'^CI Ift \l I I{ I Hit V 01.43 No. 9 1997 Ends As Perplexing Year For Producers ANDY ANDREWS VERNON ACHENBACH JR. Lancaster Farming Staff EPHRATA (Lancaster Co.) For many producers, 1997 will go into the books as a confusing, per plexing year. For others, 1997 will prove to be a year that provided the first fruits of burgeoning technolo gy and expanding markets. Pork and beef products are sell- Bob and Diana Miller, with sons, Matt, 5; Wesley, 8; and Ben, 2, have been honored as Maryland Outstanding Farm Family for 1997. Farm Show Special Issue Next Week Our special Pennsylvania Farm Show issue will come to you next week. An extensive resource to help you gel the most out of your visit to the Farm Show, this publication will be filled with the Farm Show schedule and building layout, special Interviews with farm families who plan to show their home-grown Kerns, and advertisers’ mes sages to help you choose products and services. In fact, to help you get a head start on your planning, the building layout and show schedule Is Included In this Issue, starting on page 817. Please note that to getlhe paper out to you on time next week some of the news and advertising deadlines have (Turn to Pago A 25) Four Sections ing at a brisk pace in Japan, the major buyer of U.S. pork. Exports of broilers in 1997 will total 4.6 billion pounds and should increase to 4.7 billion this year (with Russia a big growth market for U.S. chicken). Other products will see increasing demand from overseas, apparently with no end in sight At the same time, producers in a large part of the state saw their Mid-Winter Plowing Brings Hope For A New Year In many places the ground sleeps under e deep, eoft blanket of snow. But in Lancaster County, the ground was open. And early Monday morning, before the the storm came up from the South, this Amish tanner was getting a running start on spring plowing. The scene along West View Drive, east of Intercourse, seems out of place in the middleof winter. And yet, what bet ter symbolic activity could explain the eternal hope that lies within the heart of every true farmer? As we ring In the new year, this hope causes us to believe the blessings of nature will give uryet another good growing season full of bountiful harvest and the spiritual Meetings associated with the calling to be a famier^hggjt^flw^ Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 3, 1998 crops drastically reduced by a per sistent, unbreakable drought throughout the summer of 1997. In July, it was announced that a drought watch was declared for 34 counties in the Susquehanna River basin. Com silage harvests were down drastically, as much as 35 to 40 percent in some areas. The USDA yield estimate for Pennsylvania, $28.50 Per Year according to Penn Slate experts, is 85 bushels per acre compared to 119 bushels per acre in 1996 a substantial decrease. But for as much as the crop endured, some producers achieved high levels of production from their fields. Many agree that grow ing successful crops of any nature is a perplexing, confusing business at best, even in an ideal year. To illustrate the nature of this dual-personality year filled with droughts and broken expectations, the 1997 com harvest is still pegged at about 9.27 billion Millers Named Outstanding Maryland Farm Family EVERETT NEWSWANGER Managing Editor, . ~ NORTH EAST, Md. For die farm family that has been recog nized by both Land O’Lakcs and Farm Bureau as outstanding Mary land young fanners. Bob and Diane Miller and their three sons, Wesley 8, Matt S. and Ben 2, look at their operation as both a heritage and a business. The heritage part comes from a long line of ancestors who have lived on their farm located just south of the Pennsylvania/ Maryland line. Not only do they enjoy their work, the family part nership between them and Bob’s father and uncle provide a reward ing atmosphere to rear the boys. The business attitudes focus on 60C Per Copy bushels, about the same as last year’s crop. It’s the fourth largest crop on record, according to the USDA. Carryovers will create only a six-week supply of com at the time of this year’s harvest But the livestock and poultry industries continue to use com at a record level despite the small carryovers. Producers had other news that created questions about ag’s future and the role of a progressive far mer in it In a year of large mergers (Atlantic Dairy Cooperative and (Turn to Page A 24) obtaining expert professional man agement help from accountants, * feed nutritionists and crop consultants. “Any young person who wants to farm should consider what he/ shewants out of life,” Bob said. “If he wants to make a lot of money or have short hours, he will not find this on the farm. But if he wants to be self-employed, enjoy his work, and have a good place to rear a family, he should consider it” “But he/she definitely should consider obtaining professional management help.” Diane adds. “And he needs to find time to get away so he can look at the opera tion from a different perspective and come back with a more posi tive attitude.” (Turn to Page A 26)