Maryland Eastern Shore welcomes York Holstein tour BY JOYCE BUPP Staff Correspondent EASTERN SHORE, MD - York County Holstein breeders took a “busman’s holiday” April 9, visiting four Maryland dairying operations for their annual spring farm tour. Three of the four stops were at the diversified setups of Fair Hill Farms, near Chestertown. Fair Hill began operations on Eastern Shore in 1960, when the Ed Fry family moved across the Chesapeake Bay from Mont gomery County. Largest of the Fry family’s three operations is Fair Hill Dairy, where 540 head are milked three times daily. The “home farm” still maintains a herd of 60 head, while another 60 investor animals are handled at the Churn Creek leased facility. All three herds are included together for DHIA purposes, with a total of 738 head on the March test, with a rolling herd average of over 19,600 of milk and 700-plus fat. With replacements, Fair Hill totals some 1500 head of cattle, three quarters of them registered. While milk production efficiency earns top attention at Fair Hill, type is not slighted. The most recent classification, in March, resulted in 26 Excellents, 150 Very Goods, 162 Good Plus, and 133 Goods. Classification average on the 469 head scored was 82.4, for a BAA of 103.4. Host and tour guide for the visit was Ed Fry, Jr., who along with his father and brother operates Fiar Hill Farms, Inc. A third brother in an area veterinarian. Fair Hill Dairy, the large commercial-type facility, with its more than 500 milking animals, was built in 1980 by Agri, Inc. of Ephrata. “Feeding, breeding, and milking cows is the objective here,” says Fry. Emphasis has always been on efficiency, and the facility was designed to maximize cow flow and minimize handling. A staff of eight maintains operations at the "Home farm" at Fair Hill was a traditional hip-roofed stall barn, with freestalls, young stock facilities, feeding complex, and storage units added on since the Fry family moved here in 1960. Cows crowd this milking parlor holding area at Fair Hill Dairy for 22 hours each day. As they wait, the “rainbirds”, or spray nozzles, installed in the foreground, wash udders before the cows enter the double-ten parlor at the rear of the holding pen. large dairy, with a total Fair Hill a^so k® integrated in the ration, staff of 35, including a 4-man depending on commodity markets, construction crew and two office Bunker silos and a commodity employees shed allow for volume handling of The double-ten parlor is in use 22 feedstuffs. Minerals are custom hours per day, with one milker formulated, including the use of handling each of the shifts. A spray chelated types, wash system in the large holding McKnight is sold on the benefits area preps cows prior to milking, °f barley in the ration over the and udders on all but the first few tra< ?J, tlona use °‘ cofn in each group are air-dried by their stay away from using too turn in the parlor. much starch from the same feed Manure is flushed from the source, he elaborated. Every holding and free stall areas with 4 time we go to using shelled corn we recycled water held in. 30,000 gallon see a drop in production. Because tanks. Flush water in turn is cows in the Fair Hill Dairy herd caught in a storage lagoon and are under heavy production stress, recycled onto the crop ground. McKnight keeps ration levels of Other energy-savings come from beans and fats higher than is well-water tube cooling of milk and usually recommended by equipment heat recovery systems nutritionists, efficient enough to allow total hot About three years ago, he tried water needs of the dairy to be to obtam a supply of an isoacid handled through a 120-gallon water milk booster additive, but was heater. unable to find a source. So, All health and reproductive work McKnight developed his own on the herd is handled in a lockup Mend, and dubbed it Bio Boost, stanchion area, and a hospital area He s now marketing the product in includes manger lockups. A Delvo selected areas > ai ]d acknowledges test for antibiotic contamination is tb at the production booster is run on every treated animal before working. , she is removed from the treated Results in the herds he s been group. Every tank of milk is also working with show production Delvo checked before being loaded increases of 3-5 pounds per cow, on the farm’s transport tanker. usually in three weeks or less, at a Cows at the large dairy are cost of about twenty cents per cow grouped by production, with the per day. McKnight attributes the high group averaging 135 performance of the production pounds/day. Second herd averages boosting product to an increase in 92 pounds, third group is at 72 the saliva production in the cow s pounds, and the 2-year-old group of mouth, which in turn carries 130 head is averaging 67 pounds, through the digestive process to One two-year-old topping the group more efficiently utilize the feed milked 110 pounds in just her nu iT ieats ; , second month of production. The lack of gram and decrease in Roger McKnight, herd manager, forage Particle size in manure is the nutrition specialist, utilizing att ests to that theory. In addition, a