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The Rural Voice, 1980-11, Page 13BY SHEILA GUNBY All sorts of notions go through your head when you hear the term "natural farmer." Probably someone with a two acre plot who subscribes to organic gardening magazines. But that's wrong. The Natural Farmers Association of Ontario is a small but serious group of farmers - - not gardeners, but honest to goodness farmers, farming "the old way" - - without benefit of pesticides, herbicides or commercial fertilizers. The organization's 55 members come from all over southwestern Ontario, from Collingwood in the north to Coldstream in the south. They send out a newsletter at various times through the year in which their members outline some of the planting programs they have tried, their methods of handling manure, the successes of their crops - - or their failures. Recently, they held a meeting at the Hugh Johnston farm, near Walton. About twenty-five curious people toured Hugh's high roughage/low grain ration beef feedlot to hear about his method of "direct to the consumer" marketing of organic beef. Hugh Johnston has not used weed sprays for seven years and has not used chemical fertilizers for 15 years. His fields are relatively free of weeds. Spokesman for the group is Herb Eldridge, an Ethel area farmer who put it quite simply, "Our purpose is to make the land self-sufficient." COMPUTERS TO FARMING Originally from Saskatchewan, Herb grew up on a farm where his father sharecropped. I:e was educated at the University of Saskatchewan and ended up in Toronto for ten years as a computer systems consultant. But farming always appealed to him. It took him two years to find a farm. Being in the computer business, he says, gave him a tendency to over -analyze. Money was a limiting factor also, and he thought he wanted 2700 heat units for growing corn. He has since decided growing continuous corn does not fit in with his farming practises of to -day. Soil type was one of his primary considerations in buying a farm, and he chose soil which is basically Harriston silt loam. The farm also had a barn suitable for his purposes. Herb had done extensive reading on farming methods and realized even then that he was oriented toward organic style farming. He has shelves of books on the subject and tried not to be too idealistic. Herb had his 200 acre farm in hay the first year. He bought a 35 hp. tractor and purchased a loader. The first few years, with the absence of weed sprays, the fields were fu 1 I of weeds, and it has taken seven years for his fields to be used free and in good condition. "I'm just now getting the qualities in my grains making them suitable for use as organic flour or grain," he says. "What I don't use, in the way of equipment," he says, "is more important than what I use -- I don't use a moldboard plow. Soil is more than a medium -- it's a living organism with distinct attributes and zones." Herb feels a moldboard plow disrupts that system.He uses a rigid offset disc and maintains an even 4 inch seed bed. He is just seeing the results of his efforts and a vast improvement in the structure of his soil. His main crops are spring barley, spring wheat and fall rye. Sometimes, he throws in something else - like Faba beans or flax just to try them out. Herb is particularly proud of his beef cattle, fed on top quality hay and grass. He believes his quality of feed results in healthier livestock. It has taken over four years to reach the point he is at right now. He says it takes a lot less feed because of handling manure, the mainstay of this I type of farming. Farmers always want to know the yields of the various crops another farmer is getting and Herb is quite willing to share the information. He doesn't say they are spectacular but they are im- proving all the time and his costs for fertilizer and fuel are minimal, which represents a great saving. His barley yielded 50 to 60 bushels to the acre and is just starting to improve. The spring wheat runs 40 to 45 bushels to the acre, grows 3 to 4 feet high and has quality suitable for flour. Herb manages to get 150 bales of hay an acre, first cut, starting around the second week of June, and 90 bales second cut beginning the first week of August. Crop rotation is not listed at the top of Herb's priorities but then, he's not dealing with corn grown year after year. He knows his farm well, how it's made up of pockets of different soils and he's managed to deal with trouble spots. When he first came to the farm, one field, growing corn continuously, gave him problems and was under water in the low spots. But he did not re tile the field. • .. no chemicals, no commercial fertilizers its quality. "You know how it takes 10 slices of white bread to fill you up," he says, "but one slice of good bread will do the same job." Herb maintains 60 head of Herefords, plus a Swiss and a Jersey cow for his own use. His spring wheat is sold as flour to health food stores and food co-operatives, his rye is also sold for flour and as seed to local farmers. Herb does not believe in using commercial fertilizers, nor does he believe in putting raw manure straight onto the fields. He always has the manure composted and worked into the ground in the fall so it has lots of time to rot. Over the years, he has learned how much straw to put with the fresh droppings so the compost will not be too wet or too dry, The manuie is put in windrows in the field and allowed to settle a month or two. He would like to have time to turn the compost heap and is seriously con- sidering investing in a compost -turning machine. Work on an organic farm can be just as tedious as any other farm. Time spraying fields is nil, but more time is spent After seven years, handling the soil differently and planting differently than the past owners, he has good rich soil that is neither under water nor washing away. Now he can drive a tractor over the old wet spots with no trouble. He couldn't do that before. GOOD LAND FOR FUTURE FARMERS Herb Eldridge feels the average farmer takes "the easy way out", when he relies on "experts" for his information, when he depends on commercial fertilizers and sinks him money in a weed sprayer. He feels his, farm is an example of how you can farm without weed sprays and chemical fertilizers. Besides that, he uses less fuel 12y not using a moldboard plow, by having fewer passes over the field, and, in turn, Tess compaction. By using a rigid offset disc as his main piece of machinery, the land does not have deep furrows left by a plow. He has an even seed bed and can get over the land faster. Herb would like to leave the land in better condition than when he got it, for future farmers. He has found this type of farming suitable for himself and will not argue how others farm. According to Herb, "argument solves nothing, examples show everything. THE RURAL VOICE/NOVEMBER 1980 PG. 11