Farming, Saturday, Uarch 10,1090 On tain a farm -And o hazar Joyce B The robots are coming! The robots are coming! Maybe sooner than we think. For years .... decades .... prob ably centuries, people who milk cows have periodically pondered what it would be like to not have to cover milking chores twice a day, every day, seven days a week, Christmas, Easter, July Fourth, New Year’s Eve, birthday, anniversary, and ad infinitum. Those far-sighted foreseers who look ahead to science-fiction technology have envisioned for some time the likelihood that the day will come when that very thing will happen. Someday, the speculation proposed, robots will be devised to milk cows, thus eli minating the drudgery (well, on some days it seems that) of twice a-day, every day, Christmas, Eas ter, etc. You can stop chuckling. The robots are coming. In fact, one has already arrived. The only one in the world cur rently resides in the Netherlands. Which is not surprising, in light of the fact that, smart as we like to think we are, much of our “new” technology these days originates elsewhere in the world. Now the robots are coining into our back yard, with the recent signing of an agreement between the pioneering dairy-robot com pany, Gascoigne-Mellotte, and the University of Maryland. A research robotic milking setup is reportedly to be in place by the end of the year for use with the University’s 150-head milking herd at Clarksville, Maryland, just outside Washington, D.C. I confess to being “udderly” fascinated with this whole idea. Computerization, of course, is the foundation of the system. Cows wear electronic identifica tion, already a proven method in today’s most ultramodern milking and feeding systems. The compu ter I.D. signals the unit to allow a cow into the stall, supplies her with an amount of feed dependent on her production, and adjusts the milking units to fit the cow’s udder “arrangement”. It also sig nals such things as body tempera ture, flagging changes which might signify sickness or repro ductive cycling. Udder area is automatically washed and propped for milking before what the engineers label the “automatic cluster attacher” fastens individual units to each PUWNmjWE teat. When milk flow ceases, auto mation removes the robot milker and disinfects it prior to use on the next herdmate. Like any other emerging tech nology, there are undoubtedly numerous “bugs” to work out of the system. How, I wonder, will it be affected by a nervous newcomer heifer shifting around and “danc ing” at the unfamiliar feel of a milking machine. Will there be another robotic arm to soothingly talk to her and gently pat her flank until she feels comfortable with the milking process? We registered breeders striving to put together good cow families sometimes keep around a few proven, pedigreed old cows with udders lowered or perhaps tilted with age, due to their ability to produce outstanding offspring. How much problem would be posed by a less than perfect udder? j Or how about a high-producing .young cow that may have injured |a quarter, but still milks well in the i remaining three? Would that fit in the robotic system? i And what about those inevit able high-strung gals, good pro ducers and reproducers, which 'nevertheless let a foot fly and remove the milkers themselves on occasion? Could you afford a back-up for breakage? Speculation is that a unit might run upwards of $90,000 and would obviously be sensitive equipment due to the nature of the technology and mechanics. Can’t you just imagine the potential end result of a piece of equipment of that cost and sensitivity when it meets the I-mean-business end of an irate 1,800-pound cow’s back foot? Despite the inevitable hurdles, robot milkers will surely become part of the future dairy business, as routine someday as the once gee-whiz technologies of artificial insemination and embryo transfer. Yes, indeed, the robots are coming. But I’m not going to start study ing the help-wanteds just yet BIG FACTORY DISCOUNTS HELPYOU SAVE BIG AT YOUR JAMESWAY iventory of very best in prices and service—right now! Your all Jamesway parts so that when you need something participatingjamesway Dealers have factory fixed or replaced, you don't have to wait, discounts and other ways to help you save on all We think you're entitled to that kind of service Jamesway ring drive unloaders, pack drive I and these new, red hot savings and we want to be unloaders, feeders, conveyors, bam cleaners, HH I one of your major suppliers. Stop in soon at your roller mills—you name it.Aiso remember this: | jamesway Dealer or give them a call. 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