March 13, 2021 Dairy Star - 2nd section

Page 1

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Second Section

March 13, 2021

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Page 2 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021

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Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021 • Page 3

Zisk helps remove the risk Hoogendoorn creates free app to project dairy farm prots By Krista Kuzma

krista.k@dairystar.com

IRETON, Iowa – Kevin Hoogendoorn knows the milk prices over the last six years have seen extreme highs and lows. He saw how it was affecting producers. “Dairy farmers will learn how to run their farm like a business or they won’t be farming,” said Hoogendoorn, a dairy veterinarian and management consultant. “The market is too volatile anymore. We can’t just ride it and try to be a good farmer.” This realization drove Hoogendoorn to help farmers nd a solution. He created Zisk, a free app for dairy producers that helps project what prot will be for their dairy farm using realtime prices from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and data to estimate expenses based on farm size and pounds of milk. “My hope for the app is it makes markets less scary,” Hoogendoorn said. “Once you’re familiar with something, it’s not as scary. Just getting dairymen to talk about what the markets are doing, what do they mean and why are they moving – that’s my No. 1 goal.” He hopes this will drive dairy farmers to talk to their advisors to gure out how to capitalize on possible prot. Hoogendoorn never imagined he would be creating technology to help dairy farmers. But, he has always wanted to help them. After working in nutrition consulting for many years after graduating from veterinary school, Hoogendoorn started his own consulting rm to move toward helping dairy farmers with business management. “If you looked at monthly milk price from 1980 to today, it’s astronomical the volatility we’re having today,”

he said. “They didn’t have variability when they were farming in the ‘80s and ‘90s. It was if you work a little harder, treat your cows a little better and get an extra 4 pounds of milk, you’ll make more money. Now, what I see are excellent dairymen with beautiful cows and beautiful operations getting great milk struggling nancially because the markets got ahold of them and are shaking them.” These dairy farmers are not paying attention to the milk price market, HoogenKevin Hoogendoorn doorn said. Many Zisk other farmers who have done milk contracting did not fully understand how to nd the right t for them. Hoogendoorn said one of two things happen in that case. “They either did it right the rst time, thought they were really good at it, and then they tried it again and it went horribly wrong so they swore they would never do it again,” he said. “Or, they did it wrong the rst time and swore they would never do it again.” Hoogendoorn began working with these farms to build nancial projections. “I would ask, ‘Do you have a prot and loss sheet? What accountant are you working with? What’s your cost of production per hundredweight?’ Most of them had no idea,” he said. “Even if they did work with an accountant, they treated their nancials the same way they treated DHIA records – look at your rolling herd average and throw it in the drawer.” The nancial projections Hoogendoorn helped create used futures prices for milk and feed. If there was prot, Hoogendoorn suggested contracting both. “It was really scary for them, but they did it and they said, ‘This really works. I can sleep at night because I’m not worried about the milk price going to $9,’” Hoogendoorn said.

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As new tools like the Dairy Margin rience, Hoogendoorn said making the Coverage Program and Dairy Revenue app turned out to be one of the biggest Protection Program have become avail- learning curves he has experienced. able, Hoogendoorn has begun using “I didn’t do the coding, but what I them in the nancial projections where found with software engineers is they applicable for his clients, which range can code like crazy but you have to tell in herd size from 60 cows to 3,000 them what to code,” he said. “So, I escows. sentially built the app and all the algo“Right now, we’re dealing with rithms on all these excel spreadsheets feed cost,” Hoogendoorn said. “Over and then I would email to them and say 80% of dairies I personally consult with this is what I want it to do.” are skating because we locked in beanHoogendoorn also realized it takes meal when it was under $300 back in a large sum of money to develop an August. We locked in corn in Septem- app. ber. It’s not affecting us so it makes us “I had to do something to keep the more competitive with some of these app free for dairy farmers,” he said. large integrators.” “They get asked to pay for all sorts of That makes Hoogendoorn and his things and everyone wants to sell them clients breathe a sigh of relief. the newest gadget.” “It made me feel so good to be able He turned to companies within the to sit down with dad, mom and maybe the kids and talk about what their plans were for the next year without constantly being in panic mode about whether they were going to lose the farm,” Hoogendoorn said. While Hoogendoorn felt good helping a dozen of his clients, he wanted other dairy KEVIN HOOGENDOORN, ZISK producers across the country to feel the same empowerment to make their dairy busidairy industry to pay for advertisements ness run well. In 2016, Hoogendoorn on the app. took the spreadsheets he created and “Large companies are willing to built them into an app. pay to get their information out to the “It’s an indicator,” Hoogendoorn dairymen, and it’s a way for the dairysaid. “It’s not going to be as accurate men to get the info without paying for as nancial spreadsheets, but it’s a good it,” Hoogendoorn said. indicator because it’s constantly updatRight now, the dairy producers using from the CME – up-to-date milk, ing the app own 1.8 million dairy cows, corn and soybean prices. Plus, all the or about 20% of the cows in the United other costs of running a dairy farm. States, Hoogendoorn said. There’s a lot of data out there. … I built While the app offers markets, proall the cost in, and I feed in the markets jections and current news, Hoogenfrom the CME and project to a dairy- doorn hopes he can develop it to also man.” include a place for dairy farmers to chat Test versions of the app were and interact. put out in 2017 and the app ofcially “My goal is to make this app the launched in early 2018. one stop for dairy farmers,” Hoogen“The No. 1 goal from the beginning doorn said. “I would love to see it keep was it had to be simple, clean and easy growing and turn into something amazto use,” Hoogendoorn said. ing for the dairy farmer.” Without much previous tech expe-

“Just getting dairymen to talk about what markets are doing, what do they mean and why are they moving – that’s my No. 1 goal.”

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Page 4 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021

Hoiberg outlines steps to a better night’s sleep

Restoration key to improved physical, mental health By Jennifer Coyne jenn@dairystar.com

There are seasons in life when lack of sleep is a part of the journey on the farm and in the home. However, consistent poor sleep is dangerous. “You can get by going through poor sleep for a short time, but evidence tells us if it becomes habit, that’s a bad habit to have,” Dennis Hoiberg said. “Poor sleep leads to bad consequences, anxiety, obesity, overthinking, underthinking.” Hoiberg, of Lessons Learnt Consulting based in Australia, discussed three focus areas individuals should be aware of in attaining a restorative sleep during his presentation, “Sleep the Fuel of Your Resilience,” Feb. 25 as part of Minnesota Milk Producers Association’s Minne-Series. Good quality sleep is dened as getting seven to nine hours for those ages 8 to 65-plus, said Hoiberg. This amount of sleep will leave a person feeling reenergized and ready to take on the day. “You don’t ever want to sleep through exhaustion, which is waking up and still being tired,” Hoiberg said. “You want to sleep through restoration. How do you get that? I reckon I know the secret because sleep is a strategy.” To attain restorative sleep, Hoiberg

recommends developing a process he calls power sleeping. This means focusing on the bedroom environment, procedure leading to bedtime and a person’s mindset. “If you do all three of these things, I guarantee you will get better quality night sleeps,” Hoiberg said. There are two purposes for the bedroom, one being sleep. To achieve this, Hoiberg said the human brain must be trained to know that when enDennis Hoiberg tering a bedroom, Lessons Learnt the intent is to lay Consulting down. “Our brain is not designed to allow us to thrive but to survive today,” Hoiberg said. “We have to have the brain so highly trained and disciplined so that when you walk into the bedroom, your brain says to you what is going to happen in this room.” Training the brain to recognize the purpose of a bedroom begins with the environment. Bedrooms should be bare of blue light – meaning eliminate electronics such as TVs, radios and phones. “We know blue light restricts the release of melatonin that allows us to sleep,” Hoiberg said. “Bedrooms have to be dark to the point of being uncomfortable.” With this, the bedroom should be free of desks or any other pieces of furniture that would send a signal to

the brain to begin working rather than sleeping. Additionally, the perfect temperature for sleep is about 65 degrees Fahrenheit with the best sleeping posture any way to keep the extremities of the body warm. “As long as those are warm, you’ll sleep well,” Hoiberg said. The Australian also encouraged people to consider the mattress, blankets and pillows they use. “You need a bed that works with you,” Hoiberg said. Once the bedroom environment is created, the next step to power sleeping is nding a bedtime procedure. Research from Syracuse University shows that the best time to go to bed is at 10:37 p.m. and wake up at 5:56 a.m. It takes 45 minutes for the brain to become relaxed enough to go to sleep, so carefully planning out how that time is spent is critical, said Hoiberg. The near hour prior to bedtime should allow for one to wind down from the day, whether that is reading, taking a warm bath or conversing with others in the household. “We think sleep comes naturally, but we know it doesn’t,” Hoiberg said. “Find ways to slow your brain down, not rev it up. Don’t spend time on your emails, on social media, nothing that might excite you.” Hoiberg also suggested not eating or intensly exercising three hours before this time. Consuming alcohol may also interrupt a sound night’s sleep, as well as caffeine after midday. The third component to power

sleeping is one’s mindset. Hoiberg analogized getting a good night sleep with a beaver’s actions. “Beavers build dams to control ow of water and I reckon it’s fascinating,” Hoiberg said. “During the day, we have all these sticks and rocks that create worry for us. All these issues start to build up, and like the beaver, we build these dams and don’t let them go. When the head is full of this, there is no way to get a good night sleep.” To create the right mindset for sleep, Hoiberg suggested writing down thoughts on a piece of paper or talking through them with a partner. Take this time to reect on the day and what is truly in one’s control. “Anytime we have a critical decision to make, I say, ‘Mate, let’s sleep on it,’” Hoiberg said. “We come back in the morning and are much clearer in our thinking. There is something beautiful and empowering about emptying your brain.” If after incorporating power sleeping into one’s day and sleep is still challenging, a doctor’s visit may be needed to address possible issues such as sleep apnea or restless legs syndrome, said Hoiberg. “If you’re sleeping poorly, take it seriously for it could be a real message of your emotional wellbeing,” he said. “The most important person in the world is you. If you can’t look after yourself, you can’t look after your family, your mates, your farm. The world is made to be joyful and sleep is a critical part of that.”

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Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021 • Page 5

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Page 6 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021

Woman combines learning on farm, in classroom

Daul’s dual education

By Danielle Nauman danielle.n@dairystar.com

BLOOMINGTON, Wis. – There was once a blonde girl who loved to help her dad on their family’s dairy farm. She learned to love the farm, and eventually that little girl grew up and decided to embark on her own journey to establish a career in the dairy industry. “My passion for dairy probably started around the age of 5. My dad raised me on the farm,” said Abby Daul. Daul grew up helping her father, Ben Daul, on the family’s Daul Dairy Farm near Mosinee where they milk 64 cows. As a student at Marsheld Middle School, Daul was introduced to showing dairy cattle through her involvement in FFA.

DANIELLE NAUMAN/DAIRY STAR

Abby Daul works during the week at Moravits Dairy in Bloomington, Wisconsin, then travels over three hours home on weekends to help her father on their family dairy near Mosinee, Wisconsin. She took �me off from schooling during the pandemic. “Getting involved with showing really sparked a passion for me, not just for dairy farming, but for breeding animals too,” Daul said. “I started out just showing one heifer each year. Then one year, a family friend, Charlie Wegner,

blessed me with a free Jersey calf. That calf really sparked a passion in me.” That calf, who Daul named Boggs, continued to stoke the ames of her passion by taking home honorable mention grand champion Jersey honors at the

Central Wisconsin State Fair as a junior 2-year-old. “I grew up with the Holsteins and like them for their production, but I have really grown fond of the personality that Jerseys have,” Daul said. Boggs has provided a foun-

dation for Daul’s herd and has several daughters and granddaughters on the ground. Daul said she now owns 10 cows in her father’s herd, a mix of Jerseys, Holsteins and a Brown Swiss. Daul’s interest in showing has led her to an increased interest in registered animals. She has begun investing in registered Holsteins and Jerseys. “My dad always used to tell me that you can’t milk a registration paper, but I think he enjoys it more than he would like me to think,” Daul said. “Even with the Jerseys, he gets excited when we make the decisions on what to breed them to.” When Daul graduated from Marsheld High School in 2019, she decided to continue her education by enrolling in the dairy herd management program at Southwest Wisconsin Technical College in Fennimore. “My parents said I needed get away from the farm for a while to decide if it was something I really wanted to do,” Daul said. “We had traveled through the Fennimore area on our way to Iowa, and I liked the area. Then I visited the school and decided it was the right Turn to DAUL | Page 7

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Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021 • Page 7

ConƟnued from DAUL | Page 6

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Abby Daul (leŌ) works with her dad, Ben, on the weekends at Daul Dairy Farm near Mosinee, Wisconsin. Daul hopes to eventually take over the family’s dairy. place for me. It just felt like home.” While attending SWTC, Daul found employment at nearby Moravits Dairy, a 500-cow dairy farm in Bloomington. There she helps with many aspects of the farm, including calf care and eld work. Daul enjoyed her classes at SWTC and her time at Moravits Dairy during the week. She drove 3.5 hours on weekends to continue to help her dad on the family farm. While at SWTC, Daul learned dairy judging was an activity she really enjoyed. “One of my instructors, Ryan Weigel, was looking to form a new judging team, so I got involved with that,” Daul said. “I like to get to look at different cattle. Everyone sees cattle different,

When the coronavirus pandemic forced SWTC to move to virtual instruction to close out the 2019-20 school year, Dual was disappointed. “The great thing about the dairy herd management program at SWTC is how hands-on all of the learning is,” Daul said. “You just are not able to have the same experience through virtual school.” The announcement that the school would continue in a virtual platform for the 2020-21 school year caused Daul to decide to take a year off from her schooling in hopes to be able to continue when she could again have the hands-on experience she had come to love at SWTC. However, Daul did not pack her bags and head to the family farm. She chose to continue her education by working at Moravits Dairy during the week and heading home on weekends. For the 2021-22 school year, Daul decided to stretch her legs in another direction; she has been accepted into the University of Wisconsin-Madison Farm and Industry Short Course for this coming winter where she will study in their dairy herd management program. After her rst year of short course, Daul is undecided on her next step but prefers to keep her options open. “I would like to go home and take over our family farm at some point,” Daul said. … “But right now that future is kind of uncertain. One thing I know is that I don’t ever see myself not in the dairy industry.”

“I would like to go home and take over our family farm at some point.” ABBY DAUL, DAIRY FARMER

and I like to see how my opinion compares with others.” Daul competed in contests at the Accelerated Genetics Dairy Judging Contest in Viroqua and at the North American International Livestock Exposition in Louisville, Kentucky. She also competed in the practical contest held at the World Dairy Expo in Madison.

