D2-Lancaster Farming Saturday, October 19,1985 LIVESTOCK LATEST MANHEIM The Manheim Farm Show capped a week of livestock competition with the sale of 77 head of beef, swine and sheep on Friday, Oct. 11. It was standing-room-only, as buyers and spectators packed the showring bleachers for the Fair’s first sale to be held in the recently completed hog and sheep barn. Heading the list of show champions to hit the auction block was Karen Becker's grand champion market hog, a 230-pound Duroc-Spot cross that brought the hog sale’s top bid of $3 a pound from Hatfield Packing. Overall, the sale’s 47 hogs brought $7,882, for a sale average of 74 cents, counting champions. Top buyers included Hatfield Packing with 15 hogs, Willie the Butcher with nine head, White Oak Mills, McCracken’s Feed Mill and Penway Construction The highest average price was recorded in the lamb sale, with the sale’s 20 head averaging $1.59 a pound. The high selling lamb was Manheim’s grand champion exhibited by Ellen Lewis. At $3 a pound, Willie the Butcher was the top bidder. Mark Tracy’s reserve champion went to White Oak Mills for $l.BO a pound. The sale’s most active r lamb Look mom, no hands I Most sheep exhibitors pride themselves in being able to control their show animals without a halter. Some, like Carey Donches CARLISLE -An open Limousin pictured watching Manheim ® ho t w> indudin g seven classes o f Farm Qhnui cala heifers and seven classes of bulls, . a ® aCt '.? n ,r ° m will become part of the Penn tne sidelines, .don t even sylvania Farm Show for the first need their hands. Livestock time in January, according to the exhibitors are cautioned not state’s Limousin Association, to try this with their steers. aosin B date for entri « s « Nov - 5. Manheim caps Farm Show week with livestock sale buyers included Willie the But cher, White Oak Mills, Engle Business Equipment and Kreider’s Dairy Farm and Restaurant. The evening came to a climax with the baby beef sale. Chad Rohrer sold his 1,090-pound champion FFA steer to Harold Musser of Country Table Restaurant, Mount Joy, who of fered the top bid of $2.50 a pound The steer sale’s second highest bid of $1 15 was off'''-''' 1 *” 1 H Chad Rohrer's FFA champion steer was the sale's top selling animal. From left are buyer J. Harold Musser of Country Table Restaurant, Mount Joy, Rohrer and Farm Show Queen Rosie Wenger. * ■ m Jerry Clemens of Hatfield went home with Karen Becker s grand champion market hog. Brubaker of Manheim for Ahda Farrington's 1,030-pound reserve champion The sale's 10 steers averaged 97 cents a pound, counting cham pions. Farm Show to include Limousin cattle show Premium lists are currently available from Pa. Farm Sljow, 2301 N. Cameron St., Harrisburg, 17110. Phone: 717-787-5373. For additional information concerning the Limousin show, contact Pa. Limousin Association, 2070 Ritner Highway, Carlisle, 17013. Phone; 717-243-1281. The most active beef buyer was Willie the Butcher, with three head. Other steer buyers included Fenway Construction, Mojer Packing Co., Bomberger s Store and Barry Hershey. Manheim breeding Early or late spring lambing program Early lambs, those ready to sell by May or early June, are easier to raise than later lambs. Hot summer weather brings parasites, mature and less nutritious grass, and milk production drops, all factors which bring lamb gains to a stand-still. Grazing trials show lambs gam 0.55 to 1 pound per day in May. In June, however, daily gains slow to 0.50 pound, and July gams may stop completely. This means lambs should be born in time to go to market in May and June or in late August and September. Producers wanting heavier lamb weights during late summer months need to consider con finement feeding. Early lambing requires more feed for the mothers as well as creep feeding for the lambs. Late lambs can be raised with less labor and concentrate feeds because both ewes and lambs are depen dent on pasture. Fall lambing program Generally, fall or early winter lambing will be the most suitable in areas with good winter feed, limited pasture, suitable barns, and high summer temperatures. Ewes should be bred between May 20 and August 5 for mid-October to late December lambing. Rams should be turned back with ewes during the month of September to catch the ewes that were missed during the earlier breeding season. Lambs may be born on pasture or in shelters, depending upon the weather. Ewes and lambs may graze aftermath permanent pasture, crop residue, or winter pastures, eg. winter rye, brassicas, or small grains. During late gestation <45 days pre-lambing) ewes should be fed grain and offered hay, depending of course upon the pasture quality. Lambs should be creep fed and weaned at 70 to 90 days of age. I>ambs not reaching the desired market weights on pasture should be confined and finished on gram and hay. Ewes not nursing lambs can be maintained on crop residues, stock-piled pasture, hay or a limited silage ration. The breeding season Early lambs to be kept for flock replacements may be bred if they weigh 90 to 100 pounds by July 1. Shear them when they are first weaned. Breed these ewe lambs during October or November. As a general rule, ewe lambs born at other periods reach these same desired breeding weights at 6 months of age. Ewes will lamb 144 to 152 days (five months) after they are bred. They settle easier when they are in good health and are making moderate gains. Extremely rapid gains may delay settling. Body condition scoring has become a useful management tool for keeping high producing ewes in production. More information on the condition scoring and its use in ewe management is discussed in an Extension Fact sheet No. DAS- Planning your program SH-83-4. "When too fat, ewes should be reduced in flesh beginning 40 days prior to breeding. They must be brought back into moderate rate of gain by the time the ram n turned in. In many instances the excessively fat ewes are not the money-makers. Remember, 150-pound open ewes should gam approximately 30 pounds from the time they are bred until they lamb. The amount of flesh they carry at the start of the breeding season can make the job easy or difficult. Do not start them too fat! “Flushing" is a word used to describe bringing about this weight-gaining condition. Heavy sheep that are free from parasites and are on green, growing pasture will be sufficiently flushed. Some gram or brassica pasture 14 days pre-breeding should produce a flushing effect on the thin ewes. The results are a shorter and earlier lambing season with a minor positive influence on in creased multiple births. Exposing ewes to a "teaser ram” 17 to 19 days before the scheduled breeding period will also produce results similar to flushing. Make sure ewes are parasite free. Use a larvacide type wormer (Tramisol) before the breeding season. Your ram should be a per formance tested purebred. Do not get caught using a scrub ram after spending years developing a sound breeding program. Do not breed a ram lamb to more than 20 ewes. A well-grown mature ram, 18 months old, may be ex posed to 40 ewes. Before breeding time, treat your ram for internal parasites, and feed and exercise him so he carries a moderate amount of flesh Gram feed him if he is too thin Exercise him if he is too fat If he needs feed, give him a mixture of three parts corn, three parts oats, and one part wheat bran, by weight, and free choice a quality grass-legume hay. To help prevent hot-weather sterility, shear the ram. Clip wool from the ram’s testicles and belly Also trim his feet, and get him ready for a lot of walking. Keep the ram out of hot weather by keeping him up during the day and letting him run with the ewes at night. Avoid losing a lamb crop by checking often to see if the ewes are setting. A good way is to paint the ram’s brisket with colored material so that he marks the ewes showing estrus. Make your paint by mixing mineral or corn oil with such powder as yellow ochre, Venetian red, carpenter’s chaulk, or lamp black. Change color every two weeks. Apply to the ram’s brisket every four or five davs. If you do not care to check all ewes during the breeding season, use this compromise plan. Three weeks before you plan to take the ramaway, paint him. He will mark the late lambers so you can pick them out. It they should all get marked, you will know a new ram is certainly needed. Ram management