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The Rural Voice, 1978-06, Page 6plane and costs such as about 15 trips to Toronto to try to get the licence. Finally he got impatient and took the plane up without a licence and was charged. But it's in the area of regulations on chemical use that he is most vitriolic. Tight restrictions have been placed on crop sprayers in the use of herbicides and pesticides. restrictions which are. he says. impossible to adhere to. There have been times when sprayers have been forced to get a permit for every spray job they undertake, he sayys but when a crop sprayer is doing up to 500 acres a day it's ridiculous to have to get a permit for every 10 or 15 acre field he sprays. Besides, he says. the inspectors who are supposed to check up on the spraying. couldn't possibly cover the same ground as an aircraft. given the time involved. Some of the regulations he terms ridiculous such as the one two years ago that said that a permit was needed to spray every application of 2-4-D and wasn't supposed to spray within 200-300 yards of a river or open ditch. Yet, he claims. ground sprayers were washing out their tanks in the same ditches and creeks. Spraying only 8 ounces of chemical on an acre meant that even if he dropped a full 50 -foot swath right across the river he wasn't putting much chemical into the water, he said. Mr. Szekely is irked because he sees so many restrictions on crop sprayers yet so many other forms of pollution seem to go merrily along. He and fellow pilot Hans Fischer complain about industries in Northern Ontario that continue to spew pollution out yet go untouched because they provide thousands of jobs. Table salt, he said, is more toxic than some of the chemicals he uses. Indeed, he says, many trees along highways are killed every year from the spray of salt off the roads sent up by passing cars yet often it is crop sprayers who get the blame for the dead trees. The heavy burden of restrictions are not only frustrating. they're costing time and money, he says. and that means somebody has to pay and that's the farmer. If he sprays 10,000 acres a year he's saving farmers a lot and even if there are two or three gardens damaged by spray drift it's a small price for the benefit, he says. He is, naturally enough, high on the value of spraying by aircraft. Aircraft can spray when ground sprayers can't get on the ground because it is too wet. They can cover the ground fast. as much as 100 acres in an hour. They don't damage the crop by tracking it down as tractor -towed ground sprayers do. He's not alone in his praise. Soils and Crops specialist Pat Lynch of the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food at Stratford lists the same benefits of crop spraying, plus the fact that aircraft can put the fertilizer or chemicals on the crops and leave the farmer free at busy times to do other work. Though the initial cost may be slightly higher, Mr. Lynch said recently, the end cost is likely to be the same or lower because there is no tracking down of crop with an aircraft doing the spraying. That tracking can cost about 5 per cent of yield, Mr. Szekely says, which on a small lot may Nozzles and spinners that help spread the payload over crops nestle along the back of the wing. PG. 6. THE RURAL VOICE/JUNE 1978. VISTA VILLA FARMS ANNOUNCES The Introduction of our Purebred Yorkshire Herd We based our herd on females from the herd of Murray Faris, Bradford, and a herd boar from Bodmin Farms, Brussels. Therefore, these will be genetically different from most of the Yorkshires in this area. We plan to base our selections of Yorkshires on the same important basics that we use on our Hampshires: soundness, length of body, and Ieaness. We have tested our first group of boars on the R.O.P. programme, and got the following averages: 158 days, 200 lbs., 12.8 m.m. (.15 in.) backfat. We would be pleased to show you our new Zine of Yorkshires or our regular quality line of Hampshires any time. .N4 a\wn .vest' vies x.No‘' mor vi\\a a .grodh gen Bornholm dutch eu .NVinthxoP .se24oltr .Dmbbn No. 8 highmay ROBERT J. ROBINSON RR 4, WALTON, ONT. 345-2317