AZO-LancMtw Firming, Saturday, April 23,19 M Estimated Daily Livestock Slaughter Under Federal bupedlou April 20, 1994 CATTLE CALVES HOGS SHEEP WEDNESDAY (EST) 125,000 5,000 350,000 20,000 WEEK AGO (EST) 117,000 5,000 350,000 20,000 YEAR AGO (EST) 121,000 5,000 353,000 20,000 WEEK TO DATE (EST) 370,000 14,000 909,000 57,000 SAME PD LT WK (EST) 350,000 14,000 999,000 53,000 SAME PD LT YR (ACT) 360,000 15,000 1,027,000 56,000 PREVIOUS DAY ESTIMATED TUESDAY STEER AND HEIFER 96,000, COW AND BULL 26,000. ♦•• REVISION TUES. HOG SLAUGHTER..J4I,OOO. Valley Stockyards Athens, Pa. Monday, April IS, 1994 Report supplied by suction HOLSTEIN HEIFER CALVES 120.00-202.50. VEAL CALVES 80.00-92.00. VEALER BULL CALVES TO 152J0. SLAUGHTER CALVES 67.50 AND DOWN. GRASSERS & FEEDERS TO 79.00. LAMBS, GOOD ONES TO 102.50, TOP 135.00. SHEEP 15.00-31.00. HOGS 200-250, 28.00-38.50. SOWS 34.50-39.00. BOARS 28.00-35.00. PIGS 23.00-29.00. HEIFERS TO 61.00. NO GOOD STEERS. FEEDER STEERS TO 79.00. BULLS 43.00-57.50. GOOD COWS 44.25-48.50. COWS MEDIUM 37.00-43.75. COWS POOR OR SMALL 37.00 AND DOWN. CATTLE MARKET STEADY. CALF MARKET STEADY. HORSES TO 535.00. PONIES NONE. GOATS 17.50-62.50. NIGHT DAIRY SALE APRIL 21.7:30. GOOD SET OF HEIFERS AND DAIRY COWS. Indiana Livestock Homer City, PA Thursday, April 21, 1994 Report supplied by Auction BEEP HEIFERS GOOD 74.00, MEDIUM 71.00-73.00; COMMON 68.00- STEERS: GOOD 76.00, MEDIUM 74.00-75.50, COMMON 70.00- COWS; GOOD 51.00, MEDIUM 44.00-49.75, COMMON 43.00 DOWN. BULLS BUTCHER 62.00, BOLOGNA SS.OO-60.00. FEEDERS. GOOD 300 LBS. 80.00- MEDIUM HEIFER 500 LBS. 65.00- COMMON 65.00 DOWN. CALVES: 85-115 LBS. (BULLS) 110.00- 85-115 LBS. (HFRS.) 190.00- 80 LBS. UNDER 70.00 DOWN. 120 LBS. OVER (VEAL) 250 LBS 117.00. LAMBS: GOOD 75.00-90.00, MEDIUM 65.00-75.00, COMMON SHEEP 15.00-30.00. HOGS. NO 1 240 LBS. 43.00, NO. 2 A LESSON WELL LEARNED... LANCASTER FARMING'S CLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS! 140-195 LBS. 40.00; 245 LBS. UP 39.00-42.00 SOWS; 38.00. BOARS: 20.00. GOATS; 20.00-55.00 PER HEAD. Greencastle Livestock Green caitlc, Pa. Friday, April 22, 1994 CATTLE: 232. HEIFERS: SELECT FEW HOLSTEIN, STANDARD A SELECT 51.50-56.25. COWS: BREAKING UTILITY AND COMMERCIAL 45.00-49.00, CUTTER AND BONING UTILITY 46.00-50.00, CANNER A LOW CUTTER 41.00-45.00, SHELLS 38.00. BULLS: YIELD GRADE 1 1230-2200 LBS. 57.25-67.00. FEW YIELD GRADE 2 940-1500 LBS. 48.00-55.00. FEEDER CATTLE: HEIFERS FEW M-l 370-680 LBS. 59.00-72.00, BULLS FEW M-l 450-650 LBS. 62.00-72.00. CALVES: 215. ONE CHOICE 100.00, STANDARD A GOOD 75-110 LBS. 69.00- FEW UTILITY 60-80 LBS. 60.00- FARM CALVES: NO. 1 HOLSTEIN BULLS 90-130 LBS. 125.00-173.00. NO. 2 HOLSTEIN BULLS 80-120 LBS. 75.00- NO. 1 HOLSTEIN HEIF ERS 85-120 LBS. 185.00-265.00, FEW NO. 2 HOLSTEIN HEIFERS 70-115 LBS. 100.00- BEEF CROSS BULLS A HEIFERS 75-120 LBS. 100.00-157.50. HOGS: 10. ONE LOT US 1-3 230 LBS. 41.25. SOWS: ONE 1-3 800 LBS. 37.50. FEEDER PIGS 44. SHEEP 5. SLAUGHTER SHEEP ONE LOT YEARLING @ 39.00. GOATS 2. LARGE @ 32.00. Jersey Shore Livestock Market, Inc. Auction every Thursday at 4:00 pjn. Jersey Shore, Pa. Report supplied by Auction Thursday, April 21, 1994 RETURN TO FARM CALF 120.00-225.00. GOOD VEAL: 70.00-119.00. COMMON VEAL: 25.00-69.00. SELECT STEERS: 65.00-70.00. COMMON STEERS: 61.00-64.00. COMMERCIAL COWS: 47.00-52.00. CANNERS-CUTTERS: 