; 1 rj a farm Joyce Bupp j Progress and production across the state go into a sort of tempo rary limbo this week as the state’s most important season gets under way. Harvest season. Harvest sea son, that is, for Pennsylvania’s most well-known and widely hunted big-game animal: the whitetail deer. Opening day of “deer season” has always been one of the state’s biggest holidays, ushering in a DOE’S PRIDE™ NATURAL GOAT MILK jiugJ SOAP W • It’s especially GENTLE on your skin • It’s NATURAL and PURE • There's NO allergy-producing fragrance, dye, color or preservative added. SEND FOH FREE INFORMATION or CAU TOIL FREE NUMSER 1-800-542-7180 HOME SOAP WORKS P.O. Box 317, Millington, NJ 07946 (908)604-2170 W ♦f, HEAT FOR 4* HOUR & WICKLESS KEROSENE HEATER P.T.C. Ceramic Mini-Heater w/ Auto. Safety Shut-Off •Better...*sB" •Best *B9” LEOLA HEATING CENTER jptr? 93 W. 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CALL FOR DETAILS AND A QUOTE m 1-800-795-7334 % SPECIALS FOR NOVEMBER GOOD OLD FASHIONED SHOOFLY FIB MIX ALL TOD NEED IB THE PIE CRDBTI ' Regularly $1.89 NOW $1.49 GOLDEN BARREL BAKING MOLASSES S 3 Ounce Regularly $3.69 NOW $2,19 GOLDEN BARREL VEGETABLE OIL 5 Gallon Regularly $18.41 NOW $17.41 NEW ITEM *• We now cany Gourmet Coffee •• ing day. That means miles of rugged mountain foot travel for many and more leisurely spying from the edge of a meadow wood lot or open fields for others. Not to mention those few hapless antler pursuers who will spend some hours trudging in circles some where lost in mountaintop fog. A million hunters equates to multi-millions of manhours of pre-hunt preparation. Hours spent gathering the boots and the gloves, the downfilled coats and the bat tery-charged handwarmers. Hours sighting in the rifles, stocking up on the ammunition, and account ing for details like a drag rope, blaze orange hat and change for the phone at the little general store to call home to explain how the buck got away and why it’s neces sary to stay at camp an extra day. (Or double checking that you have your phone credit card.) Like all harvest crews, hunters may travel on their feet, but are fueled from their stomachs. Leg endary are the tales of accom plished camp cooks, who send packs of hunters off into the early Variety Of Kerosene Heaters • Wt urvict mmt htalers -VmITWI Meats 400 - 800 Bq. Ft lancuttr Arming, Saturday, Novambar 26, 1994-B5 morning mountain darkness stuffed with stacks of pancakes, slabs of ham and bacon, gallons of hot coffee. At the end of the day, tables groaning with turkey or beef feasts and all the trimmings welcome them back, to rest weary legs and rehash the day’s hunt. The hunting “fuel” that’s not talked about are the empty-calorie rations (junk food?) that most hunters haul along. I recall, as a kid, raiding Dad’s leftover hunt ing foodstocks for goodies that survived the trip. And on those scattered years when The Farmer could slip away for a day or two, shirt-pocket residue and pickup truck litter provided obvious clues. That such rations are among the most basic of hunting supplies was reinforced by statistical mar keting data accumulated by our eldest during the few months she worked at a local convenience store. After everything else had been accumulated, hunters headed Extension Agent DAUPHIN (Dauphin Co.) James E. Welshans, agriculture agent in Dauphin County, has been an extension educator in a variety of settings in his 25 years. With the encouragement of the Clinton county agent, Welshans began his extension career with a two-month stint as 4-H summer assistant in Northumberland County, then moved to Clearfied County, where he spent the next 15 years working with 4-H youth and expanding into horticulture, in 1984 he transferred to Dauphin County to become the county extension director with program responsibilities in horticulture. Along the way he earned a mas ter’s in agriculture and extension education at Penn State. On two occasions, Welshans taught extension education methods as part of the college programs in Swaziland and Zim babwe. In 1994, after 10 years of heavy administrative duties, Wel shans elected to return to full-time horticulture program work where he looks forward to expanding his program in urban horticulture and commerical vegetable production as well as developing an educa tional program for professionals who manage turf to create a safe environment in municipal parks and athletic fields. Welshans said the thing he likes best about extension work is that ' IjliimM m m A ti 4 ii J j j if jhb®" Ul WWaty r,» ★ Individual Feeding Programs ★ Balanced Rations based on homegrown feedstuffs’ test results ★ Improve your bottom line profit margin | T.lephon. (216) 893-2732 (vj | Symo-Lire, Inc. toh Fr«« 1-800-544-7122 (V) Ln 3507 US 62 !l n °_ hl0) MlUereburg. Ohio 44654 North made one final stop to round out their supplies of three basic necessities of mountain life; bottled propane gas, potato chips, and candy. A cash register receipt I removed from the pickup after The Farmer returned from a single day of deer hunting a year ago fur ther confirmed this data. Listed on the telltale slip of paper were pur chases of soft drinks, potato chips, candy bars and a giant bag of M & M’s. More recently, after The Farmer’s one day away for bowhunting, I again opened the pickup and found an empty M & M’s bag tossed atop the stack of boots and insulated gear. No wonder they return home lamenting the bucks that never showed or that vanished in the distance, teasing with just a mere glimpse of a bouncing white tail. The sound of all that crackling candy wrapping is a dead give away. Has 25 Years every day is different, it is never the same. In commenting on the changes he has observed in the past 25 years, Welshans is amazed at evolving science and technology. Many of the basics he learned about plants as an undergraduate at Morehead State University have become obsolete as research and knowledge have increased. Given the chance, he would choose the same work -again because it has provided him with so many interesting opportunities such as the travel and work in Afri ca. “Some of my best friends work in extension. We help each other, they understand and it goes both ways. It’s really neat,” said Wel shans. His greatest satisfactions have come as he helped new staff to develop into successful agents. Welshans’ leadership and program excellence were recognized in 1993 when he received the Distin guished Service Award from the National Association of County Agricultural Agents. He served as President of the Pennsylvania Association of County Agricultur al Agents 1993. Jim and Jane, his wife of 27 years, live in Hummelstown. Sons Jeff and Joel are Penn State gradu ates. Daughter Jennifer is a fresh man at Penn State majoring in agri culture business. For relaxation, Jim likes to work outside on his lawn and garden. ★ Documented Results ★ Improve Milk Production ★ Improve Butterfat Production ★ Improve Herd Health ★ Improve Reproduction ★ On Farm Consultation and Service