UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. Crown vetch, the pink-flowered perennial planted along high ways to control erosion, is an ef fective living mulch for cropland, said an agronomist in Penn State’s College of Agricul tural Sciences. Those interested in seeing re search and demonstration plots of crown vetch are invited to a living mulch tour from noon to 3:30 p.m. on July 14 at Penn State’s Agronomy Research Farm. The farm is at Research Gate B of the Russell E. Larson Agricultural Research Center, Rocksprings, nine miles south west of State College on Rt. 45. Lunch will be provided at no cost. “Crown vetch can be used as an alternative to terraces, con tour strips and dead residue mulch,” said Nate Hartwig, pro fessor emeritus of weed science. “When managed correctly, crown vetch forms a vegetative PUT A BAT IN YOUR BARN BATWING 3180 • 3 SPINDLE MOWER REARMOUNT FINISH MOWERS R.S. HOLLINGER & SON, INC. Mountville, PA 717-285-4538 MESSICK’S Elizabethtown, Pa 717-367-1319 MARSHALL Abbottstown, PA MACHINERY, INC 717-259-6617 REIFF FARM SERVICE Shippensburg, PA 717-532-8601 cover, virtually eliminating runoff of rainwater, topsoil, nu trients and pesticides,” said Hartwig. “It also allows farmers to plant agronomic crops, rather than planting sod crops to reduce soil erosion.” Hartwig has been studying the use of crown vetch as a living mulch for corn, small grains, and soybeans since 1973. His re search compares test plots with no soil cover, plots with surface crop residue, and plots with crown vetch. “Tilled plots with no soil cover on a 14 percent slope can lose about 12 to 14 tons of top soil per acre per year,” said Hartwig. “Plots with cornstalk residue lose an average of one quarter to one-half of a ton of topsoil per year. That’s about a 95 percent reduction in soil loss. “Plots with crown vetch show the most dramatic reduction, losing only about 50 pounds of topsoil per acre per year. That’s WOODS ... come in for a demonstration D.W. OGG EQUIPMENT CO. Frederick, MD 301-473-4250 Westminster, MD 410-848-4585 HOOBER, INC.. WERTZ FARM & McAhsterville, PA POWER EQUIPMENT 717-463-2191 Glen Rock PA T r ni TT „ Lancaster farming, Saturday, July 8, 2000-C3 four Shows How Crown Vetch ' “ Controls Erosion On Farmland mows more grass, reduces downtime, available right now. n radius capability. Greater riding comfort. xsier operating controls. te’ve even designed an expanded fuel tank to :eep you going longer. What more could we tossibly add? Come in and test drive one lay! The Woods model 3180 is the toughest Batwing® mower we’ve ever built A “clean deck” design that resists cut material build-up, innovative Intra-Drive™ gearboxes engineered and built by Woods, and the fastest blade speeds of any mower in its class The 3180 Batwing® cuts through brush, up to three inches in diameter A blade overlap of over six inches, and you have a mower that delivers a quality cut, without streaking From its heavy gauge deckplate to its heavy-duty drivelines, we build the 3180 to last What’s more, they come complete with a 36- month gearbox warranty WOODS The RD7200 Rear Discharge Finish Mower is the newest addition to the Woods line of 3 point hitch finish mowers. • V-Belt Drive with 3 blades • Industrial Quality Blade Spindles with Tapered Roller Bearings • Floating 3 point hitch • Stagger Mounted Caster Wheels • Available for 20 to 40 HP, 540 RPM Category Tractors • 72 Inch Cutting Width Honesdale, PA 570-729-7117 about a 99 percent reduction. At the same time, the plant’s roots penetrate deep into the soil, im proving tilth and water infiltra tion.” At $lO a pound, crown vetch costs about $lO per acre to estab lish. “But once in place, it should last forever,” said Hartwig. “It’s almost impossible to kill it accidentally with herbi cides. At the same time, the plant is easy to suppress so that it doesn’t compete with crops. In the long run, it can be' less ex pensive than other conservation measures.” Crown vetch is compatible with all crop rotations, including corn, soybeans, small grains, al falfa, and alfalfa/grass mixtures. It doesn’t decrease crop produc tion, and it requires no special tools or chemicals to manage it. “In addition, it has nutritional value equal to alfalfa, so it can be used as a forage,” said Hartwig. WOODS WOODS PIPERSVILLE GARDEN CENTER Pipersville, PA 215-766-0414 ECKROTH BROS. FARM EQUIPMENT New Ringgold, PA 570-943-2131 Orefield, PA 610-366-2095 Crown vetch normally takes two to three years to become well established. “Once estab lished, it fixes nitrogen, a por tion of which becomes available to crops such as corn,” said Hartwig. “Our research shows that yields of 100 bushels of corn per acre are possible in fields with a crown vetch cover with out any added nitrogen.” For more information about using crown vetch as a living mulch, contact your county Penn State Cooperative Exten THE HARDEST JOB! John Berry Ag Marketing Agent Lehigh County Good managers create, not consume, workplace energy. Remember the four “classic” functions of management plan, organize, lead, and control that you learned in school? Although these basic functions are fine for taking care of most of your day-to-day management duties, they fail to reflect the new reality of the workplace and the new partnership of mana gers and workers. Today’s managers need a new set of management functions based on forging a strong em ployee/employer relationship: • Energize. Today’s managers need to be masters of making things happen. You can be the best analyst in the world or the most highly organized executive on the planet, but if the level of excitement you generate can be likened more to a dish rag than to a spark plug, then you may never have what it takes to create a truly great environ ment. Great managers create far more energy than they consume. Instead of taking energy from the organization, the best mana gers channel and amplify energy to the organization. • Empower. Great managers allow their employees to do great work they empower them to excel. This is a vital function of management be sion office, district conservation ist, or Nate Hartwig. Information on how the system works can be found in the 1999- 2000 Agronomy Guide, avail able on the World Wide Web at http://AgGuide.agronomy.psu. edu/. Paper copies of the guide are available at county extension of fices or from the College of Agri cultural Sciences Publications Distribution Center, 814-865- 6713. cause even the greatest mana gers in the world cannot succeed all by themselves. To achieve the goals of the organization, mana gers depend on the skills that their employees offer. Effective management is the leveraging of the efforts of every member of a work group toward a common purpose. If you are constantly doing your employees’ work for them, not only have you the ad vantage of leverage that your employees can provide, but you arc also putting yourself on the path to stress. • Support. The key to creating a supportive environment is es tablishing openness throughout an organization. In an open en vironment, employees can bring up questions and concerns in fact, they are encouraged to do so. When employees see their managers are open to new ideas, they are more likely to offer suggestions and new ideas. • Communicate. Information is power, and as the speed of business continues to accelerate, information must be communi cated to employees faster than ever before. Constant change and increasing turbulence in the business environment necessi tate more communication, not less. Management is not what you do to people, it’s what you do for them. Managers who truly manage their employees who energize them, empower them, support them, and communicate with them will attract and retain key employees because they build trust and commit ment. A LESSON WELL LEARNED... Lancaster Farming's CLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS! Phone: 717-394-3047 or 717-626-1164