Page 2—Corn Talk, Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 11,1995 For Snook, Standability’s (Conllnuad from Pago 1) yield of 195.8 bushels per acre, all with Pioneer 3293. This is not the first top award he has captured in the nearly 20 years he has entered the contest. However, Snook’s reasons for entering don’t center on the awards. “We’ve been doing this about every year. I don’t like to jump in one year and miss another year. Even the year 1991, which was a drought year, there’s a lot of people who pulled their entries. I don’t like to do that,” Snook said. “They send us a report back and in our county, the extension agent requires that you do a budget plan. We have to include all investments ... the amount of equipment we have, the number of acres we farm .. . It’s not only on this com, it’s on our whole operation.” The reports Snook and other farmers in the area receive back include figures for the average cost per acre on everything. To Snook, this information is worth all the effort. Snook gained some of his com growing expertise when he worked for Doeblers from 1967-1977. “We used to raise seed com here,” he said. “I worked there part time. What would happen is that I’d work there in the fall and the spring and I’d be off in the summer and in the winter I’d be off a while.” When Doeblers downsized production in the East, Snook and his wife, Nancy, decided to look into other enterprises. They started working with Pioneer Hybrids and ventured into the hog business. They also dabbled in the hay business in the early 1980 s. “We built our hog house in 1977. We started with sows and raising feeder pigs. In about 1980 we switched over to fin ishing toohe said. “A couple of years ago because of the lack of extra help, we got rid of the sows and now all we do is finish.” As an independent producer, the Snooks finish between 400-500 hogs per year on Snook’s OK Hog Farm. They also raise raise about 700 acres of com and soybeans, mostly on rented ground. “There’s a lot of people who have farms they don’t want to farm in the area,” said Snook. “Every year it seems you get offered more land. We have written agreements with the owners usually for three to five years.” Snook is responsible for all the improvements to the land. The com is grown for both high moisture com and dry shell com. He notes that his harvest is not as fast as other farmers because he works at it himself, especially when he’s drying the com. When he’s harvesting the com for high moisture com, truckers are hired and the com is taken off at a quicker pace. Often, because of the weath er, Snook is not able to get all the com out of the fields in the fall. This past year was one of those years where having com standing was to his advantage. “We had com out there after the first of December. About the middle of December the price of com went up. From the first part of December to the last we gained $.25. We sold com over the holidays which we were harvesting and bring ing in to the bin, drying it and emptying it right out. I’ve seen this happen year after year, so one of the big factors that I’m a big stickler on is com standabil ity. Thai’s the whole key to our outfit as far as I am concerned. That’s why we went to Pioneer because we got better dry down and better standability. I select hybrids on how well they stand.” Snook also watches hybrids closely for disease. “We’re down along the river where we get a lot of fog. Sometimes we get a lot of fun gus diseases and some com really gets it bad,” said Snook. ‘This past year there weren’t a lot of problems with anything. I’m really fussy.” Before planting a whole field in a new hybrid, Snook will usually develop a test plot. “We put a test plot out every year. I’m looking at not just basic yield, I want to know about standability and dry down,” he said. If there is another key to making Snook a successful com grower, it is in planting the com. “A lot of guys say you can’t grow continuous com. We’re only growing about 125 acres of soybeans. We do that to break up the rotation and we feed them to the pigs. “The planting part is the most important part,” said Snook. “You’ve got to check the seed depth yourself. If you don’t plant right, you don’t have a harvest.” Snook also believes in taking it slow. He doesn’t plant over about four miles per hour to ensure more accurate seed placement. Although he does plant some of his com with the no-till method, he relies on the chisel plow and the standard mold board plow. “We no-till about 200 acres. We have better results on an average with conventional. This past year we averaged 20 more bushels per acre on con ventional than on no-till,” he said. “When we get a dry spell, it really hurts our no-till.” No-till also means more her bicide and more potential for disease. “What I’ve done is take fields where I’ve no-tilled a section and then chisel plowed a strip. It looks like strip farm ing, but we actually put it all in com. I see some real results where we’ve no-tilled and chisel