DAIRY ST R “All dairy, all the time”™
Second Section
December 11, 2021
Visit us online at www.dairystar.com
TMR MIXERS
Feed your herd. Feed your bottom line. Feed the potential.
ALSO AVAILABLE ILABLE
Gutter Cleaner leaner Chain & Parts
THE POWERFUL YET AFFORDABLE CHOICE
TMRs, TANKS & PUMPS & Spreaders IN STOCK & READY FOR DELIVERY!
LAGOON PUMPS & TANKS
COMPLETE PRODUCT LINE...
+ GEA Houle + Ritchie Waterers + Pasture Mat Cow Comfort + J&D Manufacturing + Schaefer Barn Fans Stocking + V.E.S. Barn Fans All Sizes + Barn Cleaner Chain & Parts + Alley Scrapers + Cen•Pe•Co Lubricants + Calf-tel Calf Huts & Pens + Feed Carts & Straw Choppers + Pik Rite Hydra-Ram Manure Spreaders + Artex Barn Solutions + Cloverdale Mixers & Bale Haulers + JBS Spreaders + Bazooka Farmstar + Dietrich Incorporators (DSI) + Curtains + Avery Weigh Tronix
New American Pride Net wrap High quality formulaƟon and not made in China
Performance, Reliability and Durability NEW & USED EQUIPMENT
• Pontoon • Vertical • Electric • Lagoon • Hydraulic LIQUID MANURE EQUIPMENT FOR RENT
Proudly Serving Our Dairy Industry Since 1975!
Oldest & Most Experienced Dealer In Central MN!
Call Us
320-836-2697
After Hours: 320-267-8568 310 Industrial Dr. Freeport, MN www.hartungsales.com
VALUE PRODUCTS PRICED RIGHT!
Heavy Duty Dump Trailers
HARMS LAND ROLLERS
• Single or double axle • Double acting hydraulic dump • Priced competitively
Wagons
Transports Easily Simple to Fold and Roll
BEST PRICES
on Hay making supplies
IN THE MIDWEST
Silage bale wrap Silage bags Silage covers Oxygen barrier film
• Keeps moisture in the soil • Firmly packs soil to slow weed growth • Enables better germination › FASTER STARTS › HIGHER YIELDS › FEWER EXPENSES JOIN OVER 2,000 LAND ROLLER OWNERS IN THE MIDWEST OPERATING THE HARM’S ROLLERS ON THEIR FARMS!
• 8-20 Ton sizes • Professional welding • Extend reach BEST trailering wagon ever built
Tandem Bale Racks
2 in 1 Combi film silage covers Baler Twine Net wrap Tire Side Walls
• Heavy Duty • All Steel Construction • Guaranteed To Trail • 10’x30’ bed
Heavy Duty!
Big Bale Dump Racks
LARGE selection of sizes and brands in stock and ready to ship.
Call for your local dealer or ask about direct to the farm deliveries. DEALER INQUIRES WELCOME W6174 County RD P Monroe WI 53566
1-800-726-0401
www.jordanagsupply.com
• Big Square And Big Round Bales • Heavy Duty • Double acting hydraulic lift • 10’x24’ Bed • 8 Bolt Hubs
Heavy Duty!
HARMS MFG., INC. 14451 430TH ST. • BERTHA, MN 56437
218-924-4522 www.harmsmfg.com
Page 2 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
W23462
W003363
2014 CIH 620 Quad, 1645 hrs $319,500
2014 CIH 600 Quad, 2645 hrs $255,900
2011 CIH 535 Quad, 4655 hrs $174,500
2011 CIH 500 Steiger, 3310 hrs $169,900 A03900
A016965
1990 CIH 9170, 5900 hrs $35,500 K45703
2015 CIH 340 Magnum, 1580 hrs $235,900
1995 CIH 7230, 11,010 hrs Call for price!
1997 CIH 9350, 6645 hrs $56,900
2015 NH T9.435, 2560 hrs $189,000
Lorem S011486 ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit, sed diam nonummy nibh euismod tincidunt ut laoreet dolore magna aliquam erat volutpat. Ut wisi enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exerci tation ullamcorper 2017 CIHlobortis 270 Optum, suscipit nisl4540 ut hrs
A016994
2008 NH T8020, 3005 hrs $106,500
Willmar 320-235-4898
Mankato 507-387-5515
Glencoe 320-864-5531
Alden 507-874-3400
2000 CIH MX220, 4880 hrs $69,500 F013293
W005132
Kimball 320-398-3800
2015 CIH 340 Magnum, 2565 hrs $189,000 G16027
2014 CIH 240 Magnum, 1775 hrs $145,000
2004 JD 8520T, 4310 hrs $99,900
1992 CIH 9250, 6340 hrs $53,000 A003252
2013 NH T9.615, 1210 hrs $222,500
$134,900
2011 CIH 550 Quad, 3515 hrs Call for price! A019411
M019359
W010579
F013996
2012 CIH 600 Quad, 3145 hrs $229,900 M017219
M014004
W012175
W012881
S08295
1999 JD 5410, 5000 hrs $22,990
^ƚ͘ DĂƌƟŶ 320-548-3285
St. Cloud 320-251-2585
Visit us 24/7...www.arnoldsinc.com
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 3
A taste for tie stalls Jaschens milk 400 cows in 203-stall barn By Sherry Newell Contributing Writer
TRIPOLI, Iowa – In a world where robots and milking parlors are nearly always chosen for dairy expansions, Neil and Nancy Jaschen nd satisfaction milking 400 cows in a 203-tiestall barn. Their growth over 40 years of dairying centers around milking the same way they began. The vacuum pump in the Jaschens’ barn starts at 4 a.m. and typically shuts off at 9:30 a.m., a routine repeated each evening. The rst 203 cows are milked, then 60 in a middle section are exchanged with three groups of cows rotated in from the free stalls, one group at a time. But while the four milkers – Neil and three employees – manage four milking units each, Nancy serves breakfast sandwiches during a break from mixing and delivering feed, scraping pens and feeding calves. Each evening, she prepares supper in the kitchen attached to the barn. “I just enjoy milking this way; this is nice,” Neil said. “We get enough time to check stuff out – get a few of the little things done (during milking). … And I hate the cold weather; it’s warm in the barn.” Nancy agreed. “It’s so nice on all those cold days,” she said. “The only downside is that it takes too long.” Nancy grew up on her family’s dairy and milked cows for 45 years. She admitted to loving milking cows. “The only reason I quit is that we put in new milkers that were too heavy for me to handle,” she said. The newest portion of the barn has a 240-foot aisle at a right angle to the older section. The older 40 stalls house smaller cows, while cows milked in the newer 163 stalls are grouped by age. All milk cows receive the same ration. Cows are fed when milking starts and again at the end using two motorized feed carts. There are no automatic takeoffs.
SHERRY NEWELL/DAIRY STAR
Neil and Nancy Jaschen stand at the head of the newest porƟon of their 203cow Ɵestall barn near Tripoli, Iowa. Their milking herd numbers 400 head, so three 60-cow groups are switched into one secƟon of the barn during milking.
Milk runs through two doublesloped pipelines totaling 1,000 feet. The crew milks from the middle section where cows are switched toward the outside ends. Two carts, one on each end, carry cloth towels and dips. Nine fans move air through the barn’s newer portion, and six more ventilate the older end. The Jaschens’ dairy began after Neil came home from one semester at Iowa State University in 1982. Instead of returning to college, he borrowed money and began milking in a barn on his grandfather’s farmstead. After marrying in 1984, the Jaschens expanded to 30 cows, then to 55 cows milked in two separate barns: his grandfather’s and the farm down the road where the couple lived. Neil milked on one farm, and Nancy milked on the other. A round roof barn was added in 1988, and the herd grew to 73 head on Neil’s grandfather’s farm, now owned by Neil and Nancy. Two years later, they built their rst freestall barn for 70 head, slowly growing to 100 cows and switching cows during milking.
They milked with seven oor pails until 1992, then they added a pipeline. In 2000, a longer, low prole tiestall barn was built at a right angle to the 73-stall barn. Neil’s father worked in construction and had retired. Building the barn was his rst duty post-retirement. “We were going to add 100 stalls,
but to build a manure pit in the right location, we needed to milk more cows,” Neil said. So, they added 140 stalls, ending up with the current 203 stalls in the expanded structure. They began growing again, and the tiestall milking continued. The next building project was in 2016. “I thought those freestall barns with drive-thru feeding looked like they were pretty handy,” Neil said. The three-row freestall they built houses 220 head, and houses heifers on a seasonal basis in addition to milking cows. The original freestall now houses one of the milking cow groups as well as dry cows. Switch cows travel to milking through a covered concrete alleyway. A friend found six street sweeper brushes for $50 each, two of which the Jaschens hung where cows pass under them as they travel to and from milking. Through the growth of the herd, nearly all animals came from within the herd. “We never bought anyone else’s cows except for about 40 Jerseys,” Nancy said. The Jerseys were from a neighbor where Neil milked cows as a teenager. Neil is quick to say the farm’s ve full-time employees make their milking system work well. “They are great cow people,” he Turn to JASCHENS | Page 4
BUILT WITH YOU IN MIND PRIMOR™ 2060 M & 4270 M
The KUHN Primor can process a wide variety of materials that can ® Invest in Quality be used in a multitude of ways. Both round and square bales of a wide range of sizes can be processed for both bedding materials or feed ingredients. Materials from corn stalks to wheat straw, and even to grassy hay can be processed using the multi-function rotor. Processed materials can then be dropped into a feed bunk, blown into a pile, or evenly spread throughout a pen.
SHERRY NEWELL/DAIRY STAR
The Jaschen family – (from leŌ) Neil and Nancy, and Nick holding Ollie and Lexi holding Norman – dairies together near Tripoli, Iowa. Neil and Nancy Jaschen own the farm and dairy herd, while Nick hauls milk and bedding. Nick and his Lexi also house heifers on their nearby farm.
Blue Hilltop, Inc. 507-879-3593 – 800-821-7092
Box Box 116, 116, Lake Lake Wilson, Wilson, MN MN 56151 56151 –– www.bluehilltop.com www.bluehilltop.com
Page 4 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
ConƟnued from JASCHENS | Page 3
Seven Oaks HD is an underground construction contractor specializing in Horizontal Directional Drilling (HDD) and Land Improvements
BENEFITS OF USING DIRECTIONAL DRILLING INSTALLATION INCLUDE: Ŷ Continuation of Normal Operation Ŷ Avoidance of identi¿ed Infrastructure Installation Ŷ Maintain Integrity of Driveway, Roadways, Buildings, and Natural Features Ŷ Little to No Disturbance to Wetlands or Other Sensitives Areas Ŷ Many Unique Installation Capabilities Vs. Open Cutting/ Digging (Entering under Buildings or Tanks) Ŷ Minimal Site Restoration
PRODUCT INSTALLATION Ŷ Gas Lines Ŷ Power Wire/ Lines Ŷ Communication/ Fiber Optic Ŷ Water Lines/Water Mains Ŷ Drainage/ Tile Lines Ŷ Forced/ On Grade Sewer Ŷ Manure Transfer Lines
SHERRY NEWELL/DAIRY STAR
Nancy Jaschen feeds the dairy herd on her family’s farm near Tripoli, Iowa. Jaschen mixes feed, scrapes the alleys and feeds calves on the 400-cow dairy.
said. “We have six sets of eyes looking at the cows while we’re milking. Everybody here likes to milk.” Today, one of the Jaschens’ sons, Nick, and his wife, Lexi, live on the farm where Nancy grew up with their two children: Ollie, 2, and 6-week-old Norman. Four years ago, Nick bought a semi and began hauling the farm’s milk. He also hauls loads of lime and sand bedding, and forage weekly. Youngstock are also housed at Nick and Lexi’s location on a seasonal basis, and the original tiestall barn there has
“Parlors are OK, but as we expanded, it just never seemed to be the right time to build one. ... And it always just seemed a waste to tear down these buildings.” NEIL JASCHEN, DAIRY FARMER
Land Improvements
become a calf barn. Because their milk volume is limited by the size of Nick’s milk tanker, the family focuses on milk components rather than volume.
The younger Jaschens recently invested in a drive-over pad for silage on the home farm. Nick said he might look at parlor milking in the future. “I would like to look at the ideas; it can be hard to keep employees for tiestall milking,” Nick said. “It is so time consuming.” But Neil said he never seriously considered a parlor. “Parlors are OK, but as we expanded, it just never seemed to be the right time to build one,” he said. “Now, I’m 58 years old. And it always just seemed a waste to tear down these buildings.” In spite of the years of milking, both Neil and Nancy said their bodies are in good shape. Neil said they are careful to bend rather than squat or kneel while milking. The couple has fond memories of Nick and two other sons riding their bikes down the barn’s long aisle. They hope to see the day their grandchildren might do the same. Neil admits a dairy farmer wanting to expand today might not put up a tiestall facility, but there are plenty of them around the Midwest. While theirs may be larger than most, he said they feel blessed to be doing what they do. “We are just so grateful to be able to milk cows,” Neil said. “It’s all we ever wanted to do.”
Drain Tile Design/ Installation Ditch Cleaning & Grading • Fenceline Clearing
Changing weather and higher inputs got you down? Using Drain Tile to manage excess moisture in the soil pro¿le is the foundation for increasing pro¿tability per acre. - Less compaction - Better soil Structure - Allows more days per year for ¿eld operations - More Yields with same or less inputs
Call Us to Discuss Your Project Now!
920-450-2844 Jon Lamers 920-378-5163 www.SevenOaksTeam.com Chad Van Asten
SHERRY NEWELL/DAIRY STAR
Nick Jaschen sits at the back of his milk tanker parked at the family farm, where 400 cows are milked in a Ɵestall barn near Tripoli, Iowa. The truck is backed up to a square opening in the milkhouse wall, making for easier loading for Nick’s every-other-day route.
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 5
Merry Christmas from all of us! 45240 County Road 80 E • PERHAM MN 56573
218-346-3415
PerhamStockyards.com • CattleUSA.com
Mitch Barthel Owner/Auctioneer 218-639-5228
Open Sundays Noon-8pm to Receive Stock • Complimentary Hay & Water Pens Provided
SPECIAL DAIRY SALE
THANK YOU FOR YOUR BUSINESS, AND WE LOOK FORWARD TO SERVING YOU IN THE YEAR AHEAD!
the LAST Monday of Every Month
Professional Auctioneers & Ringmen Many Years of Experience Selling Dairy Cattle
• Professional Marketing • Catalog Cows for Breeding & Production Records • Mailing List to over 6,000 potential buyers • Website, Dairy Star, Radio Advertisements • Live Online thru CattleUSA - Over 300 buyers approved to bid
320-836-2284 • 1-888-276-1751
29033 Co. Rd. 17, Freeport, MN In St. Rosa
www.arnzenconstructioninc.com
HARDWORKING. JOB-TESTED. COMMITTED.
A Spreader for Every Operation!
Invest in Quality!
We have a wide range of models and sizes with multiple options to fit any operation. Our innovative, high-quality spreaders will provide superior performance with years of low-maintenance service. RT Track Loaders feature pilot joystick controls with the exclusive IdealTrax™ automatic track tensioning system and the IdealAccess™ fold-up door. For more info visit:
www.KuhnNorthAmerica.com
Farm Systems Inc.
(800) 385-3911 (507) 451-3131
erss ade ade oa -llo k-loa ck-l ack ra /tttra entt/ me ipm q ip equ equ /equipment/track-loaders / E H L . CO M /e GEHL.COM G
2250 Austin Road • Owatonna, MN 55060
northlandfarmsystems.com
‘14 Manitou MT840
Hydro-static, 115HP Diesel, C/H/A, 2738 hrs. - $73,800
‘18 Gehl RT165
750 Cu Ft, 8” Ext, Ft Sliding Flat Conveyor, Dual Direction Unload - $25,500
Pilot H-Ctrls, D, 15.5” Tracks, 2000 Lift Cap, C&H, 2 Spd
$44,500
‘13 Penta 7520SD
‘02 Penta 4100
475 Cu Ft W/ 16” Rubber Ext, Frt Dual Discharge Conveyor, 2 Spd Drive - $12,800
‘17 Gehl R220
H-Ctrls, D, 2500 Lift Cap, C&H, 2 Spd. - $29,400
‘13 Kuhn Knight 8124
‘11 Kuhn Knight 8132
$18,400
$24,900
2400 Gallons, 500 Bushels
‘12 Gehl 5640
T-Bar Ctrls, D, 2200 Lift Cap, 2 Spd. - $22,500
3200 Gallons
‘11 Kuhn Knight 8118
1800 gal., 400 bu., Splash Guard - $16,500
Haybuster 2554
Highline CFR650
$11,600
$18,500
Process 5’ x 6’ Bales, w/Blower
1 3/8 1000 PTO
‘16 Kuhn Knight SLC141
4100 Gals, 700 Bu, Hyd Left Hand Lid - $48,700
NH Roll-Belt 560
540PTO, 2800 Bales
$44,500
Page 6 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
Caprine
Farming
Building a dream Geiger lives her passion for goats By Stacey Smart
stacey.s@dairystar.com
MAYVILLE, Wis. – For 10 years, Terri Geiger has been living her dream of milking goats. Surrounding herself with Oberhaslis, Alpines, Saanens, LaManchas and Nubians, this goat lover is happy as can be caring for her herd at Mapleledge Dairy. “This is my passion,” said Terri, who grew up milking cows. “I always enjoyed milking and wanted to milk goats. I can’t do cows on my own; that’s not practical. So, I chose goats.” Raising goats on her home farm founded in 1847, Terri and her husband, Rick, do the brunt of the work, with occasional help from their six children. The Geigers milk 132 goats and farm 120 acres near Mayville, raising hay, corn and soybean. Rick also works off the farm full time, doing maintenance for the Lomira School District in Theresa. “Rick built it all,” Terri said of the group of buildings in which she houses her goats. “He is big into recycling and used a lot of repurposed materials to construct the barns.” From kid through adult, goats
are housed in four greenhouses attached side by side. The buildings were purchased used, taken down and then put back together on the Geigers’ farm. The solar structures are lled with natural light, and all of the farm’s buildings contain strategically placed windows to satisfy Terri’s desire for good visibility. These features make housing and working accommodations ideal for the Geigers and their goats. “The barns are bright, and I love that,” Terri said. “And no matter where I am, the windows allow me to see what’s going on around the rest of the farm.” Rick also built a nursery featuring patio doors on both sides. There, newborns are dried off, weighed, fed colostrum, tagged and tattooed. After a couple weeks, babies are moved next door to the kid barn. “Ventilation is one downfall of the greenhouses,” Rick said. “But we do our best to maintain decent ventilation during the heat of summer.” Goats are milked twice daily in a double-11 parlor built within the Geigers’ rst goat barn, which was previously used to raise
STACEY SMART/DAIRY STAR
Terri Geiger pets her goats Nov. 30 at her farm near Mayville, Wisconsin. Terri began milking goats in 2011.
