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The Rural Voice, 2001-08, Page 41!w. Putting nature to work for the environment By Mark Nonkes When Luckhart Transport of Sebringville built a new plant in 1996 for their growing trucking company they did not forget about the envi- ronment. The new plant featured a wash bay, where trucks for haul- ing livestock are cleaned. After a shipment of cows, pigs or sheep the inside of the trailers are dirty with manure. When president Doug Luckhart built the new centre he had two choices to deal with the manure run off from the wash bays. He could either build a large storage tank or build a marsh, where the dirty water would be sent and nat- urally cleaned. Luckhart opted for the latter and more expensive choice. They began digging pits beside the business. With the help of Upper Thames Conservation and the township council Luckhart designed and began building the man-made marsh. The Luckharts built a pond and two marshes on the back of their property using backhoes and bull- dozers. They dug deep into the up with top soil. The two marshes were built with several different levels, the first a foot deep and the next level three and a half feet deep. The plants in the marsh act as a filter to clean the water. Close to Black Creek, the marsh collects manure water that is sent out from the wash bays. In the marsh are plants like cat- tails and bulrushes which thrive in this type of envi- ronment. The water from the wash bays goes through a pipe which traps any grease or chemicals and the rest of the water is deposited into the marsh 'for two hours every day. The hose has holes every two feet so the wetlands won't become a big sinkhole, Luckhart said. After one week one marsh will be full so the water is sent to the second. By the time the water has A constructed wetland treats waste from the trucks. ground for the pond, down to the bedrock or clay level to line it so no dirty water would escape into ground water. While the pond is 18 feet deep in the middle for the marshes most was covered back Livestock trucking has changed in 50 years By Mark Nonkes Change is inevitable, it's a fact of life. Being pre- pared to ride with the winds of change is an art, one that Luckhart Transport of Sebringville has been trying to finesse over the last 50 years. In charge of change are two brothers, Doug as President and Doug, as vice-president. Described by Tom, Doug's job is to spend the money while his to bring money into the company. The key to Luckhart Transport is its family roots. Doug's wife and daughter work in the office. a son-in- law is on the road, and family pets roam the offices, while the father, Howard, is still involved in delivering the occasional item, despite being in his 70s. In 1951, Howard Luckhart purchased his first truck and while most of his first business came from a local feed mill he also started hauling livestock. Doug remembers the first days of trucking. Just a little boy, he would ride around with his father with a load of animals in the trailer behind, hauling animals from the four slaughter houses in Kitchener to Toronto on a regular basis. In fact, Doug became so interested in the business as a child he would be sent with new drivers to direct them to the Toronto stockyards. 38 THE RURAL VOICE The business stayed small and ran out of the fami- ly's home and in 1971, Doug joined with his own truck. Six years later the business changed hands with Doug becoming one of the men in charge, along with Paul Ehgoetz. In 1986, Paul Ehgoetz sold his shares to Tom. Since that time the Luckhart's have bought smaller trucking companies from Kirkton, Tavistock and St. Agatha. Becoming bigger is required as the industry changes. Back 50 years ago, there were plenty of small packing plants in the area, like the four in Kitchener. But now smaller slaughter houses have disappeared and left larger packers at further distances. Hogs that once went to Kitchener are now sent to Indiana and West Virginia. Back in the early days. truckers would drive to several farms to fill up a truck, today an entire load can be picked up from one location. Luckhart Transport has grown to 42 transport trucks and employs 35 full time people and about 13 part-time and student employees. It's a far cry from Howard and his single truck back in the '50s. On August 18 Luckhart Transport cele- brates 50 years in the trucking business with an open house.0 .