82-Lancastar Farming, Saturday, October 12, 1991 Silent Partner Becomes Respected Cattlewoman SHARON B. SCHUSTER Maryland Correspondent UNIONTOWN, Md. Run nymede sits like a pastoral para dise near historic Uniontown, Maryland. Neatly manicured and lovingly cared for, the 165-acre farm is a picture-perfect family operation. Virginia “Ginny” Lambert and her husband, Harry “Buzz” Lam bert, and her mother, Grace Own ings, tend to the farm, perpetuat ing the agricultural heritage at Runnymede established by Gin ny’s father and grandfather in 1942. “I started going to the sales with my father, Theodore Ownings, in 1979. That’s when I really got started,” recalled Ginny. Like father, like daughter, Ginny learned the cattle business quickly by helping her father. “I always was the silent partner with Daddy,” she explained. “After he passed away, I came out of the woodwork.” Ginny and her mother had a difficult decision to make that April whether or not 75-yeais resident kittens at Runnymede. Ginny and her husband, Harry “Buzz” Lambert, have seen more than 100 head of steers pass through the loading chute where they are perched. to continue raising steers. “Dad died on April 8, 1988. We got catde.the following Friday,” said Ginny. More than a decade and a thou sand steers after she started, Run nymede is not only an efficiently run operation but also a way of life. “To me, April is Christmas,” said Ginny. When the first green grass of spring blankets the rolling meadows of Runnymede, Ginny heads for the sale bams of Virg inia in search of 100 to 125 steers. “I go to the graded sales. They usually have better quality cattle,” said Ginny. The cattlewoman knows from her years of experi ence that the “medium 1” grade are the best for her. The markets of Culpepper, Winchester, Mar shall, and Madison, Virginia offer graded cattle in lots of 50 to 60. “As a rule, they’re fairly uniform. We buy steers at an average weight of 650 to 700 pounds. Even though Ginny raised a Hereford for a project as a child, she now appreciates the qualities Raisin, one of the many Glnny Lambert that white-faced black cattle offer. “I like crossbreeds better. They gain weight better and we have very little sickness.” she reported. Ginny runs her operation effi ciently, down to every detail. “I bought 66 (head) in Marshall at 8 p.m. I stopped along the way home and called Keilholtz Truck ing in Thurmont, they hauled for my dad, and at 1:30 ajn., the steers walked off the truck. At Runnymede, the steers are kept on the 125 acres of pasture until October when they are sold to an order buyer to be placed in a finishing operation. “They never see the bam except when they are unloaded, loaded, or if they need medical attention,” she said. The white bank bam is usually filled with hay, but this year the hay that they made on shares of 21 acres was needed for feed. “We had this bam stuffed with hay before the drought. It was full, but we fed several thou sand bales. We fed 40 bales pa day from June to September,” said Ginny. J*. The bam is Ginny’s domain at Runnymede. “Buzz gave me an automatic head gate for Christmas last year, and I got a generator the year before that,” she recalled. The barnyard wall bears the date 1910. And, it also bears Gin ny’s initials. ' / \ ■ M “She put the barnyard wall back together last year,” said Buzz proudly. “Frost had gotten into it.” Ginny said she started putting her initials on her handiwork ; \ a close on the y -•« left, with her mother, Grace Owlngs, pauses under the shade of a huge oak tree at Runnymede. around the farm a tradition her eye-pleasing landscape, that it was father began years ago. selected as a site for the filming of Runnymede is tended to care- a Quaker Oats cereal commercial, fully by the whole family. The The sun rises behind the bam long lane that leads to the home- every morning and floods the big stead if flanked by postures full of country kitchen with golden light free-grazing steers. Curious _ j us t the effect the producers bovine momentarily shift their werc looking for. attention from the lush grass to see “ft was like sitting there waiting who is driving through their pas- a baby to be bom,” recalled ture. There is “Bubby, Moldy. Ginny. “It was a cold morning, P.T. (named after the manager of and they had 20 minutes to shoot the Winchester stockyard). Moldy that scene. The commercial ran for and the Preacher who spends more about 6 months and Runnymede time on his knees eating under the received nationwide exposure.” fence.” The lane eventually leads A sign at the entry announces, to the lovely white farmhouse, “Pet Walking Area.” It is a remin where huge trees stand as sentries der to visitors to drive cautiously, in the yard. and yield the right-of-way to the Runnymede presents such an (Turn to Pag* B 3) c faips