Page 4 • Dairy Star • Saturday, April 14, 2012
USED EQUIPMENT
BIG CAPACITY AND UNIFORM SPREADING
TRACTORS
COMBINES/HEADS IH 914, pull type, nice unit .......... $5,250 Gleaner 18’ Series III bean head L/M, green stripe, consigned .......... $3,250
SKIDLOADERS
IN STOCK
3) New L220, 2000# lift, cab, heat, AC, 12.00 tires ...................... In Stock Bobcat 873, cab/heat, new 12.00x16.5 tires, 72” bucket .............................. $17,500
NEW! T5050 Cab, FWA NEW! T5070 Cab, FWA NEW! NH T7.210 NEW! NH T8.300
New Holland adds two durable, high-capacity models to its best-selling box spreader line up—the M2080 and M2090. They spread manure evenly across your fields, and they do it economically. They’re also built strong with a channel-iron frame, polybonded plywood box with solid poly floor, galvanized steel side flares and splash guard. In addition to dependability and long life, you get: FEWER TRIPS – HUGE 524- OR 629-CU. FT. HEAPED CAPACITY CONSISTENT FLOW – RELIABLE, NO-JUMP, T-BAR DOUBLE APRON CHAINS SMOOTH, VARIABLE SPEED CONTROL – ADJUSTS FROM THE CAB EVEN SPREAD PATTERN – ROOSTER-COMB UPPER/LOWER BEATER PADDLES
FORAGE NH FX38, RWA, 414 HP, crop processor, 15’ HH, 6 row CH ...... Just In New NH FR9050 .......................In Stock Krone Big X 500 LD SO.......................$179,000 Krone 20’ Easy Collect 6000 SOLD corn head..................................$72,000 Krone EF 3801 hay head............$18,900 LD SO Claas RU450, 15’ .......................$27,500
NEW! NH T9.560 NH T8040, 305 HP, 1875 hrs., front suspension, front duals, front/rear weights, all new rubber, auto guidance .......... Just In Ford 8730, FWA, 140 HP, power shift, 3800 hrs., SOLD 540/1000 PTO, 16.9x28 fronts, 18.4x42 w/hub duals, well cared for, consigned ...........$39,500 Ford 9600, cab, 6900 hrs., engine OH, consigned ........ $11,900
TIRES 2) New 18.4x26 Dyna Torque Radial II on rims, off NH H8080 windrower, pair................. $2,400 or Best Offer
AUGERS
SPREADERS New NH M2080, 353 cu. ft. .................................In Stock New NH Hydra Box 550V, vertical beater, 442 cu. ft. ........In Stock
TILLAGE New - Salford 31’ RTS HD Exteme ............................In Stock New - Salford 14-bottom plow .In Stock New - Salford 4, 6, 8, 12 bottom plows .....................................In Stock New - Salford 19’ HD disc ripper .......................... Coming In Wilrich 2900 10 bottom. ex frame, coulters, good bottoms, paint faded, consigned .............$14,500 IH 800 10 bottom, coulters ..........$9,500
WE SELL WESTFIELD AUGERS!
NEW! New Holland HydraBox™ Spreaders
HAY
HydraBox™ hydraulic-push box spreaders from New Holland are built for simplicity, easy maintenance and years of productive performance. 0% for r 36 Months o te Low Ra Financing for up to 72 Months!
A much simpler design with fewer moving parts, with no apron chains that can stretch or wear.
IN STOCK: 550V - 442 cu. ft. M2080 - 253 cu. ft.
FARM RAISED™
© 2012 CNH America LLC. New Holland is a registered trademark of CNH America LLC.
MODERN FARM EQUIPMENT 320-352-6543 • Hwy. 71 South, Sauk Centre, MN www.modernfarmequipment.com
FARM RAISED.
Store Hours: Monday-Friday 8-5, Saturday Seasonal
© 2012 CNH America LLC. New Holland is a registered trademark of CNH America LLC.
