Center Releases Boar Sale Results STATE COLLEGE (Centre Co.) Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture’s Meat Animal Evaluation Center wishes to announce the results from the 17th Performance Tested Boar Sale. Charles and Mark Hall con signed the top indexing pen of boars. The top boar in this pen of Yorks sold to James Mathis and Jeanne Beyer of Julian, for $525. The second highest indexing pen of boars bred by Neutzel Yorkshires sold next and started off with the highest individual indexing boar. Charles Hall, Rat tlesnake Mountain Farms, was the successful bidder at $1,175, the top pice of the day. The second boar in this pen then sold to Hill side Acres of Lenhartsville, for $9OO. The 13 Yorkshire boars averaged $560. Baum Family Landrace had consigned the only entries in this breed, but the entrees were a good representation for their breed and they were in demand. The highest selling Landrace, out of this pen, sold to Roy Jamison of Chambers LAND PRIDE Quality equipment from y company. 3-Spindle, 48”, 60” 72” & 90” I mf* % REAR BLADES 48” Through 120” 48” Through 120” 48” Through 96” w .Shjpp.ru j K U B 0 T B’ awvMf CmiM PA Mne* IWI PSjAagb piu>wi Ktujw wo«. I burg, for $1,000: Kenneth Jones of Danville, bought the second boar out of this pen for $9OO. The four Landrace boars averaged $656. Penn State University had the top indexing pen of Durocs. The top indexing and top selling Duroc boar came from this pen. This boar was purchased by Hillside Acres for $5OO. The three Duroc boars told averaged $467. The four Hampshire boars aver aged $4Bl. Carl Rabenold and Franklin Feeser each sold a Hampshire boar for $5OO. These boars sold to Hillside Acres and Brian Hege of Fayetteville, respectively. The 24 performance .tested boars sold averaged $551. The center is accepting pens of progeny pigs for our fall-winter testing program. The next boar testing program will begin in March 1994. The next perfor mance tested boar sale is sche duled for Wednesday evening, August 17, 1994, For more information on Pen; , 42” Through 96” PULVERIZERS 48” Through 84” 5555, OVER SEEDERS & PRIMARY SEEDERS 34” Through 76" *tftk»A4LßO nsylvania’s performance testing programs, contact Glenn Eberly, director of the Meat Animal Eva- (Continued from Poo* business, you must have a certain ‘Besides, who can continue to level of volume. With declining operate with 1993-level operating numbers of family fanners, there expenses on a 1980-level income? is just less dollar value available,” Some 70 percent of our farmers he laments of the trend. now depend on some or almost all of their living to come from off farm jobs,” Flaharty continues. “It doesn’t paint a very good picture down the road.” William Sprenkle. Jr., at the York offices of Abbottstown based Hoke Mills, Inc., like Fla harty, has watched numerous county feed firms close over the years. “Feed companies operate on a very low profit martin; to stay in MONDAY FRIDAY 7:30-540 SATURDAY 7:30-1240 Last York County tN ' rnC^ Built for big capacity delivery and heavy duty operation. One-fast roll operation gives more capacity with less horsepower, provides self-cleaning action with wettest material. Also available with blower discharge on direct drive from roll shaft luation Center, 651 Fox Hollow Road, State College, PA 16803, (814) 238-2527. “Equipment advertising is so widespread now that Lancaster is getting York’s business,” flatly insists Jim Waltemyer, owner of Waltemyer’s Sales and Service, Red Lion, the sole remaining full service John Deere dealership in York County. Like other agri business firms, Waltemyer verbal ly ticks off a list of York County equipment dealers that have closed their doors in the last two decades, easily a dozen he figures. MORE CAPACITY MODEL ATG-A Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 16, 1993-A37 “Those that are still here are likely to stay - but you’re not going to see any new ones starting up,” Waltemyer is certain. While fewer full time farmers have impacted sales of equipment over the years, “weekend" farmers con tinue to be an increasing factor for dealers who, like Waltemyer, serve the lawn and garden business. “If the government wants to jump-start the economy,” suggests Waltemyer, “they should put another dollar on com, beans, milk. If farmers get more money, it bumps right up through the rest of the economy. Three-quarters of our sales in recent years is for equipment that farmers absolutely must have and simply can’t put off buying any more. “If fanners got a little more return for what they produce, we couldn’t get enough equipment to supply die demand to replace what’s wearing out.” Both federal and state ag census data on file at the York County Exten sion Office depict in numbers the continuing loss of farms and farm land in the county. The 1982 Ag Census notes 282 dairy farms in York County, averaging S 2 head per herd, and a total of 14.748 dairy cows. Pennsylvania Ag Statistics data for 1991. by comparison, counts 215 dairy farms of an average 67 head totall ing 14,300. Inventory of beef cattle and calves in 1992 was at 51.000, down from the 1982 count of 53,400. Hog numbers were up, with an esti mated 101,700 head marketed in 1982 to a 1987 estimate of 135,000. Cropland planted in major grain and forage crops in York County dropped from 204,000 acres in 1980 to 182,000 acres in 1990, according to John Rowehl, York Extension agronomist. “The only crop that has shown an increase has been soybeans,” adds Rowehl. noting that bean acrage in York County increased from 18.000 acres in 1985 to a current estimated 32.000 acres. Com grain acrage decreased from 93.000 acres in 1980 to 65.000 acres in 1990, while wheat also dropped from 30,000 acres in the early 1980 s to the low 20,000-acre level a decade later. “Feed crop acres tend to run with the dairy and livesrtock industry; the rest appears to be in a steady decline, except for the increase in beans,” the agronomist notes. Reflecting that, alfalfa acreage has remained relatively level in the last ten years, about IS.SOO acres, while acres in other types of hay dropped from 31,000 acres to 24,500 acres. Com silage, in’ Row il’s estimate, fluctu- jtes considerably with drought yean,* ranging frorii 10,000 to 15,000 "res.