BY MARTHA J. GEHRINGER LANCASTER Few graduating college students would elect to visit Lancaster for their senior trip to study agriculture. However, a group of Danish college students opted for an ag-oriented tour of the United State instead of a trip to France. The 30 delegates from the Denmark’s agricultural college, Grassten Landbrugskole, decided to combine tourism with an education on American agriculture. Prior to arriving in Lancaster on Tuesday, the group spent two days in New York City. Following the Lancaster visit, they headed for farms in the Cambridge area in Ohio and the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia. They planned to conclude their two-week holiday in the United States by exploring Washington D.C. for two days. “We did not want to be just tourists. We wanted to also meet with the people and we felt this was the best way to accomplish that,” David Landis (left), Lancaster County Extension Agent Jay Irwin and Danish Agricultural Attache Torben Milthers respond to questions from the Danish students at Landis’ farm in Lancaster. adc Atl iptK Dairy Cooperative Atlantic Dairy Cooperative Members Here Now In July A Food and Farm Supply Cooperative Buying Service Save on your Food and Farm Supply Purchases. Here are just two of the fine products available to you! ■ Crowloq Foods, Inc Vi* SENECA LAKE GRAPE GROWERS CO-OP We produce grape juice from grapes grown along J F - ~ . Seneca Lake, where the sweetest, most succulent F grapes are grown. Seneca Lake Grape Growers is finest a farmer co-op, like Eastern Milk Producers and we are pleased to know our product is reaching so many new homes. Take advantage of this exciting new service provided by Eastern Milk Producers Dairy Supply Division at no cost to your Cooperative. We will deliver to your area every 7 weeks. -I Atlantic Dary Supply Distribution FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT P 0 80x27l Canton, PA 17724 717-673-3026 f ( het k )mar Mail tor Our has y Ordur_torm Af EASTERN , ALL To2r TS MILK PRODUCERS GUARANTEED COOPERATIVE ASSOCIATION INC explained Hans Knudt Krag, an instructor at Grassten. He noted the favorable exchange rate of the Danish krone to the U.S. dollar made the trip affordable for the 26 students and four teachers on the tour. The students on the tour recently completed a three-year program at the school. The remainder of the 1,000 student graduating class selected France for their senior trip. Torben Milthers, the Agricultural Attache of the Royal Danish Embassy in Washington D.C., compared Grassten to a junior college. Students opted to attend the school after completing nine to ten years of formal education. Grassten, located in Jutland in the southernmost part of Den mark, offers both the ground course and the management course for agricultural students, Krag said. Ag Education Danish Style By completing both courses, Attention! For ADC Members Provides Eastern Milk producers with first quality cultured products. Our yogurts will keep you slim and trim! Danish students from the agricultural school of Graasten Landbrugskole, located in southern Denmark, visited the Lancaster area this week as part of their senior trip. students qualify for a green card a form necessary to buy a farm in Denmark Without the form, Krag explained, a person needs special permission to purchase a farm and does not qualify for government benefits These benefits include no interest rates on the first $30,000 loaned for the first five years. A second benefit is a $5,000 subsidy to pay for lawyers. Krag noted the government extends these benefits to help young farmers get started in production agriculture. Prior to entering the ground course, students must complete a six-month practical course of work on farms. The ground course lasts five months. Drought, flood; blazing heat, freezing cold. Nature ensures that farming is filled with uncontrollable risks.. Economic risk, however, can be controlled. Cooperatives are the proof. Whatever the risk, in markets or inputs, Pennsylvania dairy farmers have joined together in cooperatives for self-insurance. Cooperatives are owned and controlled by the farmers using their services, making them true instruments of self-help. Cooperatives have helped dairy farmers handle risk since the turn of the century. Improved breeding, innovative feeds, assured markets... needed financing, ready electrici ty, reasonable insurance. Cooperatives have been there every step along the way, controlling risk and working in the best interests of their owners Pennsylvania’s dairy farmers. The Pennsylvania Association of Farmer Cooperatives PO Box 1 2 107 Hdiusburq PA 17108-2107 717-232-PAFC Danish Ag College Students Students electing to continue at the college enter the management phase. During this time they must complete an additional year of practice at two different farms one dairy farm and one swine operation. During the practice portion, the students must follow a parallel course of study arranged by the Young Farmer organization. Krag said that the Young Farmer organization in Denmark is similar to the American organization. Throughout their practical study the students learn about raising crops to feed that species of animal. “When they enter school, they CONTROLLING \ RISK / Cooperatives: Keystone of Agriculture a PAFC know a lot about practical items Their weak side is the economics When they buy a farm they will need to know how to handle $300,000 to $1 million,’ - Krag said Students returning to college specialize in either pigs or cows They gain an education in managing the land to produce crops for this species as well as the economic education. Krag stated that approximately 2,000 students begin the ground course and 1,000 students continue into the farm management course. Of those who enter the management course, 80 percent will farm with 25 percent of those students entering the business full