New Krone and New Holland hay tedders .................... In Stock NH 1431 discbine, 13’, std. hitch ......................... $15,500 NH 1431, 13’ std. hitch, either 1-3/8 or 1-3/4, 1000 PTO $15,900 CIH RBX 563, 5x6 bale, net wrap, like new ........... $24,000
NH BR780A, 2.07 meter pickup, net wrap, endless belts, nice 1 owner, Red Armor Extended Warranty .......................$26,900 NH 166 inverter, STD table, consigned .......................$4,500 NH 644 RB, 4x5, auto tie, wide pickup, nice ...........Just In Massey Ferguson 124 small square baler, above avg. $2,500
MODERN FARM EQUIPMENT 320-352-6543 • Sauk Centre, MN
When When time time is is of of the the essence, essence, choose choose excellence. excellence.
CHOOSE KRONE BiG Pack Balers.
Higher Density: A longer bale chamber and tapered shutters produce a higher density bale on all Krone BiG Pack models. The BiG Pack 1290 HDP can produce a 25% denser bale. EasyFlow CAMLESS Pick-Up: Fewer moving parts with the elimination of the traditional cam-track design. It can also work at a 30% higher speed allowing higher ground speed and an increased throughput. Variable Fill System (VFS): The VFS pre-chamber system produces uniform flakes and bales regardless of windrow size and crop condition.
CHOOSE KRONE KW Tedders Krone KW Tedders work hard to speed up your drying time while being gentle on your crop. These rotary tedders impress with their rugged design and innovations such as the OctoLink 8-finger drive clutch and maintenance free gearboxes for the rotor drive. Tines wrap around the tubular tine arms five times for increased strength and the angle of the tines ensure even ground contact, reducing crop contamination. Available in working widths of 18’, 22’, 25’7”, 28’10”, 36’, 43’ and 50’.
MODERN FARM EQUIPMENT
320-352-6543 • Sauk Centre, MN • www.modernfarmequipment.com
Page 16 • Dairy Star • Saturday, April 14, 2012
From Our Side Of The Fence Tell us about your farm invention.
Charlie Sachs, pictured with his dad, Chuck Sachs Eyota, Minn. Olmsted County 175 cows Tell us about your invention. It is a calf mover for the skidloader. We can also leave calves in the boxes for a few days with a heat lamp over them during the winter and move them when needed. We’ve been using them for about 10 years. They work really well. What did you use prior to your invention and what was the dilemma that provoked your discovery? We would carry them or use the skidloader bucket, which meant there was a chance they could jump out.
This makes it a lot easier for the calf and the people. You can pick the calf up and go. Tell about the process and materials you used to make it. How much time did it take to make? There’s not much to it: a pallet for the bottom, wood for gaps on the bottom of the pallet to make it at and ply wood for the sides. You hammer them together and you have a simple calf mover. The front plywood side slides in and out of grooves so it can be removed and get the calf in and out. It took maybe a half hour. We have made a total of about six calf movers. Most of them are made from scrap wood around the farm. Did you encounter any challenges while making it? How did you overcome it? There’s not much to it. They are not too difcult to make and there aren’t any challenges. Do you have any other ideas you’re currently working on? One of our employees made a towel basket holder for the parlor using a two-inch pipeline. It’s sturdy because it’s stainless steel. Tell us about your farm. I farm with my wife, Carrie. We have three kids: Jay (15), CJ (13) and Anna Marie (12). My dad, Chuck, works for us around the farm. In addition to our cows, we own 320 acres and rent 40. We have a double-6 parlor with a freestall barn.
