AlO-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 2, 2000 OPINION Ready To Give Up? Agricultural economist Luther Tweeten, Ohio State University, thinks the three member nations of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) should follow Europe by adopting its own common currency. According to Tweeten, common currency would help farmers in Canada, Mexico, and the United States by easing the impact of fluc tuating international currency rates that affect the value of products sold in cross-border trade. Farming is already one of the riskiest businesses due to unpredictable weather, pests and markets, and a single currency would provide at least one aspect of stability. “My proposal would reduce what we call ‘exchange rate risk’ in agriculture,” Tweeten said. “It’s one of the instabilities in the mar ket we wouldn’t have to put up with anymore. We could do away with that if we had a common currency.” Tweeten, who has argued the case to U.S. trade policymakers, said that a common currency should be the next level for discussion between the three nations, which formed the world’s second largest free-trade zone in 1994, although there’s still more work to be done on reducing trade barriers. “If France and Germany in the Europe an Union (EU) can get together despite historical animosities that run long and deep, I think surely we can get together,” the ag econ omist said. The EU, which is the largest free-trade zone, adopted a common currency, the euro, on Jan. 1,1999. And talk of a common currency is a hot topic among economists, business people and finance minis ters in other parts of the world, thus dispelling the notion “it’s a rev olutionary thing,” Tweeten said. For example, this summer Ecuador boldly adopted the U.S. dollar as its official currency as a step against hyperinflation; to stop de valuation of the national currency, the sucre; and to promote foreign investment in the South American nation. A common currency is a great facilitator for trade and invest ment, and I think ultimately it’s good for the world,” Tweeten said. But we have questions. Would this inflate the dollar and offset any gains in a lower exchange rate risk? Would this further get us ready to give up our U.S. sovereignty in favor of one world govern ment? Think about it. Roundup Sale, at the Great Allentown Fair, 3 p.m. Mon Valley District Dairy Show, Washington County Fairgrounds, 9 a.m. Northwest District Dairy Show, Crawford County Fair grounds, Meadville, 8:30 a.m. Berks County Holstein Club visit to Stoltzfus Family Dairy, Somerset County, leaves Fleetwood Grange at 7 a.m., returns 7:30 p.m. Juniata County Fair, thru Sept. 9. Cambria County F" : - ;hr>' Sept. 9 Spartansburg Community Fair, thruSept9^^^^^^ office closed. Ox Hill Community Fair, thru Sept. 9 Waterford Community Fair, thru Sept. 9. West Alexander Community FaMjruSeptjJj^^^ Pasture Meeting, William “Red” Whittaker Farm, Berlin, 7 p.m. Bellwood-Antis Farm Show, thru Sept. 9 Claysburg Farm Show, thru Sept. 9 Jamestown Community Fair, thru Sept. 9 Twilight Meeting, Northumber land County Conservation District, J. Daniel Faus Farm, 6 p.m. ■ Farming ♦ Farm Calendar ♦ nj»^^CoinUjnPairrthr^ uzerne 10. Grazing Alfalfa, Dick Packard, East Troy. Dairy Alliance Seminar Series, Ramada Inn, State College. Pike County Fair, thru Sept. 10. Maximizing Grain Dollar In Tough Times at the Tri- County Agronomy Field Day, Roger Kilbarger Farm, Thornville, Ohio, 2:15 p.m. Ohio Pork Industry’s Competi tive Seminar 2000, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, air, tl I'hurmont and Community Show, Catoctin High School, Thurmont, Md., thru Sept. 10 Berks County Conservation Tour, Agricultural Center, 9 a.m. VorkFairJJhruSep^^_^^^ Adams County Hollabaugh Brothers Orchard Farm, Biglerville. Veal 101, Penn State, lege, thru Sept. 12. Preferred Stock Shorthorn Sale, McElhaney Stock Farm, Hookstown. Health Seminar, Kreider’s Restaurant, Manheim, noon. Green Township Community Fair, thru Sent. Ifi Robert Anderson, Lancaster County extension agronomy agent, has observed some farm ers beginning to cut com for si lage. This may be due for the need of feed and fields are being opened to supply this need or being done based on the cal endar. Com silage harvest should be delayed this year because many fields were planted a little later than normal. This means they will mature later than normal. In addition, the cool summer weather and lower-than-normal amounts of sunlight did not promote the normal growth rate for com. Ephrata Area Young Farmers Computer Class, Ephrata High School, 7:30 p.m. Serving Seminar Berks Ag Center, 1 p.m.-4 p.m., 6 p.m.- 9 p.m. Adams County Field Day, Dan Winter’s Farm, McSherrys town, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Denver Fair, Denver, thru Sept. 16. Albion Area Fair, thru Sept. 16. Berlin Brothersvalley Commu nity Fair, thru Sept. 16. Sinking Valley Fair, thru Sept. 16. Family Farm Crisis Regional Meeting, Holy Name Church Small-Scale Manure Manage ment Solutions, Central Maryland Research and Edu cation Center, Ellicott City, Md., 6 p.m.