike, 9 a.m. Mason-Dixon Red and White Dairy Cattle Association Picnic and Field Day, farm of Paul and Lucinda Moyer, Bemville, 1 p.m. GrcenTownslupCommunity Fair, Cookport, thru Sept. 19. Poultry Management and Health Seminar, Kreider’s Restaurant, Manheim, noon. Beef Producers Meeting, Country Cupboard Restaurant, Lewis burg, 5:30 p.m., and Byerly Brothers Meats, West Milton, 7 p.m. Albion Area Fair, Albion, thru Sept. 19. Sinking Valley Fair, Skelp. thru Sept. 19. Denver Fair, Denver, thru Sept. 19. also provide additional forage for livestock feed. If the crop is har vested as a silage crop, the nitro gen which it captured from the soil becomes a source of protein when fed to ruminant livestock. When the cover crop is used to produce silage, not only is the ni trogen kept from leaching into the ground water, the silage harvested will replace purchased feeds at a very small cost to the farmer. A little money tor seed and a little time to plant are small costs to pay for the many returns cover crops may provide. Erosion con trol, nutrient bank, feed source, organic matter, water holding ca pacity and soil structure are a few of these returns C over crops offer the most advantage when planted immediately after removing com silage or tobacco. To Test Private Water Supplies If your water supply is from a ON BLAMING THE SNAKE September 6, 1998 Background Scripture: Genesis 3 Devotional Reading: Romans 7:IS-2Sa As a teen-agaer, I assumed that the sin of Adam and Eve was a sexual one. My assumption was understandable because people very often portrayed them in that light The ‘forbidden fruit’ usually depicted as an apple was usually suggestive of sexual pleasures. It probably wasn’t until my theological studies that I re alized that their sin was much mote encompassing. They dis obeyed God in eating the forbid den fruit and it robbed them of their innocence, making them ashamed of their nakedness. This misconception is only one of many which people entertain about the meaning of the Garden of Eden. Among others is that God counts us as sinners because of what Adam and Eve did eons ago. One bright lad in one of my con firmation classes said he thought it was very unfair of God to hold us responsible because people dis obeyed him so long ago. My response was that this story is not so much about what hap pened long, long ago, but what is happening in our lives right now. Like Adam and Eve not be cause of what they did we will fully disobey God’s command ments today. That responsibility does not rest with them, but each of us. It is not so much history as it is our story. NOTHING TO HIDE Just compare their situation with ours. Their initial relation ship with God was an ideal one. They “were both naked,” but they were “not ashamed.” Innocent up to this point, they had nothing to hide, either from God or from each other. That is the kind of un ashamed relationship for which God creates us. Then, introduced into the story, is the one factor that always ruins that guileless relationship: the tempter. Note that the tempter in Genesis 3 is not the obvious “bad guy.” Genesis portrays the temp ter as a serpent, “who was more subtle than any other wild animal that the Lord God had made.” The worst temptations arc the subtle ones that persuade us that they are private well or spring, monitoring water quality is your responsibil ity. Leon Ressler, Lancaster County Extension Environmental Agent, reminds us that the only way you may be certain your wa ter is safe to drink is to have it tested periodically. Several screening tests can give you a pretty good idea about the quality of your water. A test for total coliform bacteria should be run annually. The acceptable test results are zero colonies of coliform bacteria in the sample. Make sure the lab running the test is certified for microbiology tests by the Pennsylvania De partment of Environmental Pro tection. Other tests you might want to consider are nitrate nitro gen, hardness, iron, total dissolved solids and pH. Feather Prof.'s Footnote: "You lead people and you manage things." not temptations, but ideas that are fully rational and justifiable. The tempter always tries to con fuse us with suggestive words: “Did God say, ‘You shall not eat of any tree in the garden’?” (May be politics is the world’s oldest profession!). But Eve knew that God had restricted them from eat ing only the fruit of “the tree in the midst of the garden.” She remem bered also that God had warned: “... lest you die.” Note that Eve rejects the tempter’s suggestion, not because God forbade them, but because she is afraid of the dire consequences. EQUAL WITH GOD! This is where the tempter ex cels: he makes us doubt sin’s con sequences. “You will not die,” he tells Eve. “For God knows that when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God knowing good and evil.” He suggests a divine conspiracy to keep Adam and Eve from being equal to God. How much more effective these words are than if he had simply said, “Go ahead and disobey God!” Eating the fruit will not be “disobedience” but self-fulfillment (How often we disobey God for the sake of “self fulfillment”!) Later, when God confronts them, it is evident that the serpent lied. They were not given the power to discern between good and evil, but only to be ashamed of their nakedness. “Who told you that you were naked?”, but God already knows the answer. Their shame is not that they are naked, but that they feel naked in God’s sight. Now, they have something to hide and he can see them exact ly as they are. I always marvel when I read their self-justifications. Adam blames Eve, even implying that God is also at fault: “The woman whom thou gavest to be with me. she gave me the fruit of the tree ...” Eve at tempts to shift the blame too: “The serpent beguiled me ... It seems no one is ever wrong today. Either we blame our dis obedience upon some other person or we are still trying to blame the snake with the same conse quences! Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Bphrata Review Building 1 E. Main St. Ephrata, PA 17522 -by Lancaster Farming, Inc. A Steinman Enterprise William J. Burgess General Manager Everett R. Newswanger Managing editor Copyright 1996 by Lancaster Farming