Harold Good Triples Silage Tonnage With Rye Sod-Seeded in Alfalfa By ERNEST J. NEILL Highrock, Pa. Balboa rye seeded m alfalfa sod has tripled silage yields on the southern York County farm of Harold Good s Usifag a .method that is gam ing broad acceptance in the flat Delta lands of Mississippi and in the fertile'farmlands of-York and Lancaster Counties, Mr. Good seeds in dry, hard ground during the fall months Seeds and fertilizers are put in place without destroying the firmness of the soil. ' Sod-seeding is somewhat new, but it is producing acres and acres of winter grazing in the south, and tripling tonnage that goes into upright silos in York County. Generally Maintenance Tool “It’s a maintenance tool gen eially, unless you have a bound sod condition, 1 ” one man told of the Pasture Dream that leaves sod intact, resisting erosion much better than most other tillage tools. Dairymen have found that the first cutting of combinations is not too satisfactory for silage. With Balboa rye, a large, woody, fibrous chop is produced that readily absorbs alfalfa juices, adds carbohydrates to proteins furnished by the -legume “Fall seeding gives rye a good root system, and' by spring it is able to start on a par with al falfa. Fertilizers are'applied 0-20-20 or 0-14-14 for the alfalfa only, and tonnage returns are astrounding,” Lancaster Faming was told. The Pennsylvania State Uni versity has been experimenting with the machine that works in unprepared seedbeds, but as a rule they have limited tests to prepared soils. - - Chicken Numbers In State at 26 Year Low p oint HARRISBURG Pennsylva nia farmers this year are rais ing the smallest number of chickens in 26 years, the State Department of Agriculture re ported today. Excluding broiler-fryer chick ens, the total of chickens raised this year was given as 22,503.000 or three per cent below the 1955 crop of 23,199,000 head, a Federal-State survey showed. The 1956 total is 33 per cent below the 10-year 1945-54 aver age. However, with the reduc tion in numbers the State still holds its fourth place among all the states in the number of chickens raised on farms, the Department said. Broiler Output Record The term “chickens raised” in cludes fowls intended for re placements in laying flocks, al so birds other than those of broiler type that are sold for meat, observers said. Also, lay ing flock numbers have been de clining in recent years as pro duction of eggs per layer per year has been increasing. \ Meanwhile, farmers of Penn ey Ivama have been advancing their production of broilers to meet consumer demand Output last year reched a record high of 30,318,000, an increase of nearly 2 million in the past ten years Placements up 20 Per Cent The Department reported on increase of 20 per cent in the numbei of broiler chicks placed dunng the first seven months of this year compared with the same pe. md. in 1955. Nationally, the number of ra sad on farms this ' t>-' ( al-, n 472 million, an me 1 C’i3 of tv o per cent over 1935, h'> '*‘3 pei cent below the 10-year £ \rn, -j Rye Combines Well Rye alone does not provide too good a silage It furnish „ bulk 'And a limited amount of carbohydrates. But these com bine well with legumes and hold moisture that normally runs away in silage. Although Mr Good’s results have been very satisfactory, he plans to try oats sometime soon, to see if an oats-alfalfa combi nation will equal rye-alfalfa Right now he has two 50-by-14 silos, olle is full, the other three fourths full. Exceptionally good pasture growing conditions this year have reduced the need for feeding silage, but there is an ample reserve fpr all demands next winter may require. Mr Good farms 285 acres in one farm plus another 150 near- County farmer who moved across the Susquehana to start diversified farming operations Included in his acreage are 35 acres tomatoes, 40 acres or more of corn, 45 of hay, 15 wheat, by. He’s a former Lancaster and 15 acres of oats “So far this year I’ve put up 8,000 bales of hay,” 'Harold fold, while showing his' Lancaster County visitors around his farm “I’m running a herd of 70 Guernsey cows, milking 40, ,f he continued Weeds also Reduced His procedure of combining Balboa and, alfalfa* has reduced weeds When seeding rye, 5-10- 10 fertilizer is applied in the sod-drill Rye application is ex tra thick Silo filling started the last week of May, while other crops were progresing rapidly On the contoured hillsides were fields of corn being grown .for seed sale. Comparing costs, Harold fig ures the alfalfa-Balboa combina tion costs about a third that soybean-sorghum mixtures would require. “You have your perma nent stand of alfalfa,” he ex plained, “and the soybean-sor ghum planting requires more fertilizer.” Feeding of silage will start when pastures require support; Harold told, but from prospects now, pastures will last all sum mer. “I believe in this combina tion of Balboa-alfalfa,” he as serts, “and I’m feeding some hay to encourage the cows to eat more grass He’s producing 4.5 to 4.7 per cent 'butterfat, marketed for lo cal consumption through Red Lion Detasseling of 30 acres of hy brid corn for seed was keeping Harold and his helper, Bill Fans ler, a former Lebanon county resident, busy at the time. No Plowing Required Reviewing success with- the Pasture Dreom and pasture seed ing, he told, “There is no plow ing, and we are able to plant' four 20-inch rows simultaneausly. There’s no land preparation, no cultivation Fertilization is ap plied at the same time for alfal fa, and there’s a deep placement of fertilizer,” the York Coun tian reports ■“Potash and phosphorous are our greatest needs here,” Har old explained, but his program of sod-seedmg is combatting this. “We use a field chopper direct cut. The alfalfa-oats are not wilted, the crop is blown in to wagons and then into silos," this enthusiast said. Fifteen acres of Canadian Grass pasture are producing well in another new venture for this York County farmer. Summarizing his program, Mr Good is sure cereal crop seed mg doesn’t work too well in fhr spung. One procedure that has worked well in the Delta Conn r •3 being applied in the pioduc tive lands of Lancaster and Yoik Counties. Tripled silage tonnage is the record stacked up by Harold Good (left) through s'od seeding of Balboa rye and alfalta. Here he is shown at the silos on his tarm Ground beneath this sod-seeded Balboa rye and alfalfa has little chance to wash away from the High Rock farm of Harold i* 1 u (it: t oi u initio-. ppl pasture on the 0 A Hoxie Farm near Port Gib son, oats seeded with an FR model Pature York Countian, Helper Silage on the Contour Mississippi and York County near High Rock with his helper, Bill Fans- t ler, formerly of Lebanon County. (See ac- * companying story) (Lancaster Farming Staff Photo) Good. Silage yields have heen tripled described in an accompanying story this issue of Lancaster Farming. !«■ Pastille Dream that-is supplying a new/, means of tripled silage production m , t Yoik and Lancaster Counties. ! 1 Fancier Farming—l 3 , Friday, Aug. 17, 1956 ! * '*9* ■* . * * ! I I ! L i