plowed and then after four to five years go in there and moldboard again. It’s really a stand out. So, the bottom line is, we’re keeping our plows!” What this ultimately mean's to the Snooks is that they con centrate on rotating tillage methods more then rotating crops. His main fertilizer is the pig manure, but he’s careful not to apply too much. “We didn’t find we were get ting any more results after 15 tons per acre. We did a study with the Soil Conservation Ser vice on applying manure at dif ferent rates. We found out we were getting our best yields at that level. We try to redistribute the manure over more acres. It costs us a little more money to do it, but it pays in the long run,” he said. His pig manure runs at about 10-11-10 on an analysis. This past year he added a 10-34-0 starter at eight gallons per acre when he planted his com. Snook is also a big believer in the Pennsylvania Crop Man agement Association. In fact, he helped start the West Branch Crop Management Association. During the growing season, technicians visit the farm to scout for weeds and pests. They also check moisture content, percent lodging and other fac tors in the crop and take soil samples to give the farmers fer tilizer recommendations. For Snook, the technicians arc like having a hired hand. With their help, he can concen trate on planting or harvesting while they scout for pests and check the field conditions. “Basically a lot of farmers want their high moisture com from 25-28 percent moisture,” explained Snook. “You can look at the reports and know which fields to harvest first. We cover about seven miles. I don’t like to go to a field and find that it’s not ready.” Marathon Oil Announces ST. LOUIS, Mo. —Mar athon Oil Company, Findlay, Ohio announced it would imme diately begin producing ethyl tertiary butyl ether (ETBE) at the company’s Robinson, 111. refinery. This will be the first full-scale production of ETBE. an oxygenate additive made from ethanol, to occur in the United States. “This is a significant first step in helping to diversify the role of ethanol in America’s gasoline pool. The continued use of ethanol blends, the development of E-85 vehicles, and now ETBE, all help to fulfill the Clin ton Administration’s objectives to lessen our dependence on fos sil fuels and reduce global warming,” said Rod Gangwish, president of the National Com Growers Association (NCGA) and a farmer from Shelton. Neb. Marathon had been producing methanol based, MTBE at the Robinson refinery but has decid ed to make the switch to ETBE for economic reasons. Produc- (O®!! tmm. mm Crop management records are an Important tool to Ed Snook who captured first place in the three year average, regular harvest size, shelled grain class in the 1994 Pennsylvania Corn Club competition. herbicide program and go back to what I used to use,” said Snook. “For the past year or two I tried to do it all pre emerge, now I’m going to go back to post-emerge. We’re having a problem with a couple of weeds where we’ll get better results with post emergence.” What Snook would like to see someday is a com efficien cy contest. “I’d like to see who can raise the most com with the least amount of cost,” he said. “In a heavy dairy state this could be done really easy.” Use of the technicians has also allowed Snook to virtually eliminate insecticide use. “I haven’t used any insecti cide for five or six years. That’s why we went to some soybeans. When a field gets a high threshold, 1 push it into soy beans for a year,” he explained. “That was a crop management principle. It you take the time to do your scouting, you’ll know what you Jiave out there.” Knowing what’s in the field also helps Snook determine which herbicides he will use. “I’m going to change my ETBE Production tion levels will range from 1,500 to 1,600 barrels per day or approximately 63,000 to 65,000 gallons of ETBE per day. Ethanol will comprise roughly 40 percent of the total ETBE gal lon, with the remaining 60 per cent being isobutylene, a butane based refinery by-product. Marathon cites the recent rul ing by the Treasury Department to allow the application of the Federal Excise Tax Exemption for ethanol blends to ETBE, as the reason for the switch. Daniel Moenter, manager of governmental affairs for Mar athon, said, “This change in refinery operation will benefit both the environment and agri- cultural interests in Illinois.” While not the first to produce ETBE, Marathon Oil will be the only fully dedicated ETBE etherification unit in operation. Arco Chemical is also produc ing ETBE. but has yet to “scale up” to major production levels. Most of their production has been on a test market basis. “We are very optimistic but the extent of ETBE use has yet to be determined, variables such as the price of imported methanol, production and logistical consid erations for ethanol and the final ruling of the U.S. Court of Appeals on the Renewable Oxy genate Requirement, will all play a role in shaping the future of ETBE,” Gangwish said. INI IC.