Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, November 20, 1993, Image 99

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    op Pennsylvania DHIA
T
LINZ PARKS 3
NIL-AID! FASH 3
MORRELL FARKS 3
JANES + JANET HUNTER 3
A t B DAIRY FARR G 3
BLACK POD EARNS 3
RONALD KALINONSKI B 3
RICHARD L BUCK 3
NARK + CHRIS CORNELL B 3
FOSTERS FAMLY FARR B 3
DAVID HNADSLE 3
JEFFREY RANEY 3
STANHOPE FARRS B 3
GARYXARER FREYERHOm 3
ALAR i RfIGHA CUSTEAD B 3
When you need to get in and out
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A.hnr.ie STOLTZFOS KELLER BROS.
a™ farm TRACTOR CO.
CANNS-BILCO SERVICE, INC. 717-949-2000
215-820-0222 215-593-2407 717-569-2500
UUUim
ALLENWOOD
RENTAL A SUPPLY
717-538-2595
Avondale
THOMAS POWER
EQUIR, INC.
215-268-2181
Bloomsbufa
TRACTOR PARTS CO.
717-784-0250
Chambersbura
STOUFFER RROS. INC.
717-263-8424
(Continued from Page CIO)
CRAWFORD
SMOOTH
OPERATOR
See Your Local Kubota Dealer
Elizabethtown
MESSICK FARM
EQUIP. INC.
717-367-1319
Jersey Shore
THOMAS
L. DUNLAP
717-398-1391
Honesdale
MARSHALL
MACHINERY,
INC.
717-729-7117
time, fuel and unnecessary wear and tear
on the engine.
So, if you want a tractor that is
dependable, efficient and available with a
wide range of implements and special
features, take a look at our smooth opera
tors - the Kubota L-Series line with GST.
Kubota Tractor Corporation markets a full line of tractors through
a nationwide network of over 1,000 dealers.
K'jbofo.
MIFFLINSURQ
FARM
SUPPLY, INC.
717-966-3114
New Berlinvilla
ERBA HENRY
EQUIPMENT, INC.
215-367-2169
Reading
NICARRY
EQUIP., INC.
215-926-2441
Herds By County For October
CUMBERLAND
STEVE + MARY REESE
M THWAS SHEARER
CDmS + A 0 DAY
HAROLD E EYES
AL HAST BOLSTEIIS
JPADLSIROCK
HIGHLAND IDE FARMS
GLSDI V HYERS
GLEB EERSIAKER
DOHALO A KCULLOOGH
FRED B DC GILLVRAY
DAVID E SETTLE
PAUL H SNYDER
LOKHI A HOARD
HARRY E THOMPSON
Stroudsburg York
SEBRINQ'S YORK TRACTOR,
POWER HOUSE INC.
717-421-8980 717-764-1094
Hagerstown
ARNETT'S
OARAOE
301-733-0515
Ftemington H . conrt
ft Clinton
PONIATOWSKI
BROS. EQUIP. HANDLINO
CO. INC.
908-735-2149 609-267-6100
UMM^FMMngrMuittr^^
Rising Sun
AC IND. EQUIP.
CO. INC.
410-658-5568
24239 0 824
22760 0 846
23353 0 876
22286 0 834
22609 0 717
22458 0 813
21413 0 815
22318 0 722
21680 0 779
21437 0 830
21265 0 711
20228 0 792
21899 0 784
20772 0 739
20100 0 773
(Turn to Pago Cl 2)
Reproduction
A Challenging
Task On Farms
MADISON, Wls. Efficient herd repro
duction is a significant problem for most dairy
producers, according to a survey taken at the
1993 World Dairy Expo.
Fifty-eight percent of the producers
surveyed said good reproduction is “extreme
ly challenging” to achieve, while the remain
ing 42 percent rated it “somewhat
challenging.”
The survey was conducted at a presentation
intended to help producers improve dairy
herd reproduction. ‘Targeted Breeding™;
New Progress in Dairy Reproduction,” was
sponsored by The Upjohn Company. The
Michigan-based pharmaceutical manufactur
er recently introduced Targeted Breeding,
which incorporates Lutalyse® Sterile Solu
tion, a prostaglandin product, to help get cows
bred more efficiently.
Austin Belschner, DVM, MS, technical
services representative for Upjohn, detailed
how Targeted Breeding works. “The program
starts by determining a voluntary waiting per
iod after calving usually 4S to 60 days
during which cows are allowed to recover
from calving and are not bred,” said
Belschner.
He said that 17 days before the end of that
period, a cow receives her first 5-mL shot of
Lutalyse as a “set up” for estrus. Two weeks
later, another shot is given, which should
bring the cow into estrus, ready to breed at the
end of the voluntary waiting period. Heat
detection and breeding follow; if not detected
in heat, another shot is given two weeks later
and, if still not detected, the cow is
appointment-bred at 80 hours post-injection.
Examinations to detect open and pregnant
cows are performed by a veterinarian 33 to 40
days after insemination.
Belschner said the system allows for every
cow in the herd to be inseminated within 21
days after the voluntary waiting period.
Gordon Jones, DVM. a dairy practitioner
from Oconto Falls, Wis., explained how
Targeted Breeding has helped ease the task of
breeding in many of his clients’ herds. “They
like the system because it is predictable and
effective. They know which cows to watch for
heat, and, because several cows arc cycling at
the same time, heats are easier to detect”
Jones said that getting mote cows pregnant
allows his clients to cull cows for other rea
sons besides being open. “Often my clients
have had to cull good cows because they
weren’t pregnant and keep poorer ones
because they were pregnant. Targeted Breed
ing lets producers keep the right cows for the
right reasons.”
A Pennsylvania dairy fanner who has been
using Targeted Breeding for nearly three
years revealed that improved reproduction
has positively influenced other performance
aspects of the 425-cow herd he manages. Sam
Shotzberger, farm manager of Landhope
Dairy, Kennett Square, Pa., said, “Getting
cows pregnant faster has resulted in more
milk in the tank. The majority of a cow’s
income-over-feed-cost is generated in the
first 100 days of lactation, so we want to have
them milking in that period as often as
possible.”
For more information on the Upjohn
Targeted Breeding program, write Targeted
Breeding, The Upjohn Company,
9823-190-45, Kalamazoo, MI, 49001.