010—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 13,1981 Crop plan (Continued from Page 09) • the county’s average soybean yield is 30 bushels; • the price guarantee chosen is $7.00 a bushel, for which was paid a premium of $8.50 an acre. Now let’s assume that severe drought reduces 1981 com yield to 20 bushels per acre and soybean yield to 10 bushels. Payment for the damaged com crop under the subsidized Federal Crop Insurance Program is calculated as follows: 1) 75 percent of the 110 bu. yield = 82.6 bu. 2) 82.5 bu. (guarantee) - 20 bu. (production) = 62.5 bu. loss 3) 62.5 bu. x $2.70 = $168.75/acre 4) $168.75 x 200 acres = $33,750 paymt. Payment for the soybean damage is determined this way: 1) 75 percent of your 30 bu. yield = 22.50 bu. 2) 22.5 bu. (guarantee) - 10 bu. (production) = 12.50 bu. loss 3) 12.5 bu. x 57.00 = $87.50/acre 4) $87.50 x 100 acres = $8,750 paymt. Under the subsidized Crop In surance Program, the fanner would receive a total of $42,500 for two damaged crops. The subsidized premiums were $9.90 an acre for corn and $8.50 an acre for soybeans. Therefore, he paid $2,830 m premium costs and received a net benefit of $39,670. Other options The relationship between any insurance benefit and the premium cost depends, of course, upon how Introducing The ALL NEW HONEY BROOK NATURAL 20 ENERGI BLOCK For Dairy And Beef Cattle Net Wt. SO Lbs GUARANTEED ANALYSIS Crude Protein, Minimum Crude Fiber, Maximum Crude Fat, Minimum Calcium, Maximum Calcium, Minimum Phosphorus, Minimum Salt Vitamin A Vitamin D Vitamin E Sugar as Invert 20 percent 5 percent 1 percent 2 5 percent 1 5 percent 2 percent None 25,000 USP per LB 5,000 USP per LB 10IU per LB 40 percent FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CALL US. t"®. d=* -g severe the loss is *he level of protection chosen. Insured far mers who suffer no losses and thereby reap no benefits must still bear the premium cost out of cash receipts. This is a management decision each farmer must make based on individual financial situations. Keep in mind that the premium payments are a tax-deductible business expense that lowers the cost of insurance protection. If, in the previous example above, the farmer had decided against insurance, but had par ticipated m the 1981 feed gram program, he would have received a disaster payment from the com crop. Soybeans, aren’t a target price crop and therefore aren’t eligible for disaster payments. Let’s see how the farmer would fare under the low yield disaster program, without insurance. Assuming a target pace of $2,40 a bushel and the same yield reduction as above, he’d be eligible for payments calculated as follows: 1) 60 percent of 110 = 66 bu. (only production below 60 percent of normal yield is eligible) 2) 1/2 the target price = $1.20/bu. (the payment rate equals 1/2 the target price) 3) 66 bu. (eligible) - 20 bu. (production) = 46 bu. loss 4) 46 bu. x 51.20 = $55.20/acre 5) $55.20 x 200 acres = $11,040 paymt Fanners who want to avoid risk as much as possible can choose to pay the higher, nonsubsidized crop insurance premium and received the combmed protection in 1981. INGREDIENTS Beet Molasses. Soybean Meal, Phosphoric Acid, Calcium Oxide, Zinc Sulfate, Ferrous Sulfate, Manganese Sulfate, Copper Sulfate, Ethylenediamme Dihydroiodide (source of iodine), Cobalt Sulfate, Vitamin A Palmitate, Vitamin D Supplement, Vitamin E Supplement, Soy Oil Contains NO UREA-All Natural Protein Remember... ENERGIBLOCK con tains no salt and is not affected by the weather. ZOOK MOLASSES CO. WEST MAIN ST., BOX 160 HONEY BROOK, PA. 19344 Phone 215-273-3776 or 717-393-3987 Call toll free m area code 215 & 7X7 Assuming the same corn and soybean acreage and coverage as above, premium charges would be $3,370, up $540 from the subsidized premium costs. But the combined potential returns from insurance and disaster payments-assuming the same damage-would rise substantially: $42,500 + $11,040 = $53,540 In this example, participating in the feed grain program and paying the additional corn premiums increased total payments by $ll,OOO. The actual result would depend on the level of coverage selected and the extent of any loss that crops may sustain from dought, wind, hail, disease, or other natural disaster. Advantages of Program Under the new program, there