120 —Lancaster Farming, Saturday, A| Holstein breeders tour top farms in Virginia By JOYCE BUPP York Co. Reporter LOUDON COUNTY, Va. - Under leaden skies and pouring rain, a busload of York County Holstein breeders beaded for nor thern Virginia on April 5 for their annual bus tour. Harvue Farm, owned by Jack Hardesty and sons, near Berryville, Va. was the first stop. The Hardesty family milks 220 cows, currently maintaining a herd average of over 16,000 pounds of milk and 608 of fat. “We have a low investment operation here,” stressed Hardesty, who worked his herd up from one calf. Milking is done in a double-eight herringbone parlor and cows are fed with a loader scooping from a 4000-ton capacity trench silo. Even the old stanchion (bury bam has a unique purpose in the operation. The top 20 cows are confined there each afternoon and press-fed for higher production. Five head were milking over 100 pounds daily, with several more just under that mark, on tour day. “Separating the cows daily keeps us familiar with the animals,” believes Har desty, whose two sons are key men in the feeding and management areas. Every cow, but two in the herd, is home bred and raised. Most trace their pedigrees back to the Oregon Challenger Baron sire. A number of large, heavily milking Paclamar Astronaut daughters are in the herd, as well as one Round Oak Rag Apple Elevation progeny. Near the trench silo a pile of bags lay stacked. They contained peanut shells, a prime Virginia bedding commodity. Bedding with the peanut by-product was new to the tour members, but three of the four farms visited were' found using them regularly. Because of nationwide fiber shortage, many fanners have begun using them in feed blends, causing the price to skyrocket. Next farm visited was the PUBLIC SALE The undersigned will offer at public sale located at Port Treverton RD 1 (turn east from Route 104 at Meiserville and north Vz mile at sale sign.) SATURDAY, APRIL 23,1977 Beginning at 12:00 Noon 125 HEAD FEEDER STEERS Varying in weight from 300 to 800 lbs. All are dehorned and fully acclimated since calfhood. A broad selection of Hereford, Charolais, Angus, Holstein and a variety of crosses. 7 GOOD HEREFORD FEEDER HEIFERS AND 2 ANGUS BULLS PIES Several brood sows due to farrow on or about sale time and about 75 head good feeder pigs. 1 Yorkshire Boar and 5 Yorkshire gilts. Terms: Cash. Owner, ROY MARTIN L. S. Klingler, Auctioneer il 16. 1977 home of E. B. Lee and Sons, at White Post. Lee greeted his guests on the lawn of his plantation-style farm home, (hen led them to the original milking barn where the best animals were tied for viewing. A new milking parlor and free stall bam for the 200 cows has been added recently to the facilities. “We freshen our heifers at nearer three than two years of age- because of their having to compete in the parlor milking arrangement.” Lee ex plained. Several of the top breeding animals in the herd shown by Lee to the visitors came from Pennsylvania farms. Lee noted that one crop of growing importance in the area is fescue. Forty acres of the legume wintered 75 of the farm’s dry cows, with only four pounds of supplement per head daily. The home of the popular Round Oak Rag Apple Elevation bull at Purcellville was the third stop. Round Oak farm is owned by John Hope, who has just modernized the milking operation with the con struction of a double-six parlor. The main attraction in the long tie-stall bam was the line-up of homebred Elevation daughters, some of the oldest milking animals anywhere, sired by the bull. Also housed at the Hope farm is the famous Har borcrest Mary Hoe cow, 13- year-old maternal sister to all-time great brood cow Harborcrest Rose Milly. The York countians were also shown Round Oak’s two young sons of Elevation, both being sampled by Virginia breeders. PI STATE GRADED SALE FRI., APRIL 22 1:30 P.M. AT WESTMINSTER LIVESTOCK AUCTION Westminster, Md. Phone (301) 848-9820 A large lake, with a guest house on the island in the center, elegantly greets visitors to Foxlease Farms at Upperville, the final herd visit. Owner is Mr. Sinclair, vice-president of the Stan dard Oil company. Ted a German' refugee, manages the farm and Holstein breeding herd for Foxlease. Total acreage in the crop ping program is 1200, with 800 acres of that owned. Feed for the 100-plus milking animals housed in the long stanchion bam is raised on 400 acres of com and 200 of hay. Large rolling pastures surround the farm buildings and provide fresh forage for the animals. There are a number of