AlfrLmcMtK frarininfl,' Saturday,' Novainbar 1997 OPINION Scams Now Running Lancaster Farms Of course, there was no written agreement, and no company name was given. An 800 number just gets you an answering service so there is no real tracer to the people involved Two more scams in southern Lancaster County involve sealing drive ways and fixing chimneys. The driveways arc sealed with a chemical that washes off with the first rain, and the chimneys are fixed with plas ter of paris. , Amish farmers seem to be targeted but all fanners need to be alert It was an Amish farmer that asked the policeman to contact Lancaster Fanning as the best way to warn other farmers about these scams. Whenever you agree to have work done around your farm, be sure you arc dealing with a firm or person who has a good reputation and is well-known in the community. Ask for references from other jobs that have been completed Get a company name, address, and telephone number. Get price quotes from several firms. Always sleep on it. A reputatable firm will be glad for your business tomorrow. If it seems too good to be true, it probably is. And be especially careful right now because people running scams are on the loose in Lancaster County. And they could show up anywhere in Pennsylvania or in neighboring states. Editor, I am submitting a poem for your consideration for printing. As an ex Cum boy, I deeply the farmers needs in this hour. So many farms are going under, the younger generation so often wants the big money for their parents lands etc. And where our Government should back the farmers in every way so often they show no con cern. As an ex Fanner, I can readily appreciate the plight of today’s Fanner. So many of them are find ing their farms auction off their life’s work gone with the pound of the gavel on the auction block. The following poem is a tribute to all such farmers. The Farmer He stood where he had stood, for many years, Feeling the power and the pull of the land; His greying hair ruffled by the western breeze. Today was different It was hard to understand. He scanned the far off green pasture lands Fall Seminar Emu Husbandry. Products, Marketing, Farm Show Complex, Harrisburg, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Bucks County DHIA and Bucks Holstein annual meeting, St Matthew’s \utheran Church, Kellers Chu. :h, 6:30 p.m. 3d Annual Killer Trail Course Competition, Tuckahoe JP — * (Continued from Pago Al) * * < V* < <• i ❖ Farm Forum ❖ T vs it *- { Where cattle had trod trails morning and night; He looked at the early morning rising sun. Thought: such power, such ma jesty, such might! He was stirred by the sounds of the barnyard. Hens cackling, cows mooing, all dependent upon man; Old Shep, with tail wagging, was ready to follow, Shep wondered why today seemed a different plan. He looked to his house, where with wife and children They had been so close as the years had flown by; He remembered nights so plea sant around the kitchen table. With his hand he brushed a tear from his eye. He knelt in an act of so final a surrender, And felt the earth so, cold, cold, cold; While the words echoed throughout his mind With the bang of that gavel: sold! sold! sold! ♦ *< ♦ yfp * K > * * > * v* * & ❖ Farm Calendar* Watershed Workshop, meeting #2, Farm and Home Center, Lan caster, 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Dauphin County Extension annual meeting. Dauphin County Ag and Natural Resource Center, Dauphin, 7 p.m. MU Joy Co-Op Service Program, On > “'*• ■ *% \ Roger E. Sovocool L* '• * *•» r** < To Know Forage Quality Because of this summer's drought conditions, forage crop yields were down on many farms. However, quality was generally good. Because of the shorter growth, this year's forages had less stalk and fiber content with a higher concentration of nutrient rich leaves and grain. According to Glenn Shirk, Lancaster County Extension Dairy Agent, this makes our forages looking more like a supplement, lower in fiber and higher in energy and protein. When this kind of forage is fed, there is less need to feed grain and expensive supple ments. What is really needed is more effective fiber. This may be supplied by feeding more longer stemmed or coarsely chopped for ages. To Balance Cow Rations Glenn Shirk, Lancaster County Extension Dairy Agent, remind us if cows have been hav ing low fat tests, appetites are sluggish, lose too much flesh and lose flesh too quickly, fail to peak well and drop off milk too quickly, are "loose" and passing undigested grain and fiber in their feces, tend to be ketotic and de velop laminitis, chances are they may be consuming too much gram or protein. These problems are costly. With today's slim margins, there is no room for costly mis takes. Test your forages for nutri tive value and consult a trained nutritionist for specific recom mendations. Formulate a balanced ration and feed it properly. Aim to maintain an even level of high ac tivity in the rumen throughout the day. Total mixed rations may help you accomplish this. Otherwise, avoid feeding laige slugs of grain at any one time. Limit intakes to about 6 to 8 pounds per feeding. Try to feed some forages before feeding grain. To Test For MUN Excess protein in the ration and in the blood stream is expensive and unhealthy, according to Glenn Shirk, Lancaster County Exten- Country Table, Mount Joy, 10:30 a.m.-2 p.m. Chester County Extension Annual Meeting, J&J Catering, White land Business Park, Exton, 7 p.m. Beef2ooo Course, Penn State, thru Nov. 12. Beginning and Retiring Farmer Workshop, Hoss’s Steak House, Williamsport, 9-a.tn.