A2B-Lancntar Fanning, Saturday, NoVemberm,- <994 GEORGE F.W. HAENLEIN Extension Dairy Specialist University of Delaware NEWARK. Del. Cheese on the National Cheese Exchange is Wisconsin recently dropped 20 cents per pound, resulting a price decline at the farm gate in this area of about $2 per 100 pounds of fluid milk. This translates into different in come losses per 100-cow herd per month, depending on the level of milk production per cow per year as shown on DHIA reports. For an 18,000 milk pounds per cow herd the monthly income loss will be $3,600. Delaware DHIA dairy herds milked on average 19,127 pounds per cow per year in 1993. The highest herd had 23,911 pounds and the lowest 14,680 pounds all Holsteins! a considerable spread in the efficiency of produc ing milk and in cost per pound of milk. Obviously, one cow with more milk has a lower maintenance plus production cost per pound of milk than the other cow with less milk. The first way to cope with low er milk prices may be to increase milk level per cow. What increase in milk produc tion will make up for a certain drop in milk price? Given a $2 drop, and if all other costs remain the same, it’s necessary to in crease milk per cow by 4,000 pounds in order to maintain the same level of income and profit. This is an enormous increase, and one hard to achieve, except maybe through 3X milking or other extraordinary means, heavy 'culling, a much shorter calving in terval, better heat detection or bet ter sires. The temptation on many farms is instead to add cows. But this never lowers cost of milk per cow! It only adds gross income per farm, while at the same time in creasing feed costs, labor, costs and veterinary expenses, and re quires more room and facilities, including more feed bunk space. All of this could put a strain on the production level of the existing herd and lower it, thus increasing cost of milk per cow. Because feed is the largest ex pense item in total milk produc tion, it’s important to evaluate on a regular basis the feed ingredients and their prices to find new cost savings without decreasing the daily level of required nutrient supply to each cow. Regardless of the other tricky OUTSIDE WOOD (HpP FURNANCE Hot Air and Hot Water Domestic Hot Water Chuckwood Sales and Service (717) 532-5820 WOODMASTER Coping With Lower Milk Prices details of ration formulation, the main concerns are and will be energy, protein, fiber and calcium. These can be supplied equally well and interchangeably by vari ous feed sources, which will have different prices attached to them. The following ration ingredi ents usually are bargains per pound of protein: brewers grain dry or wet, com gluten feed, whole cottonseed, soy hulls, wheat middlings, and often alfalfa hay and high-quality grazing. By dividing the price of eeed per ton by its protein content or energy content, you can determine the price per pound of protein or energy unit for that particular feed. This gives you the oppor tunity to compare bargain feed buys. The feed’s fiber content must be low for the digestible energy content to be effectively high. But on many farms, the hay feeding is so little and the fiber length of the haylage or silage chopped so short that it becomes necessary to feed extra fiber length to avoid low fat content in the milk and displaced abomasum cases. Whatever the situation, it is generally folly to decrease grain and protein feeding in order to re duce feed costs and maintain pro fitability. Even if the milk price was to drop to $lO per hundred pounds and the grain supplement price was to rise to $ll per hund red pounds, the milk income above total feed costs would still favor normal supplement feeding required to keep up high milk pro duction levels. The second way to deal with lower milk prices may be to con tinue to' feed for high production but to shop for bargain feed in gredients. Per $21.00 Year Two $40.00 Years In PA, NJ, OH, MD. DE, NY, VA ft WV (Other Areas $31.00 Per Year or $59.00 For Two Years) What else can be done to cope with lower milk prices? Count how many cows are milked by one person per hour on your farm. To calculate this, di vide the total pounds of milk sold per day by the hours per day it took to milk that amount Then ap ply the price of milk and the salary per hour to those totals. You may be surprised at the fig ures you get on your farm and compare them to those on your neighbors’ farms. Some of these figures could be embarrassing when you consider that on some farms more than 100 cows are milked per person per hour, or more than 7,000 pounds milk per person per hour. I have made these calculations for the DHIA herds in Delaware. The third way for making more money may be to improve the milking labor efficiency. And in the category of labor, what about feeding your calves? How many hours of labor does feeding calves cost per day? We have reduced the costs here at the University of Delaware’s dairy farm from two hours to IS minutes per day just by converting to computer nursing. The result has been better nutrition, healthier calves and better weight gains. If you would like to know more about our automated system, ask for a video we’ve made. Just send me $8 to cover the cost of the half hour video, we have no financial interest or involvement in the electronic nursing system. So the fourth way may be to take advantage of a profit oppor tunity by converting to computer nursing for calves. Another way of coping with lower milk prices is the monthly milk and herd record-keeping ex- sjggj lllsal. Ne» 3rS§iS; Jg '■SSs L *TnSsjtfiS “JljflSßlJ 1 SJSS 1 * 5 Honors I «a? l .| r | c "'“ r * I Uo< ul!_J£- js*gs I w-^^fT ys.s'w I Wool Art |° I |.|,,*d Ort.J*? ONLY! LANCASTER FARMING WILL SEND A GIFT CARD ANNOUNCING THE START OF THE GIFT SUBSCRIPTION jsSas igsas AS&JCtS -fSWSS* SSMS-sSly l BBSS® penses as provided by DHIA or by computer milking systems. It doesn’t make sense to try to save costs by discontinuing such record keeping systems. It's more likely the efficiency per cow will slip without the dairy farmer’s know ing when, where, who and why. It’s a good idea to divide the monthly cost of DHIA by the number of cows (or by the pounds of milk per day) to determine your farms’ record-keeping cost per cow and per hundred pounds of milk. I have made this calculation for all our Delaware dairy farms on DHIA. Some of them pay almost twice as much per cow than some of their neighbors, and not neces sarily for any good reason or bene fit. There are alternatives. If you don’t milk your cows to sell dairy offspring or if you are interested only in a good milk income, then the bargain record-keeping system that still comes with an “official” tag is the so-called AM/PM sys tem. You pay only for the milk tester to come once to your farm instead of both morning and night Is it less accuratge than the tra ditional system of two tests per day? Not really, neither in fat tests w oooooo* Christmas Shopping Doesn’t Get Any Easier Than This! Give The Gift That Comes Week Alter Week. A Subscription To I 1" Clip And Mail This Coupon "1 I j With Your Check To: j \\ 1 Lancaster Farming I |\ jP.O. Box 609 j £ I [ Bphrata, Pa 17522 j I Name: j Address: j City:_ | State: j Gift Card To Read From I I I NEW L“ I nor in milk pounds. Most of my Delaware DHIA members on AM/PM claim the fat test is more on target than when two samples per day are taken. And milk yield varies from day to day per cow as much as any inac curacy from AM/PM factor calcu lations. So, thinking you can feed your cows more accurately from two milk yield records per day than from one AM/PM record is also not true. Thus, the fifth way may be to switch from regular DHIA to AM/ PM. This can mean greater cost savings without sacrificing pro duction efficiency and validity of record information. At least switch to APCS, which is two milk records but only one milk sample per day tested for fat. Of course, changing from wholesaling your milk to retailing some or all of your milk is one more avenue for coping with low er milk prices. Another is making value-added products, such as yogurt and cheese, for retail sale from your farm. Still another way is alternative milking animals such as dairy sheep and dairy goats. It does a body good. * Zip: I I RENEWAL