Lancaster farming. (Lancaster, Pa., etc.) 1955-current, February 04, 1995, Image 39

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Bank Ag Seminar Held
BLUE BALL (Lancaster
Co.) The Blue Ball National
Bank ag seminar featured a num
ber of speakers with good ideas
about farming. These speakers
included Timothy Clemens, Hat
field consumer relations officer;
James Myer, Lititz beef farmer;
Dr. Darcie Stolz, Strasburg veter
narian; Don Robinson, Lancaster
Soil Conservation District mana
ger, and Louis Moore, Penn State
ag economics professor.
Stolz gave the definition of
health and bio security as the man
agement practices that protect the
herd from entry of new disease and
minimize the adverse effects of
disease in the herd. She said you
need to control the new arrivals on
the farm and curb farm traffic, wild
birds, the movement of animals,
rodents, pets, people, and equip
ment on the farm.
In addition, you need preventa
tive medicine, and you need to
maintain high disease resistance
and good meat and milk quality.
“You want to focus on control,”
Slolz said. “You want your herd to
“PURR”; that is, you want to pay
attention to production, udder
health, reproduction, and
* "v
★ Boat
★ Buggy
\ ★ Fence
FOR MORE '^'VV
INFORMATION CALL \\
SKEE CRAFT
(717)354-5755
136 S. Shirk Rd, Maw Holland, PA. 17667
j" " “ “CLIP & SAVE “ “ “ n
OFFERING
‘> FREE ,
I Off-Season 1995 .
I Estimates 1
For No-Peel
. Barn Painting I
The Most Permanent. |
I How? By Proven
I Combination of New & Old *
Methods! I
I A) New Solid stain for first 1/2 coat that penetrates
permanently. I
I B) High Performance enamel for second 1/2 coat -
can't peell ■
• C) Both sprayed & brushed, brushed & brushed, ■
■ using the finest of bristles. _
■ 1. Controlling film placement & thickness I
I accurately.
u 2. Can’t peel, can't flake off, almost permanent. J
> 3. Less paint - less cost! Substantial difference, p
< 4. On RESURFACED barn siding, stripped of old
paint, etc!
•8 5. Using any pressure washer with the new
L Kranzle nozzle! g
!j Sum Total ■ Shiney. Smlley, Happiness
O MANY Times Longer .
■' Remember when barn paint did
Anyway, let's interact by calling *
0 W PHARES HURST I
233 E. Maple Grove Rd. ■
Narvon, PA 17555 1
' 717-445-6186 |
I • For Real Low Cost Roof Maintenance Use
Pure Pine Pitch (same as for Ark) brushed |
| at above 90° temperature. This outlasts the
warranty on metal siding many times. ■
I • For Bare Cement Block Wall use - WHITE, 1
tinted, or regular CEMENT & water mix ■
■ carefully brushed or rubbed into surface J
1 pours - provides a real low cost permanent .
■ seal. I
I • More revolutionizing information to share on
family farm consumer user benefits. |
I • Dramatic savings on fine tuned inspirational
cosmetic bam art. I
I _ _ CLIP& SAVE. ...
replacements.
“For every pound increase in the
peak production of a dairy cow,
you increase her total production
by 2SO pounds for the lactation. On
a 40 cow herd that translates into
10,000 pounds of increased pro
duction over those lactations. At
$12.50 milk, that is and increase of
profits of $1,250.”
Conversely. Stolz said an
increase of only two SCC points
will decrease production by three
pounds per cow per day and that
translates into $5,400 lost in the 40
cow herd. She said the most impor
tant information you obtain from
DHIA records is the SCC count
Robinson gave an inspirational
talk on how to pass on a farm herit
age. He said that the caption under
the now famous poster of two little
boys dressed as fanners which
says, “You been farmin’ long?”
might well read, “Are you going to
be farming long?”
“Are our farm children a gene
sis?” Robinson asked. “As your
children go. so goes your farm. As
the nation’s farm children go, so
goes agriclture.” He said that pride'
with a small “p” was the satisfac
tion of a job well done as was part
In
B
E
At the Blue Ball National Bank ag seminar are, from left, Melvin Pankuch, president/
CEO; Don Robinson, manager, Lancaster Conservation District; Dr. Darcle Stolz,
VMD, Strasburg; Louis Moore, Penn State ag economics professor, and Kenneth
Overly, vice president.
of the fanning heritage of “proud
to be a fanner.”
“History is something that is
past,” Robinson said. “A heritage
is alive, something passed on. Her
" itage with no future is history.”
Robinson said the future of agri
culture is threatened most by farms
gra-Bngrßrßrßra
with no one to take over or by situ
ations where there is no heritage to
pass on. “How many farms are
sold when a child is eager and
ready to take over?” Robinson
asked rhetorically. “Not many. I
know we can’t force children to
stay. But when children are
involved in decision-making, they
are more likely to want to stay.
“Don’t wait to give respect,
responsibility and resources to
WOI
Financial stability and expertise in milk marketing - the
outstanding benefits that John Mayer refers to - are among the
strengths of the premier dairy cooperative in the region.
Atlantic Dairy Cooperative has a 78-year history of excellent
service to its members. Financially strong, ADC guarantees a market
for all member milk and excels in maximizing returns. ADC is a
leader in providing equity payments, quality bonuses and over-order
premiums to members.
Nearly 4,000 dairy farmers agree that "ADC is the Place to Be."
For free information on how you fan secure the future of your
dairy farm operation, write or call:
Atlantic Dairy Cooperative y' >s \
1225 Industrial Highway
Southampton, PA 18966 UJBMSjJ
1-800-645-MILK
Lancaster Fanning, Saturday, February 4, 1995-A39
ADC Is the Place To Be
your children. Start small, plan to
increase involvement as the child
matures. Teach the child well and
then let the child try.
Robinson said children should
get involved in record keeping. He
said you can’t pass on a way of life
unless you also pass on a business.
“You send a message to your
children with deed restrictions and
implementation of conservation
(Turn to Pag* A4O)
“When we were looking for a
milk market , we chose Atlantic
Dairy Cooperative because of its
financial stability. ADC is a
progressive cooperative that
concentrates on what it does best
- marketing milk. ”
—-John Mayer
Taneytown, MD