Perennial WOOSTER, Ohio The fifth annual Perennial School will be conducted on the Wooster campus of the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center June 27-28. The two-day event is co sponsored by OARDC’s Secrest Arboretum and Ohio State Uni versity Extension’s Nursery, Landscape, and Turf Team. The school is an intensive two-day course (17 hours), which will pertain to perennials including selection, horticul tural practices, and pest man agement. Participants will explore Secrest Arboretum, attend presentations, and par ticipate in hands-on learning through interactive exercises and diagnostics. Registration for the event is limited to 70 participants and the deadline for all registrations is Friday, June 16. Cost for the two-day event is $175 and in cludes a continental breakfast on Wednesday, lunch both days, dinner on Tuesday, the diagnos tic clinic, outdoor labs, and a notebook of materials and pres entations. The school will begin at 8 a.m. on Tuesday with check in at TUNNEL VENTILATION SYSTEMS savings. The all new NCF Fans are the answer to your ventilation 6 Paddle Fans Produce More Air Flow At requirements. Our innovative drive assembly applies power through V Less Speed Resulting In Less Noise and belts directly to the propeller. Blade load is concentrated directly over HP per CFM Produced. 52” Fan the bearings for more economical operation and longer bearing life. The LRW Shutters, a companion accessory for the NCF Fans, feature a 410 RPM = 28,000 CFM 335*™ sturdy extruded aluminum frame, aluminum blades, aluminum Options: shutters and cabinets reinforcing brackets and nylon bearings on all movable linkage. Performance and Efficiency are the keynotes to the Coolair NCF Economy Fans. Our use of quality materials and precise engineering techniques in constructing blade assemblies assure you of years of quiet, trouble-free service. When economy is measured in terms of cubic feet of air per minute per dollar invested, Coolair Fans are today’s best investment. Dairy Barns • Shops • Sto I MStP^etown ' MI *** * * n|||| 11 MMydrauucs 343 Christiana Pike Christiana, PA 17509 610-593-2753 8 to 10 a.m. *- • ‘-■‘-‘-a-*-* .****«%**•* «'<*'»*■*<* • *•%*<,*■ re-'anmeta ■ School Set June 27-28 Ohio State University Agricul tural Technical Institute’s Ap plewood Village Conference Center. At 8:25 a.m., guest speaker Alan M. Armitage, a horticul ture professor from the Univer sity of Georgia, will be talking about “Up and Coming Peren nials.” “He (Armitage) is an expert in perennial plants, perennial herbaceous plants and the cut flower industry,” said arbore tum curator Ken Cochran. “The cut flower industry is where a person grows acres of a plant and then sells them to florists. The grower also may conduct research on these types of plants.” After a break at 9:35 a.m., Ar mitage will speak about “Herba ceous Perennials for Cut Flowers.” This year’s school will also feature something new two field trips have been added into Tuesday’s events. The trips in clude a tour of Quailcrest Farms in Wooster, and Wade and Gatton Display Garden and Nurseries in BeUville, Ohio. “We decided to try something new this year,” Cochran said. Coo/a/r MEANS PERFORMANCE PLUS... ALL GALVANIZED NCF 6 PADDLE FANS Now you can buy Coolair quality and our unique blade design at a 20 HP Mitsubishi Diesel Hyd. Unit Very Low Noise! Complete Safety Shutdown Remote Control Box Inside Dairy Barn Very Quiet Vane Pump “Both of these places have ex cellent display gardens for perennials.” Participants will board buses at 11 a.m. and head for Quail crest Farms in Wooster. They will arrive at the farm at about 11:30 a.m. and form two groups. Group A will tour Quailcrest Farms and Group B will partici pate in a seminar titled “Diag nostics of Herbaceous Perennials.’ After lunch at 12:30, the two groups will switch places. “The diagnostic clinics will allow participants to bring in specimens with various prob lems, and we will then help them identify what type of problem it is,” Cochran said. The group will leave the farm at about 3:30 p.m. and head to the Wade and Gatton Display Gardens and Nurseries. Participants will again be split into two groups. Group A will tour the gardens and Group B will participate in another diag nostic clinic. The groups will switch places after dinner at 6:30 p.m. Events will conclude on Tuesday evening at about 8:30 p.m. On Wednesday, participants will be served a continental breakfast at 7:45 a.m. Ohio State’s Michael Knee, professor of horticulture and crop science, will speak on “U.S./British Gar dens” at 8:15 a.m. At 10:15 a.m., participants will be taken to an OARDC home off of route 83 in which they will participate in a hands on planting demonstration called “Landscape Planting with Perennials.” “We are going to incorporate woody landscape plants with perennials for foundation plant ing around the home,” Cochran said. “Foundation planting is around the house as opposed to landscape planting, which simply plants everywhere.” “We will divide the people up into six groups, and they are going to go around the house and physically work on this for about an hour and a half. We will have the ground and beds prepared so they are going to ba Robert Foster Receives Big E Agricultural Adventurers Award Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 17, 2000-A29 sically just install the plants, and when they get done they will see the finished project as opposed to when they arrived and the around was bare.” After lunch, participants will learn “Propagation of Herba ceous Perennials,” taught by Jim Brady of Sunbeam Gardens, Inc., in Avon, Ohio. At 1:45 p.m., Dave Shetlar will talk about perennial plant insects, and “Weed Management in Perennials” given by Randy Zondag of the OSU extension in Lake County, will be the last topic of the day at 3 p.m. For more information about the event, call Sandy Winkley at Secret Arboretum, (330) 263- 3761; Jack Kerrigan, Cuyahoga County office of OSU Extension, (216) 397-6000; Charles Behnke, Lorain County office of OSU Extension, (440) 326-5851; or Denise Ellsworth in the Stark /Summit office of OSU Exten sion, (330) 497-1611, ext. 21. WEST SPRINGFIELD, Mass. The New England Fellowship of Agricultural Adven turers presented Robert Foster, Middiebury, Vt., with the 2000 Agricultural Adventurers Award here at the annual meeting of trustees of Eastern States Exposition May 18. Foster, who operates the 1,900-acre Foster Brothers Farm with his wife, Nancy, his father, and other family members, is credited with producing a new product electricity from cow manure from the farm’s 380 milking Holsteins. The year was 1982 and the concept was new at the time in the U.S., but had been used in several foreign countries. The Fosters’ environmental concerns led them to build an anaerobic digester, which acts as a large incubator for methane producing bacteria. The fresh cow manure is warmed and “ferments” to produce methane gas, a clean burning, environmentally safe source of fuel used to generate electricity. The electricity became a source of energy for the farm and the excess was sold to a local power company. In 1991 the Fosters began using the solid residue, which is odorless and free of contam inants and weeds, to develop a line of com post potting materials. The material, which contains no volatile nitrogen compounds, is composted to yield a peat-like substance. Unlike peat moss, the digested manure is a re newable resource. The products, marketed by Vermont Natural Ag Products, a subsidiary of Foster Brothers Farm, are found in nurser ies and garden stores throughout the North east under the names of Moo Doo, Moo Grow, Moo Dirt, and others. Foster is an active member of Agri-Mark and Yankee Milk dairy cooperatives, serving as a director from Region 10. He is a past vice chairman of Agri-Mark, holding that position from 1992-1997. He serves as vice chairman of the Vermont Beef Promotion Council and the Green Mountain Dairy Cooperative Fed eration. He is also a member of the University of Vermont’s College of Life Sciences Advi sory Board and the Vermont Dairy Promo tion Council. A graduate of the University of Vermont, Foster has a bachelor’s degree in agricultural engineering and a master’s degree in agricul tural economics. Since 1953, the fellowship has honored out standing leaders in New England agriculture. PAINT-TECH, INC. Brush & Spray Painting • Sandblasting Roof Coats • Waterproofing & Repairs commercial, Industrial, *ches & Farms We Paint i rm Equipment