-8 p.m. Delmarva Breeder, Hatchery, and Growout Conference, Delmarva Conference Center, Delmar, Md. Natural Landscapes and Habi tats Walk, Valley Forge Na tionalParkjSpjn^^^^^ Adams County Farm Bureau annual meeting, Gettysbrew, Gettysburg. North East Community Fair, thruSept^6 i^^_BB _^^^ Grp^Freaenac^larT^Tnru »t. 17 reat Sept. 23. “Do Trees Effect Community Liability?” Dinner Meeting, Best Western Inn, Hunt’s Landing, Matamoras, 6:30 >tate ZDOOMarylamo^wui^^esuv^ Farm Museum, Westminster, Md., thru Sept. 17. Pasture Walk, Don and Lugene Chamberlain, Mainesburg, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. To Delay Corn Silage Harvest Corn likes hot weather, includ ing hot nights. This year we had very little hot weather and al most no hot nights. We have lost slightly over a week of growing degree days for corn this summer. The loss of growing degree days and later planting could amount to nine or more days delay in the maturing of com. Before starting to harvest corn silage, each field should be checked for maturity and mois ture, according to Robert Ander son, Lancaster County extension agronomy agent. Corn continues to add dry matter content up until the time the black layer is formed on the kernel. When this happens, the plant has reached maturity. However, the moisture content may still be too high to cut silage. A simple way to estimate plant moisture content is by checking the kernel. At full dent the whole plant moisture is about 74 per cent. When the milk line is half way, the whole plant moisture is about 68 percent, a good time to fill the silo. Do not be in a hurry to fill silo this year because you always fill silo around Labor Day. Check the plant maturity and its moisture content before you harvest. This will minimize the amount juices running out of the THE WILLING RESPONS! Background Scripture: Judges 4 through 5. Devotional Reading: Psalms 68:1-6. When we read Judges, we cannot help wondering why these people never seemed to learn. We can see them forsak ing the Lord perhaps once, or even a second time. But because each time they “did what was evil in the sight of the Lord,” they suffered grievously and had to beg the Lord to save them, wouldn’t you think they would eventually leam to straighten up and fly right? They weren’t just slow learners; they were essen tially nonlearners. Ah, but then maybe no more than we. When Winston Chur chill wrote “Triumph and Trag edy,” the third volume in his magnificent history of The Sec ond World War, he described its theme as “How The great De mocracies Triumphed and so Were able to Resume the Follies Which Had so Nearly Cost Them Their Life.” Isn’t that the theme of just about ever great crisis through which we have come? And that is true, not only of our societies, but our lives as individuals. We, too, come through one scrape after another and then quickly settle into doing what is “evil in the sight of the Lord.” What made the Lord so angry with these people time and again? Essentially, it was be cause, “forgetting the Lord their God ...,” they served the Baals and the Asheroth of their neigh bors. They did not say, Lord God, we will not serve you any longer. No, what they did was to pretend to serve the Lord, but base and fashion their lives on the values and practices of their pagan neighbors. air,H To Check Corn For Maturity Slow Learners! silo while producing good quality silage. To Look At Corn Cutting Height A recent Pioneer Management study looked at what happens when you raise the cutting height for com silage. Tall corn plants have reduced grain-to-stover ratios. Raising the cutting height leaves more stover and fiber in the field and results in higher quality silage. It also reduces yield. So does it pay? The Pioneer study indicated that for every six inches of stalk left in the field, yield is reduced by 1.2 tons per acre. At the same time, quality is improved by 0.6 percent (whole plant digestibility). These numbers can be con verted to milk. For every six inches of stalk left in the field, you gain 72 pounds of milk per ton in quality and lose 258 pounds of milk per acre in lost yield. If your corn yields 20 tons of silage per acre, you will net 1,182 (1,440-258) pounds of milk per acre by raising the cutting height by six inches. This may be a good year to raise the cutter bar and improve your silage quality, particularly if you have a lot of low quality hay to feed this year. Feather Profs Footnote: “It is one of the laws of our being that only in seeking happiness of others can we find our own. ” Does life in this country, your community, or your home reflect the rule of Christ or the Baals and Asheroths of today? God Always Responded Yet, no matter how often the people of Israel forsook their faith, God always responded to their cries for help and sent them someone to deliver them. For the most part, that’s who the “judges” are in this book. In Judges 4 and 5, the savior whom God sends is a surprise, given the generally low status of women in the Old Testament and the ancient world. Deborah, a woman upon whom God be stowed the gift of prophecy, would be the one who would be God’s instrument. To be sure, she enlisted a man, Barak, to lead the armies, but without her persuasiveness, Barak would have done nothing. When God called Deborah to assume this most unusual role, she had a per fect excuse. She could have pro tested that I’m only a woman; no man is going to listen to me. We should be able to identify with Deborah because when we are called by God to do some thing (and don’t think you are not!), we have the same tempta tions: Lord, you can’t mean me, I’m only a youth; I’m too old; I don’t have the skills; that’s not my line; I can’t influence anyone, and so on. The difference. Judges tells us, was that “the people offered themselves willingly” (5:2b). When God calls us. no matter how ill-fitted we may think we are for the task, he can use us if we offer ourselves willingly. Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Revievt Building I E. Main St. Ephrata, PA 17522 by- Lancaster Farming, Inc. A Sleinman Enterprise William J Burgess General Manager Everett R Newswanger Editor Copyright 2000 by Lancaster Farming