(Continued from Pago 1) after three years of tests showed that not only could com be planted as early as mid-April, but some of the best yields came from crops planted in April. Some of the early experi ments also searched for the right combination of seeds and soils. “We had a method where we’d run four sections with 12 or 14 hybrids staggered to get away from soil problems,” Rumbaugh said. In those years farmers could have good crop yield seasons and bad crop yield seasons. Rumbaugh remem bers one year when the corn was well ahead of “knee-high by the Fourth of July.” However, the rest of that With our biotechnology and agronomic information, you’re not just raising crops. You’re raising your standards. Only Golden Harvest has Agronomy Up Front™, the exclusive agronomic research program that gives you the information you need before you plant. And because Golden Harvest is the only independent national seed brand with unbiased access to new technologies, we can guide you to the right seed products for you from an extensive lineup of varieties for your area. Call today! We’ll start guiding you to smarter farming right away with hybrids like: H-2515 (110 day), H-25308t (112 day), H-2573 (114-day) and H-2643 (117 day new) plus soybean varieties like: H-1357RR (3.5), H-1365 (3.6), H-1383 (3.8) and X-415 (4.1). A COMPLETE SEED UNE FOR NORTHEAST AGRICULTURE W/ AGRICULVER, INC Golden 3900 Mclntyre Rd., Trumansburg, NY 14886 Harvest Phone: 1-800-836-3701 Fax:6o7-387-5789 PMCGA’s First summer turned to dust, and the crop produced only about eight bushels an acre. Rumbaugh remembers that he was harrowing oats one spring day when his wife told him some gentlemen in State College had tele phoned. They wanted to form a state com growers associa tion, and they knew Rumbaugh from his early work on running the com test plots with the extension ser vice. They asked him to lead the foundling association and he agreed, serving for three years as the first president of PMCGA. Dr. Joe McGahen, a retired professor emeritus of Penn State University’s College of Agriculture whose specialty was crop production, was one | Smarter Farming] President A ‘Student of Corn ’ of the men who encouraged Rumbaugh in his experi ments. “I visited his farm. That was my position at the time to visit corn producers throughout the state” as the extension service’s corn spe cialist for Pennsylvania, McGahen said. “We had this com program the one-acre com contest but I didn’t like the connotation of a con test. I thought there were more benefits than just a con test.” According to McGahen, Rumbaugh was instrumental in getting other farmers in Armstrong and Indiana coun ties to participate. The pro gram went from being a con test to a study that looked at the cultural practices of pro- :s Corn Talk, Laneaater Farming, Saturday, October 10, 1998—Page IS during com. The real educational part of their cooperation was that the farmers got together for a “crops day.” “People were talking with their neighbors about what they did with their crops,” McGahen said. Results of seed experi ments were shared with asso ciation members, and awards were presented each year to top growers. Originally the association’s prizes were awarded at the state Farm Show, Rumbaugh said. Rumbaugh himself is the isiL €®lM fivlLl NSWS PENNSYLVANIA MASTER CORN GROWERS ASSOC., INC. proud owner of one of those trophies. In one of the first years of competition he was named the corn growing champion with a five-acre average yield of 170.7 bushels per acre using Pioneer 3773 a yield that would be more than respectable even today. “And this isn’t prime corn growing country here,” he said. In the early days Rumbaugh’s family operated a poultry business on the farm and grew com for chick en feed. Later they also raised sheep and Angus cat tle. But today the Rumbaughs are strictly crop farmers “deer and groundhogs” are the only livestock on his farm, Rumbaugh said and this season they’re growing oats and hay in addition to about 90 acres of com. They sell their crops main ly to neighboring hog and cat tle farmers. A small amount of their hay has been sold for mulch in Armstrong County’s underground mushroom farms, and in past years some of their hay fed thor oughbreds at The Meadows harness racing track in Washington County. ’Hie Rumbaugh experi mental corn plots have been posted with signs advertising the use of Pioneer Funk Agway, Doebler’s, and other brands of seeds as the Rumbaughs searched for the right combination of seed and (Turn to P»8» 16 )