B 111 H Hb ,. I 818 PENNSYLVANIA MASTER CORN GROWERS ASSOC , INC. ■ rn Talk, Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 3, 2001 A bumper corn crop resulted in a huge pile of corn at Risser Grain. Family members, from left, are Debbie, Brent, Mark, and Ann with dog, Wiley. Photo by Andy Andrews, editor Crop Winners Announced At Keystone Farm Show ANDY ANDREWS Editor YORK (York Co.) Winners of the Pennsylvania Five-Acre Corn Club Contest were announced here at the York Fairgrounds in mid- January during the annual Keystone Farm Show. Dan Wolf, president of the Pennsylvania Master Corn Growers Association (PMCGA), noted that of the 103 entries in the corn con- Pa. and Del. No-Till Confer ence, West Middlesex, Pa. Also March 7, Hotel Magee, Bloomsburg; March 8, Carlisle, Pa.; and March 9, Dover, Del. Mid-Atlantic No-Till Confer ence, Bloomsburg’s Hotel Magee. test, there were some “nota ble differences,” he said, in cultural practices compared to the 1999 contest. Only 7 of 91 growers used cultivation, with most growers using 30- inch row spacing. The second highest spacing was 38 inches apart. Wolf noted it is “hard to find significant differences in yield to favor one type of til lage over another,” he told those attending the awards RN TALK arm Calendar Capitol Region Row Crop Herbicide and Insecticide Update, extension office, Adams County, 1 p.m.-3 p.m. Mid-Atlantic Tillage Confer ence, Penn-Del Conference Center, Carlisle, contact Mark Goodson, (717) 840- 7408. (Turn to Page 4) presentation at -grounds. About 44 percent of the contestants use sidedress ni trogen. Average planting depth was 1.7 inches. Corn Corn contest winners announced at Keystone included, from left, Susan Johnson, herdsperson, accepting for Nelson Beam, Elverson, second place, shelled grain class, nonirrigated no-till; Jim Hershey, Elizabethtown, first place, shelled grain class, nonirrigated no-till; Bob Shearer, Mount Joy, third place, shelled grain class, nonirrigated tilled; and David B. Bivens, Big Cove Tannery, third place, ear com class. Photo by Andy Andrews, editor Forward Pricing Critical To Corn Growers’ Economic Survival HOLTWOOD (Lancaster Co.) “You can no longer put corn in a bin and wait on prices,” said Ann Risser, Risser Grain. Risser, who with her family are celebrating 25 years in the grain elevator business, are trying to spread the word about the realities of grain buying and selling. Farmers need to “have a marketing plan,” Risser said, including simple forward pricing. Ann; with husband Mark and son Brent and Brent’s wife, Debbie, operate a grain business with three locations, serving about 2,500 custom ers. With headquarters in Holt- fair- the acres grown by participants numbered 24,242. For the most part, the year was substantially different in terms of total yield, a vast im provement from the state ANDY ANDREWS Editor wood, the grain business picks up and delivers grain to areas in Lancaster, York, and other southeast Pennsylvania counties, all of Maryland, and into New York. At Holtwood, all 150 till able acres are rented. Late last year, the location housed two piles of grain overflow. Both covered, one pile included 200,000 bushels or 11 million pounds of corn. Another, when it was piled, included about 50,000 bush els. The corn is on top of a 120-foot square concrete pad and covered by a heavy plas tic bunker cover. Storage at the Holtwood location, noted Brent Risser, is more than 550,000 bushels. They can store 250,000 bush (Turn to Page 5) wide drought of the previous summer. “Some don’t appre ciate how good of a year it was,” Wolf said Greg Roth, Penn State (Turn to Page 3)