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The Rural Voice, 2004-01, Page 24Taking shelter Shelterbelts of trees and shrubs can help reduce odour complaints in livestock operations, agroforestrg specialist Todd Leutg sags Story by Keith Roulston Illustrations supplied by Todd Leuty ural cynics sometimes say R people smell with their eyes when it comes to new Targe farm buildings but planting trees around buildings can do more than just screen out the offending building, says Todd Leuty,' agroforestry specialist with Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food. Certainly planting trees around a new barn can eventually help screen off the barn from the sight of those who automatically associate new barns with strong manure smells, but the trees can go farther in eradicating the problem. Leuty told a recent nutrient management conference in Shakespeare. They help reduce the odour problem in five ways, he says: 1. They can help dilute and disperse the smell coming from barns. 2. They can help deposit dust and particles much like a windbreak causes snowdrifts. 3. They can collect and store the chemical constituents of the odour within the tree wood. 4. The trees can physically intercept odour particles like dust and aerosols. 5. And the visual barrier can make both the barn and the fields on which you spread your manure more visually appealing. Properly designed shelterbelts do reduce odour, Leuty says. They disturb moving air masses and help create the wind effect that helps meet the farmer's needs. A shelterbelt on the windward side of a barn pushes the wind up and No Shelterbelts over the trees and barn. The shelterbelt creates a "quiet zone" of air downwind that measures a distance of eight to 10 times the height of the tree row downwind from the trees. and an additional moderation of wind speeds for a distance measuring 10 to 25 times their tree height. Livestock barns and manure storage area are best located in the quiet zone just downwind of the shelterbelt. Odours emitted from the barn or manure pit tend to travel along the ground as a plume with air movement, especially during atmospheric inversions. By disturbing the wind pattern, shelterbelts have the ability to Odour plume travels along the gr - Full strength smell - Maximum neighbour complain ound is Trees create an obstacle Faster turbulent clean air Calm breeze -�.��► Less odour 100 feet The top illustration shows what happens when there are no trees sheltering a barn. The illustration above shows how a shelterbelt disrupts the winds. 20 THE RURAL VOICE lift some of the odour plume into the lower atmosphere where the winds aloft mix and dilute the odour. The most dilution occurs above and downwind from the quiet zone, created by the action of wind passing over the shelterbelt. Beyond the quiet zone, more fresh air and less odorous air returns to the ground, reducing the movement of livestock odours off site. The proper design forces turbulent