The Rural Voice, 1979-11, Page 34Double cropping
predicted for here
Jack Tanner, chairman of the crop
science department at the University of
Guelph, has predicted double cropping to
make the most of southwestern Ontario
farmland will become more popular in the
future.
One crop which can be double -cropped
is soybeans, Mr. Tanner told farmers at a
King Grain research farm near Chatham
last month. The problems for growers will
lie in harvesting grain before the soybeans
are planted.
Soybeans are traditionally planted after
winter wheat or barley is harvested. The
Guelph professor said research shows
Maple Arrow soybeans planted in the first
week of July will mature before frost 19 out
of 20 years.
However, weather conditions in July can
make soybean germination a problem four
years out of 20, Mr. Tanner said.
Since most winter wheat is now
harvested between July 15 and 23, Mr.
Tanner said farmers must learn how to
harvest cereal crops early without hurting
their value.
American growers are already experi-
menting with double cropping. Some are
using low -tillage techniques, planting
soybeans on wheat stubble in harrow rows.
Tax savings for
livestock, poultry
farmers
Most taxpayers would jump at the
chance to decide how much tax they would
like to pay, and then fill out their tax
returns accordingly.
This option is available only to a select
few, however; farmers who raise livestock
or poultry are one example.
Even then, it works mainly for those who
are starting out in thc• farming business.
Fortunately, that is the time that a farmer
needs tax relief most.
This particular tax -saving device is
based on the concept of "notional"
inventories. It allows a farmer to transfer
tax benefit from one year to another, so
that he may take maximum advantage of
the tax system.
With this device, he can set any value he
likes on his herd of cattle, or flock of
chickens, as long as the value he
establishes does not exceed their real
value. Then, when he sells them, he can
apply the inventory loss against his taxes.
Sounds complicated? Here is an ex -
PG. 32 THE RURAL VOICE/NOVEMBER
ample:
A farmer has a herd of beef cattle. He
sells them for $30,000 in November, and
buys new stock in December for $50,000.
Consequently, he has operated at a $20,000
loss for the year, and pays no taxes. The
$20,000 loss is carried forward to next year.
The next year, he makes a $30,000 profit
on his cattle operation. He has a $20,000
loss from the previous year, plus $5,000 in
personal exemptions. He thus pays tax on a
$5,000 taxable income -- about $825.
If he had applied the concept of notional
inventories, however, he would have paid
no tax at all that second year.
It would have required him to establish
an inventory value for his herd in the first
year of $27,000. Thus, instead of incurring
a $20,000 loss in the first year, he makes a
$7,000 profit, at least on paper.
He applies his personal exemptions of
55,000 to that $7,000 profit in the first year,
reducing his taxable income to $2,000. And
of course, his taxable income is too low
(under $2,300) to pay any tax at all. So far,
he is in the same position as he was in the
first place.
But in the second year, he can write off --
not $20,000 -- but $27,000. This would
reduce his taxable income to $3,000, which
is too low to take adyantage of his $5,000
exemptions. So he creates a new inventory
value for his herd of $4,000, bringing his
second year's income up to $7,000.
Now he can claim his 55,000 in personal
exemptions and escape tax again! The
inventory level of $4,000 in the second year
can be deducted in future years. The
farmer thus saves money two ways: a cash
saving of $825 and $4,000 to deduct against
taxable income in the future.
It may sound complicated, but it's
amazing how many livestock and poultry
farmers in this country report taxable
incomes of exactly $2,300 using this
perfectly valid device.
Donald Shaughnessy, CA
Guelph introduces
dairy goat course
The Independent Study Program at the
University of Guelph is introducing a new
correspondence course, Dairy Goat
Production.
The course was written with the serious
goat keeper in mind, although a novice or
small scale operator can also benefit from
the course.
The cost of the independent study
program is $60 for Ontario residents and
575 for people living outside the province.
The topics covered in the course include
choosing a goat, with a look at the various
breeds available, production records of
breeds and milk recording programs in
Canada; nousing, fencing and equipment
needed to raise the animals; a chapter on
1979
breeding and reproduction including an
examination of problems that might arise;
the parturition and care of kids and the
feeding and overall nutrition of goats.
The last chapter in the course focuses on
goat's milk and it's uses. Goat's milk has
unique buffering and digestive qualities
that set it aside from cow's milk for people
with allergies or stomach problems. The
milk can be made into cheese, butter,
yogurt or ice cream.
Measuring manganese
Invisible elements in the soil are often
critical to plant growth. The building
blocks are nitrogen, phosphorous and
potash, but other elements - micro-
nutrients - can be just as important.
Tests have been devised to monitor soil
"health", but some micronutrients are
unmeasurable. Staff at the Ontario Soil
Testing Laboratory hope to select a method
for measuring one micronutrient known as
manganese.
Although plant analysis is used to
measure manganese, no soil test has been
evaluated for Ontario conditions. Plant
analysis is limited in its use because
samples must be taken at specific stages of
plant growth. More definite tests are
needed for manganese and other micro-
nutrients such as boron and zinc.
Micronutrients, measured in parts per
million (ppm), are needed in very small
quantities. Deficiencies are present in
some soils. but they can be aggravated by
erosion or high crop yields. Without
manganese. for example, the growth of
soybeans. barley, and winter wheat can
often be stunted.
Manganese deficiency in soybeans
causes the leaf area between the veins to
turn pale green. and in oats and barley, it
causes gray oval-shaped spots to appear on
the lower leaves.
Researchers are analyzing several chem-
icals to find one which will simulate the
manganese extracting activities of growing
plants.
"Eight to ten chemical extractants have
been tested under controlled conditions in
a greenhouse." says Professor Bates.
"About SO to 60 Ontario soils, supporting
soybeans and barley, have been tested for
manganese availability. We have a 75 per
cent success rate in determining amounts
of manganese in the greenhouse situ-
ation."
Meanwhile, field tests are in progress on
winter wheat in Norfolk and Elgin counties
where manganese deficiencies are a prob-
lem in some sandy soils.
Standardizing a test tor Ontario soil
conditions is difficult because extractants
that are successful in other regions are
often not accurate for our soils.