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The Rural Voice, 1998-12, Page 52Bruce drought costs average $25,000 per family, survey shows Surveys of the drought -stricken area of Bruce County show a loss of $25,000 per family, Gerry Poechman, outgoing president told the Federation of Agriculture's annual meeting in Ripley, November 6. In his farewell address, Pocchman said close to 100 families had filled in the questionnaires circulated by the Federation in an attempt to tally the toll of this summer's drought. Losses include feed that had to be bought to feed cattle, cattle sold at a loss or wells that needed to be drilled. Effects of the drought continue, he said, with some wells still going dry and feedlots being left empty because there is no water or feed for the animals. More and more townships in the Bruce and Grey Counties are declaring themselves disaster areas because of the drought, he said. On top of the drought there is the "ticking time bomb" of disastrously low pork prices, Poechman said. The crushing effect of the drought and poor prices was likely to create problems for farm families, he said. He urged Federation members to reach out to their neighbours in trouble. "If you see somebody who is hurting, go and talk to them. If it's not appropriate for you to talk to then, ask someone else to do it." And Poechman urged people who were doing fine not to make judgements about the management ability of neighbours because conditions this year were so unusual that people on one concession could have rain while those on the next didn't. For some people in the Cheslcy and Paisley areas this was the second year in a row they had been hit by drought, he said. Peter Canning, of Clifford, OFA executive liaison for Bruce County said it had been difficult convincing people from other parts of the province that they should support farmcrs who were hit by drought in a 48 THE RURAL VOICE News relatively isolated region of Grey and Bruce but "they didn't know they were dealing with Bruce County people". As evidence of the fact Bruce County's voice is being heard, Canning pointed to a pronouncement from Noble Villeneuve, Ontario's Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs, that a top priority of Agricorp was to develop a better crop insurance program for forages. Most farmers in Bruce didn't carry insurance on their forages because the program was seen to be a good investment. "Hay doesn't have any value until you don't have it," Canning said. In accepting one of two awards presented to him and his wife Judy on the evening (see the people page), Tony Morris, OFA past president urged people to keep their spirits up. "If we continue to laugh, if we continue to have fun, that crosses all boundaries." Perhaps in the belief that laughter is good medicine the Federation chose Neil McGavin of Walton as guest speaker and he regaled the audience with stories while slipping in a few concerns about farm safety and promoting the 1999 International Plowing Match in Huron County. Murray Clark of Kincardine was acclaimed the new president with Jayne Dietrich of Mildmay as vice- president and Rick Robson of Kincardine as second vice-president. Regional directors are Allan Smith, Tara, for Bruce North, Bob Bregman, Teeswater, for Bruce - South and Lloyd Schnurr, Walkerton from Bruce West.O Link needed between manure producers, manure users Agriculture needs to find a way to bring together large livestock operators who produce a surplus of manure with cashcrop farmers who could use the manure to fertilize their crops says Don Hilborn, by-product and waste management specialist with the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs. Speaking to the poultry producer update meeting in Holmesville October 28, Hilborn said the traditional link between keeping livestock and growing crops has been broken in modern farming. Most poultry producers no longer grow their own feed, he noted. Yet manure is a valuable commodity even if it is a big problem for large livestock operations. "The economics are here to make it (brokering manure to cash crop farmers) viable in the future," Hilborn said. He said the day could come when "I could call up somebody and say I need fertilizer and get a choice of manure or chemical fertilizer." Society would be more accepting of large livestock operations if they knew there was a system in place for handling surpluses of manure, Hilborn said. Dry manure from chicken farms would be the easiest to set up a brokerage system for, he said. Looking at the components of manure from a broiler farm, Hilborn said the accumulated value of the manure is about $32.85 a ton for nitrogen, phosphorus and potash applied to a rotation of corn and soybeans. The corn would make use of the nitrogen in the first year at a saving of $8.75 in nitrogen purchase needs. The phosphorus is worth $9 each year for two years while the potash is worth $6.10. The phosphorus, not the nitrogen, is the limiting factor Hilborn said. It can't be used up by the crop in one year so the most broiler manure that could be applied is four tonnes per acre every two years. That would mean a broiler producer with 50,000 birds would need 110 acres of corn to take the initial application and 110 acres of other crops like soybeans to use up the residual phosphorus. If a farmer doesn't have that much cropping acreage, or if he has even more birds. then some way of getting the manure to cashcrop farmers who could use it would be valuable. Farmers must begin to look at the usefulness of nutrient management plans instead of just looking at them as a restriction to get past in order to