Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, November 15, 1986, Image 24

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    A24-Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, Novambar 15,1986
6 Lou Ella 9 Sells For Golden Price Of $186,000
(Continued from Page Al)
Ella owns a cow index of plus 1,050
milk, plus 64 fat and plus |l6B with
aCTPIof plus 769.
She sold with a package that
included $llO,OOO to $130,000 worth
of embryo contracts, a 10 embryo
guarantee, five Rotate pregnan
cies due in March 1987 and four
open end AI contracts.
Lou Ella is out of Walkup
Astronaut Lou Ann, a 3E 94 point
GMD by Paclamar Astronaut. Lou
Ann produced five record over
21,000 milk with a best effort of
28,770 pounds of milk and 1,000
pounds of fat; her lifetime record
stands at 159,120 pounds of milk
and 5,934 pounds of fat in 2,366
days.
The next dam is an Elevation
daughter out of an 87 point dam.
Classified 3E-91, she registered a
high production record of 30,160
pounds of milk and 1,204 pounds of
fat in 365 days.
Horace Backus described the
sale topper as, “One of the best
breeding cow families.”
Orland Nelson of Marynole
Genetics explained Lou Ella has
the pedigree and index his group is
looking for. He said, “We are
starting a new project; it takes
cows like that (Lou Ella) to make
it go.” Marynole’s project includes
purchasing high indexed, deep
pedigreed animals and selling
embryos.
A package of three bull embryos
sold for $169,000, the second high
price of the sale. Sold as one unit to
the Elite Three Syndicate from
Virginia, the package was
described as “modem Holsteins at
Three
Coldsprings Production Sale
BY SHARON SCHUSTER
Maryland Correspondent
FREDERICK, Md. A stan
ding-room-only crowd packed the
sale arena at the Frederick County
Fairgrounds on Monday, for the
fifth annual Coldsprings Farm
Production Sale.
Marlin Hoff of New Windsor
offered 69 of what he referred to as
“good quality cows and heifers’! at
the noonday auction. Sixty-three
head sold for an average bid of
$1,315. The remaining six bulls
were auctioned for a total of $6,325,
at an average price of $1,054.
Clark Woodmansee of Preston,
Clark Woodmansee (left) was one of three buyers to pay the top price of $2,350 at the
Cokfsprincs Production Sale, held by Marlin Hoff. George William Smith (right) was the
contender on Kinglea Chairman Eddy.
their best” by Horace Backus.
Each bull also sold with an AI
lease.
Bossir Glen-Valley Starlite Al
sired the first of the three unborn
males, due in mid-December 1986.
The embryo is out of Walkup
Valiant Lou Ella, the sale topper,
and consigned by Rothrock Golden
Holsteins.
Carlin-Mayer Caprie sired the
second bull. Consigned by Rocby
Holsteins, Bridgewater, Va., the
embryo is from Indian-Crest
Valiant Kando-ET.
Classified EX-90 with an Ex
cellent mammary system, Kando
produced a top record of 23,690
pounds of milk and 1,035 pounds of
fat for a 4.4 test. She owns a cow
index of plus 1,263 milk, plus 68 fat
and plus $lB7 with a CTPI of plus
815.
Completing the package is a
Browncroft Jetson son due in
December 1986 and consigned by
Rothrock Golden Holsteins out of
the Shey-Land Valiant Athene cow.
Athene classified EX-90 with a best
record of 29,670 pounds of milk and
1,398 pounds of fat for a 4.7 test in
365 days. This record qualified her
as the Pennsylvania fat champion
for the 3-year-old, 365 day fat class.
Hilltop-Hanover-B Darby-ET
registered the third high price with
a bid of $50,000 from Rothrock
Golden Holsteins. A bred heifer.
Darby will freshen in November to
Walkway Chief Mark.
Hilltop Hanover Farm,
Yorktown Heights, N.Y., con
signed the Darby. Sired by Valiant,
she is a full sister to Brigeen
Hanover Debra, the breed’s only
$2,350 Bids
Conn., was one of the three bidders
purchasing animals for the top
price of $2,350. Woodmansee’s new
acquisition, 3-year-old Kinglea
Chairman Eddy, is rated VG-86.
“They sure wouldn’t complain
about me bringing her back
home,” said Hoff of the Chairman
daughter that milked 102 pounds on
her first test.
As a 2 year old, Eddy produced a
record of 19,840 pounds of milk and
668 pounds of fat. Her index stands
at plus 553 milk with a CTPI of plus
453.
Her dam, a Straight-Pine
Elevation Pete daughter,
fourth consecutive generation
Excellent, 40,000 pound cow.
Darby’s dam, Ocean-View
Elevation Debbie classified EX-91
and produced lifetime credits of
101,060 pounds of milk and 4,168
pounds of milk in 1,183 days. Her
cow index stands at plus 1,639 milk
and plus 58 fat with a CTPI of plus
806.