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Page 8 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021

Research that replicates the real world

phdR&D conducts trials alongside commercial dairy By Stacey Smart

stacey.s@dairystar.com

FORT ATKINSON, Wis. – Located on the site of a 1,000-cow dairy, phdR&D is a research facility unlike any other. The dairy research center near Fort Atkinson has access to a large herd for populating trials – a feature not found at most research institutions. “We have many cows that can t our clients’ criteria, which gives us an advantage over other facilities,” said Dr. Patrick French, chief scientist at phdR&D. “Many research institutions do not have a big enough herd to do this. For example, some universities may take over one year to acquire enough animals to complete a transition cow study. Timeliness is important in research. The longer a trial runs, the more inuence external factors can have.” Since opening its doors in the fall of 2013, hundreds of trials have taken place at phdR&D which serves a broad geographic spectrum of U.S. and international clients. According to French, phdR&D mimics a commercial setting, providing real-world production data as it operates adjacent to a large, high-producing dairy. Studies are done on calves, transition

cows, early and mid-lactation cows and dry cows. The 40,000-square-foot facility includes animal housing, laboratory space, a conference center, and feed ingredient storage with weighing capabilities. Conducting research on behalf of its clients, phdR&D is a private standalone dairy contract research organization testing products and nutritional strategies in a controlled environment that replicates real-life scenarios. All studies are condential, and clients may choose to publish the data or use it to support product sales or technical aspects of a product. “Most of our dairy contract work centers around nutrition,” French said. Companies needing a place to conduct research can take advantage of the resources and expertise phdR&D offers, including trial design, statistical analysis, and data interpretation services. phdR&D carries out the work, implementing protocol treatments and collecting and organizing data for the client while providing updates throughout the project’s duration. At the trial’s conclusion, a nal report is provided to the client. “We work closely with each client to learn their goals for the project and then tailor or customize each trial according to client needs,” said Saige Hagerty, director of research at phdR&D. phdR&D offers three testing venues within its temperature-controlled, cross-ventilated barn: group pens, BioControl gates, and tiestalls. A fourth venue is located outside to accommo-

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The BioControl feeding system at phdR&D tracks individual feed intake and feeding behaviors/paƩerns on 24 stalls, providing detailed data to clients. The research site is located on a 1,000-cow dairy near Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin. date calf studies. The facility includes 12 pens that hold eight cows each for a total of 96 animals, which serves as a model for large studies. Each pen has its own water trough to measure water consumption. The setup allows the delivery of two or three nutritional treatments with four or six pens per treatment to enable replication. “To replicate research, you need more than one cow or one pen per study,” French said. “At phdR&D, we’ve replicated conditions of a mod-

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ern dairy as close as possible.” The BioControl feeding system tracks individual feed intake and feeding behaviors/patterns on 24 stalls, providing detailed information on dry matter intake, number of meals, meal size, length of visit, total minutes spent eating per day, and other data. French said phdR&D was the rst dairy research facility in the U.S. to install this technology. Each electronically Turn to RESEARCH | Page 9

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Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021 • Page 9

ConƟnued from RESEARCH | Page 8 controlled feeding tub holds a cow’s daily allowance and particular treatment, which is distributed once per day in the morning. “The BioControl venue provides ne details about a cow’s eating habits, giving clients comprehensive data for their study,” Hagerty said. “The system also allows us to top-dress feed to create individual diets.” Each cow in an experiment is assigned to a unique feeding station, and the BioControl gate is programmed to open for her specic RFID tag. The tub sits on weight cells and weighs feed before and after each feeding. When the cow is done eating, the gate closes automatically to prevent another cow from entering. The tiestall or metabolism venue is an area designed for

feed and water intake. The stalls make it easy to deliver individual nutrition treatments and do frequent sampling while measuring response over many cows. Calf research is performed on calves housed in individual hutches on the commercial side of the dairy. Most calf work is done during the wet phase between birth and weaning. Sometimes, calf studies will last up to 120 days. Calf research is centered around nutrition allowance, growth, health and morbidity. phdR&D will track milk yield in these animals 2 years later when they reach their rst lactation. “Calf and transition are areas with a lot of interest,” French said. “Animals are susceptible to disease and morbidity during this time, therefore, anything supporting health in that timeframe is popular.” Venues are client-specic with one venue typically used per trial, however, the use of BioControl and group pens are often combined into SAIGE HAGERTY, PHDR&D one trial Hagerty said. The farm also intensive research. In-depth has 10 rumen-stulated cows measurements can be con- which can be used for digestducted in these nine stalls ibility and bypass studies. while monitoring individual Cows are selected based

“Because there are so many cows to choose from, it’s easy to select a good population that’s pretty uniform.”

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phdR&D is a dairy research center serving U.S. and internaƟonal clients based on a commercial dairy near Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin. Since opening its doors in 2013, hundreds of trials have taken place at the 40,000-square-foot facility. on the trial’s desired parameters and protocols and can be blocked according to milk production, lactation number, days in milk, etc. Animals go through an acclimation process prior to the trial starting.. “Because there are so many cows to choose from, it’s easy to select a good population that’s pretty uniform,” Hagerty said. “We typically do not use the same cows over and over. Rather, cows will participate in a study once a year or maybe twice a year if it’s a short study.” A cow’s progress can be tracked throughout her lactation, even after she returns to

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the dairy. Once cows rejoin the commercial operation, staff can look at carryover effects of the treatments. phdR&D’s layout enables exibility within venues depending on trial requirements. Cows at phdR&D are milked in the commercial dairy parlor, and color-coded ear tags ensure cows return to the correct pen after milking. Body weights and milk yields are recorded three times daily. All cows also wear a Cow Manager tag to help monitor health and provide additional data regarding rumination, activity, and ear temperature. Samples requested by

ear trial are taken as needed. All samples are processed in the onsite lab and sent out for analysis.. phdR&D gives businesses in the dairy industry access to a world-class facility for conducting controlled scientic research that can accurately indicate how a product or practice might work in the real world. Specializing in on-farm research, phdR&D has become the site of product innovations and management discoveries designed to benet and advance the dairy industry.

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The “Mielke” Market Weekly

Page 10 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021

Class III futures see price on the rise

The Agriculture Department announced the February Federal order Class III benchmark milk price at $15.75 per hundredweight (cwt.), down 29 cents from January and $1.25 below February 2020. . Late Friday morning Class III futures portended a March price at $16.34; April, $17.56; May, $18.07; June, $18.16; July, $18.25; August, $18.25; September, $18.30; October, $18.25; November, $18.07; and December at $17.79. The February Class IV price is $13.19 per cwt., down 56 cents from January, $3.01 below a year ago, and the lowest Class IV price since September 2020. In politics, the House passed a $1.9 trillion stimulus bill on Feb. 27, sending it on to the Senate for passage. HighGround Dairy says Congress is expected to approve the bill for the President’s signature by Mar. 14, when current jobless benets expire. The package includes funds for additional stimulus checks and extends the bolstered unemployment benets through August. The 15% increase in food stamp benets will be extended through September. Global dairy traders triggered some shock waves Tuesday as the morning’s Global Dairy Trade auction’s weighted average skyrocketed 15.0%, biggest increase since Sept. 2015 and the eighth consecutive session of gain. All products offered were in the black except buttermilk powder, which was off 0.3%. The average winning price was $4,231 U.S., up from $3,746 on Feb. 16. Gains were again led by whole milk powder, up 21%, following a 4.3% rise last time. Skim milk powder was up 3.5%, after inching up 0.3% on Feb. 16. GDT butter was up 13.7%, after a 2% gain last time, and anhydrous milkfat was up 7.4%, following a 1.1% gain. GDT Cheddar was up 1.3%, after climbing 2.4%. StoneX Group says the GDT 80% butterfat butter price equates to $2.5780 per pound U.S., up 30.8 cents from the last event and compares to CME butter which closed Friday at a huge discount, $1.69. GDT Cheddar equated to $1.9415 per pound, up 5.8 cents, and compares to Friday’s CME block Cheddar at $1.7325. GDT skim milk powder averaged $1.4976 per pound, up from $1.4548, and whole milk powder averaged $1.9795, up from $1.64. CME Grade A nonfat dry milk closed Friday at $1.1775 per pound. Another shock wave came this week from the Biden Administration’s announcement that it will not renew Uncle Sam’s Food Box program. Speaking in the Mar. 8 Dairy Radio Now broadcast, Dairy and Food Market Analyst editor, Matt

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Gould, reported that the Administration says food security is still a priority but will go about it in a different way. Funding to food banks will be increased instead so they can purchase the foods they desire. Food welfare programs will also be increased, according to Gould. The hit on dairy, says Gould, is that the Food Box program has purchased about 2% of total U.S. milk production and that will surely drop with the new program, and have a negative price effect on dairy. On a brighter note, the surge in the week’s GDT had New Zealand whole milk powder prices up 22%, primarily driven by the purchases of China, he said. “The last time that we saw China be the aggressor in dairy markets, you’d have to go back to the 20132014 period, the period of all-time record high milk prices to U.S. dairy farmers and, near to, or the most protable years ever for dairy farmers.” He said it remains to be seen if China will keep this up and thus put us into an inationary milk price period, but “All eyes are on China right now.” HighGround Dairy reports that New Zealand saw the strongest January on record for dairy moving into China, most notably whole milk powder and uid milk & cream, but exports of skim milk powder, cheese and fat were also very strong. “Calendar year 2020 was an all-time high for cheese moving to China with the trend persisting thus far in 2021,” according to HGD. “Lower offer volumes at GDT events in recent months translated into weaker SMP exports into January. Signicant declines were noted to Southeast Asia,” according to HGD. Back on the home front; U.S. January cheese output totaled 1.12 billion pounds, down 1.2% from December but 0.5% above January 2020 and the strongest January on record, according to USDA’s latest Dairy Products report. Wisconsin produced 278 million pounds of that total, down 0.8% from December but 0.3% above a year ago. California output, at 211.1 million pounds, was up 1.2% from December but 0.9% below a year ago. Idaho, with 87.8 million pounds, was up 2.7% from December and 2.9% above a year ago. Italian type cheese totaled 481.5 million pounds, down 0.7% from December and 0.8% below a year ago. American type cheese totaled 459.3 million pounds, down 0.8% from December but 5% above a year ago. Mozzarella output, at 374.6 million pounds, was down 1.9% from a year ago. Cheddar, the cheese traded daily at the CME, crept up to 337.6 million pounds, up 0.1% from De-

By Lee Mielke

cember and 18.4 million pounds or a bearish 5.7% above a year ago. Churns produced 206.9 million pounds of butter, a record for January, up 0.3% from December and a bearish 13.5 million pounds or 7.0% above a year ago. Yogurt production totaled 384.2 million pounds, up 10.5% from a year ago. Dry whey totaled 83.9 million pounds, up 2.2 million or 2.8% from December but 400,000 pounds or 0.4% below a year ago. Dry whey stocks inched up to 67.4 million pounds, up 2.8% from December and 7.1% above those a year ago. Nonfat dry milk output slipped to 197 million pounds, down 9.4 million pounds or 4.6% from December but were 20.7 million or 11.7% above a year ago. Stocks grew to 305.3 million pounds, up 22.1 million pounds or 7.8% from December and a 24.8 million pounds or 8.8% above a year ago. Skim milk powder production fell to 36.9 million pounds, down 4.3 million pounds or 10.4% from December and 3.2 million pounds or 8.0% below a year ago. The shipping container shortage may be affecting exports of U.S. powder. One of the measures of dairy farm protability continues to slip, as milk prices fall and feed costs keep rising. The USDA’s latest Ag Prices report shows the January milk feed ratio at 1.98, down from 2.18 in December, down from 2.42 in January 2020, and the lowest since May 2020’s 1.77. 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, thus one pound of milk could only purchase 1.98 pounds of dairy feed of that blend in January. The US All-Milk price averaged $17.50 per cwt, down $1.00 from December and $2.10 below the January 2020 average. The national average corn price climbed to $4.24 per bushel, up 27 cents per bushel from December, which followed an 18 cent rise the month before, and was priced 45 cents per bushel above January 2020. Soybeans averaged $10.90 per bushel, up 40 cents from November, which followed a 20 cent rise from November and $2.06 per bushel above a year ago. Alfalfa hay averaged $171 per ton, up $2.00 from December and a year ago. Looking at the cow side of the ledger; the January cull price for beef and dairy combined averaged $59.70 per cwt., up $1.60 from December, $1.70 below January 2020, and $11.90 below the 2011 base average of $71.60 per cwt. In the week ending Feb.20, 59,600 dairy cows were sent to slaughter, down 6,900 from the previous week and 6,100 or 9.3% less than that week a year ago. The National Milk Producers Federation (NMPF) reports “The Dairy Margin Coverage program margin dropped below the maximum $9.50 per cwt. coverage Turn to MIELKE | Page 11 CLIP AND SAVE

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level to deliver a nal monthly payment for 2020 of 72 cents per cwt. in December, bringing the average payments for the maximum coverage level during all of 2020 to 73 cents per cwt. Payouts under the program, the main federal safety net for dairy producers, are expected for most of this year.” “With year-end data now reported, the annual average U.S. all-milk price for 2020 was $18.30 per cwt., 30 cents below 2019,” says NMPF. “But with the uncharacteristically high level of direct Coronavirus Food Assistance program payments and payment disparities due to the high level of Class III milk depooled from federal orders last year, the all-milk price is less reective of average farmer revenues than typical. Also, the number of licensed U.S. dairies declined to 31,657 in 2020, a decrease of 7.5% from the previous year. That is slower than the loss rate in 2019 but still above historical averages,” NMPF concludes. Meanwhile, the latest Margin Watch (MW) from Chicago-based Commodity & Ingredient Hedging LLC., stated that “With the exception of the spot period in rst quarter, dairy margins improved over the last half of February as higher milk prices, which advanced to new contract highs in deferred months, offset generally steady feed costs over the past couple weeks.” The MW admitted that U.S. milk output has been increasing, but “is occurring against a backdrop of stronger demand which is helping to support prices.”Most of the milk gain was from increasing cow numbers, according to the MW. It cited the “rising output in Midwestern states, with the new Glanbia cheese plant in St. Johns, Michigan helping to support growth in that part of the country.” The cash dairy market has to balance the GDT’s exuberance with January’s Dairy Products data. Block Cheddar closed the rst Friday of March at $1.7325 per pound, up 11.50 cents on the week and the highest since Jan. 19, but 1.75 cents below a year ago. The barrels nished at $1.5075, up 8.75 cents on the week, 3 cents above a year ago, but 22.50 cents below the blocks. There were 12 cars of block that traded hands on the week at the CME and 9 of barrel. Dairy cooperatives are again leading efforts to curb milk output growth, according to NMPF, by reviving base plans imposed in 2020 to deal with output that grew by nearly 3% during last year’s fourth quarter. NMPF says that “removed some volatility from markets, with cheese and milk prices settling at relatively stable, but also relatively low levels, as domestic commercial use of milk in all products dropped to nearly at levels and increases in exports also slowed.” Midwestern cheesemakers tell Dairy Market News they are keeping ahead of the widely available milk priced at $7 to $2 under class. Some block cheesemakers suggest buyers are hesitant, as the availability of blocks has grown. Western cheesemakers also say there is plenty of milk to buy and cheese output is active. Inventories are building but much is already sold. Congestion at ports has delayed some shipments, backing them to manufacturers’ warehouses. International buyer interest is present due to favorable U.S. prices but they often want to forward buy several months out. The gap between cash prices and futures prices makes manufacturers hesitant to do this, says DMN. Cheese is moving well through contracts but domestic buyers are “reticent.” Retail sales are ahead of last year and there’s been a small uptick in food service interest but overall demand is “shaky,” says DMN. Spot butter shot up to $1.7150 per pound Tuesday, highest since July 27, 2020, but saw a Friday close at $1.69, still 22 cents higher on the week but 16.50 cents below a year ago when it fell 13 cents. 35

Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021 • Page 11

sales were made on the week. Butter contacts expected some upside following the “new crop” butter rule on the CME, but few expected the nearly 25 cent bump in its rst two days. Some question the sustainability of the markets with the amount of bulk butter available, but domestic prices continue to be a good value to exporter interests and there are some bullish indicators moving forward, says DMN. Western butter makers are actively churning with plentiful cream available and heavy inventories. Demand has increased in domestic and export markets as U.S. butter is favorably priced compared to international competitors. A few contacts say export butter manufacturing lines are “maxed out.” There was a butter-battle of sorts north of the border the last week of February, as the Canadian dairy industry dealt with a controversial local news article that went viral. The Feb. 26 Dairy and Food Market Analyst (DFMA) reported that the article claimed Canadian butter was “overly hard because the country’s dairy farmers are relying on palm oil and palmitic

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acid as feed ingredients.” “The article set off a public relations storm that resulted in Canada’s dairy processing lobbyist issuing a statement condemning its use and Dairy Farmers of Canada, the country’s dairy farm lobby, asking farms to voluntarily stop feeding the ingredients,” according to the DFMA. Cash Grade A nonfat dry milk closed at $1.1775 per pound, highest since Jan. 21, up 4.50 cents on the week and 6.25 cents above a year ago, with a hefty 33 carloads nding new homes on the week. Dry whey nished Friday at 58 cents per pound, a record high for its three year lifespan, besting its Oct. 17, 2018 peak by 0.50 cents, and 23.25 cents above a year ago. There were 5 sales reported for the week at the CME. Cooperatives Working Together members accepted 19 offers of export assistance this week to capture sales of 756,186 pounds of Cheddar, 771,618 pounds of butter, and 868,621 pounds of cream cheese. The product will go to Asia, the Middle East, North Africa, Oceania, and South America through July.

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Page 12 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021

Grain Markets r Ot he

ts Oa

bea S oy

Co rn

ns

March 10, 2021 Sanborn, MN Meadowlands Farmers Co-op

5.14

13.70

Almena, WI Synergy Cooperative

4.74

13.46

St. Cloud, MN ADM

5.34

14.09

Westby, WI Premier Co-op

4.94

13.51

Cadott, WI Cadott Grain Service

4.87

13.55

Pipestone, MN Cargill

5.34

14.09

Muscoda, WI Riverdale Ag Service

4.98

13.59

Wheat 5.58

GarÀeld Pro-Ag Farmer’s Co-op

4.99

13.45

Wheat 6.21

Monona, IA Innovative Ag

5.04

13.61

Watertown, SD Watertown Co-op Elevator

4.99

13.62

Whitewater, WI Landmark Services Co-op

5.07

13.59

Dennison, MN Central Farm Service

4.94

13.63

Durand, WI Countryside Co-op

4.78

13.44

Glenwood, MN CHS Prairie Lakes

4.94

13.48

2.96

S. Wheat 6.01 W. Wheat 5.71

Wheat 5.80

Wheat 6.26

HELPING GOOD MANAGERS MAKE BETTER TRADING DECISIONS Fortunes can be made or lost in commodity markets during periods of extreme volatility. Today’s commodity craziness is being driven by various extreme fundamentals, with most of the credit going to China’s unsatiable appetite for commodities. It seems that each week there is a new headline of a commodity market that China stepped into and bought up the excess inventory. What seems odd about China’s demand is that it isn’t one commodity. It is for varied and across all regions of the world. Everything from ethanol, corn, soybeans, grain sorghum, barley/EU, canola/Canada, dairy products/NZ, and energy. Why the sudden appetite? Is this a permanent trend? Do they know something we don’t know? One of the sleeper U.S. dairy product markets over the past year has been whey. Prices were under heavy pressure from lost export demand to China from the ASF outbreak. As that demand returns inventories have tightened allowing whey prices to improve. Whey futures are trading between 53-56.5 cents for all of 2021. This compares to a 29-38 cent range for most of 2020. This whey price improvement has added $1.50/cwt to the value of Class III.

Spot butter prices have rallied from an early February low of $1.21 to over $1.70 in recent trading. This compares to EU butter at $2.09 and NZ $2.50. If U.S. butter and nonfat dry milk prices continue to narrow the spread with international competitors, producers with PPD’s more heavily exposed to Class I, II, and IV will see improved pay prices. December FMMO data showed a significant amount of Class III milk that has been de-pooled since June 2020 beginning to return to the pool. This will help take some of the disfunction out of the FMMO pricing and PPD calculations as the Class III and IV price spread narrows. The cost to produce milk continues to move higher with 2022 setting up to see more of what is happening in 2021. It is almost surprising that profitability looks as good as it does for our client network if feed wasn’t contracted early, but especially where it was. We will be taking some of our staff to the Central Plains Dairy Expo. I would like to personally invite each of you to stop in and meet us in our booth.

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Area Hay Auction Results

Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021 • Page 13

Fort Atkinson Hay

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Rock Valley Hay Auction Co.

March 3, 90 loads

1st crop 2nd crop 3rd crop Grass

Small Squares $80-165/ton $170-220/ton $190-200/ton $170/ton

3 3 2 1

loads loads loads load

1st Crop 2nd Crop 3rd Crop 4th Crop Straw Grass

Large Squares $145-150/ton $130-190/ton $120-240/ton $235-240/ton $75-110/ton $120/ton

3 5 7 2 3 1

loads loads loads loads loads load

1st Crop 2nd Crop 3rd Crop 4th Crop Grass Oats CRP Corn Stalk Rye Balage

Rounds $70-160/ton $100-175/ton $110-170/ton $155/ton $40-165/ton $65-110/ton $60/ton $40-55/ton $60-65/ton $50/ton

18 loads 9 loads 11 loads 1 load 10 loads 3 loads 1 load 4 loads 2 loads 1 load

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March 4, 85 loads

Grass

Small Squares $150/ton

2nd crop 4th crop Grass Mixed

Large Squares $145-170/ton $152.50/ton $60-105/ton $132.50-142.50/ton

1st crop 2nd crop 3rd crop 4th crop Grass Cron stalks

Large Rounds $137.50/ton $137.50/ton $132.50-167.50/ton $140-145/ton $65-155/ton $32.50-42.50/ton

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Page 14 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021

DAIRYING ACROSS AMERICA

De Jongs dairy in High Plains of Texas Natural Prairie Dairy has four organic farmsites in panhandle, one in Indiana By Krista Kuzma

krista.k@dairystar.com

HARTLEY, Texas – When the De Jongs were looking to move their dairy away from urban encroachment in central Texas, the High Plains in the panhandle was the perfect t. “It is wide open, not a lot of people and a lot of feedlots with cattle,” Cheri De Jong said. De Jong and her husband, Donald, started their certied organic dairy, Natural Prairie Dairy, in 2005 in Hartley, which is about 70 miles north of Amarillo and close to the borders of Oklahoma and New Mexico. What started as one dairy site has now turned into four dairy sites within a few miles of each other with a total of 14,000 milking cows and 16,000 heifers being raised as replace-

ments. Natural Prairie Dairy also includes a new 3,500-cow dairy site in Lake Village, Indiana, along with a farming operation in Colorado growing wheat and alfalfa hay. “In all three states we have a footprint with farming operations with our grazing elds, grasses and organic corn, wheat and alfalfa,” De Jong said. Grazing circles surround each milking site to accommodate the required grazing days per year for cows that give certied organic milk. They also have satellite farms 30-some miles away from Hartley to grow more feed. “We have found it to be advantageous to have not every single acre you own in one big area in case hail or storms come,” De Jong said. The landscape is at without many trees and center pivot

PHOTO SUBMITTED

Cheri and Donald De Jong are the owners of Natural Prairie Dairy, a cerƟed organic dairy farm with four sites milking 14,000 cows in Hartley, Texas, and one site milking 3,500 cows in Lake Village, Indiana.

PHOTO SUBMITTED

Cows at Natural Prairie Dairy graze on pasture at a farmsite near Hartley, Texas.

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irrigation is needed for their elds and pastures. Although summers are hot and typically see temperatures up to 100 degrees, De Jong said it is not humid. “That’s one of the nice parts about where we’re at,” De Jong said. “It’s not humid so cows do not go down in milk production much at all. I think that’s why cattle and heifers do very well in this area.”

Spreaders •

Spring and fall will bring moderate weather along with thunderstorms and strong winds. All dairy sites have freestall barns to accommodate winters that typically brings temperatures in the teens. While the De Jongs and their team members did not enjoy the cold snap earlier this year when they experienced several days with -12 degree

temperatures, it is not out of the ordinary for the area to receive snow or cold weather. “We can button up the barns and keep the cows pretty happy,” De Jong said. “We’re used to it. We have extra tractors to move snow around. We were very well prepared for the cold snap.” Because their area of the Turn to TEXAS | Page 15

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ConƟnued from TEXAS | Page 14

Tues

Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021 • Page 15

ivestock Auction Com L e i r i a r P pany 43 Riverside Drive g n Long Prairie, MN 56347 Lo

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., March 16 Feeder & Slaughter Cattle Sale

with hay/straw, baby calves, feeder cattle, replacement cattle, goats, sheep, hogs, fat and slaughter cattle

Fri., March 19 Dairy Sale - Noon Tues., March 23 Feeder & Slaughter Cattle Sale PHOTO SUBMITTED

This VARCOR system, which puts manure through a vapor recompression process, turns manure into clean water, aqueous ammonia and a powder NPK ferƟlizer. state is not on the same grid as the rest of Texas, their dairy sites did not lose power. “I think the biggest issue is many of the milk plants were shut down or they didn’t have power,” De Jong said. “There was a lot of dumping of milk, but most of it was conventional.” Fortunately, a portion of Natural Prairie Dairy’s milk goes north, and the family was able to nd space for the other portion of their milk at other organic plants. All of Natural Prairie Dairy’s milk is sold directly to regional grocers including H-E-B, Kroger and Meijer, which have their own milk plants and distribute the milk under private labels. It has been this way since they rst began in 2005. At the time, the De Jongs had set up a conventional dairy in nearby Dalhart after dairying 15 years on a conventional site in central Texas. When they arrived in the panhandle, friends approached them about also starting an organic farming venture alongside their conventional dairy. They decided to add organic dairy to growing certied organic forages too. “There was a big need at the time from our customers that wanted certied organic milk,” De Jong said. “(Organic milk) was just coming out and really hard to nd.” As soon as they nished the rst organic dairy site, the De Jongs were contacted by their customers asking for more milk. So, they built another followed by two more as the market expanded. “That’s how we grew,” De Jong said. “We didn’t just start throwing it all out there. It’s not our business philosophy to just build it, produce it and hope

PHOTO SUBMITTED

Clean water is one of the outputs aŌer manure is put through a system using a vapor recompression process.

we nd a home for it. We focus on longterm contracts and providing good quality, excellent milk for our customers that they need and want.” The De Jongs have learned a lot about organic dairy farming since their rst step into the venture over 15 years ago. “Your tools in the toolbox are limited,” De Jong said. Crop rotation has been a big help in breaking cycles of bugs or weeds for the De Jongs’ elds and pastures. “That’s critical, and we’ve seen that as a tremendous benet if we get on the right type of rotation,” De Jong said. “And it takes time. We’ve been in business many years. It takes time to gure out what works best.” De Jong said timing of planting and cultivating are also important in growing crops organically. They also learned on the cow-side. “We discovered early on we were doing things on the conventional side we did not need to do with cow health,” De Jong said. “We’ve noticed we can do a lot less on the treatment side than what we used to do.” While focusing on the basics of organic, the De Jongs also use technology where they can. On their Indiana farm, the family worked together with an engineer to create a vapor recompression process called a VARCOR system for the manure. The manure is collected from the freestall barns and sent through a sand separator. The liquid manure then goes through the system where it is heated and boiled. The output from the process is clean water, aqueous ammonia liquid and a powder NPK fertilizer. The ammonia and fertilizer can be certied organic because there are no additives and used on the organic elds. Plus, the heating process kills any seeds. “So, we get something that is weed free and in organic that is a game changer for us,” De Jong said. While managing the business has been enjoyable for the De Jongs, the people in the dairy industry have been what the family has liked the most. “Most of the people who we associate with, go out with, go on vacation with are fellow dairy farmers and people we have known for many years,” De Jong said. “They have become family to us. I love the dairy business because it’s very family oriented.” In the future, the De Jongs will follow the markets and grow if the need is there. In the meantime, they will start the transition process as their daughter and several nephews are a big part of the dairy. “We’re not retiring anytime soon, but we want to make sure we empower them to make condent decisions,” De Jong said. “We are lucky we have younger people who want to be in the business.”

with hay/straw, baby calves, feeder cattle, replacement cattle, goats, sheep, hogs, fat and slaughter cattle

Please consign your cattle as early as possible! Thank You!!!

