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The Rural Voice, 1983-05, Page 12The Dynamics of Terracing by Gregor Campbell It was once five fields with fences between. But since John and Hugo Maaskant of RR 2 Clinton bought, then began farming them in the mid-1970s, the fences have been torn down and dug out, and now it is just one big field in Colborne Township, 110 acres and shaped like a quarter saucer. That's a problem. Because like a saucer, if water hits the lip it will race to the middle carrying crumbs and whatnot with it. But in the case of a field the water is whisking away something much more valuable - topsoil. It's erosion. The Maaskants have now decided to take the bull by the horns and tackle this problem at its source by using a practice relatively rare in Ontario - terracing. The terraces won't eliminate erosion completely says Hugo, nothing can do that, but hopefully they will slow it down significantly. He explains the dynamics —allows farming over the whole terrace —may be built on slopes up to 8 percent —construction results in steeper land slope —highest cost, more soil moved in construction PG. 10 THE RURAL VOICE, MAY 1983