AlO-Umcastef Farming, Saturday, June S, 1999 OPINION First of all, there just aren’t many pictures of dairy farmers around They’re too busy working their farms to take time out for photo sessions Second, it's June - and June is Dairy Month - so they’re busier than ever right now It is prime milk drinking season, you know But picture or no picture, we still wanted to tip our hats to the men and women responsible for the products that are part of our everyday lives Now about the cow Since dairy farmers are such a hardworking lot with little time to dillydally, they tend to speed through publications like this pretty quickly So, to make sure they’d stop and read this, we chose a photo of the one thing that always gets their attention June is Dairy Month 0 Bucks-Montgomcry Wool Pool, Delaware Valley College. Clarksville Field Day, Ellicott City, Md. Antique Engine, Tractor, and Toy Club Annual Show, Kempton Community Center, thru June 6. Centre County Dairy Princess Pageant, Pleasant Gap Grange Hall, Pleasant Gap, 7:30 p.m. Lebanon County Dairy Princess Pageant, Lebanon County Vo- Tech Building, Lebanon. Chester County Dairy Princess Pageant, Cochranville Com munity Center, Cochranville, 10:30 a.m. Huntingdon County Dairy Prin cess Pageant, Huntingdon Area Fundamentals of Marketing, Penn State Lancaster Greenfield Center, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., thru June Grazier Meeting, Allan Lynch JP why the cow? From milk to butter' to cheese Farm, Tuibotville, 7 p.m. York County Beekeepers, York 4-H Center, in conjunction with York County 4-H Strawberry Roundup, judging begins 7 p.m. Y2K Considerations hi Mercer County, Mercer County Cooperative Extension, 2 p jn.-4 pjn., also at Penn State Shenango Complex, Sharon, 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Pasture Walk, Wilmer Stoltzfoos Farm, Gratz, 9 a.m.-l 1:30 a.m. Second Agriculture Research Symposium, Capitol East Wing, Harrisburg, 10 a.m.-3 pm. Stock Dogs In Livestock Manage ment meeting, Allan Lynch Farm, Turbotvillc. Tulpehockcn Young Farmer Safe- Roundup, Farm and Home Cen- Farm, Halifax, 7 p.m.-9 p.m. Managing Your Well and Septic (Turn to Page All) June Is Dairy Month The time ot year we honor our dairy tarmeis and the tine products made from milk With more people in our country becoming two or three generations removed from farms, it becomes increasingly important tor farmers to promote and educate people about the importance of their commodities, their farm businesses, the wholesomeness and nutritional value of the food they produce. This requires farmers to be good neighbors. As our farming operations grow, farmers need to be more concerned about the image they present in the community. Thus, part of promotion includes landscaping, supporting community activities, being sensitive to the environment and knowing your neighbors. For many people, the impression of the dairy industry is your farm. In addition to supplying general industry promotion programs, do not forgo?’the many ways your farm is promoting dairy products. Wear your milk mustaches with pride! To Be Safe This spring has seen a rash of farm accidents. At least one farmer and one small child have been killed and one farmer seriously injured in tractor accidents in Lancaster County this year. Although some accidents are out of our control, most acccidents can be prevented. The happen when we let our guard down or take unnecessary risks. Consider the following rules for your farm 1 Never have small children on a tractor. Keep children away from busy areas We do not allow children to play on roads or highways. Jeffrey Stoltzfus, Eastern Lancaster County School District Adult Farmer Instructor, observes many farm driveways are busier than many roads. Keep power take off (PTO) shields in place. Replace them after making repairs. Make sure pesticides are Stored away from children. Talk about safety with your family at least once a week. Remember farm safety pays. How much would it cost you to hire someone skilled enough to make the decisions and do the work you do on the farm 7 It you could find such a person, you probably could not afford to hire him or her To Monitor Hay According to Robert Anderson, Lancaster County Extension Agronomy Agent, bailing hay too green may cause heating that could bum down the hay storage facility. Every year a barn usually burns due to spontaneous combustion caused by storing hay too wet. Hay should not be stored until the moisture content reaches 20 per cent or less. At higher moisture levels, there is a greater risk of a fire. In addition, hay which is baled above 20 per cent has a higher risk of becoming moldy and dusty. To be safe from fires, inspect hay mows at least twice each week during the harvest THE GOOD EARTH June 6,1999 Background Scripture: Genesis 1:1 through 2:4a Devotional