computer to keep rations fine- McKnight sees the isoacid product tuned for each production working as a preservative for grouping. The Total Mixed Ration feedstuffs, allowing forages to, is based on an 80 percent corn re mam palatable for a longer silage and 20 percent haylage period of time once they are ex blend, with roasted beans and posed to air. ... ground barley. Cro P production includes 3600 “We go for the ‘best cost’ ration, acre ®’ a b° u f 40 Pf rc 6"t of that to not necessarily the ‘least cost,”’ 1 ? . herd feedstuffs and the stressed McKnight. Cottonseed, remaining for diversified gram distillers grain or soy hulls may production. The sixty head herd at the Fair Hill home farm are milked twice daily in a double-four parlor. All cows for the farm complex are calved out at this facililty, between 60 to 85 head monthly. Hutches, up to 75 in use at a time, house baby calves until weaning, when they are grouped and held until about fourteen weeks of age. A custom raiser than takes over calves, until they are returned for breedmg, either by A.I. or as embryo transfer recipients. Once bred, heifers agam go to a custom raiser. Transfer work plays a large part m Fair Hill’s merchandising program with about 200 E.T.’s done annually. All ET work is by fresh transfer, and non-surgical implantation. High pedigreed virgin heifers are often flushed, and up to forty percent of the total ET recipients are mature cows Calf hutches, up to 75 in use at a time, house replacements at Fair Hill. In the background is part of the irrigation system for the 3600 acres and a bred heifer facility with wooded pasture. Pintail Point, near Queenstown, is owned by Baltimore automobile executive Louis Schaefer. The farm is located on a point of land projecting into the Wye River, which flows into the Chesapeake Bay. Tall, typey cows, with impressive udders, and housed in a spotless, airy, tie-stall barn, greet visitors to Pintail Point. from the Fair Hill Dairy. High indexed Excellent and Very Good individuals comprise a group bred to high TPI sires, with the aim of continuing and building “numbers.” A second breeding group includes good type cows with indexes of $35 and under. Sires are selected to improve type and build indexes in succeeding generations. A third group is comprised of Good Plus and Good individuals, below herd scoring averages, but the “bread and butter” producers of the herd. Established sires whose popularity has lessened are crossed to this grouping. Remaining cattle not meeting the above standards are bred to young sires, if offspring are wanted for replacements, or used as transfer recipients. Fair Hill’s “elite” cows are kept at the leased Chum Creek bam, which houses 54 head of top indexed, pedigreed investor animals. Four individuals are contracted for foreign frozen ET sales, and ten either already have or have potential for sons in AI organizations. Final visit was to a new Eastern Shore establishment, still in the process of building a herd of high type, production and index cattle. Pintail Point Farms is located near Queenstown, on a point of land projecting out into the Wye River, which flows into the Chesapeake Bay. The farm was acquired some years ago by Baltimore automobile dealership owner Louis M. Schaefer, as a hunting and fishing getaway. In fact, the farm’s name comes from the Pintail ducks which frequent the waters of the Wye. Schaefer felt the dairy bam on the property should be utilized, and purchased a small commercial herd. After becoming interested in purebred cattle, he chose to in stead begin establishing a top herd of registered stock. Walter Johnson, a former purebred Guernsey breeder, and his wife Carol, who grew up with registered Holsteins, were hired to put together and manage a new Pintail Point herd. Two additional full time employees complete the staff. In January of 1985, construction crews began remodeling the old facility. On Christmas Eve the herd was moved into a new tiestall barn, complete with paneled office and board room amenities. Goal is a herd of 70 head, with 45 currently in the milking string. Foundation Holstein stock has been acquired from various state and national sales, Fair Hill Farms and 21 head of high indexed individuals at the November Kingstead Farms dispersal. Breeding program at Pintail Point focuses on crossing to strengthen individual cow weaknesses, while selecting traits that will fit anticipated future industry markets for fat and protein. “We’re shooting for a four percent test and higher protein,” affirms Johnson. That means cows get feedings of first and second cutting alfalfa hay, some corn silage, high moisture corn and a 29 percent protein concentrate. A unique feature of the Pintail Point barn is a small, closet-like, “washup” room, where milking equipment is cleaned away from the usual milkhouse site. In fact, the bam was constructed for en trance direct to the stall bam, not through the milk house, which is offset via a hallway. In planning is a baby calf unit, immediately outside and protected by a roof extension from the stall barn. Construction is also un derway for a new heifer facility.