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News Release
| April 5, 2005 |
Contact: Shannon Wehinger |
| For Immediate Release |
(717) 238-PACD (7223), ext. 18 |
Farmers Protecting Chesapeake Bay Recognized
Scott and Herb Kreider & Sons of Quarryville, Ben and Dean Jackson
of Columbia Cross Roads, and David and Terry Rice of Williamsburg, have
been selected to receive the 2005 Pennsylvania Chesapeake Bay Clean
Water Farm Award. The award recipients will be recognized on July 26,
2005 in Erie, PA during the Annual Conservation Awards program of the
Pennsylvania Association of Conservation Districts, Inc. (PACD). To
further acknowledge their accomplishments, the landowners will receive
a certificate and large "Clean Water Farm Award" sign to erect
on their property.
The Clean Water Farm Award, initiated in 1986, recognizes farmers within
Pennsylvania's portion of the Chesapeake Bay Watershed, who manage their
daily farm operation while keeping a watchful eye on water quality.
The farms' conservation plans address issues that help control potential
pollutants such as eroded soil, pesticides, and fertilizers from entering
streams or groundwater supplies.
Award winners Scott and Herb Kreider & Sons manage 400 head of dairy
cows, 380 heifers, and 520 acres of cropland in Lancaster County. The
Kreiders implement numerous Best Management Practices, a combination
of practices determined to be the most effective, practical
means of reducing pollution. Their conservation work adds up to 8.5
miles, including terraces, a series of ridges and channels created across
a slope to prevent rainfall from causing serious erosion, and grassed
waterways, which trap soil to help prevent erosion.
Recipients Ben and Dean Jackson operate Mt. Glen Farm, a 358 acre farm
in Bradford County that includes a dairy herd of 90 cows, 60 heifers,
50 calves and 12 bulls. To control excess nutrients, the Jacksons use
contour strip-cropping in which land is plowed across a slope instead
of up and down it to reduce soil erosion and to protect water quality.
The Jacksons have also constructed a manure storage structure that eliminates
the need for spreading manure on farm fields in the winter time when
the fields are frozen and nutrients can't be integrated into the soil.
This could lead to nutrients washing off the fields and polluting waterways
in the spring.
Lastly, David and Terry Rice own Ojala Farm, a 120 head dairy and poultry
farm in Blair County. To protect water quality, the Rices use rotational
grazing in which grass-fed livestock is periodically moved from one
area to another to allow the pasture time to re-grow the grasses that
will prevent soil erosion. Stream bank fencing is also used to prevent
their livestock from entering the stream and eroding the stream bank.
Recipients of the annual Chesapeake Bay Clean Water Farm Award are nominated
by county conservation district staff. This annual award program is
coordinated by the Pennsylvania Chesapeake Bay Education Office (administered
by PACD, a private, nonprofit organization representing Pennsylvania's
66 county conservation districts). The awards are sponsored jointly
by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection's Chesapeake
Bay Program and the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture to recognize
farmers who implement Best Management Practices. The Pennsylvania Chesapeake
Bay Education Office conducts numerous activities promoting the theme,
"We All Live Downstream." For more information, visit
www.pacd.org.
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