Zahnbach Farms (Continued from Page A2l)' be managed for erosion control. . . The farm is isolated, though the Sattazahn is 63 and works at the dm of traffic from Rt. 419 filters its home farm, with Ray. a- „ “My father stated his sons all With all the chilLi out on their out ui famung. Ray said. When OWIlj last ycar the Sattazahns we started on. a fellow (with a farm slopped miUdng commg up for sale) came and & But & had mi]ked ataedif imy of theboyswere inter- times for 35 years> starting ested m farming. We (Robert and back when they were farming in Jane) were the only ones married, Myerstown, he said. It is perhaps quieter now that His father helped get them their herd has been reduced and the started dairying. children are out on their own. m Myerstown in Their yftungest son Mark, 31, 1954 with 24 cows and Delaval lives on his own and works for milkers (the kind (hat arc set down A gway. but st m manages to go to dong side the cow, not the kind his farm to with feed . that were suspended beneath the and work . F udder from an adjustable strap Their oldest child is slung over the cow s back). daughter Rebecca “Becky” Har- Like many others at the tune, the akel, who is secretary at a com coule lugged the buckets of milk to pa ny . but who with her husband , , ... operates a side business of custom- In 1955 or 1956 he couldn t printing T-shirts. The couple is recall exactly the electricity in printing T-shirts to sell to members Myerstown went off for a week 0 f the Pennsylvania State Grange, and he had to borrow some diffe- which is celebrating its 125th rent milkers and rig up a generator, annual meeting this year. That experience led them to In fact, Robert and Jane said that eventually find a dependable back- a t a Pomona (a county meeting up electric power system. They involving the 12 subordinate went through several including Granges in Berks County) meeting an Army surplus monster j U ne 7 that featured a visit by state before finding one at the state Grange Master Bill Steel, about Farm Show. 100 members wore their T-shirts in After nine years in Myerstown area, they moved to the current farm one Bob’s father pur chased and sold to Robert and Jane in 1967. The invested in building a mod em operation that would provide the family with a future, as well as challenges. They built new facilities. They had the herringbone parlor and 104-stall freestall bam and a 125-cow mostly registered Hols tein herd. For the time, it was much advanced technology. The Sattazahns were among the first to use hutches, after seeing them at the state Farm Show. In fact, Robert said he bought some other major items through Farm Show exhibits three dif ferent Allis Chalmers/Deutz Allis tractors that had been displayed at the Farm Show, and a generator capable of running dependably off of a tractor (PTO) and providing enough juice to provide the electric needs for the entire farm and household, with everything turned on. That’s what Robert said they did when the salesman showed up with the model to provide a demonstra tion. They turned on all the electric to provide a full load test of the generator. It passed the muster. The hills in the Host area of Berks County can get a little steep compared to relatively flat and rolling hills of the more central Lebanon Valley. Robert said that when they were first at the farm, while some of them were working on a com crib, his father told the others to go work on a certain field. "When we got to the hill, we didn’t know what to do,” Robert said, laughing. They stopped the tractor and looked at it. While he and his brothers were very familiar driving tractor, they weren’t familiar with significant slopes that can pose a challenge to keeping the center of gravity between the wheels, The farm really 'is a small valley the fields and wood lands are spread out from the farm house and bam and stream like a deal of cards held in a hand. Fields ate contoured and grass waterways prevent erosion. The flood plain of the stream is partial ly pastured, but mostly appears to a show of support Their two other sons are involved in the dairy industry. The oldest son Nick, 38, worked for a Jersey herd for 10 years, and now works for Mill-Joy Dairy Farm where he is mostly responsi ble for crops and his wife milks one time per day. Another son, George, 36, and his wife Robin, work for Lynn Acres. Both of the dairy herds are about 250 animals, Robert said. Most of the Sattazahns’ children have started their own families. The grandchildren visit A wooden children’s play structure with seat swings, overhead rungs, climbing ladders, and a rope swing is in the front yard of the old, thick-walled stone farm house. The trees behind and around the house are old and seem perfecdy mated to the house. This is the older Berks County agricultural area. It is a remnant of the Pennsylvania German era in a way isolated, thick, green and lush. Like many other farmers in the area, Robert speaks Pennsylva nia German. Involved in the Grange locally, at the county level and at the state level for years, Robert is one of three members of the Pennsylvania State Grange Dairy Committee. He started serving on the commit tee when Charlie Wisner was state master. The members serve to col lect and prepare dairy policy for the Grange. He has also served on the state Good of the Order Committee. He has served various offices, such as county master, overseer, treasurer, etc. The list is long. In 1969, Robert and Jane were the first Pennsylvania State Grange Young Couple of the Year. They got to go to Florida for five days to compete in the national contest. It was their one and only trip to Florida. But through the Grange bus trips they have seen a good bit of the United States and some of Canada. This year they are headed for Wisconsin. Robert was a leader for the Stouchsburg 4-H Community and then Dairy Club. He has honorary FFA chapter Prepares For and state degrees three ditte rent chapters presented him with honorary degrees. He has served as president of