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The Rural Voice, 1991-08, Page 21agreements for five, ten of 15 years. Because the two programs are run by area farmers under guidance from the Soil and Crop Improvement Association, Kennedy says the com- mittee has the ability to be flexible to meet the local needs. Bruce Shillinglaw of Londesboro, one of the original group of eight who now successfully practices no -till on his 950 acre operation, says that farm- ers thinking about getting into reduced tillage on their farms should first think of soil conservation as a "systems approach." "You can't just change a tillage practice without looking at all the parts of the crop equation such as fertility, rotation, varieties, weeds, residues, cover crops. Tillage is only one part of it." For instance, Shillinglaw — whose yields, cost of production and net returns are tops in soil and crop com- petitions — says that there are differ- ent fertility needs, and some varieties of corn emerge better from the cooler ground of no -till than others. Lobb agrees, saying that the factors are so interconnected, (see illustration) that many farmers new to the system who only change tillage practices may be disappointed in yields and give up early because they didn't consider, for instance, the impact of different species of weeds that thrive under the new conditions. Traut, whose duties have been expanded from just a soil conservation advisor to looking at the overall envir- onmental preservation, agrees on the systems approach. He says farmers shtuld feel comfortable with a con- servation system that fits their farm and personality. It might not embrace a changed tillage practice, but could include erosion control with grassed waterways, berms to slow down water movement, terraces, strip cropping, and tree planting. Although there was little infor- mation on soil and water conservation a decade ago, Lobb says there is now plenty of data available thanks to a major push by the University of Guelph. "We've made tremendous strides since professors such as (Guelph's) Clarence Swanton, Gary Katchenoski and Murray Miller, to name just a few, have put some practi- cal data into the books." There is still much more research needed says Lobb, whose Goderich township farm is one of the longest running conservation farms in Ontario, It continues to be the site of dozens of experiments conducted by the Univer- sity of Guelph. One research experi- ment is being conducted on a nearby farm this summer by Lobb's son David, who is working on his master's degree at Guelph. Preliminary results have shown that five "to seven times as much soil moves down slopes from tillage practices than from erosion, a new revelation that could change tillage practices in the future. Both Shillinglaw and Lobb agree that some of the rush to more environ- mentally sound farming practices is partially due to government financial incentives, but say continuing poor crop prices have also sent many farmers scrambling to reduce input costs, and conservation farming has put up enough numbers to impress many farmers. Lobb says the University of Guelph has been down this road before, assembling farm conservation plans in the 1950s that "were abandoned in the years of good crop prices in the 60s and 70s." Lobb — whose rolling farm has evolved into a sustainable farm with windbreaks, reforested hillsides, wildlife runways, and berms — thinks it will take more than a clear conscience to bring all farmers into doing better conservation practices on their farms. He says there should be cross compliance in farm programs, and "eventually it will take legislation to get everyone to do it."0 Farmer proves no -till works to increase profits Soft spoken, articulate, and successful cash cropper Bruce Shillinglaw is not one to brag about his success, in fact he doesn't really want the publicity. But the numbers speak for themselves. You see, Shillinglaw, who farms 950 acres in Hullett Township near Londes- boro, has proven that you can make no -till turn a better profit than conventional farming, and save the environment too. In fact, his numbers are so impressive, it's a no wonder other farmers are running to copy them. He and his wife Harriett and two teen- aged sons Kevin and Kent work all those acres with little outside help. This year, the family has 289 acres of com, 319 acres of soys, 80 acres of white beans, 26 acres of alfalfa, with the balance in winter wheat and barley. And not one of the cash crop acres has seen a plow or cultivator. All the corn acres were planted, fertilized and planted in one pass using a J.D. eight -row planter custom fitted with two Rawson two-inch fluted coulters on each furrow. For the grain and soybean acres, he has a coulter cart hitched up in front of his seeder. And that's it. A mid-July tour of his farm revealed clean, vigorous crops in all fields, and the tractor was sitting unused in the shed. "We're not taking any yield loss," he says, "and any that there are, are because of management mistakes." Shillinglaw, who got into conser- vation tillage not only because of concems for degradation of the soil, but also for the major savings in input he thought he could realize, has been practicing crop rotation since 1977. A University of Guelph grad- uate, Shillinglaw carne to Londesboro in 1973 when he bought his fust 200 acres. Over the years, the farm grew to a 1,400 acre operation, which included 600 rented Bruce Shilinglaw with no -till soys. AUGUST 1991 17