Producers Should Make Community-Wide Effort To Vaccinate Against Pseudorabies (ConthHMd from Pag* Al) through the air, all producer! must because “there isn’tmuch you can u, . k u start Also, because some believe work together at one time in a do if your neighbors don’t want to 06 ttMC ” *° Cp youracu that, the virus can be spread countywidc vaccination program cooperate in this,” he said, “You or three years ago. “if somebody would have asked me about (pseudorabies), I would have said, it’s a political disease, just live with it” said Dave Heck el. Farm Crest Feeds. But Heckel said the success that his company’s grower-finishing herds have had with the gene-deleted vaccine has proven that the problem can be cleaned up. Heckel spoke on a producer panel with Ray Martin, a hog pro ducer from Voganville. Both herd managers spoke about their problems after testing pseudorabies virus (PRV)-positive in the past. Martin discovered that, after testing his herd in 1987, he was informed that 96 out of 100 hogs were positive. He began using vaccine which had an immediate and dramatic effect on reducing the virus. By October 20 this year, he said, out of 60 animals tested, only one was positive and that he blames on ear tag con- PENNSYLVANIA PSEUDORABIES VACCINATION PROJECT (Name) Vaccination Project By agreeing to participate, I accept the conditions below: 1. Vaccinate my all my feeder pigs against pseudorabies for a period of 6 months according to the schedule prescribed by my veterinarian. 2. Apply identifying ear tags to 20% of my pigs for a period of 6 months. 3. On the recording sheets provided, record the ear tag count color, and removal date as tagged pigs are removed from the premises. I understand that in return for accepting the above conditions, I will be provided with the following: 1. Half of the needed doses of pseudorabies vaccine at no cost. 2. All of the needed ear tags. 3. A summary of my pigs’ growth performance. Signed: Please return this form to: Dr. Paul M. Pitcher USDA-APHIS, VS 2301 N. Cameron St. Room 412 Harrisburg, PA 17110 Companion Hybrids. For A Better Shot At A Bigger Yield. JL .« 9=Poor I=Excellent (EXP 258) Excellent plant health provides consistent yields. Key tralta: Produces consistent yields under a wide range of conditions. Excellent stalk strength with excellent late-season plant Integrity and very good drydown. Very good seedling emergence. Rexible usage for grain or silage. Management tlpa; Good choice for tough conditions where good stalk, plant health are required. Fast seedling emergence and growth allow planting under variable tillage practices, including no-till or minimum tillage. Adaptable for medium to high populations. Flowers early for its maturity to help avoid mid-season heat stress. Earning Our Way On More Of Your Acres. WZT' PARTICIPATION AGREEMENT agree to participate in the Pennsylvania Pseudorabies Spread your risk and avoid a hurry-up harvest with this team of top-yielding corn hybrids from DEKALB r *M' <%*!*•« t t 43 2 1 ills I I "1 I I I j 1 «IX } I I 11l I II il r’ j i" i iii i 98 7654 321 9=>Poor I=Excellent (EXP 261) Superior plant health, emergence and atandablllty. Plant thla one early. Key traltt: Excellent seedling vigor and emergence. Super stalk strength and staygreen with excellent late-season plant integrity. Very good yields and grain quality with relatively thin and loose husk cover at harvest for excellent drydown. Management tips: Plant early; excellent choice for no-till or minlmum-tlll situations. Superior standability allows flexible harvest schedules. Superior plant health for full-season areas. Tough hybrid adapted to a wide range of soil types. Date 9=Poor I=Excellent „ - - Raffias. «- ..^a (EXP 266 b) New for Eastern Corn Belli Excellent choice for no-till. Key tralta: Excellent seedling growth rate, stalk strength and staygreen. Produces consistent yields across a wide range of environmental conditions. Good choice tor no-till. Plant for grain or silage. Excellent resistance to Southern Corn Leaf Sight. Management tips: Plant at medium to high populations. Adapts to a wide range of tillage practices an excellent choice for no-till. Exhibits strong performance across all soil types. Adaptable to all crop rotations. Good choice for • grain or silage. Contact your local DEKALB Representative For More Information tito* 'maff mMti MSt& "r:\zt - 4\ I I I * * " ? f' i * i i i M 11 54 3 2 fusion with a sow that was injected with an old vaccine. Martin injects the pigs four times per year, at about 75 cents a dose, for a total of $3 per sow. Heckel manages three herds in the Lidtz-Manheim area of the county. Farm Crest Feeds operates small contract operations in an area that wasa “hot location” for PRV spread. In 1990, a 700-sow unit tested positive for pseudora bies and was placed under quaran tine. In the years following, they depopulated twice, but the “finisher flow” operation didn’t stop the disease. But Farm Crest decided to “repopulate” rather than depopu late. and cleaned off the finishing floor and began vaccinating all pigs right off the truck. A recent test of 40 hogs showed only two or three positive for the virus, because of stringent biosecurity and use of a vaccine that proved “without a doubt” to stop the spread. (Turn to Pogo A 36) Producers can sign up for cost share money to eradicate pseudora bies, according to Dr. Paul Pitcher, APHIS veterinarian, far right. Those speaking at the Tuesday night meet ing Included, from left, Abe Fisher, president of the Pen nsylvania Pork Pro ducers Council; Dr. Bill Sischo, Penn State veterinarian; Dr. Amy Nesselrodt, APHIS veterinarian; and Pitcher. 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