STACEY SMART/DAIRY STAR
Rick and Terri Geiger own and operate Mapleledge Dairy, where they milk 132 goats and farm 120 acres near Mayville, Wisconsin. heifer calves. Terri, who views milking as more leisure than chore, handles most milkings. “I nd milking to be a peaceful and relaxing time,” she said. “It’s an opportunity for me to enjoy my goats.” Terri milked cows for a neighbor, and when he passed away in 2010, she began working for another neighbor. The death of her father that same year was a turning point in Terri’s life. “I thought, how long am I going to wait to do what I want?” she said. “So, I drew up plans for a parlor and started looking at goat herds for sale.” To sell goat milk at that time, a contract was required. The Geigers bought a herd from an Amish farmer in Iowa, who shipped milk to Woolwich, a company later bought out by Saputo. Now, the Geigers ship their milk to Kolba-Leana. “We weren’t set up to milk yet, so we bought yearlings, but that was a mistake,” Terri said. “It took a year before we started
Focused 100% on the long-term success of your dairy goat farm:
Dairy Goat Specialist
• Extensive on-farm experience and technical expertise ͻ EƵƚƌŝƟŽŶ ĂŶĚ ƌĂƟŽŶͲďĂůĂŶĐŝŶŐ ĨŽƌ ĞǀĞƌLJ ƐƚĂŐĞ ŽĨ ŐƌŽǁƚŚ ĂŶĚ ƉƌŽĚƵĐƟŽŶ ͻ ,ĞƌĚ ĞǀĂůƵĂƟŽŶ ĂŶĚ ďĞŶĐŚŵĂƌŬŝŶŐ ͻ &ŽƌĂŐĞ ƋƵĂůŝƚLJ ĂƐƐĞƐƐŵĞŶƚ ͻ &Ƶůů ůŝŶĞ ŽĨ ƋƵĂůŝƚLJ ƉƌŽĚƵĐƚƐ ĨŽƌ ƚŚĞ ǁŚŽůĞ ŚĞƌĚ
sadamson@vitaplus.com
Subscribe: dairygoatperformance.vitaplus.com
Sarah Adamson 800.362.8334
milking in April of 2011.” Rick agreed. “That rst year was a shocker,” he said. “We were milking all yearlings, which is like milking all heifers, and we needed more milk. It took almost three years to start making a prot.” With eyes on production, Terri nds Dairy Herd Improvement testing to be an invaluable tool. “You have to test,” she said. “Their udders might look good, but it might be all meat and no milk. You have to test to know what your girls are producing. We’ve had a couple goats on the top 10 list for components and production throughout the years.” To earn a spot in the Geigers’ milking herd, a yearling must milk 6 pounds a day. “If they don’t hit the 6-pound mark, they have to go,” Terri said. “That’s our cutoff. We choose quality over quantity, but we like to give them a chance – some will surprise you.” Baleage is the primary staple
of the milking herd diet, and to ensure quality, Rick said all feed is wrapped. Goats are housed on a bedding pack that is cleaned out twice a year in spring and fall, and all goats have access to pasture. “I’m a big believer in that everyone should be able to get outside,” Terri said. “Fresh air is good for the goats, and it gives them a chance to run around and have fun.” Every goat has a name, and each goat born in the same year has a name that begins with the same letter. This year’s letter is N, giving way to names like Nolie, Nellie and Nutella. Rick’s favorite breed is Alpine, while Terri likes Oberhaslis the best. “I’d have a whole herd of brown and black goats if I could,” she said. “I like the Oberhaslis’ temperament and the taste of their milk.” The Geigers use a combination of A.I. and natural breeding, Turn to GEIGERS | Page 7
SHEEP & GOAT EQUIPMENT
Working Chute & Crowding Tub
#WCCT Fast, easy way to handle sheep.
Basket Feeder for Sheep
#SHBP 14 ga. steel pan beneath for catching loose hay.
D REPAIR R DAVE’S HILLS, MN • 507-962-3631
Located 2 miles north & 1/3 mile east of Hills or I-90 Exit 5, 3-1/2 miles south & 1/3 mile east
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 7
ConƟnued from GEIGERS | Page 6 and every month a new buck is rotated in. Because offspring from yearlings are sold rather than raised, yearlings are bred by a Boer buck to produce goats suitable for the meat market, which Terri said is phenomenal right now. “You shouldn’t just breed to breed – you have to breed up,” she said. “This way, you can keep numbers down and production up. We raise a lot of registered experimentals which means that both parents can be registered if needed. We tag and tattoo everyone and utilize DNA testing if we need to determine the sire
of a goat.” The DNA is on le with the American Dairy Goat Association, and the Geigers are also members of the Wisconsin Dairy Goat Association. “I encourage others to join these great organizations,” Terri said. Terri has a semen tank on hand and does collections of bucks she wants to keep, and has also sold semen from one of her purebred Alpines. All bucks are DNA tested. The Geigers’ daughter, Natalie, who lives near Beaver Dam, helps with A.I. breeding, dehorning, tattooing
STACEY SMART/DAIRY STAR
Rick Geiger enjoys his favorite goat, an Alpine named Riot. Rick helps Terri on the farm when he is not working his full-Ɵme job for the Lomira School District in Theresa, Wisconsin.
STACEY SMART/DAIRY STAR
Terri makes loƟons, soaps, lip balms and bath bombs as well as caramel, ice cream and fudge from her goats’ milk. She and her husband, Rick, like to give the products as presents, and they sell online, at farmers markets and at holiday vendor fairs.
and other veterinary work. “We’re fortunate we have family who helps,” Terri said. Goats at Mapleledge Dairy kid in January and February. All goats are dry during the month of December, which is when Terri supplements her income by working at the local cheese factory. The Geigers also have a small herd of Scottish Highlander beef cattle and do some custom eld work for neighbors. “Those are two ways we diversify,” Terri said. “We’re always evening out our bottom line.” Terri also uses some of her
goats’ milk to make lotions, soaps and lip balm in a variety of scents including peppermint, eucalyptus and fresh citrus. New this year, Terri is making bath bombs. In addition, she makes caramel, ice cream and fudge from the milk. “That’s a big thing for the holidays,” Terri said. “We give the products to the schoolteachers for Christmas gifts. Everything is made with all-natural, healthy ingredients, and our lotion has just ve ingredients. My motto is when you gift healthy, that’s love.” The products are sold on Terri’s Facebook page, at two
makes the best fans in the world. NEW 55” Direct Drive Storm Conversion Kits Shutter not pictured
• Energy efficient • Maintenance Free • Variable Speed
...Buy this
farmers markets during the summer and at holiday vendor fairs. Starting nearly from scratch, Terri and Rick built their operation together and try to make improvements every year. Terri chased after her dream and conrmed that running a successful dairy goat business is the perfect t for her. “When you enjoy what you do, it doesn’t seem like work most days,” Terri said. “I can look around and say, ‘We have a good life.’”
Visit your local J&D dealer: ARCADIA, WI
MENAHAGA, MN
DURAND, WI
MINNESOTA CITY, MN
D&D Farm Sup. 608-323-7001
Komro Sales & Serv. 715-672-4263
FREEPORT, MN
Arnzen Construction 320-836-2284
FREEPORT, MN
Dairyland Equip. 218-564-4958
D&D Farm Supply 507-474-6920
MENOMONIE, WI
Lindstrom Farm Syst. 715-231-3168
Hartung Sales & Serv. PENNOCK, MN 320-386-2697 D&D Ag Supply & Construction GILMAN, MN 320-599-4466 Gilman Coop Creamery ROCK VALLEY, IA 320-387-2770 Prairie Land Ag Sup. 712-476-9290
is? Have..t.h
JANESVILLE, WI
Tri-County Dairy Sup. 608-757-2697
LANCASTER, WI
No VFD Required!
Fuller’s Milker Center 608-723-4634 800-887-4634
t
...To ge this!
MARSHFIELD, WI
www.jdmfg.com Family Owned & Operated in Eau Claire, Wisconsin
SAUK CENTRE, MN Dairyland Supply 320-352-3987 800-338-6455
SPARTA, WI
Preston Dairy Equip. 608-269-3830
Podevels Farm Serv. 715-384-6193 800-742-5748
WHITEWATER, WI
MELROSE, MN
WITHEE, WI
Farm Systems 320-256-3276
The Scharine Group 608-883-2880 Hoover Silo Repair 715-229-2527
Page 8 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
A chance to look back
Larsons receive Freeborn County farm family award By Kate Rechtzigel kate.r@dairystar.com
ALBERT LEA, Minn. − For the Larsons, the county’s farm family of the year award gives them a chance to look back and reect on what generations before them have done. “Our farm and our land have always been involved in our family. Being recognized gave us an opportunity to go back and look at the prior generations and what they set up,” Jon Larson said. “It’s a privilege and a responsibility to take care of (the land) we have been given.” Larson and his wife, Ann, milk 250 cows, have 500 youngstock and run 600 acres at Larcrest Holsteins in Albert
Lea. Larson’s nephew, Chase Saxton, also helps with all aspects of farm operations along with Saxton’s mother, Linda, and Saxton’s sisters, Lydia and Bridget, who help picture cattle and get them ready for shows. This past year, the Larsons were recognized as the Freeborn County Farm Family of the Year by the University of Minnesota. “It was an unexpected surprise,” said Larson of the award. The land which Larsons call home today started in their family in 1850 when William White moved to southern Minnesota from New York. William’s son, Richard White, contributed to the farm in the late 1860s upon receiving land adjacent to William’s in return
PHOTO SUBMITTED
The Larsons have added new heifer faciliƟes over the years but the dairy cows are milked in the original barns built in the 1960s.
KATE RECHTZIGEL/DAIRY STAR
Bridget Volpel, Linda Saxton, Chase Saxton, Ann Larson, Jon Larson, Tyler Larson, Caleb White and Connor White are awarded the Freeborn County Farm Family of the Year Award at their farm near Albert Lea, Minnesota. The Larsons milk 250 cows. from his service in the Civil War. White’s Woods was established in the 1970s as a Freeborn County Park from land donated to the county by their family. White’s Woods borders the land that we farm today, Larson said. Richard’s granddaughter, Raymona, began farming in 1960 when she married David Larson. Raymona taught school until that time. She cashed in her retirement savings to help purchase eight registered Holsteins. These eight heif-
ers represent the beginning of Larcrest Holsteins. David and Raymona are Larson’s parents. “I think my father and mother probably had pigs, sheep and chickens way back when, (but) for the last 20 years the main focus has been the dairy,” Larson said. Growing up on the farm, Larson was not the only sibling with a passion for agriculture. Larson’s oldest brother, Mark, owns two agriculturalrelated businesses and has been in charge of the farm’s hoof care for the past two decades.
His sister, Carolyn, who passed away in 2003, was a professor of dairy science at Wisconsin Indianhead Technical College. And Larson’s other sister, Linda, helps at the farm frequently by preparing cattle for shows and foreign visitors who come for farm tours. “I am one of ve kids, and we were all quite passionate about agriculture,” Larson said. Some of Larson’s favorite memories growing up on the farm consist of showing at Turn to LARSONS | Page 9
Concrete
Silos
Emergency service, any day, any time. Because we value your business, your call will always be answered by a live person, not a machine.
Call whenever you need us, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
320-251-5090 141 28th Avenue South Waite Park, MN
“Thank you for sponsoring my trophy. This is my ²rst time winning a trophy. I really appreciate it. It meant a lot to me.” - Emily Isherwood
trautcompanies.com
With over 40 years experience, Wisconsin Silos is the most complete builder of concrete silos in the United States. From pouring the footing, to fixing the accessories, unloaders, feeders, conveyors, silo pipes, silo distributors & silo chutes.
WE DO IT ALL!
3700 Post Rd., Plover, WI
1-800-472-9202 • 715-570-0069 • wisilos@gmail.com www.wisconsinsilos.com
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 9
ConƟnued from LARSONS | Page 8 both the county and state fairs and putting up hay with his brother. “I think we took a lot of things for granted growing up on the farm. But as you grow older, you realize how important they were,” Larson said. “(We) saw life from the start every day and took on responsibilities early. Staying humble and working hard are things we learned at a very early age.” Today, Larson’s family members each play an important role on the dairy. Ann takes care of the calves, hosts the tours, does the bookkeeping, helps with herd health and cares for any sick animals. Saxton is involved in all aspects of the dairy from feeding to milking, and Larson oversees things on the farm, works closely with their veterinarian, and handles a lot of his own vet work and herd health. “I love the cattle, and breeding is something that’s interested me since I was a little kid. The rst books I read were bull books,” Larson said. “It’s been a thrill to see our bulls in the books that I learned to read on, and it’s always a thrill to see a new heifer calf born and think what she might become.” The Larsons also have four employees who help with milking, repairs and eldwork. The family works with several independent contractors for varying
harvests and also local heifer growers. The Larsons have added heifer facilities, but the milk cows are housed in the original barns built in the 1960s. “We’re quite happy with the heifer facilities we
“I love the cattle, and breeding is something that’s interested me since I was a little kid. The rst books I read were bull books.” JON LARSON, DAIRY FARMER
have,” Larson said. “My guess is that in the near future we’ll probably do something different for housing the milking herd, but for right now, I’m quite thankful for what we have.” In addition to the farm, the Larsons are also members of their church council and head of the church’s youth group. Larson’s great grandfather, Richard White, was one of the founders of Concordia
Bearlake Lutheran Church. “We have the best neighbors in the world and most of them go there,” said Larson of the church. The Larsons are also active in their dairy communities, having been a part of the county’s American dairy association for many years. Larson has been president of the Freeborn County Dairy Herd Improvement Association for the last 20 years and was president of the Freeborn County Registered Holstein Breeders for 10 years. Ann was a 4-H club leader, and they both volunteer with the youth organization. “It’s good to get out once in a while,” Larson said. “Seeing some of these people outside of the farming operation is probably a good thing for everyone.” The Larsons are looking forward to passing down the farm to the next generation. “The generations before me valued passing it on to us as much as we value passing it on to those after us,” Larson said. “Each generation has changed and grown (the farm), and we have the responsibility to do much of the same to be viable in the next generation. Changes will have to be made, but the same core principles of honesty, hard work and family is what got us here and what will take us forward.”
Work smarter Not harder
Inline Round and Square Bale Wrapper
Hybrid X
Contact your local dealer for more information: Mid-Central Equipment, Inc.
Woller Equipment
Beaver Machine
Henning, MN • 218-583-2931
Swanville, MN • 320-573-2341
Coleman, WI • 920-897-4035
Northland Farm Systems
Cloverdale Equipment Curtiss, WI • 715-223-3361
Farmers Implement Store
Mineral Point, WI • 608-987-3331
Olson’s Custom Farm Service
Reiser Implement
Simpson’s Tractor, Inc
Owatonna, MN • 507-451-3131 Sebeka, MN • 218-837-5749
Waukon, IA • 563-568-4526
Richland Center, WI • 608-647-6343
Roeder Implement
Schlauderaff Implement
Helmuth Repair
Dubuque, IA • 563-557-1184
Litchfield, MN • 20-693-7277
Kalona, IA • 319-656-2894
The “Mielke” Market Weekly By Lee Mielke November Class III price highest since May
Page 10 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
The Agriculture Department announced the November Federal order Class III milk price at $18.03 per hundredweight, up 20 cents from October, $5.31 below November 2020, but the highest Class III price since May. The 11 month average stands at $16.96, down from $18.39 a year ago and compares to $16.74 in 2019. Late Friday morning Class III futures portended a December price at $18.43 which would result in a 2021 average of $17.09, down from $18.16 in 2020 and compares to $16.96 in 2019. The Class IV price is $18.79, up $1.75 from October, $5.49 above a year ago, and the highest Class IV price since October 2014. Its 11-month average stands at $15.74, up from $13.50 a year ago and down from $16.26 in 2019. Meanwhile, a sharply higher October All Milk Price and sharply lower corn and soybean prices propelled the October milk feed ratio higher for the second month in a row. The USDA’s latest Ag Prices report has the ratio at 1.87, up from 1.69 in September, but still down from last year’s 2.49. The index is based on the current milk price in relationship to feed prices for a ration consisting of 51% corn, 8% soybeans and 41% alfalfa hay. In other words, one pound of milk would purchase 1.87 pounds of dairy feed of that blend. The U.S. All Milk Price averaged $19.70 per cwt., up $1.30 from September but 30 cents below October 2020. The California price climbed to $19.90, up $1.10 from September and a dime above a year ago. Wisconsin’s, at $19.60, was up $1.30 from September but $2 below a year ago. The national average corn price fell to $5.02 per bushel, down 45 cents per bushel from September, after dropping 87 cents from the August level, but is still $1.41 per bushel above October 2020. Soybeans averaged $11.90 per bushel, down 30 cents from September, after dropping $1.50 from August, but is $2.27 per bushel above October 2020. Alfalfa hay averaged $213 per ton, up $4 from September, after gaining $3 from August, and is a whopping $44 per ton above a year ago. Looking at the cow side of the ledger; the October cull price for beef and dairy combined averaged $70.60 per cwt., down $2.30 from September, $10.60 above October 2020, but $1 below the 2011 base average of $71.60 per cwt.