Fri., March 26 Dairy Sale - Noon

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

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tfn


Page 16 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021

SPECIAL DAIRY SALE

Thursday, March 18th • 11 a.m. JERSEYS JERSEYS JERSEYS: 17 super fancy young Registered Jersey cows!! All fresh in the last 60 days mostly 2 year olds with a few 3 year olds. Housed in freestalls milked in a parlor. Supreme offering of cattle! Coming from Gil Bar Jerseys. 94 years AI breeding herd is averaging 55 lb 5.7F, 3.9P, 180 scc on 320 cows. COMPLETE HERD DISPERSAL: 32 Holstein tiestall cows. Over half of herd is fresh less than 90 days with the balance due from now till June. Cows are bred to a good Holstein bull. Herd is averaging 66 pounds, 4.3F, 3.2P, 165 SCC on just homegrown forage with very minimal added grain. High percentage of young cows in the herd with some older high producers as well! Cows that have potential to do more if you ask them to. Coming from Ephraim Stoltzfus, Argyle, WI PENDING: 15 top top, fresh, AI sired, two-year-old Holsteins! OTHER EARLY CONSIGNMENTS: Jumper bull, Redguard Red son, dam is a Copper dau. Proven breeder, A2A2 tested, aAa 315. Nice bull, ideal size for cows or heifers! 3 excellent quality Fleckviegh bulls, approx 400 lbs! Load of quality cows from Cashton including a Jersey cross cow fresh 30 days and milking well. Extra fancy and great for hand-milking! Several other high production, good hand milking cows in this load. SPECIAL ITEMS: IBA brand foot bath 10 ft long 2 ft wide 10 in deep. Surge Alamo vacuum pump, Surge pulsation control panel, Surge Commander 5K vacuum regulator, Boumatic milk meter, 90 step in pigtail electric fence posts, 18 - 8 quart calf pails, 8 gallon iodine dip, 5-gallon Eco-san pre dip, 9 gallon pipeline soap, 6 gallons acid; Glass reciever jar.

SPECIAL DAIRY AND FEEDER CATTLE SALE

Thursday, March 25th • 11 a.m. COMPLETE DISPERSAL#1: 40 Holstein tiestall cows and 20 Holstein heifers, bred five month to Springers. Includes 7 red and white Holstein cows, also 7 red and white Holstein bred heifers. 40 years AI, also some aAa. Bulk tank average 68 lbs, 4.3F, 3.3P, 250 scc. Individuals milking up to 100 lbs! A nice herd of cows let out everyday and not pushed for production. HERD #2: 40 tiestall cows including 15 Holstein, 10 Jersey and 15 cross bred cows. Cross breds include Holstein, Swiss and Jersey crosses. Some very nice individuals! Herd is averaging 55 lbs milk, 180 scc. No TMR, not pushed for production. Nice gentle cows that are outside everyday. 7 bred heifers including 2 nice Jerseys. Coming from Marvin Kurtz New Holstein, WI OTHER EARLY CONSIGNMENTS: 6 fresh 3 year olds milking 7 -105 lbs! 11 Hol strs 650 lbs, vac, green ADVANCE NOTICE: SPECIAL DAIRY TUESDAY, March 30th • 11 a.m.

SALE

haz-broy farms complete dispersal Brian and Judy Hazel • Lanesboro, MN

Brian 507-259-1512. Amy Hazel Loeschke 651-895-9676

160 HOLSTEIN COWS, 20 HOLSTEIN SPRINGING HEIFERS.

80 Procross cows including several purebred Montbeliarde! 5 Procross springing heifers Excellent quality cattle!! Fully vaccinated, AI breeding for many years, most cattle can be registered. Holstein RHA 27,557M, 1072F, 883P. Procross RHA 24,402M, 986F, 815P Herd scc will be under 100! February test has 43 cows over 100 lbs with several individuals in the 130s!! A few 2 year olds milking 90-105! Parlor freestall herd fed High forage TMR, not pushed for production. Gentle cows that should work in any setting. A young herd with over 100 first lactation cows!! AUCTION ONLINE AT WWW.COWBUYER.COM

NEW 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. We will have special feeder cattle sales as announced.

JWO NOTES & MARKET REPORT:

March Fourth. If you plan to start or do anything notable, this would be as good a day as any. Top dairy cows $2,150 Larry Brubacker, Colby. $2,100, $2,000 Jonas Stutzman, Milladore. Many good cows $1,100-1,975. Medium-quality springing heifers $700-1,100. Open Holstein heifer $70-95/lb. Hol hfr calves $10-40/hd. Breeding Bulls $1,000-1,675/head. Market Bulls $75-82.25. Choice Holstein steers and Heifers $91-95. Crossbreds to $99. Holstein bull calves mostly $55-110. Beef cross bull and heifer calves $190-220. 20% of Market cows sold $57.50-64.50. 60% sold $47.50-56. Our largest hay, straw and firewood sale to date. Sold 67 lots on a lower market. 3x3x8 dairy quality mixed hay $80/bale. Good quality mixed grass rounds and squares $50-77.50. First crop round grass $22.50-35. Baleage $22.50-45.Rounds Bean stubble $20-25. Rounds corn stalks $20-30. 3x4x8 straw 60. Small squares grass $1.75-4.50. Spreader loads firewood $75-100. Thank you for your business!!

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 • Oτce 715-255-9600 www.oberholtzerauctions.com

NO WIRES

Grazing goats provides ecological benets Wika, Prieve share experiences with silvopasture By Danielle Nauman danielle.n@dairystar.com

LACROSSE, Wis. – Sue Wika and Tom Prieve have gained a great deal of experience grazing their goat and sheep herds on their Paradox Farm in Battle Lake, Minnesota. They shared their experiences as silvopasture graziers during the Midwest Organic and Sustainable Education Service Growing Stronger virtual conference Feb. 23. Silvopasture is dened as the deliberate integration of trees and livestock grazing operations on the same land. It can be created by introducing forages into wooded areas or by introducing trees into pasture. “Silvopasture grazing really plays to the character of goats,” Wika said. “They love to climb into the low tree limbs, and they really love the high lignin foods such as tree leaves.” The key to grazing goats and sheep in silvopasture is to select stock that is well adapted for the environment. “Some animals that have been doing well in more of a connement system might not do well in silvopasture,” Wika said. “You might need to do some culling to ensure that you have animals that will perform well in the system. It might take several generations of selecting for those animals to really have the best performing animals.” When Wika and Prieve rst purchased their central Minnesota farm, many acres were in the Conservation Reserve Program and were dominated by brome grass; other acres were an overgrazed oak savannah, which is an area that has a mixture of grass and trees spaced apart so the canopy does not close. They worked to reclaim the elds and pastures, rst using their sheep and goats for landscape grazing.

“Through our high-density grazing, moving paddocks, bale grazing and various other techniques, it has become much more diverse,” Prieve said. “You have been told that goats will browse and sheep will graze, but they will both happily go the other direction, so you can use all of your land and resources that way.” Wika calls their grazing program landscape grazing, using the herd to clean up the undergrowth that had overtaken the farm’s oak savannah. “Over the years, the goats have really been able to open up that oak savannah and make it more userfriendly,” Wika said. Wika and Prieve said they rarely graze only goats in an area. They prefer to mix the goats and sheep. “There is a nice synergy that

“Some animals that have been doing well in more of a connement system might not do well in silvopasture.” SUE WIKA, GOAT/SHEEP FARMER

occurs between the two small ruminants,” Wika said. “Sheep have a little different work ethic and tend to get right to the grazing. That is particularly helpful when we are stockpile or bale grazing in the winter. The sheep will break up the ice and snow and open it up for the goats.” Goats prefer to browse forage around knee-height or higher, while sheep prefer to graze closer to the ground. Prieve cautioned that not all grasses are equal in terms of the nutritional value they provide. He said to be aware of the body condition of the animals. Turn to PASTURE | Page 17

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SLIDE COURTESY OF SUE WIKA/TOM PRIEVE, PARADOX FARM

For opƟmum grazing results, Sue Wika and Tom Prieve suggest that goats should be grazing forage at knee-height or higher, which beƩer suits their browsing nature and helps reduce their exposure to parasites.


Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021 • Page 17

ConƟnued from PASTURE | Page 16

SLIDE COURTESY OF SUE WIKA/TOM PRIEVE, PARADOX FARM

Wika and Prieve use a series of training fences to teach young goats how to respect fences while out in their grazing paddocks.

“If you are new to animal management, you can’t start too small, but you can start too big,” Prieve said. “Starting with ruminants on pastures is one of the most difcult things to do. With monogastrics, you buy feed for them. These guys, if you want them to live on this, it has got to be done correctly.” Wika agreed. She said a producer must have the right kind of animal to meet a performance goal. “We never want to sacrice performance,” Wika said. “That has to be a priority.”

“The key to keeping them in is that the fence must be properly energized, at least 3,500 to 4,000 volts.” TOM PRIEVE, GOAT/SHEEP FARMER

They said paddocks must be properly fenced, and electric fence should be considered to help grazing be successful. Wika and Prieve have constructed a perimeter fence consisting of two high-tensile wires placed at 14 and 28 inches off the ground along with a poly rope placed at 42 inches. They are also vigilant about keeping grass and weeds trimmed away from the perimeter fence for both voltage and visibility. For paddock dividers, Wika and Prieve utilize two strands of poly rope. “The key to keeping them in is that the fence must be properly energized, at least 3,500 to 4,000 volts,” Prieve said, noting they use two-joule solar fencers in more remote areas of the farm. They use a two-stage process to make their animals aware of an electric fences. They begin in a small lot constructed of panel fencing to provide a visual border for the animals to recognize. Just inside the panel are two strands of electric wire at nose height. After the animals have learned to avoid those two wires, they are moved to a second nursery training lot, this time with four wires placed at 6, 12, 18 and 36 inches from the ground. Once they have learned to respect that boundary, Wika and Prieve said they are ready for the regular paddocks. “Goats are lovely animals that bring joy to your life,” Wika said. “They provide so many fabulous ecological services. They are very useful animals.”


Page 18 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021

www.mndhia.org

Brillion SSB10 10’ Seeder, double boxes - LIKE NEW $13,900 Landoll 14’ Hi Lift roller, scrapers - VERY GOOD! .........$6,500 Taylor Way 12’ Hi Lift roller, scrapers - CLEAN! ............$4,995 2) Kewanee 15’ cultimulchers ..........starting at $4,750 $4,450 Kewanee 12’ cultimulcher ................................. $4,250 $3,850 DMI 37 1/2’ crumbler - CLEAN! .................................... $7,500 DMI 25’ crumbler - NICE! ............................. $6,500 DMI 15’ crumbler - VERY GOOD! HARD TO FIND! ....... $4,995

Landoll 875 10 1/2’ Tilloll, less than 90 acres .............. $15,900 Glencoe 4300 15’ soil finishers, 5-bar harrow ............... $7,995 USED FIELD CULTIVATORS JD 980 21.5” field cult, 5-bar harrow - NICE! ..............$10,950 JD 980 18.5 field cult, 5-bar harrow - VERY GOOD! ....$10,500 CIH 4800 16’ field cultivator, 5-bar harrow ....................$6,295 CIH 4800 15’ field cultivator, 5-bar harrow ....................$5,995

2020 Rolling Herd Averages above DHIA Average Dollar Value

Barron/Washburn DHIA Representatives

Producer Name BREEZY HILL DAIRY CHANDLER, BRAD & JUDY DOUG & SANDRA DEROUSSEAU FRIENDSHUH FARMS LLC GEHL ACRES FARM GRAZIN ACRES IMAGE-POINT DAIRY MANSHAEM, GORDON & MICHELE MARSHLAND FARMS NYHUS, BRAD & HOLLY RAY, RODNEY RIVER VALLEY DAIRY LLC SONNBELL DAIRY TURNER DAIRY LLC

Todd Beaver Turtle Lake, WI 29 years • 715-986-2224

City DALLAS RICE LAKE RICE LAKE CLEAR LAKE CAMERON HILLSDALE RICE LAKE CHETEK CUSHING CUMBERLAND CLEAR LAKE SHELL LAKE CHETEK CENTURIA

Used Field Cultivator Shanks

DMI • IHC • CASE IH • JD • BRADY• GLENCOE • KRAUSE • BRILLION “For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” John 3:16

Jim’s Cell (920) 988-9444

Intersection of Hwy.106 and 26 W6856 Hwy. 106 • Fort Atkinson, WI 53538

(920) 563-7555 • (920) 563-6222

# Cows Brd 718 HO 84 HO 80 HO X 1,150 HO 140 HO 91 HO 69 HO 42 HO 109 HO 67 HO 54 HO 109 HO 50 HO 169 HO

3X

Current Rolling Average Milk Fat Prot 24,917 1,046 787 24,961 913 810 25,205 929 771 29,182 1,134 928 24,341 963 776 23,372 868 734 23,972 929 762 21,923 960 692 26,055 1,018 815 23,263 1,020 786 25,562 1,036 828 25,921 1,032 843 21,995 940 689 27,935 1,103 904

Becky Bitzen Parkers Prairie 4 years 320-815-1426

Becker DHIA Representatives Producer Name AHO, TIM&SARAH INGVALSON, ANDREW J & A DAIRY SCHLAUDERAFF, GARY

% Milk Sold 99 100 101 100 101 101 100 101 101 100 103 102 102 104

Bob Klopp Cameron, WI 28 years • 715-458-4163

City FRAZEE FRAZEE FRAZEE FRAZEE

% Milk Sold 108 102 104 101

3X

X

$Value $4,593 $4,338 $4,324 $5,195 $4,394 $4,064 $4,253 $4,125 $4,640 $4,465 $4,688 $4,728 $4,050 $5,045

Dave Myhre 3 years 218-841-8736

# Cows 188 194 509 645

Brd HO HO HO HO

Current Rolling Average Milk Fat Prot 28,182 1,151 907 23,926 930 747 24,907 942 761 28,133 1,044 888

$Value $5,175 $4,240 $4,314 $4,901

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Producer Name ACKERMAN FARMS CORRIGAN, DOUG & KATHY CZECH ROADSIDE ACRES DANDEKEN HOLSTEIN MEHRWERTH, MITCH MEL & SPENCER HACKETT MOLITOR, TERRY NEW HEIGHTS DAIRY O + S DAIRY POPP DAIRY RIVERVIEW ENTERPRISES SCHEFERS, DREW & RENEE SONNEK FARMS

Producer Name WEST RIDGE LLC

Minimizes Feed Waste

Agron. Petro. Feed Feed: 320-468-6655 Toll Free: 877-468-6655 Agron./Petro: 320-468-2509 Toll Free: 877-438-3378

% Milk Sold 103 103 101 101 102 103 104 104 102 103 102 101 103

3X X

X

X

City BELLINGHAM

Producer Name

DIAMONDVIEW GRIEBELS BLACK AND WHITE LAX DAIRY MOLDANS HOLSTEINS OLMAR FARMS PORT HAVEN DAIRY SEIFERT, JONATHAN SEIFERT, STEVEN SELLNER, LORAN AND HEIDI

