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The Rural Voice, 1978-06, Page 7This Piper aircraft is one of five that Kincardine Airways uses. There are three regular pilots each of whom must do 10,000 acres a year to break even. not seem large but on the 10,000 acres a crop sprayer is likely to do a year, that's a lot of savings. about 500 acres of yield. Despite his justification of some damage caused by aircraft spraying, Mr. Szekely claims that a good deal of the damage crop dusters get blamed for is actually from other causes such as salt damage along roads and drift from ground sprayers. Government inspectors called to investigate damage will often put the blame on aircraft spraying even though they have no proof that was the real cause. In some cases, he says, aircraft can more safely apply chemicals than ground sprayers. He talks about orchards where fungicides must be applied after a rainfall. The aircraft can fly right over the tree tops to drop its chemicals but the ground "...the best name around livestock today...' AARCHER'S CLINTON, ONT. iSM� 482-3991 (519) 482-3991 LIVESTOCK ONFt$EMENT SYSTEMS r/-/-/-/-/-/-/-/-.-/-/-/-/-/4 1 request further information on HOGS Farrowing Crates❑ Finishing Pens L. Dry Sow StaIISL CATTLE Free Stalls Li Wide Arch Stalls Maternity Pens[ 1 HORSES Box Stalls Standing Stalls L1 Breeding & Boar Pens Weaner Pens El Combination Pens❑ Calf Pens Bull Pens❑ Corner Feeders ❑ Hay Racks Manure Handling Ventilation Systems Steel Stalls Waterers & Sprinkler NAME ADDRESS Farmer C] Student El Dealer❑ sprayer has to spray the chemical up in the air sometimes 20-30 feet to let it drop down. It isn't that he's just a complainer about government restrictions with no alteynatives in mind. One recent summer, he says. he asked for the government to split the salary with him for a student to monitor his spraying operation. There just isn't enough testing and research into crop spraying he says. There aren't enough experts on crop spraying to know just what it's about. The government refused to go along, he says. He and Mr. Fischer commiserate over the government's expectation of how much knowledge sprayers should have of the chemicals they use. They use over 500 chemicals, they say and the government expects them to know the chemical makeup of each and such things as the symptoms of someone who has had an ingestion of each. Mr. Szekely put the blame on government for many of the problems with chemicals saying the government is supposed to test the chemicals before they are released for public use but they don't do a good enough job and then when something goes wrong, the government blames the sprayer or the manufacturer of the chemical but shucks the blame itself. All these problems with herbicides and pesticides has Kincardine Airways looking for other business. They're trying to get into liquid Nitrogen application for instance, but with the poor weather for wheat planting last fall, there was little nitrogen to be applied this spring. They're expecting more business this year applying fungicides to beans because of the infections which have struck the bean crop and the fact that if the bean plants are disturbed by ground sprayers. the disease can be spread. Crop sprayers. like the farmers they serve, have been caught in a cost -price squeeze in recent years. Price cutting by competing sprayers means that the spraying charge is only $3.50 per acre plus chemicals in 1978, compared to $2.50 plus chemicals in 1972 but the price of gasoline for the aircraft, for 11111116.111111.1111\111111111. 111111111k SILAGE DISTRIBUTOR- UNIOADER V ORN FEEDS SILAGE FAST Butler V -II silage distributor-unloader pours silage out fast, cuts level from top to bottom. Ask about the new independent power ring drive, silage distributor, and silage monitoring system. We also install cattle feeding, ventilating, and manure -handling systems. I I 1 LOWRY FARM SYSTEMS RR 1, Kincardine, Ontario Phone 395-5286 `____._..._...._J THE RURAL VOICE/JUNE 1978. PG. 7.