Country Folks East 5.28.12

Page 1

28 May 2012 Section One e off Two Volume e 40 r 24 Number

$1.99

Your Weekly Connection to Agriculture

Farm News • Equipment for Sale • Auctions • Classifieds

Planting decisions to maximize yield ~ Page A3 High PI count levels discussed ~ A-5 Columnists Paris Reidhead

Crop Comments

A6

Lee Mielke

Mielke Market Weekly

Auctions

B11

B1

Classifieds

B17

Farmer to Farmer

A28

Since we live by the Spirit, let us keep in step with the Spirit. ~ Galatians 5:25


Section A - Page 2 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Foster Sheep Farm

by Sally Colby Tom and Carole Foster were used to life on their Schuylerville, NY, dairy farm, but when the herd was sold, things just weren’t the same. “When we sold the dairy cows, I missed having animals,” said Carole, explaining the family’s start in the sheep business. “We went to Cornell, saw their sheep program, and got into sheep. We have had as many as 120 ewes, but now have about 40.” The family started with the Polyface and Dorset sheep, two meat-type breeds known for producing excellent carcasses. When Carole became interested in hand spinning, she purchased a small flock of sheep that had fleeces suitable for spinning. Not long after that, her young daughter Abby wrote an essay for the Romney Association and won a ‘starter’ flock of Romneys. “From there we built the Romney flock,” said Carole, “and I built a natural-colored

flock of Romney crosses. Then about three years ago, my husband became enamored with the Wensleydale breed. We got a few crossbred Wensleydale ewes, and a Wensleydale ram from Oregon.” The Wensleydale is an old British breed, the result of a Leicester ram and Teeswater ewe. The ram ‘Blue Cap’ that resulted from that breeding is the founding sire of the Wensleydale breed. The Wensleydale is a large sheep, naturally polled, with luxurious, long staple wool that forms ringlets. According to the North American Wensleydale Sheep Association, the breed was developed to provide rams for crossing with hill ewes, primarily Swaledale, Blackface, Rough Fell, Cheviot and Dalesbred. The resulting females are hardy, prolific and produce plenty of milk for lambs. Wethers finish well on grass, and have high-weight carcasses without excess fat. A full-year

Carole Foster (center) and her daughter Abby (right) show a pair of yearling ewes in the natural color long wool class at the Maryland Sheep and Wool Festival.

Abby Foster enjoys preparing and showing the family's sheep. This Wensleydale ewe produced the champion natural colored fleece in the wool show at the 2012 Maryland Sheep and Wool Festival. Photos by Sally Colby Wensleydale fleece measures between to learn and share. Wool is processed 8 and 12 inches, and because its traits into yarn at Green Mountain Spinnery are similar, is often blended with in Vermont and at Battenkill Fibers in mohair. Wensleydale fleeces are free of nearby Greenwich, NY. In addition to kemp (hairy fibers) due to the charac- yarn from their own sheep, the family teristics of the wool-producing follicles. offers other local farmers’ yarns and This trait is passed on through cross- select commercial yarns. The Fosters breeding, which makes the also sell market lambs; some as hot Wensleydale valuable for improving house lambs in the spring, and others that are finished on pasture and sold wool in a flock. As the Fosters focused on wool pro- locally, mostly through word-of-mouth. The flock is sheared twice a year by duction, they decided to market yarn Hampshire shearer Gwen from their own sheep. Carole built a New loyal clientele at farmers’ markets, but Hinman. The ewes are shorn in found it difficult to make enough to January, then housed in the old dairy cover the costs of wool processing, trav- barn for February lambing. In sumel and time. About three years ago, a mer, the ewes are sheared again, long-time dream of Carole’s was real- which allows for ample wool growth for ized when the family created a yarn both fleece and shows. “The fleece is and fiber arts shop in the farmhouse very fine and lustrous,” said Carole, where Tom grew up. The Yarn Shop at noting that Wensleydales are shown Foster Sheep Farm includes the yarn with about two inches of fleece. “It’s shop as well as space for classes, a much finer than Cotswold or Lincoln.” wool-dying area and a gathering place A fleece from one of the Fosters’ for those who want to meet with others Wensleydales was awarded grand champion natural colored fleece at the fleece show at the 2012 Maryland Sheep and Wool Festival. The family also exhibited the second place white long-wool fleece. In the show ring, a ram lamb sired by their ram from Whenever possible, bring all your Oregon placed second. The Fosters are currently in the equipment back the farmstead or take other measures. Consider park- process of selling their development ing equipment near a neighbor’s resi- rights through the Saratoga Plan, a dence and letting them know that you land trust that protects land and water did so that they are aware. Also it is resources through conservation easeadvised that farm owners frequently ments and acquisition of property. take inventory of their tools and Carole and her family are hoping to equipment so that they can inform raise money through the Three Bags law enforcement if their farm was vic- Full campaign, which will provide suftimized. Lastly, take the time to report ficient funding for their farm to be preany suspicious activities or if some- served when the goal is met. Although farm families benefit greatly thing is determined to have been stolen. By helping to promptly identi- through farmland preservation, the fy thefts, the likelihood of those indi- general public also benefits from viduals being caught as well as the preservation through protected land prevention of future crimes is greatly with clean air and water, wildlife habitat and better access to local food and fiber. impacted.

