AlB-Lancastcr Farming, Saturday, October 18,1986 ITHACA, N.Y. - New York monitoring progress, Empet said Dairy Herd Improvement Guest speaker Edgar King of the Cooperative held a Supervisor New York State Department of Seminar recently to inform Agriculture and Markets, reported records supervisors about DHI that this is “the toughest time for innovations and recognize in- farmers since the Depression,” dividual accomplishments. Nearly and called for elimination of the 250 supervisors from New York, f ea r that many farmers associate New Jersey, Maine, with the word “cooperative." Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Farmers need help from informed New Hampshire gathered in sources to manage their resources Albany, to participate in the two- and make profitable management day event. decisions, King said. King General Manager Nelvin Empet described the Regional welcomed the crowd at the opening Cooperative Marketing Agency, a of the seminar with thanks for money management cooperative their excellent performance in 1986 intended to improve dairy farm and the challenge to live the DHI er’s incomes by collective promise of delivering fast, ac- bargaining, curate, useful dairy herd Supervisors throughout the management services. The Northeast system were recognized records supervisor makes the DHI for various accomplishments in promise real by gathering in- years of service, excellence in formation, helping farmers realize reporting and on proficiency and areas that could be improved, and competency exams, and for Order 4 Milk Priced At $12.93 ALEXANDRIA, Va. - Middle price was up 25 cents from August Atlantic Order Market Ad- and was 42 cents higher than a ministrator Joseph D. Shine an- year earlier. The gross value of nounced a September 1986 base September producer milk was milk price of $12.93 per hun- $66.1 million, compared to $63.6 dredweight and an excess milk million a year ago. price of $11.53. Shine said that producer receipts The weighted average Sep- totaled 513.5 million pounds during tember price was $12.91 and the September, an increase of 2.8 butterfat differential for the month million pounds from last Sep was 17.7 cents. The base milk price tember, and the average daily was up 26 cents from August and delivery of 2,640 pounds per was 38 cents higher than last producer increased 100 pounds or September. The weighted average 3.9 percent from a year earlier. Class I producer milk totaled USDA Buyout Report WASHINGTON -An estimated Dair y cattle reported for export 13,700 head of dairy cattle were unde . r 0,6 Program for the period slaughtered in federally inspected A P. **° 11 , tota ] ed an plants during the week ending estimated 37,003 head. An Sept. 27, as a result of the Dairy astunatad were exported Termination Program, the U.S during the week ending Oct. 11 Department of Agriculture an nounced Wednesday. This total includes all cows, heifers and calves identified as dairy animals designated for disposition in compliance with the program requirements. The cumulative total of cattle slaughtered under the program from April 1 through Sept. 27 is an estimated 789,700 head. The purchases of meat in ad dition to normal purchases are to help offset the effects of the DTP on the domestic meat market. For the two-week period ending Oct. 11, the government purchased 241,250 pounds of meat. The cumulative purchases, reported bi-weekly as of Oct. 11, total 297.5 million pounds WHITE WASHING with DAIRY WHITE • DRIES WHITE • DOES NOT RUB OFF EASILY • NO WET FLOORS • IS COMPATIBLE WITH DISINFECTANT & FLY SPRAYS • WASHES OFF WINDOWS & PIPELINES EASILY BARN CLEANING SERVICE AVAILABLE WITH COMPRESSED AIR To have your barn cleaned with air it will clean off dust, cob webs & lots of old lime This will keep your barn looking cleaner S whiter longer We will taka work within 100 mile radius of Lancaster MAYNARD L. BEITZEL Witmer, PA 17585 717-392-7227 Bam Spraying Our Business, not a sideline. Spraying since 1961. High Pressure Washing And Disinfecting Poultry Houses, Veal Pens, Hog Units And Dairy Barns NY DHI Hosts Supervisor Seminar fM NU PuISC; IllC. DKT - SALES MGR. rd i, Box 390 [mM 908 Stewart Street C si?GoWwfstitrt Y w Madison, Wl 53713 USA Lititz.PAiS 814/326-4496 608/274-2722 717/626-1065 STINER’S REFRIGERATION 25 Crooks Terrace Canton, PA 17724 717/673-8351 ZIMMERMAN’S SALES& SERVICE 2440 St.