Several types of machines are in use to till small strips for planting rather than the entire field and initial studies show they can help control nutrient lose while maintaining high yields. (Photo by Simon Crouch)Several types of machines are in use to till small strips for planting rather than the entire field and initial studies show they can help control nutrient lose while maintaining high yields. (Photo by Simon Crouch)
Sarnia

Good Economics And Environment Protection

First-year results from a strip till program designed to protect the environment have been so successful some of the participants are predicting it will solve some future concerns about phosphorus and other nutrients getting into lakes.

They've been working with special cultivators that till eight-inch wide strips leaving spaces between the planting strips untouched to control run-off.

Peter Johnson, an agronomist working on the experiments says only one year's results are available but those results show no statistical yield loss.

“From an economic standpoint we think this has some legs as well, but the real focus is that we have to keep the phosphorus out of the lakes and we think this might be one of the better ways to do this,” he says. “It costs more money to strip till than it does to moldboard plough, but I don't have to cultivate, I don't have to spread fertilizer, I've really reduced my trips so economically I think it is a win.”

He says the fear going into the first year of the experiment was that yields would be hurt, but they are within two percent of other tillage methods so statistically there is no real difference.

Read More Local Stories

New military crosswalk rendering. (Image courtesy of the Sarnia Legion Branch 62)

New military crosswalk in Sarnia to be unveiled

As part of a partnership between the Sarnia Legion Branch 62 and City of Sarnia, an unveiling ceremony will be held at the corner of Christina Street and Wellington Street on Sunday, June 7, at 2 p.m.

Members of the Sarnia Police Service entering a Tashmoo Avenue residence on June 4, 2026. (Photo courtesy of the Sarnia Police Service)

Two men arrested in Tashmoo Ave. standoff

Sarnia police said the investigation began on May 29 after the victim was allegedly attacked by acquaintances at a residence near Tashmoo Avenue and Christopher Drive at Aamjiwnaang First Nation.