the Tulpehocken Young Farmers Association, actually helping to get it started. Robert also recently received his 40-year membership pin from the Pennsylvania Holstein Associ ation, served on the board of the Reading Fair, and president of the president of the Berks County Dairy Farmers Association, as well as a director on the Pa. State Grange Service Corporation, trea surer of the Southeast Pennsylva nia District 4-H dairy show, and on the consistory of a nearby Trinity United Church of Christ, as well as being the current farmer represen tative on the state board to the Underground Storage Tank Inde mnity Fund. He is also involed with the coun ty Pomona Consignment Sale Committee, which is scheduled to hold its 29th such sale starting 8:30 a.m., August 23 at the Leesport PFB Supports State Ag Nominations CAMP HILL (Cumberland Co.) The Pennsylvania Farm Bureau (PFB) is urging prompt Senate -Confirmation of Governor Ridge’s nominees for Secretary of Agriculture and the Pennsylvania Milk Marketing Board (PMMB). The governor has nominated Samuel Hayes Jr. of Warriors Mark, Huntingdon County to the Agriculture Secretary’s post and Luke Brubaker of Mt. Joy, Lan caster County to serve on the three-member PMMB. In a recent letter to Sen. Dan Delp, chairman of the Senate Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee, PFB president Guy Donaldson said, “Mr. Hayes has a distinguished career, both as a legislator and as an advocate for agriculture.” Hayes retired from the state House in 1992 after serv ing 22 years, including 16 years in leadership positions. “While in the General Assembly, (Hayes) shep herded numerous agricultural legislative initiatives,” Donaldson said, “and was instrumental in the adoption of Pennsylva nia’s farmland preserva tion program.” Hayes was the recipi ent of PFB’s “Barn Raiser” award in 1992 in recognition of being a “tireless advocate for agriculture” during his years in the General As sembly. PFB has pre sented the award only seven times in its 46-year history. “Mr. Hayes has strong qualifications for the position of Secretary of Agriculture,” Donaldson wrote. “We are confident of his ability to lead the De partment and to chart a positive course for the Commonwealth’s num ber one industry in the future.” Luke Brubaker is the owner and operator of a 450-cow dairy farm in Lancaster County and is the manager of an 800-acre dairy agribusi ness partnership. He has been nominated to a six year term on the PMMB which regulates the dairy industry in Penn sylvania. Next Generation Auction. There’s more. But he said he has had to cut back on some of his involvement also, now that they are on their own. Nevertheless, that hasn’t dimin ished his interest in what lies ahead for the dairy form family. He said he thinks federal orders are good and necessary, though he looks foward to the consolidation; he said sometime in the future membership in the Northeast Dairy Compactcould be beneficial for Pennsylvania; he is a strong supporter of the Pennsylvania Milk Marketing Board; and he thinks that the nation’s desire for cheap food won’t allow the dairy farm family to become extinct. He noted that while the dairy farm family may be a generational tradition, or may be started by a young couple with no previous family involvement, it offers cheaper food, because it offers cheaper labor, and labor is still “Mr. Brubaker has proven him self to have substantial knowledge and understanding of the dairy industry and dairy marketing prin ciples,” Donaldson stated in a let ter to Sen. Robert Mellow, the Senate Minority Leader. Brubaker is a member of the Ml Joy Farm- ers Cooperative and received the Pennsylvania Dairy of Distinction award in 1995. “(Brubaker) has also shown himself to be a capable leader both inside and outside of dairy cir- cles,” said Donaldson. “He cur rently serves as Chairman of the East Donegal Township Board of j/hpJune^ M Dairy monW BEFORE YOU SIDEDRESS YOUR CORN WITH NITROGEN... You have worked hard to get what you have Before you spend $25 00 to $3O 00 an acre to sidedress Nitrogen on your corn, spend just about $2 00 an acre to make sure you need it Many fields that have manure on them do not need sidedressed with Nitrogen A Pre-Sidcdress Nitrogen Test will make sure I will come farm, sampleyour fields and return in 3 to S with the answer you need. CUSTOM AG CONSULTING: Independent Crop Advice. (esse Sanders, CCA Agronomist PO BOX 177 MILLERSVILLE, PA I7SSI mm For More Information Contact LANCASTER SILO CO., INC. 2008 Horseshoe Road, Lancaster, PA 717-299-3721 necessary to the production of food and fiber. While a coroporatc setting may be able to produce things cheapen due to reduction of labor, it still hai higher labor costs. Like all families, the dairy farm family is perhaps supposed to have its own life cycle times for beginnings and endings. But Sattazahn still worries about what is to become of the farm, his and those of others. “It scares me. for a young far mer to get started with the costs increasing and the milk prices dropping,” he said. “There’s a farmer I know. He’s still farming. He’s older than I am. He made money in his day, we did too. “But he says. “The pile keeps getting littler and littler.” , "The ‘pile’ is his money,! Robert explained. “Basically, the only way (for young people to enter dairy farm ing) is with the help of their parents.” Supervisors. Chairman of the Farm Service Agency county committee, and is chairman**of PFB’s Poultry Meat Advisory Committee ... We strongly en courage your support for Mr. Bru baker and prompt confirmation by the Senate of Pennsylvania.” Both nominations have already been approved by the Senate Agri- culture and Rural Affairs Commit- tee. Confirmation for both will re quire two-thirds approval by the state Senate. PFB is a voluntary, statewide organization representing 26,625 farm and rural families. I Day (717) 656-9326 (Agri-Analysis) Evening (717) 871-9379 MARTIN EQUIPMENT 537 Falling Spring Road, Chambersburg, PA 717-263-3505 Ask for Sam