No- Na-Me Fond Matt milking animals in the herd, as well as several Elevation heifers. E. B. Lee, who guided the busload of visitors on their Virginia tour, treated them to a surprise drive OUR OWN ANNUAL FARM FEEDER STEER & HEIFER SALE SATURDAY, APRIL 30,1977 At l:OOP.M. At our Troxelville Farm. OFFERING 80 HEAD About 50 percent Steer Calves All Steers castrated. All Cattle polled or dehorned. All bred & raised on our farm. All sired by French bred Charolais bull. Excellent recorded Charolais heifers. Health charts with heifers. Club calf quality steers. Write or Phone for Brochure: Dan Baker - Auctioneer BROOKS END & PAR KAY FARMS RENO H. THOMAS PARK F. THOMAS MARK L STEHR Reno H. Thomas, Sales Manager Beavertown, PA 17813 PH: 717-658-5821,7007 or 6544 Lunch available by UCC Church Women PUBLIC SALE SATURDAY, APRIL 23,1977 Location from Mt. Airy to Girl Scout Camp, about 4 miles north of Route 322 in West Cocalico Township, Lancaster County, Penn sylvania. 3 TRACTS OF WOODLAND TRACT #l-3 Acres more or less with Spring, never dry; Heavy Timber along Netzley Road. TRACT #2-12 Acres more or less along Netzley Road. TRACT #3-3% Acres more or less along Girl Scout Road. These 3 Tracts join each other. These tracts are in a good location if you are looking for woodland. Sale to be held at Tract #3. Anyone wishing to view these tracts call in the evening, 733-6618. Sale at 1:30 P.M. Terms by. RAYMOND ft LUTHER EDWARDS Frank and Paul Snyder, Auctioneers. 859-2688 or 733-7052 Shirk, Reist& BuckwaKer, Attorneys Ted Haberland briefs visitors on uermany many years ago. Several of the breeding and management the Foxlease animals have been aspects of Foxlease farms. Haberland exported to the "old country” as he left behind a large farm when he fled terms it; and he visits there yearly. around Carter Hall mansion, a hugh colonial home set on the rolling Virginia hills. Surrounded with towering old trees and blossoming daffodils, the home has been featured in a Walt Disney movie and on nationally distributed Carter Hall pipe tobacco packets. 1:30 P.M. SPECIAL SALE SPRING FEEDER CALF & YEARLING SALE 600 HEAD 600 STEERS—HEIFERS ANGUS-BLACK BALDIES-HEREFORDSCROSSBREOS Sale to be held at the ABERDEEN SALES CO. INC.; Livestock Auction Market located on Rt. 22 6 miles east of Bel Air, Md., via U.S. Rt. 1 or 6 miles west of Aberdeen, Md. via 1*95 or U.S. Rt. 40 in Churchviile, Harford County, Md. on SATURDAY, APRIL 39,1977 1:00 P.M. Sharp These cattle are consigned from the surrounding counties of Cecil, Kent, Baltimore, York, and Lan caster —no shipped cattle in this sale. All cattle will be sorted, graded and sold on out weights to suit all buyers. This has proven to be a sale of the highest quality feeder cattle. Consign your cattle early. Cattle will be accepted from Friday A.M. until sale time Saturday. ABERDEEN SALES CO. INC, Box C, Aberdeen, Md. 21001 Phone: 301-734-6050 734-7105 Night 734-7978 TRUCKING AVAILABLE. ORDER BUYING SERVICE. RESTAURANT OPEN. PUDLIC AUCTION SATURDAY, APRIL 30,1977 At 11:00 A.M. At the former Ray Kiefer Farm on Maple Street in Hegins, Pa. (behind Kiefer’s Mill) FARM EQUIPMENT Farmall H tractor, M.-M.-R tractor with cultivator, Oliver 13 disk grain drill, good condition; (2) farm wagons on rubber, Oliver No. 5 cornpicker, Oliver 2-row planter, Nl 7' mower Brillion 5* rotary cutter, Hardie 200 gal. orchard sprayer with fan, Wisconsin motor t wooden tank, tractor disk, Oliver 4-wheel manure spreader, good condition; Champion single-row potato digger, side-delivery rake, lime drill, 24' bale elevator, PTO seeder, potato grader, cement mixer, small farm trailer, Swab wagon running gear, horse plow t cultivators, wagon seat, apple boxes t fruit baskets, orchard ladders, (2) air pruning guns and other pruning equipment, egg washer, grader & baskets, chicken brooders, feeders and nests, brooder houses, range shelters, 12' metal com cribs. S' fencing, snowfence, butcher kettles, wagon iack, rope block, single and double trees, hay hook, sprayer boom, huckster scale, harness, wooden wheelbarrow, water pump with motor, barrels, exhaust I circulating fans, cast iron troughs coal chute, chest-type freezer, pipes, many other items not listed. Frame bank-type barn approximately 35’ x 70' with good timber and aluminum roof, (this barn must be removed by purchaser.) 1950 Chevrolet V-Tag truck. 2-speed Transmission Van type body. 1946 Chevrolet U-Tag truck. 10:00 x 20 tires and rims. Sale ordered by, PINE CREEK INVESTORS, INC. Lunch Available. George N. Deibert, Auctioneer (717)425-3313