A26-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 29,1986 Farm vacations could bring BY DR. GEORGE F.W. HAENLEIN University of Delaware These are tough days! The government tells us there are too many dairy farmers in the country. There is too much milk produced, too much corn grown, beef, prices are down, red meat is in surplus. Even gasoline prices are coming down, which means burning manure into biogas and corn into ethanol is not economically attractive. What can a farmer do besides shoot himself? Plenty! Many of our farmers are sitting on choice land like the scenic Susquehanna shores around Nottingham and Wrightsville, along tiie Bohemia River and the inlets of the Delaware and Chesapeake Bays. Many of our farms have old, historically in teresting farm houses. In many cases all it would take is a paint brush to get these delapidated clapboards spruced up, and a few flowers planted around the house. In other cases it would take a little more carpentry repair and landscaping to become attractive. However, the historical societies in this area and on the federal level have programs of financial sup port for historically {interesting houses to preserve them and to get them back into shape. Many of our farm houses are at least 100 years old, (I know, I live in one, and am surrounded by several) and then qualify for support from historical registry. Of course, this is not a panacea for everybody. It requires an outgoing attitude of wanting to work with people and not being angry at trivial details and im patient. However, being a dairy farmer is an excellent opportunity of acquiring patience with can takerous cows, stubborn calves and other tempermental animal behavior challenges during milking, feeding and breeding. Also, Eastern Milk Producers Cooperative has award programs for “Farm Beautification”, a good Superhopper Got Grain? Then get the trailer that is Timpte tough... the Super Hopper. It’s not only built to take it...it’s also built to cut fuel costs. The Super Hopper is lightweight and aerodynamically designed to reduce wind drag. When there’s grain to be hauled, Timpte does the haulin’ best ,and pulls a lot easier than the rest. M.H. EBY, INC. P.O. Box 127 step in this direction of enabling side income from vacation on the farm or similar ideas. In Wisconsin, along a major highway I saw an attractive farmstead converted to a petting zoo with young farm animals and a big sign visible from fary saying “Old McDonald Had a Farm”! Some of our farms could look just as attractive as those in Switzerland, Austria and Germany that everybody raves about and spends thousands of dollars an nually to see. Why don’t we copy their ideas old ideas, I’ll admit and have a pretty looking farm house outside and inside with at tractive, well-kept pastures around the house. With clean, well-tended cows, sheep, horses, goats, ducks, geese and the like, and a horse team working some fields around the house, wouldn’t that get the cameras clicking! Our brothers and sisters from the city would love to see that and come from far, as they already do in Lancaster County, Penn sylvania. It is possible to introduce some of this nostalgia throughout the region especially along its many scenic shores? On my farm tours of Europe we see such scenes every year. Why not here too? Why not promote vacations on the farm as an old idea for new farm income? Such enterprises could bring direct sales income to the farm from bed and breakfast ac comodations, pony rides, perhaps dude ranching for reducing diets, and simple soul recharge from plain country living and fresh country air. One of my silent and last wishes is to be invited back to an old fashioned farm for a vacation where I can work again with horse teams like I did when I grew up on a small farm in Germany, walking barefooted behind a single plow in the furrow when hilling potatoes. Work down by the stress of modern society and fast BUY A 1986 TIMPTE LIGHTWEIGHT GRAIN HOPPER NOW (717) 354-4971, I * Blue Ball, PA 17506 needed income technology, today many of us yearn to go back to nature, to the plain and simple life. Why can’t some of our hard-pressed farms provide this opportunity, turning it into a new source of income? See The Best in the Field Introducing the 10-foot wide Ehh Distributed By HAMILTON EQUIPMENT, INC. 567 South Reading Road P.O. Box 478 Ephrata, PA 17522 Telephone (717) 733-7951 Please Contact Us For Your Nearest Dealer gr—REDUCED PRICE gfSJT OVATEC 5[ Check Our Prices Crider’s Dairy Equipment, Shippensburg, PA, 717-532-2196 Dennis W. Silvers, Troy, PA, 717-297-4279 Neil P. Stewart, Marion Center, PA, 412-397-4920 Ray Miller. Oakland. MD. 301-339-9612 HAVING A DIFFICULT TIME KNOWING WHEN YOUR COWS ARE COMING IN HEAT - OR KNOWING IF SHE'S IN A TRUE HEAT? ■ Mail to: Oregon Sales I 3/29/86 | J Oregon Pike ! | R.D. #l, Leola, PA 17540 i i Or Call i I (717) 656-3380 ■ I I i I I Yes, send me information about I Ovatec for cows I Name I Address j City ■ Zip Our farms aren’t just here to produce food! They offer a way of life as well. Put some fields back into pasture, convert some trac tors back to horse teams, let some cows graze out there again maybe with some other livestock, too instead of keeping them standing in those muddy bam At Oregon Sales, 717-656-8380 or Melvin J. Lesher, Jr. Halifax, PA, 717-362-9168 Gerald Martin, Saeli Rd., RD 2, Savannak, N.Y. ON'T USE AN OVATEC State Phone( ) yards. It will be attractive and the economics of reduced cash outlays plus new tourist income from renting rooms might just make economic sense. It does in Swit zerland and Austria, why not here? Perhaps the time is right to bring back some good old ideas. S ■ TEST - Tells You When To Breed - OVATEC is an ovulation detec tion instrument that will assure you of shorter calving intervals, decreased services and higher conception. Indication of reproduction health problems such as: Cystic Ovaries Late Ovulating Cows "Silent Heat” Cows Post Partum Infections T^j