Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1979-12, Page 25just sitting back and waiting. He said that usually resistance to smut is bred into the plant, and maybe it's a case of waiting to see what develops. In Perth County, soils and crop specialist Pat Lynch said very little was happening with the corn smut and he said in his opinion its a potential problem, but is overrated as a threat, especially to Huron and Perth. He said a lot of other things are more of a threat to corn crops then corn head smut and he cited the corn rootworm problem as an example. The corn smut problem was found in four fields in Perth County, but Mr. Lynch said he had to walk and walk to find a plant with the problem. "We may have lost (at a gross ex- aggeration)" he said, 1000 bushels of crop." He said that corn rootworm has resulted in more individual farm losses than the whole county has lost to corn smut. Probably 300 tons of corn rootworm insecticide has been put on in Huron and Perth, and after five years, the problem still hasn't been solved, he said. On one Perth County farm where the corn head smut infestation was found, Mr. Lynch said the infected corn could have been carried out in their hands. In one other field he said the man may have lost 20 bushels of corn. He said four fields have been positively indentified as havine the disease and OMAF will be checking to see if the disease is carried over. He said that to date, the disease has only been found on a limited number of hybrids. Marketing boards potential for abuse? There is no other country in the world where marketing boards are more ex- tensive, and as result there is more potential in Canada for marketing board abuse, June Menzies, chairman of the National Farm Products Marketing Council, told a meeting of the Eastern Canada Farm Writers Association in Toronto. Some of the marketing board problems she cited were: inflexibility, provinces being unable to achieve self-sufficiency, and escalating production quota prices. "Marketing boards have helped many Canadian farmers stay in business but the system is not perfect and the debate must go on," she said. There is a necessary place for consumers in the farm marketing debate, she said, adding that "informed and constructive criticism can lead to new solutions." WE'RE IN BUSINESS TOS KEEP YOU WORKING Chisel Plow Points Mould Boards Shins - Landsides Grade 8 Fine Thread Bolts Plow Points �_ :. '` r►: III , -1144 �� gr -4. - Coulter Blades Hand Tools o Grade 5 Coarse Thread Bolts Cultivator Points iese FARM TOOL MANUFACTURERS CftNORATION palm' WO' Disc Blades Roller Chain Shop Tools Gathering Chain ALL TILLAGE TOOLS IN STOCK! HUGH PARSONS BOLTS AND TOOLS LTD. 11/4 Mi. East of Hensel! 262-5681 THE RURAL VOICEIDECEMBER 1979 PG 23