Bruce Telleen Monticello, Iowa Jones County 180 cows Tell us about your invention. A device called the “Sand Trap” is used to help keep sand in the free stalls. The original Sand Trap was built out of tire treads cut into strips about 3.5 inches wide and 45 inches long. They were fastened with stainless steel cable. When completed the Sand Trap looked like a venetian blind that was 57 inches long and 45 inches wide. The Sand Trap was put in the stall about two inches below the curb height. The Sand Trap cut sand usage by 50-70 percent What did you use prior to your invention and what was the dilemma that provoked your discovery? I started using sand for bedding in free stalls back in 1975. At that time, I was farming next to a sand pit, so sand was readily available and inexpensive. After I moved away from the sand pit, I continued to use sand even though it wasn’t as cost effective. Also, the cows seemed to be wasting a considerable amount of the sand. I started thinking about putting something in the bottom of the free stalls to prevent the cows form pawing the sand out. Tell about the process and materials you used to make it. How much time did it take to make? I had stopped at a tire recycler to see about getting an earth mover tire to build a tire scraper. While I was
there, I saw a bunch of rubber strips cut from tire treads. I got to wondering if I could nd a way to fasten them together and put them in the free stalls to keep the cows from kicking the sand out. Eventually, I got to the point of assembling the Sand Traps using stainless steel cable, plastic spacers, and the tire tread strips. Did you encounter any challenges while making it? How did you overcome it? I applied for a patent and eventually received one. I began to manufacture and sell the Sand Traps. After about two years into the process, a serious problem surfaced. Some of the Sand Traps were coming apart in the stalls. Fortunately, it was only a small percentage of what had been sold. I immediately found the problem and corrected it. I continued to build them and did everything I could to replace, repair or x the problems caused by the failed units. After about eight years of dealing with every tire recycler within a 500 mile radius, I decided it was time to make a major design change in the Sand Trap. I found a way to have the tire treads replaced by a manufactured panel. The new Sand Trap II is made from foam injected polypropylene and held together with stainless steel threaded rods and nuts. The second generation of Sand Traps has the original design with improved features of less weight and more uni-
formity, making handling and shipping much easier. Some of the original tire tread models have been in our free stalls for over 16 years. Do you have any other ideas you’re currently working on? A couple of years ago I built a contraption to store big square bales in a 10-foot silage bag. It is very simple. The silage bag ts on the machine and the square bales can be stacked three high inside of it. The machine is advanced forward to make room for three more bales. A 10- by 250-foot silage bag will hold bout 250 3- by 3- by 8-foot bales. Next, I modied the original bagger to allow big round bales to be stored in a bag. The rst bale is put into the bag on end like a barrel and the second bale is set on top. A 10by 250-foot silage bag will hold about 90 big round bales. These “bale baggers” are very simple with no moving parts. Tell us about your farm. My wife, Jani and I bought our farm in 1983. We are fortunate to have several hard-working and dedicated employees. Mike Nietert, his wife, Brandy, and four boys have been with us nearly 10 years. Our son, Klark, and his wife, Brittney, began farming with us full time two years ago after graduating from ISU. Eliseo and his wife, Veronica, and their three children started about one year ago and help us with the three-times-a-day milking. We have about 180 cows milking, feed about 200 steers and farm about 600 acres. We also have a custom forage harvesting business that includes a chopper, two silage baggers, a big square baler and a round baler.
We had been milking 50 cows in a 10-stall stanchion barn. We wanted to eliminate all that bending and save on our knees. Tell about the process and materials you used to make it. How much time did it take to make? After a long planning process, we began by breaking out the old concrete. We then dug out the parlor pit with a small skid loader we borrowed from my brother. We built the parlor ourselves and did much of our own concrete work, but we consulted with our dairy equipment company throughout the entire project. It took us about four weeks from start to nish. Did you encounter any challenges while making it? How did you overcome it? The biggest challenge was milking our cows while we built the new parlor. My brother had just quit milking, so we were able to milk them over at his place. We were calving seasonally at the time, so our main goal was to get the new parlor built before the bulk of our cows started calving on the rst of September. We worked on it during the entire month of August and had one side ready
to go in time. We then milked on one side while we worked to get the other side going. Do you have any other ideas you’re currently working on? We have a machine shed that was put up in the 1970s that we would like to move. We’ve added to our facilities over the years and the shed is now too close to the yard and blocks truck trafc. We would like to simply pick up the shed, turn it a quarter turn and put it back down. It might not get done this year, but we’re thinking about how we would do it. Tell us about your farm. We dairy farm with our son, Steve. We raise all of our own replacement heifers and sell the bull calves when they are two days old. I grew up on a dairy farm located two miles away and started dairying on my own when I got home from Vietnam in 1969. We now have 14 grandchildren, seven girls and seven boys. Steve has six children that range in age from 6 months to 12 years old, and they are starting to help out around the farm. Shirley fed calves and did a lot of other things on the farm when we were younger, but now her main job is to be Grandma!
