'! a H «K« X»K *3 UKIIT 1680? D.-4 Pi* 1733 < 030 062896 Gi RIALS R! CORDS ’|p | tj ~ UNI V PARK PA 1680? U 'f~ Vol. 47 No. 43 Pride, Hope Central To Outgoing, Potential Incoming Pa. Governors Mike Fisher Gov. Mark Schweiker, far left, greets young visitors Wednesday before the Ag Progress Days luncheon. He’s joined by Dr. Robert Steele, dean of the Penn State Col lege of Agricultural Sciences, center, and Sam Hayes Jr., state secretary of agriculture. Photos by Andy Andrews, editor Persistent Drought Deepens Across Lower Susquehanna, Delaware Valleys DAVE LEFEVER Lancaster Farming Staff HARRISBURG (Dauphin Co.) “Wanted: Rainmaker Apply Within.” That’s the message written on the sign at Starr Pottery & Bronze Barn near Abottstown, Adams County. It expresses the wish of a lot of people across the region not just farmers. “We have two kinds of drought,” said Paul Craig, exten sion agent in Dauphin County. “We have the agronomic drought that affects crops, and we have the long-term groundwater drought.” Crops from Fulton County to the eastern reaches of the state will probably yield about SO per cent of a normal harvest, with some areas producing as low as 10-15 percent of a crop, Craig said. Corn planted in the latter part A Winner! Ice cream freezer winner select ed at Ag Progress Days is Bran don Altland, Dillsburg. Congratu lations, Brandon! www.lancasterfarming.com of May is the hardest hit because of the high temperatures and dry conditions that prevailed during the critical pollination stage, he said. Extension agent Del Voigt said he recently made a count of 500 ears on a 28,000-plant-per-acre stand of com in Lebanon County. Brian Egan demonstrates horse handling and training at “The Equine Experi ence” during Ag Progress Days. Egan is an extension program associate in the de partment of dairy and animal science. Read more about The Equine Experience on page AlB. Photo by Michelle Kunjeppu Four Sections Ed Rendell Saturday, August 24, 2002 Gov. Schweiker, Candidates Address Ag Progress Luncheon ANDY ANDREWS Editor ROCKSPRING (Centre Co.) Pennsylvania Gov. Mark Schweiker spoke about pride. And Pennsylvania’s farmers responded with pride, giving standing ovations as Schweiker was introduced, as he spoke, and again when he completed his speech to hundreds of farm fami lies at the Wednesday luncheon Sjoerd Duiker, Penn State assistant professor of soil management, spoke about the benefits of “prescription tillage” and “soil husbandry” during a deep tillage demonstra tion Tuesday morning at Ag Progress. See story page A 33. Photo by Andy Andrews, editor That amounts to ears on less than 20 percent of the stalks, not to mention the small size of the ears. “There are pockets that are in better shape,” Voigt said. “They’re the exception.” These (Turn to Page A 25) during Penn State’s Ag Progress Days. The two gubernatorial candi dates to take his place after the state’s general election Nov. 5 fol lowed Schweiker. The governor’s “legacy of pride” for Pennsylvania reached national eminence one day late in July. “It was a Sunday morning, and those nine miners came back to Farmers Ask For Better Weed Control In CREP Fields DAVE LEFEVER Lancaster Farming Staff DANVILLE (Montour Co.) Jay Wissler is concerned about stands of Canada thistles grow ing near the land he farms in Montour County. He believes the white, downy seeds drift into his fields and increase the weed pres sure on his com, soybean, and $36.00 Per Year the surface, to the air I breathe right here in this fine hall,” he said about the Quecreek Mine dis aster near Somerset late last month. There, nine miners spent three days trapped in the mine, while 200 rescue workers brought them successfully to the surface, on a field at the edge of a farm owned by Lori and Bill Arnold. (Turn to Page A 26) small grain crops. The problem, Wissler claims, is caused by the “mismanagement” of noxious weeds under the feder al Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), started in 1985, and the Conservation Reserve Enhance ment Program (CREP), mandat ed in the 1996 Freedom to Farm Act and reauthorized in the new Farm Bill. “I wouldn’t mind if these places had a few thistles, but this is criminal,” Wissler said. Landowners enrolled in either program are responsible for con trolling weeds and are subject to penalties if they fail to do so, according to William Foose of the state Farm Service Agency (FSA), the arm of the USDA that manages the programs. “Within the contract, it’s pret ty clear they have to control the weeds,” Foose said. Landowners enrolled in CREP also need to implement a program that estab lishes one or more plant types, in cluding warm-season grasses, cool-season grasses, or trees na tive to the state. Plantings can be designated as riparian (water way) buffers to enhance water quality and as other uses that protect soil and wildlife habitat. CREP landowners are paid cost-share funds for seeding, and $l.OO Per Copy (Turn to Page A 32)