$ BY BETH HEMMJLNGER Staff Correspondent CHAMBERSBURG - At the recent Franklin County Dairy Day, Wayne Hall of Shippensburg shared tus experiences with em , bryo transplants. Hall, a dairy farmer for 14 years, has tran splanted the embryos of two of his excellent cows. A question harbored by many of the farmers during the meeting was “Why?” Hall’s answer to the question was simple. “1 wanted inure offspring from my lup-auich cows.” He remarked, "People have asked me if 1 am transplanting out of curosity or maybe because it is a novel idea.” “Hardly,” he said, pointing out that once any fanner looks at the investment tran splanting takes, it squelches any curious ideas. Hall said he feels most dairymen who are breeding with the new method are at the introductory level, breeding _ one or two ex- ET highlights Franklin Dairy Day cellent cows for top-quam sprmg. However, he said, embryo transplanting doesn’t eliminate the risk of having bulls. “You still have a fifty-fifty chance of getting a heifer.” Since tus first transplant two years ago, Hall said costs have dropped slightly because of the growing competition in providing transplanting service. He stated that Select Sire is now offering the service and he looks for other .breeding businesses to "hop on the band wagon.” However, he said, it is still a cosily process at $5OO to $7OO per pregnancy for the average farmer. Hall said that tus.first transplant was done with an Excellent aged cow. He said that she was old and he didn’t know if he could breed her one more time. "Transplanting was the solution to that problem," he said. Hall stated that he didn’t lair too well with his first transplants. Only two embryo’s were transplahted with only one pregnancy and that was a bull. His second transplant to another Excellent cow producing 32,000 pounds of milk looks extremely favorable. Hall stated, "There were seven embryos transplanted in December and to date there are seven pregnancies, however, they are all still in the recipient stage. Hall said embryo transplanting is definitely an upcoming method of reproduction in the dairy in dustry. However he said the average dairyman must be able to show profit for this kind of in vestment before the process will become commonplace. Hall said he is interested in new developments and keeps abreast of new information about tran splanting through magazines and various publications. He said that he recently read that researchers are now working on ways to freeze the embryos, dictating the sex of the embryo and cloning. Hall admitted, “The future it lucastf fanning, Saturday, Fafcmary 27,1982-A27 sounds like a little frightening, but it is definitely the road we are headed for in dairy reproduction.” Along with Hall, Harold Crider, Ciiambersburg and Jed Bashore, New Cumberland gave presen tations similar to Hall’s about their experience with embryo tran splants. Crider has completed at least one transplant and Bashore has been using the process fur four MILLERSVTLLfcr The Manor Young Farmers’ banquet will be held on Thursday, April I, at 6:301 p.m. in the Penn Manor High School cafeteria. The speaker will be Keith Bckel, President of the Pennsylvania years and has transplanted four or more different cows. Mike O’Connor of Penn State also presented information about embryo transplanting at the meeting. He provided those members of the audience, who knew little about the new reproduction process with basic facts and procedures, from in semination to flushing and tran splanting. 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