Doward and Shirley Dykstra Bigelow, Minn. Nobles County 200 cows Tell us about your invention. My son, Steve, and I designed and built our own milking parlor. We started out with a double-4 parlor and expanded it over the years to a double-6 and then to a double-10. What did you use prior to your invention and what was the dilemma that provoked your discovery?
Dairy Star • Saturday, April 14, 2012 • Page 17
The Heavy Duty Mega Frame...only from Penta!
®
LIQUID MANURE TANKS, PUMPS, AGITATORS, AND ALLEY SCRAPERS
MIXERS S HEAVIEST FRAMES IN THE INDUSTRY!
• Consistent Mix • Fast, Easy Unloading Mixer Sizes From 240-1100 Cu. Ft.
Truck Mount Mixers Low Prole Vertical Mixers 3020 • 4120 • 5620
Alley Scrapers
Tanks Spread All Types Of Liquid Manure
If you’ve gotta haul, give us a call!
2410 Trailer And Stationary Vertical Mixer
Powerful PTO Pumps & Agitators
8100 Series ProTwin Slinger
Pro Spread 160 Vertical
GET THE PROTWIN SLINGER ADVANTAGE
• Even and controlled spread pattern • Eliminates material bridging • Simple and dependable • Versatile, multi-purpose unit
SPREADS THE WIDEST VARIETY OF MATERIALS: • pen pack • semi-solids • bedding • semi-liquid • liquid
BIG CASH DISCOUNTS OR LOW RATE FINANCING
The PS 160 sets the new standard for reliability and spreading performance to meet the changing needs of livestock producers. The durable, all-welded construction and solid poly oor of previous ProSpread® models remain, but the new, simple, protected center driveline improves dependability and reduces maintenance. The PS 160 quickly and evenly spreads the toughest solid materials from dairy and feedlot operations with the hydraulically-controlled, variable-speed apron. VertiSpread® vertical beaters provide a consistent, wide spread pattern and superior material breakup to help maximize the value of manure nutrients.
IT’S BIG!
• Designed for a fast and thorough mix, less pressure and feed breakdown • Dependable, heavy-duty roller chain drive runs in oil bath • Low horsepower requirement • Trailer, truck or stationary models
Left-hand Discharge
750-1350 cu. ft. Spreader
Horizontal or vertical beaters Manufactured in Minnesota
A STANDARD ON NORTH AMERICAN FARMS FOR OVER 30 YEARS! Designed to be versatile enough...
...to utilize one piece of equipment for a variety of applications!
DAIRYLAND SUPPLY INC. 320-352-3987 • 1-800-338-6455 SAUK CENTRE
OFF I-94 ON THE CORNER OF HWY. 28 & 71 SOUTH
Kuhn Knight 3142 Reel Mixer
3100 Series Commercial Reel Mixers
What Makes The HYDRA-SPREAD The Best Spreader?
A whole new way to spread.
