D6-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, May's,2ool $1 Million Awarded In State Conservation Grants HARRISBURG (Dauphin Co.) Rep. Raymond Bunt Jr. has applauded the more than $1 million in state grants awarded for conservation easements and a park project in the 147th Legisla tive District. The Department of Conserva tion and Natural Resources (DCNR) awarded $285,000 to the Montgomery County Lands Trust for a conservation ease National Junior Gelbvieh Classic Heads To South Dakota RAPID CITY, S.D. The 2001 American Gelbvieh Junior Association (AGJA) Black Hills Gold Classic will make the Cen tral States Fairgrounds in Rapid City, S.D., its home July 9-13. The AGJA, the South Dakota Junior Gelbvieh Association and South Dakota Gelbvieh Associa tion are joint sponsors of this event. The National Junior Gelbvieh Classic attracts youth ages 7 to 21 from across the nation for a week of leadership contests and cattle shows. The last two Junior Classics have seen record attend ance and numbers of cattle. This year in Rapid City will be no ex ception. The events kick off with open ing ceremonies on Mon., July 9. That evening will feature a bus trip to the Mount Rushmore Lighting Ceremony. The next three days feature a variety of contests including livestock judging, team fitting, photogra phy contest, poster contest, quiz bowl, advertising, sales talk, showmanship and impromptu speaking. The week tops off with the N.Y. Farm Bureau Applauds House Vote To Eliminate Death Taxes GLENMONT, N.Y. New York Farm Bureau, the largest general farm advocacy organiza tion in the state, commends the U.S. House of Representatives for their vote to repeal the death tax. Death taxes impose a tre mendous burden on family farm ers and other small business owners who pour their lives into building something for their fam ilies, only to lose that gift at the time of their death. Repeal of this tax can erase the burdens and uncertainties associated with estate tax planning. “Due to the current estate tax structure, surviving farm family members often have to sell land or equipment to generate enough money to pay the estate tax bill, ultimately devastating the farm,” Balance®Pro Gains Registration In Pennsylvania RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK, N.C. Balance Pro herbicide for com is now avail able for use in Pennsylvania. Balance Pro is a low-dose, broad-spectrum herbicide for com that controls more than 50 of the toughest weeds in com, including foxtail, lambsquarters (including triazine-resistant spe cies) waterhemp and velvetleaf when applied pre-plant or pre emerge. One of the product’s unique ment on 165 acres of land in Lower Frederick Township, the Spring Mountain Camp, and $BOO,OOO to the National Lands Trust for a conservation ease ment on 880 acres in Marlbo rough Township, the Musser Scout Reservation. “I’m very pleased to see the state is providing funds for these critically important open space and habitat preservation projects in Montgomery County,” Bunt steer show on Thurs., July 12 and the breeding heifer and bred and owned bull show on Fri., July 13. Clint Rusk of West La feyette, Ind., will judge this year’s show. The final event of the week will be the Awards Banquet and State Basket Auc tion Friday evening. To participate in this year’s Black Hills Gold Classic, a youth must be between the ages of 7 and 21 by Jan. 1,2001. If you are not currently a member of the American Gelbvieh Junior Asso ciation, you must become an AGJA member by June 18. Con tact the American Gelbvieh As sociation office for a membership application. To show cattle at this year’s Classic, the cattle must be in the youth’s name by June 1,2001. For more information on the AGJA Black Hills Gold Classic or to join the American Gelbvieh Junior Association, contact Pat rick Doyle at the AGA office, (303) 465-2333 or email pat rickd@gelbvieh.org. A tentative schedule is available to view on the AGA website at www.gelb vieh.org. stated John W. Lincoln, presi dent of New York Farm Bureau. “If the farmland is located near an urban center, as much of the farmland is in New York State, the sale often results in that farm ending up in the hands of devel opers.” The support from those New York Representatives who voted in favor of repealing the death tax to help save family farms is greatly appreciated by New York Farm Bureau. Needs across the country vary, and support from all members of the House of Rep resentatives was difficult to ac quire, but proved successful. Property values in New York are much higher than in other states. Therefore, estate taxes are much more draining to New York characteristics is its ability to re charge. If weeds emerge during periods of dry weather, Balance Pro will recharge with as little as a half-inch of rain and control weeds up to two-inches tall. “With some meteorologists pre dicting extended dry weather across the state in the next few weeks, that benefit may prove especially attractive to com growers in Pennsylvania,” said Rob Schrick, Balance Pro prod said. “As a long-time advocate of protecting open space in our county, I strongly support these conservation easement projects and applaud the Montgomery County Lands Trust and the Natural Lands Trust for their strategic alliance that is working to protect the most critical and threatened natural areas in the county.” “The Musser Scout Reserva tion, in particular, is a priority natural region that deserves pres ervation. Its large size and the quality of its forest, the Unami Creek and other natural re sources make it a true regional treasure.” The scout reservation is home to Camp Delmont, Camp Garri son and Camp Hart. It has been the site of scout activities since the early part of the last century. “This conservation easement will help ensure that the land re mains protected open space in perpetuity,” Bunt said. “This state funding is a testament to the hard work and commitment of the lands trust and others, without whose vision and dedi cation to conserving our natural resources these projects never would have been possible.” Towamencin Township also received a state grant. It will get $98,000 to restore Fischer’s Park. The funds are for a playground, a gazebo, an addition to the existing rest facility, installment of ADA access, picnic tables, landscaping and sign and other related improvements. The grants are provided by DCNR through the Community Conservation Partnerships Pro gram. The program provides fin ancial and technical assistance to municipal governments and local organizations for parks, recrea tion, conservation and greenways projects. farmers and farmers in the northeast, making