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The Rural Voice, 2019-08, Page 20•By Lisa B. Pot • Fascinated by the common earthworm Less tillage equals more worms which improves soil say fans of the humble Lumbricus terrestis This past Spring, on a beautiful evening after the sounds of the day had faded away, Carl Brubacher of Carlotte Farms Inc. near Arthur stood in the midst of a field of corn residue and listened to the earthworms. “You could hear them,” he says, excitement creeping into his voice. “You can shine your phone on the field and you’ll see them grabbing at corn leaves with their mouths. They have no idea how big the leaves are so they keep working away at it and you can HEAR it, literally millions of them working away...it’s so neat.” Since posting a picture of a shovel of soil featuring a count of 80 earthworms, Brubacher has become known as the “earthworm guy”. His slogan is “Earthworms are Nature’s Plow”. He isn’t the only one. Earthworm excitement is a real thing. And this year’s wet spring has some farmers concerned how their “ecosystem engineers” are thriving. “Given this wet year, farmers have struggled with timing to plant crops and they’ve had to grit their teeth and march through. There has been more compaction and compaction is hard on worms,” says 16 The Rural Voice Crops