Reading: Psalms 104:24-35 Upon being told that God had created the heavens and the earth in six days, a little boy asked his teacher: “What busi ness had God been in since?” Good question! An there are a number of dif ferent answers with which peo ple reply. Some believe that God has mostly been unemployed since he finished creation. Others would say that it is not so much unemployment as retirement. Still others believe that God has been only part time since he got the world run ning like a good machine. There are others who, like myself, believe that God is still in the same job he had millions of years ago, that the Creation was just the first phase of a long-term project. Jesus himself says: “My Father is working 5ti11...” (Jn 5:17) and many texts in the Bible portray a creator who is still creating, still nurtur * ing his creation toward his pur pose. I think God is still in the same business. The Genesis story of creation convinces me of that. In the ancient world it was believed by many that the world was brought into being by accident. The story in Genesis 1, however, indicates a world created, not by accident, by by intention and action: “Let there he light,”com mands God, *and there was light.” Before the first fiat of cre ation, all was “without form and void, and darkness was upon the face of the deep.” On the very first day of creation, however, was begun a process of bring order out of the chaos. Every decree of creation follows a well devised plan and suggest a goal. The God of Genesis-which means “beginning”-has a plan and a purpose. TIME’S TREADMILL Our whole modern idea of “progress” stems from Genesis. In antiquity, time was generally conceived as being cyclical. Just as there was an endless cycle of seasons, many people believed that time and existence are a closed loop, without beginning or ending. The God of Genesis, however, gave the Hebrews a dif ferent concept of time, a linear one with a beginning and an ending. They saw time moving on an incline between Creation season Check for hot spots. Hot spots should be checked for their exact temperature using a thermometer. If hay temperatures reach 150 degrees, there is a danger of fire and a daily monitoring of hay temperatures is recommended. If temperatures reach 160 degrees, monitoring should be at four intervals. Fire pockets can be expected if the temperature of the hay reaches 175 degrees. You should notify the local fire department to be on standby and be ready to move hay. If temperatures reach 185 fTiirn to Pago A3B) and the fulfillment of God’s plan. Even though that is no longer the novel idea that it once seemed, there are still lots of people who see the world as pur poseless. That kind of view makes life seem meaningless and there are many who see the world as a hostile place and time as an enemy. God’s plan begins with light; “Let there be light.” Just as the chaos was changed by God’s order, so the darkness of the chaos was transformed by light. Light is one of the most endur ing spiritual symbols in the world. Light contends with and is victorious over darkness. Touched by the Spirit of God, people are enlightened. In pro claiming the coming of the Messiah, Isaiah said, “The peo ple who walked in darkness have seen a great light...” (9-2) and “Arise, shine, for your light has come and the glory of the Lord is risen upon you” (60:1) In Jn 1, we read, “The light shines in the darkness and the dark ness has not overcome it”(l:5). VERY GOOD! Some people believe that the world is essentially an evil place. In contrast to this attitude is the one we find Genesis. “And God saw that the light was good.” After each act of creation, Genesis tells us, “And God saw that it was good.” And following his last act of creatiobj human beings, both male and female, God is even more pleased with the world he has made; “And behold, it was very good.” That might come as a sur prise to those who believe that the human race is “just no good,” Notice that we are to be created in the divine image. While human nature may be plagued by demonic temptations, there is always a divine flame that bums within each of us. It is not human nature that is to blame but what we have done with it. The same is true of the natural world. Note, too, that we are to have dominion over the earth, but not to abuse, conquer, or rape it in the name of its own self-fulfill ment. Our dominion over the earth must be tempered by God’s purpose in creating us: we are to tend it like tenant farm ers. It belongs, not to us, but to God and we are at best, stew ards of that Good Earth. Lancaster Farming Established 1955 Published Every Saturday Ephrata Review Building 1 E. Main St. <■ Ephrata, PA 17522 -by- Lancaster Farming, Inc. A Stemman Enteipnse William J. Burqess General Manager Everett R. Newswanger Editor Copyright 1999 by Lancaster Farming