A22-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 12, 1988 BY BETH N. GRAY Bedford C. Correspondent LOYSBURG Sarah Ann Baker’s schedule reads as if she’s trying to make up for all (he young people who don’t get involved, a fact about others for which she feels badly. The 1988 Bedford County Outstanding Holstein Youth, named at the annual ban quet of the County Holstein Club here last week, said, “There are a lot of ways for people to get involved. It seems like most youth don’t want to get involved.” The 18-year-old daughter of J. Allen and Norma Baker of Bed ford, RIM, has been building her registered Holstein herd since she first joined the Friendly Moo- Moos 4-H Outsat age eight. She recently joined the newly organ ized County 4-H Dairy Judging Club and says she’s looking for ward to involvement in a Youth Dairy Bowl, if the tentative project should get underway. She also belongs to the County 4-H Teen Club. The senior at Bedford Area High School is a full-fledged worker at Alienor Holsteins, own ed by her parents. She arises daily between 4:30 and S a.m. to ready the bam for milking, to feed the calves and to bed the cows. In the winter she helps to hay cows in the evening, cleans the milk tanks and finishes odd chores. And in the summer she helps with haying as well. Outstanding Holstein Youth Gets Involved All are experiences that Baker appreciates. In her essay that helped her earn the “Outstanding Youth” title. Baker wrote: “Farm ing is always challenging and a stimulating experience for me. I look back on all the years of grow ing up on a farm and it fasc/iptes me to know that I have seen a Beau tiful life created and brought into this world as a calf.” As the young woman has built a family from her original calf. Alie nor Sun Lisa, she’s won reserve champion female at the Bedford County Fair five times. A disap pointment has been the lack of a grand championship. “That’s what I’d like to get this year.” she noted. Another disap pointment has been an abundance of bull calves. Her cow family today includes Lisa plus her daughters Alienor Citation Lin and Alienor Belle Linda plus Linda’s offspring. Alienor Torn Lydia. Baker is conversant in DHIA numbers and classifications. All of her cows have classified Very Good. Their most recent records; Lisa, a 5-year-old: 20,338 lbs, milk and 694 lbs. butterfat; Linda, a 4-year-old: 17,000 lbs. 'milk and 563 lbs. butterfat; Lin, a 3-year-old: 19,500 lbs. milk and 712 lbs. butterfat; Lydia, a 2-year-old: 15,300 lbs. milk and 624 lbs. butterfat “They’re a good family for milk production,” she said, yet added that she’d like to bring in an out-of- family female for her 4-H effort this year. She expects to be able to show the new animal to a 4-H’er from the South. Baker is looking for ward to hosting an exchange 4-H’er for a week during the com ing summer. Last summer she her self visited a Kansas 4-H family for a week, after serving as hostess at Alienor the previous summer to a Kansas 4-H’er. She did all that amidst two suc cessful seasons learning coopera tive enterprise. In 1986 she advanced from the county to the regional and to the state Institute of Cooperative Education sponsored by the Pennsylvania Association of Farm Cooperatives. At the latter she was chosen to take part in the American Institute of Cooperative Education at Knoxville, Tenn. Last summer she served on the scholar staff for the PAFC institute. Baker is likewise busy at school where she has lettered on the track team, is secretary and treasurer of the local chapter of Students Against Drunk Driving, is a mem ber of chorus and its elite group, the Varsity Singers. She also serves as a library aid and is an honor roll student. As a community service effort. Baker helps conduct a weekly story hour at the public library for pre-kindergarten children. She teaches Sunday school and is lec tor at her church. The Alienor farming enterprise includes 150 registered Holsteins in milk-- “three are Excellent and more than 30 are Very Good,” Baker notes -- and some 600 acres of owned and rented land in com. The young woman is undecided alfalfa, mixed grasses and soy- about her career. “I have so many beans. Her father has won honors interests and there are so many as Pennsylvania’s best alflafa things to do,” she says. Her agenda grower in four years since 1982. spells it out Census Counting On Farm Operators WASHINGTON, D.C. Far mers and ranchers have you returned your 1987 Census of Agriculture form? The U.S. Cen sus Bureau says the form was due February 1. If you haven’t, the bureau asks you to please take a few minutes to complete it Use your best estimates if you don't have the information in your records. Return your forms to the Census Bureau even if you did not grow any crops, or have any lives tock, poultry, or other agricultural products in 1987, so the bureau can correct its records. If you have questions or need help filling out your form, call the Census Bureau’s toll-free number, 1-800-233-6132. Indiana residents should call 1-800-233-6135. You also can obtain help from local offices of the Cooperative Exten sion Service, Soil Conservation Service, Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service, Far- mers Home Administration, and vocational agriculture teachers. The census shows how farmers in each county stand today com pared with five years ago how they are doing compared with far mers in other counties. It provides a picture of the number of farms, farm size, production, sales, and the financial health of agricultural producers. The agriculture census, an unbiased accounting, gives a clear picture as to changes that are taking place. This picture of the agricultural production industry is studied by both the public and private sectors to help chart the future. Here are some examples: * Farm organizations use the facts to plan programs and evalu ate legislative proposals. * Congress uses the census of agriculture data for evaluating and developing legislation. • Farmer cooperatives use county-level agriculture census numbers to evaluate the need for grain elevators, and other services to farmers and ranchers. • Feed manufacturers use agri culture census livestock numbers to define their market potential down to the county level and to determine equitable dealer territories. • The U.S. Department of Agri culture uses agriculture census data in estimates of farm income and other economic indicators for the farm sector. • The Farm Credit Administra tion uses agriculture census results to formulate and evaluate farmer loan programs.