43.00-50.00. SHELLS: 32.00-42.00. SELECT HEIFERS: 65.00-69.00. COMMON HEIFERS: SXOO-64.00. GOOD FEEDERS: 70.00-85.00. COMMON FEEDERS: 48.00-69.00. BULLS: 54.00-58.00. HEAVY HOGS: 36.00-37.00. WHITEWASHING with ttAOiur wtari?y*ip jeujfwjnupi f xtjnuEis. wjnuijiiSr • DRIES WHITE •NO WET FLOORS • IS COMPATIBLE WITH DISINFECTANT AND FLY SPRAYS • DOES NOT RUB OFF EASILY • WASHES OFF WINDOWS & PIPELINES EASILY ] Serving Southeastern Pa. And More BEITZEL S SPRAYING Witmer, PA 17585 717-392-7227 or Toll Free 1-800-727-7228 7:00 AM to 5:00 PM CERTIFIED COMMERCIAL APPLICATORS LICENSED 32 Years Experience INSURED CALL US ABOUT ON THE FARM FLY CONTROL 5 Trucks For Air Cleaning And Whitewashing RADfi Barn Spraying 1$ Our Business, not a sideline. Spraying Since 1961 li would be cheaper, too, you think. No longer would you have to pay the tester or put up with the delays. Never again would you be hounded by all those questions: When did you breed which cow to what sire? What are numbers of the sire, the cow, the cow’s dam? When did you dry off that cow? How much silage, hay and grain do you feed to each? And so on. Maybe your bank doesn’t re quire you to keep official DHIA records for your mortgage and you don’t sell young sires, heifers or embryos from high-record cows with fancy pedigrees. Perhaps you don’t care to use proven A 1 young sires, which you can get cheaper, but only if you are on DHIA. And maybe you are called on by effective sales reps from milking-machine companies who convince you that their new electronic systems give you every thing DHIA offers in records ex cept the official label. If these “maybe” circumstances describe your situation, then you are a good candidate for thinking: “let’s quit DHIA; it’ll be easier and cheaper.” You aren’t alone. You have company. DHIA has been part of U.S. dairying for 8S years, and though it includes a few more cows every year, it never has cov ered more than half of all dairy cows in all states. In fact, every year a good number of dairy farm ers quit, and the number is barely made up by new participants. Why? A new study (Journal of Dairy Science, 77:1994; 1141-1145) from a Midwestern state examined reasons for 148 herd owners quit- BARN CLEANING SERVICE AVAILABLE WITH COMPRESSED AIR To have your bam cleaned with air it will dean off dust, cob webs & lots of the old Jr lime. Thil will keep your bam looking cleaner & whiter longer. DISPA* iD TRUCKS Can You Afford To Quit DHIA? GEORGE F.W. HAENLEIN Extension Dairy Specialist University of Delaware NEWARK, Del Maybe you get tired of the inconvenience, the added expense, the new and strict er national regulations, even the push for conversion to electronics that are part of DHIA, particularly the new DHIA. You wish you could just enjoy milking your cows or goats in peace, keeping a simple wall chart record for each, thus removing yourself from the competitive ness. ting DHIA during the last two years. On profile, the discontinued herds were slightly smaller in herd size and slightly lower in average herd production than the herds continuing on DHIA. Among four major manage ment areas for using DHIA culling, mastitis, feeding, estnis only culling seemed a strong reason for being on DHIA, ac cording to those who discontinued DHIA. Maybe these herds used bulls instead of AI, even though other studies in that region on