A2O-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 27, 1992 (Continued from Pago At) a.m. and 4:30 p.m. schedule to pay the bills. The operation is simple to handle, yet sophisticated in con cept It’s old looking, but modem ly designed. When he and Carol moved to the rural farm, it was not set up for dairying. It had been a steer and hog farm with a chicken house. The chicken house has been renovated into a series of pens with headlocking gates which can be cleaned with a small front-end loader. After the calves are raised to size in hutches, they are grouped together in the pens, which are out fitted with headlocking gates. The bank bam, which Trimble said was probably built about the time that the 1814 stone house was built, was changed from three large pens to a U-shaped freestall bam. The floor of the bam is scraped and the manure stored in one of the first holding facilities built in the county. In the mid-19705, Trimble was one of the first to take advantage of cost-sharing to build the manure lagoon and terrace the sloping crop fields. His interest in environmen tal responsibility has not waned. hi fact, Trimble is involved in efforts to scrap the current prop osed nutrient management legisla tion which would focus on all agri cultural operations and would be enforced by the county conserva tion districts. The group to which he belongs is the Family Farm Movement, ini tiated by neighbor Allen Weicksel. From the Trimble yard. Weick sel’s farm is near one of the large, high-voltage electrical transmis sion line towers that course the western ridge near the Peach Bot tom Atomic Power Station. According to Trimble, the movement is not to discourage environmental responsibility, but to discourage bunieacratic “exper ts” who have singled out farming in the Susquehanna River watershed as the probable cause of the excessive nitrogen which flows into the Chesapeake Bay. *Tt think it’s a real issue for me. If you mess (the environment) up, it’s gone forever. We try to go a good job with the environment and wildlife,” he said. Trimble said that farmers should know about what occurs on their farm and whether they are contri buting to major degradation of an area and its watershed. “I think fanners are more edu cated about the environment, than some of these people. It’s his (the farmer’s) livelihood. We live with it,” he said. He said that what is needed is education, not regulation. However, he said he doesn’t rule out the need for some regulation as long as it isn’t the state Department of Environmen tal Resources doing the enforce ment, and as long as it is “farmer friendly. “I think we are definitely going to need a (nutrient management) program somewhere down the line.” A quiet champion of taking care of agricultural land, Trimble would be difficult to argue with in light of his recognized stewardship and past practices. In 1976 he was the recipient of a conservation award for his work on the farm. An avid hunter, he said he has a strong appreciation for the quality of life benefits obtained through an understanding and caring for the area in which he lives. Environmental Dairyman, Brown Swiss Fancier Also, he said he recognizes the financial benefits of conservation practices. Trimble said that, since he watt to storing the manure and using it when it was most opportune, he hasn’t used any commercial fertil izer, except for lime, on his com for more’ than a decade, perhaps longer. The area is not typical Lancaster County, however. There is a lot of woodland which covers the lower slopes leading to the river. There are areas which protect waterways, though some do course short dis tances unprotected through pastures. A quick check of Peters Creek last week (above the confluence of Puddle Duck Creek), which receives water drained from Dons dell Farm, revealed a wide diversi ty of aquatic insects which are associated with trout streams mayflies, caddis flies, beetle lar vae, etc. Some sedimentation was evi dent in the tails of pools and sidewaters, but the main flow of the stream, and its clarity, seemed above normal for many lower-state Pennsylvania streams. Watercress was growing in the sidewaters and bank conditions were better than average. There were numerous small fish dim pling the slow flowing pools. However, it was apparent that some people have been driving along the unimproved Peters Creek Road and dumping along the banks of the stream such things as cat litter and yard refuse. Not that it couldn’t be farmers doing the roadside dumping, but it is unlikely. Residential growth in the area isn’t strongly evident, but it is growing, he said. Trimble said he’s been dairying all his life, having grown up in the southern Lancaster County region on his father’s dairy farm with its Holstein herd. He said his first association with Brown Swiss came as a youth, when he bought a Brown Swiss calf for a project animal. He does not own any Swiss related to that animal, but he said having that ani mal instilled an admiration for the breed. A couple of yean after graduat ing from school, he worked from 1965 to 1969 for the now-defunct Lee’s Hill Farm in New Jersey. It was a well-known farm, one of the oldest Brown Swiss opera tions at the time. He said he picked up a lot of information there, such as how to artificially inseminate cows, which he continues to practice, instead of using an A.I. technician. He also met his wife Carol while working at Lee’s Hill Farm. Her introduction to the dairy world was through him. Her agri cultural backround was her fami ly’s New Jersey retail flower busi ness. After several years, she got used to cows, Donald said. Trimble is recovering from hip replacement surgery he had recen tly at Lancaster General Hospital. He walks with a limp and some times a cane. As an avid hunter, he said he will be ready for the fall grouse season when he and some friends plan to take to mountains in another part of the state for the arduous walking that is common with hunting grouse without a dog. He also hunts deer and occas sionally goes for groundhog, he said. Currently, while recuperating, he has full-time help for milking. Peters Creek drains the sgricultural highlands along the east bank of the lower Sus quehanna River. This rocky area is located a couple miles below Donsdeli Farm and seems to show at best minimal ar Iture. This rsnnovated chicken house now serves as an older calf-raising facility at Dons* dell Farm. Nancy Ambler from Kirkwood, a 20- to 30-minute drive away, does the milking. In the meantime. Trimble does what he can on the Harm, taking care of crops, making repairs, and feeding. His herd is not on test with the Dairy Herd Improvement Associa tion and he doesn’t try to market pedigree, though he has four Excellent Brown Swiss cows in the bam, all home-bred, and he occas sionally sells calves. He markets his milk in Federal Order 4 through Atlantic Dairy Cooperative and said his Swiss herd is averaging about 17,000 pounds of milk. His grade Hols teins are averaging around 21,500 pounds. Those numbers are strong, but Trimble has been feeding a totally mixed ration for the past 12 years. Trimble also uses a nutritionist, raises his own forages and has pro tein tests done. He purchases some com and feed supplements from the local mills and he is on a herd health program with a local veter inary outfit, with visits every two weeks. He had tried a computer feeder and had previously split the herd into a high and low producing group, but discovered thathelosta lot of production when making the switch from high to low. Now all his milking cows get TMR. Standing In front of a aw. of thraa round hay bales, The computer feeder system Donald Trimble ahows the size of the easily handled bales, remains unused in the bam. and Hs said hs wouldn’t switch back to square, now that hs has (Turn to Pago A2l) thOSO.