KEARNEYSVILLE, WV - Eating greens may be a special treat, but harvesting them is backbreaking work. So a trio ot U.S. Department ot Agriculture and State engmeers are developing a mechamcal harvester to revive a dying industry. “Fresh market greens are on the decline because they have to be hand-harvested, and workers are ditticult to lind,” says Donald L. Peterson who is with USDA’s Agricultural Research Service at Kearneysville, WV While stationed at East Lansing, Ml, Peterson and two colleagues desgmed, built and tield-tested the first prototype harvester which gathers and cuts the leaves and conveys them through an in spection area where discolored leaves and weeds are removed by hand, then on to a mechanism MARS: PLUS 1716 MILK 87% PLUS 1.79 PDT 29H2786 Lime-Hollow Elevation USDA 7-81 RPT 87% 150 D. 116 H. 18.483 M 3.4% PD+sl74 + 1.716 M -.17% HFA7-81 69% RPf +I.79PDT (+493 TPI Unofficial) ■ Eluvttun Round Oik Hi USDAPO +1516M +SOF 99% Rep 7/79 + 2 38PDT 99% R 7/79 HFA )t Culurlon Jull« VG-M Cow Index + 592 M +4F 5- 2X 305 D 21340 M 32% 675 F 6- 2X 3650 22400 M 35% 795 F MARS daughters are freshening all across the country, and they are doing extremely well too. mars daughters are doing so well that his POM went from +1653 to +1716 when 114 daughters were added to his USDA Summary. MARS daughers look very nice too. His POT went from +1.63 to +1.79! Cali your ABS Representative and ask for MARS! (IBS Harvester for greens may save time, labor which bunches and ties the leaves automatically. The harvester was rear-mounted to a 60-horsepower tractor that has hydrostatic drive in order to maintain a precise ground speed. Peterson’s collaborators were ARS engmeer G.K. Brown, located at Michigan State University, and A.K. Snvastava, assistant professor ot agricultural engineering at Michigan State University. The harvester performed well for turnip and mustard greens which had been drill-planted, but did not satisfactorily gather collards which were grown as widely spaced individual plants. It produced bunches that were more uniform in size than hand harvested greens and equal in quality. The prototype harvester and its Rurice Elevation GM Round Q»*l»«nho«Ev EX-84-4E For—lL Centurion Rocket EX-91 GM Mirshcot Cn 405 2X 3050 15460 M 38% 586 F Sire Wis Captain EX 91 GM Eric Hemsohn Cindy Gordeuk James Charles Oarvm Yoder Paul Herr Paul Martin Lynn Gardner Robert Kayhart William Tyner Robert Greider Tom Engle Ira Boyer Dan Rush Dan Rush Cyndy Hetzell Allan Pickett George Showers Wayne Piper Wendel Musser Larry Bower Harold Robson, Jr Michael C Ewing Wilmer Hendricks JohnM Beachy Mervm Zendt Glenn Barr Bonnie Barker Bangor, PA Baptistown, NJ Columbia, PA Ephrata, PA Holtwood, PA Lebanon, PA Leola, PA Port Murray. NJ Prospectville, PA Reading, PA Stewartstown, PA Thomasville, PA West Grove, PA Kirkwood, PA Elmer, NJ Mt. Airy, MO Allenwood, PA Carlisle, PA Coburn, PA Linden, PA Mansfield, PA McClure, PA Millville, PA Mifflmburg, PA Mifflmtown, PA Reedsville, PA Ulysses, PA RPT MARS EX-95 636 F + 36F In Darkness 215-588-4704 201-996-2088 717-898-8694 717-733-0966 717-284-4592 717-949-2381 717-656-6700 201-689-2605 215-542-8479 215-378-1212 717-993-6836 717-225-3758 215-869-9187 717-529-6548 609-455-8187 301-663-4191 717-538-1812 717-249-8882 814-349-5310 717-323-9710 717-662-7731 717-658-7316 717-458-5949 717-966-1344 717-436-6386 717-667-2775 814-848-7674 crew ot three turned out 18 cartons (432 bunches) ot mustard greens per hour and 28 cartons (672 bunches) ot turnip greens per hour-rates that are only slightly better, on a worker-hour basis, than hand-harvesting. However, this test model was designed for single rows. A multiple-row har vester could mcrease worker productivity, says Peterson. He points out that the engmeermg involved in converting his prototype into a multiple-row harvester should be relatively simple. Productivity could also be improved by 30 to 50 percent if there is good weed control, and the greens are of more uniform height, he added. Hand-harvesting currently accounts for 10 to 25 percent of the sale price of leafy green vegetables. Peterson estimates it will be 2 to Commercial • Agricultural • Residential ALSO - WILL DO SIGN PAINTING AT OUR SHOP. AMOS FISHER 667 Hartman Station Rd. Lancaster, PA 17601 717-393-6530 Compare the Stoltxffus Woodwork Calf Hutch Rear Vent (Option) Sturdy 2x4 construction Treated skids exterior plywood -ft Dealers: (Calf Hutche Adams County: LIPPY & RINEHART SALES Glen Lippy, Littlestown, Pa 717-359-5793 or John W. Rinehart, Taneytown, MD 301-346-7326 Lebanon County: Chester County: UMBERGER'S MILL ZOOK'S FARM STORE Rt 322, RD#4 Lebanon, Pa Honey Brook, Pa 717-867-5161 215-273-2943 X STOLTZFUS WOODWORK RD 2 f Box 2280, Gap, PA 17527 717-442-8972 ★ DEALERSHIPS AVAILABLE IN SOME AREAS ★ 3 years betore the prototype harvester is ready tor commercial use. Brown and Snvastava are continuing its development and are trying to adapt it to a large variety $55 million available to Poland WASHINGTON - The United States will make $55 million available to Poland in response to that country’s urgent need for corn, Secretary of Agriculture John R. Block said today. Funds will be provided through an allocation under Title I of Public Law 480 (Food for Peace), and will supplement previous short-term financing made available under the Commodity Credit Corporation’s GSM-102 export payment guarantee program. Commodities to be financed under the P.L. 480 allocation will be purchased for Lifting Hook for easy handling (Option) » One Sheet Galvanized Metal Roof Tilt Out Feeder for/ easy access TRACK FOR FASi CHAINED TO CEIi Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 8,1981—C35 Simple, efficient eyebolt and pin connector 38” or SO” high wire INC. Box 109 AA, R.D. 1 Abbottstown, Pa. 17301 717-259-9868 Water Blasting - || Chemical Cleaning Brick & Stone Re- || pointings Water proofing || RD #4133 Fleetwood, Pa 19522 215-944-7571 of leafy greens, including root crops that are sold with their leafy tops, such as beets, bunching onions, turnips and possibly carrots. August and September delivery, Block said. CCC last September allocated $670 million in credit guarantees to Poland to enable it to obtain commercial financing to buy American agricultural com modities in fiscal 1981. Poland has now used about $652 million of that allocation. Title I of Public Law 480 allows receiving nations to buy U.S. agricultural products for dollars, but on credit terms more favorable than normal commercial tran sactions. The total P.L. 480 financing period for Poland will be 10 years. MEMO HAY, STRAW & EAR CORN SALE EVERY MONDAY At 11A.M. NEW HOLLAND SALES STAILES, INC. Phone 717-354-4341 Lloyd H Kreider, Auctioneer