MOHJMasW Farthing, ’Saturdays Juna 2f;ilM UnmuffTMaiw OPINION Cropland Is Unique Ecosystem Cropland is a unique, essential environmental ecosystem to the survival of modem man. Modem man, in this case, is defined as agrarian-dependent. The world’s truly nomadic cultures are gone. Hunting and gathering now has little reference to finding wild foods. In fact, except for a dwindling percentage of wild seafoods steadily being replaced by coastal aquacultural “cropwaters,” most humans around the world grow and harvest foods from soils we call cropland. Even livestock in high-yield confined housing operations require a substantial amount of corresponding cropland to provide the feeds used to raise them for slaughter. It isn’t all done in greenhouses in growing media. This is important to recognize because it is cropland, not “farm land” that comprises the real goal in preserving the open space being purchased through the state farmland preservation program. (The Farmland Preservation Program is to get a $43 million boost this year, thanks to the current state General Assembly, and this week to Gov. Ridge’s pen.) It is cropland that can be differentiated from noncropland because of its production capacity. And despite die arrogance of some, men did not, and do not, manufacture cropland. At least not yet. As far as we can tell, the creation of cropland required the power that formed the mountains, the oceans, the watercycles of world, and the atmosphere. It is time to recognize in public policy that cropland is a limited natural resource that can be destroyed or nurtured. Those without control and access to cropland survive at the mercy of those who control it. Yet, while we rightly attempt to prevent irreversible damage to watersheds through the protection of wetlands, we sit around and talk about lifestyles and pleasant views and keeping farms in a fam ily when we discuss farmland preservation. It’s time to recognize cropland for what it is, and to take the mes sage to the public cropland is an essential element-to an envi ronment suitable for long-term sustained human existance. S:ilui(l;i\, .lunc 26 Dauphin County Holstein Associ ation Twilight Meeting, Cris singer Daily Farm, Grate, 7 p.m. First Annual Pa. Herb Festival, York Fairgrounds, York, 9 aan.-4 p.m. Crawford County Dairy Princess Pageant, John and Janellc Green, Springboro. Somerset County Dairy Princess Pageant, Berlin Brothersvalley High School. 19th Annual Hickory Ridge Anti que Farm Show, Horace Potter residence, Milford, Del., thru June 27. York County Dairy Princess Pageant, York County 4-H Center, Bair, 7:30 p.m. Greenhouse Growers Workshop, UMES, Princess Anne, Md,, Pa. Council of Cooperatives Sum mer Youth Institute, Shippens burg University, thru June 30. Ephrata Area Young Fanners picnic, Ephrata Park, 12:30 Schools, thru July 2. Pa. Junior Holstein Judging School, Adams County hosts. ❖ Farm Calendar ❖ Jeffers Tree Farm, southeastern Susquehanna County, 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Pa. Tobacco Marketing Associa tion Banquet Meeting, Yoder’s Restaurant, New Holland, 6:45 D.m. (Turn to Pago A 27) Editor: Over the past year I have had the honor of serving as the 1998/99 Centre County Dairy Princess. Every since that night on June 12, 1998, I have been overwhelmed with the great opportunities and responsibili ties that come with the title which are truly opportunities of a lifetime. When I was crowned you probably wouldn’t have known that I was the quietest and shyest young lady, but after hav ing to appear in front of crowds of people I now have the ability to talk, speak, and listen to peo ple of all ages and gender. One of To Understand Bt Corn The long-term effectiveness of controlling insects depends on the willingness of farmers to make sure some of the in sects survive. This is espe cially true with some of the new technologies associated with genetic engineering, re ports Robert Anderson, Lancas ter County extension agron omy agent. Entomologists warn that how long Bt com hybrids will re main an effective way to con trol European com borer (ECB) will depend on farmers’ under standing and willingness to use Bt hybrids along with non-Bt refuge acres to reduce the po tential of resistance develop ment in the ECB population. Bt technology was so effec tive at controlling the ECB, it is being adopted at an alarming rate. First introduced in 1996, it accounted for one percent of seed sales and grew to 19 per cent of sales in 1998. As the percentage of the com acreage planted to Bt increases, the po tential for the insect to become resistant also increases. According to Dr. Kevin Stef fey, University Of Illinois Ex tension entomologist, planting a non-Bt refuge is in everyone's best interest. Everybody loses if we lose the ability of trans genic crops to control pests. If we blow this, we only have ourselves to blame. The use of refuge planting to manage in sect resistance relies on the theory that if an European com borer (ECB) does survive in Bt com field, it will find a mate ♦ Farm Forum ❖ ,f . * jC < * the greatest lessons I have learned in the past year is that every person is different. They have all taught me something I didn’t know before. As the Centre County Dairy Princess I have some pretty amazing tasks. I made a giant sundae, rode in many parades and handed out many ribbons, but speaking to more than 100 Penn State