WAYNE and SANDY STAFFORD

CLICK
HERE FOR VIDEO PRESENTATION
By Carla Correa
Whig Staff Writer
Generations of hard work and strong family bonds have hoisted
Staff-Herds Farms to the top of its field in Cecil County. The
resulting mix of soil and water conservation, economics and farm
management has also earned Wayne and Sandy Stafford top honors at
the Cecil Soil Conservation District’s 56th Annual
Cooperator’s Banquet. The husband-and-wife team are the
organization’s Cooperator’s of the Year. “It’s more of a family
award because it started with Dad,” said Wayne Stafford of his
father Carl Stafford. Carl moved his livelihood to Maryland in 1963
after Delaware made way for Interstate 95-right through his land.
Wayne took over the operation in
1995. The farm, which produces dairy products, grain, straw and
hay, contains 140 cows and heifers. Charles Hayes, manager of the
Cecil Soil conservation District said the Stafford family
incorporates conservation as an integral part of their daily farming
operation. “As stewards of the land, they do an outstanding job in
the management and care of their natural resources, particularly the
conservation of top soil, “he said.
The Stafford’s use grassed waterways,
diversions, minimum and no-tillage, stream crossings and a spring
development with watering trough. Hayes said the dairy operates
under a wastewater management plan. The strategy includes roof
runoff management to divert clean water from the barnyard and the
application of nutrients under a nutrient management plan. The
largest physical element in a newly finished wastewater storage
tank. The circular concrete structure is about 105 feet wide and 12
feet deep. The receptacle enables the Stafford’s to collect all the
manure and nutrient runoff from the farmstead. “They can store it in
the tank until it is the optimal time to apply it to the land” Hayes
said. A videotape at the banquet will highlight the Staffords’
conservation efforts. And in a time when many dairy productions are
disappearing, the family continues to send their milk to places as
far away as South Carolina.
“There’s so few dairy farmers,” Wayne
said. “We’ve been farming on more ground, but basically right now
it’s going to stay about the same”. “Hopefully we’ll still have
something going on when our 5 month old grandson, Colton grows up –
if he wants to do it.”

