Bl2—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 22,1984 TZI"- Onbei a farm -And o bazar Joyce B Equality. We’ve heard that word so much over the past decade, as the feminist movement continues the crusade for men and women to be treated as equals in rights, in services, on the job and in the marketplace. Most farm women of my acquaintance, while leaning toward feminism, aren’t die harders about the issue. That’s undoubtedly somewhat due to the fact that most of us are already doing such “manly” things as helping to tend livestock and crops along with the garden, yard and household. There are, though, some farm jobs that just naturally seem to fall to one sex or the other. Never have I, thank goodness, been asked to service a tractor (I once greased a disk before heading out over the field), crawl inside the bottom of the silo for repair work, or help to mechanically stir up the manure lagoon. Our very “macho” son contends that certain chores are “women’s work.” Nevertheless he hasn’t completely avoided being forced to occasionally pick up his muddy shoes or help set the table for supper. And one job that everyone readily leaves to me is handling the calf chores. In fact, they’re often referred to as “mom’s calves.” Am I complaining? Never. I love A NEW IDEA IN MIXER-FEEDERS Roller-Mixer* gives you both... • SUPERIOR PROCESSING • SUPERIOR MIXING Now Available - Phone For Details Ryder supply those baby calves. Surveys have recently shown that baby farm animals raised by females consistently show a higher rate of survival and better thnf tiness and health than similar ones cared for by males. (Before you men calf feeders hit the ceiling, there are doubtless some ex ceptions. You may be one of them.) No matter how tired you are, or frustrated, or disgusted, just stepping into that calf nursery is enough to give you what’s currently referred to in a popular country song as an “attitude ad justment.” All those bright, shining, alert pairs of eyes eagerly watch your every move, and bawls of welcome sing out. Each one, like a class of children, is an individual. Some are exceptionally loving, and there are a few, always, that seem bent on creating aggravation. Sometimes just their unusual patterns of black and white color are fascinating and really set certain ones aside as individuals. One little heifer bom here in late summer has long black eyelashes over one eye, and long silky white lases over the other, lending a sort of endearing, crooked look to her face. Yoko, one of the older nursery heifers, bawled for her first several days there in what was probably the loudest voice I’ve ever heard come out of a calf’s «ouA WM* mouth. Her mother once belonged to a group of investment cattle owned by members of the Beatles singing group maybe that’s where her loud music ability originated. After Yoko finally came to grips with the fact that she and her mama were separated for good, she pouted and sulked in the comer for a couple more days before settling down to behave like a good calf should. Pushover should have instead been named Push Around. Day in and day out she clamps her jaws shut like a vise, and you have to Wayne Co. to start craft group HONESDALE - The crafts connection is the connection for you to make if you’re a hobbyist or a “crafty-type.” This fair-weather group is forming for the purpose of exchanging ideas, showing and telling about your work, and learning more about improving a craft or hobby. The group will also plan and arrange bus trips and outings to various craft shows and places of enrichment. Meetings will not be held in the snow months. The first get-together will be held on Monday, Oct. 22 at 7:30 p.m. in the Extension Office in the Wayne County Courthouse, Honesdale. A chairman, secretary and treasurer will probably be the only officers necessary. Different committees will be set up to plan activities. As this is an enrichment program sponsored by the Wayne County Cooperative Extension Service, plans will be implemented by the extension. For more information call Jackie Cook at 253-5970 ext. 114. 9450 Roller Mixer efficiency and ly of Automatic I Grain mod With ig Excellence Available With ELECTRONIC WEIGHING pry them apart to get her to take the bottle. After two sips of the warm milk, Pushover nearly flattens you in her eagerness to drink. After two weeks of this, you think she’d finally learn? Then there’s Marvina. Mar vina’s mother was the proverbial “holy terror” heifer, shown as a - H calf in competition, but never really taming down into a puppy like pet like most 4-H calves do. Then, to boot, her sire is well known in the industry as having fathered some extremely high strung, jittery animals. general, the foresters and scien tists agree, 1984 promises to be a previous mountain pine beetle year of less than staggering losses, outbreaks. The dead trees fuel a gut foresters think in long terms, massive forest furnace, which of gypsy moths, for example, needs only a spark to become an Hofacker says, “It’s going to be inferno.” bad somewhere every year. Some McGregor’s forecast proved years it will be worse than others, tragically accurate when August It’s extremely explosive. We aren’t blazes seared thousands of acres of very good at predicting what it’s Montana forests. going to do. It can be relatively Potential Harvesting rare> an( j the next year there’s just If infestation is caught early bugs all over the place.” enough, the devastated yellow ‘Ain’t Seen Nothin’ (Continued from Page BIO) pines of Texas can be harvested Despite the defoliation the gypsy and thus not totally lost, because moth already has caused on its they are usually more accessible southward march, “We ain’t seen than the remote giants of the West, nothin’ yet,” says Hofacker. “It’s Then a buffer strip cut around the the V ast hardwood forest that infested stand will usually stop the extends down the Appalachians spread of the beetles. way i n t o the South that really But if the infestation has gone too hasn’t been attacked yet.” far, the answer, in forestry Inevitably it will be. parlance, is to “cut and leave.” one of those who takes the long The spruce budworm poses a view is Dr. Gerald W. Anderson, different sort of problem, par- director of the Forest Service’s ticularly in Maine, the nation’s insect and disease research, most heavily forested state, where Although he recognizes the lumbering is the principal in- problem of lag time - perhaps 10 or dustry. 15 years to come up with a solution Insects can t read boundary to a particular problem —he is not markers, and the 100 million pessimistic about the future of our budworm-inf ested acres extend far forests. into the confiers of Csnsdfl. In both k4 The trees out there nre the East and the West, a joint remarkable in terms of their Canadian-U.S. program is sear- ability to endure,” he says. “They ching for ways to control the pests. have to be very competitive. All these omnivorous insects are, They’re m a fixed position. They to some extent, cyclical. The ex- have to endure drought. There are tent of their ravaging vanes just all kinds of things that can widely from year to year. In challenge them along the way.” the one that keeps rolling when others quit! Automatic pioneered the development of the unique crusher unit which shells corn and shreds the cob ahead of the rollers which crack the kernels and reduce the cob further. No troublesome screens to change or slow down the capacity. It comes with 8-foot hydraulic intake auger and 54-inch blower. Also available with an 11-mch tilting discharge auger with 10-foot reach in place of the blower. • UNIQUE CRUSHER ROLLS shell the corn, crush the cob ahead of the rolls, no screens to plug. • FATIGUE-PROOF DRIVE SHAFTS, ground and polished • CARBON STEEL ROLLS, hardened to a 56 Rockwell "C”, out perform other rolls in capacity and durability. •20-SPLINE, 1%-inch PTO shaft with shear pin protection Thus, Marvina was fully ex pected to be one of those calves that keeps at least one eye on the feeder at every second,•waiting until just the right moment to lash out with one of those sharp, hard little hooves. What a surprise when she turned out instead to be a real honey, who has to be awakened for her bottle, and then lays right back down and goes to sleep, never making a sound. That’s the neat thing about animals. You just never know how they’ll turn out. Insects munch