No Apron Chain, Sprocket or Drive To Ever Wear Out
• Heavy-Duty Upper Beater • Dual Endgate Cylinders • Replaceable Bang Boards • Poly Floor/Sides Won’t Rot or Rust • Innite Speed Adjustment • Heavy Duty Shear Pin Protected PTO • Heaviest Frame In The Business • Operates Year Round With Simple Hydraulics • High Lift Endgate • Tandem Pivot On Solid Shaft • High Ground Clearance • Two Bolts Remove Beater Assembly For Piling • Slurry Pan • Replaceable 3/8” Beater Paddles • All Splined Shafts and Sprockets
HYDRA-SPREAD HYDRA-SPREAD IS THE RECOGNIZED LEADER IN HYDRAULIC PUSHOFF TECHNOLOGY
You asked for a way to spread solid manure ner, and while we were at it, could it be a little wider too. We answered.
Extravert.
With Extravert, the benets stretch far and wide.
www.dairylandsupplyinc.com
Dairy Star • Saturday, April 14, 2012 • Page 19
“... able to consistently ship more of our milk, and higher quality milk.” — Jeremy Kinslow
KINSLOW DAIRY — THE KINSLOW FAMILY Don, Gail, & Jeremy Kinslow; Adam & Lindsie Logston Smithsgrove, Kentucky Milking 650 cows — RHA: 22,500 (3X) — SCC: 170,000 Jeremy Kinslow at the 2009 World Dairy Expo with TJ Pollema Advent Sheena Red he owns with Steve Martin. Sheena was then EX 90 as a senior three-year-old. At right is Sheena as an EX-91 mature cow. Her daughter, TJ-Pollema Redliner Shania-Red, is EX-91 as a three-year-old. Shania is 2011 All-Minnesota senior three for Starlight Acres, and Grand Champion, Best Uddered and Best Bred and Owned at the 2011 National Red & White Convention Show.
“The Udder Comfort™ blue spray is a very employee-friendly product for our 7 employees milking 650 cows 3 times a day. What I like best is it works without having to throw the milk away. We are able to consistently ship more of our milk, and higher quality milk. And we don’t have to worry about the tank,” says Jeremy Kinslow. Jeremy and his sister Lindsie, and her husband Adam, farm with parents Don and Gail at the fourth generation Kinslow Dairy, Smithsgrove, Kentucky. “First we used the white lotion at cattle shows. Then we brought it home for use on fresh cows after every milking for the first few days after calving because it removes the swelling faster.
“We continue to routinely use Udder Comfort spray on all fresh cows and heifers. Our herd has always had a low SCC, but this has helped lower it even more, to be consistently around 170,000, while at the same time, treating fewer cows in the herd.” Quality Udders Make Quality Milk
Keep the milk in the system 1.888.773.7153 1.613.652.9086 uddercomfort.com Call to locate a distributor near you. For external application to the udder only after milking, as an essential component of udder management. Always wash and dry teats thoroughly before milking.
Dairy Star • Saturday, April 14, 2012 • Page 27
Grasp Firmly. Then Apply Science.
You wouldn’t feed this baby just twice a day. Calves are babies too. If left to nurse naturally, the average 100-lb. calf will nurse 6-10 times per day, consume 1.9 to 2.8 gallons of milk, and gain 2-3 lbs. per day.
®
COLOSTRUM REPLACERS / MILK REPLACERS / STARTERS / GROWERS
“…NeoTec4 ® alters some immune and inflammatory responses, including increasing titers to bovine viral diarrhea and respiratory parainfluenza-3 vaccinations, reduces scours, reduces medical treatments for clostridium sickness, and improves growth rates and feed efficiency.”
A conclusion from the most recent of 8 expert reviewed journal articles developing the understanding and use of fatty acids in calf feeds. The 8 articles report the results of 20 U.S. trials on more than 1,100 calves.
With an Urban automatic calf feeder, you can optimize early growth potential, minimize mortality and make better use of your milk replacer or milk.
