Foraging Around John E. Baylor Director of Market Development Beachley-Hardy Seed Company FORAGE/LIVESTOCK DAY I can’t help it. I must devote this column to a special event that I , hope several hundred of those reading it will want to attend. The event, of course, is our 1989 Forage/Livestock Day sponsored by the Pennsylvania Forage and Grassland Council and scheduled for Wednesday, July 19 at Milton Hcrshcy School Farms, Hershey, Pa. Forage field days at Hershey, sponsored or co-sponsored by PFGC, are certainly not new as the j ; RED ROSE INTRODUCES... 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And with excellent Cooperation and support from the Hershey Farms team, along with many others, every one has been a success.' This year’s field day should be jio different. Promoted as a forage/ Available CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-537-0580 OR MAIL COUPON FOR MORE INFORMATION Name Address Town County m i The exterior of our Country Classic speaks for itself, State (717) 738-4248 Mall To: P.O. Box P-50 • Stevens, PA 17578 livestock day it will be geared to producers of beef, dairy, horses and sheep. Dr. Harold Harpster of Penn State Dairy and Animal Sci ence Department has gone all out to line up a program on year around forage systems that you won’t want to miss. You will see on display all the ways to package forages for winterfeed and have a chance to discuss the pros and cons for each package. The role of pasture for various types of live stock will receive lots of attention, 100, including species, manage ment, fencing and livestock handling equipment. A variety of alfalfa-grass mix tures established last year, along with P.S.U. alfalfa and red clover research trials, will be on dispaly. And weather permitting, and we’re confident it will, extension forage specialist Sid Bosworlh and associates will demonstrate making hay in a day using the lat est hay-making technology. Dr. Richard Adams, dairy nutri tionist, and his staff will be front and center too, with Penn States’ new NIRS Van and equipment to run a forage analysis on a wide range of forages and to help you with your feed formulation recommendations. And there’s more. Dr. Charles i Gardner, a well-known veterina rian, will be on hand both morning and afternoon to lead discussions on forage quality and herd breed ing, while at 7 p.m. Wednesday eve.. Dr. Scott McAllister DVM, will consider health and pasture management for horses. These are discussions that you will want to hear. No forage field day would be a success without the support of our forage-related industry friends. jAnd some 25 commercial exhibi '"tors will be present to share their product line and thoughts with you on how to make your forage program more profitable in the years ahead. Luilch, supper and refresments will be available ,on the grounds. So load up your family and neigh bors and head for Hershey for a worthwhile and enjoyable day. Measure Prosposes Ag Education From Forgiveness Legislation which would enable higher education students of agri culture to have up to $lO,OOO in college loans forgiven has been introduced in the state House, ac cording to Rep. John Barley (R-100). The measure (House Bill 899) would allow portions of guaran teed student loans (GSLs) ad ministered by the Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency to be forgiven when re cipients' work full time on any family farm. The program would allow the forgiveness of $2,500 of a GSL for each year in which the recipient works on a family farm. The proposal is modeled after similar laws enacted to encourage students to enter career fields where demand is high, but supply is low. For instance, education students who agree to teach a cer tain number of years of math or science in Pennsylvania public schools can have their loans for given. This measure is designed to deal with the problem of dwind lihg numbers of farmers in the Lancaster Farming Saturday, July 1,1989-Dl5 For the records, the Pennsylva nia Forage and Grassland Council its motto “Industry, Farmer, Scientist-Working Together To ward a Sounder Grassland, prog ram” is dedicated to the profit able production and utilization of quality forage and grassland. Organized in 1959 with yours tru ly as its first president, ours was the first state council of its kind in the U.S. Today there are more than 30 such councils 1 in the U.S. and Canada with others on the way. And while its membership totals nearly 400, we still have room for lots more members. So when you come to Hershey on July 19, and we hope you do, if you’re not already a PFGC mem ber, bring along an extra $5 and join up. The benefits are many and you’ll find it’s by far the best bar gain in town. state. While the idea behind this mea sure has merit, some of the details of the legislation need greater at tention and, perhaps, amendment First the measure does not spe cifically require that the family farm be in Pennsylvania. While we may be sympathetic to the dwindling numbers of family farms nationwide, we need to en sure that state funds target the problem in Pennsylvania. The issue of funds brings up the second major concern with this legislation. As currently proposed, this program would allow partici pants to obtain full advantage by working on a family farm for only four years. It would also be very expensive to fund at a rate of $2,500 per student per year. The bill could be improved by amending both the funding and timing provisions so that, say, 10 percent of the amount of a student loan could be forgiven for each year of work on a family farm. That would also encourage long er-term work on family farms.