o*\*ing (ft i a farm wife -And Joyce Bnpp Surely you’ve been as guilty of saying the phrase as much as I have been at one time or another. It’s a familiar one, heard at family reunions, holiday gatherings and any place wh?re people who see one another only periodically gather. “Why, you look just like your mother!” Or, father, sister, uncle, or whomever. Kids don’t always find that such SBMKI INFRARED HEATING,INC. g Models To Choose From hr Your Particular Operationl SUNNY PIG 1 1,000 to 2,200 BTU Choose downgoing heat... Choose SBM brooders. nr SUNNY PIG 2 2,200 to 4,400 BTU & SUNNY PIG 3 2,500 to 5,000 BTU COMPLETE SYSTEMS, EQUIPMENT, SALES, INSTALLATION, SERVICE CATTLE. HOGS AND POULTRY. 0 "7 We Welcome Year Inquiries - Culler Write mm '\ AGRI’ RD 4, East Farmersville Rd., Ephrata, PA 17522 M on.-Fn 9 7 9 !m04:30; (Lancaster County) Sat. 7;30 t0 11:30 a compliment. We recently heard from an infrequently-seen acquaintance how our daughter looked “just like her mother.” The “daughter” happened to be a son greatly miffed at the gender error. Anyway, family resemblance is an undeniable fact of life. Even in cows. In bovine offspring, however, the family resemblance is not so much physical as it is tempermental. BROODERS For Hogs. Poultry & Turkeys EQUIPMENT,.nc (717) 354-6520 EXPERT REPAIRS £\_ •GENERATORS &sp\ • STARTERS ||H [ y • ALTERNATORS JpP PEQUEA BATTERIES Ronks, PA INFRA-RED GAS * AUTOMATIC CONTROL SYSTEM AVAILABLE GROUP CONTROL • jjk *l,* r y lfer k' fi* €>; F m i ">Jyn | * jzLzJmzz-tJ* ., RGG + STI SEMI-AUTOMATIC CONTROL w/Thermostat Our Wanda and Wendy are perfect examples. From the first day homebred Wanda joined the dairy herd, her obnoxious, scatter-brained behaviour won her special - deserved - notoriety. She even looks the part of a malcontent. As a calf, dehorning didn’t totally “take” on Wanda, resulting in a short, but slightly crooked, whitish-colored horn growing from the left side of her head. Wanda also boasts a wild-eyed look, one of the few in our herd of extremely calm, laid-back bovines. Couple the wild-eyes with the lopsided horn and she has what can only be called “devilish” aura about her - which she plays to the hilt. Endlessly I’ve grumbled while herding her around the bam that she couldn’t see her stall if it fell on her. She has one speed, fast, which slides into overdrive as she sails past her stall and on down to the far end of the dairy bam. Needless to say, in addition to all the above irritating qualities, Wanda isn’t above sending the milking equipment flying oc casionally or taking aim at the person attaching it. Weird Wanda (as she’s com monly known) has two redeeming qualities which have earned her * * (Parts Only) the tenuous right to hang around the ’ herd. She’s a consistent, health-problem-free producer and breeds back to calve on a regular basis. Too hateful to do anything that would get her tossed out, I figure. It was inevitable that Weird Wanda would have heifer calves, about three of ‘em so far, I think. The first joined the milking string last year. Wacky Wendy, the first milking daughter of Weird Wanda, is “just like her mother” in scatter brained temperament. Naturally, this family will prove to be heavily one-sided in giving birth to heifer calves, more to be “just like their mother.” And, then there’s Matilda. Matilda is an old excellent cow suffering breeding difficulties until she spent a romantic in terlude with the bull in residence. The end result was a rugged baby heifer calf, who promises, to grow up to be just like her mother.” Unfortunately. Matilda will cheerfully flatten anyone who happens to get in the way of her eternal and endless quest to eat. Such aggressiveness and determination are qualities which have obviously kept the old NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. - Members of the New Jersey Association of FFA Chapters will be on the Rutgers University Cook College campus for the statewide interscholastic fall judging con tests Thursday, Oct. 30. Teams from 39 chapters will test their agricultural or horticultural skills in land judging, weed identification and control, fruits and vegetable identification, and small engine trouble shooting. The highest scoring team in the dairy foods contest will compete at Poly Dome Calf Nursery OK Call Us Now For Details On This Poly Dome All-Season Nursery... Usable All Year With Removable Feeder. MADISON SILO CO. OF PENNSYLVANIA 1070 StettlthetzKd., Ephrata, Pa. 17522 Phone 717 733 1206 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 11,1986-09 NJ. FFA’ers Test Judging Skills Now Available From.... girl going. On the other hand, anyone putting cows into their stalls had better step lively and not have their back turned when Matilda marches down the alleyway to conquer the feed trough. She simply will not stop, nor step aside, for a human traffic director. Or at least not this human traffic director. “Just like her mother” is Matilda 11. As a 3-month-old calf, she lowered her hard head, and repeatedly plowed into my legs as I bedded the pen. Finally, it was necessary to physically hang onto her head and wrestle her away while I backed my way out and over the gate. While we have no absolute proof, it is believed that Matilda II never sleeps. She has never been ob served anywhere but with her head jammed through the hay rack, jaws going constantly, and ob viously has but one goal in life to grow up to be “just like her mother.” . Sometimes, in fleeting moments of dairy farm frustration, I have a burning yen to be “just like my mother.” My mother doesn’t chase Matildas or Weird Wandas or Wacky Wendys. Not ever. the regional competition in West Springfield, Mass, next Sep tember, then at the national competition in Kansas City, Miss., m November of 1987. The first place land judging team will move on to the national competition next spring in Oklahoma. The chapter that accumulates the most points in the fall, spring and summer contests will receive the H. 0. Sampson trophy. Samp son, a member of the staff of Rutgers Univesity, was one of the original founders of FFA. f fv er y , c/oy *oiv Pr,e e... ‘205« r ft