Lock it or lose it

Rash of rural thefts raises concerns for goods around the farm by Steven E Smith Desperate people do desperate things is the old saying. And knowing that the most dangerous people are those who have nothing to lose, farmers are finding out what people can do. While working in Madison County recently, I was informed that a number of farmers had found they were victims of rural crimes during the recent few months. By bringing this to light, I hope to prevent others from experiencing the same loss. As farms have grown in size and scale, it has become more challenging for farm businesses to keep the sizable arsenal of equipment, tools and other supplies used for farming activities in

one location let alone stored under lock and key. The practice of leaving an implement in the field during crop activities is becoming more risky. I learned that a farmer returned to a field where his tractor was parked to find that someone has taken the suitcase weights while he was gone. In another instance, a farmer pulled his self propelled discbine from the winter storage shed and realized that someone had broken into the shed and removed the toolbox that was inside attached to the step of the unit. Other thefts including the removal of batteries, fuel and other elements used for farming activities have been targeted. In conclusion, keep your guard up.


Page 3 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Planting decision to maximize yield by Sally Colby Agronomist John McGillicuddy says farmers are their own best agronomic support system. “You’re there every day, and it’s your money on the line,” he said. “That makes you much more dedicated.” McGillicuddy’s Iowa-based agronomy consulting business is built on the premise that interacting with clients and helping them understand what’s going on in their fields bring them back. The dilemma for corn growers, according to McGillicuddy, is this: “You have a certain amount of time, and a certain amount of money. You also have a resource that you might not be thinking about, and that’s brain time. Your most valuable asset is your brain, and it has to make a lot of decisions.” McGillicuddy referenced an actuary who compiled a spreadsheet to help sort the factors involved in crop planting decisions. The printed version of that spreadsheet is 30 feet long, in small print, with nearly 3,000 critical input factors that have an impact on the outcome. “His position is that crop production is the most complex industry in the world,” said McGillicuddy. “Decisions have to be made well, and those decisions have an impact on success or failure.” McGillicuddy says many planting decisions are made instinctively, but most stem from areas where time and money are invested. “You have to be selective about critical resources like your time and what your brain is doing,” he said. “Good agronomy is about identifying where time and money should go.” According to McGillicuddy, one steadfast rule of crop production is that ‘almost anything will work somewhere, but absolutely nothing works everywhere’. “If you’re going to spend time and money on anything, two things have to be true or it won’t improve yields,” he said. “The problem you’re solving has to actually exist in your field. Products or treatments are

purchased to solve a problem, so if the problem isn’t in that field, or if the problem isn’t the critical thing that puts a ceiling on yield, it probably won’t change the outcome.” How should the farmer look for problems? “When you look at a field and have 2,500 decisions to make, it’s the same as running with 2,500 dragons,” said McGillicuddy. “Which dragon do you kill first? You kill the one that’s the most immediate threat. In a cornfield, what is the most likely thing that’s robbing yield?” When he started as an agronomist in the late 1970s, McGillicuddy says that an International Cyclo 400 Air Planter was considered state-of-the art. Yield limiting factors and concerns at that time included ear count, stand quality, hybrids, root mass and compaction. Today’s concerns are more about N, P, K and micronutrients. However, those factors must be carefully analyzed before amendments are made. “If you throw a jug full of a mixture of manganese, copper and boron on a field and assume your problem is solved,” said McGillicuddy, “you probably wasted material and didn’t solve your problem.” McGillicuddy says since we can’t control water and sunlight, good agronomy is about solving the things that can be solved. “If you want to achieve yields you’ve never had, you’re going to have to manage details you’ve never managed,” he said. “We didn’t always manage sulfur, boron and zinc, and now we manage them actively. That doesn’t mean we’re always putting those on — it means we’re always verifying whether we’re getting enough.” According to McGillicuddy, corn has a unique characteristic that doesn’t apply to other agronomic crops. “It starts with extremely high yield potential, and over the season, gives it up,” he said. “Once those bushels are lost, they cannot be regained. Good agronomy is about stopping the decline in the early season.” Under ideal conditions, most commercial corn varieties would surpass

