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The Rural Voice, 1988-09, Page 27THE PLOWMAN "The most basic mole plow costs about $4,000," explains Keith Wires. "Besides that you need time and a powerful tractor." A more elaborate unit which can impose a grade (slope along the length of the mole run) costs $13,000. Wires is studying the system with researchers Claude Weil and Sultana Natho-Jina of Alfred College of Agricultural Technology near Ottawa. Field trials have been underway at the college since 1985 using mole plows imported from England. Wires' job is to determine the physical characteristics of soil that make the investment in mole drainage a good bet. "Given the right soil texture and proper installation techniques, mole drainage offers farmers a real option. But it's not the answer for everyone." The mole plow can only shape a lasting drainage conduit in clay soil with specific structural qualities. A clay content of at least 40 per cent is one prerequisite. In Eastern Ontario alone, as many as 100,000 hectares of farm land may qualify. In the spring of 1988, two com- mercial installations were made in the Alfred Region. Another three will be made this fall. Before the trials at Alfred, experts believed that mole drains, known in Europe for almost a century, would collapse on exposure to Canadian frost. Scientists used a fibre-optic observation tube to inspect the interior of the channels over several seasons. After the first winter, most of the channels were in fair to good shape, with little evidence that frost caused damage or deter- ioration. The field tests suggest that mole systems last longer when made at the right time in the drying cycle, usually in late May or early June. To date, the mole channels at Alfred have controlled the water table effectively for three years. The Europen experience suggests mole drains should last an average of 10 to 15 years. Some have been found to con- tinue working for more than 60 years. "It has taken the Europeans 200 years of trial and error to discover which of their farming areas are best suited to mole drainage," Wires says. "We're hoping to speed things up a bit here."0 AlommillmnimwmINMEMPIF RLETRL YOUR BEST BUY IN FEEDING SYSTEMS! . __ IJ 1 1 Granton Avonbank Farm Equip. (519) 225-2507 Thunder Bay Bole's Feed Ltd. (807) 623-7311 Goderich Clarkhill Feeders Ltd. (519) 524-4367 Cochrane Cochrane Farm Equip. (705) 272-4008 Powassan Nelson Giles Sales & Service (705) 724-5406 Putnam H. & M. Silo Structures (519) 269-3506 Seaforth Huron Dairy Equip. Ltd. (519) 527-1935 Paris Ilett's Equip. Ltd. (519) 753-8131 Angus Grant Dunstan (705) 424-5832 .� i THINK CANADIAN 41101F • SILO UNLOADER • BELT FEEDER • BELT CONVEYOR • CHAIN CONVEYOR • T.R.M. MIXER • ROLLER MILL i See you et the International Plowing Match at Stretford Sept 20 - 24 Eariton Norman R. Koch Agri. Sales (705) 563-8325 New Hamburg Tn County Farm Systems (519) 656-2021 Melbourne Melbourne Farm Auto (519) 289-5256 Palmerston Moorefield Equip. Ltd. (519) 343-2122 Tara H. Nicholson & Sons Ltd. (519) 934-2343 Campbellford Rix Equip. Sales (705) 653-1875 Sunderland Claire Snoddon Farm Machinery (705) 357-3579 Wyoming DeBoer's Farm Auto. (519) 845-3338 Cavan Suurd's Feeding Equip. (705) 277-2992 Demorestville Roy Brooks & Sons (613) 476-4495 Wellandport Wellandport Farm Supply Ltd. (416) 386-6262 Alexandria R.B. Farm & Dairy Equip. Ltd. (613) 525-3691 Bourget Lavoie Farm Equip. (613) 487-2946 Martintown Len's Farm Equip. (613) 528-4205 Brinston Plante Farm Equip. (613) 652-2009 Alfred Femand Pregent & Son Inc. (613) 679-2200 Sturgeon Falls Northern Agn Systems (705) 753-4645 VALmETAL Inc. FARM EQUIPMENT MANUFACTURER TRANSCANADA HIGHWAY, EXIT 170 ST. GERMAIN, QUE. CANADA Tel: (819) 395-4282 Ontario Region, Atwood (519) 356-2818 SEPTEMBER 1988 25