RANDY WELLS Indiana Co. Correspondent < DAYTON (Armstrong Co.) Despite the relatively dry •weather this summer in Armstrong County, George Rumbaugh was able to walk into one of his com fields near here on the first day of September and gaze up at the green stalks stretching well above his head. The ears had filled out nicely, too, he noted, and he predicted his crop would probably yield 80 or more bushels per acre. Rumbaugh probably knows as much about grow ing com as any farmer in his tcounty and perhaps the state, f He had not only been growing Lcorn but studying it for years nwhen he was asked in the r early 1970 s to serve as the h first president of the newly formed Pennsylvania Master Corn Growers Association (PMCGA). “George was a student of corn. He not only grew it, but 30,000 Could Be Corn’s Optimum Population Rate ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Farming Staff PEACH BOTTOM (Lancas ter Co.) —Producers often seek In several planting demonstrations involving grain and silage corn, the optimum population rate could be 30,000 seeds per acre. The best stands were planted this year at that rate, according to Ed Herrmann, advis er to the Solanco Young Farmer Association. PMCGA’s First President A ‘Student of Corn ’ he watched it to see how it reacted to weather and soil conditions,” said Bill King a retired Armstrong Penn State Extension Service Lush, alternating contour strips of corn and hay swirl across much of the 360-acre Rumbaugh farm in eastern Armstrong County. that “optimum population rate.” That rate is the amount of com seeds to put down per acre (Turn to Pago 6) ORNIUK NSYLVANIA MASTER CORN GROWERS ASSOC., INC. k, Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 10, 1998 agent. Rumbaugh lives on the Wayne Township, Armstrong County farm his great-grand father bought in 1857, and he Another growing season is coming to an end and it’s been a very active spring and summer for the PMCGA and the NCGA. The ethanol battle was won once again. Special thanks to all of you who took time to send a seed com tag, with your “Save Ethanol” ACOBNTMK ™ Farni Calendar lurs(l;n, (Klolht 13 Corn Silage Management meeting, Solanco Young F Associ. Sola*" (Turn to Pago 11) lives in a 131-year-old brick farm house along with a two lane blacktop that winds through the rolling farmland. Eventually the farm was PENNSYLVANIA MASTER N GROWERS ASSOCIATION President’s Message Chris Krimmel President, PMCGA message to your congression al leaders. Because of our combined efforts, ethanol production A harvester demonstrated to the crowd At Ag Prog ress uses a rotating blade. See story page 14. divided between his grandfa ther and his great-uncles “In those days you could raise a family on 50 acres,” Rumbaugh said and today at age 76 Rumbaugh operates part of the original farm with his son David. Their 360-acre spread has about 260 acres of tillable land. Rumbaugh was taking a critical look at his com crops even before PMCGA was started. Rumbaugh, along with extension agent King and Willard Kimmel, another Armstrong County farmer, conducted some of the first interval com planting tests in the state. Despite the conventional wisdom of that time that com should not be planted before mid-May, the three men started planting com as early as mid-April six rows each of the same seed variety in the same field and contin ued the weekly plantings through May. The results (Turn to Pago 15) will use more than 600 mil lion bushels of corn each year, adding 43 cents per bushel or (Turn to Pago 13)