VI Uw/lv Pennsylvania Forage and Grassland Council W FOR AGING AROUNdW ‘lndustry, Farmer, Scientist Working Together Toward A Sounder Grassland Program 9 Producer: ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Farming Staff GERMANS VILLE (Lehigh Co.) Great baleage starts with getting hay bales off the field and wrapping them at appropriate moisture levels as soon as possible, according to a large-scale hay producer. David Fink, owner of Heidel Hol low Farm in Germansville, often goes to great lengths to ensure bale quality and consistency factors vital to marketing any agricultural product, especially haylage, crucial to many feed suppliers and users. Fink recently spoke to Lancaster Farming about some of the new tech niques he uses on his farm to manage and bale hay. Fink has been a member of the Pen nsylvania Forage and Grasslands Council for more than 20 years. He is a 1973 graduate of Delaware Valley College in animal husbandry. Fink, who also serves on the Interna tional Market Development Commit- Waste Water Growing GAIL STROCK Mifflin Co. Correspondent BELLEVILLE (Mifflin Co.) Participants at a rotational pasture management field day learned about a win-win situation at Plum Bottom Farm near Belleville and momentarily forgot about low milk prices and less than optimal com yields. The event featured long-term sus tainable pasture production in an intensive grazing system and was sponsored by the Pennsylvania Asso ciation for Sustainable Agriculture (PASA), Fairmont Foods, Mifflin County Cooperative Extension, the Pennsylvania Forage and Grassland Council, Golden and Associates and Plum Bottom Farm, an Ayrshire farm owned by John Rodgers. The win-win situation? Irrigating pastures with biologically-friendly waste water, or sludge, from Fairmont Foods, a nearby food processing plant. “The challenge for Fairmont Foods is how to dispose of its manufacturing by-products. The challenge for far mers is how to provide extrra water to Pennsylvania Forage & Grassland Council Rich In Com- Nutrients Newsletter Section Nov. 1,1997 Get Hay Off tee for the National Hay Association, manages 900 acres, all tillable, on the Lehigh Valley farm. Of the 900, 600 acres are in hay, including some alfal fa, mixed hay, and timothy. Each year, Fink noted, the farm can achieve about three cuttings of mixed hay and about four cuttings of alfalfa. Per year, Heidel Hollow harvests 1,900 acres of hay. Although Fink makes use of several brands of alfalfa seed, 40 percent of what he plants is Dekalb. New this year to the farm is about 30 acres of oatlage interseeded with alfalfa. After about five years, Fink noted that alfalfa fields arc rotated into Roundup Ready soybeans, double cropped. The remaining 200 acres are in com, all of which is fed to the hens. Heidel Hollow is home to 20,000 hens, producing about five million eggs per year. Those table eggs are packaged on site and are marketed directly to area stores and restaurants. (Turn to Pago 2) crops when liquid from the sky is lim ited,” said Dave Filson, Miffliin County’s extension director, as he addressed the crowd. “These chal lenges become opportunities when environmentally sound waste water becomes a nutrient utilized by plants for growth.” Filson said the same opportunity exists with other food manufacturers. For example, farmers can work potato peels from a Mifflin County potato chip manufacturer into soil deficient in organic matter. The fully organic, nontoxic potato by-product can help build the tilth of the soil, once again providing an opportunity for both the manufacturer and land owner. But the system needs one more ingredient to make it work good management. Can the manufacturer generate the by-product on a regular basis? What if it rains continuously for a period of time? What about tire com paction on pastures? Will the farmer know the analysis per load? Will the (Turn to Pag* 5) Field, Wrapped Quickly David Fink, owner of Heldel Hollow Farm in Germansville, often goes to great lengths to ensure bale quality and consistency—fac tors vital to marketing any agricultural product, especially haylage, crucial to many feed suppliers and users. Fink has been a member of the Pennsylvania Forage and Grasslands Council for more than 20 years. Irish Scientist To Speak At Grazing Conference GRANTVILLE (Dauphin Co.) Ireland, will be the keynote speaker at Sinclair Mayne, a scientist at the Agri- the Pennsylvania Grazing Conference cultural Research Institute of Northern at the Grantvillc Holiday Inn, March (Turn to Pag* 6) Friday, Nommulht 14 Preserving Crop Biodiversity and Sav ing Seeds in the Northeast, Toftrces Resort and Conference Center, S;ilurcl;i\, ,|:inu;ir\ 10 Pennsylvania State Farm Show, Farm Show Complex, Harrisburg, thru * Farm Calendar ❖ thru Feb. 7., contact PASA, (814) 349-9856. Wednesday March 4 Pennsylvania Grazing and Forage Conference, Grantville Holiday Inn, Grantville, thru March 5. PFGC Annual Meeting and Awards d ' G ference, Indianapolis, Ind., thru March 10.