(Continued from Page 30) DOM/CP ratio showed a need for a protein supplement almost three weeks earlier, because of the dry weather, than in past years. I was encouraged by the data I re BG-34 Perennial • BARALFA 54 GRASS Proven track record A winterhardy btyid of the best late manuring AADAI FA AO dfploid ‘varieties "of‘pe'renhfal ryegrass "from IWK Europe. The combination of winter hardiness and and late maturity has made this blend very popular. wnw Used pure or in a mix with White clover, it provides D ADAI EA OO extremely high quality forage. People who graze D#Vlvp\Lawa IWI BG-34 report increases of milk production up to to pounds of milk per cow per day. extremely nigh teed quality BARAULA Late maturing and winterhardy! Developed in The Netherlands and is listed in many European countries (including Germany and Switzerland). It is one of the latest maturing varieties available today. Not only is Baraula very winterhardy, it is also highly digestible even after the first cutting. It has proven to withstand severe winters and is also capable of enduring dry and hot summers. \pt7 \ /eystone Group 570-538-1170 • 570-546-3117 Toll Free 1-888-825-5088 Name Paradise Valley Orgdnic Feeds Agronomy Inc Locust Brook Inc, Dole Greiner Ken Deitch John Marks Stanely Crone .... Richard Crone Michael Judd Robert Lentz Charles Groff Kore Yoder Helena Chemical Co, Webb's Super Gr 0.... Harlan Martin Carl Schmidt Joe Anchor. East Gate Feed & Grain, LLC Sandßod Soles & Service .. Ron A. Wasson Forman Gram ceived this past summer. Many times I hear landowners say “my cows won’t eat those grasses” or “these grasses won’t maintain a cow-calf herd” (when referring to seeded grasses). Although I have CLOVERS Alice White is a new variety in the US and is a truly improved variety. It has large leaves and grows to medium height. Alice has shown tremendous nitrogen fixing benefits for the grass that grows with it. Alice is persistent and winter hardy making it the perfect companion for pastures. Barbian White is a small leaved and very persistent White clover. This makes it a perfect variety for sheep, goat and horses. It also is the clover of choice if high traffic is anticipated. Agricultural Seeds Phone 570-437-2156 717-328-3145 717-665-4821 ,717-486-7311 570-799-0769 .570-275-1738 ,570-275-1343 814-334-5281 717-933-8211 717-242-3712 670-966-3947 570-759-1311 800-258-6689 717-589-7676 .570-546-3117 570-538-1170 888-567-6556 717-532-9501 814-237-2339 570-649-5579 only one growing season of data, I believe this information will be very useful when discussing the use and value of seeded grass with produc ers. CHv Limestoneville, PA Mercersburg, PA Manheim, PA Boiling Springs, PA Catawissa, PA Danville, PA Danville, PA Harrison Volley, PA Lebanon, PA Lewistown, PA Lewisburg, PA Mifflinville, PA Mill Hall, PA Millerstown, PA Muncy, PA New Columbia, PA Reedsville, PA Shippensburg, PA State College, PA Turbotville, PA Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 21,2001, Foraging Around*3l Lab Plays Key Role In U.S. Research WASHINGTON, D.C. Parasitic wasps, flies, fungi, and bacteria abound at the Agricultural Research Ser vice’s (ARS’s) European Bio logical Control Laboratory (EBCL) in Montpellier, France. There, ARS and collabo rating scientists are subject ing these organisms to a battery of tests aimed at pit ting them against non-native insects and weeds that en danger U.S. agriculture. Montpellier, on France’s Mediterranean coast, is a strategic locale. From this seaside city, EBCL scientists can hop flights to the pests’ points of origin in North Africa, the Middle East, Bal kans and Asia, where natural enemies can be found. Typi cally, they’ll explore sites where the crops, climate or habitat matches a particular U.S. region where a pest has become established and a biocontrol agent is needed. Entomologists Kim Hoelmer and Dominique Coutinot, for example, are now rearing Hymenopterous wasps, collected last fall from Tunisia, that parasitize olive fruit flies. In California, the It’s Hay Time and We Have The Hay Tools For You At Umberger’s of Fontana GA7OOO — j=, ROTARY RAKE W« Put A Spin On Farming Editor’s Note: Mary Schrader can be contacted at NRCS, PO Box 186, Benkelman, NE 69021, (308) 423- 2402, ext. 3, or at mary.schrader@ne.usda.gov. fly’s establishment threatens the state’s $33.9 million olive industry. Charles Pickett, a Califor nia Department of Food and Agriculture cooperator, is seeking fruit fly parasites that could be released into olive groves as part of an in tegrated approach to control ling the pest. Tim Widmer, meanwhile, is testing the host specificity, virulence and other features of dozens of fungi and bac teria cultured from salt cedar, yellow starthistle, giant reed and other Eura sian weeds. While collecting diseased reed specimens in Nepal’s wetland areas in Sep tember, the plant pathologist picked up and had to pick off another inhabitant: leeches. Some other pests on the EBCL “hit-list” include dia mondback moths, gypsy moths, pink hibiscus mealy bug, Asian long-horned bee tles, wheat stem sawflies, apple leafrollers, knapweed, hoary cress, and rush skele ton weed.