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The Rural Voice, 1987-05, Page 16NEW DIRECTIONS in CONSERVATION The techniques of conservation management have become much more well known to Ontario farmers over the past several years, and a general awareness of conservation issues appears to be spreading. Losses caused by soil problems alone cost Ontario farmers an estimated $90 million a year, and the fed- eral and provincial governments are spending $30 million over five years to improve soil and water quality in southwestern Ontario alone. Farmers themselves, realizing that Canada is now producing more than it can sell profitably, have been retiring fragile land that simply costs too much to work. And more are turning to crop rotation, conservation tillage, and erosion - control structures, motivated not only by long-term economics, but by stewardship concerns. National Soil Conservation Week was last month, and the message is clear: "Soil conservation is everybody's business." Particularly during a time of low returns, farmers deserve support in their conservation efforts, and more agencies and organizations are providing the necessary funds and research required for technology transfer. The Rural Voice looks at some of the programs and activities directed toward conservation issues, and also, in recognition of National Forestry Week this month, takes a look at innovations in agro-forestry. AGRO-FORESTRY GAINS MOMENTUM IN PRACTICE by Merle Gunby When Europeans arrived in what is now Southern Ontario, they found a rich fertile land, unfor- tunately, as they thought, covered by virgin forest. That forest impeded their desire to establish themselves quickly as yeomen in this new land, so with single-minded purpose they set about ridding themselves of the nuis- ance by girding, cutting, and buming. Then the timber companies moved in, decimating what was left. During the nineteenth century, millions of board feet of timber were exported. The exploits of the lumbering men of this era are legendary. As we move through the twentieth century and the problems of soil ero- sion, a market surplus of agricultural products, and an increasing scarcity of quality Togs to supply the growing de- mand for timber products, some people are wondering if timber production in Southern Ontario might be profitable. It would certainly provide plenty of fringe benefits: better wildlife habitat, less erosion, and a stabilizing effect on water runoff, to name a few of the more obvious. Ontario is a major exporter of tim- ber products, much of it softwood lum- ber and paper, produced mainly in the north. The valuable hardwoods such For Andrew Dixon, agro-forestry is a gift to the future. as walnut, cherry, and oak (and even white pine of the softwood varieties) flourish mainly in the soil and clima- tic environment of Southern Ontario. Wood from these tree varieties is a net import commodity in Ontario. Logs of these species are trucked from the U.S. to as far as North Bay to supply mills there. Andrew Dixon, who lives near Ailsa Craig, has been promoting agro- forestry — the idea of growing trees as a crop interplanted with regular farm crops (see The Rural Voice, May 14 THE RURAL VOICE