m Tim Fritz PFGC President Spring is just breaking as ! write this message. We lad a cold, wet fall followed ly a tough winter but flings are finally looking ike spring. Just about ev jryone is looking forward to Timothy Producers: Check For Mites Paul H. Craig Dauphin Co. Crop Agent Less than four years since f|rst being identified in Penn fylvania, nearly every timothy bay producer in Pennsylvania has heard of the timothy mite and the problems that this pest can cause for timothy hay producers. First identified in the spring of 2000 in southcentral Penn sylvania, the mite, actually re ferred to as the cereal rust mite, has spread across the state and has been noted in Delaware, Maryland and New (Turn to Page E 9) Chesapeake Bay Foundation Compiles Resource List For Farmers DAVE LEFEVER Lancaster Farming Staff HARRISBURG (Dau phin Co.) Be sure to see the Chesapeake Bay Foun dation’s comprehensive guide of conservation re sources for farmers and landowners in the center spread of this Foraging Around issue. The newly-released Guide to Conservation Funding Programs in Pennsylvania is a cross-re ferencing field guide identi fying conservation practices appropriate for farms, along with available finan cial support. David Wise, scientist with the Chesapeake Bay Foundation (CBF) office in Harrisburg, said farmers and landowners can benefit tremendously from having the various agencies and programs pooled together in one list. beautiful green fields. These bright green fields are more than beauty, how ever. They have the poten tial to convert sunlight into high quality forage which ruminants convert into (Turn to Page E 3) Mite-infested timothy showing classical draughted appearance. “It’s become pretty clear that there’s an enormous variety of funding re sources out there,” Wise said. He said CBF first recog nized the need for such a project in 1997 when it be came evident that many farmers and landowners were faced with a wide array of conservation sup port options from federal, state, and local programs. As an agency with a focus on water quality, helping farmers with good land management, and partnering with a wide range of agencies, Wise said the CBF was in an ideal position to compile the guide. “We recognized the need and had the ability to re spond,” Wise said. The guide was first re leased earlier this year and was recently updated. For more information, call CBF at (717) 234-5550. ntist - Toward A Sounder Grassland Program ' Frank Stoltzfus with some of the Masonic Homes’ beef herd on recently established pasture part of the purebred Shorthorn operation’s new commit ment to grazing. Photo by Dave Lefever More Grass In Store For Masonic Homes' Shorthorns DAVE LEFEVER Lancaster Farming Staff ELIZABETHTOWN (Lan caster Co.) The farm at Ma sonic Homes has an impres sive herd of purebred Shorthorn beef cattle, grazing the hills of a unique property. The Masonic Homes com munity and farm, founded in 1910, is situated on 1,400 acres just on the edge of Eliza bethtown. About 1,500 resi dents, including 40 school aged children, live there. Owned and operated by the Grand Lodge of Pennsylvania, Masonic Homes offers health Northeast: Irish Brothers Suggest Combined Approach DAVE LEFEVER Lancaster Farming Staff GRANTVILLE (Dauphin Co.) An abundance of high quality land and good access to reasonably-priced silages and concentrate feeds suggest that pasture-based systems have a “bright and profitable” future in the Northeast, according to Tom and Dr. John Roche. The Irish brothers spoke at the annual PFGC conference, which took place in early March at the Grantville Holi day Inn. jSi v*' 4 Jfv 4 care, assisted living, residen tial living, and retirement ac comodations adjacent to its working livestock farm, or chard, and farmer’s market. Since the Masonic Homes Holstein dairy herd was sold last December, farm supervi sor Frank Stoltzfus said he has more time to focus on the 150 head of Shorthorn cattle. Part of his attention is cen tered on switching to a more grass-based system. Stoltzfus has managed the farm since 1985, including the Shorthorn herd first estab lished by Gerald Tracy, Ma- ‘Huge Potential' For Grazing The brothers grew up on a dairy farm in the southern part of Ireland, and Tom con tinues to manage the family’s grass-based dairy farm there. The Roches also run a dairy farm in New Zealand, where Pennsylvania Forage & Grassland Council Newsletter - Section E - April 19, 2003 J-i |l nisi| < v. &£ n?!** & w * $ ’ ; ■ » 2 "l Y* t sonic Homes environmental services and land manage ment director. Performance has been the focus of the beef breeding pro gram here for more than 20 years. This work recently earned the farm the 2002 Seed Stock Breeder of the Year award from the Pennsylvania Cattlemen’s Association. Stoltzfus is in the process of changing a sizeable portion of the farm’s cropland into per manent grazing paddocks for the beef herd. So far, about 60 acres have been seeded and (Turn to Page E 2) John is employed as a nutri tional scientist. Two years ago, the brothers visited several farms in Penn sylvania, Maryland, and New (Turn to Page E 4)