A24-Lancastar Farming, Saturday, January 3,1987 DHIA Head (Continued from Page Al) is simply something added to it in terms of service to the dairymen. DHI, which would probably be the next one for scrutiny, is usually looked upon as a two-time-a-day milking. Both weighed. Both sampled. The only difference between this and DHIR is the breed program involvement. Otherwise the testing procedure, the testing codes, the records which are returned are absolutely the same. There is some cost difference for the dairyman because he is not having to pay for the breed sponsored programs. As we come to AM-PM with a timer, AM-PM really cuts in both directions. After the activities of the Holstein Association earlier this year, AM-PM is now an official program for DHIR as well as DHIA. Which means that as we move from DHIR to DHI to the AM-PM, we are not coming downhill. When we go to AM-PM, what we’re doing is looking at and measuring a single milking a day.' Projecting a record from that based upon an interval established by a timer and the statistical basis that we have in which to move. That applies equally to DHI and the DHIR. Normally it will be available at lower cost because the supervisor is required only one time on the farm as opposed to two. So this is really a price option in the program. AM-PM applies to DHI or DHIR. Moving past that to the AM-PM program without the timer, this is recognized as an official program in Pennsylvania. It is obviously of lower cost because it involves again the single measure milking. However, since it does not have the timer, it is not accepted to the breed association for DHIR records. Cattle are not FARM FANS: 1 *1 Modal CMS 1000 H Contimiotis Mutti-Staga 2,015 BPH* Modal A 8 ISO Automatic Batch 210 BPH* E/MH&7J EQUIPMENT, INC. RD 1, Rt. 272 S., Herrville Rd„,Willow Street, PA 17584 Phone 717-464-3321 or Toll Free: 800-732-0053 j indexed under the AM-PM program by USDA. A certain number of daughter evaluations do go through USDA for genetic evaluation. So there is a usage in that area. Indexes will not come off the AM-PM program. AM-PM, as such, is not recognized by all state DHTs as official programs. So it sits halfway in between. When we move past that, we begin to look at such things as owner sample direct service and so forth. These are management records. They are normally at lower cost because of the leas degree of service involved. However, once the sample leaves the farm, the degree of accuracy in terms of testing and quality con trols is absolutely no different than that on DHIA. Q. So if a farmer has given you a good record, he is going to get a good record back? That is correct. When they open the official to the management record, the only real changes are in the sampling and service procedure on the farm. And there it becomes the owner’s respon sibility to provide the accuracy. In terms of the caliberation of the equipment, equipment used to test those samples, processing procedure, you can’t tell the dif ference between that and the DHIR. Q. Let’s move to fat and 501... fat and all the other ingredients in milk that we can test for. It seemed that a lot of times the fat and solids-not-fat will go down the same line and yet we still get paid on fat. Would you like to comment on that and what different parts of milk that can be tested? What is available? What should we be doing along this line? , Without exhausting the subject, once we get into it I think we’re Farm Fans has established a tradition of excellence with gram farmers everywhere by producing the most energy efficient, automatic, arid dependable dryers possible. 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Example, Pennsylvania with its heavy degree of ur banization, with major milk sheds in the Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and other areas has had over the years a higher blend ratio and, con sequently, a higher milk price than say liie uppei uiiuwest. In the state of Wisconsin, for example, about 70 percent of production goes into the hard product. In Pennsylvania it is considerably lower. What does this mean for milk handlers? It means in the state of Wisconsin, most of the people who acquire milk for processing will pay on a protein base and quality. They have every reason to do so. Protein content combined with the quality produce a higher cheese yield, which means more dollars coming out the other end for them. There is every incentive to do it. That heavy degree of incentive is not present in Pennsylvania on the part of the milk handlers because of the higher