REBATE RIOT with your dealer; then get these big factory discounts direct from Jamesway. Factory rebatemay be deducted from sale price at time of sale or mailed directly to you after the sale. It’s your choice. Rebate Schedule 12'unloader 14' unloader 16' unloader 18'unloader 20' unloader 24' unloader J-STAR Industries, Inc. 801 Janesville Avenue, Fort Atkinson, W 153538 414-563-5521 Number one in value —and moving up! STAR SILOS Myerstown, PA 17067 ERB 6t HENRY 717-866-5708 EQUIPMENT INC. Beiilnvllle, PA 19545 JAMBS L. HOSTETTBR 210-367-2169 McVeyfOwn, PA 17051 717-899-6386 PENNSYLVANIA LG. SALKS llverdale, PA 18962 218-257-8135 LAPP’S BARN equipment ILBB ft SERVICE Gap. PA 17527 717-442-8134 PRINGLES FEED STORE, INC. SOLLENBERGER Greenville, PA 16125 SILOS CORP. 412-588-7950 lambersburg, PA 17201 717-264-9588 rovendale supply HARRY TROOP Watsontown, PA 17777 ochranville, PA 19335 717-838-5821 218-893-6731 OR 1-800-232-DALE THE Make the best deal you can make $675 Rebate $7OO Rebate $725 Rebate $750 Rebate $775 Rebate $B5O Rebate SOMERSET BARN EQUIPMENT Somerset, PA 15501 814-448-5588 Heavy duty unloader includes these exclusive features: • Stainless steel blower wrapper • Stainless steel reversible paddles •Roughage auger • Cast iron weights and drive wheel • R.O.S.E. safety control GNEGT SURGE SERVICE Washington, PA 15301 412-222-0444 HOOVER EQUIPMENT Tyrone, PA 16686 814-684*1777 TRACTOR MART Frederick, MD 21701 301-663-6060 MD 6c VA MILK PRODUCERS ASSOC. Frederick, MD 21701 301-663-6552 GEORGE COLEMAN Elmer, NJ 08318 609-358-8528 MARYLAND gladhill Lancaster Farming Saturday, December 14,1991-D5 Wildwood Farm Is Second Best For Mastitis Control JUDY PATTON Union Co. Correspondent At Wildwood Valley Farm in Lewisburg, the Pennsylvania Dairy Herd Improvement Associa tion (Pa.DHIA) mastitis manage ment program is an integral part of the tender loving care given to each cow. As a result, Steve and Ruth San ders won second place in Pa.DHIA’s first award program for the most improved low somatic cell count in 1991. Somatic Cell Counts (SCQ are a measure of the quality of the milk and an indication of the health of a milking herd. Infections of the udder raise the number of somatic cells which are released into the milk. The lower the number, the healthier the herd. One cow with a high SCC can raise the count of the entire bulk tank milk, decreasing its value. Therefore, management tech niques which prevent the spread of (he various forms of mastitis are useful in creating a profitable dairy. During the past year, the San ders had a 35 percent improvement in their average SCC linear score, reaching a score of 2.6. Their herd’s average raw county of 74,000 put them in first place in Union County. In addition to getting more milk from having a low SCC, the San ders receive a quality milk bonus from their milk cooperative, Dairylea. At the end of the year, Dairylea Cooperative Inc. sends a bar graph which shows the monthly raw counts and linear scores. At Wild wood Valley Farm, the bar graph reported excellent-range results almost eveiy month. The Sanders herd has been on the Pa.DHIA mastitis program ever since it started, so Ruth and Steve have monitored their 18 registered Holsteins and two Jersey closely. During lactation, any cow .im v,. -“A ■" " -"Hr *”■* - -ii j|, , Penn-Atlantlc Region P.O. Box 43 -- i Elizabethtown, Pa. 17022 Jjla 717/367-1178 Southeast Pa & N.J. • Ted Holt (215) 398-7742 Western Pa Robert Smola (412) 942-0125 whose county goes up is immedi ately tested by culturing milk sam ples to determine the cause. The cow is then treated. Cows that chronically have linear scores of 4 or above are culled. Because the Sanders are “natur al” fanners who don’t use antibio tics, they are on the “Impro” masti tis program. A month before dry ing off the cow, they send a culture sample in to the company lab. When they get their results, they treat with an injection of “Impro,” a whey product, into the vein of the tail. The culture and treatment (as required) series is repeated at least twice two weeks before freshening, and on the day of freshening. Even in the worst summer heat, the Sanders have maintained a 35,000 SCC. How? During the summer, the cows are kept in the bam during the day and are left to pasture over night. Also, while in the bam, the bed ding is either newspaper or straw. The couple milks three times a day, and Ruth sprays the teats with a Chlorohexadine dip before milk ing and dries them with a paper towel. After milking, she applies to the teats the same spray, but with, glucose added. The setup in the bam and milk house is based on two vacuum pumps one runs two bucket milkers and the other operates the dumping station. The milking sys tem is sanitized before each milk ing, and the units are completely taken apart for thorough cleaning every morning. Inflations are replaced every other month. The current rolling herd average for the Holstein herd is 20,830 pounds of milk, 813 pounds of fat, and 639 pounds of protein. Ruth and Steve took over the farm six years ago from Ruth’s father, Ray Yerger. Ruth’s grandfather bought the farm in 1927. The Sanders worked as breeding technicians before farming. FARM Livestock • Storage • Utility HORSE Barns • Riding Arenas • Open-Sided Shelters COMMERCIAL Office • Warehouse • Retail Over 35 years of design-build experience and expertise m providing turnkey solutions, competitively priced with a variety of financing options For more information contact AGWfiY BUUMNGS. (aow*y| 1 f 1 South Central Pa Kyle Nicholas (717) 633-5435 Northeast. Pa. Don Hohn 717-663-2929