-Rt. 7 Columbiana, OH 44408 216/482-5190 numerous sales achievements. Two region managers, Walter Close and Myron Brown, were commended and awarded for 40 years of service with the cooperative. Close lives in Oneonta and manages supervisors in Chenango, Otsego, and Herkimer counties. Brown is responsible for supervisors in Washington, Warren,* Saratoga, Renssalaer, Schoharie, Albany, and Mont gomery counties and resides in Cobleskill. General Manager Nelvin Empet reported that the Northeast DHI Association task force would be meeting on Oct. 21 to consider a draft of bylaws for the new North east DHI organization. Currently, the states of Con necticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Jersey, and New Hampshire have contracted with New York DHI for record keeping and 261.0 million pounds and was up 19.7 million pounds or 8.2 percent from last September. Class I milk accounted for 50.84 percent of total producer milk receipts during the month, compared with 47.25 percent in September 1985. Base milk accounted for 91.96 percent of total producer milk receipts m September compared with 88.94 percent last year. The average butterfat test of producer milk was 3.61 percent, up from 3.55 percent last September. Middle Atlantic Order pool handlers reported Class I in-area milk sales of 211.4 million pounds during September, an increase of 2.4 percent from a year earlier after adjustment to eliminate variation due to calendar com position. P 4th ANNUAL HARVEST PIPELINE SPECIAL Ft. of 2" S.S. 18 gauge tubing^V^^^ Harrisonburg, VA 22801 r a pipeline system* and get your first of 2" stainless steel tubing for^>,]^- C That’s a savings of over $800! Take Advantage Of This Harvest Special Now. See Your Local Dealer Now! * Contact your dealer for details of required pipeline components HENRY JAQUITH AQUILLA YODER RD1,80x325 Box 83 Spring Creek, PA 16436 Belleville, PA 17004 814/664-2397 717/935-2481 ASHBY FARM SERVICE RD 8 Box 1A 703/434-9943 management services. Sept. 1,1987 is the goal set for consolidation of the Northeast organization, which would give representation on the Board of Directors to all states involved. Lyle Wadell, Director of the Northeast Dairy Records Processing Lab, spoke of the future of NE DRPL. Toll-free telephone lines have just been installed for better com munications. Wadell recognized Kathryn Ray, DRPL writer, who was hired in another effort to improve communications. Wadell described upcoming electronic mail systems and increased use of computers in DHI record report ing. He mentioned that use of the Remote Management System, a method allowing parties to access DHI records via remote com puters, has increased 68 percent over the past year. Wadell expects this increase to continue as computers become the way of the future for dairy farm managers. Dairy Production Consultants Dr. Arden Nelson of Homer and Dr. Howard Redlus of Mount Holly, N.J. spoke of the im portance of records in herd health and production management. Without a record base, it is im possible to make sound nutritional, reproductive, and production management decisions, according to these two production medicine veterinarians. Nelson and Redlus claim that dairy animal veterinarians are now spending more of their time as production consultants than in treating disease. The DHI supervisor is the crux of the records on which these veterinarians base their consulting decisions. The DPC consultants commended the supervisors in attendance for excellent service SCHMIDT’S EQUIPMENT RD 2, Box 122 Hawley, PA 18428 717/253-3048 and challenged them to take an active interest in their members’ records to help make those records come alive. Terry Smith, New York State Extension Dairy Specialist, based his talk on the importance of the DHI Remote Management System in making DHI records come alive for dairy producers. Records are of utmost importance in the day to day and long term decision making processes that dairy farmers undergo, Smith said. Smith spoke of Extension projects underway in several areqs of New York State involving extensive use of the Remote Management System in dairy farm management and of the impact these projects will have on the future of dairy farming. Calvin Walker, Maine Extension Dairy Specialist, spoke of the importance of the Advanced In formation Manager reports. AIM offers farm managers the op portunity to use their records in innovative and self-tailored styles without the need for a computer on the farm. Walker commended the new “AIM in Lieu” option, where a farmer can trade the Sample Day Lactation Report for an AIM report of his or her own making, as an opportunity for supervisors to spread the word about the im portance of AIM. At the closing of the seminar, General Manager Nelvin Empet reiterated the principles and goals of the cooperative and called for continued superior performance by NY DHI records supervisors. He stated that the DHI mission is to increase the dairy farmers’ net profit. “If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it,” Empet stated. The DHI supervisor is the focus of the measurements that provide the records used to make profitable management decisions. ( . .'I LUCASBARN EQUIPMENT RD 2, Box 339 D Bellefonte, PA 16823 814/383-2806 CRIDER DAIRY EQUIPMENT 8933 Rowe Run Road Shippensburg, PA 17257 717/532-2196 NORTHAMPTON FARM BUREAU 300 Bushkill Street Tatamy, PA 18085 215/258-2871 FISHER & THOMPSON 127 Newport Road Leola, PA 17540 717/656-3307