Parts Dept. 800-245-8222
Dairy Margin Coverage payments will be triggered for the 10th month in a row. In the week ending Nov. 20, 59,200 dairy cows were sent to slaughter, up 900 from the previous week and 500 head or 0.9% above that week a year ago. Omicron became the buzzword of “Black Friday” and ever since, as another chapter is written in the ongoing COVID saga. Growing concern unleashed widespread commodity market selling for those open on that Friday, with crude oil taking the brunt, according to StoneX Dairy Group, as countries scrambled to formulate and institute travel bans in an effort to contain Omicron. While several reports downplayed the seriousness of the new variant, the President tried to ease the fear, promising there would be no new lockdowns. “It may be much ado about nothing,” said StoneX broker Dave Kurzawski in the December 6 “Dairy Radio Now” broadcast. “Dairy has taken the news in stride,” he said, but “One thing is for sure, Omicron doesn’t make more milk.” That’s the issue we’re dealing with right now, he said, and follows anemic growth and even negative milk growth in October. Year to date U.S. milk output is up 1.6% while domestic dairy demand is up 2.4%. Throw in exports, he said, and demand is up over 4%. “We don’t have as much milk,” he reasoned, “And the cost of producing milk has gone through the roof for a lot of producers, especially in the last few months, so $18 milk isn’t what it used to be.” That said, he quickly added; “The market doesn’t have to give you a prot. If demand slows down because of Omicron or some other variant or something else comes out of the woodwork, prices can sink back down.” Kurzawski says he doesn’t see people eating any less because of Omicron so he still sees a stable and slightly bullish market as we head into the end of the year. When asked how high milk prices might go in 2022 he answered, “No one knows for sure but the reality is, I wouldn’t rule out $20.” “We’re not out of the woods yet,” he said, “But I don’t think milk production is going to turn on a dime here. After talking with dairy producers all day long, every day, I don’t see the capital investment being put back into dairy farming today and I don’t see demand slowing down a tremendous amount,” he concluded. Cash dairy prices started December mixed. The Cheddar blocks held all week where they closed on November 19, at $1.8575 per pound, up 21.50 cents
3DUWV 'HSW RႇHUV KXQGUHGV RI JUHDW SURGXFWV \RX ZLOO ¿QG RQ RXU RXU :HEVLWH www.PartsDeptOnline.com
%XON 7DQNV *DOORQ *DOORQ *DOORQ *DOORQ *DOORQ *DOORQ *DOORQ *DOORQ *DOORQ
0LON 7UDQVSRUW 7DQNV *DOORQ $3395 *DOORQ $3995 *DOORQ $4795
$2195 $2595 $3695 $4295 $5495 $5695 $6595 $7795 $8695
Replacement Claws :HVW $99 &DOLIRUQLD $144 *HUPDQLD $175 +DUPRQ\ $105 'H/DYDO $89-$149
3RUWDEOH 9DFXXP 6\VWHP +3 9DFXXP VXSSO\ $1295 +3 9DFXXP VXSSO\ $1495 &RPSOHWH 0LONLQJ %XFNHWV /E %XFNHW IRU &RZ $449 /E %XFNHW IRU *RDWV $525
Replacement Surge Pulsation
BM Style Pulsators 6WDOO &RFN 3XOVDWRU 3DUORU 0RXQW 3XOVDWRU 5HSODFHPHQW &RLOV 3XOVDWLRQ &RQWUROOHU
6WDOO &RFNV $22 $109 $109 $55 $599
• Repair & Sales • Troubleshooting • Hose Assemblies
Surge Style Pulsators 6WDOO &RFN 3XOVDWRU $209 3DUORU 0RXQW 3XOVDWRU $209 5HSODFHPHQW &RLOV $99 3XOVDWLRQ &RQWUROOHU $599 0LON 3XPS 6HDOV 6XUJH 2OG 6W\OH $22.95 6XUJH 1HZ 6W\OH $39.95 8QLYHUVDO $21.95 /& 7KRPVHQ $24.95
Turn to MIELKE | Page 11
Hydrostatic & Hydraulic Repair
Sizes available Up to 1000 Gallons
Replacement BouMatic Pulsation
from where they were on November 3, and 27.25 cents above a year ago. The barrels nished at $1.6025, up 7.75 cents on the week, 3.25 cents above the Nov. 3 perch, 20.25 cents above a year ago, but 25.50 cents below the blocks. There were no sales of block on the week and 14 for the month of November, down from 22 in October. Barrel sales totaled 3 for the week and 98 for the month, up from 49 in October. Interestingly, USDA’s recent solicitation for 13.5 million pounds of cheese went unlled. StoneX says that means we are either light on production or on productive capacity and doesn’t read it as bullish or bearish because we just don’t know the reason. Midwest cheesemakers were catching up following the Thanksgiving holiday week, according to Dairy Market News. Production schedules varied as some plants were closed for the holiday while others were down for multiple days. Milk availability had not shifted much at midweek but demand has, says DMN. Some contacts, for weeks ahead of the holiday, were mentioning slowdowns in orders, but some of those producers now say orders are rebounding. Cheese market tones are still uncertain, as the large block-to-barrel price gap remains. Cheese availability varies within the region, but mostly balanced, according to contacts. Cheese demand in the west remains strong in retail and food service and international purchasers are looking for U.S. cheese, with notable purchases for export to Asian markets. Port congestion continues to cause delays which have increased in recent weeks. Spot cheese inventories are tight, says DMN, and stakeholders say this may persist as purchasers continue to buy for strong year-end holiday demand. Cheese producers are running busy schedules in the west as milk continues to be available. Spot butter slipped to $1.97 per pound Tuesday but fought its way back to a Friday close at $2.0025, up 1.25 cents on the week and 52.25 cents above a year ago. Sales totaled 21 for the week and 59 for the month, up from 25 in October. Butter churning resumed as more cream became available Thanksgiving Week and this week, due to Class II and III producers taking days off. Plant managers were locating cream in the low 1.20s, regionally and from the West. Bulk butter remains tight and contacts question if cream availability will remain as it currently is for long. A major factor holding back output remains the lack of employees. There has been some improvement, says DMN, but the problem remains. Cream inventories are available to meet demand in the West and some contacts are, reportedly, sending loads to other regions as cream demand is strong. Again, a shortage of truck drivers is causing delays to loads of cream and butter throughout the region. Butter demand in retail and food service is steady and international purchasers are looking for U.S. butter but spot avail-
• Design • Service Calls • Cylinders
Skidsteer Attachments For Sale 6LQJOH &RZ 0LONHU +3 3XPS 2QO\ $799 1XSXOVH 3DLO $479 3XPS 3DLO $1275
www.stoens.com
16084 State Hwy. 29 • Glenwood, MN 56334
320-634-4360
Toll Free 866-634-4360
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 11
ConƟnued from MIELKE | Page 10 ability is limited. Producers are running busy schedules, though delays to production supplies and a shortage of labor aren’t helping matters any, according to DMN. Grade A nonfat dry milk fell to $1.5475 per pound Wednesday but saw a Friday nish at $1.5625, unchanged on the week and 41.25 cents above a year ago on 18 sales for the week and 57 for the month, up from 17 in October. Dry whey fell to 68 cents per pound Wednesday but closed Friday at 69.75 cents, a quarter-cent lower on the week but still 23.50 cents above a year ago. There was 1 sale on the week and 8 for the month, down from 16 in October. Looking globally we got a look at New Zealand’s October dairy exports. Whole milk powder was off 1.3% from a year ago while skim milk powder was up 12.9%. HighGround Dairy says “October was not an all-time high for the month even as volume shipped to China, the top destination, did hit a record. Strong powder exports were recorded into the country despite rumors of high inventories.” HGD says the strongest increase by volume into the rest of the world was on cheese, at 69.6 million pounds, up 20.1% from a year ago, strongest for the month in ve years, according to HGD. China’s market share reached 26%, as it remained the number one destination, but gains over prior year were strongest to Japan. Year to date cheese exports were up17.1%. Butter totaled 41.8 million pounds, down 17.7%, though YTD is up 2.1%. Speaking of “down under;” DMN says “Australian dairy production has not met expectations for the season and there is increasing concern that current factors will impact longer term results in coming seasons. Farm labor shortages remain a limiting factor frequently cited, resulting from various COVID restrictions. Observers fear these challenges will deter needed investments by producers to yield longer term increases in dairy production.” The current milk producing season in New Zealand has also been disappointing, says DMN. Pastures in both islands have yielded sub optimal growth. Excessive rain on the North Island has overwhelmed the ability of pastures to absorb water in a productive way and growth has suffered. The South Island has suffered from erratic rain, resulting in periods of too dry weather. The Daily Dairy Report says New Zealand cows produced just 6.9 billion pounds of milk in October, a decline of 3.3% compared to last year and the lowest October volume since 2017. Cumulative production for the rst ve months of the milking season has trailed the prior year by 3.1%, says the DDR. In politics, Senators Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and Susan Collins, R-Maine, introduced legislation this week which calls on the Agriculture Secretary to begin a national hearing process on Federal Milk Market Orders within six months of its passage. The hearings will consider the Class I mover but may also address other issues as well. A task force from six Midwest dairy groups gave the measure a thumbs up and stated “The Dairy Pricing Opportunity Act leaves the door open to considering various proposals, such as the Class III Plus proposal put forth early this year, and the ability to address other
areas of the system that are just as urgent, such as increasing price transparency.” The task force also supports creation of an academic dairy pricing study that would aid in the discussion and called on lawmakers to “support this research effort to help inform whatever emerges from the hearing process. We look forward to working with the Senate and USDA to nd a lasting solution for our dairy farmers.” Task force members include Wisconsin-based Dairy Business Association, Edge Dairy Farmer Cooperative, the Iowa State Dairy Association, Minnesota Milk Producers Association, Nebraska State Dairy Association and South Dakota Dairy Producers. The National Milk Producers Federation says the legislation “adds bipartisan momentum to a range of critical milk pricing discussions that dairy farmers are having through NMPF’s Economic Policy Committee. NMPF is continuing to work with USDA and Congress on how best to remedy deciencies in the Class I mover
formula and fully recoup $750 million in unintended losses felt by farmers of all sizes.” The Federation said that it is “leading discussions on a broad range of Federal Milk Marketing Order reform issues important to producers in all regions of the country. We look forward to pursuing policy improvements that will serve all dairy producers more equitably and effectively.” The International Dairy Foods Association (IDFA) recognized six individuals this week at the annual Celebration of Dairy, “whose work in federal legislation and food and agricultural policy has helped to advance the economic impact of the U.S. dairy industry.” IDFA President and CEO Michael Dykes, recognized Senator Roy Blunt of Missouri, House Agriculture Committee Chairman Rep. David Scott of Georgia, Rep. Sanford Bishop of Georgia, Rep. Mike Simpson of Idaho, and Jason Hafemeister and Bruce Summers of the USDA with the IDFA Leadership Award.
Keep your cattle happy and healthy with a great TMR mix. A Supreme vertical mixer is powerful, thorough and accurate, providing the best TMR mix on the market. Unlike other mixers, a Supreme is built to last, providing exceptionally accurate mixes throughout its entire life. With proper care and maintenance, a Supreme will offer the same great mix from the first cow to the last – Guaranteed.
THE WORLD’S BEST TMR PROCESSOR
Mixers on hand:
CLIP AND SAVE
NEXT DAIRY SALE
THURSDAY, DEC. 16, 2021 DAIRY SALE RESULTS FROM
November 18, 2021 252 head sold
Top Springing Hol. Heifer - $1,550 OUR COMMISSION IS ONLY 2.5%!
SALE SCHEDULE EVERY TUESDAY: 9 a.m. Slaughter Hogs • 11 a.m. Hay - Straw 12 noon Slaughter Cattle 1ST & 3RD WEDNESDAYS: 1 p.m. all classes sheep & goats 2ND & 4TH THURSDAYS:11 a.m. Stock cows Baby & Started calves • Feeder Cattle 3RD THURSDAY: 9 a.m. Dairy Sale • Springers, Bred & Open Heifers • Breeding Bulls • Herd Dispersals
Pipestone Livestock Auction Market, Inc. PIPESTONE, MN
For more information phone: Of¿ce 507-825-3306 www.pipestonelivestock.com
‘21 NEW SUPREME 600T
Stainless Steel Lined, Hard Surfaced Screws, Flat Dual
WE Direction Conveyor, Digi-Star Scale -
CALL NOW
‘06 SUPREME 900T,
RH Dogleg Conveyor, Digi-Star Scale
$17,500
aupun
quipment Co., Inc. W7257 State Rd. 49 N9695 Frohling Lane Waupun, WI Watertown, WI 920-324-3597 920-261-5301 www.waupunequipment.com
“The Dealer That Offers A Choice”
Page 12 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
Grain Markets r Ot he
Oa
ts
bea S oy
Co rn
ns
December 8, 2021 Sanborn, MN Meadowlands Farmers Co-op
5.86
12.27
Almena, WI Synergy Cooperative
5.27
12.01
St. Cloud, MN ADM
5.72
12.31
Westby, WI Premier Co-op
5.57
11.96
Cadott, WI Cadott Grain Service
5.35
12.06
Pipestone, MN Cargill
5.78
12.41
Muscoda, WI Riverdale Ag Service
5.57
12.01
Wheat 7.12
GarÀeld Pro-Ag Farmer’s Co-op
5.82
12.36
Wheat 10.20
Monona, IA Innovative Ag
5.51
12.13
Watertown, SD Watertown Co-op Elevator
5.70
12.42
Whitewater, WI Landmark Services Co-op
5.67
11.93
Dennison, MN Central Farm Service
5.48
12.12
Belleville, WI Countryside Co-op
5.57
11.89
Glenwood, MN CHS Prairie Lakes
5.79
6.87
12.35
S. Wheat 9.90 W. Wheat 8.02
Wheat 10.17
HELPING GOOD MANAGERS MAKE BETTER TRADING DECISIONS Dairy prices are moving higher around the globe with some regions seeing the equivalent of $22-30 cwt U.S. dollar milk values. Much of this strength is being driven by the cost side of the margin equation moving higher with inflation. World feed and grain prices are up 25-40% from recent lows. This requires over $2/cwt of additional milk value just to cover increased feed costs. Milk in China is trading around the equivalent of $30/cwt, corn over $10/bushel, and soybeans over $18/bushel. With the rolling electrical grid shutdowns disrupting jobs and productivity capacity, it seems that food demand out of this region will start to feel the pressure from consumer budgets. Class III and IV markets continue to work higher with Class IV values nearing $20/cwt. Current spot cheese prices are projecting a Class III settlement near $18.00. With current whey values, cheese prices will have to move above $1.92 to push Class III futures above $20/ cwt. U.S. cheese prices continue to lag EU and NZ values. In recent spot auctions, blocks traded $1.85 with barrels at $1.6025. For reference EU cheese is trading near $2.20
and NZ $2.37. U.S. cheese prices will struggle to move higher with the large inventories of American cheese in cold storage. Typically, American cheese inventories draw down 3.5% between July and November. Since July of this year inventories grew by 3.5%. Dry powders remain the strongest leg of the various dairy product categories. U.S. whey is trading near 70 cents and nonfat dry milk $1.56. EU whey is trading 10 cents below U.S. based on Dairy Market News reports. Some of this spread may be freight differentials to SE Asia buyers. Feed and grain markets are having a difficult time building upside momentum at current values. Depending on where you are located, cash corn prices are likely pushing near $6.00 for feed purchases. Corn basis remains strong as demand is tightening available supplies forcing feed mills to compete with high margin ethanol plants to acquire corn for grinding. *Futures and options trading involve significant risk of loss and may not be suitable for everyone. Therefore, carefully consider whether such trading is suitable for you in light of your financial condition. Past performance is not indicative of future results. DVi is an equal opportunity employer.
Milk, Feed & Grain Market Support
Joe Spader
✓ Physical Feed and Grain Trading ✓ Commodity Broker ✓ DRP/LGM Insurance Provider ✓ DVPro Consulting Services
320-634-3771
1145 East Minnesota Ave.• Suite 1 Glenwood, MN 56334
www.dairyvisor.com
DairyVisor Inc. is a private corporation based in Glenwood, MN. DVi provides a full range of commodity trading products and consulting services to large scale grain and dairy operations.
SMARTPHONE FARMING
SM
Alma Pro
Automatic Calf Feeder
MilkShuttle
Automatic Milk Transport & Pasteurizer
FOR THE NEXT GENERATION OF DAIRY FARMERS.
We offer 21st century whole-barn solutions through Smartphone Farming. Put your farm operation literally at your fingertips: control milking, calf feeding, cleaning, etc. all from your phone, tablet or PC. AMS GALAXY USA is committed to supporting our customers — from small family farms to large-herd operations — with efficient, affordable, reliable and cow-friendly automatic milking systems, specialized stress-free calf feeding systems, and other automation solutions for dairy farms. For more information, contact your Authorized Dealer or AMS Galaxy USA:
MIDWEST DAIRY ROBOTICS 1DWH /D[
ZHSLZ'TPK^LZ[KHPY`YVIV[PJZ JVT AMS GALAXY USA Kutztown, PA 484-648-1365
AMSGalaxyUSA.com ROBOTIC MILKING. AUTOMATIC CALF FEEDING. ROBOTIC BEDDING. ROBOTIC FEED PUSHING. TOTAL FARM AUTOMATION.
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 13
Area Hay Auction Results Fort Atkinson Hay
Ft. Atkinson, Iowa • 563-534-7513 Small Squares $155/ton $160/ton $150/ton $130/ton $170-195/ton
1st Crop 2nd Crop 3rd Crop Grass Straw
Large Squares $135/ton $115-140/ton $110-205/ton $120-125/ton $95/ton
1st Crop 2nd Crop 3rd Crop 4th Crop Grass Oats New Seeding
Rounds $50-170/ton $70-130/ton $90-130/ton $150/ton $70-110/ton $60/ton $75-80/ton
HOOF TRIMMING
Rock Valley Hay Auction Co.
Since 1997
Rock Valley, Iowa • 712-476-5541
Trimming commercial and show cattle
Dec. 2, 62 loads
Dec. 1, 59 loads 1st Crop 2nd Crop 3rd Crop 4th Crop New Seeding
Monahan
1 1 1 1 2 1 3 4 2 1
load load load load loads
1st crop 3rd crop Grass Straw
Large Squares $237.50/ton $225/ton $172.50-212.50 $132.50-137.50/ton
load loads loads loads load
1st crop 2nd crop 3rd crop 4th crop Grass Straw Corn stalks
Large Rounds $177.50-212.50/ton $175-230/ton $175-190/ton $185-227.50/ton $92.50-210/ton $120/ton $37.50-57.50/ton
15 loads 12 loads 5 loads 1 load 4 loads 1 load 4 loads
We use a hydraulic upright chute for less stress. “Our two man crew allows us to complete the job in a timely manner with less disruption of your herd’s daily routine.” Covering the states of MN, IA, SD, WI & IL
Call Dan at
507-272-3447
Target Your Customers! The Dairy Star is sent only to DAIRY FARMERS! If you would like to advertise in the DAIRY STAR, call 320-352-6303.
“We like that we rarely have to clean stalls and the heifers stay cleaner.” “We move heifers at 5 to 6 months old, they take to the stalls right away and we don’t see them lying in the aisles. We like that we rarely have to clean stalls and the heifers stay cleaner. They seem to like them and they transition well later.” - Derek & Tim Rolf, Golden Sunrise Dairy, Inc., MacIntosh, MN Waterbeds in use - 200 Heifers, 2019, 300 Cows, 2016
Contact a DCC Waterbeds dealer near you: Eastern Iowa Dairy Systems Epworth, IA
Nachatelo Construction Mauston, WI
Advanced Dairy LLC Spring Valley, WI
Preston Dairy Equipment Sparta, WI
Livestock Systems Charles City, IA
Midwest Livestock Systems Zumbrota, MN, Renner, SD, Menomonie, WI
Bob’s Dairy Supply Dorchester, WI
Wille Construction Garnavillo, IA
Northland Farm Systems Owatonna, MN
Dorner Equipment Sales & Service New Franken, WI
RLS Vinyl and Farm Supply LLC Hager City, WI
Fuller’s Milker Center Inc Lancaster, WI Field’s Mt. Horeb WI
Leedstone Melrose, MN, Glencoe, MN, Plainview, MN, Woodville, WI Gorter’s Clay & Dairy Equipment, Inc. Pipestone, MN
Joe’s Refrigeration Inc. Withee, WI Komro Sales & Service Durand, WI
Lindstrom Farm Systems Menomonie, WI Russell Berger Wilson, MI Scharine Group Inc. Whitewater/Janesville, WI & Mt Horeb, WI
www.DCCWaterbeds.com | (608) 709-2693 Advanced Comfort Technology, Inc. © 2021
Page 14 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
More than dairy Ryndas add value to farm with pastured livestock, connecting with consumers By Kate Rechtzigel kate.r@dairystar.com
M O N T G O M E R Y, Minn. − When Joe Rynda nished his missionary work in St. Paul in 2019, he was bound and determined to nd a way his family could come back to the dairy. “I wanted to come back and farm because I’ve always loved cows,” Joe said. “But, my wife and I wanted to nd
an extra little niche besides just bringing some cows in.” Joe and his wife, Kate, milk 70 cows with their daughter, Felicity, 7 months, and Joe’s parents, Richard and Ann, near Montgomery. They also farm with Joe’s parents, Richard and Ann, and Joe’s seven siblings, Greg, Andrew, Maria, Celia, Luci, Ana and Anthony are also involved with the farm in various ways. This fth-generation farm
PHOTO SUBMITTED
Kate, Felicity and Joe Rynda milk 70 cows with Joe’s parents, Richard and Ann, near Montgomery. Joe and Kate recently selling pasture-raised pork and chicken, as well as ground beef, eggs, baked goods and seasonal fresh produce, in addiƟon to creaƟng their own online newsleƩer.
