Vol. 43 No. 51 State Farm-City Event Shares Agricultural Adventure VERNON ACHENBACH JR. Lancaster Farming Staff HARRISBURG (Dauphin Co.) Almost 3,000 elementary school students and an unknown number of adults on Wednesday participated in the second state Department of Agriculture’s (PDA) Farm-City Day event at the PDA headquarters building in Harrisburg. Although the official Farm-City Week is annually held the week ending Thanksgiving Day, and the state has been involved in Farm- Beetles Prove An Effective Weapon In Controlling Flies ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Fanning Staff ELIZABETHTOWN (Lancas ter Co.) Fanners may have new weapons for the war on disease cany ing flies in layer and broiler houses. Those weapons could surprise you. In the past, researchers knew about the effects of using the “bis ter beetle” (known scientifically as Carcinops Pumilio ) to live in poul try house manure and eat fly eggs and larvae. But research by Penn State and independent companies are clos ing in on ways to mass-produce beetles that each can eat up to 150 fly eggs a day. Penn State has been studying the hister beetle for many years, according to Charlie Pitts, Penn State professor of entomology. Pitts said the beetle is an insect that is native to the country, which, NAZARETH (Northampton Co.) —Crisp, clear weather allowed a lot of shelled corn harvesting to take place the past week. Bill Sandt, farm manager of Windhaven Farms in Nazareth, takes a break from harvesting corn off of Penn Dixie Road. The 10-acre field was yielding in the range of 30-150 bushels per acre. Photo by Andy Andrews Five Sections City Days for years, the PDA ini tiated its first on-site Farm-City Day event last year. Based on its success, the event was continued this year. Last year about 500 youth attended the event, which involves many of the PDA staff. For those unfamiliar with Farm- City Day activities, they arc held as a means for agriculturally employed and non-agriculturally employed people to get to know and appreciate each other better. The goal has been that simple. according to the literature, was transmitted through “cow piles” from Buffalo herds to cow herds. The beetle, transmitted across the U.S., eventually ended up from the cow piles into poultry houses. A company operated by Roni Clark and Leon Beiler, C & M Farm Services in Elizabethtown, manages a hister program to tackle the fly problem. The natural fly parasites include wasps, beneficial nematodes, and the carcinops beetle. Working under a USDA Small Business Innovation Research Grant, IPM Laboratories, Locke, N.Y., has come up with a way to mass-produce the beetles. C & M Farm Services has an exclusive contract to sell the beetles in three states, according to Carol Glenis ter, president of IPM Laboratories. Measuring less than '/«inch in length, each adult beetle can (Turn to Page A 27) Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 24, 1998 though the mission has sometimes been difficult to maintain, given the fact that fewer than 2 percent of the population is directly involved with production farming, and many of the current generation of people are two to three generations removed from farming as a means for direct sustainment. As the general labor employ ment of the population of the United States changed dramatical ly from farm, mining and timber ing work to factory, manufacturing and service work, the culture of the new communities based on the new types of employment deve loped a void of first-hand know ledge of farming, land issues, and rural and environmental concerns. Even more significantly, a phi losophical chasm seemed to deve lop between city and rural people, that continues today. The chasm seems to concern the nature of the relationship of human beings to plants and animals. One of the efforts of Farm-City Day events is to present the rela tionship of agriculture lly produced plants and annuals to everyday commodities and products, in an effort to educate the general public about their everyday reliance on a strong and healthy agricultural industry. While some community Farm- City Day events are designed to provide a forum for both city and farm people to leam more about each other, the PDA event is designed more to have an impact on children. Wednesday’s program carried the theme, “Farm City Week. A Story to be Told Lessons to be Learned.” The theme was the concept of state Secretary of Agriculture Samuel E. Hayes Jr., who has been a long-time advocate of promoting education and agriculture. “This year’s edition of PDA’s Farm City Day was another great success,” Hayes said. “Agriculture has a wonderful stoiy to be told and there are many lessons for our young students to learn.” Free candy apples, and a few mild midway type rides were sev eral of the not-strictly agricultural activities ii'eluded. However, the event is designed to avoid boring the youth with dry, force-fed lectures about the impor tance of agriculture, but rather to provide an atmosphere, similar to a Quality Haymaking In Foraging Around To get good hay, you h t #e to feed it. “Fertilizer pays. It doesn’t cost you,” said Joel Steigman, who farms 250 acres at two separate sites below Broad Mountain near Halifax. Steigman won first place for his alfalfa-timothy grass at the 1998 Hay Show during Ag ‘Progress 3ays. He is profiled in the special section this issue, Foraging Around. Photo by Andy Andrews Set Clocks Back Tonight Time has come to change from Daylight Saving Time back to East ern Standard Time. We “fall back” one hour at 2 a.m. Sunday morning, Oct. 25. To get that extra hour of sleep, turn the clocks back one hour before you go to bed Saturday night. Animal feeding and milking sche dules also need to be adjusted accordingly. Shirk’s S>rry Fniiii 3 isics Column Or Lk Website The “Daily Farm Management Course” column by Glenn A. Shirk, Lancaster County extension agent, is now up to Article 20, “Heat Stress," on page A 35. Readers with access to the Internet can also read the previous articles in the series, of which several more will be written for the newspaper. .Check out the columns on our website at www.farming@lancasterfarming.com $29.50 Per Year county fair (that they may later want to visit), of fun and adventure. The PDA building sits along Cameron Street across from the state Farm Show Complex, where PDA vehicle and some guest park-' ing was temporarly relocated for the event. The parking lot of the PDA building, the front steps, landing, lobby, first floor and basement, side yard, and an area behind one of the greenhouses were used for the event. On the steps of the PDA build ing, 13-year-old country singing entertainer Crystal Marie, dressed in white Stetson and cowgirl attire, (Turn to Page At 1) 600 Per Copy