LVNB Holds Annual Ag Seminar VERNON ACHENBACH JR. Lancaster Farming Staff PRESCOTT (Lebanon Co.) Though snows and cold weather persist, many fanners in the Lebanon Valley region have come to consider the recent annual Lebanon Valley National Bank farmer seminar as the Erst true sign of spring. The seminar is held annually at the Prescott Fire Hall, and this year more than 400 people attended by invitation. The purpose of the seminar is to bring together as many of the bank’s clients and others for an educational day on the latest or most significant cur rent events which affect agriculture. This year, speakers included Kenneth Winebark, Lebanon County Extension agent; state Rep. Sheila Miller, R-Berks; Dr. Lynn Sammons, DVM, large ani mal specialist with Willow Creek Animal Hospital, Myerstown; H. Louis Moore, Pennsylvania State University professor of agricultur al economics; and Albert Murry, president and CEO of LVNB. The program included Moore’s analysis and prognosis for agricul tural commodity prices, based on existing prices, production esti mates, current demand estimates, trading practices, and political environment. Known for his agri cultural outlooks, Moore has been a perennial and frequent speaker at different agricultural seminars and OPEN HOUSE February 24, 25, 26 J Wednesday, Thursday & Friday from 8 to 5 Coffee & Donuts Lunch Served February 25 & 26 from 10:30-2:00 ★ * f \ Walnut Barn & Dairy Equipment Sale and Service 436-9429 436-9066 - - - *★ .*'= —• *★ * * 10% M —Up To 20% Off ** * CASH DISCOUNTS on All \ * On All Parts & Supplies Whole Goods Ordered! * ★ DOOR PRIZES * * Grand Prize Will Be Choice Of: * 1) $l,BOO Worth of OR 2) 4 Westfalia nR 3) 386 Computer J-Star Parts u Visotron Pulsators UM w/Color Monitor & Dairy Plan Software TO BE ELIGIBLE... For Grand Prize Drawing You Need To Purchase At Least $200... Get 1 Ticket For Every $2OO Purchase! FEATURING... PI WasUalla MIIKIng Equlpmaq. Janlaaway 4 stal||na Q Oswalt TMR Mixers OSWALT GSI Grain Systems gSi Lancaster Level Flo Goosenecks & Distributors Ventilation Systems Plus More Equipment On Display and Company Representatives Will Be On Hand To Answer Any Questions You Might Have! \ See Us For All Your Dairy & Barn Equipment Needs.... Walnut Barn & Dairy Equipment programs in the state. Moore also co-writcs a regular column for an agribusiness publi cation, “The PennAg Journal.” Returning for the second year to the podium to discuss nutrient management, state Rep. Miller dis cussed the contents of the nutrient management proposal contained in House Bill 100 (printer’s No. 178), and handed out copies for the audi ence to take home and read. Miller is a freshman legislator in the House, but she has been involved in Harrisburg and agri cultural politics for years, last serving as executive director of the state Senate Agricultural and Rural Affairs Committee. Last year she warned of a large number of farms being projected as going out of business under now obsolete proposals for nutrient management legislation. When it came time to testify during a public hearing last year, she did not get support from researchers who made the projec tions she had told last year’s group. However, last week she said that the old proposal would have affected a large percentage of farms compared to the estimated IS percent who would be required to create a nutrient management plan under the current proposal. She voted for H. 8.100. She explained the process of arriving at the wording contained within H.B. 100 and said she had one reservation with the current You're Invited i 1 i Farm Master Mixers | ww | a i a ,| 717-436-9429 bill, which may be addressed while in die Senate agricultural commit tee. depending on what its chair man and ultimately the Democra tic Caucus decide to allow in amendments. She said her one concern with the proposal is that it does not • specifically address cash-crop far mers who may be overloading their land with chemical nutrients, but do not have livestock, and therefore do not fall within the only defining threshold contained in the H. 8.100 proposal those farms with 2,000 pounds or more of livestock (including poultry) per acre of land (owned or rented). She said it is a concern to her and some others that cash crop far mers are not specifically addressed, but that because chemi cal nutrient use is contained under the list of sources of nutrients to be addressed, it may not be a real concern. Miller, in her former capacity, worked for years on nutrient man agement proposals, receiving cri ticizm for allegedly sitting on pre viously House-approved legislation. However, she said the current proposal is a reflection of much work done while the previously House-passed nutrient manage ment bill was in the Senate Agri culture Committee. Much of the wording and prop osals generated and agreed to dur ing the past year was introduced as -v j/ H Location: On Rl 35, / \ wt t r[ SW olMlftHnlown. / ' ’ i ' Energy Free Waterers legislation late last session, receiv ing bipartisan support of the House. This bill contains much of the wording proposed last session, and it was also amended to reflect additional areas of concern in the agricultural community. She said the audience should read over the proposal and if they have concerns, to talk to their rep resentatives, including her. Using a carousel of slides to illustrate his talk, Winebark dis cussed the industry in the Lebanon Valley, its accomplishments and its diversity. Designed somewhat as a pep talk, Winebark's address also con tained a number of not widely publicized facts about the area’s agricultural character. “It’s important to remember what mark agriculture is making on the community,” he said. Winebark said the changes in agriculture are all around, such as the large dairy freestall, research into robotic milkers, continued improvements in genetics and technology and overall care and understanding of bovines, lengths of poultry and hog facilities expressed in multiples of football fields, etc. He said that farmers and all agri businessmen in the Lebanon- Berks-Lancaster area have a good reason to be proud of the job they are doing. Winebark said that for the fourth year in a row, not only has Leba non County led the state in milk production per cow, but the aver age this past year broke the 19,000 pounds of milk-per-cow barrier. “Fifty percent of the pork in the state is raised in the area,” Wine bark said, adding that not only are the local swine used for meat pro ducts, but hogs are used as a source of valves for human hearts, in the making of insulin, cortisone, cray- * * ★* Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 20, 1993-A37 ons, and of course leather. He also said that while many agriculturalists recognize the strength of the industry in which they participate, they can fail to see the significance of other agricul tural industries within the community. He talked about the area’s 10 million hens, the turkeys, the fruits and vegetables, the 2.S million trout, the area’s $3OO million worth of cow-calf operations, 14.000 sheep, horse production, 300.000 acres of com for grain and the additional 40 percent that goes to make silage, the 100,000 acres of hay, greenhouse operations such as Laysers, which is one of the top 100 producers in the nation with more than 13 acres in green-, houses, the strong ornamental industry, roadside retail markets, bologna, etc. He said that further, there are many food processors in the area which also contribute heavily to the area’s economy, such as Mur ray Steaks, which buys boxed beef from across the country, cuts and prepare the meat products and ships them back out to 17 different states. “Food processors have played an important role and will continue to as long as it continues to be (pro fitable to remain in the area.)” As far as retail markets for the agricultural products, he said that they are also very important, because in addition to providing outlets for local produce, they also impact on the general public, because that is where the general public gets the majority of its experience with agricultural commodities. Further, he said that farmers should think about their total impact on the community, and said they should, “Go out and produce the kind of product your proud to have produced.”