-3 p.m. Vegetable Growers Meeting, Hill top Restaurant, Shade Gap. Northampton County Extension meeting. Star Grange, Moores town, 7 p.m. Northeast Greenhouse Seminar, Luzerne County Community (Turn to Pago A3l) sion Dairy Agent. One good way to monitor protein metabolism in dairy cattle is to use the milk urea nitrogen (MUN) test on individual cows on a regular basis. This may be done through the DHIA program. Normal MUN vales are 12 to 16 mg/dl. Higher levels mean: 1. Too much protein is being fed. 2. Rumen degradable protein levels are high. 3. Too lit tle rumen degradable energy is be ing fed. Thus, not all of the ru men degradable protein can be utilized and some of it spills over into the blood stream as urea ni trogen. This is a costly situation for several reasons 1. More purchased feed ends up being excreted and wasted. 2. A considerable amount of energy is needed to metabolize and excrete the excess protein. Less energy is available to the cow. As a result, milk production, body condition and conception IN OVER YOUR HEAD? November 9, 1997 Background Scripture: Ezra 9:1 through 10:17 Devotional Reading: Deuteronomy 6:1-9 You probably have never heard a sermon on Ezra 9 and 10 and you are not ever likely to do so. Why? For one thing, because the situation in these two chapters seems utterly irrelevant to our own situation today. Who today can relate to Ezra’s violent reaction in learning that many of the men of Israel have taken foreign wives? Ezra is more than a little upset: “When I heard this, I rent my garments and my mantle, and pulled hair from my head and beard, and sat appalled.” And when he calls upon God in prayer, he says: “Oh my God, I am ashamed and blush to lift my face to thee, my God, for our iniquities have risen higher than our heads, and our guilt has mounted up to the heavens” (Ezra 9:3,6). Reading that, I just could not relate, either to the reason for bis concern or the depth of his response. Inter-religious mar riages can certainly cause some problems, but do they call for that kind of response? Ezra also raises a concept which waves a red flag to many of us: “the holy race has mixed itself with the peoples of the lands” (9:2b). Generally, not only do we as Christians not think of ourselves as a “holy race,” but even the suggestion of this con cept seems out of place in the day in which we live. I bristle when it seems that Ezra is saying that the “holy race” of Israel has been pol luted because of intermarriage with other races not so holy. ADULTERATED FAITH After some consideration, how ever, I can understand Ezra’s point of view. The problem is that the faith of Israel has been adulterated with the religious influence, prac tices and values of these pagan peoples. The intermarriage between these peoples has mater ially weakened and perverted the faith of Israel. And with that con cern I can identify very-well. The problem is not with the foreign wives per sc, but with the destruc tive influences they have intro duced to Jews returned from exile. Actually, this is a vcty real and current problem for Christianity. Not because of intermarriage suffer. MUN values generally increase when rations contain increased amounts of haylage, lush pastures and rapidly digested protein sup plements such as soybean oil meal and urea. This is especially true when there is not an accom panying decrease in the use of pro tein supplements and an increase in the amount of rumen degradable energy being fed, such as high moisture corn, barley, wheat, mo lasses, etc. Low levels of MUN may re sult from feeding too little pro tein, too little rumen degradable protein or too little energy. This is more apt to occur on rations containing considerable amounts of hay, especially low protein and low energy hay. Feather Prof, 's Footnote: "Pride is a personal commitment; it is an attitude which separates excellence from mediocrity." necessarily, but for a number of reasons I see Christianity has hav ing been seriously watered down with ideas, values and practices which, apart from our professions of faith, render it often indistin guishable from the rest of society. At work, in the market place, in our citizenship, in our community life, in our families, what is there in the way that we live that marks us and our church as ‘Christian’ as distinct from the secular world? Does the way we do our daily work or practice our profession make us any different than the way that others do? Do we run our churces according to Christian values or by the values of the market place? Does our response to “the least of these my brethren" the hungry, the poor, the naked, the lost, the prisioners reflect the gospel of Jesus Christ or the philosophy of our political party? Do our churches incarnate the true differences between the Church and religious clubs? WHAT WE MUST DO If in any way you share the belief that, like the people of Israel in Ezra's day," our iniquities have risen higher than our heads," he has shown us what we must do about it. Ezra’s prayer of confes sion and contrition is one of the great prayers of the Bible. Ezra does not make any alibis, but states plainly that "our guilt has mounted up to the heavens.” We arc told that “a very great assemb ly of men, women and children, gathered to him out of Israel" and “they wept bitterly.” But neither Ezra, nor the people who came to hear him, were will ing to let it go at being sorry. Ezra challenged them: "Therefore let us make a covenant with God to put away all these wives and their children..." (10:3). Beyond feeling penitent the people were called to make a covenant that would pro duce results. I am not suggesting for one moment that we, too, ought to "put away" our spouses and children. Our situation is dif ferent and the solution most cer tainly is different, too. So, beyond feeling sorry, what should we do when, as individuals and as churches, we are into the way of the world over our heads? Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St. Ephrata, PA 17522 -by- Lancaster Farming, Inc. A Steinman Enterprise Robert G. Campbell General Manager Everett R. Newtwanger Managing Edltoi Copyright 1997 by Lancaster Farming