6 —LancasJec;Faming/Saturday/'February; J963' '■ • DHIA Tester (Continued from Page 1) tie farmer has. If he expects them to do him any good he has -to make use of them.” Risser checked his scales to make sure they legistered "zero”, and by the time the first milker pail was full, he was ready with his 20-quatt bucket. He weighed the milk from the first cow, entered the wei ght on his charts and then stir red the milk -thoroughly before dipping his sample. Accurate sampling is just as important as accurate testing Risser be lieves. "You can make an accu rate butterfat test, but if you don’t haie a representative sample, you won’t get a -tiue picture.” he said. The sample went into a num bered bottle and Risser carried the milk to the bulk tank in the milk house. By the time he returned, an other milker pail was ready and the process was repeated. He had little time to loiter be tween cows, but he worked THE FIRST THING JAY RISSER does when he arrives at a farm to collect milk samples is to get freshening,-breeding, and dry dates on each of the cows from the farmer’s barn charts. He transfers this infor mation to the record which he sends to Penn State. It then becomes part of the permanent record on the herd. L. F. Photo. ACCURATE SAMPLING IS JUST AS important as accurate testing, Risser believes. He stirs the milk well in the pail before collecting a dipper full. If the milking hours vary from morning to night, he takes a larger sample from the larger milking. L. F. Photo. carefully and accurately, By shortly after 7 o’clock the 2S Holsteins were milked and the sample box closed. Risser took the home where he would st re them in a cool well pit overnight to keep them from spoiling. He also took the Landis Herd book along with him to enter the permanent re cords which would be returned to the farmer next morning. At 5 30 a m. next morning we were in the bain again where much the same routine took place, except, this time he pre sented the bill and collected a check before leaving. Conversation in the,, barn ranged over a wide scope, but centered mainly around dairy ing and milk testing. Risser re counted some of his experienc es as a tester for two years m Washington and in Lancaster County for the past eight years He has been head tester in the Red Rose DHIA for the past two years. Since Landis was formerly a cow tester, he had shared many of the same experiences of living with farm families, and they enti ,:ned . nje quite well -pith .amusing ac-> >- ; c6unts of-their early days in' testing. Risser took the sample bottle wife-to-be. in a church in Wash ington County while he was testing there. Her father was a dairyman, but his. farm was not in Risser’s area. We stopped on the way home to pick up a tray of samples from the farm of Jacob Hess, a neighbor of Landis, who is on the Owner-Sampler pro giam. Hess weighs and samp les his own milk and keeps his own feed records Risser tests the samples and figures the in dividual cow’s record just as he does for the regular DHIA pations The Owner-Sampler records are not official, but they aie a good guide for the farm er who wants a record for his own use. Risser has almost'3o of these herds under test at present. After a delicious breakfast of 'eggs and sausage with the Rissers, I was introduced to the real job of the DHIA sup ervisor. In the basement of his comfortable home, Risser has set up a laboratory where.he “runs” the samples. Riser took the sample bottle numbered “one” and agitated it thoroughly to make sure the cream was well mixed with the milk. He poured it back and forth in two clean sample bot tles to complete the mixing and drew exactly 17 5 cubic centi meters into a pipette, and then transferred it to the thin-neck ed test bottle. After all the 56 samples had been pipetted into the test bottles, he added a like amount of sulfuric acid to the milk samples and shook the trays to mix the acid and milk. The samples turned a rich cof fee color as the acid digested the protein and other solids not-fat The digestion made the test bottles so warm that they could not be held in the hand. Twenty four of the samples went into the centrifuge at one time The centrifuge is a mach ine that spins the bottles at a high rate of speed to push the heavy acid and digested milk solids t 6 the bottom of the bot-, tel and bring the dissolved but terfat to the top. After five minutes in the centrifuge, each bottle got enough hot water to bring the level of the sample to the bottom of the neck. Af ter another two minutes of spinning the bottles were filled with enough hot water to bring the entire fat content into the neck of the bottle. Another minute of centrifug ing, and the samples were ready for a hot "water bath. Butterfat expands and con tracts with temperature chang es, so in order to get an ac curate' reading, Risser keeps the samples in the hot water bath for five minutes With the aid of a pair of wing dividers, he measures the height of the fat column in the neck of the test bottle and reads the but terfat percentage directly from the graduations on the bottle neck After all the tests had been entered on the record sheets, Risser emptied the test and sample bottles and thoroughly washed all glassware. He made sure all bottles weie turned upside down for thoi ough diying By this time it was past mid morning and the daily leport to be sent to Penn State for electionic processing had still to be completed While Jav completed the “IBM” sheets tor mailing, his wife, Lois Ann, worked on the monthly news letter of completed lactations ovei 350 pounds and the mon thly herd a\erages over 35 pounds which is-sent to all members of the assoc iation. By noon, all the paper work was completed and after call- (continued on page ( 7) }!il i AFTER THE,, MILK HAS BEEN sampled, Risser carries it to the milk, house and pours it into the bulk tank. Here at the-farm of'Jay Landis, Lancaster R 6, he strains milk from one cow while Landis milks another. L. F. Photo! CAREFUL MEASURING OF THE TEST SAMPLE assures an. accurate butterfat test. Here Risser draws 17.5 cubic centimeters of milk into a pipette for trans fer from the sample bottle to the test bottle. Milk must be kept from souring until the test is completed. AN EQUAL QUANTITY OF ACID is added to the I milk. The sulfuric acid digests the protein and other | solids-not-fat, leaving the butterfat to rise in the neck | of the test bottle after a spin in a high speed centrifuge. I L. F. Photo. | -. I 4 r * s H ■ r « t r L. F. Photo. r /