Good Type Puts Big Dollars In This Dairymen’s Pocket HARRISBURG (Dauphin Co.) When the 26th Pennsylvania All-American Dairy Show opens September 25 for a five-day run at Farm Show Complex, one of its most unabashed boosters will be its president, Obie Snider. “Breeders are showing the typy kind of cows that will produce heavy year after year,” this Bed ford County breeder and Master Farmer remarks. Snider noted in the September issue of Pennsylvania Farmer that he has been studying pedigrees 38 years to produce durable, long producing Holsteins. Breeding for type gives you that, he indicates. Obie Snider started farming on his own in 1951 with seven Hols teins. Today, over half the 180 registered cows at Singing Brook Farm are classified Excellent or Very Good and have a current DHIR herd average of 21,228 pounds milk, 773 fat and 658 pro tein. Or 50% more than the stale average. “Supreme Champion at the 1988 PA All-American shows how type, longevity and produc tion mesh,” Snider insists. He says the 10-year-old “Della” from Lylehaven Farm, Vermont, classi fies a lofty Excellent 97 and is completing a 30,000 pound record. “We expect her back at the All- American this month,” Snider notes. Matriarch of the Snider herd is the 15/4 -year-old. Excellent 91 Singing Brook ML Prissetta who just finished a 20,000 pound record. “Her daughter is no slouch either,” he adds. “An Excellent 90, she has a 147,000 pound lifetime record as an eight-year-old.” Eight is about average for the high classified cows at Singing Brook Farm. "A lot of cows produce well for a year or two,” Snider explains in the current Pennsylvania Farmer. “Then teats get injured. They have calving problems. Don’t breed back. Go lame. Breeding for good type helps prevent such problems.” It does at Singing Brook Farm. “We don’t doctor more than one or two cows a month,” he says. Another plus of typy, durable cows are surplus heifers. By keep ing cows in the milk string longer, the Sniders are able to sell 20% of the heifer crop each year. One of the Snider three-year olds sold at the 1988 Pennsylvania All-American Dairy Show for $12,100. Jackbuilt Chairman Mandy in the Singing Brook herd hasn’t changed Snider’s mind about good type and strong pedigrees. An Excellent 92 with such famous sires as Bootmaker, Ivanhoe and Elevation in her pedigree, she averaged 24,710 pounds milk for three 365-day records, then took time off to produce 60 Embryo Transplant calves. Her sons have been sold to major studs world wide. Most daughters have been held back for the Singing Brook herd. One sells at the All- American this year. Snider is partners with his son Perry Dairy Promotion Committee And 4-H Create Giant Sundae NEWPORT (Perry Co.) How much ice cream and choco late sauce does it take to make a 75-foot-long iee cream sundae? Members of the Perry County 4-H program found out on Friday evening of fair week as they assisted the Perry County Dairy Promotion Committee construct the colossal sundae. The sundae, made in celebration of Coopera tive Extension’s 75th anniversary, took about 20 minutes to prepare with over a dozen people scooping ice cream, others distributing the peanuts, whipped cream and cho colate sauce, while still dozens more stood by with raised spoons Bruce, and the milk check still pays most of the bills. “And we don’t baby the cows,” he emphas izes. Herdsman Jim Carman puts 60 cows an hour through a 14-stall carousel. In the seven minute cycle on the carousel, a Singing Brook cow is washed, propped, stripped, milked and teat dipped. “Hard milkers and problem cows self destruct in our system,” according to Snider. “We cull them,” Disposition and ease of milking ready to dig into the delicious dairy treat. Becky Kaucher, Perry County 4-H Coordinator, commented that the construction of the sundae and the resulting feast allowed county FFA and 4-H members a chance to relax and enjoy themselves during a busy week of competition in the showring. While parents and fair visitors watched from the sidelines, 4-H and FFA members prepared the sundae, each foot containing a slightly different mix of ingre dients, obviously determined by the preference of the 4-H member or FFA member standing close by. Dave Swartz, County Agricul tural Agent, remarked that the sundae construction was a unique way to remind the county’s resi- /gcjs Groin Systems Incorporated TOP DRY THE TOP DRY DIFFERENCE! •540T0 2100 BUSHEL BATCH CAPACITY •18'THRU 36' DIAMETERS • USES GRAVITY AS AN ENERGY SOURCE We Have Been Selling, Installing And Servicing This Very Dependable Type Of Drying System For 16 Years. Contact Us For Free Quotation. LOUCKS GRAIN EQUIPMENT INC. R.D. #l2, Box 307 York, PA. 17406 717-755-2868 get high priority. “It’s one of the first questions I get from bull studs,” he says. “Dairymen just don’t have the time or manpower to fuss with cows. Cows have to adapt,” he says. Snider points out that disposi tion and easy milking are highly transmittable... by the bull as well as the cow. Are high scoring, durable cows more fun to work with? “They sure make the trip to the bam a lot shorter,” he grins. ’ dents of the 75th anniversary of Cooperative Extension. He went on to thank the Perry County Dairy Promotion Committee for providing the ingredients for the event, and extended thanks to Dairy Promotion Committee members Beth Rice, Blain and Patty McLaughlin, Elliotsburg for their assistance during’ die event By the way, how much ice cream does it take to make a 75-foot sun dae? Rice and McLaughlin pro vided the following recipe: 10 gallons ice cream 1 gallon chocolate sauce 1 gallon crushed strawberries 2 lbs crushed peanuts 1 gallon crushed pineapple 6 cans Real® dairy whipped cream •DOUBLES AS A STORAGE BIN •ITS AFFORDABLE! •EASY TO OPERATE •LOW MAINTENANCE WTCNT No: 4,137 AM MMAM