Today farmers are thinking more about N, P, K and micronutrients, however those factors should be analyzed before making amendments. Photo by Sally Colby

350 to 400 bu/acre. “The day it germinates, that’s the number you’re starting with,” he said. “If I harvest 200 bushels of corn, it’s a safe assumption that some time earlier in that growing season we were at 220 bushels. What I’m looking for is the event that dropped the yield — how did that field give up its last 20 bushels? The last 20 are the easiest to get back, so we want to identify how and when did the corn plant give up. If we can identify that, we can focus on figuring out the three

most likely causes, and manage those.” Since growers are paid for weight, and the smallest unit of corn is a single kernel, the focus should be on maximizing both the number of kernels and kernel weight. “The number of kernels produced per acre times what each of those kernels weighs is what you’re going to be paid for,” said McGillicuddy. “We’ve been challenging this concept for 33 years and it hasn’t let us down yet.”

Nozzle calibration aids weed control by Sanne Kure-Jensen Calibrate, Calibrate, Calibrate! Each spring equipment and nozzles should be calibrated using a tank of water. Spray for 30 seconds into a cup to check volume and/or drive the planned speed over paper calibration cards randomly spaces through the rows to check spray and drip patterns. Dr. Richard Bonanno, Extension and GAP Educator with UMass Extension Agricultural and Landscape Program, in Amherst, Massachusetts recommends careful boom and nozzle calibration. Most nozzles should be spaced 20” apart on a boom. Nozzle tips should be 19” above the surface that is being sprayed. He uses quarter turn, quick release plastic nozzles with stainless steel tips. They last longer than brass and can easily be taken off for cleaning. Also make sure that all the nozzles on the boom are the same size. (Do NOT

use old brass tips that may have been cleaned out with wire.) Spray Nozzles and Boom Settings The most common spray nozzles offer either 80° or 110° patterns. Boom spacing either allows a full overlap (110°) where all weeds or soil are hit by spray from two nozzles or a 20 percent overlap (80°) between the nozzles where the spray is weaker at the edges. Nozzle codes are simple: they start with 80 or 110 depending on their spray pattern. The next number refers to their delivery (at a ground speed of 3 mph and a pressure of 40 psi): “01” means 10 gallons per acre, ”02” means 20 gallons per acre, “03” means 30 gallons per acres and “04” means 40 gallons per acre. Smaller tips (01 and 02) can be used for liquid-based formulas. Larger tips (03 and 04) are commonly used for powderbased formulas to minimize clogs. Nozzle codes ending in VS work well at

lower pressures. Nozzle codes ending in E spray evenly across their whole delivery width. Ideally boom heights should be set so that the nozzle tips are 19” above the surface to be sprayed. When spraying emerged weeds, the nozzle tips should be 19” above the top of the weeds. The proper height adjustment is crucial when spraying a post-emergent herbicide. If the boom is too low, more herbicide will be deposited under the nozzles. If the boom is too high, more herbicide will be deposited between the nozzles. Another critical setting is the orientation of the nozzles over the crop row when spraying a post-emergent herbicide. It is important that the nozzles are NOT directly over the crop rows. This is especially important over crops like corn where the herbicide can run directly into the whorl. Crops may be stunted and yield reduction can be significant.

To adjust the amount of water you are using per acre, you can change the speed of the tractor. If you normally spray at 3 mph, doubling the tractor speed will result in half as much water being used. Do not drive too fast on rocky or uneven fields, as this will jostle your boom and send spray in random, less effective patterns. Another way to alter the amount of herbicide delivered is to change the size of the nozzle tip being used. Using a smaller tip will reduce the amount of water sprayed per acre. A final way to change output is to change the pressure in the spray tank. However, the relationship between pressure and delivery rate is not linear. To double the output you will need to quadruple the pressure and to cut the volume in half, you need to decrease the

Nozzle calibration

A4


Section A - Page 4 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Randall Implements hosts Kubota Demo Day & Open House by Elizabeth A. Tomlin “I’ve had very good service here for at least 30 years,” stated Bill

Bailey of Bailey’s Farm in Amsterdam, NY. Bailey, who was attending a Kubota

Demonstration Day and Open House at Randall Implements with his wife Joyce, was referring to

Randall Implements owner Wes Ostrander shows a zero-turn Kubota ZD 326 mower, with a 26hp, 60 inch deck and top speed of 17km/h.