PHOTO SUBMITTED
Pigs are raised on pasture at the Ryndas’ dairy farm near Montgomery, Minnesota. Customers are welcomed out to the farm to visit the pigs during the summerƟme.
has also recently started selling pork, chicken, as well as ground beef, eggs, baked goods and seasonal fresh produce on their farm in addition to creating their own online newsletter. “We don’t have the crops and (machinery) so we’re not busy with that necessarily, so this is kind of what we do during the day,” Richard said
of the diversity. The farm has been a dairy since 1955. The Ryndas tried expanding in the past but were faced with challenges such as nancial hardship and disease. Now, with Joe being back full time, it has given the farm a new opportunity for growth. “I think having other animals enhances being a dairy farmer,” Joe said. “Being a
dairy farmer is great and I love it, but then having some other animals too really makes it all that much better.” Joe started this venture in the summer of 2019 as he wanted to try raising his own meat. “I want to be able to grow my own food for my family Turn to RYNDAS | Page 15
Used Kuhn SR 300 12-wheel rake tandem/kicker
$10,900
Gehl 425 bu. spreader new floor, new apron
Rubes Sponsored by Fluegge’s Ag
$6,995
Kuhn GA300T 9’ Rotary Rake
$3,200
New Kuhn FC3161 TCR, 10’3”, center pull, rubber roller
Call
McKee 7’ Rear mounted Snowblower
FLUEGGE’S AG Farm Material Handling Specialist
Bernice discovers the pitfalls of procrastination.
G LEASIN LE B AVAILA
ROD FLUEGGE “the boss”
2040 Mahogany St., Mora, MN • 320-679-2981 WWW.FLUEGGESAG.COM
Hyd. spout - $2,000
Looking for good, used trades!
1960-2021 Celebrating 61 years!
“Service After The Sale”
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 15
ConƟnued from RYNDAS | Page 14
here on the farm,” Joe said. “And then while my family raises the best food we can, we also sell that food to other people and customers, inviting them into it.” Joe got extraordinary feedback from his pigs that rst year; so last summer, he also started raising pasture-raised broiler chickens and laying hens. “We’ve actually had a lot of people who have liked the pasture-raised animals or even just the simple fact of knowing the farmer personally,” Joe said. “The fact that (the customers) knew where the pig, the meat and the food came from was really big for them.” Since then, Joe’s family has also started diversifying the farm in their own ways.
“Lucy does cupcake sales,” Richard said. “She’s done a few graduation parties, so she’ll make cupcakes and sell them. It’s kind of a big hit. She already has some plans for next summer and people already have her booked.” Kate helps Joe with a lot of different pieces. “Kate grew up on a small farm that actually did the pasture-raised animals down in Texas,” Joe said. “She brought a lot of the knowledge into it. She’s jumped right into the dairy industry.” Anthony helps milking cows every night, and Maria helps feed calves when she is available. Greg and Andrew live nearby with their families and ll in if Joe or Richard need to take time off. Greg is also a carpenter and does some of the repair work on the farm, while Andrew is a great resource for Joe’s questions on herd health and management. Celia and Ana have moved away but help on the farm when they come home. Lucy and Kate have been able to offer some granola, bread and cupcakes along with their other products through the farm’s online platform. “Everybody’s inPHOTO SUBMITTED Broiler chickens are raised on pasture at the Ryndas’ Turn to RYNDAS | farm near Montgomery, Minnesota. Page 17
PHOTO SUBMITTED
Felicity and Kate Rynda look over the Ryndas’ herd Dec. 2. The Ryndas milk 70 cows near Montgomery, Minnesota.
TOP PRICES PAID & CONTRACTING AVAILABLE Your Market For:
Holstein Steers • Fed Dairy Cows • Lean Dairy Cows Your local area buyer for MN, IA and WI.
Bruce Belter • 507-429-0359
Holstein Steers • Lean Cows • Bulls • Fed Cows
Tyrel Lembke • 877-300-9298 Long Prairie, MN Lean Cows • Bulls
Green Bay Dressed Beef
Dean Derricks • 920-655-4730 Green Bay, WI Holstein Steers • Fed Cows • Lean Cows
Chad McQuade • 605-668-4275
DĂdžŝŵŝnjĞ ŶŝŵĂů ,ĞĂůƚŚ ĂŶĚ ƉƌŽĚƵĐƟǀŝƚLJ ƚŚƌŽƵŐŚ Ăůů ƐƚĂŐĞƐ ŽĨ ŐƌŽǁƚŚ͕ ƉƌŽĚƵĐƟŽŶ and environmental challenges. MICROBIAL & NUTRITIONAL PRODUCTS
QuadriCal® + YEAST
Generator ELITE BaseLyteTM TM
RumenAider® Bovine GoldLyte®
Yankton, SD Lean Cows • Bulls
Mike Baczwaski • 800-445-0042 Gibbon, NE Fed Cows • Lean Cows • Bulls
Long Prairie Buying Station
Cody Ritter • 320-293-5212 • 320-732-8358 Long Prairie, MN
Call your Bio-Vet sales representative today to learn more about our products!
Page 16 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
ADVANCING THE FUTURE OF FARMING Let us Help You With all Your Barn Steel Needs!
MANUAL OR MOTORIZED 24 VOLT DC
CURTAIN SYSTEM
Raising the Bar in Cow Comfort
HEAVY DUTY HIGHEST QUALITY
BARN STEEL OPTIONS: • Adjustable Twin Beam System • Free Stall Systems • Adjustable Headlocks • Feed Panels, Gates, Fencing • Brackets • Accessories
J&D Manufacturing’s DC Curtain System offers easy installation and trouble-free operation. With the sealed keder curtain and matching roll tube, the J&D Curtain System can be installed in a fraction of the time of conventional curtain systems.
FEATURES: • End drive or center drive systems • Single roll up, double roll up, middle roll up, or middle double roll up • Fully adjustable for minimum winter ventilation or maximum summer ventilation • Manual or Motorized drive • Optional programmable control • Heavy gauge galvanized wind pockets to protect your drive system
“High-end system at an affordable price.” Nate and Jenny Landon LANCASTER, WI
INSTALLED J&D HEADLOCKS, STALLS, FANS AND CURTAINS
“We love the headlocks for ease of breeding and herd health work. The fans increased our milk production and conception rate. The stalls for more comfortable and keeps our cows clean. The curtains are a high-end system with an affordable price.”
(800) 887-4634 Lancaster, WI (608-647-4488 Richland Center
fullersmilkercenter.com
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 17
ConƟnued from RYNDAS | Page 15
volved to a certain extent,” Richard said. All of their customers are local and pick up the product directly from the farm. “A lot of people love seeing our cows out on pasture and all the different colors of cows too,” Joe said. To further engage with their customers, Kate took the initiative to start an online newsletter while she was on maternity leave with Felicity. “My family was once new to farming, and I think my dad instilled in us this love of sharing stories, the humorous real life, down-to-earth stories of farming, so I wanted to invite people into that,” Kate said. “(I wanted to) give little snapshots of what we’re doing here at the farm and our family life.” Kate plans to have the
newsletter go out quarterly to all of the customers who purchase from them on their various platforms, as well as available to those on their Facebook page. “People want more,” Joe said. The Ryndas also believe this diversication has brought them together as a family. “It really brings us closer together because we get to spend time together,” Joe said. Kate agreed. “It’s not a given that a family is going to work well together all the time,” she said. “I notice my in-laws have a gift for working well with each other. They are patient, communicative and allow people to speak up or take initiative, and that makes a big difference in drawing people
PHOTO SUBMITTED
The Rynda family – (front, from leŌ) Leah holding Briella, Kate holding Felicity, Richard, Ann holding Khloe, Ana and Maria; (back, from leŌ) Andrew holding AJ, Joe, Greg, Anna holding Frankie, Anthony, Cecilia and Luci – are all involved on the farm.
PHOTO SUBMITTED
Cows rest out on pasture Dec. 2 near Montgomery, Minnesota. The Rynda family allows their cows to have access to the outdoors but are housed in a freestall barn.
Prevent costly falls before they occur
closer.” The biggest challenge the Ryndas have faced is getting the word out there that they have products to sell. “There’s a lot of people doing this now,” Joe said. Kate agreed. “Realizing just because you put a post on Facebook doesn’t mean a customer that wants to buy food is going to see it,” she said.
bp2957 & Bp2958 bale processors Gold Level Award • Process baleage, corn stalks, 2021 Dealer’s Choice and dry hay • Handle round or square bales with fully adjustable loading forks • Left or right discharge • No belts or chains
We offer grooving & scarifying!
BEST FOOTING CONCRETE GROOVING
Strum, WI
715-579-0531
www.bestfootingconcretegrooving.com
Here Today. Gone Tomorrow. Give Classifieds a try.
+ 16.00 R20 Michelin XZL $300 + We stock military HD wheels + 14.00 R20 Goodyear AT/2 $325 + 40 + sizes of Aircraft tires + Great quality tires with 75% + tread in stock
Farm Landings LLC
Dell Rapids, SD 57022 • (605) 838-5362 sales@farmlandingsllc.com
ALL NEW MODEL - GM9117 Grinder Mixer • The hammer mill cuts material IDVWHU DQG PRUH HIÀFLHQWO\ WKDQ WKH competition, producing a grind with excellent uniformity. • NOW FEATURING: Optional rear supplement hopper.
ALL NEW product - rM7117 roller Mixer • Faster unload time • Feeding attachments and unloading mechanisms are driven hydraulically • NOW FEATURING: Optional rear supplement hopper.
Wood
Shavings BULK
OR
BAG
free h&S americana tumbler with purchase
S&S Wood Products
35335 Green Street | Independence, WI 54747
800-234-5893 | 715-985-3122
In the future, the Ryndas hope to process their own milk into cheese, yogurt or ice cream with an on-farm creamery, sell more fresh produce and baked goods, and continue diversifying their dairy farm. “It’s a small space, but we’re making the most of it,” Kate said.
*with submission of warranty registration to H&S
FIND A DEALER hsmfgco.com/dealer
715-387-3414
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 18
Build Your Farm Team Today!
Tues
k c o A t s uction Com e v i L e i r i a r P pany 43 Riverside Drive oL ng Long Prairie, MN 56347
Home of the longest running dairy sale in the Midwest! SALES START EVERY TUESDAY AT 4 P.M.
Starting with hogs, goats and sheep, followed by baby calves, slaughter, replacement and feeder cattle.
SALE DATES:
Tues., Dec. 14 Feeder & Slaughter Cattle Sale
Please consign your cattle as early as possible! Thank You!!!
with hay/straw, baby calves, feeder cattle, replacement cattle, goats, sheep, hogs, fat and slaughter cattle
Fri., Dec. 17
MDI is available to help existing and potential dairy producers succeed through team-based on-farm education, resources, and networking. Your Team Can Assist With… • Estate planning/farm transfer • Milk production/quality • Calf & heifer performance/growth • Feed management/nutrition • Reproduction • Herd health • Financials • Grant opportunities • Farm/family communication • Expansion/facility improvements • Forage production • Transitioning to Organic
“The MDI program has been essential to the growth and development of our dairy farm over the years. The team meetings, resources and ideas we get from agriculture professionals help us to ensure that we’re making the right choices for our farm!”
Dairy Sale - Noon
Tues., Dec. 21 Feeder & Slaughter Cattle Sale
with hay/straw, baby calves, feeder cattle, replacement cattle, goats, sheep, hogs, fat and slaughter cattle
DAIRY SALES are held every Friday. Dairy cattle sell at noon
For an on the farm estimate or current market info, call 320-732-2255 WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS!
Market Phone 1-320-732-2255 Fax: 1-320-732-2676
tfn
-Dairy Producer, McLeod County
The Minnesota Dairy Initiative Program is available to all dairy producers regardless of size or production and is custom fit to the farm’s needs.
V6750 V8950
To enroll, please contact Leah Bischof at 320-429-0611 or leahbischof@gmail.com or visit www.mn-dairy-initiative.org.
ROUND BALERS
Maximize Your Harvest Nutrition COMPACT LOADERS
WHEEL LOADERS
RAKES
5 Heights to choose from: 6’ to 16’
VERSATILE MOVABLE, RELIABLE VERSATILE, PRECAST BUNKER SILO WALLS!
Also Available:
Call today for your custom bunker plan designed to fit your needs and budget!
x Manure Storage x Feed bunks x Grain Storage x Water Tanks x Cattle Guards x Foot Baths
1-800-325-8456 LIKE US ON FACEBOOK!
Visit us on the web: www.wieserconcrete.com
MOWERS The new generation of TL Series inline bale wrappers from Tube-Line are built to provide producers and custom operators with high efficiency and proven reliability. To ensure that everyone can reap the benefits of the high moisture hay, Tube-Line BaleWrappers are available in multiple configurations to suit your needs and your budget.
TEDDERS Tub & Grain Grinders
FINANCING AVAILABLE THROUGH AGDIRECT AND DIVERSIFIED FINANCIAL
-SALES & SERVICE - Daniel Showalter (641) 832-0361 www.clearviewagllc.com
Page 19 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
Transition cow diets are essential Overton explains five things to know By Kate Rechtzigel kate.r@dairystar.com
Managing pre- and postpartum diets is essential in caring for transition cows, and recent research shows how proper rations can reduce the risk of common health problems for this group in the herd. “Fresh cow diets are not new, but interestingly enough, the vast majority of the research done with transition cow nutrition is focused only on the dry cow,” said Dr. Tom Overton. “In the last few years, new studies have given us some insight into how we might think about feeding some of these fresh cows and what strategies might work best.” Overton is a professor of dairy management and chair of the Department of Animal Science at Cornell University in Geneva, New York. He was featured in a Diamond V webinar, “What we think we know and still need to learn about feeding transition cows” Nov. 18. Referencing more than 25 years of research available, Overton outlined ve things known about transition cow diets and also unknowns, which need more understanding. He also touched on metabolic issues balanced transition diets can address, such as hypocalcemia, inammation, and acute phase response and stress, among others. “If you told me 10 years ago that we
would spend as much time (researching) hypocalcemia as we have in the last 10 years, I would’ve told you you’re crazy, we gured that out a long time ago,” Overton said. “But now I think we understand more about what we really didn’t know on the whole calcium issue in transition cows.” What is known is that purposeful nutritional strategies are needed in closeup cows to effectively manage postpartum hypocalcemia. These nutritional strategies decrease the dietary cation indifference or use synthetic celite A to create a diet more functional in calcium. “You really don’t treat postpartum hypocalcemia, but prevention is preferred and we do that with diets through the dry period,” Overton said. In addition to nutrition strategies, there needs to be an effectively implemented control energy diet from the dry period until lactation for metabolism and dry matter intake. “When these diets are well managed, the farmers manage particle size, they chop the straw or hay and they add water to some of the wet ingredients to help the (diet) stick together and (they) work a lot better,” Overton said. Managing particle size of forages and adding water are examples of ways farmers can feed an effective control energy diet. Overton’s third point was to focus on metabolizable protein supply preand postpartum, as it demonstrates the amount of amino acids needed in the diet. “The cows responded well to the
QUALITY GRAIN FROM A QUALITY MIXER
There’s no one better than Art’s Way when it comes to processing feed. Stationary mills for livestock or breweries, portable units for small operations and large grinder mixers for the modern feeding operation have your back day in and day out.
The Right Size for Your Operation:
· Stationary roller mill or hammer mill in electric or PTO drive when you bring your ingredients to the mill · Portable roller mill or hammer mills when you are wanting to process one thing at a time · Grinder Mixers with roller mill or hammer mills that have tanks ranging from 105 bushels to 215 bushels to meet the needs of your operation
Unique two year warranty is behind each one of Art’s Way Feed Mills!
amino acid-balanced blend diet in terms what regulates body protein metaboof milk yield, and the rst calf heifers lism, said Overton. actually responded quite nicely to the He would also like to examine other inclusion of a little less crude forage parts of the pre- and postpartum diets, and more non-forage ber,” Overton including the nutritional needs of a said. “Again, some extension work (is transition heifer. needed) to improve protein feeding in “We’re mostly feeding these cows the fresh cow.” and heifers the same closeup diet (in the As long as rumen health is main- studies), but are there things that might tained, well-balanced transition cow have been different if we separated those diets promote groups?” Overbetter perforton said. “We’re mance and metjust scratching abolic status in the surface, so cows post calvthere may be ing, meaning some opportuthat if you add nity (for more too much starch research).” or forage in the Moving forDR. TOM OVERTON, CORNELL UNIVERSITY diet, it could be ward, Overton a negative for those cows later on in thinks farmers are going to be feeding their lactation. a combination of a higher-fermentable, “We have done some work trying to higher-energy diets with more metabofeed higher (forage, energy and protein) lizable protein. He also thinks nutridiets post calving,” Overton said. “If the tionists will focus on gut and rumen forage is really (disease) preventable, it adaptation to lactation. works pretty well, but if you (add) for“We will feed certain feed additives age that isn’t digestible or you overdo or other things to promote gut health (the forage amount), you can only take and reduce inammation during that back (the health) of those cows.” time frame,” Overton said. “Then, we’ll The nal point Overton stressed learn more about other nutrients beyond was the importance of supplementing choline that might be conditionally esspecic nutrients and feed additives sential otherwise.” during the transition period. In the Overton emphasized there are still presentation, Overton showed an ex- many unknowns left to learn. But by ample of supplementing choline, which understanding the needs of transition ultimately improved milk production, cows and how to appropriately manage feed intake and gut health. those diets, farmers can care for transiResearch still needs to be done to tion cows well and reduce the risk of nd out what controls postpartum dry common herd health problems. matter intake in the rst two weeks and
“We’re just scratching the surface, so there may be some opportunity (for more research).”
Rock Valley Hay Auction Co.
Your source for dairy quality hay! For more info and to view hay for sale go to:
www.rockvalleyhay.com
Call for your parts and service needs!
www.lakehenryimplement.com
23661 Hwy. 4 , Lake Henry, MN • (320) 243-7411
OfÀce: 712-476-5541
Cell: 712-470-1274 • Fax: 712-476-9937 Rock Valley, IA • Paul Mc Gill, Owner
USDA opens 2022 signup for DMC, expands program As part of the Biden-Harris Administration’s ongoing efforts to support dairy farmers and rural communities, today the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) opened signup for the Dairy Margin Coverage (DMC) program and expanded the program to allow dairy producers to better protect their operations by enrolling supplemental production. This signup period – which runs from Dec. 13, 2021 to Feb. 18, 2022 – enables producers to get coverage through this important safety-net program for another year as well as get additional assistance through the new Supplemental DMC. Supplemental DMC will provide $580 million to better help small- and mid-sized dairy operations that have increased production over the years but were not able to enroll the additional production. Now, they will be able to retroactively receive payments for that supplemental production. Additionally, USDA’s Farm Service Agency (FSA) updated how feed costs are calculated, which will make the program more reective of actual dairy producer expenses. “Dairy Margin Coverage is a critical safety-net for producers, and catastrophic coverage is free. These DMC updates build on other efforts of the Biden-Harris Administration to improve DMC and other key USDA dairy programs,” Under Secretary for Farm Production and Conservation Robert Bonnie said. “We encourage dairy producers to make use of the support provided by enrolling in supplemental coverage and enroll in DMC for the 2022 program year.” Supplemental DMC enrollment Eligible dairy operations with less than 5 million pounds of established production history may enroll supplemental pounds based upon a formula using 2019 actual milk marketings, which will result in additional payments. Producers will be required to provide FSA with their 2019 Milk Marketing Statement. Supplemental DMC coverage is applicable to calendar years 2021, 2022 and 2023. Participating dairy operations with supplemental production may receive retroactive supplemental payments for 2021 in addition to payments based on their established production history. Supplemental DMC will require a revision to a producer’s 2021 DMC contract and must occur before enrollment in DMC for the 2022 program year. Producers will be able to revise 2021 DMC contracts and then apply for 2022 DMC by contacting their local USDA Service Center. DMC 2022 enrollment After making any revisions to 2021 DMC contracts for Supplemental DMC, producers can sign up for 2022 coverage. DMC provides eligible dairy producers with risk management coverage that pays producers when the difference between the price of milk and the cost of feed falls below a certain level. So far in 2021, DMC payments have triggered for January through October for more than $1.0 billion. For DMC enrollment, producers must certify with FSA that the operation is commercially marketing milk, sign all required forms and pay the $100 administrative fee. The fee is waived for farmers who are considered limited resource, beginning, socially disadvantaged, or a military veteran. To determine the appropriate level of DMC coverage for a specic dairy operation, producers can use the online dairy decision tool. Updates to feed costs USDA is also changing the DMC feed cost formula to better reect the actual cost dairy farmers pay for highquality alfalfa hay. FSA will calculate payments using 100% premium alfalfa hay rather than 50%. The amended feed cost formula will make DMC payments more reective of actual dairy producer expenses. Additional dairy assistance Today’s announcement is part of a broader package to help the dairy industry respond to the pandemic and other challenges. USDA is also amending Dairy Indemnity Payment Program (DIPP) regulations to add provisions for the indemnication of cows that are likely to be not marketable for longer durations, as a result, for example, of per- and polyuoroalkyl substances. FSA also worked closely with USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service to target assistance through the Environmental Quality Incentives Program ) and other conservation programs to help producers safely dispose of and address resource concerns created by affected cows. Other recent dairy announcements include $350 million through the Pandemic Market Volatility Assistance Program and $400 million for the Dairy Donation Program. Additional details on these changes to DMC and DIPP can be found in a rule that will be published soon in the Federal Register. This rule also included information on the new Oriental Fruit Fly Program as well as changes to FSA conservation programs.
