Page 18—Keystone Farm Show Section 1, Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 2, 1999 (Continued from Page 17) WHAT'S HAPPENING ON PENNSYLVANIA DAIRY FARMS? Partn This month we are presenting information on the technologies being used on Pennsylvania dairy farms. This is the second set of results from a 1997 mail survey by the Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology of Pennsylvania dairy farmers. The 874 dairy farmers responding to the survey averaged 65.3 cows per farm and 17,476 pounds of milk sold per cow. Each farmer was asked what type of milking system was used on the farm, and if they used automatic takeoffs, TMR, DHIA, bST, personal computers, or JOIN THE RUSH TO NEW TECHNOLOGY with CHEMGRO SEEDS See the latest in Biotechnology rkAmarA and advanced Genetics at the Keystone Farm Show MJ Booth 228 & 229 You may take home the Gold! Register for our SEEDS tcnn SppH Giveaway p -°- Box 218 > East Pe,ersbur 9- PA17520 oeeu Giveaway (717) 569 . 3296 . (800 ) 34 m 7 69 (grow) Designed fora new generation of custom applicator, the L-20208T dual spinner dry fertilizer and ag-hme spreader features an easy-to-use Mark 111 ground speed control system for adjusting application rates on the go, and a highly-advanced, corrosion-resistant paint system with fully welded and caulked hopper construction. The L-2020GT also features a stainless steel “turnkleen” idler pulley that insures proper belt tracking and a newly-designed stainless steel product flow divider for an even more precise placement of material. Mounts On Vehicles With Highway, Semi or Flotation Tires We provide Parts and Service on New Leader Spreaders See us at the Tuesday & Wednesday January 5 & 6 Booth 4198 - in the Old Main Building wt sh ,p ANNVILLE EQUIPMENT CO. PARTS 470 Palmyrs-Bellgrove Koad, Annville, PA 17003 EE 717-867-4631 1-800-233-0520 kJQgi We provide parts & service for new leader spreaders. Building the best since 1939. iiitiKii . ,i n.i iiih i i ittm > > i ti i.tittitHtinii What’s Happening On PA Dairy Farms KEYSTONE FARM SHOW written farm plans. The results indicate a wide variation of herd size and milk production per cow of the farms using individual technologies (Table 1). Please keep in mind that the use of a certain technology does not necessarily mean greater profitability. More than half (56.5%) of Pennsylvania's dairy farmers use a bam pipeline milking system. The results indicated that 18.3% of the farmers use a milking parlor while 25.1% of the farmers continue to use milker pails. As would be expected, the average herd size on farms using milking parlors is more than 3 times larger then SNOOKS EQUIPMENT “"“J RD #3 Box 130 Mlfflinburg, PA 17844 570-966-2736 -Spreader Tanks - Vacuum Tanks ask for Ernie or Dean T „ "We’re Here to Serve You ” - Truck Mounts -Manure Pum P s UUICDLUI MhIHIhUI - Laaoonp u mpB v ** >nr.„, _ Vertical Pumps - Alley Scrapers Talk with us at the 1999 iZZZZL. Keystone Perm Show. - vacuum pumps, We’re here to help you solve Hoses ’ Valves ’ Et . . ... . Ask About Our your waste handling needs. rental EQUIPMENT Here is how I did it; Using PADHIA’s Somatic Cell report I identified problem cows and lowered my cell count from 400,000 to 200,000. Saving me 4,200.00 per year. The Milk Urea Nitrogen (MUN) test shows me if my herd is utilizing the protein correctly. With this report and the help of my nutritionist I am able to save on valuable protein loss, and to help with breeding problems that high MUN levels can cause. Herd Reproductive Management has helped me to lower my average days open. Any cows open over one hundred days cost three dollars per day per cow. By tracking my milk production I stopped over feeding my cows. By saving two lbs. of grain per day @ 10 dollars per cwt on a 70- cow herd saved me 5,110.00 Dollars a year. Pennsylvania DHIA technicians are the very best. Giving me the quality service I need. u u » m ! i m t i 111 * i m > t t > i it n m m » > n 111111 mmiittimn ».?. Since I started testing my herd with Pennsylvania DHIA , I have saved hundreds. TRUST THE DHIA WITH EXPERIENCE PENNSYLVANIA DHIA herd size of farms using milker pails and 2 times larger than the herds size of farms using a bam pipeline. Dairy farms using milking parlors or bam pipelines average more than 1,850 pounds of milk per cow than farms using milker pails. However, there is little difference in milk production per cow between cows milked in milking parlors and cows milked with bam pipelines. In addition, automatic takeoffs are used on 16.2% of the state's dairy farms. These farms tended to have larger herd size and greater milk production per cow. www.dhia.osu.edu 1-800-DHI-lIST (Turn to Page 20)