A3D— UncastT Farming, Saturday, February 11,1984 BY LAURA ENGLAND NEWMANSTOWN - Lebanon County cattleman Floyd Horst is not one to take any evergy crisis lightly. T J>r *• t mai * • After running underground a. jght feet, the pipes jut out and connect directly to the barn fans. The air is harvested by a Martin air system. • Easy to apply • Reduces nutritional loss • Helps control heating • Improves palatability • Improves digestability • Helps eliminate spoilage • Non-corrosive, nontoxic • Non-chemical, safe to use CONTACT THESE FINE ( EDWIN MARTIN PAUL ZIMMERMAN Rt. 2, Box 307 Rt. 4, Box 173 Quarryville, PA 17566 Lititz, PA 17543 (717)786-2815 (717)733-7674 HARRY M. BARNER LOUIS S. PEACHEY, SR. TRI OUR GANIC FERTRELL EDWIN R.OTT Box 265 Rt. 1, Box 58C Rt. 2, Box 113 2039 Dark Shade Dr. Lamar, PA 16848 Reedsville, PA 17064 McAllisterville, PA 17049 Windbar, PA 15963 (717)726-3275 (717)667-3291 (717)463-2551 (814)467-5909 OR CONTACT THE FERTRELL COMPANY Warm geotherm air heats veal barn In 1973, when the Arabs boycotted the United States fuel market, Horst erected a solar panel on the side of his barn to heat water. During the Iranian crisis in A Probiotic culture providing the bacteria required to cut hay and silage losses and improve quality Lebanon County cattleman Floyd Horst and his 5-year-old son, Anti inlet pipes used to direct the outside air through the geotherm system. 1979, he and Robert Kreider, of Jonestown, engineered an alcohol fuel generator for additional farm fuel. Although no foreign energy crisis is currently threatening the United States, Horst has added another energy-saving device to his beef cattle operation - a geotherni system. Designed on the theory that the earth (geo) provides heat (therm), Horst engineered the geotherm system to heat his 50 x 64 foot, In stall veal calf barn. The system, which was installed in October 1983, provides heat during the SPECIAL DISCOUNT NOW THRU MARCH UTRI-SIL FORAGE INOCULANT CHRIST B. MILLER Bird-In-Hand, PA 17505 cPEC iaI $3.00 Discount Off Each Bag Purchased F&t&teH Box 164 winter and will serve as a cooling system during the summer months. Already this winter, Horst has recorded a 50-degree difference between the outside and inside temperature of his veal barn. The temperature outside was -15 degrees, but the inside barn temperature boasted a warm 35 degrees. "If you’re looking for a way to minimize energy," Horst said, "then this system is a natural." Horst said he expects a 15 degree cooling temperature during the summer months. High summer ( REPRESENTATIVES ROBERT ACKERMAN THOMAS J. BAIR Rt. 9, Box 566 Rt. 2, Box 196 Meadville, PA 16335 Wrightsville, PA 17368 (814)724-7419 (717)252-3342 out the tony, poml temperatures and humidity cause problems when fattening calves, he said, and he hopes the geotherm system will help eliminate these problems. Though the concept of the geotherm system sounds com plicated, Horst said it actually works as a three-step process. To begin, outside air enters an inlet pipe located on the outside corner of the veal barn. The air travels through the pipe and mixes with the 50-degree temperature ground air. This "treated air” is harvested by a fan and flows (Turn to Page A 37)