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The Rural Voice, 1991-08, Page 22(nLmnR; PLAN TO ATTEND "CONSERVATION DAY" on August 20, 1991 at Hayter's Turkey Farms Located 1/4 mile west of Dashwood on Hwy. 83. THEME - INNOVATIONS IN CONSERVATION See the latest in conservation technology for agriculture Lunchtime Speakers On: • Variable Rate Nitrogen Application • No -till White Beans • No -till Row Crop Culitvation Sponsored by: Tours of: • No -till Variety Trials • Equipment Displays • Tillage and Planter Demonstrations FREE ADMISSION LUNCH PROVIDED FOR $5.00 THE HURON SOIL AND WATER CONSERVATION DISTRICT (H.S.C.I.A.) (K) KONGSKILDU • Cushionair 300 800-1100 bu./hr.' GRAIN VACS AND GRAIN CLEANERS • Cushionair 500 1400-1800 bulhr.' FEED BINS • ALL GALVANIZED CONSTRUCTION • WEATHERTIGHT • ECONOMICAL FLEX-FLO AUGERS • 5 SIZES: 2" - 5" • BELT OR DIRECT DRIVE • COMPLETE LINE OF ACCESSORIES GRAIN _ BINS GRAIN SYSTEMS LTD. 244 WELLINGTON ST., EXETER, ONTARIO NOM 1S2 519-235-1919 or call Brad Marsden, evenings 519-235-2018 18 THE RURAL VOICE acres. A few years ago, he decided to cut back the operation to a point where he could handle the job better with just the family. Now the family owns 570 acres and rents the remaining 380. He was one of the original eight members of the pioneering Huron Soil and Water Conservation District in 1982, and over the years gradually converted the whole farm until it was all in no -till. The savings in dollar terms are impressive. Where he used $8,000 worth' - of fuel three years ago, he only needed $2,000 this year, or about 700 gallons on on the 950,acres, compared to an average of four to six gallons per acre on conventionally tiled land. All that lack of work is good for his equipment as he only puts 200 hours a year on his tractor. "I expect it will last nearly a lifetime," he jokes. He's alto trimmed the fertilizer bill considerably by using liquid hog manure on 450 acres this spring through agree- ments he has with neighbouring hog producers. As well, the alfalfa is sold to another nearby dairy farmer. While some of the corn received a 6-26-30 fertilizer in a band two inches beside and two inches deep at a rate up to 160 pounds an acre at planting time, followed by up to 90 pounds of anhydrous nitrogen, 120 of the corn acres didn't receive any fertilizer at all. "We haven't bought starter in eight years for the home farm," Shillinglaw says. As well, he's cut his herbicide bill in half. In the spring he uses 1/4 liter of Roundup per acre pre -plant as a burn -off for weeds, followed by a 10 inch band spray of Dual at planting time at 1/3 the recommended rate. "It costs us about $6 per acre instead of $18 for spray," he says. After the crop is up, he walks the fields to check for weed escapes, using Banvel at the full rate, post -emergent, if needed. Shillinglaw uses some of those hours he saved not riding around in the tractor to check the fields on foot. "Under no -till, you spend a lot of time walking your fields," he says with his pleasant smile. His savings really show up through a comparison study of costs, yields and net return through the Huron Perth study group by the Soil and Crop Improvement Association. He had the lowest input cost per bushel of $1.35 (without land cost) and a yield of 176 bushels per acre, compared to the average of $2.02 on 136 bushels. His net return per acre of $197 was the highest of the dozen in the group with an average of $135. Shillinglaw says he's constantly working out kinks in the system. For instance, he's working with Dr. Hugh Hope of Agriculture Canada in Ottawa to