Onbei a farm -And a hazar Joyce B Every day is Mother’s day on a dairy farm. Or at least it seems that way. That’s because our livelihood, our economic status, our very moment-to-moment way of life revolves around the continuing cycle of motherhood. For a cow to produce milk, she must deliver a calf. To have that calf, she has to be bred, either arti ficially, or via the more danger fraught method of keeping a bull around. To reproduce she must be healthy, get her exercise, avoid stress, and consume large volumes t* The new ■ NEW I v ioors ■ NEW Simple, trouble-free collector ring redesigned for greoter ease of service ■ NEW Vertical control guide wheel on auger's outer end adds stability when raising the unloader ■ NEW Three-year limited warranty ■ High strength, extra-heavy angle iron frame ■ Heavy-duty double wall reinforced drive ring ■ Super tough chipper wheel shaves silo wall clean ■ Rugged 10" auger with heat treated Zinc Dichromated knives and double flighting on outer end The best Forage Box you can buy is built by Bsipr A Badger Box is built with high strength steel for extra strength and specially treated, exterior grade plywood to resist acids and deterioration. The bolted undercarriage and roller chain drive are designed to take the toughest punishment. And Badger Boxes hold their value. At trade-in time many Badger owners are surprised to see their box worth as much as when they bought it new. FANCY FURROW FARI AG EQUIP., INC. RR 1, Uhler Rd. Easton, PA 18042 (215) 252-8828 CHIDESTER FARMS RD 2, Box 75 Kingsley, PA 18826 (717) 289-4260 FARMER BOY AG 410 Lincoln Ave. Myerstown, PA 17067 (717) 866-7565 of tasty foodstuffs in proper balance of TDN (total digestible nutrients),* fiber, fats, vitamins, minerals and all that good stuff. Making sure this all happens as it should entails regular periodic herd reproductive and health checkups, plus occasional emergency calls, by your friendly local large-animal-practice veter inarian, nutritionist, feed consul tants, supply personnel, extension experts and a whole retinue of support people. That further entails bam builders, equipment suppliers, truckers, equipment Salts & Service RR 3, Mlftlinburg, PA 17844 (717) 986-2720 986-1996 McMLLEN BROS. RR 1. Loysvllle, PA 17047 (717) 7893961 LEONARD WORK RR 3. Brookvilla, PA ISB2S (814) 849-3361 ■ Center-mounted blower allows for further travel betweer doors ■ Simple, trouble-free collector ring redesigned for greate ease of service ■ Quick installation and low cost, the ideal replacement uni ■ High strength, extra-heavy angle iron frame ■ Rugged 10' auger with double flighting on outer end equipped with heat treated Zinc Dichromated knives ■ Heavy-duty chipper wheel shaves silo wall clean 8N2054 540 RPM FORAGE BLOWER High Throw Capacity With Ah Affordable Price! • Cupped paddle design for high throi with minimum horsepower • High-strength steel band • Shear bar design prevents feed carryover • Simple trouble-free shaker pan - fewer moving parts • 54” high capacity fan • Hopper magnet option removes tramp metal RANCK’S FARM EQUIP. SALES IA AO SALES* BD 2 Box 164 PO. Box 200 LoZ»VITO44 (717) 899-7543 < 2ls > 257 5136 /DALE SPREADING DEERFIELD AG & TERRA-VIEW FARMS SERVICE INC. TURF CENTER, INC. nD *• |£*: 7 P* 17740 505 Cliff St. RD 2, Box 212 (717) jso-41 // Hontsdale, PA 18431 Wataontown, PA 17777 CECIL DAIRY STORE (717) 253-2410 (717) 538-3557 374 Biggs Highway MELVIN 6. MILLER BHM FARM EQUIP. INC. Ri,l "o M 0 2i9 1 1 RT 2, Spring Mill*. PA 16875 RR 1, Annvllle, PA 17003 (301)668-6923 (814) 422-8279 (717) 867-2211 HEFLIN SALES & SERVICE , __ 12312 Oak Hill Rd. SHOW EASE STALL CO. p| K EVILLE EQUIPMENT INC. Woodsboro. MD 21798 i M R T 2. Olay. PA 19547 (301) 896-3233 2»2536 ,215) “T- 6277 * Whaal Good, 0,117 people, seed companies, fertilizer firms, and on and on. To say nothing of the twice (someplaces, thrice) daily “mid dleman,” the person or persons who connect the milking equip ment to the cow, transferring the white lifeblood of motherhood from the cow’s production output unit to an automatically cooled tank. And not to forget all those folks that handle, process and market it after it leaves the milk house. This motherhood stuff sure keeps a lot of people busy. But all mothers need a break, a rest period, a little vacation time. We send ours to the dry cow “rest farm” over the hill and down the road a piece, where expectant mothers go to condition their bodies for delivery and await their blessed events. There they can lounge their days away in the pasture or on the straw bedding of the bam, soak up sunshine and nibble grass, hay and silage. No schedule, no structure. But are they happy in this envi ronment of all play and no work? Apparently not. Every few days, or at least recently, these va cationing mothers make a break *G. for greener pastures beyond the “rest farm.” They miss their fami ly, they miss their friends, they miss their work. Actually what they miss most are hearty scoops of high-protein dairy ration feed, a necessity for our milking mothers, but forbid den, fattening food on the condi tioning diet for dry cows. Occasionally our mothers-to-be put on a protest march against their restrictive impending motherhood diets, and make a break to stampede the quarter mile back home to the dairy bam. Or they just go off their diets and chomp up whatever they can find in the closest fields. Sometimes they apparently run off for the sheer excitement of it, like a recent rainy evening we arrived home just after dark to find the house surrounded by 20-plus expectant mothers. We suspect their plan had been to hold us cap- Spring Fling SCRANTON (Lackawanna Co.) If you would like to leant how to exercise and get a good workout, plan to attend Penn State Cooperative Extension’s “Spring Fling” on Wednesday, May 16, at Keystone Junior College from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. Vince Brust, owner of Vince Brust studios, will dis cuss exercise and how to get phys ically fit. The event will also feature Joyce Hatala, Lackawanna Coun ty recycling coordinator. In addi tion, Pam Brown of Milton, will present a picturesque slide prog ram sharing her experiences in Kenya. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 12,1990-B3 live inside and bargain for extra rations of sweet feed a strict no-no on their dry-cow diets. They turned tail and made tracks when we arrived on the scene. As you may have figured, the tracks remain all over the lawn, along with a few other souvenirs of their aborted hostage attempt. But the transgressions of the marauding mothers-to-be are for given and forgotten as the every day miracle of birth begins the cycle again. Even after a quarter century of delivering and caring for these four-legged babies and their mothers, we still take great joy and satisfaction in a warm, wet newborn calf lifting a wobbly head. Motherhood. It really is a miracle. Seems fitting that, at least once a year, we pause to pay tribute to that. Reservations are $8 which includes lunch and speaker fees. For more information or to make reservations, call the Penn State Cooperative Extension office at 963-6842 by May 9. HENRY K. FISHER INC. Sandblasting & Spray Painting \ 1 1,1 1 Aerial Ladder Equipment Farm Buildings Feed Mills Commercial - Industrial Repointing Interior/Exterior 667 Hartman Station Road Lancaster, PA 17601 717-393-6530