will be one straightforward system for everyone. Previously, a vast array of programs sprung up wherever farmers suffered losses. Premium rates will be set by the FCIC, based on the potential risk of crop loss in each area. This should encourage farmers to plant crops that are better suited to their particular area. The expanded protection will serve farmers’ financial needs by helping ensure cash flow stability. • This will make it easier to obtain and pay loans, especially for those producers who don’t have a big capital reserve. • Forward contracts will also be more secure with insurance to guarantee funds for meeting the contract. The amount of insurance that’s nght will probably depend on these same cash flow needs. Insurance Maybe ills time you switched fertilizer tanks Switch to a Calumet Liquid Manure Spreader Compared to today's and tomorrow's sky-high fertilizer prices, manure is lust too valuable to waste A hundred cow dairy herd, for example, can save thousands of dollars every year in fertilizer costs Take full advantage of this liquid gold with a Calumet liquid manure spreader teamed with a 4-shank soil miector Injecting can help retain .four times the nitrogen that's usually lost with . surface spreading —in addition to reducing odor and run-off problems ‘Sg|&* F. ERNEST SNOOK RD 3 - Box 84, Mifflinburg, Pa. 17844 - Phone: 717-966-2736 Md. farm visits on June 28 COLLEGE PARK, Md. - It’s 'time again for urban youngsters to cuddle a calf or love a lamb, as 24 “Welcome Farms” in nine Maryland counties prepare for the fifteenth annual Farm Visitation Day on June 28. This year’s host farms are scattered from the mountains of western Maryland to the flatlands of the Eastern Shore, reports Roy D. Porter, Extension coordinator of special communications, at the University of Maryland. Barring rainy weather, Porter expects more than 25,000 youngsters and adults to turn out for the traditional fourth-Sunday in-June event. Open house hours are 1 to 5 p.m.; but visitors are welcome to stay later to watch milking operations at participating dairy farms, including a dairy goat farm in . southern Maryland’s Calvert county. New features of this year’s Farm Visitation Day will be a crop farm m Charles county where greenhouse tomatoes are grown commercially without soil and a dairy farm in Talbot county where cows are milked on a continuous basis, 24 hours per day. Intended to give urban families a agents can help choose a protec tion plan. But finally, each farm operator knows the level of protection that feels most com fortable. Calumet spreaders, in capacities from 1625 to 4500 gallons, are engineered for efficiency and longevity Heavy duty steel alloy tanks are coated with epoxy to resist corrosion. Double reinforced A-frames and support skids add strength for heavy loads' All Calumet liquid spreaders are backed by a 12-month warranty close look at their rural neighbors, Farm Visitation Day is sponsored each year by the University of Maryland’s Cooperative Extension Service in cooperation with major farm organizations in the state. Local committees have been active in most of the nine par ticipating counties, planning details for hosting the event at each designated farm. Many of the host farms' will offer light refreshments, free of charge, with cold milk a likely prospect at participating dairy farms. Directions to all participating farms are listed in a free Farm Visitation Day brochure, titled “A Family Affair” (Leaflet 86). The leaflet will be available by mid- June from offices of the Cooperative Extension Service and public libraries in the participating counties Anne Arundel, Baltimore, Calvert, Charles, Frederick, Harford, Montgomery, Talbot and Washington. - They will also be distributed at all three offices of the University of, Maryland’s Cooperative Extension Service in Baltijnore City. , '&:> % jis? f> -, -•/-;o‘V4>3»%. ! Make the best use of The fertilizer produced on your farm with a Calumet liquid spreader and soil injector Call for information on the value of manure— and some good reasons why you should switch fertilizer tanks Look For The Right AA One! x 2/ The Calumet Co., Inc. USED EQUIPMENT— -1 - Clay V 2250 1 • Better-Bilt 12 Ft. Auger Pit Pump 1 - Calumet 10 Ft. Pit Pump 1 - 53250 Calumet Spreader w/Auger