, jffs. IWe € e ii vrm S3.’ P 3 „ /"“I JIM ill I o-v.u** °”° 00 oso ,*■ —X*- lr ‘ I IMI Jjnu ~i fjj PFI.IODIL ALS DIVISION I l U Uj hUV I WEO9 PATTE library I I I*—^ PENN STATE UNIVERSITY | |_ | UNIV PART. PA 16802 _ I I _ —^ m ITo Nil V 01.45 No. 51 Poultry Manure Management, Use Strategies Focus Of National Symposium ANDY ANDREWS Lancaster Farming Staff OCEAN CITY, Md. It’s a big challenge: how to move what some consider “waste” and others a valuable resource. Poultry manure. The problem: of the seven bil lion broilers produced in the Nelson Groff, Manheim, is poised to lead, as president, the Lancaster County Poultry Association, which will con duct its annual banquet Tuesday evening. Groff, technical services representative for Heritage Poultry Management Services, is pictured with his wife, Arlene. Turn to page A 36 to read more about the Groffs. Photo by Lou Ann Good World Dairy Expo Names Holstein Supreme Champion MADISON, Wis. A 4-year old cow exhibited by Kent Van Dyk and Mark Rueth of Jeffer son, Wis. was selected as the 2000 World Dairy Expo su preme champion here during closing ceremonies at the 34th annual show. Vandyk-K Integrity Paradise is sired by Robthom Integrity and her dam is Vandyk-K Broker Pansey-ET. The su preme champion produced a 305-day record of 23,729 pounds of milk, 849 pounds of fat, and 780 pounds of protein. The reserve supreme cham pion honors went to the cham pion from the Central National Jersey Show. Waymar Patrick Nadine is an aged cow owned by Piedmont Jerseys Inc. of Coa ticook, Quebec, Canada. She has a 305-day record of 21,344 pounds of milk, 977 pounds of fat, and 838 pounds of protein. Nabdon Master Patrick sired Nadine and her dam is Waymar Silver Jay Norah. A Jersey cow named Robin Acres Red Alpha lOf was se (Turn to Pago A 39) Four Sections U.S. every year, the manure gen erated could be laid down in a pile three feet wide by three feet high stretching 7,900 miles long, or about twice the length of the U.S. Processing the manure so it could be used for fertilizer, fuel, or feed is the greatest challenge. INTERCOURSE (Lancaster Co.) Fall harvest season is almost complete as warm weather arrived early this week. The morning sun created an Indian Summer-like specta cle. This has been a record year for corn production in the state and the country. The USDA notes that a record crop is in store for Pennsylvania —an average of 129 bushels per acre, up seven bushels per acre from the previous record of 120 bushels per acre in 1994. Corn production nationwide should be 10.2 billion bushels, the largest pro duction and yield on record (average of 139.6 bushels per acre for the nation). Other farm reports indicate the corn harvest is coming in strong at regional feed mills. Rain has prevented harvest in some areas. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 21, 2000 but one that can be technologi cally met today, according to an agent with North Carolina Ex tension Service. Glenn Carpenter, area agent Margeaux Firestine and “Miss Universe” stand by the MAP Farm sign in Womels dorf. Firestine recently won the junior division speech competition at the Hereford Junior National Expo in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Miss Universe has been a class winner at several fairs and state competitions. Photo by Michelle Ranck Speaking Of Beef Have You Heard fibout CHB? MICHELLE RANCK Lancaster Farming Staff WOMELSDORF (Berks Co.) Heinz ketchup, Idaho potatoes, and a trip to the gro- $32.00 Per Year with North Carolina extension in Pittsboro, N.C., said Monday that the technology to convert the resource is there, but is “not nearly as good as it needs to be cery store proved to be more than simply food for thought for Margeaux Firestine. Firestine, 15, combined sev eral marketing ideas as she de According to the Pennsylvania Agricultural Statistics Service, corn for grain production is forecast at 135.5 mil lion bushels, 120 percent above last year’s crop. The corn crop was 96 percent dent, 2 percent behind the 5-year av erage. The corn crop was also 78 percent mature, which was the same as the S-year average. Twenty-two percent of the corn acreage was harvested by the end of the week, 8 percent behind the S-year average. Corn silage harvest was very active and yields looked good. Fall plowing was 59 percent complete. A sign of some rainy, cooler weather, not to mention shortening days, ahead ... The photographer caught this glimpse of the rising sun Monday at the corner of Newport and Pond roads near Intercourse. Photo by Andy Andrews 600 Per Copy for a long-term, sustained market of poultry goods,” he said. Carpenter spoke Monday (Turn to Pago A 29) vised her own plan to market beef, the basis for her first place speech at the Hereford Junior National Expo held in (Turn to Pago A3B)