City

ST JAMES NEW ULM SLEEPY EYE COMFREY SLEEPY EYE SLEEPY EYE SLEEPY EYE SLEEPY EYE SLEEPY EYE

Ron Kipka Oak Park, MN 35 years 320-387-2641

# Cows Brd 111 HO 66 HO 644 HO 79 HO 61 XX 140 H 130 XX 4,256 XX 245 HO 235 HO 91 HO 97 XX 105 HO

Current Rolling Average Milk Fat Prot 25,229 1,017 817 23,777 859 685 27,237 1,020 855 21,891 927 690 22,783 927 755 25,646 1,019 834 23,363 855 732 26,429 1,097 887 26,769 1,040 862 30,315 1,095 934 26,135 967 823 22,461 842 747 21,854 862 700

$Value $4,613 $3,915 $4,747 $3,994 $4,227 $4,657 $4,011 $4,945 $4,772 $5,133 $4,541 $4,002 $3,935

Malcolm Dirksen Twin Brooks, SD 55 years 605-432-6128 % Milk Sold 101

3X X

# Cows 553

Brown DHIA Representatives

Enhance Ration Palatability

Call Randy

City SAUK RAPIDS FOLEY FOLEY SAUK RAPIDS SAUK RAPIDS RICE SAUK RAPIDS RICE RICE RICE FOLEY FOLEY FORESTON

Big Stone DHIA Representative

40% Crude Protein Improves Nutrient Digestibility

Bruce David Rice, MN 38 years 320-393-4206

Benton DHIA Representatives

% Milk Sold 105 102 101 103 108 103 104 104 102

Brd HO

Current Rolling Average Milk Fat Prot 28,025 1,074 871

$Value $4,915

Rebecca Novey Courtland, MN 6 years 262-995-8970 3X X

X X X

# Cows 88 70 346 91 165 272 214 124 190

Brd HO HO HO HO H BS HO HO HO

Current Rolling Average Milk Fat Prot 22,084 25,710 29,231 25,215 27,145 24,859 27,283 25,748 23,222

851 987 1,094 1,005 1,038 994 1,063 1,002 880

708 814 899 829 869 867 843 815 747

$Value $3,909 $4,529 $5,037 $4,578 $4,805 $4,613 $4,807 $4,570 $4,074

Turn to DHIA / Page19


Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021 • Page 19

Continued from DHIA / Page 18 Producer Name SPRING CREEK DAIRY FARMS STADICK FARM INC TAUER, DAVID D.& ANGIE

City SLEEPY EYE NEW ULM HANSKA

% Milk Sold 102 99 102

3X X

# Cows 153 200 269

Carver DHIA Representatives Producer Name BRABEC FARMS FLOWER-BROOK REG.HOL. HEUER DAIRY FARM HOEN, LEONARD & STEVEN HOESE DAIRY INC. HOLLANDALE FARMS OTTO, DENNIS SAINTVILLE DAIRY SOUTHVIEW DAIRY LLC TA LEONARD REG HOLSTEINS TELLERS, MIKE AND DONNA

% Milk City Sold MAYER 101 HAMBURG 99 NORWOOD 102 NORWOOD 99 MAYER 100 COLOGNE 99 NORWOOD 100 NORWOOD-Y.A. 102 COLOGNE 102 YOUNG AMERICA 102 CHASKA 101

City FARMINGTON DENNISON HASTINGS HASTINGS LAKEVILLE RANDOLPH ST PAUL

3X

# Cows 143 110 141 68 143 77 97 72 142 55 55

City DODGE CENTER HAYFIELD PINE ISLAND MANTORVILLE PINE ISLAND DODGE CENTER

% Milk Sold 99 100 97 103 99 99 102

3X

X X

City ALEXANDRIA

% Milk Sold 98 101 100 102 98 99

3X

X

Current Rolling Average Milk Fat Prot 25,264 975 801 24,371 942 782 21,582 954 690 25,130 1,028 830 22,736 939 746 21,668 941 674 22,012 929 716 24,835 1,055 813 22,354 988 742 26,145 1,055 807 26,810 980 812

$Value $4,465 $4,347 $4,078 $4,618 $4,195 $3,986 $4,074 $4,641 $4,284 $4,699 $4,564

For ALL your HEAVY DUTY PANEL needs, Come see how we Roll !!

# Cows 58 185 147 392 56 607 102

Brd HO HO HO XX HO HO HO

Current Rolling Average Milk Fat Prot 22,763 924 724 22,924 939 705 27,133 1,116 863 29,349 1,119 915 24,082 1,028 782 26,991 1,137 869 24,517 1,006 798

# Cows 91 271 179 108 637 125

Brd HO HO HO HO H HO

Current Rolling Average Milk Fat Prot 26,313 1,025 863 25,359 915 773 25,152 919 758 28,013 1,239 924 24,473 977 784 26,613 1,124 935

% Milk Sold 102

3X

% Milk City Sold FOUNTAIN 101 FOUNTAIN 100 RUSHFORD 99 LANESBORO 99 SPRING VALLEY 102 CHATFIELD 101 LANESBORO 101 PETERSON 102 FOUNTAIN 102 LANESBORO 100 PRESTON 103 CHATFIELD 101 FOUNTAIN 99 FOUNTAIN 102

# Cows 74

Brd JE

Current Rolling Average Milk Fat Prot 18,031 952 685

N14685 Copenhaver Ave., Stanley Phone: (715) 644-0765 Fax: (715) 644-4931

$Value $4,103 $4,123 $4,965 $5,148 $4,525 $4,976 $4,514

3X X X X X X X X

X

Current Rolling Average Milk Fat Prot 24,946 978 793 28,037 1,033 899 24,389 916 775 26,307 1,013 857 28,977 1,101 857 29,299 1,128 897 26,540 1,064 872 28,012 1,172 900 26,783 1,116 853 27,346 1,084 853 26,481 1,013 834 26,782 1,033 832 23,389 947 728 32,510 1,214 1,013

We’re open 24/7: www.dairystar.com

For Sale:

• CIH 4800, 32’ digger w/4-bar spring tooth, mulcher... $9,500 • ‘01 CIH MX240, 6070 hrs., cab, MFD, 1000 pto, quick 3 pt. hitch, 4 hyd. remotes, full set front wts. w/rear whl. wts., tires: rears 90%, Michelin Agribibs w/rear duals, fronts 60%, tire size rear 480/80R46, fronts 380/85R34 .............. $62,000 • CIH 900 6RN Cyclo corn planter w/Insecta. & Herba. boxes, also switch to liq. fert., corn & soybean drums $8,500

ALL EQUIPMENT SHEDDED & IN EXCELLENT CONDITION

Call 320-247-2882 $Value $4,763 $4,299 $4,260 $5,392 $4,411 $5,114

$Value $3,960

Stephanie Tienter Harmony, MN 11 Years 507-993-9115 # Cows Brd 233 HO 675 HO 186 HO 292 XX 499 HO 474 HO 179 HO 1,376 HO 989 HO 240 HO 565 HO 259 HO 62 HO 663 HO

Visit us on the corner of Hwy 29 and Copenhaver Ave. Complete Post Frame packages, custom designed.

MANUFACTURERS OF QUALITY BUILDING COMPONENTS

Becky Bitzen Parkers Prairie 4 years 320-815-1426

Fillmore DHIA Representatives Producer Name BLUE VALLEY HOLSTEINS CRYSTAL VIEW FARMS DAHL FARMS HAZEL, BRIAN AND JUDY HEUSINKVELD FARMS HINCKLEY HOLSTEINS LLC HOLST, TOM AND SUE JOHNSONS ROLLING ACRES MULHERN DAIRY REDALEN, MICHAEL RUMPUS RIDGE FARMS SASS FARMS SHIR-MAN HOLSTEIN FARM TRAIL SIDE HOLSTEINS

Brd HO HO HO HO HO HO HO HO HO HO HO

Brandon Novey Kasson, MN 1 year 507-696-6161

Douglas DHIA Representative Producer Name LAKESIDE JERSEYS

$Value $4,282 $4,705 $4,686

Rosalie Egge Cannon Falls, MN 36 years 507-263-4341

Dodge DHIA Representative

Producer Name AVON HEIGHTS BEHOUNEK, RONALD BERG, TOM+PENNY CURRIER BROTHERS KENNETH ALBERTS NOLT FAMILY FARM

Current Rolling Average Milk Fat Prot 24,298 908 805 25,094 1,086 795 26,145 1,026 835

Keith Korkowski Waconia, MN 31 years • 952-955-3762

Dakota DHIA Representative Producer Name BRAND HOLSTEINS EMERY DAIRY REUTER FARMS RIVER CITY DAIRY SAUBER, JOHN SQUARE DEAL DAIRY ST.PAUL DAIRY

Brd HO HO HO

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$Value $4,455 $4,871 $4,274 $4,706 $4,970 $5,120 $4,869 $5,196 $4,928 $4,883 $4,634 $4,728 $4,220 $5,655

Early Sign-Ups & Winter Discounts!

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(ends Mar. 16)

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715.267.1416

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https://www.greenwoodsilo.com/goodasnew


Page 20 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021

www.mndhia.com

CANOLA MEAL CORN GLUTEN FEED CORN DISTILLERS GRAINS CORN STARCH LINSEED MEAL FLAX SEED OAT HULLS RICE HULLS SOYBEAN MEAL SOY BEST SOYBEAN HULLS SOY FLOUR SOY PLUS

AMINO PLUS SOY ISOLATE WHEAT MIDDS WHEAT GERM MEAL BEET PULP CASEINATES CHEESE SCRAPS SAW DUST FOOD BY-PRODUCTS LACTOSE NONFAT DRY MILK SUGAR/DEXTROSE WHEY PROTEIN POWDER

8

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St. Cloud, MN Long Prairie, MN 320-240-2085 844-262-2281

320-732-3715 866-514-0982

2020 High Lifetime Cows by Fat & Protein lbs.

It’s been said that it takes the first 2 lactation’s to recoup the cost of raising a heifer, these cows have paid for themselves and a few others. Congratulations to healthy, long lived, reproductively successful cows and to their owners!

Producer Name PATER DAIRY INC LARCREST HOLSTEIN DAIRY GAR-LIN DAIRY FARMS INC. STELLING FARMS SELKE FARMS HOLLERMANN DAIRY PATER DAIRY INC FELTMANN, DENNY KLINGSPORN FARMS FRIENDSHUH FARMS LLC SELKE FARMS FJEL-MAR DAIRY HYDE-PARK HOLSTEINS HUNSTIGER HILLCREST FARM GAR-LIN DAIRY FARMS INC. HYDE-PARK HOLSTEINS STELLING FARMS CRYSTAL VIEW FARMS REILAND FARMS SHEEHAN, JAMES AND JEROME FJEL-MAR DAIRY SEIFERT, JONATHAN GAR-LIN DAIRY FARMS INC. WENDT DAIRY LLC LUEBKE, TOM & JODY VALLEY ACRES DAIRY CO-JO DAIRY GAR-LIN DAIRY FARMS INC. SWENSON, PAUL+CINDY GRUBER, BOB & KAYLIE CLEAR CREST FARM LLC HINCKLEY HOLSTEINS LLC KLINGSPORN FARMS CLEAR CREST FARM LLC GAR-LIN DAIRY FARMS INC. TA LEONARD REG HOLSTEINS REDALEN, MICHAEL GAR-LIN DAIRY FARMS INC. HERBER, SCOTT&MICHELLE SHEA DAIRY VALLEY ACRES DAIRY HERBER, SCOTT&MICHELLE SCHWAB DAIRY KENNETH ALBERTS STELLING FARMS DIERSEN, JOHN + KARYL PATER DAIRY INC CRAZY DAISY DAIRY JOHNSONS ROLLING ACRES VALLEY ACRES DAIRY ANNEXSTAD DAIRY FARMS INC DEKAM, WES HOUDEK DAIRY LLC FRIENDSHUH FARMS LLC VALLEY ACRES DAIRY SCHWAB DAIRY DEKAM, WES HERBER, SCOTT&MICHELLE MARTIN, ERNEST KIEFLAND HOLSTEINS LLC VANDER WAL DAIRY PINE CREEK FARMS BORST FAMILY DAIRY LLC FRIENDSHUH FARMS LLC

Cow 8302 CRIMSON 8251 LARK 973 27G 8325 LORAINE CHELS 3J170 993 921 3897 188 10340 3876 ORPHA 1018 1137 WOODPEC 948 743 10424 788 259 10336 162 11555 2112 SUSIE 983 2113 VIRNA 701 11524 PIPSTER KASH 10845 4118 1762 10474 90E 42 CRISPY VENICE 722 8292 EVE 3944 11065 1040 2177 1849 7K977 63 50 2275 2586 250 215REG 4259 97 1431 5M1564

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Mo 6 10 5 7 4 1 7 2 9 11 11 11 4 0 4 9 2 4 11 4 5 5 0 7 8 3 10 6 11 6 1 6 5 2 6 3 2 0 7 4 2 5 2 3 4 11 9 11 7 11 5 3 1 2 1 11 3 4 1 11 8 7 6 0

Lac 9 6 9 7 8 9 10 9 7 7 8 7 8 10 9 8 7 11 8 9 10 9 9 11 8 9 8 7 10 10 8 8 8 8 6 8 11 9 9 8 8 8 7 10 6 7 9 7 9 8 8 10 10 10 5 9 8 9 8 9 9 7 9 9

DIM 3,192 3,758 3,241 2,943 2,990 3,277 2,942 3,085 2,795 3,502 2,866 3,162 2,412 3,793 2,782 2,517 2,511 3,813 2,781 3,221 2,918 3,377 2,823 3,523 3,189 2,756 3,189 2,496 2,885 3,846 2,663 2,505 2,736 2,752 2,538 3,060 3,646 2,608 3,044 2,926 2,791 2,632 2,840 3,497 2,559 2,899 2,812 2,667 3,106 2,540 2,460 3,447 3,350 2,985 2,601 2,849 3,445 3,007 2,844 2,614 3,005 2,834 2,897 2,620

Milk 396,441 320,545 373,549 322,045 350,454 355,650 293,901 294,528 289,129 392,028 341,960 297,659 300,279 318,845 310,264 284,290 302,055 340,316 294,692 300,878 286,532 302,298 308,607 302,664 308,568 310,076 287,389 307,035 304,931 298,783 296,632 307,174 284,432 301,234 312,746 284,809 297,943 292,824 291,911 334,428 301,382 290,338 317,723 292,449 290,161 298,396 295,707 304,888 289,528 286,620 285,482 290,189 305,437 306,640 317,439 283,676 286,041 291,649 318,554 291,867 292,925 292,429 289,888 297,574

Fat 13,600 13,993 13,852 13,511 12,781 12,293 12,307 12,718 12,179 11,076 11,266 12,367 11,801 10,936 11,251 11,716 11,650 10,740 11,485 10,964 11,561 11,456 11,236 11,252 10,983 10,393 10,650 10,797 10,024 10,964 10,597 10,433 10,299 10,809 10,469 11,653 9,833 10,816 11,120 10,715 9,954 10,189 10,095 10,664 10,570 9,974 9,747 10,472 10,082 9,638 10,092 9,331 9,571 9,557 9,430 9,870 9,522 8,920 8,868 9,059 8,781 8,514 8,668 7,100