Cover photo by Sally Colby Decisions made at plating time will impact harvest yield.

Country Folks Eastern Edition U.S.P.S. 482-190

Country Folks (ISSN0191-8907) is published every week on Monday by Lee Publications, PO Box 121, 6113 St. Hwy. 5, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428. Periodical postage paid at Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 and additional entry offices. Subscription Price: $47 per year, $78 for 2 years. POSTMASTER: Send address change to Country Folks, P.O. Box 121, 6113 St. Hwy. 5, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428. 518-673-2448. Country Folks is the official publication of the Northeast DHIA, N.Y. State FFA, N.Y. Corn Growers Association and the N.Y. Beef Producers. Publisher, President .....................Frederick W. Lee, 518-673-0134 V.P., Production.................................Mark W. Lee, 518-673-0132........................... mlee@leepub.com V.P., General Manager......................Bruce Button, 518-673-0104...................... bbutton@leepub.com Managing Editor.............................Joan Kark-Wren, 518-673-0141................. jkarkwren@leepub.com Assistant Editor..................................Gary Elliott, 518-673-0143......................... cfeditor@leepub.com Page Composition.........................Michelle Gressler, 518-673-0138 ...................mmykel@leepub.com Comptroller.......................................Robert Moyer, 518-673-0148...................... bmoyer@leepub.com Production Coordinator..................Jessica Mackay, 518-673-0137.................... jmackay@leepub.com Classified Ad Manager.....................Peggy Patrei, 518-673-0111..................... classified@leepub.com Shop Foreman ..................................................................................................................Harry Delong Palatine Bridge, Front desk ....................518-673-0160 .......................Web site: www.leepub.com Accounting/Billing Office .......................518-673-0149 ..................................amoyer@leepub.com Subscriptions ..........................................888-596-5329 .......................subscriptions@leepub.com Send all correspondence to: PO Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 • Fax (518) 673-2699 Editorial email: jkarkwren@leepub.com Advertising email: jmackay@leepub.com Ad Sales Bruce Button, Corporate Sales Mgr .......Palatine Bridge, NY..........................................518-673-0104 Territory Managers Patrick Burk ...................................................Batavia, NY ................................................585-343-9721 Tim Cushen ...............................................Schenectady, NY ...........................................518-346-3028 Ian Hitchener ...............................................Bradford, VT ...............................................518-210-2066 Mark Whitbread..........................................Skaneateles, NY................................... ..........315-317-0905 Ad Sales Representatives Jan Andrews .........................................Palatine Bridge, NY .........................................518-673-0110 Laura Clary ............................................Palatine Bridge, NY ..........................................518-673-0118 Dave Dornburgh ....................................Palatine Bridge, NY ..........................................518-673-0109 Steve Heiser ..........................................Palatine Bridge, NY ..........................................518-673-0107 Tina Krieger ...........................................Palatine Bridge, NY ..........................................518-673-0108 Kathy LaScala...................................katelascala@gmail.com...........................................913-486-7184 Sue Thomas ........................................suethomas1@cox.net ..........................................949-305-7447 We cannot GUARANTEE the return of photographs. Publisher not responsible for typographical errors. Size, style of type and locations of advertisements are left to the discretion of the publisher. The opinions expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the publisher. We will not knowingly accept or publish advertising which is fraudulent or misleading in nature. The publisher reserves the sole right to edit, revise or reject any and all advertising with or without cause being assigned which in his judgement is unwholesome or contrary to the interest of this publication. We assume no financial responsibility for typographical errors in advertisement, but if at fault, will reprint that portion of the ad in which the error appears.

the service he has received over his many years as a customer at Randall Implements. “We bought our first tractor here,” he recalled. “It was an International Harvester 966.” Bailey says that he followed up that purchase with an International 1086, and has been doing business there ever since. The Bailey’s raise replacement heifers, beef and pigs on their farm, and they say that good service for their equipment is a high priority for them. Randall Implements, well known throughout the Mohawk Valley for their high standards, strives to maintain their reputation for customer service — and customer appreciation. Owner Wes Ostrander says that Randall Implements staff their Parts Department with “experienced professionals who want to make sure you get the right part at the right time — and at a fair price.” Although the weather was cool and extremely blustery, Randall Implements’ Secretary Samantha Richardson and employee Crystal Hutchison kept the grill running at the Open House until all of the

