Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, August 10, 1991, Image 33

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    by Willard Jones
It's not often that show stoppers
like Doebler's Precedent and Star
master come along in the alfalfa
business
Precedent is fast out of the
ground at seeding. And it produces
big, like a whopping 8.20 tons per
acre in Penn State's 1990 trials.
Starmaster, a fine stemmed, dark
green alfalfa, led the 5-year trial at
Virginia's Northern Piedmont Ag
Experiment Station with 25.9 total
tons per acre.
So you can understand my
dismay when a farmer tells me
Doebler's seed is too expensive.
"Price is one of the last things to
look at," I almost shout. Then I
cool it and suggest these buying
tips:
Look at performance. Precedent,
for instance, produced 1,84 more
tons per acre at Penn State last year
than the variety that placed No. 38.
Check longevity. Starmaster
showed its staying power in
Virginia by producing 6.89 tons the
fifth year.
Tie seed cost to tons. I put a pen
cil to Starmaster seed cost in that
Virginia trial using 1991 prices. It
was a surprisingly low $2.27 per ton
of hay produced.
Demand good disease protection.
Both Precedent and Starmaster are
resistant to the big five diseases.
Precedent also is resistant to
Aphanomyes, a new alfalfa menace.
The Apron advantage. Don't buy
seed without it. Seed treatment pro
tects Doebler alfalfas from Pythrium
and Phytrophthora during first
critical weeks.
DOEBLER’S
Alfalfa
R.R. 1, Jersey Shore, PA 17740
How to pick
your next alfalfa
DOEBLER’S ALFALFAS
I'm Willard Jones, Doebler's sales manager, with a couple of
winners for you Doebler's Precedent and Starmaster.