16802 546 17 Q62896 Vol. 47 No. 26 WiRNBtSVNti (Nki Co.) -< With raemt warm weather, pastures are groaning up nicely, hteiudlng this 3-acre paddock of orchardgrasS, fescue, ryegrass, clover, add alfaffa on the farm of Forrest Strieker. Strieker manages an 83-cow herd of Holstein, Jersey, and Jersey-Hol stein crossbreds and farms with wife Barbara end two sons, Greg, 18, and Jeff, 18. Strieker’s organic dairy herd’s milk is shipped to Horizon Organic. According to the Pennsylvania Agricultural Statistics Service, for the week ending April 21, unseasonably warm temperatures coupled with precipitation resulted in coneiderabte improvement in pasture and wheat crop conditions. The warm temperatures helped to establish 4.1 days suitable for fieldwork. Soil moisture was rated 2 percent very short, 19 percent short, 66 percent adequate, and 13 percent surplus. Principal farm activities. Included spring plowing# planting oats and alfalfa, fixing Pictured are students from the Conococheague FFA chapter of James Buchanan High School, Mercersburg. A nine-member dairy Judging team recently took first place out of 412 FFA chapters from across the country in Hoard’s Dairyman magazine’s annual cow Judging contest. See story on page A3B. www.lancastertarming.com Four Sections Saturday, April 27,2002 fences, machinery maintenance, cleaning bams, spreading lime and fer tilizer, hauling and spreading manure, pruning fruit trees, and sprayin# herbicides and pesticides. Spring plowing was 57 percent complete, 34 percent more than the previous year and 13 percent more than the 5-year average. The show ers and extremely warm temperatures helped to improve pastures. Only nine percent of the pastureland was rated poor to very poor, down 11 percent; 77 percent fair to good; and 14 percent excellent, up 11 per cent from the previous week. According to the Pennsylvania Capitol Re gion Crop Report, begin grazing short stature grasses (bluegrass) after five inches of growth, tall grass (orchardgrass, bromegrass, etc.) after 10 inches of growth, and warm season grasses (switchgrass) after 18 inch es of growth, to manage forage supply, weed growth, and stand longevi ty. Photo by Andy Andrews, editor New Trust Director Brings Vision To Farmland Preservation DAVE LEFEVER Lancaster Farming Staff LANCASTER (Lancaster Co.) When Tom Stouffer an nounced he was leaving his posi tion as executive director of the Heidi Schellenger, new executive director at the Lan caster Farmland Trust, combines administrative duties with farm visits. Photo by Dave Lefever $34.00 Per Year Lancaster Farmland Trust, Heidi Schellenger didn’t exactly jump at the chance. She was already working with (Turn to Page A 32) 75$ Per Copy