the use of AI have demonstrated a signifi cant superiority of between 800 to 1,100 pounds milk per cow per year for herds on AI. Or maybe they had little masti tis and mainly fed pasture and free choice roughage. Farmers gave several reasons for quitting DHIA. One-quarter sold the herd; one-eighth replaced DHIA with a new electronic pri vate system and one-eighth went back to hand-written records; one quarter didn’t like the tester or the lab (half didn’t like the computer center): and one-quarter quit be cause of cost, despite the fact that another Midwest study had shown that DHIA herds gave 1,800 pounds more milk on average than non-DHIA herds. What do Delaware records show? Last year we had more cows on record than in any pre vious year. There were also fewer herds than ever, down from 94 herds 30 years ago to half that. The herd size, however, is the largest ever 135 cows now, compared to an average 45 cows then. And while we have made great strides every year for higher and higher milk production averages per cow per herd, we still have tre mendous variation in production levels and management parame ters. This indicates that some dairy farmers make better use of their records than others, assuming that higher milk production means higher profits. DHIA management data reveal where and why differences occur in milk production level. We have repeatedly demon strated that higher milk levels per cow under prevailing feed prices mean more profit per cow on aver age, regardless of breed (especial ly when other DHIA data are con sidered), and these are warning lights. I will name only six. No. I: If a Holstein cow or Swiss goat is testing less than 3.S percent milk fat (other breeds are correspondingly higher), this is a signal from her DHIA records that you are feeding her too much grain in proportion to roughage and insufficient levels and length of fiber. Grain should not exceed 60 per cent of dry matter of the total daily radon, and fiber should not be less than 17 percent in the total daily radon with a greater amount long er than 1 inch. You will not only lose money from low testing milk, you will soon have veterinary problems from excess grain feeding, such as acidosis, enterotoxemia, parakera tosis. displaced abomasum, lam initis, etc. No. 2: If a Holstein or Swiss goat is testing less than 3.2 percent protein during the first four months after lactation begins, you aren’t feeding her enough energy to make up for ha high milk pro duction demands, thus she is cut ting back on her reproduction, coming into only silent estnis or not at all. She is underfed in ener gy. and you will be losing money because your animals won’t con ceive again in time. DHIA records could have helped you prevent this; besides, you are getting less money for your milk because of lower proteins-solids contents. No. 3: If your herd average days in milk is much above ISO days that’s a warning that your animals aren't conceiving back in time. You have a major number of your milkers beyond the peak of lacta tion in the lata stages of lactation. When they milk less than they should, they cost more to main tain. Also somatic cell levels tend to go up with later stages of lacta tion, even when there is no masti tis infection, not even subclinical. And you’ll have less than one calf per year from each cow, the mini (Tum to Pago ASS)