Adams County llvsstock hauler Bob Bishop loads steers onto his truck at Don Mason’s farm in New Freedom Township. The steers were headed for butchering at Norman J. Shrlver, Jr.’s in Emmltsburg, Md. Doyle Waybright, one of the justify the expense of hauling owners of Mason Dixon Farms cattle in their own truck when Inc. in Gettysburg, said even an . Bishop will provide the same ser operation as large as theirs can’t vice at such an affordable price. of the weed, leaving the possibility for weed regrowth after your crop comes up. And that, of course, increases the need for costly r< Perfect for everything from no-till Roundup Ultra delivers rainfast and reduced tillage to mulch tillage control in wet weather or dry and lets Ultra, you won’t and stale seedbed, Roundup Ultra you get into your fields more quickly give them one, can be used preplant, at planting or to plant. Plus, it’s labeled for cotton, prior to crop emergence. And thanks Market Manager today. Because weeds to new TransSorb™ technology, “It creates a lot of flexibility for us,” Waybright said. “And Bishop dots well. He knows how to handle cattle.” Bishop charges $6 peanuts and vegetables. For more information about Roundup Ultra in a conservation tillage program, contact your farm don’t deserve a second chance. And Bwwn K works. with Roundup r -> • Bonn Bishop, left, and Bob Bishop, right, ars the father son team behind Robert G. Bishop & Son, a livestock deal ing and trucking firm based out of the family’s Gettysburg farm. The Bishops haul livestock from Franklin, Adams and York counties in Pennsylvania and Carroll and Frederick counties In Maryland to weekly auctions in Greencastle, Pa. and Westminster and Hagerstown, Md. per ca|f; $7 to $8 for a feeder steer the’4os —s3 per cow and $1 per and $l2 for anything larger. The calf. prices aren’t much beyond what But the increase worries Bishop Bishop and his Either were paid in just the same. soybeans, rice, corn, milo, Lto Local ftnmng, teterity, F*nwy ie, iN*Alf innyinip “I hate to charge that much really, for the price they're bringing now,” he said, as if the depressed market is somehow his responsibility. Blue Southern States cap firmly on his head and a flannel shirt and jacket to protect him from the winter weather. Bishop is efficiency in quiet action as he makes his rounds. If folks are around, he's happy to exchange pleasan tries. But he’s a man on a mission, so there's no time for gossip. At farm after farm. Bishop hoists calves into the truck with an ease that belies his years. He hesitates only to brush matted man ure from their coats and mark them with an orange crayon so he’ll be able to note their ownership later. ‘The better something looks, the belter it sells,” he said. Though it’s been more than a decade since he was employed by an auction. Bishop spent enough nights and summers working the sales in Carlisle, Chambersburg, and Westminster, Md to know. In all that time. Bishop’s never been seri ously hurt by an animal though there’vc been a few close calls. “If I wouldn’t have been as quick as I was in my prime I wouldn’t be here right now,” he said Experience has taught him lessons about four-legged beasts that would make Dr. Doo little jealous. The “contrariest” animal a haul er fades? Good old Porky Pig. “A hog is something you can’t force,” Bishop said. “You’ve got to give him his time and let him decide for himself.” When hogs had tails, he said, “you could grab ’em tail-to ear and throw ’em on.” But the practice of (locking tails is so commonplace now, those days are long gone. Bishop doesn’t believe in using brute force to make an animal do what he wants. And he has little understanding for those who poke and prod a calf or cow until it becomes hyster ically frightened "You take an old cow, for example. She’s wore out She’s old. And she was never hit in her lifetime. But first thing, they’re in on her with a cane, beating her like she’s a wild ani mal,” he said, shaking his head. Bishop still runs about 20 bulls of his own, splitting his fortune among the leading dairy and beef breeds, including registered Hols tein, Black Angus, and Limousin. He “rents” the animals to other farmers in exchange for their feed and board. Friends and neighbors also call on Bishop to castrate their animals. He learned the tech nique from a neighbor many years ago. Though demand for his services has slacked off a tut now. he’s performed the operation on as many as 99 pigs in a day and even the odd cat now and then, he said.