bottling. We have certain plants which will pay on a protein base. Many of them do pay on quality already. It’s not whether or not it’s going to happen. It’s a question of when. That’s the milk handling side and the impact that it has. Now flip that over to the other side. You’ve got a herd of 60 head out there. You plan on doing business for the next 15 years or 20 or however many. It means that as you look at the herd that you’ve got in your barn, you want the next generation, if your breeding direction is appropriate, to be Mood A Winter Hardy AMaHdt Plant VE.NIB3 Developed for Northern PA and Now York Stale. Mora wiirter hardy than other alfalfa varieties. Bacterial Wilt Spotted Alfalfa Aphid Pea Aphid Anthracnose Fusarium Wilt Phytophthora Root Rot Has some resistance to stem nematode California Grown: If your alfalfa is not over wintering well, try VE-NEB3 Distributed By: Northaimton Countv Soed Co.. Inc. • • m SHVi m ipr m^MFV » WwwVVV W iiilPf James Hoover Rt. 6 Box 896 Lebanon, Pa. 17042 717*933*5370 Duane MWer RD#l-Box6BD Cfinton, Pa. 15026 412-378*8175 Rich-Rojr7*rmi Iss3PenArgyißd. Pen Argyi, Pa. 18072 215-588-7144 GlenSJmonton RDtl Port Royat, Pa. 17086 717-527-4772 better than what you got in the stalls. If this is true, better in what way? One, they should be more economically efficient, which means they’re going to have to match the market at that time. Brought back to home base, what this pieans is that if you’re going to breed in the direction of protein, solids-not-fat or whatever, you have got to be tested at least five years earlier for that in order to provide a statistical base for genetic evaluation. Where the crunch comes is if one does not make those shifts in the testing program at the appropriate time, genetic evaluation is not there, and assume that the milk handling industry changes its pricing base first, you’ve got a lot of catch-up to do. And there is no way you can do it. Q. Is there any indication that the other contents of milk do follow the fat content so that we wouldn’t be totally lost if we made the switch later on? Yes. There is a degree of truth in that. Normally we would expect that a cow which tests fairly high on butterfat is going to be fairly high in protein. Although protein will be lower than butterfat. This has been an assumption for years. It’s one of the excuses we use for not testing for protein, which just flat out ain’t true. We’ve found, for example, sires that had noteworthy credentials for but terfat test improvement have actually gone negative on protein. Other factors involved, so long as one is paid for milk fat with no payment for protein, the incentive is not to move in that direction. The people who are sensitive to the future of the industry, I think, are already looking there. Another consideration, butterfat per centage in production is more P.O. Box 51 Bath, PA 1*064 215»*i7*6332 UltriMtdraM; Peak Alfalfa, IW 38 Alfalfa, Friend Ryegra Mrffttrrtown, Pa. 17059 Schnecksviile, Pa. 18078 DIALERS: DfllKilHllwra RD#lßox4lß 717*436*2883 HausmanrfsFarm Box 173 RDII 218*787*6281 Christian Farmers c/oPegEJ Berry Sussex, NJ 07461 914*728*3688 highly influenced by managerial factors than is protein. Protein essentially is a cow’s foot print. By management factors such as feeding, environment and so forth, you can make small changes on it, but not big ones as you can in butterfat. That will remain essentially stable and it is attached genetically to the cow. Meaning that if you want to make changes in your capacity to produce pounds of protein or percent protein, you better be thinking a long way ahead because feeding won’t do it. Q. I know you’re looking at in novative programs in DHIA. This ARIS program. I’m not so sure that it has progressed to much. Can you give us a little update on it and where we might be headed? There perhaps isn’t a lot that one should be saying about the ARIS program at this point. I think the overall orientation of it might be worth looking at. That is an at tempt to do the customary sample analysis, processing into the main frame. But past that point to enable the dairyman to access, retrieve, massage, manipulate, and reorganize everything that’s in that main frame to come out as a report that he wants without receiving standard hard copy (Turn to Page A3S) David Bird RD #2 Box 122 Catawissa, Pi, 17820 717*388-7403 F.W.Eckat and Som RO #2 Box 384 Clarfc Summit, Pa. 18411 717-586-2822 MariowaStutzman RD #2 Box 78 Mertztown, Pa, 19539 215-6827065 PalmertonFaad and Grain 480DelawareAvc. PalmartorvPa. 18071 215-826-2117 .