Pa’s Biggest Feedlot (Continued from Pap 16] they come in. Although the equipment represents a significant chunk of capital, its availability means that Jerry Hatcher can say, “We never have to buy feed. Never. “We have the equipment we need to process these byproducts, and we have the people who know how to run it It’s what gives us an edge in file cattle business, and we think any feeder in Penn* sylvania, or anywhere else In the Northeast, needs an edge if he’s going to compete with the Midwestern feedlots. “Land and labor costs are higher here than * in the Midwest,” Hatcher con tinued, “and the weather can kill your business. In the winter, you have to feed cattle an enormous number of calories just so they can maintain their body tem peratures. And if an Eastern feeder has to buy feedgrains trucked in from the Midwest, he can be in a lot of trouble.” Hatcher himself has only been living here for the past This separator is one of the pieces of equipment used to process horticultural byproducts for use as cattle feed. Things like apple pomace and cannery wastes are run through this clean line separator to remove cans, paper and other trash. two years. He’s had a lot of experience with feedlots west of the Mississippi, and is still associated with a group that’s feeding 85,000 head on the West Coast. A 3000 head feedlot is smaller than he’s used to, but Hat cher says Lebanon Valley has plans for expanding soon to 5000 head and doesn’t see anything to hold them back from getting even bigger. Presently, the company has as assured supply of enough byproducts to feed 5000 head. Many of the feeders Hatcher buys come from Virginia. Virtually all breeds have passed through the Lebanon Valley Feedlot, but Hatcher says their best performers have been Charolais, Holsteins and Santa-Gertrudis. “We’d like to buy more feeders locally - especially Holstein bulls - if we can find the right quality at the right price,” Hatcher said. Finished animals are sold directly to packing houses locally and in Philadelphia, Hatcher said. Very few go John Graham, a transplanted lowa native, is operations manager for the Lebanon Valley Cattle Company. He’s shown here as he helped this week to herd cattle through a loading chute onto a truck. Every animal that went onto the truck was sold at a $l5O loss. They were feeders that had been pur chased at 60-cents a pound. through the auctions. Asked for bis opinion of the future of the beef business, especially in the Northest, Hatcher spoke en thusiastically, saying, “I feel more bullish about the beef business today than I’ve felt in the past four years. We have the feeders here, we have the packing houses that are willing ,to buy the finished cattle, and we have more consumers here than in any other part of the coun try. People may have slacked off on eating beef in the past year, but they’ll come back. This is a beef eating country, and that’s not going to change over night” Lititz Manheim 4-H Club The Lititz and Manheim 4- H Club meeting and doggie roast was held at Doris and Linda Hershey’s home, July 11th. 4-H queens were chosen to represent tiie club. Sr. Queen Doris Hershey and Jr. Queen Beverly Buckwalter. The next meeting will be Hathcher said he expects retail prices to come down in the months ahead, he thinks consumption will go up, and feels liveweight prices will hover in the mid-40-cents to 50-cents per pound for the forseeable future. “It costs other feeders maybe 40 cents to put a pound of gain on a steer. Our cost is somewhere in the mid-30’s. You can see why I’m bullish.” (Editor’s Note: Elsewhere in this issue of Lancaster Farming is a story about some recent Penn State work with horticultural byproducts for cattle feed. Its title is “Plant, Animal Wastes “Recycled” for Feed”.) held at the Brethren Church in Lititz at 6:30 p.m. August 8, it will be a covered dish supper. News Reporter Beverly Buckwalter Fur Ale Some people believed that gold was begotten by the sun and that the heat of under ground veins wholly burned everything they came into contact with, turning those substances into gold. COMPLETE FARM PAMIMG SPRAY-ON AND BRUSH-IN METHODS For FREE Estimates Write DANIEL S. ESN (C. RALPH MILLER) BOX 351, RDI, RONKS, PA. 17572 Lancaster Farmim i jDo You Want To Use; jOur Farm Calendar? S I We're happy to print Farm Calendar items for | I non-profit, farm oriented clubs and I I organizations. If your group is planning I I something you'd like to see in our calendar, I I write us a note or use this handy form to tell us i 1 about it. All items, of course, are subject to • I editorial review and space limitations. 2 | Organization Name I * Function title (Annual Meeting, Show, etc.) | •• a.m. J I Date..... .Time p.m. ! J Address for function i Other Information: • •••• ■ I 4 I Name, address and phone number of person sub- ■ I mitting item (must be included for item to be con- ■ I sidered): I MAIL TO: Farm Calendar | Lancaster Farming Newspaper I 22 East Main St. I i Lititz, Pa. 17543 I Eg HIGH PRESSURE k »<^ Do your own cleaning jobs fast. Blasts dirt and grease away. Farm Equipment, Dairy, Calf Barns WE ARE OFFERING A PORTABLE UNIT 600 TO 700 PSI. 3 GPM. TRIGGER GUN, CHEMICAL INJECTOR. For Approximately the Same Price You Would Pay for a Sfhaller Unit, 500 PSI - 2 GMP. 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