lyNjfc. Cattlemen’s Queen Nomina tions: The expanded Cattlemen’s Queen program this year is receiv ing interest from several affiliate cattlemen associations and indivi duals. The Cattlemen’s Queen program is one that was very popular a few years ago, and can help promote the Pennsylvania beef industry in several ways. The Pennsylvania Beef Council co sponsors some of the beef promo tional activities of the Queen program, with the Cattlemen’s Association and some private donors funding the other activities of the Queen. There’s still room for more dedicated candidates who want to learn from the prog ram, but also want to contribute to the betterment of the industry. Nomination material can be obtained from Mrs. Sue Clair, 568 Rock Road, State College, PA 16801 (814/238-1233). Expo Plans Continue: The educational program will be held on Friday, April 8, and will address some of the more impor tant problems and questions cat tlemen have about improving their operations. Preregistration for the educational program, which includes lunch, will be $25; infor mation can be obtained from the Cattlemen’s Association office (814/692-4208) or Dr. John Com erford (814/863-3661). The prog ram will emphasize grazing sys tems, hay and silage conservation methods, breeding improvement, feeding systems for the cow herd and the fcedlot, use of growth promotants and complying with nutrient management. There will also be a discussion about a recent study to determine the future of the cattle industry in Pennsylvania and what steps might be taken to expand the industry in Pennsylva nia and the Northeast. The annual Cattlemen’s Banquet will be held Friday evening, April 8, with the cattle breed sales on Saturday, April 9. Expo Trade Show Spaces Available: The Expo Trade Show is coming along nicely but there are still spaces for more commercial trade show exhibitors. Please give Dan Card (717/653-8719) or Lowell Wilson (814/238-5888) a call for more information. Youth Activities to be Emphasized: This year’s Expo will include the Expo Junior Heif er and Steer Shows which sud denly has become the largest such Junior event in the Northeast. With extra space available in the Farm Show Complex, and increased premiums for the Junior shows, there should be an ever lar ger show in the 1994 Expo. The Pennsylvania Junior Cattlemen’s Association will hold a pizza party-meeting on Saturday even ing, at 7:30 p.m. There will be several special Junior activities, including a Skill-a-thon which will test the knowledge of Juniors in several different aspects of beef ®SOCIATIO' News cattle management. Preregistra tion for the Skill-a-thon can be through the Cattlemen’s Associa tion office (814/692-4208), Ger ald and Sue Clair, Co-Advisors of the PJCA (814/238-1233), or from Tammy Balthaser, PA Beef Coun cil (800-572-2020). All Junior Heifer and Steer Shows will be on April 10. Prizes and cash are being solicited for both premiums and awards for the Junior competitive activities. Beef Output to Increase 3% in 1994: National Cattlemen’s Association and Cattle-Fax pre dict that beef production will increase by about 3% in 1994, which will cause a per-capita increase in consumption by about 1.5 lbs, up from 66 lbs retail weight in 1993. Production of competing meats, especially chicken, will also increase, and pressure on meat and livestock prices will result. The increased production is brought about by several years of profitability in die cow-calf busi- GEORGE F.W. HAENLEIN Extension Dairy Specialist University of Delaware NEWARK, Del. Feeding soap to dairy cows? What’s next? The simple days of letting our cows graze natural or planted pas tures have been superseded in many places with all kinds of feeding substitutes and bypro ducts that aren’t usually harmful to cows or their milk, meat or longevity. To the contrary, the high producing cows of today often benefit from some of these pro ducts, because they contain a higher nutrient content than what’s available naturally through grazing. This doesn’t mean that grazing is no longer important Grazing is still the cheapest way to feed many cows, and it supplies the daily essentials of fiber and vita mins for cows and calves, goats and sheep. But substitute feeds and bypro ducts are valuable supplements to grazing; they reduce the acreage needed to graze and are some times obtainable at bargain prices. A few years ago, I worked with a dairy herd that had a sweet con nection. A major candy manufac turer had an abundance of broken chocolate and candy bars, which one farmer was more than happy to feed to his cows. Nothing went to waste. I also know of a potato chip manufacturer who regularly “recycles” his breakage to a dairy herd. The cows apparently love chips. Back in the Old Country, we were very much oriented to this kind of recycling. We fed our cows leftover string beans, silage from sweet pea pods and husks from nearby vegetable canning ness; the nation’s cow herd is the largest since 1985. Herd expan sion is expected to continue for a few years. Meat Supplies at High Level: Cattle Fax also has been one of several market outlook agencies that point out the rather large supply of beef and other meats, which have decreased profitability from feeding. Compounding the problem (as usually happens in the case of large supplies of meat ani mals ready for market) is the heavy slaughter weights of fed cattle. Feeding margins are expected to remain narrow or negative into the spring. Most experts agree that keeping current in the marketplace selling cattle when they are ready from a weight and grade standpoint will help bring about a profitable feeding margin. Stretch plants. Each fall we’d harvest sugar beets first for leaf-and-tops silage before gathering the beets themselves. I also worked on a research pro ject in Delaware which involved using lima bean vines for dairy cattle feeding. The lima bean vin es made excellent silage as long as the harvesters didn’t pick up too much soil and sand to contaminate it . In recent years, byproducts suit l able for feeding to cows have been brewer’s grain, distiller’s grain, molasses, beet pulp, oil meals and gluten meals. New additions to this list include bakery bypro ducts, whey, syrups, soyhulls, tal low, feather meal, blood meal and soaps. More food industry pro ducts are sure to follow, because recycling makes economic and sociological sense. It even makes cow sense. We’ve known for years that ruminants such as cows, sheep, goats, llamas, camels, reindeer, musk oxen, yaks and buffaloes are unique in their ruminant feed requirements. They are especially suitable for poor, developing countries. Because ruminants can thrive