(From left) Ned Ostrander, Samantha Richardson and Mike Manko greeted guests at Randall Implements' Kubota Demo Day & Open House. Photos by Elizabeth A. Tomlin hamburgers, hot dogs, chili and other refreshments were given away. Terry Davis of Pam-Ter Farm, Carlisle, NY, helped himself to some chili and commented that he was also a regular customer at the business, and that he wasn’t just there for the Open House. He and Herman Schroer of Sloansville were at Randall Implements “looking at a set of International discs.” Sales Representative Ned Ostrander reported that it was a very successful turnout for the demonstrations part of the day. “We had a lot of people in that were trying out machinery,” Ostrander said. “They

were finding out what the machines can do to make their lives easier.” Wes Ostrander was also pleased with the Open House, which he calls a “party.” “We had a very successful turnout,” Ostrander commented. “It not only met, but exceeded our expectations.” Randall Implements is a 46-year-old company. They stock and service multiple lines of equipment, including Kubota, Ferris, Case, Cub Cadet, Land Pride, Claas and Woods. Randall Implements is located at 2991 State Highway 5-S, Fultonville, NY, and may be contacted at 518-853-4500.

Nozzle calibration from A3 pressure by a factor of four. Dr. Bonanno did not recommended this because raising or lowering the pressure too much will change the pattern of the nozzle and result in either an uneven spray pattern or too much potential for drift. Weed ID and Treatment Selection After identifying the weed to be controlled using a good field guide or the “New England Vegetable Management Guide,” determine what time of year and what treatment offers the best control. The Guide is available online at www.nevegetable.org and includes the crops an herbicide is registered for and any restriction on which crops can be grown afterwards. Resistance “Herbicides don't make weeds resistant; herbicides select for resistance,” said Dr. Bonanno. Sometimes these resistant weeds take years to gain numbers where they present a significant problem. To reduce this risk, alternate herbicide applications, use varying herbicide choices combined with other options such as cultivation and crop rotation. Greenhouse Weed Control Dr. Bonanno's favorite weed control in greenhouses and high tunnels is weed cloth or landscape fabric. These cloths

often last 10 years so when holes are cut for certain spacing and growers rotate crops he recommended moving the cloth to the new location rather than cutting new holes and fighting weeds in each hole. This effort is faster and cheaper than weeding the weed cloth later. In general, Dr. Bonanno recommended against using herbicides inside high tunnels or greenhouses. Having multiple crops in close proximity makes selecting a spray program difficult if not impossible. Chemicals can build up or volatilize in unexpected ways effecting plants and people working in closed spaces. The only exception would be mitigating weeds in an empty house before planting. Be sure to ventilate before and after but not during application to avoid movement of herbicides out of the greenhouse through exhaust fans. Wear all recommended protective clothing and respirators during application process as closed houses increase the risks to applicators. For more information, contact Dr. Richard Bonanno, Extension and GAP Educator with UMass Extension Agricultural and Landscape Program, Amherst, Massachusetts, via email at rbonanno@umext.umass.edu or call 978-361-5650.


by Elizabeth A. Tomlin Dolgeville Producers’ Co-Op held their 77th annual meeting on May 11 at the Knights Inn in Little Falls, NY. “We were founded in 1926,” Byron Walrath, President of the Co-Op informed attendees, as he opened the meeting. “We became incorporated in ‘36 and have gone through some major changes; from cans to bulk tanks.” Walrath said the Producers’ Co-Op had marketed nearly 6 million pounds of milk in the past year and now covers seven counties. “We are no longer a small Co-Op. We paid out $60,000 in premiums last year.” Walrath stated that the Producers’ Co-Op is a “progressive and growing Co-Op, with numbers growing from 33 members in 2010 to 51 members in 2011, and now with 73 members in 2012. “We are currently marketing milk for conventional farms and organic

Dean Foods representative Bruce Bunce explains why higher PI counts mean lower milk quality and therefore lower premiums for producers.

farms,” he reported. Walrath noted that each board member of the Co-Op is a dairy producer and that all Producers’ Co-Op milk goes to the Garelick plant in East Greenbush, which is owned by Dean Foods. This is their third successful year with Garelick. Dean Food’ Representative Brent Bunce of Dallas, Texas, attended the meeting to report on milk prices and milk quality. He addressed the issue of high Preliminary Incubation Count (PI count). “As you go down the road, if you’re not receiving premiums for quality, you’re really missing the boat,” Bunce said. “There is a solution to high PI count. Some people have had a fight — but some do have success stories.” Folks around the room nodded their heads in agreement. Some shared information concerning their struggle with high PI counts. Some folks were still confused as to why they have high PI counts and even with help from their veterinarian and inspector could not discover the reason why. PI count is a measure of bacteria in raw milk. The milk is incubated for 18 hours at 56 degrees and then a culture test is done to see how many bacteria have grown. This produces the PI count. Although the bacteria are killed by pasteurization, some researchers say that the enzymes formed by the bacteria before pasteurization occurs can cause a shorter shelf life. High PI count is a difficult problem to diagnose. Some possible causes are slow or marginal cooling times, prolonged storage, unclean cows, milking wet teats, dirty equipment, milk stored

