VOL 37 NO. 12 Listen To Customer, Farm Market Panelists Say ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Fanning Staff HERSHEY (Dauphin Co.) —A sellout crowd jammed the Hershey Convention Center Trinidad Room on Tuesday to hear how retail marketers succeeded in the vegetable and fruit farm market industry. More than 400 people attended the afternoon session, “Making Big Bucks Successes and Fai lures in Retail Markets” at this year’s Pennsylvania Vegetable Conference and Trade Show. Farm market representatives from Pennsylvania and other states listened to the panel describe cer tain “secrets of the trade” in run ning a successful direct marketing business. What the panelists agreed on was simple you have to have quality merchandise and the right atmosphere that keeps customers coming back. Quality to start "It’s easier to sell in the market when you have quality to start with,” said BobTrax, Trax Farms, Finleyville. Trax Farms operates a vegetable and fruit production operation on 375 acres and leases another 250 acres. Trax said that the store regularly stocks com, tomatoes, and peaches all through the season, because people come in “day after day’ ’ for those items. He said it is important not only to pick quality produce, but to choose quality employees. Several marketing ideas tried by Trax Farms includes an 8-ounce bottle of cider made into a six-pack version. During the apple season, about 200 bags of seven to eight (Turn to Pago A 34) Lancaster County Farmers’ Association Elects First Woman President LOU ANN GOOD Lancaster Farming Staff ELIZABETHTOWN (Lancas ter Co.) Lancaster County Far mers’ Association chose its first woman president recently. “I didn’t want the job. I don’t have time. And I said ‘no’ two times,” Jane Balmer said. But in typical Balmer style, Jane said, “Somebody’s got to do it I didn’t want to lose the Association so I took the job.” Jane is familiar with doing jobs that need to be done. In 1978, her 39-year-old husband died of a heart attack. “I had two loves: my husband and the farm. I lost my husband, but I wasn’t about to lose the farm,” she said. Through hard work and deter mination, Jane has been able to Four Sections Zoann Parker, Lancaster 4-H agent, shows the design of the special Wlnross truck now available. An order form appears on page 812. Parker will be soon be leaving for Poland to help start a 4-H program In that country. Photo by Andy Oakenbound Farms No. 8 In Nation For Bulls Tested VERNON ACHENBACH JR. Lancaster Fanning Staff RICHLAND (Berks Co.) More than 20 bulls from the Oakenbound herd are in USDA animal model summaries, making the Berks County dairy farm eighth in the United States for the most number of bulls being tested. According to the data, the Oakenbound farm has 27 proven bulls averaging a +124 pound for protein, +1,023 pounds milk and predicted transmitting abilities (PTAs) of +29 protein and +34 fat Impressive, by any standards. And it is not lost on the Trout man brothers. Nelson and Richard maintain two farms with a total of 188 acres. She eventually sold out the dairy cows and concentrates on raising 100,000 chickens, 80 hogs, and about 55 steers. Her two children were teen agers at the time, but now her daughter. Belle, is married and has a daughter, and her 24-year-old son, Bryan, works full time on the farm. Balmer also has a full-time and several part-time employees, but it’s she who does “everything but the mechanical work” to keep the Elizabethtown farm profitable. Her husband had been a member of the Lancaster County Fanners* Association. When he died, Bal mer saw the benefits of remaining part of the Association, which has (Turn to Pag* A 32) Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 1, 1992 Jr., who said they are pleased with the results of their breeding program. But selling breeding stock is a side business. The main business at Oakenbound Farm is running a profitable dairy operation that can pay its bills and maintain two households. They do that by milking an aver age 90 registered and grade Holsteins. “When Butch (Richard Jr.) and I took over, we made some major changes in management to go along with changes in the industry. “My goal is to really be profit able and take care of our cattle so Lancaster County Fanners’ Association president Jane Balmer believes in doing what needs to be done even if it isn’t easy. Widowed in 1978, Balmer has been deter mined to continue fanning. It has not been easy, and Balmer does not foresee easy changes in the farm economy either, but she is convinced that the Pennsylvania Far mer’s Association is the best organization to legislate changes. Agent To Bring 4-H To Poland ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Fanning Staff LANCASTER (Lancaster Co.) Until recently, for the children of Poland, it was all work and no play, which made for some pain fully dull days. But thanks to the efforts of lead ing agriculture experts who recen tly toured the large eastern Euro pean country, some rays of hope for the children and for the coun trywide ag industry are shining in. Several Pennsylvania represen tatives will soon make a journey to the country to further the efforts of youth in agriculture. One of those to introduce the 4-H way of life to Polish children will be Zoann Parker, Lancaster County 4-H agent The children of Poland “work, they go to school, they sleep,’ ’ said Parker. “Again, they work, they go to school, they sleep. They need a social outlet And so 4-H can offer that to them.” Mission to Poland On February 14, a one-month we have longevity,” Nelson said. The family operation is basical ly comprised of a 127-freestall building and a 63-stanchion milk ing bam. There are also calf, heifer and bull facilities, a TMR setup (They have been using TMR for at list IS years and are on their third mixer.), and bunk feeding. The farm sits in a tiny, smooth edged valley north of RL 422, near the Lebanon County border. It’s not very visible from the road except for the roofs of the build ings and the silos jutting high. The soil is deep and good for produc tion of the com, alfalfa and soy beans they raise on the farm’s 60c Per Copy mission to Poland begins for a team of U.S. extension profession als, including Dr. Donald Evans, Penn State University, chair of the team; Dr. Daniel Pfannstiel, Texas A & M Univeristy; and Parker. The team will arrive in Warsaw, Poland, where they will meet and discuss current high school ag cur riculums with the Polish minister of agriculture and food economy. Then, for nearly a month, the team will visit sites in south, west, and east Poland working with the schools, local extension offices, and school administrations, said Parker. “I’m going to be out in the schools and the community, and we are going to start a couple of very basic local 4-H clubs, teach them some of the games that we play that teach leadership skills, how to run a 4-H project, and do some hands-on programming,’’ she said. Parker, working with an inter preter, will be bringing in 4-H pro ject books, such as gardening, rab (Turn to Pago A2O) acreage and the additional rental property. The brothers are in their third year of jointly purchasing the farm from their father Richard Sr., who lives in a house at the mouth of the farm lane where a hand-painted Holstein sign proclaims the entrance to Oakenbound Farm. There’s also a shed and a sign at the lane entrance which advertises the Troutmans’ willingness to take neighbors’ newspapers to use as bedding. Richard Sr. contributes to the operation, doing jobs such as watering and feeding silage to (Turn to Page A 24) 19.00 Per Year