Scott Williams Training Coordinator Call l-SOO-DHI-TEST , fax (814) 86S-3294 Web site http://wwH.dhia.psu.edu Pennsylvania Dairy Herd Improvement Association DHIA Service Center, Orchard Road, Unhereity Park, PA 16802 Dairyman To Dairyman Question: A while back you talked about freshening heifers at a younger age and poorer milk production as a result. Did you recommend that they go back to older age freshening? No! There are many good rea sons for calving heifers near 24 months of age. The recommen dation that I gave to these dairy men was to address the needs of the heifers so that size and age disparity does not grow as we decrease age at first calving. First, here are some vary good reasons to consider calving heifers at 24 months of age instead of the customary 28 months. •Accumulation of additional cost of rearing heifers for 120 days x cost per day (est. $1.50) = $lBO •Accumulation of heifer replacements at the rate of 4.2% per month (1 month divided by 24 months) •Assuming equally produc tive lives, increase in non-pro ductive days •Delay of milk income poten tial •Delay of genetic gains from heifer replacement The greater number of heifers that tie up cash flow can be offset by the sale of replace ments to other dairies as long as cull rates remain reasonable at near 33%. In reality, this seldom happens and cull rates over 40% are often seen. This puts a great deal of pressure on the herd’s ability to just maintain size. Previous heifer management prompted heifers to calve at 28 months. These heifers produced 19843# milk in 305 days and had 305 mature equivalent (ME) of 24216#. The new heifers are now calving for the first time at 24 months and produce 17569# milk with a 305 ME of 23840#. This results in 2274# less milk per animal with an estimated $273 value ($12.00/cwt). The greater dollars generated by the older heifers in this case makes up for the increased cost of rear ing them. We cannot, however, justify some of the other poten tial losses. For this reason, we discussed what might be going wrong with the new heifer man agement program. Sometimes the most signifi cant change in management is no change at all. The theory here is that past heifer management bred heifers at 19 months of age and these heifers were housed with dry cows shortly after they were confirmed pregnant. Therefore, these heifers did not go on the maintenance dry cow diet until past 20 months of age. Currently heifers are treated the same way, but now this diet change occurs at 16 months. Did we tell our heifers to slow down their growth? Without heifer measurements before the man agement change, we can only rely on instinct and maybe some current measurements against breed averages. We still are calv ing at the younger age, but the heifers are allowed to stay in their age group until 20 months of age (pregnant 5 months). The plan is to do similar measure ments, with milk starts and peaks as before, to have some idea if our plan is working, at the earliest possible time. WATERLESS TOILETS We Perform Septic Inspections 81 Certifications ECO-TECH Call Today 1-800-879 0973 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 8, 2000-A3l Average Farm Feed Costs for Handy Reference To help farmers across the state to have handy reference of commodity input costs in their feeding operations for DHIA record sheets or to develop livestock feed cost data, here’s last week’s average costs of various ingred ients as compiled from regional reports across the state of Pennsylvania. Remember, these are averages, so you will need to adjust your figures up or down according to your location and the quality of your crop. Corn, No.2y 2.50 bu., 4.47 cwt. Wheat, N 0.2 2.32 bu., 3.87 cwt. Barley, N 0.3 —1.77 bu., 3.79 cwt. Oats, N 0.2 —1.55 bu., 4.84 cwt. Soybeans, No.l —4.94 bu., 8.25 cwt. Ear Corn 77.28 ton, 3.86 cwt. Alfalfa Hay —128.75 ton, 6.44 cwt Mixed Hay —125.00 ton, 6.25 cwt. Timothy Hay —125.00 ton, 6.25 cwt. V/ BREAKING MILK RECORDS! Lancaster Farming Carries DHIA Reports Each Month! “Sun-Mar” Composting Toilets Several models available including non-electnc. • NO Septic System • NO Chemicals Save the Environment' Recycle Back to Nature' FREE: 12 Page Color Catalog The original flex tine harrow that will &