A2B-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 21,2001 Action Of The Auction Lures, Keeps Employees At Sales Stables Part 2 of 2 MICHELLE RANCK Lancaster Farming Staff Editor’s note: This article is part two of a two-part series on New Holland Sales Stables. Since the business encompasses many facets of agriculture, the articles feature several people with asso ciations to the sales stables. NEW HOLLAND (Lancaster Co.) There must be some thing about the livestock auction business. Something about working This picture shows the beef barn and arena when it was built in 1950. In the auctioneer’s box at left is Charles Her shey, featured in last week’s article. Aaron Kolb is at the bottom right-hand corner, opening the door. with animals, or watching the market, or socializing with farmers, or hearing the auc tioneer’s chant, or buying the best animals. Something that could create employee loyalty, stability, and long-lasting ca reers. Following Father’s Footsteps Wayne Weidman of New Hol land has worked at the sales st ables since March 1944, while his father worked there. One day a week, Weidman would be picked up from his one-room school when he was 13 years old to work from 1 p.m. to 10 p.m. at the auction. He began leading cows and calves through the ring. “That was when we had both dairy and beef sales in one day,” said Weidman, “We didn’t have sep arate barns for calves, so we sold them after the beef.” Although the hours were long, “I just liked the work,” he said. Even after 57 years in the business, he still remembers his beginning salary. “I got 75 cents an hour, $7.50 a day ... $7.35 take-home pay,” he said. He also remembers beginning work at six or seven in the morn ing on Thursday and getting home on Friday evening. Around 1955 he became barn foreman and was responsible for This truck is parked in front of original stockholder Aaron Kolb’s (Norman Kolb’s father) home in East Lam peter, Lancaster County. “keeping everybody busy.” Watching others taught him how to dip horses and dairy cows. “I always liked improving the animals,” said Weidman. He quickly became comfortable with the process as he helped to clip 100 horses every Sunday to get ready for Monday’s sale. Preparation for Monday’s horse sale usually entailed wa tering, bedding, feeding, and currying the horses. Tuesday, then, was a cleanup day. “We cleaned out the stables by hand, hauling manure out with a dump cart and a horse when the stables were smaller.” Wednesdays he helped “take in” dairy cows for the following sale, which meant tying, clip ping, and milking the animals by hand. Thursdays featured the dairy sale. In 1950, when the beef barn was built, the dairy sale was moved to Wednesdays. Fridays, then, was another cleanup day. January through March became draft horse season, as work horses from mostly lowa and Kansas came in a steady clip five railroad cars every week were unloaded at the sale barn. According to Weidman, “Farmers bought them for spring work. The bulk of them sold their horses in the fall and bought new ones in the spring so they didn’t have to winter them.” The sales stables did not always have a ring and sur rounding bleachers, said Weid man, who remembers a platform which buyers stood on an look at the animals being led around below. Weidman has seen changes and shifts in his years in agricul ture. “Herefords used to be the main beef breed, then Charolais, and now blacks and black bald Vi \ Every Thursday the fed steers, feeder steers and heifers, then cull cows keep the ring filled from 9:30 a.m. until 8 p.m. An average of 1,300-1,400 head go through the ring on Thursdays. Here Dale Stoltzfus, auctioneer, David Kolb, at the computer, and ring man Ron Ranck keep the sale moving during the afternoon. Dairy farmers deliberate on which animals to purchase to increase their herds. ies,” he said. “There was a time when some buyers bought noth ing but Hereford cattle.” Another change has been the steady decrease in the number of buyers at the sale. “There was a time when the beef ring was nearly full to the top of buyers,” he said. “Now there’s fewer ‘little’ butchers buying two, three, four, or ten animals.” Even with this trend, how ever, Weidman predicts that there will always be a need for the sale barn, as farmers will still need a place to sell their ani mals. He also sorted fed cattle for many years, “before we had a roof over that area,” he said. Sorting cattle, in fact, is one of his favorite aspects of the job. “I always enjoyed seeing how to line the cattle up for size. I try to put the better ones in one pen and the rest in another.” An Order Buyer’s View H. Paul Good, Fivepointville, estimates that he was 20 or 21 when he began buying animals. Now 89, Good still spends his af- ternoons at the sale barn buying animals. Over the years he has spent many such afternoons at the barn buying animals for custom ers since his first purchase, a $3B heifer at the nearby Green At the Monday horse sale, approximately 200-250 horses are sold. The supply, while mostly riding horses and ponies, includes a few draft and driving horses also. Dragon auction. Following in the footsteps of his father, also an order buyer, Good is a familiar face around the barns. Ironically, he didn’t chose the business as much as the business “chose” him when (Turn to Page A 32)