URBAN CALF FEEDERS
From the Journal of Dairy Science 94:3936–3948 (2011)
Contact Vern Schmitz at Healthy Calves Direct 320.248.6835 or vernschmitz@gmail.com
Request NeoTec4® today and experience better calf performance tomorrow. NeoTec4.com / nurturecalf.com / 800-553-1712 or 800-392-8324
ProFeeds Pine Island, MN 507-356-8313
Doane Grain Service Plainview, MN 507-534-3165
Centra Sota Albany, MN 320-845-4086
Midwest Livestock Larchwood, IA 712-477-2355
HEALTHY CALVES DIRECT
YOUR CALF-RAISING PARTNER
111 N. COLLEGE AVE., SUITE 10 - P.O. BOX 9, ST. JOSEPH, MN 56374
Last Chance… …For Masters Choice Corn! • High-Sugar • High Starch Availability • Fully Flex Ears and Stalks • Yields like your best • Moderate Plant Populations • Superior Natural Plant Health Dwight Burkholder
For more info or dealer Claremont, MN inquiries - please call: 507-279-0292
Rick Tamm
NW Territory Manager
320-267-5021
Larry Hawkins
NC Territory Manager
608-516-0101
Gerard Becker
Long Prairie, MN (320) 290-9261
Hy View Feeds 507-493-5564 Wayne Leitzen Mabel, MN (507) 493-5564
Schueler Farms
Sherman Schueler Willmar, MN (320) 894-4808
Lawlor Farm Center David Burns Lawlor, IA (319) 240-6351
We have some 110 day (Conv., *GT & Quad) 107 day (Conv. & GT), 105 day (Conv. & GT), 93 day, 90 day (Conv.), 87 day (GT), 83 day (Conv.) & Master Graze still remaining! *GT is Glyphosate Tolerant.
Luxemburg Feed Service Luxemburg, MN (320) 252-1513
Greenwald Elevator 330-987-3159 John Dockendorf Greenwald, MN (320) 290-1240
Valley View Ag Russ Funke Dyersville, IA (563) 590-6939
Tony Barthel
Monticello, MN (320) 420-1167
Winscher Seeds Mike Winscher 320-282-6748 Shawn Winscher Royalton, MN (320) 420-4516
Timberline Dairy Service Joe Graber Kalona, IA (319) 656-3527
Jack Stamschror
Tim Huffman
Stock Service
Nelson Horst
Kellog, MN (507) 259-0269 Josh Stock Correll, MN (320) 596-2170
Lee Kurtenbach
Mechanicksville, IA (319) 241-5105
Edwin Lied
Osage, IA (641) 732-1079
Peak Dairy Consulting, Hollandale, WI 608-574-7918 Mt Hope Seed Supply Mt Hope, WI 608-988-6855
DJ Cattle Co.
Daryn Yoder Leon, IA (641) 344-6002
Page 40 • Dairy Star • Saturday, April 14, 2012
Call us for more information! Centre Dairy Equipment Sauk Centre, MN 320-352-5762 • 800-342-2697 Eastern Iowa Dairy Systems Epworth, IA • 563-876-3087 Hobert Sales Inc. Cokato, MN 320-286-6284 • 800-820-6455 (milk)
Fitzgerald, Inc. Elkader, IA • 563-245-2560 Fuller's Milker Center, Inc. Lancaster, WI • 800-887-4634 www.fullersmilkercenter.com Midwest Livestock Systems Pine Island, MN • 800-233-8937 Sioux Falls, SD • 800-705-1447 Beatrice, NE • 800-742-5748 Fullerton, NE • 402-920-1217
Sioux Dairy Equipment, Inc. Rock Valley, IA 712-476-5608 • 800-962-4346 Colton, SD Service 800-944-1217 Edgerton, MN Chemical Sales 507-920-8626
Stearns Vet Outlet and Pharmacy Melrose, MN 320-256-3303 • 800-996-3303 Glencoe, MN 320-864-5575 • 877-864-5575 www.wedocows.com West Central Dairy Supply Henning, MN 218-583-2639 • (emg.) 218-849-2234