Professors and local lawyers was difficult, especially after I informed them that I wanted to go to Delaware University instead of Penn State. The countless questions and facts that I have heard and To Plant Non-Bt Refuge Areas i*® f c/ >/ y * &A (Turn to Pag* All) from a refuge area to mate with. If a resistant borer mate with a susceptible borer, the offspring would only carry a single resistance gene and may not survive on Bt com the next year. Without the pool of sus ceptible borer to mate with, the resistant borers would mate with other resistant borers and continue to produce resistant offspring. How much refuge is enough? Finding agreement on this question is difficult. One sug gestion is 20 percent. To Know Poisonous Plants According to Chester Hughes, Lancaster County Extension livestock agent, Pennsylvania has about 100 toxic plants. Some of these plants arere sponsible for death of numer- RETURN TO FOLLY June 27,1999 Background Scripture: Genesis 6:5 through 9:17 Devotional Reading: Deuteronomy 7:7-11 When I read the scriptural passages for this week, I remem bered the theme that Winston Churchill inscribed in Triumph and Tragedy, the final volume in his remarkable history of the Second World War: How the Great Democracies Triumphed and so Were Able to Resume the Follies Which Had So Nearly Cost Them Their Life For those of us who remem ber World War II and have wit nessed what has taken place in the world in 43 years since its close, the words seem ominously prophetic. It does seem at time that we worked so hard, fought so tenaciously and sacrificed so much only to resume the follies which brought us to war in the first place. FROM CRISIS TO CRISIS This, of course, is hardly a surprise to those of us who read history. It is the story of the world from ancient time to the present: surviving one crisis and then planting the seeds of the next one. Each time, we think if we can only get through this one, we will never find ourselves in this situation again. But gen eration after generation lives from one crisis to another, usual ly of our own making. 3SS. 'At While I don’t believe the unchanging, unchangeable God of creation actually “was sorry that he had made man on the earth” (can God make mis takes?), I can understand why it is said “it grieved him to his heart” (6:6). The writer of Genesis here has a hopeless task in that he is trying to express in human emotions the mind of God. He is trying to illustrate the Great Flood as the conse quence of the sin and folly of everyone—with the exception of Noah. The rest of humanity was depraved and they seemed to go from bad to worse. “But Noah found favor in the eyes of the Lord.” (6:8). During World War II our ous domestic livestock every year. Factors contributing to plant poisoning are starvation, acci dental eating, and browsing habits of animals. Wth houses springing up everywhere, the rural/urban interface is dramati cally increasing and many farm neighbors ate unfamiliar with the plants that are toxic to animals. Following are some common plants that are poisonous to livestock and should not be tossed over the fence to grazing animals: Garden Iris, Holly, Morning Glory, Bracken Fem, Rhubarb, English Ivy, Wld Cherry, Yew, Oak and Moun tain Laurel. Feather Prof, 's Footnote: "Commitment is the difference between wishing and doing." world seemed aptly described by the story of Noah: “For the earth is filled with violence” (6:13). But that is a fairly accurate description of the world at many times in its existence, including today. Corruption, depravity, licentiousness, cruelty, deceit and lying are all too prevalent in our society—at the bottom as well as at the top. Perhaps we need to ask ourselves about the consequences of the way we live today. A DIFFERENT WORLD I have been reading an inter esting book entitled, How the Irish Saved Civilization by Thomas Cahill (Doubleday). It is a historian’s account of how a small group of Irish monks took up the labor of copying all of Western literature they Could find to preserve it in this mbst desperate time when the great Roman Empire the weight of barbarian invasion bringing in the Dark Ages. Without this effort by the Irish monks, Cahill says “their world would have been an entirely dif ferent one—a world without books. And our own world would never have come to be. In a sense, the Irish monks by the grace of God provided a Noah’s ark to preserve civiliza tion a time comparable to the Great Flood. There have been many times in the history of the world when this same phenome non has prevailed. I do not think it chance, but Divine providence. Perhaps it is the continuing ful fillment of God’s pledge to Noah: “This is the sign of the covenant which I make between me and you and every living creature that is with you, for all genera tions: I set my bow in the cloud, and it shall be a sign of the covenant between me and the earth” (9:12). As we approach the year 2,000 there are many dire pre dictions of the end of the world. We need to look at the rainbow and remind ourselves of God’s everlasting covenant. There will always be an awesome price for human folly, but God’s redeem ing love is even greater. Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St.> Ephrata, PA 17522 -by Lancaster Farming, Inc. A Stemman Enteipnse William J. Burgess General Manager Everett R. Newswanger Editor Copyright 1999 by Lancaster Farming