PERIODICALS DIVISION PENNSYLVANIA SIATE UNIVERSITY W 209 PATTEE LIBRARY UNIVERSITY PARK PA 16802-1802 VOL 37 NO. 30 This Special Issue A Tribute To Dairy Farme&sL UNIVEBS And Agribusinesses: Keep Up The Good Work! Lebanon County Is rich in historical artifacts of early United States living, such as the Union Canal Tunnel, which was cut through solid rock so that barges could transport commodities between the watersheds of the Sus quehanna and Delaware rivers. The dairy Industry is also Important to this Dairy Industry Vital To Lebanon Economy, Community VERNON ACHENBACH JR. Lancaster Fanning Staff NORTH CORNWALL (Leba non Co.) Lebanon County’s Holstein breeders are to be the cov er feature in the June issue of the Pennsylvania Holstein Associa tion’s monthly magazine. Profiles. For a variety of reasons, the choice of Lebanon County to grace the Dairy Month issue of the state Holstein breed magazine is fitting tribute to not only the county’s Holstein breeders, but to all of the dairymen in the county for the past three years, Lebanon Coun ty’s members of the Pennsylvania Why Isn’t My Herd Milking Better? LARRY JONES Assistant Professor, Cornell University ITHACA, NY—Have you changed rations four times and feed companies twice, but your herd is still at 58 pounds of milk per day? Nothing you have done seems to increase milk production. What other factors can be limit ing production? Have you considered checking your demographics? Demographics! It sounds like a swear word, but it has a big influence on herd performance. Demographics is the distribution of animals in a herd. (Turn to Pago A 22) Additional DHI News: Pennsylvania Focus Pages CB-C 9, Lancaster Monthly Page D 3 Five Sections Dairy Herd Improvement Associa tion have lead the state on their average rolling herd production. With all production taken into account and compared against the averageftumber of cows, the aver age production in the county drops, but still remains in the top 10 percfnt in the state, according to statistics compiled by the Pen nsylvania Agricultural Statistics Service. But to the Lebanon County community and its economy, the dairy industry and the agriculture industry are more important than simple statistics can signify. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 6,1992 Agriculture in the county is the leading industry and the dairy industry is the single largest ele ment of that A small northern sister to Lah State DHIA Releases Lancaster Herds EVERETT NEWSWANGER Managing Editor LANCASTER (Lancaster Co.) —With 993 requests for trans fer on the table, the Pennsylvania DHIA directors voted to give the Lancaster County DHIA members who had submitted them an unconditional release to have their Using DHI As Dairy Management Program KEN BUTCHER Manager DRPC, North Carolina State RALEIGH, NC—The famous black baseball player. Satchel Page, once said, “If you don’t know where you’re going, you might end up somewhere else.” Good dairy records are essential to “know where you’re going” in managing a dairy herd. A commitment to accurate cow identity and day-by-day recording of all events, coupled with modem record systems, will pay a high return per dollar invested. (Turn to Pago A3O) now largely urban community. In the front are Kirby and Cheryl Horst with their 2-year-old Holstein, Len-Lyn Winken Hope. Standing In the back is Kurt Hostetter with his 5-year-old Dale Pride Specs Betz, which was named grand champion of the Junior show at the state spring Holstein show. tester County, the Lebanon Valley is a limestone-soiled farming mec ca. But for many years, the impor tance of the agricultural and dairy industry was overshadowed by the records processed at Raleigh. The special board meeting to consider these requests took place Tuesday afternoon in the Farm and Home Center after a joint meeting of reconciliation between the Lancas ter and Pennsylvania boards earlier in the day. The move makes Pennsylvania 609 Per Copy Maryland Management Awards Announced LEE MAJESKK Extension Dairy Specialist, University of Maryland COLLEGE PARK, MD—The lop 21 winners of the 1991 Maryland Dairy Herd Management Award (HMA) are listed here, along with the criteria that was developed in 1989, along with dairy producers and county agricultur al agents. Fourteen different management practices are evaluated for all herds enrolled in the Maryland DHI prog ram. Points are given to the different management prac tices based on ideals for each one. The award attempts to (Turn to Page A 33) Cornwall Iron Ore Mine and the Bethlehem Steel Coip and other steel industry manufacturing businesses. (Turn to Pago A2O) the only State in the nation at pre sent with its own Dairy Herd Pro cessing Center (DRPC) that has agreed to allow competition within the borders of jurisdiction. Other states often have several DRPC’s for members to use when they don’t have their own center. But (Turn to Page A3l)