Protein 12,470 11,550 11,669 10,337 10,565 10,771 9,519 8,953 9,470 10,360 9,976 8,848 9,293 9,696 9,368 8,869 8,904 9,759 8,823 9,338 8,696 8,766 8,909 8,752 8,918 9,503 9,200 9,027 9,764 8,797 9,114 9,233 9,303 8,782 9,113 7,912 9,694 8,681 8,313 8,673 9,430 8,883 8,938 8,205 8,232 8,747 8,894 8,155 8,494 8,859 8,171 8,765 8,275 8,181 8,269 7,798 8,146 8,707 8,672 8,447 8,673 8,741 8,198 6,460

F+P 26,070 25,543 25,521 23,848 23,346 23,064 21,826 21,671 21,649 21,436 21,242 21,215 21,094 20,632 20,619 20,585 20,554 20,499 20,308 20,302 20,257 20,222 20,145 20,004 19,901 19,896 19,850 19,824 19,788 19,761 19,711 19,666 19,602 19,591 19,582 19,565 19,527 19,497 19,433 19,388 19,384 19,072 19,033 18,869 18,802 18,721 18,641 18,627 18,576 18,497 18,263 18,096 17,846 17,738 17,699 17,668 17,668 17,627 17,540 17,506 17,454 17,255 16,866 13,560

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BR Cow Yr HO 10 HO 12 HO 11 HO 9 HO 9 HO 12 HO 10 HO 11 HO 10 HO 10 HO 9 HO 10 HO 9 HO 13 XX 10 HO 9 HO 9 HO 13 HO 9 HO 11 HO 10 HO 11 HO 10 HO 12 HO 10 XX 10 JE 10 HO 8 HO 10 HO 13 HO 10 HO 9 HO 10 HO 10 HO 8 HO 10 HO 13 HO 10 HO 11 HO 9 HO 10 HO 9 HO 9 HO 12 HO 8 HO 9 HO 10 HO 9 HO 11 XX 8 HO 9 HO 12 HO 12 HO 11 HO 7 HO 10 HO 11 HO 10 HO 10 HO 9 HO 11 HO 9 HO 11 HO 10

TIMED ONLINE ONLY BIDDING CLOSES AT 12PM TRUCK LOADS SELL FIRST

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320.693.9371 | SteffesGroup.com


Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021 • Page 21

Dairy farming at story time

Iowa author writes nine ag-related children’s books By Jerry Nelson

jerry.n@dairystar.com

STANHOPE, Iowa – Katie Olthoff always knew she wanted to be an author. “When I was a girl, I read all of Laura Ingalls Wilder’s books,” Olthoff said. “I admired Laura so much that I even dressed up as her for Halloween.” Olthoff’s dream of becoming a published author has been realized through a series of children’s books that focus on sectors of agriculture. Her most recent book is titled, “My Family’s Dairy Farm.” “I grew up in central Iowa but not on a farm,” Olthoff said. “I ended up marrying a turkey farmer. Up until I got married, I didn’t know a lot about farming.” Olthoff and her husband, Bart, have been married for 15 years. The couple have three children, Adam, 12, Isaac, 10, and Edie, 4. After graduating from Iowa State University with a degree in elementary education and teaching, Olthoff taught fourth grade for several years. “As a young mom, I came to realize that there is so much information out there about food, especially information that can make consumers

scared of their food,” Olthoff said. “I made it my mission to correct those misperceptions by becoming an advocate for our farmers. I wanted to inform our consumers by sharing the real story of agriculture.” As Olthoff’s ambition to become a writer came to the fore, she began to submit articles to local newspapers and magazines. She started a pro-agriculture blog, participated in broadcast media events and became a public speaker. With encouragement from friends, Olthoff decided to Katie Olthoff write her rst chilBook author dren’s book called, “My Family’s Turkey Farm.” The success of this book led to similar tomes about soybeans, corn, pork, poultry and beef farms. “My Family’s Dairy Farm” is the ninth book in Olthoff’s series of children’s books. “My Family’s Dairy Farm” is set at Jones Dairy, a 1,100-head Jersey operation located near Spencer, Iowa. Using a mixture of photos and text, Lucas, 8, the grandson of Patrick and Nancy Jones, guides the reader through various facets of the Jones Dairy operation. Lucas is a member of the fth generation of his family to operate their dairy farm. All of Olthoff’s books are nonction and are geared toward an audience of elementary schoolchildren. The book explains that cows give

E LD SE RVICES, I NC I F H & . D Darrin Herickhoff

birth to a baby calf once a year and that dairy cows are fed a ration that contains all of the nutrients they need. The book also shows some of the things the Jones family does to protect the environment and ensure their farm remains sustainable. It tells how they use manure to fertilize the corn and alfalfa crops they feed to their cows. The book uses an illustration to show the reader how much milk is produced by each cow at Jones Dairy. It also explains the steps taken to make sure the milk remains safe for consumers. Most of the high fat, high protein milk produced at Jones Dairy nds its way into a variety of cheeses. While Olthoff wrote the text of the book, its accompanying photos were taken by photographer Jenn Hindman. Supplemental information about dairy farming is located at the bottom of each page, which can be useful for teachers and older students. “My Family’s Dairy Farm” was published as a special project of the Iowa Agriculture Literacy Foundation with nancial support from Midwest Dairy. And while the book’s main goal was to educate students who live in urban areas, Olthoff discovered the need for agricultural information is much larger than she expected. “A few years ago, I read Laura Ingalls Wilder’s book, ‘Farmer Boy’, to my son, Adam,” Olthoff said. “Afterwards, Adam asked why we don’t have a farm similar to the one depicted in Wilder’s book, with two pigs, one cow, a horse and so on. It made me realize that the need for agricul-

tural education isn’t limited to just urban areas. There is also a huge need to educate our students from rural settings.” Jenna Finch, of Midwest Dairy, appreciates the book and its impact. “Understanding where milk and

“This book will help students connect the dots between the high-quality care the cows receive and the tasty dairy product that they get to enjoy.” KATIE OLTHOFF, AUTHOR

dairy products come from is important,” Finch said. “This book will help students connect the dots between the high-quality care the cows receive and the tasty dairy product that they get to enjoy.” Copies of the book are being made available to all Iowa elementary schools and additional copies are available on request. The book also has two lesson plan companion resources to help teachers integrate the book into a science or social studies lesson. The lesson plans are aligned with Iowa core standards and easily t into an approved course of study.

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Page 22 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021

Better Milking... With

Udder

Stuff

News and Dairy Views from across the region

CALL NOW! “We have already reduced labor by 1 person. Milking time has significantly reduced - it means the cows are in the free stall barn over 4 hours more per day than before.” - Mike Palmer, 110 Holstein cows, Swiftflo Swing 12

Call Dairymaster today on 1-877-340-MILK(6455) Dairymaster USA Inc, 11405 Sebring Drive, Cincinnati, OH 45240, USA Email: usa@dairymaster.com Website: www.dairymaster.com

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Plan to Bid at Dairy’s Foundation Silent Auction The Professional Dairy Producers Foundation – Dairy’s Foundation – will host a public silent auction during the upcoming Professional Dairy Producers (PDPW) Business Conference, March 17-18, at the Kalahari Resort Convention Center, Wisconsin Dells, Wis. A wide variety of items, including tickets for sporting events, framed artwork, household and children’s items, athletic tickets, and more, will be on display and available for bidding. The auction will include more than 90 lots. “Since last year’s event was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, excitement for the 2021 silent auction has been building for several months,” said Janet Keller, Executive Director of Dairy’s Foundation. “We’re looking forward to gathering at the Kalahari in Wisconsin Dells for this year’s fundraising event. We encourage everyone to bid on items.” Funds raised will directly support the work of the foundation’s three primary focus areas: – Raising up the next generation of professional dairy producers – Growing and maintaining public trust in dairy producers and dairy products – Building the skills of dairy producers People will be able to view and bid on auction lots from 8 a.m. Wednesday, Mar. 17, until 1:10 p.m. Thursday, Mar. 18. Those interested in donating an item or with questions should call Keller at 608-345-5405. Edge Dairy Farmer Cooperative announces scholarship opportunity Edge Dairy Farmer Cooperative announced today that once again it will award $1,000 scholarships to children of its members. Applicants must be high school seniors, high school graduates or college undergraduates. They must be enrolled or planning to enroll in a full-time course of study at an accredited four-year college or university or a two-year program at a technical, junior or community college. The area of study does not need to be in agriculture. “Edge feels strongly about education and supporting our members’ families. This scholarship program is a tangible way to provide that support,” Executive Director Tim Trotter said. “I hope that the young people looking to further their education take the opportunity to apply.” Only dependents of Edge members qualify. Scholarship recipients will be selected based on academic achievement, leadership, participation in school and community activities, academic honors, goals and aspirations, recommendations and work experience. Applications must be postmarked by May 1. For more information, contact Lauren Laubscher at 715-584-7117 or llaubscher@voiceofmilk.com. CentralStar scholarship applications due June 1 CentralStar Cooperative, serving dairy and beef producers in Wisconsin, Michigan, and Indiana, is offering seven, $1,000 scholarships this year. Those interested can nd the application at www.mycentralstar.com. The deadline is June 1, 2021. Scholarships are available for two types of students. Applicants must be presently enrolled in a four-year college or a one- or two-year technical college or short-course program in an agricultural-related eld. Applicants can also be a high-school senior admitted into one of the aforementioned programs. The applicant or their parent(s) must be a stockowner of CentralStar Cooperative. Read the application for additional detail.

Midsota Rock Wagons

Sitrex Side Rakes

USED TRACTORS

CIH 8940 Magnum, FWA..................Coming In CIH 8920 Magnum, FWA, 2,900 hrs Coming In CIH 7220 Magnum ..........................Coming In CIH 7120 Magnum ..........................Coming In CIH 730 Magnum, FWA, 3,300 hrs. ... $68,000 MX 120, 2WD, 4500 hrs. ................... $50,000 MX 120, FWA w/ldr ............................ $57,000 IH 1586, 5165 hrs. ............................. $20,000 IH 966, 8920 hrs., no cab .................. $11,000 JD 2955, FWA, cab, 4100 hrs. ........... $32,000

TILLAGE

CIH RMX 370, 27’ disc....................... $28,000 CIH Tigermate II, 30’ .......................... $21,000 CIH Tigermate 200, 32’ rolling basket $32,000 CIH Tigermate 200, 32’ ...................... $27,000 CIH 4800 26’ field cultivator................. $7,500 CIH 7500, 4-bottom plow..................... $5,000 CIH 4600 field cult, 26’ ........................ $7,500 CIH 4300 30’ field cult ......................... $9,500 CIH 527B ripper ................................. $13,000 DMI 530 w/lead shanks...................... $14,000 DMI 530 Ecolo-Tiger .......................... $12,000

Mandako Land Rollers

DMI Tigermate, 26’ .............................. $9,500 JD 714, 9-shank disc chisel ................. $9,500 Glencoe 4450 13-shank, disc chisel ... $10,500

HAYING & FORAGE EQUIP.

Sitrex QR12, QR10, QRS rakes ................ New Many sizes of rakes available All Sizes of Sitrex Rakes .....................On Hand

GRAVITY BOXES

Demco 365 .................................$4,000-5,500 J&M 385 box w/brakes & lights........... $7,500 Brent grain cart .................................. $25,000 Brent Grain cart.................................... $9,500 Many Used Gravity Boxes - Demco, J&M, Brent

MISCELLANEOUS

NH 680 manure spreader ..................... $7,500 CIH 5300 grain drill w/grass .............. $10,900 CIH 5300 grain drill w/grass .............. $11,000 JD 450, 13’ ........................................ $14,500 Midsota 5510 & F610 rock trailers .... In Stock Midsota F8216 rock trailer ........................ Call Harms 31 ft. roller.............................. $13,000 Gehl 170 grinder, scale, like new........ $22,000 New Red Devil & Agro Trend Snowblowers

GREENWALD FARM CENTER Greenwald, MN • 320-987-3177

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Cut out this ad and keep next to your phone for on-farm service!

Turn to UDDER STUFF | Page 23

On Farm Service New & Used Equipment

Agromatic • Alber’s • Badger • Berg Freudenthal • Hanson • J&D Manufacturing MiraFount • N-Tech Pasture Mat • Ritchie • Loyal-Roth • Trioliet • VES • Weaverline • Zabel

www.chippewafarmservice.com 715-382-5400 16570 Co Hwy O • Chippewa Falls, WI 54729


ConƟnued from UDDER STUFF | Page 22 CentralStar’s goal of enhancing producer protability through integrated services is fullled by incorporating an array of products and services critical to dairy-and-beef-farm prosperity. CentralStar’s product and service offerings include Accelerated Genetics, GenerVations and Select Sires genetics; extensive articial-insemination (A.I.) technician service; genetic, reproduction, and dairy records consultation; DHI services; diagnostic testing; herd-management products; research and development; and more. CentralStar’s administration and warehouse facilities are located in Lansing, Mich., and Waupun, Wis., with laboratories in Grand Ledge, Mich., and Kaukauna, Wis. For more information, visit CentralStar Cooperative Inc. at www.mycentralstar.com. DCRC calls for scholar applicants The Dairy Cattle Reproduction Council (DCRC) is accepting applications for its Scholar program. The recipient will earn an expense-paid trip to attend the DCRC Annual Meeting, Nov. 10-11, in Kansas City, Mo. The application deadline is April 30. Eligible candidates must be a DCRC member and graduate student enrolled full time at a college or university in a dairy, animal or veterinary science, microbiology or related program at the time of application deadline, with an area of interest that includes dairy cattle reproduction. To apply for the program, complete the DCRC Scholar application form, submit an interest statement that details the applicant’s interest in dairy cattle reproduction, career goals and research project(s), and provide a letter of recommendation. Applicants may also share additional information, such as awards, honors and scholarships received. The DCRC Scholar Selection Committee will evaluate the applications and choose the DCRC Scholar by June 1. To learn more about the program and/or apply, go to: http://bit.ly/DCRCscholar. Plant a Seed, Inspire a Dream Campaign Kicks Off The future of dairy hinges on the ongoing professional development of dairy producers. Professional Dairy Producers Foundation, also known as Dairy’s Foundation, is kicking off its Plant a Seed, Inspire a Dream fundraising campaign to support programs that will enhance the skills of current dairy producers and develop the leaders of tomorrow. “This annual campaign supports educational programs that develop and strengthen communication and leadership skills, dairy-specic nancial literacy, engaging with our communities, and more,” said Janet Keller, Executive Director of Dairy’s Foundation. “Money raised through ‘Plant a Seed’ impacts people from all walks of life all across the country. Each gift makes a difference in the number of lives we can touch.” Donations to the “Plant a Seed” campaign is used for support of programs such as the Cornerstone Dairy Academy™, Financial Literacy for Dairy® and Agriculture Community Engagement™. The foundation also awards grants across the nation to innovative dairy initiatives that align with the mission. “In a spirit of fun, we’ve assembled four teams of volunteers to compete with each other,” Keller said. “The idea is to challenge each team to raise more funds

UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP!

Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021 • Page 23

than the other three. Donors can vote to choose a team to apply their donation toward.” Team Inspire: Captain Steve Vale; Sydney Endres, Dave Lindevig, Dr. Rami A. Reddy, Peter Curran and Jim Mlsna Team Vision: Co-captains Sam Schwoeppe and Joan Behr; John Kappelman, Linda Hodorff, Logan Bower, Andy Buttles and Dave Thorbahn Team Impact: Co-captains Russ Warmka and Derek Orth, Julie Gabris, Jeff Sluzewski, Marty Hallock, Carrie Feucht, Danielle Warmka Team Dream: Co-captains Brian Forrest and Mark Diederichs, Mitch Breunig, Charlie Crave, Jeff Montsma, Keith Engel, Andy Skwor and Steve Orth To make a contribution toward the campaign, go to dairyfoundation.org; click on donate to give a gift and pay by credit card. Or send a check to Professional Dairy Producers Foundation, 820 N. Main Street, Suite D, Juneau, WI 53039. Those who want to give and don’t have a preference as to which team to support can choose a team at random. Edge Dairy Farmer Cooperative applauds agricultural workforce bill Edge Dairy Farmer Cooperative, one of the largest dairy co-ops in the country, today applauded the reintroduction of federal legislation that would provide a solution for dairy farmers desperate to hire and retain skilled workers. U.S. Reps. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., and Dan Newhouse, R-Wash., are resurrecting the Farm Workforce Modernization Act, which had passed the House of Representatives on a bipartisan vote in 2019 but was not considered by the Senate. The bill, introduced late Wednesday, would provide a path to legalization for current farm workers and expand the H-2A foreign guest worker program, which would accommodate the year-round needs of livestock farmers. Click here for a summary of the bill. Edge President Brody Stapel, a dairy farmer in Wisconsin, praised Lofgren and Newhouse for remaining committed to addressing what Stapel said is a crisis for his group’s farmers throughout the Midwest. Changes in demographics, labor patterns and the nature of the jobs have made it impossible for farmers to ll all available positions with American citizens, Stapel said, and existing immigrant ag labor rules, which focus on seasonal work, are impractical. “The struggle is very real for many of our farmers,” he said. “We need a solution that provides a path for qualied employees to come to this country and a system for keeping those already here. No business or industry can survive without a skilled and stable workforce.” Stapel said that while certain parts of the bill are not ideal, it’s a compromise that provides the best opportunity in decades for a labor solution for farmers. The House approval in 2019 was the rst time in more than 30 years that the chamber passed legislation to address agricultural labor. “For years, we have worked to nd common ground on this critical issue,” Stapel said. “There is too much at stake to let this opportunity pass us by.”

PROFESSIONAL DESIGN.

32638 US-10 • MOTLEY, MN 56466

218-352-6546

MITCH BARTHEL OWNER/AUCTIONEER

218-639-5228

JOE VARNER 218-352-6546 FAIR AND COMPETITIVE PRICE SELLING ALL CLASSES OF LIVESTOCK EVERY WEDNESDAY AT 9 A.M.

MARKET COWS & BULLS, FAT CATTLE, FEEDER CATTLE, HOL STEERS & BRED COWS.

BAR J RANCH PRODUCTION SALE SUN., MARCH 14 • 1:30 P.M. • BROOTEN, MN

ON THE RANCH

EFFECTIVE DRAINAGE We Offer Site Prep, Drainage Tile, Land Clearing, Excavation, Pump Stations And So Much More!

REASONABLE RATES.

Special Feeder Sale

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 2021 - 9 A.M.

Slaughter Cattle, Bred Cow/Heifer Sale Breeding Bull Special

SATURDAY, MARCH 20 - SLAUGHTER CATTLE 9AM

BRED COWS & HEIFERS NOON • BREEDING BULLS WILL FOLLOW

Special Feeder Sale

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 2021 - 9 A.M. WWW.TRICOUNTYSTOCKYARDS.COM

Brad Herickhoff, Owner 320-351-4872


Page 24 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021

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US2802, Trailhawk, Sun Roof, Navigation! $ NOW ONLY 34,990

US2794, Sun Roof, Blind Spot Monitoring, Navigation! $ NOW ONLY 31,990

US2783, High Altitude, Sun Roof, Towing Package! $ NOW ONLY 25,990

‘10 Nissan Altima, Gray, UC4336 ................. $7,990 ‘08 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT, Bright Silver, UV2253 ...................................................... $7,990 ‘13 Toyota Prius, Black, UC4319 .................. $8,990 ‘11 Volkswagen Jetta DSL, Silver, UC4327 .. $8,990 ‘17 Dodge Grand Caravan, Red, UV2671...... $9,990 ‘14 Dodge Grand Caravan, White, UV2683 $10,990 ‘15 Jeep Cherokee, White, US2817 ............$12,490 ‘15 Jeep Cherokee, Gray, US2777 ..............$16,990 ‘18 Jeep Compass, Blue, US2842 ..............$17,990 ‘18 Jeep Compass, Orange, US2843 ..........$17,990 ‘14 Ram 1500, White, UT4488 ...................$17,990 ‘18 Hyundai Santa Fe, Bright Silver, UC4318 $17,999 ‘20 Dodge Journey, Black, US2825 ............$18,990 ‘18 Jeep Compass, White, US2861 ............$18,990 ‘13 Ram 1500, Gray, UT4564 .....................$18,990 ‘16 Subaru Legacy, Blue, US2741 ..............$18,999 ‘19 Chrysler 300, Black, UC4334 ...............$21,990 ‘17 Chrysler Pacifica Touring L, White, UV2452 ....................................................$22,899 ‘19 Chrysler 300, Red, UC4341 .................$22,990 ‘17 Jeep Compass, Black, US2813.............$22,990 ‘20 Chrysler Voyager, Billet, UV2673 .........$22,990

‘19 Chrysler 300, White, UC4330 ..............$23,990 ‘18 Jeep Compass, White, US2812 ............$23,990 ‘19 Dodge Challenger, Gray, UC4331 .........$24,990 ‘14 Ram 1500, Silver, UT4562....................$24,990 ‘18 Dodge Charger, White, UC4324 ...........$24,999 ‘16 Jeep Grand Cherokee, Black, US2744 ..$24,999 ‘15 Ram 1500, Silver, UT4487....................$24,999 ‘18 Jeep Cherokee, White, US2783 ............$25,990 ‘17 Ford Explorer, Blue, US2725 ................$26,990 ‘14 GMC Sierra 1500, White, UT4556 ........$26,990 ‘15 Ram 1500, Silver, UT4501....................$27,999 ‘17 Jeep Grand Cherokee, Black, US2789 ..$28,990 ‘16 Chevrolet 1500, Silver, UT4547............$28,990 ‘20 Jeep Wrangler, Black, US2860 .............$29,990 ‘09 Jeep Grand Cherokee, Black, US2762 ..$29,999 ‘17 Jeep Grand Cherokee, White, US2793..$30,990 ‘17 Jeep Grand Cherokee, Black, US2800 ..$30,990 ‘18 Jeep Grand Cherokee, White, US2784..$31,990 ‘17 Jeep Grand Cherokee, Velvet, US2794 .$31,990 ‘18 Ram 2500, Red, UT4506 ......................$31,990 ‘18 Ram 1500, Blue, UT4588 .....................$31,990 ‘16 Ram 1500 Sport Crew Cab 4x4, Red, UT3788 ....................................................$32,799

34650 225th Ave. - Albany, MN 56307

320-845-2801 • 800-392-3426

‘19 Jeep Grand Cherokee, Black, US2765 ..$32,999 ‘18 Dodge Durango, White, US2763 ..........$33,990 ‘19 Jeep Grand Cherokee, Billet, US2736...$33,999 ‘19 Ram 1500, Billet, UT4469 ....................$33,999 ‘19 Ram 1500, Granite, UT4470 .................$33,999 ‘20 Dodge Durango, Gray, US2743 ............$34,990 ‘18 Jeep Grand Cherokee, Rhino, US2802 .$34,990 ‘17 Jeep Wrangler, Red, US2852 ................$34,990 ‘19 Jeep Grand Cherokee, Black, US2752 ..$34,999 ‘19 Jeep Wrangler, White, US2769 .............$35,990 ‘15 Jeep Wrangler, Black, US2837 .............$35,990 ‘17 Ram 1500, Black, UT4485 ....................$35,990 ‘20 Jeep Grand Cherokee, Black, US2766 ..$36,990 ‘20 Jeep Grand Cherokee, Granite, US2755$37,999 ‘19 Ram 1500, White, UT4567 ...................$38,990 ‘20 Chevrolet 1500, Gray, UT4566 .............$40,990 ‘19 Ram 2500, Black, UT4553 ....................$42,990 ‘19 Chevrolet Silverado, White, UT4584.....$42,990 ‘20 Jeep Gladiator, White, UT4452 .............$49,999 ‘20 Chevrolet 1500, Red, UT4559 ..............$52,990 ‘19 Ram 3500, White, UT4505 ...................$52,999 ‘20 Ram 1500, Black, UT4592 ....................$55,990

SALES HOURS: Mon.-Thurs. 8:30 AM - 7:00 PM; Fri. 8:30 AM - 6 PM; Sat. 8:00 AM - 3:00 PM

SERVICE HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 7:00 AM-6:00 PM; Sat. 7:00 AM - 1:00 PM

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45240 County Road 80 E • PERHAM MN 56573

218-346-3415

SALES EVERY MONDAY AT 10:00 A.M.

PerhamStockyards.com • CattleUSA.com Mitch Barthel Owner/Auctioneer 218-639-5228

Open Sundays Noon-8pm to Receive Stock • Complimentary Hay & Water Pens Provided

March 14th ON THE RANCH

BAR J RANCH PRODUCTION SALE Brooten, MN • 1:30pm

March 15th Feeder Sale w/Hog, Goat, Sheep Special March 22nd Feeder Sale w/Bred Cow Special March 29th Dairy, Hay/Straw/Corn Stalks with Hol Steer Special

Cleaning Drain Tiles, Manure Systems, Sewers and Frozen Lines

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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.

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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, March 13, 2021 • Page 25

Lot no. 878 920 923 935 936 943 957 964 965 981 982 254 259 870 888 912 942 960 961 962 973 975 272 275 278 895 929 941 956 980 986 268 934 889 866 873 876 880 927 958 994 863 882 990 267 269 865 869 930 872 995 892 931 855 856 857 859 860 861 862 875 894 896 898 900 902 906 913 917 928 949 952 953 954 983 992 993 996 265 266 874 879 884 908 909 918 921 925 926 933 939 959 963 968 970 974 985 1000 250 251 252 258 260 262 270 858 864 867 868 883 886 890 916 924

Mid-American Hay Auction results for March 4, 2021

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 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 Rounds 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 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 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

moisture protein 12.11 19.97 13.82 19.44 49.25 10.49 11.7 8.74 14.56 16 12.39 14.98 14.39 16.07 16.6 17.93 13.34 19.72 12.98 11.72 13.49 20.22 15.49 20.46 14.4 8.68 14.21 19.9 13.71 17.13 15.7 11.49 12.74 13.49 16.64 24.66 12.67 23.45 18.51 22.51 14.68 14.35 13.89 8.33 13.57 12.54 29.78 20.46 29.47 20.03 14.44 19.31 16.75 18.66 15.03 20.16 17.32 20.38 19.41 22.4 12.21 17.76 14.4 22.54 15.5 20.85 13.9 22.16 13.04 22.22 9.4 20.69 11.63 21.41 12.96 18.34 13.14 22.46 13.24 20.98 12.75 12.82 11.97 17.09 12.94 21.4 15.68 18.6 10.83 15.68 13.69 19.84 14.54 17.11 17.39 21.33 14.33 25.41 11.8 23.07 12.84 19.11 16.37 5.25 11.66 17.02 12.42 20.22 10.78 13.86 12.63 20.71 12.91 18.64 12.87 21.08 12.85 20.02 15.06 24.8 11.33 19.59 9.43 19.64 14.16 15.74 12.15 20.18 12.42 20.22 13.22 19.85 12.7 16.2 11.96 16.61 13.41 22.2 12.02 17.02 12.12 14.78 12.88 22.48 11.19 16.59 12.93 9.42 13.97 16.51 11.71 18.28 10.53 18.1 13.33 18.11 10.96 13.25 14.27 10.2 10.72 17.83 14.65 21.36 14.53 22.68 11.01 16.22 12.55 15.32 12.03 17.07 12.14 18.85 16.05 23.87 12.36 22.99 14.26 22.95 11.72 11.16 13.44 23.82 15.27 22.11 13.19 11.27 16.8 20.24 14.24 24.53 13.95 24.28 12.87 25.18 10.68 16.66 11.23 17.6 13.47 16.77 17.52 23.82 12.71 18.37 82.42 24 16.03 20.02 12.76 16.53 11.63 18.83 12.14 16.57 14.91 22.69 13.65 23.89 14.75 24.23 15.02 18.48 9.66 18.41 11.31 18.29

RFV 167.81 123.63 85.46 94.4 91.93 85.29 89.1 101.36 155.24 101.11 159.16 146.79 82.15 142.72 124.07 83.88 99.67 140.54 133.16 124.49 80.79 89.33 78.65 154.76 141.62 134.45 135.16 119.33 115.94 123.58 114.03 123.12 108.32 123.47 150.3 141.97 113.56 94.19 181.07 170.33 108.77 144.75 175.21 129.59 113.43 100 134.23 155.43 136 209.91 130.66 56.63 123.32 161.18 109.3 160.25 140.08 152.79 156.18 143.39 123.17 161.36 101.99 161.23 161.18 133.84 113.49 117.97 159.86 87.88 85.23 172.24 120.82 72.63 104.91 140.59 153.84 130.55 91.91 84.26 127.32 140.01 148.83 119.31 128.31 157.91 106.44 141 193.11 129.39 103.53 124.35 116.5 93.22 122.85 155.35 172.13 181.42 120.48 88.03 105.34 166.96 105.35 134.88 99.05 136.42 125.44 143.17 144.57 113.01 105.34 119.93 174.43 165.74

cut. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 1&2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 4 1&3 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 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 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3

