Clinton News-Record, 1979-10-11, Page 7te.
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MAIN CORNER CLINTON 482-9732 VISA
ulate your
soybean hary
BY
PAF LYNCH,
SOILS. AND CROPS
SPECIALIST
This past two weeks we
measured soybean
losses in five
harvesting
fields in Perth and Huron
counties. Four of these
fields were harvested by
combines equipped with
soybean, --headers. The
fifth field was harvested
using a conventional
grain hTader. The grain
header was leaving„three
or four bushels of
soybeans in the field. This
was two more bushels per
acre than the soybean
headers were leaving.
t
These extra beans were.
still in the pod. The
conventional header
could not cut low enough.
In terms of extra profit,
this amounts to about, $15
per acre. It only takes a
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Shooting
deal of
an old black powder rifle requires a great
skill and a steady hand, as this man
demonstrated at the turkey shoot held at the Fish
and Game Club last Sunday. (Steve Cooke photo)
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CHMAER
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CLINTON
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OPEN: SALES EPAI1TMEN1': Monday thru. Wednesday a.m..5:36 p.m. Thursday 8 am. -
6:00 p.m. 713,r4i4,40:00 Friday 6 a.m..5t30 p.m.. Saturday 9 a.m..4 p.m.
SERVICE AND PARTS DEPARTMENIY: Monday thru. Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Opcia Tkursda '
rttolit6 p f • to pr.orie,
few minutes to calculate
harvest loss. If you do it
this falig?efore ploughing,
it will give you an idea
how much you are losing.
The technique is
simple. You count the
number of .unharvested
beans in 10 square feet,
The areacckinted must be
the length of the soybean
header. The width is that
dimension that will give a
total area of lec square
feet. That means for a 12
ft. header, • the area
measured is 12 feet by 10
inches. For a 14 foot
header, the area will be
14 feet by 8.6 inches. It
takes 40 to 45 b2ans per 10
sq. ft. to equal one bushel
per acre-. If your total
harvest losses are one to
two bushels, there is
probably nothing you can
do. Harvest losses of two
/to four bushels are ex-
cessive and you should
find out why.
Baby boom
ST. MARYS - First there
was Martin. Then there
was Anita. Two -and -a -
half years ago along
came Garry and Chris.
And just five weeks ago
Nicholas, Joseph and
Michael arrived on the
scene.
And so, Garry and
Cathy Heynsbergen truly
do have their hands full
with six children, three of
which came unexpected.
Despite the recent birth
of triplets, the Heyn-
sbergens, who lie in a
modest home off the
Kirkton Road, appear to
be calm as ever.
When asked for any
cause of their high fer-
tility rate, with a set of
twins and a set of tripleiS
Mrs. Heynsbergen said,
"It must be the air
around here."
The St. Marys Journal
Argus also asked if the
couple planned to call it
quits, Mrs. Heynsbergen
said, "No Comment.
That's what I said after
the twins."
Holtnesville
4-H
• Holmesville I, Stitchy
Stitcher -o -o -os' met
October 9 at the
Holmesville Public
School. The secretarial
report was read and
approved bringing the
meeting to an open. The
rdll call was not an-
swered since we do not
know how to "BLOCK II
RIGHT."
Deb Hutchenson
demonstrated and helped
us to do the scotch stitch.
' Judy Renner then
demonstrated and helped
each member do the
cashmere stitch. All
members and leaders all
took turns in reading The
History of Needlepoint.
Refreshments 'I were
then served bringing the
meeting to a close. - by
Helena Tiesma.
4)4
-1111-1111._III
natura,
•
spew
Do animal calls work? You bet your boots they
do, but only if they're blown properly. One of the
biggest snistakes the neophyte makes, is not
reading, the instructions. I have often watched a
beginner try to attract ducks with his newly
purchased call by . sounding off with a set of
evenly spaced quacks. When the ducks flare and
,head for parts unknown, the user
naturally assumes the call is no good . and
abandons it. What he never does realize is that
the call he gave was a warning call and he ac:
tually drove the ducks off. An experienced •
caller, who knows the techniques, can call ducks
from an amazing distance.
The same goes for varmint calls. Good calling,
excellent camouflage and minimum movement,
can result in an old smart fox being sucked right
into touching distance, but make a wrong move
or hit a false note, and you'll never see him.
Successful callers can always relate some in-
teresting stories about things that happen while
trying to attract wildlife.
While I've had a crack at calling with very
limited success, I do have a rather interesting
story to tell.
Eddie Okeese is an old Ojibway trapper who
had taken over the camp chores in a tent camp
we had in northern Ontario. While everyone else
was out hunting, Eddie would busy himself
cutting wood, washing dishes, cooking the
evening meal and just doing whatever else
needed doing. Since we weren't being overly
successful in our hunting, Eddie also spent a
considerable amount of time fishing off our pole
dock to help round out the larder. One day when
he was quietly trying to induce a walleye to take
his lure, a rabbit ran through our camp with a
marten in hot pursuit.
The marten dispatched the rabbit only a few
feet from Eddie, and the old Ojibway, being an
opportunist atevery chance, swooped down and
commandeered it from the little predator. He
chuckled gleefully around the campfire that
night as he related his story while we dined on a
great rabbit stew.
The next evening, Hal Swiggett, my hunting
partner and I returned to camp a little earlier
than usual with a spruce grouse we happened to
surprise, to find that Eddie had landed a couple
of nice Walleye. -Since the rest of the group had
not returned yet, Hal and I decided to try and call
up the marten so we could get some pictures. We
moved back into the bush, settled down, and
after waiting about 10 minutes Hal started to
imitate a squealing injured rabbit with , his
Weems varmint call. It only took about two
minutes before our predator appeared. We were
as surprised as our prey was because it wasn't
the marten that appeared, but Eddie, armed
with a two foot stick, ready to claim another free
meal.
When we all Mopped laughing, we
_
unanimously agreed that the calling must have
been good to trick the ear of our old trapper. Hal .
probably still delights in telling his Texas friends
about how he called up an Ojibway in Ontario's
northland. Oh year, the marten still had the last
laugh: however, as that night he stole from us
the spruce grouse we'd stored under a cardboard
box outside along with the two walleyes Eddie
had caught. I'd say it was a fair trade for the
experienc e.
Don't forget that you need a Migratory game
bird permit to hunt waterfowl and woodcock.
This permit is available at any Post Office for
the sum of $3.50. On the back of it, you'll also find
a table to help you keep track of your bag this
fall. Please try to keep this record up to date as
you may be one of the hunters called upon to fill
out a questionnaire sent out later this year.
The questionnaire is sent out by the Canadian
Wildlife Service and the information it requests
is essential in estimating waterfowl populations
and establishing bag limits. If you get one this
year, please fill it out and return it promptly. In
the long run, this information will benefit
everyone.
-11L_IL.LL
b
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