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 20
Bongards’ Creameries
Tell the advertisers you saw their ad in the Dairy Star!
Has been a quality market for MN dairy farmers for over 100 years. MN producers provide one of the country’s most distinctive brands of cheese that is still made using the same Old World craftsmanship and has been combined with cutting-edge technology to produce cheese that delivers unforgettable taste with unparalleled quality. MN Dairy farmers and Bongards, quality that stands the test of time. We offer a competitive base price, premiums, and the best Àeld representatives in the industry. 13200 Co. Rd. 51 Bongards, MN 55368 (952) 466-5521 Fax (952) 466-5556 110 3rd Ave. NE Perham, MN 56573 (218) 346-4680 Fax (218) 346-4684
Shield Her From The Cold.
BouMatic’s Arctic Shield +Plus is a premium three-way protection skin conditioning package in a post dip that helps prevent frostbite. The high level of conditioning helps shield teat skin against cracking and chapping in cold harsh conditions while providing germicidal protection to help prevent mastitis. Protect and insulate your herd when the temperature dramatically drops. Maintains its effectiveness even in subzero °F conditions.
Effective but gentle, Arctic Shield +Plus is necessary for the upcoming cold weather season. Learn more at BouMatic.com/ArcticShield.
For the life of your dairy ™
Page 21 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
Great Plains SS1300 Sub-Soiler
Kilbros 387 Gravity Box
List $14,900
STOUT EQUIPMENT
DC-1125 DUMP CART
Deals! Bunker Shaver 6596
$65,000
Used ROTOMIX 475
NEW & USED VERMEER BALERS FOR SALE BREEDEN’S VERMEER
563-686-4242 • Maquoketa, IA www.breedensales.com
Gooseneck, Self Unloading, In Line, 32 FT. - $7,250 SCHMITT IMPLEMENT
6,'(:$//6
715-613-5051
(715) 285-5317
Kuhn Knight 8114 Slinger
$13,000
FLUEGGE’S AG
Mora, MN • 320-679-2981
10,900 Platteville, WI
(608) 348-9401
PRICE EQUIPMENT SALES, INC.
Bloomington, WI • 608-994-2401 www.priceequipmentsales.com
New Hayliner Trailers 42 FT. - $7,750
ΜϏϒχύϋ ΎЎωϏϋϔωϟ ΙϘϕϊϛωϚϙ χϔϊ ΙϒχϙϚϏωϙ
BLOWOUT SPECIAL $
HOLY CROSS, IA
800-584-9216
‘14 JD 569SS Round baler, 6765 bales, Automatic applicator, Great condition - $34,900
Haybuster bale chopper, 1000 RPM, solid unit - $13,900
WOLLER EQUIPMENT, INC.
Ag Equipment, LLC
Swanville, MN
320-573-2341
Silver Star
BRUBACKER
CURTISS 715-613-7308 EDGAR 715-352-2011 BOSCOBEL 715-937-5190
ROTO TILLER 2012 Trioliet 2-400L TMR, 1000 RPM, Automatic 2 spd., full scale system, right, L, R,& rear doors, new tires - $32,000
BRUBACKER
Ag Equipment, LLC
CURTISS 715-613-7308 EDGAR 715-352-2011 BOSCOBEL 715-937-5190
• Skid steer Quick Attach • Heavy Duty 7 gauge deck • Dual Drive Motors • 81” tillage width • Tillage Depth 4-6”
715-229-4879
2004 20 2 200 004 04 Bandit Ban and andi d t Ind dit di IIndustries ndu dusttri ries ies VSF-X - $8,500 2724 State Hwy. 24 Fort Atkinson, IA
(563) 534-2724
www.franzensales.com
2010 Leon 425HB Spreader 425 bu, Top Beater, Hydra Push, Very Nice
$14,500 SCHMITT IMPLEMENT
387 bu, 1396 Gear, Truck Tires - $7,950 PROTIVIN, IOWA •
563-569-8636
NEW Vermeer MC3300 Disc Mower Conditioner Rubber Rolls, Drawbar swivel hitch - $27,900
WOLLER EQUIPMENT, INC. Swanville, MN
320-573-2341
‘07 NH FP 240
w/processor and 29P hay head (no cornhead) WAS $20,900
NOW
$18,000
HOLY CROSS, IA
Lomira, WI
800-584-9216
920.583.3747
Valmetal
542
Supercart
Vermeer 604M 9457 bales
Kuhn VB3190, New sprockets, chains, knives, field ready - $31,900
NDE 2554
New liner and augers ready to use! $25,500
D&D
Arcadia, WI
(715) 285-5317
A motorized feed cart designed specifucally to facilitate the chore of feeding (silage or TMR)
IH 986
320.664.4171
(715) 285-5317
New Price $6,900
3490 hrs.
Used Lucknow 2290 mixer dual screw, 800 cu. ft. $
22,300
Minnesota City, MN
608-323-7001 507-474-6920 dndfarmsupply.com
(715) 223-3361 Curtiss, WI
Kaukauna, WI
920-766-0603
Parker 2600 grain wagon
‘01 JD 467 H&S 3127 Spreader 270BU, 2 yrs old T-Rod
540 PTO, Hi Moisture Kit, Mega Wide PU, Twine - $12,750
DEE IMPLEMENT
Waupun, WI
Waukon, IA
563-568-4511
920-324-3537
Patz 1100
NEW Anderson IFX720 Inline Round Bale Wrapper, Loaded with options - $35,900
WOLLER EQUIPMENT, INC. Swanville, MN
320-573-2341
New augers, ready to use $28,500
(715) 223-3361 Curtiss, WI
w/extensions on Pequea wagon
PRICE EQUIPMENT SALES, INC.
Bloomington, WI • 608-994-2401 www.priceequipmentsales.com
Silver Star
‘16 H&S 3143
BEDDERS Used Meyers 3600 Universal skidsteer hookup
manure spreader
Round or Square Bales
715-229-4879
Ettrick, WI 608-525-4545
2020 20 20 S Schulte ch hul ulte ult te R RS RS320 S320 S320 S3 20 jumbo rock picker - Call
Call for price
(605) 338-6351
2724 State Hwy. 24 Fort Atkinson, IA
(563) 534-2724
www.franzensales.com
New Holland FP240 Chopper
Anderson NWS 660 Inline wrapper, 12,000 bales w/remote - $21,900
D&D
Arcadia, WI
Minnesota City, MN
608-323-7001 507-474-6920 dndfarmsupply.com
Valmetal
542
List $15,800
Used PENTA 3010
BLOWOUT SPECIAL $
12,500
Tandem Box, Flot Tires, Top Beater, Var. Spd Apron - $19,900
Platteville, WI
Waupun, WI
(608) 348-9401
920-324-3537
‘97 AG BAG G6010 BAGGER
1988 New Holland 790H Chopper
WAS $17,900
824 2R30 Head, 5’ Hay Head, Metalert - $5,750
Supercart
w/ 3 row Corn Head & 7’ hayhead - Was $28,000
NOW $25,000 SCHERRMAN’S IMPLEMENT DYERSVILLE, IA
563-875-2426
Highline CFR650 Bale Processor w/ Fine Chop DEE IMPLEMENT Waukon, IA
563-568-4511
New Sheahan 24’ PTO Manure Auger $
7,000
A motorized feed cart designed specifucally to facilitate the chore of feeding (silage or TMR)
New Price $6,900
NOW
$16,000
Kaukauna, WI
920-766-0603
320.664.4171
Lomira, WI
920.583.3747
PROTIVIN, IOWA •
563-569-8636
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 22
Moovin’ Mini the mobile dairy ambassador Youth outreach connects children with food source By Abby Wiedmeyer abby.w@dairystar.com
BARABOO, Wis. – Melanie Burgi and Kimberly Evert are bridging the gap between food and farm with a unique form of youth outreach. Within the Baraboo area, the two have been connecting with young people through the use of a Mini Cooper car wrapped in cow print and nished with eyelashes on the headlights. “Kids just love to see a cow car with eyelashes,” Burgi said. “If we can get their attention and give them a tidbit of information, then that’s more than what was done before.” The idea took form in the fall of 2019 when Burgi, who works with Evert at Save Cows Network, considered selling her red Mini Cooper. She normally parked the car over the winter months and felt the car could have a greater purpose.
PHOTO SUBMITTED
Moovin’ Mini is parked outside the Save Cows headquarters in Baraboo, Wisconsin. The Mini Cooper was wrapped to look like a Holstein cow as part of a youth outreach program started in 2019 by Melanie Burgi and Kimberly Evert. “One day I walked into her ofce and Melanie said, ‘I think we should wrap the Mini Cooper to look like a cow and put eyelashes on it,’” said Evert. Evert and Burgi contacted a local man who wraps racecars, and Moovin’ Mini became a reality. The pair had big
ideas of visiting schools and daycares, and participating in parades. Unfortunately, the coronavirus pandemic halted some of those plans. “We couldn’t really do what we were hoping to the rst year,” Evert said. Evert and Burgi remained enthu-
siastic about their idea and were able to do a few promotions in 2020. They partnered with local businesses, including Carr Valley Cheese, Cedar Grove Cheese and a local ice cream shop, each Turn to MOOVIN’ MINI | Page 23
TIRE SHOOTER
Valmetal
542
Supercart
Jamesway Dura Chain Xtreme alley scraper Unit and control. (Runs up to 3500 feet of chain), Used $
16,500
Deals!
A motorized feed cart designed specifucally to facilitate the chore of feeding (silage or TMR)
New Price $6,900
920-766-0603
14,800
$
4 Rotor, Pull Type, Hydraulic Fold & Tilt - $7,795
$3,200
BRUBACKER
320.664.4171
CURTISS 715-613-7308 EDGAR 715-352-2011 BOSCOBEL 715-937-5190
18,900 Platteville, WI
HOLY CROSS, IA
800-584-9216
(608) 348-9401
Kuhn Knight 8141 Slinger
Silver Star
Twine Only, Rear Ramp, Very Nice - $7,750
D&D
Arcadia, WI
PROTIVIN, IOWA •
563-569-8636
715-613-5051
Killbros grain wagon
JD 115 Stalk Chopper, new knives, 2020 - $3,950 Kuhn 8124 Spreader SOLID - Asking $13,90
Used PATZ V620
BLOWOUT SPECIAL $
ΜϏϒχύϋ ΎЎωϏϋϔωϟ ΙϘϕϊϛωϚϙ χϔϊ ΙϒχϙϚϏωϙ
6,'(:$//6
(715) 223-3361 Curtiss, WI
1998 New Holland 688 Baler
List $22,900
New Enorossi 19’ Tedder
Kuhn 4142
Gone through shop ready to use! $12,500
Ag Equipment, LLC
SCHMITT IMPLEMENT
Kaukauna, WI
2015 Houle Lagoon pump, 8”x42’, 540 RPM
Minnesota City, MN
608-323-7001 507-474-6920 dndfarmsupply.com
on JD wagon
PRICE EQUIPMENT SALES, INC.
Bloomington, WI • 608-994-2401 www.priceequipmentsales.com
‘09 NH BB9060
BRUSH CUTTER
2017 Meyers VB750
Farmhand 822 Mill HydDrive 12’ Auger
DEE IMPLEMENT Waukon, IA
563-568-4511
• Heavy Duty • Up to 6” Brush • Skid steer Quick Attach
$28,000
FLUEGGE’S AG
715-229-4879
Mora, MN • 320-679-2981
26’ JBS DUMP WAGON
New Meyers 620 feeder wagon
$55,000
Call for price
(605) 338-6351
Ettrick, WI 608-525-4545
ΜϏϒχύϋ ΎЎωϏϋϔωϟ ΙϘϕϊϛωϚϙ χϔϊ ΙϒχϙϚϏωϙ
6,'(:$//6
715-613-5051
Used Haybuster 1130 tub grinder
Call for price (605) 338-6351
Crop & Packer Cutter, App Kit & More - $42,500 Waupun, WI
920-324-3537
1,000 pto $37,500
2724 State Hwy. 24 Fort Atkinson, IA
(563) 534-2724
www.franzensales.com
Page 23 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
ConƟnued from MOOVIN’ MINI | Page 22 of which also promote dairy. “It seemed like the one way that we could get out into the public without doing an event,” Evert said. Moovin’ Mini has been more active in 2021. Evert has taken the vehicle to daycares and schools. When she visits daycares, they have story time, and Evert reads a book that paints a modern picture of large dairy farms. “It’s more realistic to educate on big farms, because in this day and age, that is more likely where these kids’ milk is coming from,” Evert said. During the events, Evert also discusses the nutritional benets of dairy products. The children take home souvenirs like frisbees, cow hats and dairy-themed worksheets. “We try to make it a fun and educational experience,” Evert said. Burgi and Evert realized how many kids do not have a tie to a farm, and they wanted to get information to these kids in a fun and creative way. “Kids don’t necessarily get on farms as much anymore,” Burgi said. “If we can somehow bridge the gap with a cute car, then why not?” Evert agreed. “I came from a school with very few people and almost everyone had someone in their family who had a farm,” she said. “Now, that’s not the case.” Evert has also collaborated
with other organizations with similar goals to promote dairy. When schools were shut down and parents were able to pick up lunches for their kids, Evert worked with the Sauk Prairie FFA Chapter to hand out gallons of milk to families. She also took the cow-painted Mini Cooper to the fourth grade class with FFA’s Food for America program when they visited a farm. “We like to put attention on how farmers take care of their animals versus what some people believe might be happening,” Evert said. “We do this by focusing on how farmers care for their animals to produce the most high-quality product that in turn feeds the bellies of kids at school and at home.” The pair also gears their promotions toward places like the Boys and Girls Club because typically those kids are from urban communities. The two women also use social media to advocate for dairy. For National Grilled Cheese Day in 2021, Burgi and Evert bought bread from a local bakery and used cheese donated from Carr Valley to make sandwiches for their coworkers. They parked the Mini Cooper in front of the business and posted pictures and dairy trivia on social media to bring awareness to their mission. When Burgi and Evert participated in Baraboo’s Butterfest parade, they handed
ABBY WIEDMEYER/DAIRY STAR
Kimberly Evert and Melanie Burgi pose with their Moovin’ Mini sign Nov. 19 at the Save Cows headquarters in Baraboo, Wisconsin. Moovin’ Mini is a youth outreach program that Evert and Burgi started in 2019. out mini cow pies from the Baraboo Candy Company in another effort to partner with local businesses. All of the promotions and the development of Moovin’ Mini relate well to the hoof care business where Burgi and Evert are employed. “All consumers can spot a lame cow regardless of their experience in the industry,” Burgi said. “We are trying to communicate the truth about
how farmers take care of their animals, and the truth about calves and cows and what their life is really like.” Moovin’ Mini is parked for the winter, but Evert and Burgi are hoping to be more active in 2022. “I would like to get into schools more and have a day that’s truly focused on all students coming out and seeing Moovin’ Mini and doing more activities in the classroom,”
Evert said. Burgi is looking forward to doing more parades and is hoping to expand on the educational aspects Evert has started. In the meantime, she is having fun with the new venture. “We get a thrill out of this,” Burgi said. “It’s a place to put creative energy, and we have fun.”
LegenDairy LLC Straw
Q UALITY HAY & STRAW AVAILABLE! New Crop Straw, Processed in the bale available Sales and delivery across the upper midwest.
CUSTOM BALING & STACKING
Baling High-Density Large Square Bales Call for availability. Hastings, MN
651-900-2093 - Karl
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 24
NEW ARTEX SB200, SB600 & SBX800 SPREADERS
HYDRA-PUSH 1300 MANURE SPREADER IN STOCK!
NEW FLIEGL ADS100 SPREADERS
VRT RENEGADE CALL FOR PRICE
New 2022 Hybrid X
Snow Removal Land Clearing
‘19 NH 450 Roll Belt Silage Special 5,000 bales
Pen Clearing
WRAPPERS
New McHale 995 wrapper for square and round bales New Anderson Hybrid X - In Stock New McHale 991 Round Bale Wrapper Used Tubeline 5500 New Anderson RB200
CALL FOR DETAILS AND PRICES!
Tilling
MAKE YOUR JOB EASIER WITH THE RIGHT SKID STEER ATTACHMENT
Call Us At (715) 223-3361 Or visit us on-line at www.cloverdaleequip.com N13835 County Rd. E - Curtiss, WI 54422
HOME OF THE CLOVERDALE MIXER
DMR ATTACHMENT SALES
320-292-0219
dmrattachmentsales@gmail.com
ASK A
FREE H BOUT MONIT EALTH O COLL RING WITH Y ARS OUR PARLO NEW R!*
FARM INFORMATION STATION Joe Gill • Farm Director
SERVING CENTRAL MINNESOTA FOR OVER 50 YEARS Catch the Dairy Star’s Mark Klaphake with Joe Gill at 6:45 a.m. the 2nd & 4th Fridays of the month on KASM!
PO Box 160, Albany, MN • (320) 845-2184 • Fax (320) 845-2187
Swiftflo Rotary
tfn
Less Labor - More Cows - More Milk
BUNKER SILOS
Height Available: 5’, 8.6’ & 12’
ALSO AVAILABLE:
AL’S
AVAILABLE IN ONE OR MULTIPLE BAY DESIGN
• Feed Bunks • Cattle Slats • Holding Tanks • Cattle Guards
Industrial technology at an affordable price
Equipment options to suit all needs
A cost effective way to increase herd size
Unrivalled installation time
Unmatched throughput
Serving Minnesota, Iowa and Wisconsin Since 1965
www.alsconcreteproducts.com
Minimal fall-offs
Amazing cluster alignment Individual cow ID *Certain restrictions apply
DAIRYMASTER
CONCRETE PRODUCTS 1-800-982-9263
Low maintenance cost
1-877-340-MILK(6455) Email: usa@dairymaster.com Website: www.dairymaster.com
Milking
Feeding
Cooling
Manure Scrapers
Health & Fertility Monitoring
Page 25 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
Measurements for a modern era Putting big data to work to connect genetics, environment
INTRODUCING 2 ALL-NEW FEED MIXERS. Increased Capacity, with a lower loading Height. It's Compact. It's Economical. It's an NDEco. A perfect t for your Dairy.