Letters to the Editor Opinions of the letters printed are not necessarily those of the staff or management at Country Folks. Submit letters of opinion to Editor, Country Folks, PO Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428. Fax 518-673-2699; E-mail cfeditor@leepub.com.

Hysteria wins and consumers lose It was like the old horror movie when a black blob descended from the sky causing people to flee in the city streets. There are at least two things in common between the movie of the 1950s and the recent national episode about a food product now known as “pink slime.” Neither is based on truth and both caused pointless panic. The tale about this misunderstood meat product began in late March when ABC News broadcast a report about the use of lean finely textured beef (LFTB) in retail beef products. The report referred to LFTB as “pink slime,” a description coined by a USDA employee and mentioned by the New York Times. The Internet universe exploded with chatter about a product that was suddenly viewed as unappetizing, unhealthy and unsafe. When it was noted that our nation’s school lunch program permits schools to use ground beef that includes LFTB, some moms and dads freaked out. On top of all that, more alarm was raised when it became known that ammonium hydroxide is often used as part of the

meat preparation process. Many supermarket chains rushed forward to exclaim that they will never again sell any ground beef product that includes LFTB. Restaurants and other fast food places quickly joined the choir. School districts across the country suddenly vowed to go LFTBfree. On and on the hysteria grew and it’s still reverberating today. So now, let’s stop, catch our breath and reflect upon some facts and realities. Let’s first be clear about LFTB. “Lean Finely Textured Beef” was developed to provide more domestic lean beef. The processor purchases beef trimmings (mostly 50 percent lean or less, from USDA-inspected food processing plants) heats the trimmings, and sends them through a centrifuge process that separates the fat and the meat. The resulting LFTB product is 94 percent to 97 percent lean beef. Ground beef containing LFTB has nearly identical nutritional value compared to other ground beef. The meat is exposed to one puff of ammonium hydroxide (which is already naturally present in beef) to

above 40 degrees and sometimes even extremely wet and humid weather correlates with high PI count. Sometimes all it takes is one small dirty spot. Occasionally farmers report, a PI count may be high for some unknown reason and the following count will be lower — without any intentional changes by the farm. Unfortunately, results of the PI test are generally interpreted as a reflection of on-farm milk production practices and used as a tool to identify sanitation practices, although, the holding temperature of milk in the bulk tank is also considered. PI counts will multiply at a rate of doubling every 20 minutes at 50 degrees. “The warmer the milk is, the faster it multiplies,” acknowledged Bunce. PI counts less than 10,000 colonyforming units per milli-litre (cfu/ml) are considered low and counts greater than 20,000 cfu/ml are considered to be high.

“Pay attention to detail!” Bunce advised. “The money’s out there!” If the cows are clean and dry and all milk contact surface — including rubber parts- are clean, vacuum lines are clean, and the milk cooling system is running at maximum efficiency then the PI count should be low. “PI counts are very important to Dean Foods,” Bunce stated. “ It’s a challenge in the market place. Over 80 percent of the time that we lose a customer it is over quality issues.” “We, at the Producers’ Co-Op, strive for quality,” Walrath stated. “Some milk markets are taking away 15 cents on their premiums, but, our premium remains the same. When they cut your premiums, they cut your profits.” According to Doug Acre Dairy farmer Gerald Douglas, “This is a good quality program. I receive more and better premiums here.” For more information about the Dolgeville Producers’ Co-Op contact Byron Walrath at 518-337-7071. Directors meet the last Monday evening of each month at 8 p.m., in the Knight’s Inn, Little Falls.

