D2—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, E 'g bre BY SHEILA MILLER KLEINFELTERSVILLE - When you talk to a dairy fanner about breeding programs, it is inevitable that sometime in the conversation the topic of tran smitting ability will come up. What are the chances of that top quality bull or cow passing on the excellent traits he or she displays? That idea has been the cor nerstone for many dairy producers’ herd developing strategies. Its importance is evident at a glance when examining each year’s sire summaries, listing top bulls’ Predicted Difference and Repeatability scores. It’s a proven fact that genetics plays a dominant role in the quality of future generations ot dairy cattle. But, along with the inherited blueprint, a cow or bull’s performance is influenced by its environment. The idea of you are what you eat’ applies to cows as well as people. The ability to keep a top pedigreed dairy animal pampered for top production is a quality exhibited by knowledgeable dairymen, those who’ve succeeded in the business for generation upon generation. Lebanon County’s Harold Bollinger is one dairyman who not only breeds top Holstein cattle, but who also knows how to treat them. He is the eighth generation of Bollingers in the dairy business, farming on the same 50 acres as his forefathers. Over the years, each generation of Bollinger has milked a herd ot registered Holstein cattle. Today the herd, which numbers 39 head on the milking string, has its roots in the Black and White foundations built by the Bollinger family. When Harold bought the farm from his parents in 1943, he didn’t have to start out from scratch. Along with the knowledge of the business, the 28-year-old dairyman also brought with him several head of Holstein cattle he had raised as 4-H and FFA projects while a student at Schaefferstown High School. These cattle, along with some he bought from his parents herd, got Harold and wife Amy off to a good start. In his second year of farming on his own, Harold recalls, he decided to start building the genetic capabilities of his herd through the use of artificial insemination. In selecting a sire to compliment his Is It possible that the ability to be a top dairyman runs in the family? If Lebanon County’s Bollinger family is proof, there’s no question. Harold Bollinger, left, is the Bth generation dairyman milking registered Holsteins, along with son Donald, right, and 7-year-old grandson Steven. iember 12, 1981 ‘Success is in their blood 5 generation dairyman combines feeding V. ■' t Cc >ervation plays an important part on the Bollinger farm. Contour strips, a sod waterway, tile drainage, along with no-till and chisel plowing help keep the fertile soil from tie and bring out their best its, he chose Gold Medal Proven e Lauxmont Admiral Lucifer, ; of the Holstein breed’s most luentiai sices who was bred at a m in Wrightsville, York County, it still bears his prefix. Vith this female base, Bollinger led another genetic keystone in jorndale Ivanhoe, an Excellent Id Medal sire. ly the early 19605, ivanhoe haven’t gone unnoticed at the state ighters made up half the" level while all these national dinger herd. Then in 1963, the honors were being doled out. ictic progress suffered a slight Under the supervision of the Dairy back as lightning destroyed Herd Improvement Registry, Mae ht head. “We were lucky, has come in at the top of her class ugh,” remembers Harold. “We m milk production for Penn n’t lose any Ivanhoe blood, and sylvama. Her 13 lactations have y lost four Lucifer daughters.” made 295,000 pounds of milk and )ne of the survivors of this 10,616 pounds of butterfat. itructive act of nature has Her prime came as an tt-year ught national recognition to the old, when Mae made 37,865 pounds linger herd. For in 1966, an .of milk in 375 days, along with 1,276 nhoe daughter, gave birth to a pounds of fat. Eer calf sired by Limerock With a production record like Election Oscar. Her name Mae’s, Bollinger admits he would luw Maple Reflection Mae ’ • S*y * '* * *£.. >h * 1 / ,■**'■' ' < * t' f *>- Now 15 years old, this graying hallmark of the Bollinger herd is still standing in the stanchion barn and pouring out the production records. She was recently recognized as the national class leader in milk for senior aged’ cows. As a 14-year-old, Mae milked 32,255 pounds in 368 days with 1,111 pounds of butterfat. Mae’s production records Fifteen-year-old Willow Maple Election pounds fat has helped keep the Bollinger Mae and her nationally recognized production herd’s rolling average above 20,000 for the record of 32,256 pounds milk with 1,111 past four years. in top Holstein herd I , (•** _ *. i Sf 'tf S'**/* r ’ ' *» KV■» * x- *V* * ' , > ’t, > C ' (Turn to'Page 03) y». * washing away. Donald has been an active director on the Lebanon Conservation District Board since graduation from high school. Along with their dairy operation, the Bollingers raise five flocks of broilers each year, under contract. Each flock numbers 72,000 birds that reach the 4-pound market weight in six weeks. v '^c&i^M- lllNfe' t ■*» f’ * \