U550D 580 ft³ 87" Height
U700D 705 ft³ 99" Height
We've recently expanded our dealer network to better serve dairies in the Midwest:
www.NDEco.com | 888.336.3127 @NDEcoTMR
Lindstrom Equipment, WI - 715.231.3168 Podevels Farm Service, WI - 715-384-6193 Northland Farm Systems, MN - 507.451.3131 Far West Equipment, ND - 701.260.4959
EFFECTIVE DRAINAGE
Reasonable rates. Professional design. Brad Herickhoff, Owner 320-351-4872
Ask about leasing tile! KEEP YOUR CASH! Amortize your depreciation.
W Offer Sit We Site P Prep, Drainage Tile, Land Clearing, Excavation, Pump Stations And So Much More!
By Stacey Smart
stacey.s@dairystar.com
MADISON, Wis. – Data on the dairy is getting bigger as the ability to measure more traits of an individual animal becomes a reality. With the development of new phenotype assessments, data collected has surpassed traditional milk production tracking, now including more specialized measurements. John Cole These meaURUS surements look at both genetic potential and environment, linking two aspects previously often assessed separately in relation to cow performance. “A phenotype is anything we measure about an animal,” said John Cole, PEAK senior vice president for research and development at URUS. “In the past, we thought in a limited way about what we measure, but we’re really expanding our ideas on that now.” Cole’s presentation, “Precision genetic management, big data, and bridging the gap between phenotype and genotype” during the virtual Connect Summit Oct. 13-14 took a deeper look at the type of data dairy farms are collecting about their animals. The number of traits measured continues to grow as more phenotypes are established. Going beyond milk samples, characteristics measured might now include respiration rate, feed intake, chewing activity, rumen pH, heart rate, mobility, foot/claw health, lying/ standing behavior, milk composition, udder health, body condition score and greenhouse gas emissions. “If you don’t measure it, you can’t manage it,” Cole said. “That’s (as) true of the characteristics of a dairy cow as it is of any other aspect of your dairy operation.” Genetics and environment both play a role in phenotype variation, and certain traits are impacted to a greater extent by one or the other. For example, when measuring fat yield, 20% of variation is due to genetics and 80% is due to the environment. For daughter pregnancy rate, genetics are a much lower inuence at 4%, while environment dictates 96% variation. “For genetics, the variance is constant or xed, but we can change how much variation there is in the environment, based on technologies and other practices,” Cole said. “You can’t maximize your genetic performance without also ensuring a good environment.” In the past, milk yield was the data
point most people tried to improve. “Because technology has changed and the demand from consumers and processors has changed, we’re looking at a much more complex picture now,” Cole said. “As efciency becomes more important, the volume of milk going in the bulk tank is no longer the only consideration.” According to Cole, the dairy industry has been working with big data for a long time. The national cooperator database held by the Council on Dairy Cattle Breeding contains about 75 million pedigree records, 4 million animal genotypes, 140 million lactation records, 680 million daily yield records, 200 million reproductive event records, 28 million calving ease records and 18 million stillbirth records. Historically, this data was used primarily for genetic improvement. Cole said Dairy Herd Improvement reports provide some tools farmers can use to manage their herd, but the idea is to move to an era where the industry is making a lot more use of the data at a much higher frequency. “We want to measure lots of things about the cows,” Cole said. “We want to measure the environment they’re in and use that data to make fast decisions. DairyComp and the cloud is going to have a key role in that process.” Current phenotypes have low dimensionality, meaning they usually contain few observations per lactation. Milk recording programs are examples of traditional, low-intensity phenotyping. These phenotypes have
“In the future, it will be about measuring more than just the cow herself. We want to measure all the things around the cow, too.” JOHN COLE, URUS
minimal recording costs, are easy to transmit and store, and contain a close correspondence with the values being measured. For example, a test day milk sample provides numbers related to protein composition, fat composition, lactose and other solids. New phenotypes have high dimensionality, meaning there are many numbers associated with each measurement. For example, midinfrared testing produces 1,060 points per observation. A single milk sample going across the line on a single test day would provide 1,060 different numbers. “Potentially, there are a lot of uses for these types of data,” Cole said. “They can predict methane output and feed intake of a cow, and ne milk composition such as milk fatty acids, but it takes more resources to produce these measurements.” High dimensionality creates a disconnect between trait and measureTurn to GENETICS | Page 27
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 26
STOUT EQUIPMENT
DC-1125 DUMP CART DC - 1125 Series Dump Carts
have a durable and time proven box design to keep continuous harvest production. DC-1125 Series carts have high floatation tires that create less damaging impact on your fields and harvesting equipment. DC-1125 Series now also comes standard with the fold down gate and ground level grease banks.
Top Shot Topical Spray
™
$
52,000
TIRE SHOOTER LABOR SAVERS
The newest advancement in the fight against Digital Dermatitis (Hairy Heel Warts)
16’ Skid Steer/Telehandler Tire Shooter
Wheel Loader Tire Shooter
HoofStrong Top Shot™ Topical Spray’s proprietary blend clings and covers to seal the wart and stay on the hoof. One shot is all you need.
Benefits
Maximize your herd’s hoof health today! · One shot of Top Shot™ Topical spray fights off a Hairy Heel Wart. Larger warts may need a second shot
· Can be used in the trim chute, hospital, or parlor
· Helps stop bleeding
· No Formaldehyde or Copper Sulfate formula
· No wrapping
Distributed By:
ALSO AVAILABLE IN TOPICAL PASTE
› Self Unloading › Self Loading (If Tires Are Stacked Properly) › Haul Up to 80 Sidewalls (Varies Depending Loader) or 110 with wheel loader tire shooter › Reach over 18’ Cement Walls (Varies Depending Loader)
SEMI TIRE SIDEWALLS FOR SALE!
farminc.us
1.888.960.9860
› Drop Sidewalls 22’ from Edge of Plastic on skid steer or telehandler, and 30’ with wheel loader tire shooter › Custom Fit Any Skidsteer, Telehandler or wheel loader › Use with Sidewalls or Full Tires › Powder Coated › Typical customers say it saves half the time or half the labor; some say both
6,'(:$//6
ΜϏϒχύϋ ΎЎωϏϋϔωϟ ΙϘϕϊϛωϚϙ χϔϊ ΙϒχϙϚϏωϙ
715-613-5051
UPGRADE YOUR ON-FARM EQUIPMENT! “Appleton Steel chutes are the most reliable and durable chutes on the market. We’ve run thousands of cows through ours and it has stood the test of time. If you need a dependable chute, to keep your cows hoof health top of the line, get an Appleton Steel chute. Plus it’s a great family-owned company!” - Siemers Holsteins. Newton, WI Proud Partner of the Midwest Hoof Trimming School
Ask us how to get professional hoof trimmers involved with your on farm trimming program!
Call (920) 830-0277 Today!
AppletonSteel.com
Page 27 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
ConƟnued from GENETICS | Page 25
ment, and more resources are needed for transmission, storage and analysis. Phenotyping costs can be high. When measuring feed intake, for example, special equipment is needed and only a couple of cows can use the equipment at once. This is also true for greenhouse gas output and some other phenotypes. “The cost of measuring feed intake is very high,” Cole said. “We may need to look at getting more value out of the milk sample instead, by taking measurements correlated to feed intake. It’s not the direct trait, but we can measure lots of milk samples affordably and use that to increase reliabilities. We did that for years with somatic cell score before we had clinical mastitis as a direct trait.” With many data points available to farmers, statistics and phenotypic prediction offer opportunities for predicting future performance. They could also be used to assign animals to management groups or schedule treatments. There are other measurements beyond the cow to consider as well, such as the barn, parlor, pasture, herdsman, silo bunker and milk plant. Things like ooring type, bedding materials, conductivity, soil
type, veterinary treatments, ration composition and detailed milk composition are examples of what could be measured in each category. “In the future, it will be about measuring more than just the cow herself,” Cole said. “We want to measure all the things around the cow, too.” Real-time or near realtime calculation is needed for sending recommendations from the computing center back to the farmer, but data transfer speeds may be limiting. Cloud-based services rely on dependable networks with modern data transfer speeds, and a lack of reliable broadband access in rural areas could limit the collection and distribution of data on some farms. “To move data from the farm to DairyComp in the cloud, you have to have a good pipe that lets you push those data around,” Cole said. “That’s being worked on but is going to be a challenge for the near future, maybe medium future in some places.” Cole also stressed the need for proper animal identication. “We need to use 15-byte animal ID numbers in our software,” he said. “They correspond to the 17-byte and
GRAPHIC SUBMITTED
As new phenotypes become established, farms are starƟng to measure more traits about the cow such as respiraƟon rate, feed intake, chewing acƟvity, rumen pH, heart rate, greenhouse gas emissions and more.
18-byte IDs used by (Council of Dairy Cattle Breeding) and comply with International Committee for Animal Recording guidelines. We need to use those numbers to index all of our records.” Barn numbers or cow control numbers should only be displayed for the convenience of the customer. Cole said these are not unique within
a farm or across farms and should never be used to label records. Animal ID numbers should also be used instead of cow control numbers when storing data in central repositories or sharing across data providers. “Supporting national milk recording programs in the future is a challenge as farms continue to grow bigger,”
YOUR ALKOTA DEALERS! MIDWEST ALKOTA
103 5 ST. • GRUNDY CENTER, IA
Doug Kiel
Taylor Appel
563-425-3219
505 West Main Street Marshall, MN 56258
Phone: 806-346-2362
MIDWEST ALKOTA TH
18297 LINCOLN RD. • FAYETTE, IA
319-215-2138
SERVING NE IOWA & SW WI
CENTRAL IOWA
Now selling Chlor-clean detergent, one step cleaner and disinfectant, reduce the risk of infection We service all brands
dly made ou
in
Pr
CALL TODAY
Cole said. “It’s not sufcient going forward, and we need to think differently than we’ve done in the past. As an industry, we should remain focused on producing healthful food as efciently as possible for a growing population. The latest technology can help with this as we bridge the gap between genotype and phenotype.”
:HVW 0DLQ 6WUHHW
alan@stuhrenterprises.com
The Stuhr Transition-Nutrition Solution
Both research and practical on-farm application demonstrate the consistent results producers see when feeding ANION BOOSTER™ and GLUCOSE BOOSTER™ in the pre-fresh and the early fresh cows. The Stuhr Transition- Nutrition Solution is proven at the University and on the dairy to provide a palatable source of anions and an effective source of glucose precursors to help prevent Hypocalcemia and Ketosis.
For More Information go to: stuhrenterprises.com
Pre-fab Galvanized Calf Nurseries
Calf Nursery Kits: • No footers required, can be set on floating concrete pad in most localities • Engineered bolt-together structure • No-roost purlin design • Insulated feedrooms with TrusscoreTM PVC liner panel interior
'JSǪȇǯǺ KǶTȩ ' ȇǯǺ K 6ZǧQǯǹȠ +WJǷǭ &ǮW Arctic Front Curtain System > ǧW 7TǻSȧ >J >JǧW 7TǻSȧ
Call 866-543-5116
sales@sturdybuiltmfg.net
260 S. Muddy Creek Rd. Denver, PA 17517
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 28
ZIEGLER AG EQUIPMENT YOU CAN COUNT ON US. Ziegler Ag Equipment provides you with the best equipment to tackle the tough jobs you face, and backs it up with service that no competitor can match. Check out our full inventory of Fendt® high horsepower tractors, Massey Ferguson® high horsepower, compact, and utility tractors, hay equipment and more.
VISIT US TODAY FOR ALL YOUR EQUIPMENT AND SERVICE NEEDS. Willmar, MN 4600 Highway 71 S | 320-235-8123
www.zieglerag.com ©2021 AGCO Corporation. Massey Ferguson and Fendt are worldwide brands of AGCO Corporation. AGCO, Massey Ferguson and Fendt are trademarks of AGCO. All rights reserved.
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 29
Stall Bedder Specialists Straw Bedders Rear Discharge
Stall Bedders Rear Unload
Sand Bedders And much more!
Truck-mounted units available
Exclusive Financing Rate
50
0%
FOR 24 MONTHS
FINANCING PROVIDED BY
Years
FRONT UNLOAD OR REAR UNLOAD
with bidirectional belt fills all stalls on dead-end alleys!
Models up to 30 yard capacity
Visit our website for more pictures, options and specifications.
15255 10th St. NW Cokato, MN 55321
360.354.3094
320-286-6284 Waikato Milking Systems and its products are not associated with Stearns Bank N.A. or our affiliates. Subject to credit approval/qualifications. Some limitations may apply. Terms, conditions, applicable tax, shipping, insurance and closing costs may apply. Offer subject to change; valid through 12/31/2021.
405 Birch Bay-Lynden Road, Lynden, WA 98264 info@whatcommfg.com “Custom Built Equipment, Built to Last”
www.whatcommfg.com
You Know Farming, AND SO DO WE. Specializing in Custom-Designed Agricultural Facilities Since 1970. Big or Small, We Design/Build Them All. Designers
| Construction Managers | Builders
400 Brickl Road | West Salem, WI 54669-0125
Toll Free: (800) 658-9030 | Web: BricklBros.com
Some
Stuff
Page 30 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
Udder
55” Panel Fans
News and Dairy Views from across the region
MN Department of Agriculture receives federal funding to address farm stress and mental Health The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) is awarding the Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA) and 11 project partners $500,000 to advance work in farm stress and rural mental health in Minnesota. The MDA’s “Bend, Don’t Break” initiative will build upon existing efforts to connect farmers and rural Minnesotans with resources to help reduce stress, anxiety, and crisis situations, such as the drought that is affecting many Minnesota farms and ranches. It will support, improve, and promote services, such as mental health counseling, farm advocates, marriage retreats, and a 24/7 Farm & Rural Helpline, and will expand a radio show and podcast series that proles farmers who have navigated difcult situations. “We know from working with farmers that suicide, farm transition and succession, legal problems, family relationships, and youth stress are crucial issues where we can all make a difference,” Minnesota Agriculture Commissioner Thom Petersen said. “We’re thankful that the USDA can help us expand our efforts.” The initiative will also enhance the skills and responsiveness of professionals who work with farm families in stress through workshops, trainings, and other resources. The MDA will partner with 11 organizations, including several that serve Indigenous or emerging/ underserved farmers. Partners include: American Indian Community Housing Organization; Big River Farms; Farmers’ Legal Action Group; Latino Economic Development Center; Leech Lake Tribal College; Minnesota Dairy Initiative; Minnesota Department of Health; Red River Farm Network; South Central College; University of Minnesota Extension; Urban Farm & Garden Alliance.
NEW High Pressure Fog Ring Now Available
• The highest air Àow in a circulation fan - 33,900 CFM. • Cast aluminum blades have a lifetime warranty. • Totally enclosed maintenance free, high ef¿ciency motors have a full two year warranty. Model VP CA:
Search underway for World Dairy Expo’s next general manager The World Dairy Expo® Board of Directors has begun the search for a new general manager after Scott Bentley announced he will be retiring after eight years of dedicated service to the organization. Recruitment efforts are focused on hiring a passionate and highly motivated general manager to lead a professional, dedicated team and successfully produce the globe’s largest dairy event. World Dairy Expo showcases over 2,000 dairy cattle and features 700 participating companies in one of the 30 largest trade shows in the United States. World Dairy Expo is a dynamic organization operating with an annual multi-million-dollar budget, ten staff members and support from hundreds of passionate volunteers, dedicated stakeholders, and engaged committee and Board members. The week-long event attracts 60,000 attendees and generates an approximate $25 million in direct spending for Madison, Wisconsin, and its surrounding communities. During Bentley’s time as general manager, World Dairy Expo celebrated great successes including impressive growth to Expo’s Trade Show, Dairy Cattle Show and educational programming. Year after year, Expo continues to ourish, while having also withstood its rst-ever show cancellation in 2020 due to the global pandemic. Qualied individuals are directed to World Dairy Expo’s website, worlddairyexpo.com, for the complete job description and all pertinent application details. Questions about the job position should be directed to WDE Board President Bill Hageman at (608) 279-0272. Serving as the meeting place of the global dairy industry, World Dairy Expo brings together the latest in dairy innovation and the best cattle in North America. The dairy industry will return to Madison, Wisconsin for the 55th event, October 2 – 7, 2022, when the world’s largest dairy-focused trade show, dairy and forage seminars, a world-class dairy cattle show and more will be on display. Download the World Dairy Expo mobile event app, visit worlddairyexpo.com or follow WDE on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn or YouTube for more information.
Belt Drive, 1 HP, 115/230 volt, 9.6/4.8 amps single phase one speed 587 rpm
133 Atlantic Ave. NE • Pennock, MN
320-599-4466
800-597-2394 or 605-338-6351
5301 West 12th St., Sioux Falls, SD 5
Turn to UDDER STUFF | Page 31
www.pfeifersonline.com
AUTHORIZED DEALERS:
Increase Ef¿ciency By Feeding TMR!
Hanson Silo Lake Lillian, MN 320-664-4171 Hartung Sales & Service Freeport, MN 320-836-2697 Melrose Imp. Melrose, MN 320-256-4253
TMR Feedcarts Stationary TMR Mixers Round Bale Unrollers
Free Brochures! 1.800.436.5623
Anibas Silo & Eq. Arkansaw, WI 715-285-5317 Brubacker Ag Equipment LLC Curtiss, WI Edgar, WI Bagley, WI 715-613-7308
NEW TO THE
DAIRY SALES
LAST WEDNESDAY OF EVERY MONTH IN MOTLEY DECEMBER 29, 2021 • 2 P.M.
FEEDER CATTLE SALE 9 A.M. • Weigh up cows to follow dairy sale Professional Auctioneers & Ringmen Many Years of Experience Selling Dairy Cattle 32638 US-10 MOTLEY, MN 56466
• Professional Marketing • Catalog Cows for Breeding & Production Records • Mailing List to over 6,000 potential buyers • Website, Dairy Star, Radio Advertisements • Live Online thru CattleUSA - Over 300 buyers approved to bid
218-352-6546
View & bid live at cattleusa.com
MITCH BARTHEL OWNER/AUCTIONEER
218-639-5228
JOE VARNER 218-352-6546
WWW.TRICOUNTYSTOCKYARDS.COM
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 31
ConƟnued from UDDER STUFF | Page 30
BUILT TO KEEP GOING.
BECAUSE A FARM NEVER SLEEPS. CHECK OUT THE
7700 SERIES
REISER IMPLEMENT Waukon, IA 563-568-4526 After Hours: Ken 563-380-3137 • Dave 563-380-8680 www.reiserimpl.com
Used Equipment HAY & FORAGE
Anderson Hybrid Inline Wrapper, 4 stretchers
COMBINES
Most Used Combines 2 Years Interest Free!
‘15 Vermeer BW5500 Inline Wrapper Miller Pro 7914 Merger, 14’ ‘15 Tonutti TCR 12 whl rake ‘15 Tonutti TCR 8 whl rake ‘11 MF 9695, lat. tilt, duals, Tonutti 12, wheel Dominator chopper, 860/660 hrs rake Rhino RHP, 12 wheel rake ‘00 MF 8780XP H&S, 12 wheel rake lat tilt, chopper, Ag Gehl 420 10 wheel rake Leader, 3,800 hrs Rhino SE15 Batwing JUST IN Gehl 2450, 15’ hydro swing disc mower ‘86 MF 8560, 4,300 hrs Howse 7’ & 10’ 3PT Brush Mower ‘05 Harvestec 4308 CH ‘16 Challenger WR9860 SP Windrower, 16’ disc mower, only 910 Engine/ 630 cutter hours.