Dolgeville Producers Co-Op officials and local Dairy Princesses attended the annual meeting and banquet held at the Knight's Inn, Little Falls, NY. Seen here are (from left, back) President Byron Walrath, Secretary/Treasurer Richard Brelinsky, Montgomery County Dairy Princess Ashley Oeser, Herkimer County Dairy Princess Hannah Douglas, Gerald Douglas, Glen Damin, (front) Eric Kane, Vice-President Clyde Snyder, Delores Mang, and Robert Souza. Photos by Elizabeth A. Tomlin

provide extra protection for food safety. The treatment is an antimicrobial intervention directed primarily at E.coli but also is effective on Salmonella. The process has been thoroughly reviewed by scientists and has long been approved by the federal Food and Drug Administration. Now, let’s look at the costs and consequences of the rush to hysteria. Even before the LFTB controversy began, U.S. beef prices were heading higher because of a short supply caused by factors such as the disastrous draught in Texas last year. It has been estimated that it would take an additional 1.5 million head of cattle to produce the beef necessary to replace the use of LFTB. That could be welcome news for the nation’s farmers and ranchers, but certainly not for the many families who struggle to put food on the table, particularly in these tough economic times. Moreover, if school districts ultimately decide not to purchase ground beef with LFTB, it will likely raise their costs at a time when many already have trouble providing adequate school lunch programs, despite federal assistance. Then there are the jobs. Hundreds have already lost their employment after processing plants were forced to close because of the LFTB frenzy.

Another 650 will be out of work when the nation’s largest LFTB producer permanently closes three plants on May 25. Unfortunately, more paychecks will disappear; one processing company based in Pennsylvania and operating in five states with 850 employees has filed for bankruptcy. There are lessons to be learned from this incident. The food industry needs to be proactive with efforts to accurately inform the public about food production and not back away when topics such as “pink slime” surface. Meanwhile, consumers are encouraged to ask questions and critically evaluate what they hear and read in the media and on the Internet. Farmers are naturally concerned that consumers have trust and confidence that the food we produce is healthy and safe. It may make sense that regulations should enable processors to note on package labels if the ground beef has been processed with LFTB. But, it doesn’t make sense for a healthy, safe and affordable food product to be banished from production because of rampant misinformation and inaccurate perceptions. It is imperative that consumers base their decisions on facts rather than fear. Carl T. Shaffer, President, Pennsylvania Farm Bureau

Page 5 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

High PI count levels discussed at Dolgeville Producers’ Co-Op annual meeting


Section A - Page 6 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Crop Comments by Paris Reidhead Field Crops Consultant Uncommon common sense Yesterday (Monday) George called me from his Genesee County dairy/crop farm. He wanted to pick my brain on a couple of thoughts he had. Now, let it be understood: with George and me, brain-picking is a two-way street. My first contact with this dairyman was during early 2008. He was familiar with my writings and knew that I take sustainable farming extremely seriously. The year before, he had seen an article in Country Folks, which cited concerns about the adverse impact glyphosate-based herbicides can have on soils. That particular article referred to the work of agronomy professor emeritus Don Huber of Purdue University. Huber’s research showed that root-tips on glyphosate-tolerant soybeans had lost most of their ability to metabolize the element manganese (Mn). Mn in soybeans (and many other crops) functions as the cornerstone of their resistance mechanism, i.e., the plant’s ability to protect itself from harmful microbes and mycotoxins (mold poisons). Huber was not bashing glyphosate per se, he just was urging caution in the use of this crop management tool. (Nonethe-less, certain corporate entities took issue with the professor’s findings, and began to attack Huber’s research and professional integrity). What George was calling me about back then was to tell me that his 2006 corn crop, which followed soybeans, was the only corn crop in his neck of the woods that tested free of mycotoxins. 2006 was a growing season in which flooding was very prevalent in the Northeast. The year was

(Contact: renrock46@hotmail.com)

everything a self-respecting mold could want, including the tiny microbes with the big names, particularly the ones which kick out mycotoxins. He said that all his neighbors planted glyphosate-tolerant (GT) soybeans, as well as GT corn. All those neighbors had mycotoxin problems in their corn grain. George planted no GT crops, and had, by lab analysis, zero mycotoxin issues in his corn. 2007 was the year that the mold issues which were spawned in 2006 hit home. 2007 was also the year that Professor Huber addressed the glyphosate/Mn issue. Early spring 2008 was when George wanted to talk to me about his mycotoxin non-issue. Oh, another thing, George was the only dairy/crop farmer in his area who picked his corn. So I went out to examine his situation first hand. His heavy reliance on ear corn (a management concept to which I am mentally addicted) was part of what prompted me to travel the 500-mile round trip to meet this fellow. After all, he and I both agreed that five acres of picking corn can support as much milk production as six acres of shell corn. Since then, I have been periodically giving George dairy ration and crop program advice by phone and computer. So what George wanted to know the other day was the wisdom of using milk as a fertilizer, a subject which he knew I had studied at some length. He also wanted to know about the advisability of spreading molasses… in addition to milk… on his cropland. I told him that I was familiar with applying milk and fish emulsion on crop ground, but not milk and molasses. The field expe-

