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News Release
| March 29, 2006 |
Contact: Shannon Wehinger
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| For Immediate Release |
717-238-7223 x18
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Farmers Working to Protect Chesapeake Bay Recognized
The Rohrer Family of "R"-Farm in Strasburg, Mike and Donna
Olsyn of Columbia Cross Roads, and Charles "Boots" Hubler
of Morrisdale, were selected to receive the 2006 Pennsylvania Chesapeake
Bay Clean Water Farm Award. The award recipients will be recognized
on July 26, 2006 in State College, 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 certificates and large "Clean Water Farm Award"
signs 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.
The Rohrer Family of "R"-Farm manages 110,000 head of poultry
while farming 100 acres of cropland in Lancaster County. The Rohrer
Family implements numerous Best Management Practices (BMP), a combination
of practices determined to be the most effective, practical means of
reducing pollution. For example, switchgrass, which forms a dense
mass of vegetation, is planted to help control soil erosion. The mass
also provides valuable cover for wildlife in the winter. Another BMP
on "R"-Farm is recycling the waste their chickens produce.
The waste is sold to mushroom growers in Chester County who use the
nutrients in the chicken waste to grow mushroom crops. Then, the spent
mushroom soil comes back to "R"-Farm to be sold to gardeners,
landscapers, and other farmers as a soil amendment.
Recipients Mike and Donna Olsyn own and operate a 300 plus acre farm
in Bradford County that includes a dairy herd of 95 cows and 80 heifers.
The Olsyns constructed a concrete manure storage facility that stores
manure through the winter to eliminate the need for spreading manure
on frozen ground when the nutrients can't be integrated into the soil.
Spreading manure in winter could lead to nutrients washing off the fields
and polluting waterways in the spring. Manure is now spread in the spring
and early summer when it can be incorporated into the soil reducing
the possibility of runoff into nearby waters. The Olsyns have also constructed
a wetland to treat barnyard runoff. The discharge from the wetland goes
to a grass filter area. The wetland and filter area absorb and treat
the waste, removing the potentially harmful nutrients from entering
waterways.
Lastly, Charles "Boots" Hubler owns 159 acre crop farm with
25 head of beef cattle and 25 calves in Clearfield County. To protect
water quality, stream bank fencing is used to prevent livestock from
entering waterways and eroding the banks. Boots uses contour farming,
crop rotations, and a grassed waterway which traps soil to help prevent
erosion in his fields. He also uses 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.
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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