SKID LOADERS ‘20 Bobcat T770, SJC, ONLY 237 hrs! ‘96 Bobcat 853, open station ‘19 Bobcat S590 CAH, 2spd, SJC 744 hrs ‘11 Gehl 5640E c/h, 4600 hrs Case W14B End Ldr, w/ forks& bucket
‘15 Bobcat S570, CH, ACS, 3,600 hrs ‘13 Bobcat 3400 Side x Side
PLANT/TILL
‘18 Kinze 3660 ASV, 23R15, bulk fill, Liq., Loaded! ‘13 Kinze 3660 ASV, 12R30, bulk fill, Liq. ‘17 Kinze 3000, 6RN, Dry Shut Offs, Like New! ‘03 Krause 5200 20’ Bean Drill, Yetter cart, 15”spacing Sunflower 4211-9, disc chisel w/ buster bar Sunflower 4511, 11 shank, Disc chisel disc CIH 690 disc chisel, 5 shk CIH 4800 30’ Field Cult, w/3 bar coil tine harrow ‘11 Sunflower 4511-13, 13 shank disc chisel ‘12 Summers 30’ Super Coulter
TRACTORS ‘97 MF 4270, MFWD, CAH, w/ MF loader, 4,300 hrs. MF 180, diesel
‘13 Gehl V270, CAH, MISCELLANEOUS ISO, 6,600 hrs ‘88 Case 1845C, C/H, Brent 674 Grain Cart hi flow, 5,600 hrs. ‘06 H&S 430 Spreader ‘13 Case SR175, CAH, w/endgate radio, 400 hrs, SHARP Loftness 20’ Stalk ‘13 JD 5085E, Shredder, NICE!! ‘20 Bobcat S64, CAH, MFWD, C/A/H, 2 Spd, High Eitzen 1800 Feeder Only 300 hours! Flow, 297 Hours! Wagon ‘14 Patz 1200 TMR MINI TRACK LOADER w/scale ‘04 Bobcat MT52,1,700 hours NDE 702 Vertical Mixer
DCRC recognizes dairies with excellent reproductive performance The Dairy Cattle Reproduction Council (DCRC) presented Excellence in Dairy Cattle Reproduction Awards to 24 dairy operations during its annual meeting, held Nov. 9-11, in Kansas City, Mo. These dairies excel at reproductive efciency, fertility and well-implemented management procedures. Platinum recognition went to: Emerald Spring Dairy (Darrin Young), Plainview, Minn.; Kliebenstien Farms (Nate and Morgan Kliebenstien), Darlington, Wis.; Scholze Dairy (Theo Scholze), Humbird, Wis.; Red Top Jerseys (Chris Terra), Chowchilla, Calif.; Wessel Farms LLC (David Wessel), Mineral Point, Wis.; and Latham Dairy (John Latham, owner, and Mark Winters, manager), Boscobel, Wis. In addition to the six Platinum winners, there were six Gold, six Silver and six Bronze winners (listed below). Ninety-eight nominations came from six countries, 10 U.S. states and two Canadian provinces. Farms were nominated by dairy professionals who serve the industry, such as veterinarians, extension specialists and articial insemination and pharmaceutical company representatives. Gold Williams Bedrock Bovines (Jeff Williams), Brodhead, Wis. Brooklyn Rollin Green Dairy (Jim, Jeff and Jamie McNeely), Brooklyn, Wis. Holmesville Dairy (Travis Holmes), Argyle Wis. Britannia Dairy (Ben and Kevin Pearson), Flandreau, S.D. Silver Hammink Dairy (Wim Hammink), Bruce, S.D. Claytop Holsteins (Jeff Paulen), Howard City, Mich. Sunrise Dairy (Dan Hischke), Suring, Wis. Blue Star Dairy Farms (Brian and Craig Meinholz), DeForest, Wis. Nosbush Dairy (Brad Nosbush), Fairfax, Minn. Bronze Faywillow Farms (Al Ruf and Tim Douglas), Darlington, Wis. Night Hawk Dairy LLC (Chris Leick), Stratford, Wis. Davis Family Farms LLC (Jayme and Brad Davis), Darlington, Wis. Baudhuin’s Grandview Dairy LLC (Karen Baudhuin), Casco, Wis. Trailside Holsteins (Mike Johnson), Fountain, Minn. Scheps Dairy (Ken and Dan Scheps), Almena, Wis. This awards program, sponsored by Hoard’s Dairyman magazine and Dairy Cattle Reproduction Council, recognizes dairy producers whose herds excel in getting cows safe in calf. DCRC’s Excellence in Dairy Cattle Reproduction judges considered many criteria when reviewing nalists’ applications, including pregnancy rate, voluntary waiting period, interbreeding intervals, heat detection, conception rate, value of reproduction and culling rate.
WHO WILL YOU FIND IN OUR
Business Directory?
LOG ON TO: www.dairystarbusinessdirectory.com
TO BE INCLUDED IN THE DAIRY STAR BUSINESS DIRECTORY CALL 320-352-6303
OBERHOLTZER AUCTIONS
Special Dairy Sale Thursday
December 16th
Hay sale 10 am • Dairy cows 11 am
Early Consignments:
9 fresh Holstein tie stall cows, 1st and 2nd lactation, used to going outside, milking up to 110 lbs! Cashton. 2 Holstein dry cows, nice! 10 Holstein cows from overstocked herd, all stages lactation, milking 65-105. PENDING: Complete dispersal 135 Holstein parlor cows. Ai breeding, 28K milk, 110 scc
ADVANCE NOTICE:
5th Annual Holiday Select Sale Thursday, December 30th
As usual we will have many hand picked and top end cows and heifers at this year end event! Call Mark @ 715 773 2240 to consign.
SALEs SCHEDULE
Dairy & Hay sale EVERY Thursday starting with hay @ 10:00 followed by Dairy Cows @ 11:00 sharp, then bred heifers, open heifers and feeders followed by calves, market bulls, fat cattle and cull cows. Special feeder sale 2nd & 4th Thursday. WATCH OUR SALE ONLINE AT WWW.CATTLEUSA.COM
JWO NOTES & MARKET REPORT:
Upper 40s in December sure is OK by me! Well its still all about quality! 68 herd cows averaged $1,730. 17 head sold $2,000-2,500. Top $2,900. Keith Horning, Greenwood. Many decent cows $850-1,400. 15 Supreme quality springing Holstein heifers $1,400-1,700. Many high quality bred heifers $1,000-1,375. Herd open heifers $1.00-1.55. Other open heifers $65-90. Herd heifer calves $200-700. Other Holstein hfr calves $10-25. Holstein breeding Bulls $750-1,475. Market Bulls up to $83. Choice Holstein steers $115-122.50. Low Choice and Select $1.06-114.75. Beef steers up to $1.30. Holstein feeder steers $80110NT. Holstein bull calves 60% sold $100-195/hd. Crossbred Bull and heifer calves $145300. 25% of Market cows sold $50-64. 50% sold $33-47. Sold 27 loads hay and bedding. 4th crop rounds Alfalfa $90. 3x3x8 grass mix $50-70. First crop rounds grass $25-35. Rounds bean stubble $20-27.50. Rounds corn stalks $17.50-25. 40 acres land rent auction brought $250/acre. Standing room only crowd! 140 registered bidders, 108 consigners. And yes, we appreciate every one of you!
Sale Location: W1461 State Hwy 98, Loyal, WI 54446 From Spencer, WI take Hwy 98 west 5 miles. From Loyal, 5 miles east on 98
SALE CONDUCTED BY:
Oberholtzer Dairy Cattle & Auction Co. Auctioneer: Mark Oberholtzer, WI license #2882-052 John Oberholtzer 715-216-1897 • Mark Oberholtzer 715-773-2240 John Ivan Oberholtzer 715-219-2781 • Office 715-255-9600 www.oberholtzerauctions.com
Sign up for our New Newsletter
DairySt r Milk Break Email maria.b@dairystar.com
MAKING MA KING COW COMFORT OUR PRIORITY
Curtain Systems
Ventilation Systems
Freestall Systems
67962 State Hwy 55, Watkins, MN 55389 • 320-764-5000
Headlocks www.norbco.com
Page 32 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
MooMonitor+
Serving the Dairy Industry Since 1989 Dairy Equipment Sales, Repair & Dairy AutomaƟon
A standalone system that collects data on cow behavior.
It is adapted to most makes of parlors and HERD MANAGEMENT soŌware. Whether you are milking 10,000 or 100 cows, this will be the most accurate monitoring system that you will Įnd. Great Feature: tags can be ID’ed with a cell phone in the barn.
(608)757-2697 4107 N US Hwy 51 | Janesville, WI
Sends noƟĮcaƟons to alert a cow in heat, sick or under-performing relaƟve to her history in combinaƟon with group data. Used to assess cow acƟvity, ruminaƟon, feeding and resƟng Ɵme informaƟon, allowing Ɵmely rouƟne management decisions without the usual labor input.
The Most Dependable Waterers on the Market!
(920)262-0837 424 Watertower Ct | Watertown, WI
HOLSTEIN SPECIAL SALE
WaterMaster Series
EcoFount 1
Friday, December 17
EcoFount 2
11 a.m.
Cattlemaster Series
OmniFount Series
Tri-State Livestock
Thrifty King Series
Russ Pierson
SALES & SERVICE
Sioux Center, IA • 712-722-0681
MUELLER SALES & SERVICE
www.tristatelivestock.com
Glencoe, MN • 320-864-3556 OR 888-205-0974
Tell the advertisers you saw their ad in the Dairy Star!
CONSISTENT. RELIABLE. EFFICIENT.
MEYER.
CROP MAX CONVERTIBLE SPREADER The most versatile spreader you will ever own!
LET MEYER PROVIDE THE VERY BEST NUTRITION TO YOUR HERD AND YOUR FIELDS!
CROSSFIRE OR INDUSTRIAL V-SPREADER Rear unload provides the ultimate performance!
NEW! FORMULA F510 PRO SINGLE
MEYER FORMULA
Consistent rations from start to finish. 355-1,315 cubic feet!
MINNESOTA A & C Farm Service, Inc. (TMR Mixer Dealer) Paynesville, MN Fluegge’s Ag, Inc. Mora, MN
Gorter’s Clay & Dairy Equip. Pipestone, MN
Improved drive system and rough terrain package.
Meyer Manufacturing Corp.
Dorchester, WI • 800-325-9103 Visit our website!
meyermfg.com
CALL OR SEE YOUR LOCAL DEALER FOR COMPLETE DETAILS!
Hammell Equipment Inc. ChatÀeld, MN Eitzen, MN Harmony, MN Rushford, MN
Midwest Machinery Co. (Full Line) Glencoe, MN Glenwood, MN Howard Lake, MN Princeton, MN
Midwest Machinery Co. (Forage Boxes Only) Alexandria, MN Sauk Centre, MN Schlauderaff Implement Co. LitchÀeld, MN Werner Implement Co., Inc. Vermillion, MN Wingert Sales & Service Plainview, MN
IOWA Engel Agri Sales Sac City, IA SOUTH DAKOTA Pfeifer Implement Co. Sioux Falls, SD WISCONSIN Hupf’s Repair Center Beaver Dam, WI
Johnson Tractor, Inc. Janesville, WI
Luxemburg Moter Company Luxemburg, WI Price Equipment Sales, Inc. Bloomington, WI Scenic Bluffs Equipment Union Center, WI
Tractor Central Arcadia, WI Cameron, WI Chippewa Falls, WI Durand, WI Granton, WI Menomonie, WI Mondovi, WI Sheldon, WI West Salem, WI Westby, WI
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 33
Mid-American Hay Auction results for December 2, 2021
Lot no. 570 571 580 581 583 584 589 268 276 279 280 285 287 297 301 332 576 577 586 591 283 290 292 293 302 343 349 579 267 275 282 286 291 308 314 320 324 344 339 351 307 319 350 263 300 587 594 269 271 310 311 327 328 273 296 331 341 277 289 325 340 575 309 312 315 317 326 569
Desc. Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares
moisture protein 15.97 20.12 14.06 12.46 12.08 6.92 13.39 6.51 8.52 6.68 14.9 8.92 16.74 2.95 15.59 20.34 11.42 14.98 13.62 17.05 16 12.49 13.62 20.71 16.6 22.21 11.03 11.88 13.57 15 13.76 15.06 15.92 21.92 13.21 19.15 11.41 21.23 13.35 14.33 11.57 17.15 14.52 15.75 13.22 21.06 16.97 20.26 14.64 11.93 11.28 21.29 11.88 16.7 13.49 22.25 12.96 16.91 12.65 17.46 15.95 23.02 14.1 22.62 15.8 21.73 11.85 22.36 12.49 18.17 15.11 14.96 12.76 20.04 24.44 15.98 17.06 20.64 22.74 26.07 14.76 23.81 13.9 18.79 13.44 18.54 12.55 21.34 11.43 20.09 13.77 5.82 10.28 16.77 10.97 17.19 10.04 19.93 17.43 24.05 12.57 18.57 10.84 18.13 11.84 10.86 11.45 27.37 13.96 21.88 10.61 18.05 11.64 21.43 13.21 23.42 12.14 21.62 10.11 17.26 15.2 23.79 13.59 22.09 11.79 18.45 10.86 19.29 11.66 20.1 11.91 6.79 10.51 20.14 12.63 17.44
RFV 173.45 98.75 65.72 66.16 67.23 88.61 66.57 168.58 122.04 123.42 105.37 165.53 195.17 90.65 79.98 182.2 162.47 158.41 171.44 160.49 114.14 98.94 207.76 107.9 87.56 163.19 131.91 171.21 185.17 120.64 181.27 162.35 175.7 154.74 145.65 120.73 151.31 119.95 115.94 132.55 176.07 164.87 166.56 151.54 177.97 78.52 116.21 196.75 179.93 188.44 108.04 152.46 96.91 145.15 162.47 157.4 187.72 205.45 227.34 121.79 201.58 160.11 136.04 163.02 160.01 63.19 157.57 135.65
cut. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 5 2&3 2&3 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 1 1 1 1 1 1 2
Ld. size 24.05 20.15 17.26 18.53 9.26 22 25.65 23.48 22.79 23.74 21.91 23.39 23.74 14.53 9.63 28.55 24.88 26.07 19.67 25.39 16.04 20.31 25.29 26.06 15.03 19.21 8.9 24.02 25.66 26.97 25.66 25.33 25.89 25.4 23.04 23.59 22.17 14 9.77 15.89 27.09 26.72 13.77 24.72 23.36 27.43 21.12 25.55 26.78 26.34 10.85 27.47 7.81 25.08 25.81 27.1 28.46 25.91 25.54 23.14 27.82 22.41 19.91 24.37 10.62 21.05 26.89 18.44
price $185.00 $185.00 $160.00 $165.00 $150.00 $60.00 $100.00 $200.00 $220.00 $200.00 $160.00 $200.00 $200.00 $205.00 $120.00 $175.00 $195.00 $195.00 $200.00 $150.00 $230.00 $230.00 $210.00 $220.00 $175.00 $205.00 $230.00 $185.00 $220.00 $220.00 $200.00 $200.00 $195.00 $200.00 $200.00 $210.00 $210.00 $55.00 $160.00 $150.00 $200.00 $230.00 $210.00 $220.00 $230.00 $135.00 $200.00 $220.00 $250.00 $225.00 $210.00 $195.00 $195.00 $200.00 $230.00 $200.00 $190.00 $310.00 $245.00 $230.00 $235.00 $200.00 $210.00 $250.00 $310.00 $145.00 $200.00 $235.00
Lot no.
264 288 295 298 303 304 305 316 329 573 595 265 274 335 337 306 330 333 322 323 336 585 578 342 582 321 590 592 593 597 598 266 270 272 318 338 568 572 574 588 596 278 281 284 313 334 346 347 294 299 352 348 345
Desc.
Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares SR/Large Rounds SR/Large Rounds SR/Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Large Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares
moisture protein
11.35 15.93 11.6 14.03 12.41 12.78 9.35 12.2 9.65 13.1 11.81 10.01 11.29 14.25 12.26 12.78 14 16.33 12.18 13.06 9.79 14.9 11.46 20.65 8.52
RFV
21.07 157.72 22.63 147.71 20.57 121.16 21.47 147.12 9.17 100.6 21.82 166.31 22.56 157.68 22.53 173.59 16.94 174.11 22.51 185.39 22.28 151.61 21.17 191.61 24.42 169.99 21.52 149.55 15.66 121.76 21.06 196.08 24.01 185.37 19.81 181.45 21.42 179.35 22.52 191.68 18.05 140.81 8.92 88.61 21.68 175.22 12.65 82.02 6.68 67.23 STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW WHEAT STRAW WHEAT STRAW SOYBEAN STRAW CORN STALKS
cut.
2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 5 5 3&4 1 2&3 1
Ld. size
28.17 18.44 11.78 22.67 9.19 10.19 23.28 27.34 26.7 26.44 10.83 9 22.46 26.73 22.43 24.83 26.63 27.14 26.71 25.81 25.57 17 26.28 11 9.08 28 25.13 25.46 25.32 22.28 18.71 24.58 23.13 23.24 22.02 19.1 76 76 72 72 74 76 72 64 78 72 76 72 76 66 36 72 57
price
$210.00 $210.00 $220.00 $230.00 $160.00 $310.00 $260.00 $250.00 $215.00 $190.00 $250.00 $240.00 $225.00 $210.00 $220.00 $250.00 $260.00 $290.00 $240.00 $255.00 $200.00 $50.00 $195.00 $75.00 $150.00 $60.00 $105.00 $125.00 $120.00 $110.00 $100.00 $115.00 $95.00 $100.00 $105.00 $95.00 $30.00 $17.50 $37.50 $17.50 $40.00 $35.00 $40.00 $32.50 $35.00 $37.50 $25.00 $35.00 $35.00 $20.00 $72.50 $10.00 $22.50
Hay sales starts at 12:30 p.m. and are the 1st and 3rd Thursdays of the months of September thru May.
December 16, 2021 January 6, 2021
For more information, contact Kevin Winter 320-352-3803, (c) 320-760-1593 or Al Wessel at 320-547-2206, (c) 320-760-2979
EARLY PAY
DISCOUNTS Save On Your Seed Costs By Purchasing Your Seeds Early Ask Dustin about early pay discounts on NuTech Corn & Soybeans.
Call for a FREE 2022 Seed Catalog
CASH DISCOUNTS 5% December 4% January 3% February
MORE M ORE TTHAN HAN A
$15 ALFALFA DISCOUNT
$15.00 OFF Per Bag if purchased before March 1, 2022
• Attention II • Galaxy II • Radiance HD • WS L550 • WS HiFi • Big Wheel • 375HY-BR Hybrid • 2020 Supreme Brand • 5301 Multi-leaf • Grazer Brand • 4241 Creeping • WS LeafGuard LH • Hay Mixes Mix 2 through Mix 8
The Vermeer 504R Premium baler is fully loaded and comes standard with a silage kit specially designed for high output of high-moisture crops. More than a silage special, this baler is equipped with heavy-duty components, premium belts, a 5-bar camless pickup and the Atlas™ control system. Giving you full control to help handle more capacity in heavy crops, the 504R Premium baler will help you produce good-looking bales in tough conditions. Plus, a Vermeer 3-year pickup warranty* helps provide peace of mind for silage seasons to come. Silage or not, this is a first-class baler. *3-year pickup warranty covers internal components and includes parts and labor. Does not include teeth or hardware for teeth. See local Vermeer dealer for details. Vermeer Corporation reserves the right to make changes in engineering, design and specifications; add improvements; or discontinue manufacturing or distribution at any time without notice or obligation. Equipment shown is for illustrative purposes only and may display optional accessories or components specific to their global region. Please contact your local Vermeer dealer for more information on machine specifications. Vermeer, the Vermeer logo and Atlas control system are trademarks of Vermeer Manufacturing Company in the U.S. and/or other countries. © 2021 Vermeer Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
800-470-3325 www.welterseed.com
866-841-1819 or 712-753-4757
WELTER SEED & HONEY CO.