on feed that is unsuitable for human consumption, they don’t compete in starving countries for human food. Nor do they compete for the money required to import grain for feeding monogastric animals. The ruminant cow today pro vides a wonderful way to get rid of tons of byproducts that would otherwise be wasted. At the same time, cows produce excellent quality milk and meat. Of course, this “recycling” pro cess takes place under careful More Beef Promotional Ads on TV: Perhaps it’s especially appropriate to have more TV advertising because of the antici pated increase in beef production. The popular “Beef. It’s what’s for dinner.” will focus on children and special occasions for celebrating according to the Beef Industry Council. Focus group interviews show that consumers like the cur rent advertisements, and they get new ideas for beef meals from the ads. Recent surveys indicate that almost 3/4 of all consumers are now aware of the beef ads and that most consumers now intend to eat beef more often than they did pre viously. The Check-Off-funded promotion, education, and research activities have increased demand for beef. Let’s hope that it continues to bring about increased demand since we will have more beef to merchandise over the next few years. Another bright spot, though, is the expected increase in The Food Lancaster Fanning, Saturday. February 19, 1994-E5 U.S. exports of beef and other meats because of renegotiated tar iffs and more favorable trade prac tices with other countries. NCA and PCA Membership: The National Cattlemen’s Associ ation, in cooperation with Merck AgVet Division, is offering spe cial incentives for cattlemen to join both NCA and the Pennsylva nia Cattlemen’s Association. A new member joining both NCA and PCA will receive a “bonus” of two 250-ml bottles of IVOMEC Pour-On a $6O value at retail. The NCA membership must be a $6O full membership. This means that a new member will receive both an NCA and PCA member ship for the cost of a PCA mem bership $l2. In addition to receiving the benefits and all the communications from NCA and PCA, new members will add their support in bringing about changes that continually help the cattle industry. Beef Industry Long-Range Plan; Over the past six months there’s been discussion and plan ning meetings of the four major beef industry organizations National Cattlemen’s Association, Cattlemen’s Beef Board, Beef Industry Council, and the U.S. Meat Export Federation. The “bottom line” is to determine how these four organizations can work together, still accomplishing the charge of each organization, and be more efficient and effective in serving the beef cattle industry. Both the PA Cattlemen’s Associa tion and the PA Beef Council have indicated support of this concept, pending further study and detail ing of organizational methods. No Hazardous Residues in Beef: The annual report from USDA on chemical residue moni- eb, Feed Byproducts monitoring and milk and meat testing, so that no undesirable industrial residues and pesticides contaminate the meat and milk products. So what about soap? Some interesting new research at the University of Nebraska explored this question. Since soap is a byproduct of the vegetable-oil processing industry (including soybean, cottonseed, peanut, sunflower and canola), it should be a potential dietary fat resource for ruminants. Recent research has shown that plain fat supplementation is often not as well tolerated by cows as are oils converted to their salts. And that’s what soaps are salts of oils. Thirty-two Holsteins were fed for 10 weeks four different rations, high starch, 1 percent added calcium salt of fat, 6 per cent of a soyhull-soap mix and 12 percent of a soyhull-soap mix. The soyhull-soap mix had 88 percent dry matter, 10 percent pro tein, 61 percent neutral detergent fiber and 16 percent fat, and the final rations contained 3.5 percent, 4.6 percent, 4.5 percent and 5.3 percent fat, respectively, fed as total mixed rations with equal levels of protein and energy. ADS|S $ Wring has confirmed that beef is virtually free of violative residues. No violative residues were present in fed steer and heifer beef which accounts for most of the nation’s beef supply and very limited residue frequencies were found in meat from cows. Accord ing to NCA, USDA’s monitoring report confirms that Americans need not be concerned about hor mone, antibiotic, pesticide, or other possible residue problems with beef. But Food Safety will be in the News: According to NCA, the beef industry can expect to see increased media attention about meat inspection and food safety in the next few months. Most of these news stories will emphasize bacterial contamination potential, particularly E. Coli 0157-H7 about one year after the outbreak in the northwest U.S. NCA and other associations have submitted video footage and other informa tion to the news media on how the beef industry is dealing with food safety and inspection. With the increased attention on food safety issues, the Pennsylvania Beef Council is planning a major food safety seminar on April 7 for retailers, food service operators, and county health department offi cials. The purpose of the seminar is two-fold: 1) to provide accurate background information on vari ous food safety issues, and 2) to offer procedures for maintaining and upgrading sanitation procedures. Further information regarding the programs of the National or PA Cattlemen’s Associations can be obtained from the PA Cattle men’s Association, RD#l, Box 83. Port Matilda, PA 16870 (814/692-4208). Voluntary feed intake was high on all rations, between 4.4 and 4.7 percent of body weight. Fat in milk produced was high on all rations, between 3.5 and 3.7 percent; as was milk protein; between 3.0 and 3.2 percent. Cows also remained in good body condition, scoring between 2.5 and 2.7. Cows fed the 6 percent soyhull soap mix significantly outpro duced all other ration cows, with a 78-pound average for the 10 weeks, compared to 68,69 and 71 pounds, respectively. This is especially interesting because the cows on the 1 percent added calcium salt and the cows on the 6 percent soyhull-soap mix had the same ration fat contents of 4.6 and 4.6 percent, respectively. The latter appears to point to the added benefits of the soyhulls to the fat supplementation. The basic forage component of the total ration, 16 percent alfalfa silage and 34 percent com silage on a dry basis, was high in forage. But apparently the soyhulls added to the fat supplementation was beneficial for higher milk production and a profitable way of incorporating fat and additional fiber into the ration of high producing dairy cows.