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The Rural Voice, 1980-08, Page 14Crops on well drained land have a better chance of survival. But a farmer must look at tiling In economic terms. Tiling the /and BY LAURA BRUMMOND Banks have money for it. Government gives low interest loans on it. Farmers believe in it. Tile. Clay or plastic, the farmers are using it more than ever before. Hank Bellman, agriculture Engineer, Ministry of Agriculture and Food, Walkerton, says if you're dealing with potentially good agricultural land, then tile is the answer. He adds, "Conservation means making the best use of our resources. Certainly the tiling of land means the farmer is practicing conservation." Often, however, the farmer looks at tiling in economic terms. With such high land prices, farmers must pay off the land with intense cropping. Tile enables him to do just that. But at the same time he practices conservation with an eye to the future. Farmers tile so they can plant earlier and get increased yields. But there are other advantages. In cases of drought or slight drought, crops on well drained land have better chances of survival. Bellman explains that if you have wet land at the beginning of a plant's life, it doesn't encourage deep roots. Plants develop deeper roots in well drained soil. They can reach moisture better in a dry period. There are three kinds of water in soil; water moving up, water moving down, and stationary water. Water that moves up is not affected by the tile, according to Bellman. And water below the tile is not affected by the tile either. Tile does not rob the plant of water. Tile water is "free or gravitational" which the plant cannot use. The water which the plants do use is on the soil particles. When water is sitting on top of the ground, this is called the water table level. For plants to thrive, the water table level must be two to four feet below ground level. Tile provides this level. Tile draining has another very important advantage. It saves topsoil. Instead of excess water on top of the ground washing away and eroding soil, the water is soaked through the ground into tile drains and into outlets. Also, tile provides ground cover quicker when crops are planted earlier, thus reducing erosion. Barry Weigel, of Weigel Drainage Ltd., Mildmay, says tiling helps prevent spring flooding. Water starts draining away earlier in the spring and keeps draining late in the fall. Farmers today are not only draining systematically, but sometimes, every acre they own. Doug Kirkby, partner of KMM Drainage, Walton, says that not all land should be tiled. He says the type of soil is a factor. For example, once you drain black muck, it can be difficult to manage --the soil blows away. He adds, "People have to use sense though, if there's only a few acres of it up front, you don't want to leave it jungle." PG. 12 THE RURAL VOICE/AUGUST 1980