E4—Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, March 5, 1983 Daily Pipeline | “•*h'a I 1 2 I 1 '* *****o By I t ' t jL , Glenn A. Shirk \ : Mi' Extension Ml Dairy r i ( Agent _ M Fat Test Fluctuations The 50-cent milk price deduc tions concern many dairymen. Will it take place? If so, how will they be able to make up for some of the loss? One way might be to increase fat tests by three points. With a 17 cent differential, that would be 51 cents per hundredweight of milk. This is a possibility only if fat tests are a problem in the herd now, and if it can be raised without sacrificing 2*, NEED MORE ROOM? IRead The Classified ce*e o- yiu /*o*e oycr/ Real Esfaf© Ads Designed to Your Needs...to Your Specifications” Pole Barns Poultry Houses Dairy Bams Horse Stables To help you plan your building and write your own specifications, a professional Snavely field representative is ready and willing to assist you. 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I recently attended an Agway meeting, and saw a good, graphic illustration of a problem which I see on many farms. The illustration is roughly as follows: >mtdpa Smuety Says... Make ARM BUILDINGS • Riding Arenas • Utility Buildings • Hog Houses • Cold Storage J>Ci ■ Snavely & Sons, Inc. (Type of Building) iboui (Date) County -Z»P • Equipment Sheds • Storage Buildings • Workshops • Residences / - /- - As we approach and exceed the “generally safe,” upper limits of grain - the 60% level - we can ex pect fat tests to become very erratic for a while, then plummet to a more constant, abnormally low level. This, I believe, vividly shows what is happening on many farms - why a 3.8% tester one month suddenly drops to a 2.1% on the next test aid then recovers to near normal on the following test - or why there is a rather wide discrepancy between DHIA tests and plant tests, with DHIA tests being lower. These big fluctuations can be very temporary, and we are quick to find fault with sampling and testing procedures. If in question, compare DHIA protein test fluc tuations with fat test fluctuations. NOW, FOR THE FIRST TIME Knowing That Your MONEY MARKET FUNDS Are INSURED Up to $lOO,OOO If you’re in the market for a guaranteed higher rate of sav ings, then our Money Market Funds are for you! Unlike other market accounts, ours offer you the added insurance of backing by the U.S. government for up to $100,000! So you can be assured THE FARMERS NATIONAL BANK OF OUARRYVItIE SMALL ENOUGH TO KNOW YOU LARGE ENOUGH TO SERVE YOU. 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We may not be getting enough forage into our heavy producing YOU CAN REST EASY Why The Problem? that the money you earn is as safe and secure as your pass book savings account... while it nets you the higher interest rates you want! And, you can enjoy the convenience of doing your banking...and investing ...under the same roof...oursl heifers and into our large, heavy producers. Here’s why. We have been programmed X assume that all cows eat the san . amount of forage - at least on paper for the purpose of balancing rations and for writing down on paper a neat, simple feeding program for the herd. Then, we feed grain according to milk production, plus a few extra pounds for that growing heifer. The problem is, a lot of the herd is x not 1300 pounds - herd average. The smaller heifers may not have the capacity to consume what you feed the average sized cow. The larger cow needs more than the average cow. Consequently, their minimum forage needs of 1.5 pounds of hay equivalent per hundred pounds of body weight, are not being met. And, because we’re pumping the grain to them for production and for growth, our forage to grain ration is out of balance - we’ve exceeded 60% of the DM in the ration coming from grain! This creates abnormal conditions in the rumen. Fat quickly become eratic and e» ceptionally low - an indication of poor rumen health - 'and dry matter (DM) intake drops. Eventually, production will also start to decline. Similarly, when cows go off feed on forage for whatever reason - hot tem peratures in summer, bad fer mentations, poor quality, molds, stale forages, etc. - we experience the same problems. 3. We’re feeding higher quality forage, which is lower in fiber content {Turn to Page E 6)