Vol. 38 NO. 31 The Meyers family and friend gather at their farm lane and signpost. From the left, in the rear row, are Joel Mills, an employee, and Mark, Alan and Kendra Meyers. In the front are Whitney, Ashley flagrant and one of the family dogs. Family Dairy Focuses On Merchandising BONNIE BRECHBILL Franklin Co. Correspondent GREENCASTLE (Franklin Co.) Tidy-Brook Farm in southern Franklin County may soon be home to the top cow for protein in the United States. Tidy-Brook Elton Sonja-ET, a daughter of Emprise Bell Elton, has the potential to rank as the highest protein cow of the breed in the July run. She is up against Strawberry Pay-Off Day LOU ANN GOOD Lancaster Farming Staff LANCASTER (Lancaster Co.) How much are two quarts of strawberries worth? If it’s Neil Wenger’s strawber ries, it is $2OO. At least that’s what an anony mous bidder was willing to pay at the annual Lancaster Rotary Club Strawberry Roundup on Wednesday. Neil’s berries were judged the best displayed, most flavorable, and most uniform in size of the 19 entries that county 4-H’ers brought to the Farm and Home Center for judging. The reserve champion ribbon went to Joel Leaman for his berries that sold for $5O to David Fried richs of Lancaster. Both boys considered the high prices a superlative payoff for the sweat, time, and frustration they invest in maintaining the strawber ry patch year-round. Wenger said that he got up at the crack of dawn to pick berries for (Turn to Pago A3l) Four Sections more than one million cows for the honor. A member of the well-known Sally family of Holsteins, Sonja is currently milking 111 pounds a day into her sixth month on test Alan Meyers, 28, and his father, Mark, farm Tidy-Brook’s 210 acres in partnership. They rent an additional 80 acres, and raise com, alfalfa, small grains and soybeans. Alan and his wife, Kendra, and Lancaster County 4-H’er Neil Wenger, center front, holds the berries that an anonymous bidder bought for $2OO. Reserve champion Joel Leaman, center back, earned $5O for his berries purchased by Dave Friedricks, left, and auctioned by Harold Keller standing next to 4-H Extension agent, Zoann Parker, right. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 12, 1993 children Ashley, 7, Whitney, S, and Grant, 2V4 , live in the stone and brick farmhouse. The Sally family has been at Tidy-Brook for as long as anyone can remember. “The right genetic combination happened. It was nothing we did special, it just showed up here,” Alan said. He is on a full-time flushing program with Tidy (Turn to Pag* A 26) Farm Tax Reassessment Topic At Ag Forum EVERETT NEWSWANGER Managing Editor "Things without all remedy should be without regard: what’s done is done.” -Shakespeare. LEOLA (Lancaster Co.) —This doesn’t mean farmers, agri business leaders and even county commissioners like the forced property reassessment program that’s under way in Lancaster County. In cases brought by the City of Lancaster, several lower courts ruled in favor of the county commissioners who did not believe reassessment was neces- Grafting Ensures Delicious Kernels ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Farming Staff ELIZABETHTOWN (Lancas ter Co.) What do you get when you cross a hickory nut with a pecan? A “hickan,” of course. In that combination, the rich, full flavors of both nut tree variet ies are accented to produce a truly memorable kind of kernel, accord ing to Jay R. Book, president of the Pennsylvania Nut Growers Association. There’s no better time of year to ensure the nut tree you may be growing produces a fine kernel, with a large edible center, full flavor quality, and that cracks easi ly than by learning how to graft properly. Each year, the third week of 609 Par Copy sary. But the Superior Court over turned the lower court’s ruling, and Lancaster City forced Lancaster County to reassess all property to the tune of eight to nine million dollars. One mill represents approximately three million dol lars in Lancaster County’s economy. At the Ag Forum Thursday morning, many concerns were voiced about the effects of the reas sessment on agriculture in Lancas ter County. One of the most force ful statements was made by one of (Turn to Pag* A 33) March, the Association holds a Nut Grafting Workshop at the Dauphin County Agriculture and Natural Resources Center. It is scheduled for March 19, 1994 at the Center, 1451 Peters Mountain Jay R. Book, Pa. Nut Grow ers Association president, demonstrates grafting a hick ory nut tree in a series of steps on page A2B. Rd., in Dauphin, according lo Book. There, demonstrations on grafting arc given to those who are producing varieties for sale or for those who discover they’ve inher ited a a nut tree in the backyard and want to obtain the best kernel available. The workshop educates nut growers on how “to gel a bigger nut, retain the flavor, and look for the quality of nut that’s easy lo crack,” said Book. The 200-membcr Association meets regularly to discuss grafting techniques and to learn more about new types of crosses or new graft ing techniques. Grainger hickory Recently, Lancaster Farming (Turn to Pago A 29) $19.75 Per Year