Posted by Bill(Wis) on March 03, 2012 at 16:36:49 from (184.75.123.14):
In Reply to: Re: Voltage weakness posted by Janicholson on March 03, 2012 at 12:51:08:
I'm glad you asked. I still cannot reliably plant any more than 95 day corn if I want ripe corn. That hasn't changed in the 75 years that I've been around. We do plant 110 day corn but that's for silage. When you say "small things make big differences", does the opposite apply? Do "big things make small differences"? I can't help but think back to the massive volcanic eruption of Mt Pinatubo in 1990-91. Most of it occurred on a single day in 1991. About 30 million tons of sulfer dioxide alone were spewed high into the atmosphere, where after mixing with air and water vapor became sulfuric acid which did enormous damage to the ozone layer over Antarctica. 13 inches of dust settled on the island of Luzon and Clark field at Manila was destroyed. Two years later all that was left in the atmosphere was just enough to give us a few more pretty sunsets. If the earth's atmosphere cleaned all that up in several years then what is a little puff of diesel smoke every now and then going to do? It seems that the earth not only could, but does, handle this just fine. I'm having a hard time understanding the alarm some people demonstrate when, as I stated earlier, I still have to plant 95 day corn. After a lifetime of planting corn.
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