The Rural Voice, 1998-09, Page 10"Our experience
assures lower cost
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6 THE RURAL VOICE
Keith Roulston
Fashions change,
As my lawn turned the colour of
sand at the beach this summer, a few
patches of green prevailed. Even as
the weeds wilted, the clumps of
orchard grass stayed green.
Which reminds me that orchard
grass is getting new appreciation
these days as a
hardy, resilient,
fast-growing
component of
good pastures.
The first time I
heard this, a few
years ago, I was
surprised. When
I was growing
up orchard grass
was looked on
as a useless
remnant of days
long gone.
Today its value
has been
rediscovered.
That rediscovery can be a lesson
that even in things like advice given
by scientific farm advisors, there can
be fashion waves. Just because
modern scientific thought is moving
in a certain direction today doesn't
mean scientists won't discover years
from now that they made a mistake,
or that they got so caught up in the
excitement of their colleagues that
they missed something.
It's why things like seed banks
and rare -breed farms are so
important, keeping us from short-
sightedly letting old varieties and
breeds disappear when we might,
some day, need their genetic
strengths to solve new problems.
Few ordinary farmers, concerned as
they are with squeezing the most
production from their current farm
operation, can take the time to care
about preserving old varieties.
Luckily there are a few impractical
people around who continue to grow
old open -pollinated seed varieties or
raise animals like the White Park or
Canadian cattle or Barred Rock
chickens. Someday we, or our
grandchildren, may owe a debt of
gratitude for their efforts.
We're in a scientific farming
fashion wave right now. From
scientific management systems like
The value of
some old ideas
rediscovered
even in science
three -site hog production to bio-
engineered crops and, coming soon,
genetically -altered animals, efficient
farmers are being urged to throw out
the past and grab hold of the future.
We're in a brave new era and those
who don't change quickly will be left
behind, we're told.
No doubt we are in a new era. No
doubt the way farming is done will be
greatly affected by the new scientific
methods that are coming down the
pipe, just as farming in the past was
changed by the science of the time.
But hopefully farmcrs, while
listening to the advice of thcir
scientific advisors, will not throw the
baby out with the bathwatcr. 1f
orchard grass is valuable to farmers
with pastures today, then it must have
been for farmers 20 years ago but
many farmers ignored it.
We have the most educated farm
population of all time at work in the
fields and barns (and farm offices and
kitchens) these days. That education,
plus practical knowledge working on
farms, should create greater wisdom
than we've had in the past. Unfort-
unately, a university or college
education can also turn professors
and researchers into gods whose
every word is accepted as a pearl of
wisdom. Sometimes we're just not
skeptical enough to use our native
intelligence.
Like everything in life, it is
difficult to find the right balance
between stubbornly ignoring
scientific evidence and snapping up
every trend unquestioningly. There's
no doubt that too many farmers over
the years have ignored good scientific
advice and clung to old habits that
spelled doom for their farms. There
are other examples, however, of
farmers being given wrong or
inadequate advice (remember the
campaign to remove fencerows when
now we're being told the benefit of
windbreaks).
In the end, every farmer has to
make his own decision. Here's
hoping that farmers think it out and
don't just accept ideas because
they're the current fashion.0
Keith Roulston is editor and
publisher of The Rural Voice. Ile
lives near Blyth, ON.