17724 Hwy. 136 • Onslow, IA 52321-7549
Finest Quality Seeds
1809 240th St. • Inwood, IA
605-753-8650
www.fabersfarm.com
443 Pheasant Ridge Drive Watertown, SD
Holiday baking
Page 34 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
For me, holiday baking is a mixture of old and new recipes. There are the traditional treats that have to be made every year, and then there are the new adventures and avors. I’m always on the lookout for recipes that will add color and warm avors to gift platters or end up sitting on my counter as a quick snack as we step out the door. I discovered the lemon cranberry bars and peach bourbon upside down cake recipes in my collection of recipes to try. I modied both of them to t into the pans I had on hand. The crust for the bars would be a great twist on regular lemon bars. The Bundt cake has such a warm and rich taste, and looks good enough to be a centerpiece on your holiday table. If you’re looking for something new to add to your holiday baking, you might want to give one these recipes a try. Enjoy!
Grandma Preusser’s date bars 1/2 cup butter, softened 1/4 cup Crisco 1 cup brown sugar 1 3/4 cups our 1/2 teaspoon baking soda 1 1/2 cups rolled oats 3 cups dates, chopped 1/4 cup sugar 1 1/2 cups water Mix shortening, sugar, our, soda and rolled oats thoroughly. Place part of mixture in the bottom of 9-by-13 pan. Save rest for the top. Cook dates, sugar and water, stirring constantly until thickened. Cool 10 minutes. Pour date mixture over crust and cover with other half of crust mixture. Bake for 25 minutes at 350 degrees. No-bake turtle dream bars 20 Oreo cookies, crushed 4 tablespoons butter, melted 3.9 ounces instant chocolate pudding
vanilla extract and powdered sugar. With a rubber spatula, mix in 1 cup of whipped cream or Cool Whip. Remove crust from freezer and place dollops of cream cheese mixture on top of crust and spread to all sides. Spread the pudding on top of the cream cheese. Drizzle the caramel sauce over the pudding, trying to completely cover because it will be difcult to spread. Sprinkle the pecan pieces over the caramel. Cover with the remaining Cool Whip. Place in the freezer to chill for a minimum of two hours before serving. The caramel sauce may be runny. Remove bars from pan by lifting up the sides of the parchment and drizzle with additional caramel and chocolate sauces, and sprinkle with remaining pecan pieces.
Food columnist, Natalie Schmitt 1 1/2 cups milk 6 ounces cream cheese, softened 1/2 cup powdered sugar 1/2 teaspoon vanilla 8 ounces whipped cream or Cool Whip 1 cup pecan pieces, divided 1/2 cup caramel sauce, divided Chocolate sauce for drizzling Line 8-by-8 dish with parchment paper, leaving extra hanging over the edges for handles. Crush Oreo cookies in blender. Mix with melted butter and pat down into the prepared baking dish. Place in freezer to set for minimum of 30 minutes. Mix chocolate pudding mix with just 1 1/2 cups of milk (makes the pudding thicker). Place in fridge to set. In a mixing bowl, beat cream cheese until soft. Add
Ford 8770 4800 hrs.- $63,000
IH 1966, no cab, 5600 hrs. - $11,500
Many Sizes of Gravity Boxes ON HAND
Brillion XL 144
CIH 8940, FWA, 5000 hrs.,
NH ST 770 ripper
32’ packer - $24,000
new tires - $85,000
USED TRACTORS
CIH 8930, 2100 hrs., 2WD ..................... $92,000 CIH 7130, FWA, 3200 hrs. ..................... $62,000 CIH 7110, 4500 hrs, FWA ............................. Call CIH MX100, 1300 hrs ............................ $65,000 CIH MX120, 3800 hrs. ........................... $59,000 IH 1456, no cab, no TA, duals ................ $10,000
TILLAGE
CIH 4800 26’ field cultivator..................... $6,500 CIH 530C................................................ $34,000 CIH 527B ripper ..................................... $13,500 CIH 527B ripper ..................................... $13,000 DMI 530 Ecolo-Tiger .............................. $12,000 DMI 530 ripper w/leads.......................... $14,000 JD 960 32’ field cultivator ........................ $8,500 JD 2810 5-bottom plow ........................... $4,900
HAYING & FORAGE EQUIP.
Sitrex QR12, QR10, QRS rakes .................... New Many sizes of rakes available All Sizes of Sitrex Rakes .....................On Hand
Lemon cranberry bars 12 ounces fresh or frozen cranberries 3/4 cup water 3 cups sugar, divided 1/3 cup powdered sugar 3 teaspoons lemon zest 1 cup lemon juice 2 1/4 cups our, divided 1/2 teaspoon Kosher salt, divided 10 tablespoons cold unsalted butter, cubed 7 large eggs, lightly beaten Place cranberries, water and 9 tablespoons sugar in medium saucepan; bring to a boil over medium-high heat. Reduce heat to med-low; simmer, stirring occasionally, until cranberries start to burst, about 15 minutes. Continue simmering, stirring and breaking up any whole cranberries using a wooden spoon, until cranberries are completely broken down. Remove from heat. Let cool slightly, about 30 minutes. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a jelly roll pan with parchment paper, leaving extra for handles. Lightly coat with cooking spray; set aside. Mix 3/4 cup sugar with lemon zest and set aside. Whisk together powdered sugar, 1 3/4 cups our and 1/4 teaspoon salt. Add lemon zest/sugar mixture. Cut butter cubes into mixture until crumbly and starts to press together. Press mixture evenly into bottom of prepared jelly roll pan. Bake 25-30 minutes or until starts to turn golden brown. Let cool slightly, about 20 minutes. Spread cranberry mixture over cooled crust. Chill for 30 minutes. Whisk together lemon juice and remaining 2 1/4 cups sugar, 1/2 cup our and 1/4 teaspoon salt in large bowl. Add eggs; whisk until combined. Gently and evenly pour egg mixture over cranberry mixture. Bake at
350 degrees for about 40 minutes or until egg mixture is set and jiggles only slightly in center. Transfer to a wire rack; let cool completely, about an hour. For best slicing results, cover and refrigerate overnight. Garnish with additional powdered sugar. Peach bourbon upside down Bundt cake 1 1/4 cups butter, softened, divided 1 1/2 cups rmly packed light brown sugar, divided Peach slices (fresh, frozen or canned) 6 ounces cream cheese, softened 1 1/4 cups sugar 5 large eggs 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla, divided 2 1/4 cups our 1/2 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons bourbon (or rum) 3/4 cup powdered sugar 1-2 tablespoons milk Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Melt 1/4 cup butter in small saucepan over medium heat; stir in 1/2 cup brown sugar. Cook, whisking constantly, until sugar has dissolved and mixture is thoroughly combined, about 1 minute. Pour mixture evenly into a 12-cup Bundt pan that has been sprayed with baking spray. Place peach slices in an even layer on top of brown sugar mixture. Beat cream cheese and 1 cup softened butter on medium speed until creamy, about 1 minute. Gradually add sugar and remaining 1 cup brown sugar, beating on medium speed until light and uffy, 3-5 minutes. Add eggs, one at a time, beating until yolk disappears. Beat in 1 teaspoon vanilla. Sift together our and salt; add to butter mixture alternately with bourbon, beginning and ending with our mixture. Spoon batter carefully over peaches. Level batter with spatula, pushing batter to the edges of the pan and slightly upward. Bake for 1 hour and 25 minutes to 1 hour and 30 minutes until long wooden pick inserted in center of cake comes out clean. Cool in pan for 10 minutes. Loosen sides with plastic knife. Flip cake onto serving platter to cool completely. Stir together powdered sugar, 1/2 teaspoon vanilla and 1 tablespoon milk in a small bowl, adding remaining tablespoon milk, 1 teaspoon at a time if needed to reach desired consistency. Drizzle over cooled cake. As their four children pursue dairy careers off the family farm, Natalie and Mark are starting a new adventure of milking registered Holsteins just because they like good cows on their farm north of Rice, Minnesota.
Complete Auction Results at SteffesGroup.com
$18,000
GRAVITY BOXES
Brent 782 Grain cart............................... $23,500 Brent 440 box .......................................... $8,900 Demco 365 w/tarp ................................. $10,500 Demco 365 .............................................. $6,500 Brent 420 grain cart ................................. $7,000 Many Used Gravity Boxes - Demco, J&M, Brent
MISCELLANEOUS
NH 185 spreader .................................... $11,500 CIH 5300 grain drill w/grass .................. $10,900 JD 1750 6R30”, dry fert, sharp .............. $20,000 JD 450 grain drill w/grass ...................... $15,000 Brillion PD16 16’ packer ........................ $11,000 Balzer 6R stalk chopper ........................... $7,500 Midsota 5510 & F610 rock trailers......... In Stock Midsota F8216 rock trailer ............................ Call New Red Devil & Agro Trend Snowblowers Notch Rock Wagons .............................. In Stock
Twine, Wrap & Net Wrap are IN STOCK!
GREENWALD FARM CENTER Greenwald, MN • 320-987-3177
WWW.GREENWALDFARMCENTER.COM
TIMED ONLINE ONLY BIDDING CLOSES AT 12PM TRUCK LOADS SELL FIRST
150+RFV Dairy Hay
Med Squares Rounds $180-$225/ton $170-$200/ton
Beef & Heifer Hay
Med Squares Rounds $140-$170/ton $125-$150/ton
Bedding
Wheat Straw, Corn/Bean Med. Sq. Straw, Rd. $30-$40/bale $30-$40/bale We do Price Quoting right on your farm! Order Buying Available. Transportation Services Available. /RRNLQJ IRU QHZ FRQVLJQRUV WR À OO RXU expanding market!
UPCOM
ING AUCTION
Tues. Dec.14 Tues. Dec. 28 Tues. Jan.11
Tues. Jan 25 Tues. Feb. 8 Tues. Feb. 22
S
For more info contact Randy Kath,Auctioneer, 701.429.8894
All Hay & Straw MUST be on site by 10AM Sale Day!
24400 MN Hwy 22 S | Litchfield, MN 55355
320.693.9371 | SteffesGroup.com
Dairy Recipes
Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021 • Page 35
Sprayer’s Plus SAVE ON SPRAYERS IN STOCK:
From the kitchen of Jenny Briggs, Stratford, Wisconsin
Nana’s sugar cookies 2 cups flour 1 teaspoon cream of tartar 1 cup confectioners’ sugar 3/4 teaspoon baking soda 1/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup butter 1 egg 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 tablespoon milk 1/2 cup sugar, optional
Mix flour, cream of tartar, confectioners’ sugar, baking soda and salt. Cut in butter. In a separate bowl, beat the egg. Add vanilla and milk, mixing well. Stir liquid ingredients into dry ingredients until it forms a ball. Cover and let chill in the refrigerator for 2 hours. Form into balls. Place 2 inches apart on an ungreased cookie sheet. Flatten with the bottom of a glass. Bake at 350 degrees for 10 minutes. Be careful not to overcook. Option: When rolling dough into balls, coat dough balls with sugar. Or, frost with your favorite frosting recipe.
40-1250 gal. 12’-90’ booms
Call Chris Eibey at 563-920-8737 1597 220th St. • Manchester, IA
Premier Livestock & Auctions LLC
COME SEE OUR BRAND NEW STATE OF THE ART FACILITY!
N13438 STATE HWY 73 WITHEE, WI 54498 Office: 715-229-2500 Ken Stauffer 715-559-8232 Rocky Olsen 715-721-0079 Travis Parr 715-828-2454 Steve Strey 715-721-0434 Riley Nolt 715-507-1900
ONLINE BIDDERS AND BUYERS REGISTER AT CATTLEUSA.COM
HAY & STRAW AUCTIONS
Butterhorns 1 cup milk, scalded 1/2 cup sugar 1 package dry yeast 1 teaspoon salt
Every Wednesday at 9:30!
FEEDER CATTLE AUCTION 4 cups all-purpose flour 1/2 cup butter 3 eggs, well beaten
Tuesday, December 14, 2021 at 11 am Expecting 200 head!
SPECIAL FEEDER CATTLE AUCTION
ALSO SELLING BRED BEEF COWS, COW/CALF PAIRS & BEEF BREEDING BULLS
Tuesday, December 21, 2021 at 11 am Expecting 700-900 head!
Scald milk and cool to lukewarm. Use a small portion to dissolve yeast in. Pour remainder of scalded milk over butter, sugar and salt. Stir until mixed and butter is soft or melted. Add half the flour, beat until smooth; then add the softened yeast. Beat it in. Add well-beaten eggs and blend well. Add the remaining flour, mixing well until it is a soft dough. Cover the ball of dough and let rise until doubled. Punch down, divide into four equal balls. Roll each ball into a 9-inch circle and cut into eight pie-shaped pieces. Roll each piece from edge to center. Place closely on a cookie sheet and brush with butter. Let rise until light. Bake at 400 degrees for 10-12 minutes.
DAIRY CATTLE AUCTION Wednesday, December 15, 2021 at 11:00 am
COMPLETE HOLSTEIN HEIFER DISPERSAL 268 Holstein Dairy Heifers, freestall/headlock adapted. (21) calves on milk (15) started heifers just off milk (30) 200-300#(35)300500# (45) 500-600# (42) breeding age to short serviced (80) bred 3-8 months. AI sired over 50 years, bred and bred heifers AI bred. Coming from Clark County Expecting our usual run of Fresh Dairy Cows, Springing Heifers, Short Bred and Open Heifers! EXPECTING 375 HEAD!
SPECIAL ONE OWNER DAIRY CATTLE AUCTION
Thursday Thursday,December 16, 2021 at 11:00 am Dairy (NO OTHER DAIRY CONSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED) Attention Dairymen! Auction
From the kitchen of Leah Schwarz, Le Center, Minnesota
Homemade Ice Cream 2 cups heavy cream 2 cups half and half 1 cup sugar
1 1/2 tsp vanilla 1/8 tsp salt
Combine all ingredients above in ice cream maker canister. Fill your maker with lots of ice and ice cream salt, let it churn until it is softserve consistency. Eat immediately or freeze for a harder ice cream.
Keep your cows on their feet!
Get your concrete scabbled and prevent an accident!
Scabbling makes grooves in your concrete 2” wide and 3/16” deep so your cows ALWAYS have traction.
REFERENCES AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST
Smith’s of Wisconsin Serving the Midwest over 30 yrs.
1-800-525-9364
Blue Hilltop, Inc. Your Mixer, Spreader, Hay Processor Headquarters We carry:
COMPLETE HERD DISPERSAL 360 HIGH QUALITY HOLSTEIN DAIRY COWS AND HEIFERS, INCLUDING SOME FANCY RED AND WHITE HOLSTEINS! 215 Holstein Dairy Cows approx. (190) Milking Cows (75) 2 year olds (55) 3 year olds (25) Springing Dry Cows (16) Close Springing Heifers (150) Holstein Heifers - Newborn to Springing. 85# on ofÀcial test 2x, RHA over 26,000# 4.2BF 3.2P 135scc, with LOTS of TOP cows milking 100-140#. Housed in sand bedded freestalls, milked in Agromatic Parlor, also accustomed to headlocks. AI over 40 years, currently only the very TOP sires from Select Sires and ABS. Some sires include Jacey, Troy, Goldrush, Montrey, Jedi, Blowtorch, Tarrino, Helix, Ledoux, Avenger, Freddie, Super, Dartz, JoSuper, Bailey RC, Tango, Lottery, SkyFall, Montross, Chinci. Some service sires include Medley, Burley, Achiever, Heroic, Rascal, Rubels Red, Renegade, Millington, Rolan, Future, Phantom, Dragonheart, King Royal, Trooper, Dobbins, ZZ Top, Harper, Doctor, Alphabet, Handy Red. 150 Holstein Heifers - Newborn to Springing. If you are looking for replacement heifers, these are very good quality well grown heifers! (42) shortbred to bred 8 months (90) open heifers from baby calves to breeding age. Vaccination program 2x a year and regular herd health. Very well bred herd of cows with excellent feet, legs and udders that has been well managed! Extremely docile, well cared for herd of cows! Coming from Weis Crest Holsteins, Bryant Weis, Pine Island, MN 507-269-7148
*** NOT SELLING SHEEP, GOATS, AND HOGS TODAY ***
HOLIDAY SPECIAL SHEEP & GOAT AUCTION Thursday, December 30, 2021 • 10:00 am
www.rotomix.com
LLC
Dana Berreau
507-879-3593 / 800-821-7092 Box 116, Lake Wilson, MN 56151
PREMIUM PRICES PAID FOR YOUR LAMBS & KID GOATS!
MUCH MORE INFORMATION ON OUR WEBSITE!!!
Visit our website or scan the code for a direct link to our website! www.premierlivestockandauctions.com
Page 36 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, December 11, 2021
WE STOCK BOOTS!
View & bid live at cattleusa.com 32638 US-10 • MOTLEY, MN 56466
218-352-6546
Tingley
Muck
Muckmaster & Chore boots
Quatro
MITCH BARTHEL OWNER/AUCTIONEER
Reed
Insulated 13” & 16” boots
Glacier 12” & 16” boots
218-639-5228
JOE VARNER 218-352-6546
WE STOCK A FULL LINE OF ANIMAL HEALTH PRODUCTS AND CATTLE VACCINES
715-644-2350 Chippewa Valley Dairy Supply
WWW.TRICOUNTYSTOCKYARDS.COM
We ship SpeeDee and UPS!
6053 CTY. HWY. G • STANLEY, WI 54768 • Andrew Zimmerman
FAIR AND COMPETITIVE PRICE
SELLING ALL CLASSES OF LIVESTOCK EVERY WEDNESDAY AT 9 A.M.: FAT CATTLE, BEEF FEEDERS, HOL STEERS, BABY CALVES, BRED COWS/HEIFERS, COW/CALF PAIRS, DAIRY CATTLE, SLAUGHTER COWS & BULLS, HOGS, GOATS, & SHEEP
FARM LIKE YOU MEAN IT Secure your tires and Secure Covers with us too!
“The Hanson Silo Bunker empowers us to control shrink loss. With our piles, we used to see lots of spoilage. But now we see very little, if any at all.” Sako Vandermeer - White, South Dakota
Slatted Floors for Cattle & Hog Barns
Belt Feeder & Stationary Mixer Maximize feed efficiency and reduce labor!
• Engineered for strength and long-term durability • DRY CAST formulation creates low porosity and slump • Computerized batching for uniformity • Robotic mold system provides consistency • Quality finished for smooth edges and sure footing • Manufactured in a controlled environment (Steam Beds) for faster curing • Delivered, professionally leveled and installed • Strength Compression Tests to exceed quality standards • Modular design for easy installation
SILO UNLOADERS S
MANY MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM!
SILAGE FACER PATENT #7,588,203, #8,011,608, #8,336,795
www.easyrakefacer.com
NO MOVING PARTS MAINTAIN CUT LENGTH STAY IN THE HEATED CAB CALL FOR YOUR DEMO TODAY
Trioliet 3200 in stock! Lake Lillian, MN • www.hansonsilo.com
1-800-THE-SILO
“On Call” Service 24/7