— Lancaster farming. Saturday, June 10,1974 42 Fay looks over her planter of flowers. KIRKWOOD - Many companies and industries have undisclosed business connections which are known as silent partners. Their input is substantial, but their in volvement is not dramatically projected for public at tention. Probably the most frequent use of a silent partner is the family farm. For generations, farmers have had a strong help-mate, hired-hand, advisor, bookkeeper, and com panion in the forms of their wives. Fulfilling a number of roles simultaneously, effectively and without fanfare is the task and life’s work of many farmers’ wives. One example of the farmer’s wife who does whatever-needs to be done is Mrs. A. Dale Herr. First in the job description Fay Herr fulfills is mother to Tammy and Dale, Jr. Tammy is 12 years old and will be entering seventh grade at Swift Middle School in the Solanco School District next Fall. Dale, Jr. is eight years old and will be a third grader at Bart-Colerain Elemen tary School. Being a mother means trips to pee-wee baseball games, overseeing swimming pool guests this Summer and learning crafts along with her daughter Tammy. Last November Tammy was selected Citizen of the Month for the Swift Middle School and was given the opportunity to enter a special crafts class in macrame. She, in turn, taught her mother how to tie the twine and yam to create decorative as well as useful plant hangers. The newly learned craft was a natural skill for Fay who is well acquainted with crocheting afghans and a very useful craft which she uses to accent the many plants she enjoys growing. One particularly striking hanging plant among the many Fay has hung on her long front porch for the Summer months if a florishing prayer plant. It is housed in a shining black ceramic pot hung by a white twine macrame hanger with wooden beads worked into the tying pattern. Although she says prayer plants are very easy to start as are several other varieties of houseplants she cares for, Fay’s favorite is the more difficult fern. In the two west windows in her kitchen, Fay says she starts her plants best with a mixture of peat moss and garden soil and plenty of attention to watering. In the Summer, when things are too busy for much pampering of houseplants. Fay hangs a lot of them or' the front porch and also plants several dozen petunias and begonias in assorted containers which rest in front of the large stone home. One special time-saving technique Fay uses with the outdoor flowers is to place a layer of peat moss on top of the planter soil to retain the moisture and subdue weed growth. While being a mother and a tender of delicate plants, Fay is also a caretaker of the extensive lawn which spreads itself around the buildings, silos, lanes, flower beds and up and down sloping banks at Heir-Hope Farm. Fay explains that it takes a full day to get all the lawn mowed even with the use of a riding mower. With the addition of a totally new milking and housing set-up last Fall, the lawn has also expanded. Mrs. Hen explained that the farm they live on has been owned by the Herr family for around 50 years. Abram R. and Anna F. Herr, Dale’s parents, owned it for 43 years. In addition to the home farm situated at the intersection of old route 472 (now Bartville Road) and pumping Station Road in southern Lancaster County near Quarryville, the Herrs own two other farms nearby. The total acreage is 4% acres and the crops grown on this land include 200 acres of com, 120 acres of bay for haylage, 24 acres of wheat, 15 acres of barley and 26 acres of tobacco -15 acres of which are raised on the halves with Amish neighbors. Although Fay does not feel very confident with the By SUSAN KAUFFMAN Staff Correspondent Fay Herr fills many roles at Herr-Hope farm m i ■A. s ■< ■*■ 's' One of the jobs Mrs. Herr fills is that of writing down cow identifications and times she notices planting and raising gets into full swing. She explained that the plants are pulled in the morning then placed into the soil by hand with a tobacco planter. The planter is tractor-pulled. Two people sit behind it and when they hear a “click” it means they must drop the plant into the hole made by the planter before the water is added to the hole. A shoe pulls the dirt around the newly positioned plant. The Herrs use a two-row planter and Fay is often one of the two people handling the plants. With rows 40 inches apart and plants spaced three feet apart, it takes several days to plant all the 26 acres even with the Amish planting their own. After the plants have started to grow, the fields must be cultivated and hoed between plants. Once again Fay mans the hand cultivators which she pulls together then pushes apart in and out down the rows of tobacco plants. In addition to the hand work of planting and cultivating, there is the chore of topping the tobacco plants or breaking off the flower stalk by hand. Pay says this step makes black hands. Usually by the middle of August, the strenuous task of cutting, spearing and hanging the tobacco plants in the tobacco curing sheds begins. Although Fay generally does not help with this more muscular work she pitches in when stripping the tobacco in the Winter before it is baled and finally sold in Lan caster. At one tune the Herrs used to raise their own tobacco plants but now they buy them and Mrs. Herr salvaged the old tobacco bed soil, rich with peat moss, to mulch her flowers. The tobacco and yard work keep Fay busy during the Summer, but two jobs she also does all year long are helping with the milldng and keeping all the records of the diversified farm operation which includes payrolls for several fulltime employees. Fay Herr checks a prayer plant in a hanger before placing it in the hook on the front porch for the Summer. She and her daughter make macrame hangers, and she enjoys houseplants. jm. ' /r dairy animal in heat. With these records herdsmen follow up with insemination. milking cows. With the addition of a 150-stall free-sta bam and a herringbone double-six parlor, the operate now handles 173 cows with 150 milking this week. The hei is on DHIA and Fay helps during the two milkings whf testing is being done each month and also milks ew other weekend and when their herdsmen, Galen Mai and Robert Smith, have days off or vacations. The Herrs raise their replacements and have al purchased bred heifers and milking cows recently complete their herd expansion. Galen Martin inseminat the cows, and it is everybody’s job to spot and write do' cows in heat. Fay helps with the milking and tobacco, but the recot keeping is all her territory. She spends considerable ti sending out the checks, recording expenses and incomt making out the payrolls for four fulltime men and keepi records for Farm Management Business Analysis St vice. She has to have the books in order and complet* quarterly for that service. And she is quick to give crt to that service for the computation of income taxes eat year. “They do it better than I ever could. In this day it is * to imagine someone would try to figure his own incoi tax by himself,” she added. Dale Herr is presently involved in a number of activity such as serving as vice-president for Colerain Town? Planning Commission, director for Octorara Watersl Association and Lancaster County Pennsylvania Farmi Association, vice-president and delegate for District Quarryville Local for Inter-state Milk Producers president of a Sunday evening bowling league. Fay Herr, like many other farmer’s wives, is the qui*' partner who prefers the challenges of the family and • farm to speaking out in public. She, like other su l partners, finds plenty to do on the farm and goes about i many jobs as they come from week to week, season , * x ' f. *