Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, April 07, 1990, Image 170

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    (Continued from Pago 015)
bushels per acre; Group S- 124.0
bushels per acre.
Average Yield by Cultivation
Group: No cultivation- 140.4
bushels per acre; One cultivation
-139.1 bushels per acre.
Average Yield by Weed Con
trol Group: Good weed control
-141.6 bushels per acre; Average
weed control- 124.6 bushels per
acre; Poor weed control- 92.5
bushels per acre.
Average Yield by Row Spacing
Group: 30 inch rows- 146.7
bushels per acre; 32 inch rows
-125.3 bushels per acre; 34 inch
rows- 120.0 bushels per acre; 36
inch rows-131.0 bushels per acre;
38 inch rows- 132.0 bushels per
acre; 40 inch rows-113.0 bushels
per acre.
Average Yield by Fertilization
Group: Fertilizer plus manure
-140.8 bushels per acre; Fertilizer
only- 139.6 bushels per acre.
Average Application of Plant
Nutrients: Nitrogen-178.4 pounds
per acre; Phosphorus- 102.3
pounds per acre; Potassium- 90.0
pounds per acre.
9.5 percent cultivated at least
once.
49.4 percent did not use a soil
insecticide and averaged 134.2
bushels per acre.
50.6 percent used a soil insecti
cide and averaged
Some Corn Planting Reminders
per acre.
92.1 percent used atrazine or a
pre-packaged mix containing
atrazine.
43.4 percent used conventional
tillage and averaged 134.6 bushels
per acre.
17.2 percent used no-till plant
ing and averaged 151.4 bushels
per acre.
11.9 percent used chisel tillage
and averaged 142.9 bushels per
acre.
23.2 percent used chisel and
disk tillage and averaged 147.0
bushels per acre. .
For the 96 growers who submit
ted most-of-production data, the
average yield was 140.1 bushels
per acre. Their average total cost
was $261.20 per acre of $1.92 per
bushel.
Farmstead Planting
Bob Graves, Penn State agricul
tural engineer, offers the follow
ing observations to help anyone
planning to change a farmstead;
• We build buildings too close
- too close to each other, too close
to roads, streams, and property
lines and even too close to the
ground to allow good drainage of
water away from the building.
• We limit access. Access is
limited for milk trucks, fire trucks,
delivery vehicles, silo filling, and
even fresh summer breezes.
• Farmsteads are not static. We
are always adding things like
silos, grain tanks, buildings, roads,
and yards. Have you left enough
room?
• Everything is getting bigger.
Trucks and farm machinery keep
getting longer, wider, and heavier.
Docs your farmstead plan accom
modate this?
As the 1990 building season
starts to rev up, think about these
points whenever you are involved
in changing farmstead facilities.
Drinking Water For Pigs
To design or evaluate the water
supply for a swine facility, flow
rate (quantity per minute) is more
important than quantity per animal
when nipple waterers are used.
Use the following flow rates for
nipple waterers, based on manage
ment groupings:
• 10- to 2S-pound pigs - 1 cup
per minute.
• 25- to SO-pound pigs - 2 cups
per minute.
• grower pigs - 3 cups per
minute.
• finishing hogs - 1 quart per
minute.
■ sows and boars -1 to 2 quarts
per minute.
■ lactating sows - 'A gallon per
minute.
STi
cum
rm
FS3B
HARD-WORKIN
See Your L
BechtelsvHle
PASSMORE SERVICE
CENTER, INC.
RD 1, RL 100
215-367-9084
East Earl
GOODS LAWN & GARDEN
CENTER
Rout* 23
717-354-4026 Ext. 34
Elm
BOMBERCER’S STORE, INC.
OS* W. Newport Rd.
717-685-2407
Eohrata
WES STAUFTER
ENGINES & EQUIPMENT
23 Ploooonl Volley Rd.
717-738-4215
Eohrsta. Hershev. Lancaster
HOLLINGER’S LAWN &
GARDEN EQUIP.
Ephrete, PA 717-738-1131
H*r*h*y, PA 717-533-4060
LtneaaMr, PA 717-856-2710
Gao
GAP POWER EQUIPMENT
Corner ol RL 30 A Rt 007
717-442-6970
Livestock Profits Have
Been Limited
Strengthened livestock prices in
the mid-1980s may have led pro
ducers to believe they were mak
ing money. But aggregate data on
livestock producers, summarized
by the USDA’s Economics
Research Service, indicate
otherwise.
When expenses, including cash
costs and capital replacement
costs, are taken into account,
expenses have outrun receipts for
most livestock during most of the
period between 1972 and 1988.
The picture becomes even more
alarming when receipts and
expenses for the period are trans-
MUC
IT'S FITNESS
YOU CAN DUNK.
jgk. <*igl
homeowner trimmer
I Dealer For A Demonstration
Hamburg
SHARTLESVILLE
FARM SERVICE
RD I, Box IM2
21S-4M-1025
Jonestown
BLUE MOUNTAIN
ENTERPRISES, INC.
Rt. 72 South
717-865-2994
lebanan
THE FARM WORKSHOP
1011 Fonderwhlt* Rd,
717-273-9540
EBLING LAWN &
GARDEN SERVICE
•M E. Lincoln Av».
717-8666720
Ono
SHUEY’S SALES & SERVICE
Jonoolown Rd,
717600-4015
Oxford
OXFORD GREENLINE, INC.
1100 Llmooton* Rd.
210632-2073
lated into constant 1988 dollars.
In 1988 dollars, receipts fell
faster than expenses, and many
producers experienced losses.
Cow-calf producers experienced
only three profitable years, and
feedlot operators logged profits
only once. Farrow-to-finish opera
tors were the second most profit
able producers as a group, cover
ing expenses nine times during the
period.
Sheep producers were the most
profitable as a whole. Aggregate
data show that the nation’s sheep
producers made enough money to
cover expenses in 16 of the 17
years.
LIGHTWEIGHTS
Ronks
A & B SALES & SERVICE
2 MOm South of Rt 21 Along 772
Thru Montoroy • RD 1
Y
95
Sale Ends 4/30/90
WAKEFIELD SAW SHOP
742 Nottlnghtm Rd
Somerset. PA
McCoole. MD
LINCOLN SUPPLY &
EQUIPMENT CO.
Somorool, PA SI 4-443-1691
McCoolo, MD 301-78S-SBOO
Watsontown
BEILER’S REPAIR
1 Mi. W. of Turbotvlllo
On RL 44
RD 2, Box 54
West Chester
M.S. YEARSLEY & SONS
110-120 E. Morhot SL
215-696-2 MO
Distributed By
Keystone Stlhl