Clean ,(Continued From Page l) would be evaluated on the basis of individual need. In response to a question from the audience, Bass said ERTH-RIIE Sol Conditioner MAXICROP LIQUID PUNT FEEDING Vitamin & Mineral for livestock and poultry Need for less protein in crease bulterfat. cut mastitis. Increase egg production Zook & Ranch, Inc. RDl.Gap, Pa. 17527 Phone 717-442-4171 DEALERS IN W. L. ALFALFA REIST SEED CO. Mt Joy, Pa. Ph. 717-653-4121 WE DELIVER * / There's noth' old-fashio about Sta-R’ stanchion bam pipelin milking. Modern Sta-Rite dairy equipment makes ever milking system better, more efficient, easier on you and your cows. 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Whatever the size of your herd, Sta-Rite has the complete automated milking system for you Sta-Rite Stanchion Barn, Full Comfort Pador, Full Circle, and Reflex Arm Milking Systems will help you milk better, faster and more profitably We’re pi PHONE 717-397-4761 that a farmer could spread manure every day if he had enough land to handle the quantity, and if he kept manure out of any streams. “If you have strips and are doing a good Job of con servation, you shouldn’t have any problem,” he said. Another questioner wanted to know if fanners would be required to fence off the streams running through their properties in order to keep livestock out of waterways. “Under the present law, you don’t have to keep your cows out of the stream. But if we don’t do a good job of policing our selves, that could change.” Bass told about a dairy farm he’d seen where cows had to stand in a stream to eat from a feeder. “That guy was using the stream to haul his manure away, and if a lot of this goes on, we’ll see some f G stricter laws.” A conservation plan; Bass said, would indicate how intensively a farmer could use his land without running afoul of the law. “The plan costa you nothing when you get it from us,” Bass pointed out, “and it doesn’t obligate you to anything.” A listener wanted to know how long it takes to recoup the cost of a conservation plan. “Strips don’t cost very much at all, and they don’t hurt yields in the beginning. Terraces should pay their way after seven to ten years, and they could lower your yields for maybe two or three years.” Another farmer in the back of the room shouted, “Why should the guy who works five days a week tell the farmer who works seven days a week what to do?” One man wanted to know why the farmers shouldn’t sell all their cows and let the city folks go hungry. Still another asked what was the use of trying to save topsoil if the East was just going to get built up anyway. The questions revealed an underlying air of frustration which the farmers feel as they face 1977 and the costs of complying with a law they don’t understand. The audience, for the most part, was quiet and attentive, but \ World Dairy Expo SUPPLY HOURS: MON.-FRI. 8:00 AM-5:00 PM SATURDAY 8:00 AM-12 NOON 1027 DILLERVILLE ROAD, LANCASTER, PA. there were some hostile challenges issued and there was some grumbling from time to time. Afton Schadel, representing the Penn syvlania Department of Environmental Resources, took the podium after Bass. Schadel began his talk in Dutch, and told the farmers that he had- run a 500-acre truck farm in Schuylkill County for 20 years until a Rose DHIA Officers Elected Red The Red Rose Dairy Herd Improvement Association held its regular quarterly meeting Monday night at the Farm and Home Center. Officers and board members for the coming year were elected. The board approved an increase in DHIA testing fees, to be effective June 1. The-new schedule will be explained at a later date. It was explained that an increase was necessary because the association had been operating at a loss for the past few years. Pay CENTER Lancaster Farming, Saturday. Mar. 2,1974 personal tragedy caused him to leave the farm for a Job in Harrisburg. “I believe in conservation and erosion control,” Schadel said. “We worked for eight years to get good laws for erosion con* trol, and now that we’ve got them I think they should be obeyed by everyone." Schadel pointed out that many 6! the erosion control increases to the testers and an anticipated retirement program were also cited. Plans were made to attend the Southeast District directors meeting on March 8 in Montgomery County. Robert L. Kauffman, Jr., Peach Bottom RD2, was reelected to another term as president of the association. James G. Kreider, Quarryville, was chosen vice-president, and James Eshelman, Mt. Joy was named secretary. regulations were aimed at builders, but that it was not right to impose restrictions on industrial earth-movers without imposing the same restrictions on agricultural earth-movers. Schadel said that an SCS conservation plan wouldn’t cost farmers anything, and it would automatically exempt them from the provisions of the Clean Streams Law. New board members elected at the meeting are: J. Robert Kendig, Conestoga, John B. Groff, Mt. Joy, Elam J. Stoltzfus, Narvon, and Roy C. Neff, Paradise. Directors ap pointed to represent the various breed associations are: James Martin, Stevens (Ayrshire), Arthur Breneman, Willow Street (Guernsey), and Robert E. Landis, Lancaster (Holstein). In all, there are 19 members of the local DHIA board. 19