Ld. size 25.19 19.55 38 21.59 19.75 23.35 9.27 23.38 19.63 8.59 20.01 30.5 29.27 27.87 21.38 22 20.19 13.79 23.42 23.69 9.23 8.22 6 6.69 13.01 27.14 17.36 18.02 25.94 19.1 22.96 8.35 19.9 23.77 27.68 22.57 24.15 24.39 20.25 22.75 25.76 28.28 28.18 27.34 27.73 22.82 28.72 28.24 23.86 27.51 26.91 50 13.59 12.55 11.66 27.19 23.64 25.04 25.15 24.98 26.09 26.15 24.63 23.32 25.02 28.63 26.53 10.41 23.7 21.01 21.02 22.53 13.49 27.06 23.98 24.47 24.66 22.7 21.54 23.5 26.39 25.53 13.7 22.03 24.23 24.91 24.77 23.92 27.31 23.97 11.62 10.08 10.05 24 38 23.7 26.39 27.99 23.04 22.81 28.11 25.75 50 25.96 9.97 24.43 26.55 23.95 18.81 25.12 25.47 23.75 23.19 22.57

price $150.00 $120.00 $15.00 $80.00 $80.00 $95.00 $75.00 $85.00 $120.00 $120.00 $145.00 $115.00 $80.00 $140.00 $90.00 $40.00 $105.00 $110.00 $100.00 $90.00 $85.00 $55.00 $40.00 $95.00 $85.00 $135.00 $145.00 $100.00 $100.00 $130.00 $105.00 $100.00 $85.00 $100.00 $110.00 $135.00 $110.00 $110.00 $165.00 $85.00 $100.00 $125.00 $195.00 $145.00 $80.00 $100.00 $145.00 $160.00 $85.00 $270.00 $100.00 $35.00 $115.00 $140.00 $130.00 $160.00 $150.00 $150.00 $150.00 $145.00 $125.00 $195.00 $120.00 $170.00 $165.00 $135.00 $110.00 $110.00 $165.00 $75.00 $80.00 $120.00 $105.00 $80.00 $100.00 $160.00 $175.00 $110.00 $70.00 $50.00 $110.00 $125.00 $160.00 $105.00 $130.00 $125.00 $130.00 $110.00 $175.00 $100.00 $120.00 $105.00 $105.00 $30.00 $42.50 $175.00 $135.00 $150.00 $170.00 $125.00 $125.00 $95.00 $35.00 $105.00 $85.00 $120.00 $150.00 $120.00 $150.00 $100.00 $100.00 $120.00 $220.00 $150.00

Lot no.

966 967 972 976 977 987 991 253 255 276 277 922 971 271 915 978 273 938 989 910 940 950 871 877 885 887 891 897 979 279 893 901 903 905 907 911 914 932 944 946 948 951 955 969 984 988 997 998 1001 263 264 274 280 947 899 937 945 999 261 281 881 904 919 256 257

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 Small Rounds Small Rounds Small Rounds 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 Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Medium Squares Small Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Medium Squares Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds Large Rounds

moisture protein

11.85 11.75 11.01 17.05 16.03 14.01 17.08 13.04 12.92 15.35 13.81 13.88 21.35 16.8 14.73 13.9 16.32 17.23 15.08 12.94 14.34 15.08

RFV

23.63 153.33 25.16 160.08 23.73 168.86 22.68 158.64 23.05 157.93 20.24 134.61 27.12 146.81 20.74 128.57 24.84 147.19 20.76 134.6 17.43 129.43 24.1 140.68 22.45 157.13 19.6 135.93 24.47 195.53 17.12 130.31 15.81 133.6 20.28 175.93 22.36 136.54 21.26 138.43 19.61 148.83 18.01 125.14 STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW STRAW 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 CORN STALKS CORN STALKS CORN STALKS CORN STALKS

cut.

3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 5 1&2 1&2 2 2 3

Ld. size

25.12 24.09 22.06 24.65 10.38 25.55 25.38 25.79 23.57 12.77 8.84 25.54 25.1 17.53 22.23 14.73 7.24 7.64 25.25 11.07 10.94 18.48 26.04 27.17 24.67 26.48 26.44 26.36 24 44 72 69 72 60 72 36 36 76 70 76 72 63 68 44 78 72 72 30 73 60 72 72 24 72 73 34 34 34 34 34 74 34 30 34 34

price

$185.00 $200.00 $185.00 $150.00 $140.00 $135.00 $75.00 $130.00 $120.00 $145.00 $170.00 $165.00 $200.00 $115.00 $200.00 $90.00 $130.00 $130.00 $125.00 $120.00 $120.00 $85.00 $75.00 $70.00 $70.00 $70.00 $65.00 $70.00

$35.00 $20.00 $42.50 $20.00 $22.50 $20.00 $27.50 $25.00 $25.00 $25.00 $22.50 $20.00 $20.00 $22.50 $12.50 $35.00 $22.50 $30.00 $25.00 $30.00 $22.50 $20.00 $27.50 $22.50 $25.00 $35.00 $32.50 $35.00 $25.00 $37.50 $37.50 $45.00 $25.00 $27.50 $27.50

Hay sales starts at 12:30 p.m. and are the 1st and 3rd Thursdays of the months of September thru May.

March 18, 2021 April 1, 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

Tell the advertisers you saw their ad in the Dairy Star!

The Largest Stocking Dealer of ESCH HAY TEDDERS & FIELD MASTER ROTARY RAKES in the Upper Midwest!

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Built in the USA • 9’-32’ • 8”x20.5 tires Heavy duty and built to last Lifetime warranty on arms

FIELD MASTER ROTARY RAKES 13’ - 24’ • Designed to perform Heavy duty and easy to use Built to last • Built in canada

Martin Ag Supply LLC 3128 Mitchell Line St. Orchard, IA 50460

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Double holiday delights Page 26 • Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021

Looking at the calendar, I discovered I get to celebrate two major holidays with this month’s article, St. Patrick’s Day and Easter. Whether you are a green or an orange Irish (my family are Orangemen), these rst two recipes will make everyone feel Irish. I love to make Rueben loaf. It looks so difcult but is amazingly simple. You can make your own bread or you can use ready rise frozen bread. I would suggest making at least two loaves and have friends over to celebrate because you will need extra people around to help you eat the Irish cream cake. This is a recipe shared by Mark’s cousins in Virginia. Wendy and I are two Irish girls who married two German Schmitt boys. We are always trying to squeeze in a little bit of Irish fun into our families. I have also included a couple of simple Easter desserts to share around the family table. I found the coconut cake recipe in a Rachael Ray magazine. Mark and I could not stop eating this moist and simple cake. We ate the whole thing. I would suggest you use the coconut milk as called for in the recipe. The milk really adds to the avor. You might be able to substitute whole milk with some coconut extract if you are in a pinch. The recipe will not require the whole can, but I used the remaining milk mixed with a few eggs and cinnamon to make the dip for French toast. The éclair dessert called for a container of frozen whipped topping. I prefer to whip up my own cream with vanilla and powdered sugar for the topping. Either option will work. Enjoy. Rueben loaf 3 1/4 to 3 3/4 cups our, divided 1 package yeast 1 tablespoon sugar 1 tablespoon butter, softened

sides of lling. Alternating sides, fold the strips at an angle across lling. Cover dough and let rise in a warm place for 15 minutes. Brush with egg white and sprinkle with caraway seeds. Bake at 400 degrees for 25 minutes or until lightly browned. Serve immediately; refrigerate leftovers.

Food columnist, Natalie Schmitt 1 teaspoon salt 1 cup warm water (120-130 degrees) 1/4 cup Thousand Island dressing 6 ounces thinly sliced corned beef 4 ounces sliced Swiss cheese 8 ounces sauerkraut, drained 1 egg white, beaten Caraway seeds In a mixing bowl, combine 2 ¼ cups our, yeast, sugar, butter and salt. Stir in warm water; mix until a soft dough forms. Add remaining our if necessary. Turn out onto a lightly oured surface; knead until smooth, about four minutes. On a lightly greased baking sheet, roll dough to a 10-inch by 14-inch rectangle. Spread dressing down center third of dough. Top with layers of beef, cheese and sauerkraut. Make cuts from lling to edges of dough 1 inch apart on both

Irish cream cake by Wendy Schmitt 1 package white cake mix 1 large package instant vanilla pudding 1 1/2 cups Irish cream liqueur 1 cup mini semisweet chocolate chips 4 eggs 1/2 cup vegetable oil Glaze 2/3 cup Irish cream liqueur 2 cups powdered sugar Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Mix cake ingredients and blend. Pour into a greased and oured Bundt cake pan. Bake 45 minutes or until cake springs back when lightly touched. Combine glaze ingredients. While cake is still warm in pan, poke holes in cake. I use the end of a large cutting fork to make the holes. Pour glaze over cake. Allow cake to cool in pan at least two hours before removing. Éclair dessert 1 stick butter 1 cup water 1 cup our 4 eggs 3 cups milk 12 ounces cream cheese 2 small packages instant vanilla pudding 2 cups whipping cream (whipped with vanilla and 3-4 tablespoons powdered sugar) Chocolate syrup Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees. Boil

butter and water. Add our. Stir to form a ball. Cool one minute. Add eggs one at a time. Beat with a wooden spoon. Spread into a greased 9-by-13 pan. Bake until brown about 30-40 minutes. Cool. Make pudding according to directions on package. Pour over cooled pastry. Spread whipped cream over top of pudding. Lightly drizzle with chocolate syrup. Double coconut cake Rachael Ray magazine 1 stick unsalted butter, melted, plus more for buttering the pan 1 cup shredded coconut, plus 1/3 cup for coating the pan (optional) 1 cup our 1 teaspoon baking powder 1/4 teaspoon salt 3/4 cup sugar 2/3 cup coconut milk, stirred well 2 large eggs, at room temperature Arrange a rack in the center of the oven; preheat to 350 degrees. Grease an 8-inch round cake pan with 2-inchhigh sides with butter. Line the bottom and sides of the pan with parchment paper, then grease the paper (or skip paper and grease the pan, dust with 1/3 cup shredded coconut. Tap any excess coconut out of the pan.) Sift our, baking powder and salt into a large bowl. Whisk in 1 cup shredded coconut and the sugar. In a small bowl, whisk the coconut milk and eggs. Gradually stir the wet ingredients into the dry ingredients until blended. Stir in melted butter. Pour the batter into the prepared pan and smooth the top. Bake 30 to 35 minutes. Let cool 10 minutes. Run a butter knife around the sides of the pan. Invert the cake onto a wire rack and remove parchment paper. Turn the cake right side up and let cool on the rack. Dust with powdered sugar.

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Dairy Recipes

Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021 • Page 27

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Carolʼs bread 1 loaf unsliced Vienna bread 1 teaspoon dry mustard 2 tablespoon chopped onion 1 tablespoon lemon juice 3/4 pound cheddar cheese

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Cut bread into ¾-inch diagonal slices, being careful not to slice all the way through bottom crust. Combine butter, mustard, salt, onion, poppy seed, lemon juice and olives in a small sauce pan and stir until melted and blended. Cut cheese into julienne sticks about ¾-inch by ¼-inch by ¼-inch. Place the loaf of bread on a large sheet of heavy-duty foil. Start in the middle, stufng alternate sticks of Swiss and cheddar cheese into the diagonal cuts, tucking them deeply into the bread. Use foil to hold loaf in shape as it expands from stufng. Drizzle butter mixture over loaf and sprinkle over loaf completely covering it. Bake in a 350-degree oven for one hour. To serve, remove foil and place loaf on a board or plate with a sharp knife to cut pieces.

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Slow cooker loaded cauliower soup 10 slices bacon or bacon crumbles 2 large or 3 small heads of cauliower 4 cups chicken broth 1/2 large yellow onion, chopped (about 1-1/3 cups) 3 cloves garlic, pressed

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1/4 cup salted butter 2 cups shredded cheddar cheese, plus extra for garnish 1 cup heavy whipping cream Salt and pepper Snipped fresh chives or sliced green onions, for garnish

Fry the bacon in a large skillet over medium heat. Transfer to a paper towel lined plate, allow to cool and then chop. Set aside in the refrigerator. Core the heads of cauliower and cut the cauliower into orets. Place the orets in a food processor and chop into small medium-sized pieces. In a large slow cooker, combine the chicken broth, onion, garlic, butter and cauliower. Stir, cover and cook on high for four hours or on low for eight hours. Once the cauliower is tender, switch the slow cooker to the keep warm setting and use a whisk to stir and mash the cauliower to a smooth consistency. Add about three-quarters of the chopped bacon, the cheese and the cream. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Stir well until the cheese is melted. Serve garnished with additional cheese, the remaining bacon and chives or green onions, if desired.

COMPLETE HERD DISPERSAL #1: 40 Holstein Dairy Cows. Tiestall Including 2 SHARP purebred Swiss springing Cows, one Herds! coming 3yr & one coming 4yr old, bred Swiss! And several SHARP Red & Whites! Milked in tiestall with sand bedding. 73# tank average with top cows up to 120#. BF 4.1 Pro 3.1 scc 125. NO TMR! Year round calving, herd also includes (6) SHARP springing heifers! Full vaccination program. Regular herd health through Clark Marathon Vet Clinic. Over 30 years AI through Genex. Sires & Service Sires include Tango, Blowtorch, Renegade, Princeton, Tabasco, Premier, Force One, Chili Pepper and several bred to polled sires. If your looking for some very nice hard to Ànd tiestall cows, you will Ànd them in the Kunze herd dispersal! Coming from Richard and Janet Kunze, Abbotsford, WI THESE COWS SELL

COMPLETE HERD DISPERSAL #2: 30 Holstein Dairy Cows, including (7)Red Holsteins. Cows milked in tiestall, housed in freestalls as heifers. Cows will sell with fresh test, on 2x milking. Cows are not pushed milking 70# w/top cows milking over 100#! 4.1BF & 3.6P & scc 200. AI sired and bred over 20 years. Sires include Rainor, Bob, Sundaddy Red, Had Me, Markley, Mustafa Red, Defender, Carsen Red & MayÀeld. Cows bred AI to Angus bulls including Lucky, Top Cut, Capital Gain, Stronghold, and Holstein service sires include Artisan-Red and Samuri. This is a young herd with most in their 1st & 2nd lactation with (19) 1st calf in the herd!!! Coming from Tommy & Shannon Ploeckelman, Athens, WI EXPECTING 250 HEAD! AUCTIONEERS: TIM SCHINDLER & TRAVIS PARR

SPRING MACHINERY AUCTION March 19, 2021

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Dairy Star • Second Section • Saturday, March 13, 2021 • Page 28

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