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The Rural Voice, 1982-12, Page 8Dr. King and regional manager McDonald of Taralan Corporation analyze a stalk of corn on a farm near Seaforth which is on the Taralan system. crop characteristics were expressed in a formula to predict yield for any field or crop in the world. Originally the mathe- matical model involved 31 factors, but it has been honed and now involves 53. Taralan's approach allows the producer control over all but about seven of these 53 factors, and even some of these can be modified by inputs such as irrigation, manure, planting schedules and the like. The corporation's brochure states: "These factors (of which soil test values are only a part) are all inter -related. All of these factors are assigned values to determine their effect on increasing, decreasing or leaving yields the same so that crop management can be evaluated. "There are over 650 steps to make each evaluation for one field. Accordingly, Taralan uses its own computer to ensure that all the factors are considered and that information is readily provided. The inputs and processes are a corporate secret. The result is the most complete, complex and precise evaluation possible for crop production for any field in any soil type, any climate and any crop." The Taralan system is much more intensive than other programs available to Ontario growers and its yield prediction is Is crop consulting the way of the future? Is crop consulting the way of the future? Or is it a service that farmers don't really need, another way of separating them from their hard-earned money? Is the question that black and white? And does the the answer lie somewhere in-between? Pat Lynch, soils and crops specialist for Perth and Huron counties with the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food, agrees that services provided by businesses such as Taralan Corporation are far more intensive than anything that can be provided at this time by a government extension service. And he feels there may be a need for something more intensive. He points out there are about 6,500 farmers growing crops in the two counties, and only two full-time OMAF soils and crops representatives for them. The resources are spread pretty thin. Taralan, he thinks, works more along the lines of a 30:1 ratio; farmer to field representative. However, while not downgrading their services Lynch feels Taralan is more of a fertility program than a "true" crop consulting service, and such a service should be more intensively involved in the total farm operation. Lynch says Taralan's system, or com- puter model, was originally developed around and for peanuts and has been adapted to other crops such as corn. Computers, and computer models, are only as effective as the information they are fed. is adapting a model developed around peanuts for corn, or other crops, a wise system in the long run? Or, will it prove to be too rigid when it encounters other variables? Lynch doesn't pretend to know the answer, if there is one, but he feels questions such as this are worth asking. The crop consulting concept isn't as well developed in Canada as it is elsewhere, for instance the United States where in some areas "scouts" from universities perform some of a crop -consultant's functions, such as testing, for a fee of approximately $4 per acre. But Lynch cautions, this too is not true crop consulting as he perceives it should be. Lynch feels there are no "true" crop consultants in Huron and Perth counties, although in his travels he has encountered the sentiment that such may be needed, if not now, in years to come. Some individuals in Oxford County may be on the verge of establishing more along the lines of a true crop consulting business that involves "the whole ball game", but nothing is yet official. While a government extension service may not have the manpower to provide intensive crop consulting to farmers, such services have one big advantage over private firms. They are privy to a vast amount of valuable research information that is unavailable anywhere else. Per- haps, Lynch suggests, if a specific number of farmers were to express a need for a crop consultant in the future, they might be able to hire a consultant provided by the government, a consultant who would then have access to all this invaluable and costly government information. Perhaps this is the way the crop consulting concept may develop. PG. 8 THE RURAL VOICE/DECEMBER 1982