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The Rural Voice, 1991-08, Page 20SOIL CONSERVATION COMES OF AGE ONCE VIEWED AS SUITABLE ONLY FOR A FEW RADICALS, MINIMUM TILLAGE IS GAINING SO MUCH RESPECT THAT DISCIPLES ARE NOW CLIMBING ON THE BANDWAGON IN RECORD NUMBERS stories and photos by Jim Fitzgerald Call it conservation farming, or sustainable agriculture, or agriculture with ethics, it all adds up to some pro- found changes in the way food is being grown in Canada. Once the only the territory of a few select pioneers, good land stewardship has finally come of age and is being accepted into main stream agriculture, so much so, that if a few years, it may be the main way of farming, while the so-called conventional system with moldboard plowing and continuous cropping may become the exception. The whole thrust in Ontario to- wards improving farming practices, particularly cropping systems, had its birth in Huron County back in the early 1980s. A group of eight farm- ers, concerned with soil erosion and degradation, decided that conventional methods of crop production were slowly ruining the soil and endan- gering the ability of their farms to keep producing food at a high level. "I believe that each of us comes into this world with a responsibility to leave it a better place than we found it," says Don Lobb, one of those eight farmers, "and I believe that those land managers who practice conservation ADOPT A CONSERVATION �I CROP PRODUCTION SYSTEM The "systems" wheel for no -till. farm planning will prosper and enjoy great satisfaction in fulfilling that responsibility." Because of lack of data in Ontario in 1982, Lobb — who had started conservation farming on his own in 1965 — and the seven other farmers went on a field trip to Michigan to try to find out about reduced tillage systems. With little experience and technical support, they plunged into minimum and no -till systems in 1982. In 1983, with the help of Tom Prout of the Ausable-Bayfield Conservation Authority (ABCA), who was able to get a staff advisor, and former Huron agricultural representative Don Pullen, they started the Huron Soil and Water Conser-vation District (HSWCD), a volunteer group. The Maitland Valley Conser-vation Authority joined shortly after -wards, and the HSWCD now covers a combined 22,000 square miles in the two watersheds in Huron, Perth and parts of Lambton, Middlesex, and Bruce counties. Lobb says the knowledge of con- servation practices in the early days was very limited, but now with re- search conducted by the University of Guelph, and a number of land stewardship programs offered by the federal and provincial government, so much progress has been made that the system has proven superior to con- ventional tillage. "There are now 400 farmers that know more now than the original eight," says Lobb. "We made some mistakes along the way," he says, " but hundreds of yield checks have shown that it (a conservation system) on average gives a five to seven per cent higher yield." Robert Trait, the extension services advisor for the ABCA says there's "been a real snowballing over the last two or three years" as conservation farming practices prove themselves. "Now with Brent Kennedy (a resource management Don Lobb with soys in no -till wheat. specialist with the ministry of agriculture and food) and Chris Hoskins (of MVCA) there's plenty of information and help out there." In fact, Traut says there is less demand for the HSWCD to set up trials on individual farms and loan out their no -till seeders because "it's catching on so well and there's more equipment out there." Kennedy says in Huron there are now 470 farmers on the province's new five-year Land Stewardship II program, eligible for $2.2 million in grants for a number of projects rang- ing from tree planting , residue man- agement, cover crops, strip cropping, soil conservation equipment purchase and modification, conservation structures, as well as en-vironmental protection through man-ure storage and handling systems milkhouse wash water disposal systems, and pesticide handling facilities. As well, Kennedy says there is strong interest in the federal govern- ment's National Soil Conservation program which pays $10,000 per farm to put buffer strips along streams with permanent covers of grass, legumes or trees, take highly erodible land out of production, and end tillage on flood plain lands. Farmers can sign 16 THE RURAL VOICE