the issue a pri ority for the region. The bill to repeal death taxes will now need to be passed by the U.S. Senate and then signed by President Bush. The bill being considered now in the Senate will eliminate death taxes immediately. “Elimination of the death tax and increase in the threshold is very much needed,” added Lin coln. “Farming requires high op erating costs to maintain the op eration, making farmers rich in terms of land and equipment but at the same time cash poor. Cap ital is needed for constant rein vestment in order to maintain the farming operation and should not be needlessly taken away through death taxes.” uct lead for Aventis Crop Sc ience. Balance Pro can be used in a one-pass program, as a bum down, in a tankmix, as an early pre-plant, a pre-plant incorpo rated or in a sequential program. “Balance Pro is one of the most effective com herbicides available,” Schrick said,” and now Pennsylvania corn growers will be able to benefit from its outstanding weed control.” Why Do Vaccines Fail? Many commercial vaccines are available for use in a variety of dairy cattle of all ages and stages of lactation, and numerous infec tious agents (also termed patho gens) are represented. Vaccines undergo a licensing process to in sure their ability and effective ness to protect against disease. Many of the pathogens affecting cows are well identified. Nonetheless, at times the re sults in terms of protection seem less than adequate. How the im mune system responds to a vac cine is a complex interaction of many types of cells, and the fail ure of just one small step in this interaction can result in poor im munity. When a disease outbreak occurs due to a pathogen against which the cows were vaccinated, the question arises, why didn’t the vaccine protect our herd? There are several possible rea sons. 1. The vaccine actually offered incomplete protection. Depend ing on the pathogen, some vac cines provide incomplete protec tion. This reduces the severity of infections, but may not necessari ly prevent infections. 2. The wild (disease causing) type of the pathogen is a version that is not presented in the vac cine, so the immune system can not recognize it sufficiently well to mount a memory response. Particularly for viruses, new strains can appear that were not previously used in development of commercially prepared vac cines. 3. The vaccine was not stored properly, had expired, or was not administered according to direc tions. Vaccines are more sensi tive than many drugs with re spect to storage temperature. Dry vaccines that are mixed and reconstituted with a solution should not be stored longer than the day they are mixed. Booster injections refer to a repeat vacci nation, often within 2 to 4 weeks after the initial vaccination. 4. The vaccine was mixed with an other vaccine or drug. This should never happen. If two vac cines are given, use two separate injection sites and syringes. Vac cines are a suspension that in cludes the pathogen and an adju vant. Customer Practices Studied To Help Improve Beef Satisfaction DENVER, Colo. Three beef cuts have been studied through the checkoff to help better understand consumer likes and practices and increase demand for both higher-valued and underutilized cuts. The research was conducted at a leading university and coor dinated by the National Cattle men’s Beef Association under contract to the Cattlemen’s Beef Board. Goals of the “Beef Customer Satisfaction II” research were to: • Determine the relationship of quality in lower-valued cuts such as the clod; • Learn the value of prepara tion instructions on the top sir loin steak, which can be undesirably tough when over cooked; • Investigate whether new technologies, such as calcium chloride injection, improve the top sirloin’s tenderness when the product is prepared to a higher degree of doneness; and • Determine whether calcium chloride injection could be used 5. The cow’s immune system wasn’t competent, or “ready” to respond to the vaccination. Re search has demonstrated that leukocytes from cows at calving have impaired function, and this includes the lymphocytes that are critical for memory and anti body production. Cows vaccinat ed at calving do not produce antibodies as well as cows vacci nated at other times in the lacta tion cycle. 6. The cows are given too many vaccines at one time. In some herd situations, cows receive up to 15 different patho gen types during one vaccination session. It is uncertain what ef fect this has on the cow’s ability to respond most effectively to any one pathogen. If less than desirable results are being achieved, it might be appropriate to reduce the number of vaccines administered at any one time. Summary • Some vaccines may not pro vide complete protection, but they may reduce mortality and economic loss compared with no vaccination. • Some vaccines will not pro tect completely against new wild type pathogens (especially vi ruses). • If vaccines are not stored at proper temperature and prepar ed exactly according to label, don’t expect optimal protection. • Never mix a single vaccine with other vaccine or drug prep arations. • Administer vaccines at the proper time in the life cycle according to the label. Vac cination near the time of calving or during health disturbances or several infections should be avoided. • It may not be most effective to give multiple different vac cines at the same time. • Work with your veterinar ian to determine the exact patho gen(s) causing problems whdh developing your comprehensive vaccination program. This article, written by Ron Erskine, Michigan State Uni versity, is reprinted from the “Michigan Dairy Review, ” April 2000. to enhance the acceptability of lower-priced steaks. The research found that for the clod steak, in-home factors such as cooking methods and degrees of doneness influenced consumer satisfaction more than did the quality grade. Research ers concluded that preparation techniques that improve flavor without reducing tenderness im prove customer satisfaction. Customer satisfaction of top round steaks, meanwhile, were not improved by the introduc tion of the calcium chloride marinade. Research found that flavor predominantly determined whether consumers liked the top sirloin steak, followed by tender ness and juiciness. Cooking method also had an influence on palatability of this cut, with fried being the method with the highest ratings and broiled being lowest. The calcium chloride marinade had no effect on ten derness or customer satisfaction. Whether participants liked the flavor was the major factor driving customer satisfaction for all three categories of beef cuts analyzed.