|i™dwer^T .Marketer^y Barley Straw Grows Into Niche Marketing Enterprise For Keener Family LOU ANN GOOD Food And Family Features Editor TURBOTVILLE (North umberland Co.) Those cute mini-bales of barley straw Lancaster Farming Introduces A New Component Of Grower & Marketer: The Stacks' Paradise Trout Hatchery Still Going Strong After 100 Years DEANNA CUNFER Carbon Co. Correspondent CRESCO (Monroe Co.) Those who operate a success ful family farming operation can be justifiably proud of their accomplishments. So is the case for retired owner, George Stack, and his daughter, manager Beth Mar tin of Paradise Brook Trout Company Inc., Cresco, opera tors of Paradise Trout Hatch ery and Preserve. What comes to mind for Lancaster Farming • popping out of the made-to order baler appear to be for decorative use only. But don’t be fooled by size and appearance. Those Koun- most when thinking of a fami ly farm is the traditional pic turesque bam and outbuild ings with contoured fields of alternating crops, or the live stock operation with animals peacefully grazing in green pastures. In actuality, a fish hatchery such as Paradise is no different than a crop or livestock farm. The serene look of build ings, raceways, and ponds among the towering pines Section E • try Bales are bringing a much larger profit than their full- size counterparts. (Turn to Page E 10) ;er fan al Member Of The Pennsylvania Aquaculture Association with trout peacefully swim ming within view of visitors easily compares to those tran quil scenes of livestock grazing on the hillside. Managing the hatchery on 120 acres that has been in business for over 100 years, Martin must be concerned with nutrition, reproduction, growth rate, sanitation, preda tor control, marketing, and unfortunately government (Turn to Page E 2) Saturday, March 8, 2003 Dennis and Donna Keener with children Danae, 18; Oeron, 14; and Derek, 7, work together to meet the growing demand for Kountry Bales, which in cludes those for pet needs and barley straw for keeping ponds and water gardens free of algae. Maxi the dog joins them. Photo by Lou Ann Good, food and family features editor Paradise Trout Hatchery, the first licensed fish hatchery in Pennsylvania, actually opened for busi ness in 1902. The family operation has been owned and operated by the Stack family for more than 75 years.