The value of the package was
also proven to a degree at this sale.
A full sister to the sale topper sold
for $lB,OOO on her own merit. She is
a yearling bred in September 1986
to Rotate.
Eleven lots sold for over the
$20,000 mark. Marynole Genetics
was the volume buyer, pm chasing
seven lots.
Prior to the start of the sale,
Bruce Rothrock welcomed the
crowd and explained, “Following
the success of the 1984 sale it
became evident that the Holstein
industry needed and wanted a sale
of this caliber.” The animals were
consigned from across the nation
and represented “among the best
Holsteins available. ”
The sale average is down from
the first edition average of $22,000.
Jay Howes noted that the good
pedigreed animals sold for
realistic values in today’s market.
Backus Associates, Inc.
managed the sale Jointly with
Rothrock Golden Holstein Farms.
Charles Backus and Mike Weimer
shared the auctioneering
assignment. Sale staff included;
Jack Miller, Jay Howes, Richard
Clark, Jim Young, Gregg Fein
berg, Mike Rainey and Jake Emig.
Top
classified Very Good with a best
effort of 17,760 pounds of milk and
700 pounds of fat. The next two
dams registered top milk
production records of 19,000 and
20,000.
D. Bradley Garst of New Wind
sor took home Coldsprings
Klansman Motto, also for the top
bid of $2,350. Homebred on the top
and bottom of her pedigree, the 4
year old milked 25,670 pounds of
milk and 845 pounds of fat in 311
days. Sired by Coldsprings
Klansman, she earned an index of
plus 1,228 milk and plus 40 fat with
a CTPI of plus 524.
Hilltop-Hanover-B Darby-ET sold for the third high price of
the sale, $50,000 to Rothrock Farms represented by Jack
Miller, left, and Bruce Rothrock. She was consigned by Hilltop
Hanover Farm, represented by Dave Younger. Jake Emig is
on the halter.
Richard Clark, left, Mike Weimer and Jack Miller stand with
the fourth high seller, Dean-C T Valiant Margo-ET. Consigned
by Charles Dean 111, she was purchased by LaPoe Holsteins
for $35,000.
Out of Coldsprings Hero, Motto’s
dam produced a top record of
20,410 pounds of milk. The next
dam produced three records over
20,750 pounds of milk.
A heifer bred in March to
Coldspring Ira also commanded
the top bid of $2,350. Buyers Scott
Hood of Middletown was im
pressed witfi the rich pedigree of
Coldsprings Tradition Oryx, which
boasts such names as Tradition,
Elevation and Arlinda Chief.
Oryx’s dam, Smith-Mead Betty
Deanna scored VG-88 produced
records ranging from 23,360
Missouri, Georgia Declared
Free Of Tuberculosis
WASHINGTON - The U.S.
Department of Agriculture today
declared Missouri and Georgia the
30th and 31st states to be
recognized free of bovine tuber
culosis.
According to Bert W. Hawkins,
administrator of USDA’s Animal
and Plant Health Inspection
Service, tuberculosis-free
recognition is based on a state’s
remaining free of the disease for a
minimum of five years, and on its
compliance with the uniform
methods and rules of the state
federal cooperative tuberculosis
eradication program.
Cattle from Missouri and
Georgia can now be marketed
more easily, since many
prospective buyers prefer to buy
from states designated free of the
disease.
The last infected animal in a
Missouri herd was confirmed in
March 1978; Missouri herds have
tested negative since then.
Gerogia’s last infected herd was
eliminated in February 1977.
pounds of milk to 33,250 pounds of
milk with a high fat record of 1,186
pounds. Her lifetime credits in
clude 119,550 pounds of milk and
4,432 pounds of fat in 1,651 days.
The granddam classified 3E-93
with a top record produced as an 11
year old of 28,890 pounds of milk
and 1,022 pounds of fat on a 3X
schedule in 365 days.
Marlin and Kathy Hoff hosted
the traditional beef barbecue for
patrons before the sale. The
auction was managed by Rem
sburg Sale Service of Jefferson.
Hawkins warned against
complacency about bovine TB.
“Tuberculosis will continue to be a
threat to dairy and beef cattle until
the last infected herd in the United
States has been eliminated,” he
said.
Incidence of the disease has been
reduced dramatically since its
peak earlier in this century, but
recent figures show bovine TB
reappearing, with 30 tuberculosis
herds reported in eight states in
1985, the largest number reported
since 1976.
Besides Missouri and Georgia,
bovine tuberculosis accredited
free status has been achieved by
Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Con
necticut, Delaware, Indiana, lowa,
Kansas, Maine, Maryland,
Massachusetts, Michigan, Min
nesota, Montana, Nebraska,
Nevada, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New York, North Dakota,
Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode
Island, South Carolina, South
Dakota, Utah, Vermont,
Wisconsin, Wyoming and the U.S.
Virgin Islands.
. vi
f
i '
X