A&imatlK Fuming, Saturday,!*#* if, iS92 VERNON ACHENBACH JR. Lancaster Farming Staff BUFFALO SPRINGS (Leba non Co.) The roofs of the pair of poultry houses gleam like a small lake in a valley near Buffalo Springs in Lebanon County. Beneath those roofs are two of the longest turkey raising facilities in the East At 915 feet, they are the longest poultry facility under con tract to Round Hill turkey pro ducts, a $65 million-a-year turkey products producer which has markets in the New England and Middle Atlantic states. Family farm operators Glenn Wenger and son Steve decided to invest a large sum of money in the building when figures showed that it would more than pay for itself within the 10-year contract they have to supply turkeys for Round Hill. In addition, the family was look ing at a way to expand as the fami ly and family needs expanded, said Glenn and Steve during an open house held Tuesday at Wencrest Farm N 0.2. “That’s the way the whole thing is trending,” Steve said, “toward largo’ operations. Bigger family farms. You don’t want to take the family out of-the farm.” And the Wengers have no inten tion of eliminating any immediate family from the farm. But to protect cash flow, turkeys seemed like the answer, according to Steve. The Wengers already raise hen turkeys and milk 90 cows at the first farm. The cow operation could have been expanded, but Glenn said his knees suffer from years of milking cows and manag ing the birds are more to his liking. Glenn lives in the house of the new farm. He’s mainly taking responsibility for the tuikey rais ing while Steve, living at the home farm house, is milking the Holstein milking string with new brother in-law Scott Baker. The milking herd is no slouch, with a rolling herd average of 22,100 pounds of milk. The Wengers also grow 320 acres of com, 140 acres of soy beans, 50 acres wheat and 70 acres of alfalfa for haylage. The com is taken in as silage, high moisture com and the rest is shelled and sold. The cows are fed a totally mixed, ration and achieved higher produc tion because of it, Steve said. In addition, the Wengers raise all the bull calves as steer and Between the two long turkey buildings are feed storage bins connected to an auger pipeline delivery system. The three tanks of propane fuel are used to keep brooder houses at the correct temperature for keeping poults healthy and growing. The win dow curtains along the side windows allows good, adjustable cross ventilation. Long Turke; market them through a Ideal cattle broker. Currently they have 100 Holtein steers getting ready for market Financially, die best bet appeared to be expanding the turk ey operation, they said. They have a minimum guaran teed price of 4 cents per pound, and they can reasonably expect to turn over almost three batches of 40,000 mature tom turkeys each year, weighing about 30 pounds each. The contracting company uses about half hens and half toms for its operation, with recent emphasis going to the value-added products such as smoked turkey, turkey ham, etc., according to John Menges, of New Oxford, represen tative for Round Hill. Menges said that Round Hill contracts for S.S million birds a year to come from 79 different facilities located in a 12-county area within south central Pennsyl vania and northern Maryland. He said that demand for the whole birds has dropped while the demand for speciality meats has increased, thus the demand for the toms. The Wengers also raise hen turkeys under contract to Round Hill. At the home farm, Wencrest Farm No.l, the female birds are grown inside a three-story, 300-plus-foot facility. According to Steve, the hens have a turn around of about 13 weeks with bird weights at about IS pounds. The hens are used for whole bird sales. Chore Time was the supplier of the production equipment, includ ing feeders, feed silos, etc. Richard Eaton, of Salisbury, Md., district manager for Chore- Time, said that the Wenger houses are the longest he’s ever outfitted, east of the Mississippi. The next in line for length is a house 910 feet long in Virginia. The reason for the length of the building comes back to profit margin it’s less expensive to install one long building, thus a reduction in the cost per bird that has to be invested. Also. Steve said he and his father wanted the long buildings because with a brooder facility for 21,000 birds in each building the growing birds can be moved to the finishing stage with relative ease. The first shipment of birds is scheduled for this coming week. First the birds will be kept in the brooder area, which comprises House, Long Future . brooder e;. jneoft. - 5-foot long turkey raising buildings ends where the people furtherest away stand Inspecting the almost completed facility. Along the base of the walls are rodent-prevention concrete barriers. Rows of feeders, waterers and heaters trail back to the end of the brooder section. about a quarter of the three football-field-long buildings. The temperatures have to be controlled and propane heaters are suspended from the ceiling. When those birds are old enough and huge enough, they are moved to the remainder of the long house for finishing out their weight Ideally, the temperature should be kept cool. The buildings are basically long pole bams, with the support posts in concrete footers. A 2-foot-high section of concrete stretches along the walls and appears as a footer, but it’s really a rodent-prevention device. Floors are earthen and can be scraped with a skid-loader. The cement rodent wall should also make less likely any damage to the building during cleaning. Thick gauge chicken wire mesh covers the windows and adjustable horizontal curtains allow for a var ying amount of air movement Fans have been installed also to help move air throughout the building. Jay Zimmerman, sales represen tative for Farmer Boy Ag, the com pany which built and helped designed the facility, said that the building is the longest poultry facility the Myerstown-based swine and poultry systems com pany has tackled to date. Zimmerman said that the specif ic design came as a result of work- Right hand near his ever-present walkie talkie, Glenn Wenger considers a question by an open house guest. The walkie talkies keep the Wengers In constant communica tion, an Important safety and efficiency aspect to their operation. ing with all the businesses involved to determine needs and then proceed with a design which the owners accepted. Steve Wenger said the only real changes to the design provided by Farmer Boy Ag and Round Hill were the additions of more auto mated equipment and a computer. The wood frame is mostly 2-by-4s and 2-by-8s with some lathing-size strips holding up plas tic underroofing. The 6 inches of insulation is blown into the space between the roof and the plastic. The 60-acre farm where the new buildings are located was recently purchased by the Wengers. Settle ment was in March. It had been cash cropped for the last several years and was a dairy farm, before the former owner participated in the federal dairy herd buyout program. The permits required to put up the facility, under local municipal ordinance, included a stipulation that the Wengers had to submit an acceptable nutrient management plan in order to receive the okay for the building permit Altogether, the Wengers farm 600 acres, which is not enough land to adequately sustain continu ous application of the cow and bird manure (including compost). In order to get approval for building permits, Glenn said he had to go to neighboring farmers who have cash cropping opera tions. and ask them if they would take his manure. Three formers signed that they would, giving the Wengers the go-ahead for the poultry houses. Glenn said that he does not have a contingency plan in case some thing happens to the owners of the farms and he is forced to seek alter native uses for the manure. (Turn to Pago A2S)