01A192 129^ PEKIOPICALS D |VJS|°S} NI yERiiITY J (j I . _ H|| jP , , Vol. 39 NO. 27 These Brown Swiss Dairy Farmers Love To Talk Good Cows EVERETT NEWSWANGER Managing Editor PINE GROVE (Schuylkill Co.) When you talk with Wil At home with an excellent cow in a beautiful spring flower setting. What greater picture could you show to move the heart of a true dairyman. Wind Mill Improver Helena 3E, with FFA’ers Learn To Manage ‘Personalities’ At Conference ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Farming Staff LANCASTER (Lancaster Co.) For Lancaster County FFA Reporter Josh Troxell, learning to deal with 9-year-old kids as a camp counselor proved pretty demanding. With those experiences including dealing with the demands and questions posed by a wide range of personalities in Efforts Under Way To Build Animal Disease Fighting Ability VERNON ACHENBACH, JR. Lancaster Fanning Staff HARRISBURG (Dauphin Co.) After losing its accredita tion five years ago, hustling to pull together an effort to combat avian influenza years ago, and not hav ing a definitive plan of action as rabies swept through wild animal and domestic animal populations, Pennsylvania is apparently well on its way to developing a modem, model program for realistically dealing with animal disease. The system is called the Pen 600 Per Copy liam Daubeit and sons Ronald and Dennis, you get the feeling they just like fanning. And they espe cially like the good-looking, high j hand, Josh was ready to tackle sev eral more challenges: • How to hold a successful workshop. • How to deal with the wide array of sometimes conflicting personalities of FFA’ers from all the different county chapters. • How to answer the questions posed by many of the local chapter reporters. • How to provide enough learn- nsylvania Animal Diagnostic Laboratory System (PADLS), and it is being coordinated through Dr. C.S. Card, director. While the program falls under the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, it is really a coopera tive effort between Penn State Uni versity, the University of Pennsyl vania and the PDA. While designed to address ani mal health issues, the program has much broader implication for human health. There are many dis ease which affect animals and Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May 14, 1994 producing Registered Brown Swiss cows that fill their fiee stall bam on Wind Mill Farm located northeast of Pine Grove on Pine the typical high fat (1,008 f) and protein (874 p) of the Brown Swiss breed does it for, from left, Dennis, William, and Ronald Daubert. Photo by Evonlt Newswanger. ing and project experience for his group to take back to the hundreds of members scattered throughout the county. Josh had the help of about 100 of his peers, all county chapter FFA leaders, at the third annual Red Rose Leadership Conference at Lancaster Mennonite High School on Wednesday. Officers from Garden Spot, Ephrata, Solanco, Manheim, humans and up until now, there was no centralized effort to coordi nate governmental and academic forces to combat ever-increasing dangers of disease. The Department of Agriculture has published a pamphlet about PADLS and recently, through the Penn State Extension Service, some of that information was announced. This past week. Dr. Card detail ed the program in an interview. According to the doctor, a former (Turn to Pago A2O) Hill Road. And the nationally known herd that includes classification results of 8 Ex, 59 VG. 47 GP. and 2 G. Pequea Valley, Penn Manor, and Lancaster Mennonite FFA chap ters gathered at this annual confer ence to help build leadership. State FFA officers participated In the annual Red Rose Leadership Conference. Front, Andrea Noll, state presi dent. Back, from left, Grant Campbell, state treasurer; Liz Hess, state eastern region vice president; and Jason Reifs nyder, state vice president. Four Sections shows the family’s love of good cows by producing a lot of milk. For example. Wind Mill Distinc tion Elissa VG-88 just finished with 32,563 m 3.8% 1235 f 3.3% 1091 p. Elissa’s pedigree traces back to the Maggie cow that was purchased in the early 19605. Another good cow family in the herd came from Wind Mill Joan T who recently left the herd at 17 years of age with 217,905 m and 8,742 f lifetime. Individual records exceed 28,000 m, l,ooof, and 900 p and Joan T’s 2y record was a national honor roll record for the breed. The Dauberts like to do a little showing too. Maybe the most fam ous cow in the herd is Wind Mill Eventide Alamay that was nomi nated all-American as a five year old. But the world-renowned Lin dale Convince! Elain that was supreme champion at the World Dairy Expo in Madison for two consecutive years has close roots here too. Eiain’s dam carries the Wind Mill prefix. The dam was sold as an open heifer to Lindale at the lowa National Sale. """““When we sell an animal, we like fo take her from the top shelf,” Dennis said. “We always like to hear the buyer is satisfied.” The Wind Mill dairy operation started when William was in high school and started to milk Brown Swiss at home on his father’s turk ey farm. The farm has been in the family for 90 years. “When I first started, you couldn’t buy anything that made milk,” William said. ‘There was nothing available. Today there is a lot of hope out there. Production is “We want to help them learn how to work as a team within their own chapters, how to promote (Turn to Pag* A 32) $19.75 Per Year (Turn to Page A2S)