(Continued from P«go A 1) Though he spent his child hood helping tend the farm, Dave did take an off-farm job one summer, driving truck for a roofing company. Despite the good wages, one summer was enough to convince him that farming was what he really wanted to do with his life. “I hated it,” recalls this quiet spoken farmer of his brief, off farm job. “I never wanted to go back.” After high school graduation in 1949, he left again to pursue a two-year agricultural-degree at Penn State. But when a key employee left within a year, Evans cancelled his college plans and come home for good to manage Margaretta Furnace Farms, with the Guernsey herd then doubled to 80 head. In 1953, neighborhood farm daughter Janet Gilbert became his wife. Over the years, the family grew by three daughters, Victoria, Christine and Corinne, expanding to include their fami lies and five grandchildren through the ensuing decades. Dairying was phased out in 1971, giving way to more grain and beef production. Today, Evans farms 900 acres within a five-mile radius of the farm planted to com, wheat, barley, soybeans and hay and annually feeds out 50-80 head of fat cat tle. Just as his own farming interests have altered over the years, so Dave Evans has watched agriculture in general to adapt to progress. “Marketing has changed,” asserts this grain producer, who has a keen eye for the daily com modity price swings. “When we started, a farmer could make a living with a strong back. Now, a farmer has to be a business per son. You must market right, buy right, sell right.” ° Uston > made to you nee £ e ,en 9th Available in W*"" 2!lSizes HER INST; ✓ In feedlots ✓ In drying systems ✓ Commercial applications ✓ At feedmills or elevators ✓ Around poultry & dairy barns ✓ At your grain bins or bulk tanks ✓ Replacement Augers for feed mixers and farm equipment Painted, Galvanized and Stainless Steel Fabrication, Feed Sins, Feeders, Hoppers, Covers, Dump Pits, Augers, and Controls Systems to Automate Your Operation. Crops, Beef Farmer Receives York Chamber Award “It’s just different today,” Evans insists. While commodity marketing plays a big role in Evans farm ing operation, he has no hard and-fast philosophy, except per haps to remain flexible. “We store, we spot market, we contract,” Evans ticks off as his marketing methods. Having 40,000 bushels worth of bin stor age room has, in most years, proven to be a reasonable hedge against grain price vulnerabili ty. But, he is quick to point out that this past season, with grain prices- leveraging downward since harvest, goes against most marketers’ experience. Figuring soybean futures to be somewhat flat long-range, Evans leaned heavier toward corn acres for this planting sea son. And, though a long-time, no-till advocate, Evans will readily lug a chisel plow onto fields as he sees a need based on soil and weather conditions. While farming is Dave Evans lifelong vocation, the machine love of his life is not the tractors or combines neatly parked away in the farm sheds. That honor goes to another motorized “vehi cle” parked nearby in its own private shelter: his Cessna 172 four-seater, private airplane. Evans became intrigued with flying in the 19505, taking lessons between cropping and milking cows. Lack of time and the cost of flying limited his involvement. Life without a milking string left a little more free time; and, in 1971, he pur chased his first plane. Then, Dave Evans got serious about learning to fly. A 1400-foot airstrip, licensed since 1972, is kept neatly mown, with the nearby small, open sided shelter housing his prized plane. Six years ago, daughter Corinne also earned her wings; now, father and daughter often fly activities together. Janet, Augers Heavy Uau Galvanized - Carbon - Stainless Lar ge Stock nf n