riences with milk and molasses, with which I was familiar, were conducted under the guidance of University of Nebraska Cooperative Extension. Shorten that long story: as little as three gallons of milk per acre increased hay yields by 5-10 percent; adding three gallons of fish emulsion fertilizer to the milk added another 5-10 percent to the hay yield. I told George that the three gallons of raw milk (and it had to be raw) served to introduce active bacterial culture to the soil to perk up beneficial microbes already present; the thus-enhanced biological activity

improves the soil’s productivity. The fish emulsion achieves its benefit by supplying extremely available nitrogen, phophorus, and potassium, plus a bunch of vitamins (yes, soils can use vitamins). Then I told George that molasses provides energy to fire up soil microbial activity; as little as one or two gallons per acre (diluted and sprayed) improves crop yields noticeably. He had heard elsewhere that applying milk and molasses would be a paying proposition. I told him that there was no reason that it wouldn’t be. Then George asked about applying three gallons each of raw milk, molasses, and fish emulsion per acre on regrowing meadow (he’d already taken off most of first cutting). I said to apply the milk/molasses mix on some of his

meadows, and the threeway mix on other meadows, and very importantly, to leave some of the meadows (assuming these fields are otherwise similar) untreated. This provides what scientists refer to as a control. (And we want to be scientific, at least some of the time.) George said that’s what he would do. I asked him to take pictures to document what the treatments at least look like, as well as document number of wagonloads harvested. What has flattered me is the extent to which George had embraced alternative fuels. He is aware of my involvement with biodiesel, as well as what I have written about it over the years. Thus he asked my guidance early last year about buying twin oilseed presses to squeeze oil out of his soy-

beans (and ultimately canola), and feed the mash to his cows. He farm-blends his fuel, using 100 gallons of soybean oil, 10 gallons of gasoline, and 100 gallons of petroleum. Burning this mixture in his diesel tractors makes him feel profitable, as well as makes me feel wise. I have been so impressed by George’s farming practices, that I have been very reluctant to preach row cultivation to him. In my farm visit and many phone visits, that subject never came up. So cautiously, at the end of Monday’s long phone conversation, I said that I knew we didn’t have time then, but sometime soon I would like to discuss row-cultivation with him. George said there was no need to do that, because he already row-cultivates all his corn at least twice.

MAY SPECIALS 2009 JOHN DEERE 9770 Combine Premier Cab, Contour Master, Approx. 600 Hrs.

$245,000 2002 JOHN DEERE 6310 Tractor & Loader 85hp, 4WD, 2 Sevs, 540 PTO

$33,750 2001 JOHN DEERE 9550 Combine Walker, New Feeder House, Good Condition

$91,500 2004 JOHN DEERE 9860 Combine w/ Extended Wear Concave & Harvest Monitor

$149,900 2008 JOHN DEERE 1590 20’ Drill No-Till, Grass Seed, Electronic Rate Control

$47,500 1997 JOHN DEERE 9610 Combine Level Land, Snap-On Duals, 20’ Unloading Auger

$75,900

COMBINE JD 612 Real Nice 12R 30” Corn Head . . . . . . $66,500 JD 635F Flex Head w/Air Reel . . . . . . . . . . . .$32,500 JD 635F Hydra Flex, Exc. Cond. . . . . . . . . . . .$33,500 JD 643 6R Corn Head, Low Tin . . . . . . . . . . . .$7,900 JD 643 6R Corn Head, Good Cond! . . . . . . . . .$7,900 JD 693 Corn Head, Knife Rolls . . . . . . . . . . . .$18,900 JD 693 Corn Hd, Knife Stalk Rolls . . . . . . . . .$16,900 JD 893 Contour Master, good cond. . . . . . . . .$34,000 JD 893 Corn Head, Knife Stalk Rolls . . . . . . .$33,750 JD 920F Flex Head, DAM, Poly Good . . . . . . .$12,900 JD 925F Flex Head, Good Cond . . . . . . . . . . .$14,900 JD 9550 Walker New Feeder House, Good . .$91,500 JD 9610 DAM, DAS, Contour Master . . . . . . .$69,900 JD 9610 Duals, Level Land . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$75,900 JD 9770 Comb., Prox. 600 Hrs. 2009 . . . .$245,000 JD 9770 Ext. Warranty till 2014 . . . . . . . . . .$248,000 JD 9860 STS Harvest Mon., 900/65R32 . . . .$149,900 JD 9870 ProDrive, Low Hours!, 2010 . . . . .$274,000 HAY AND FORAGE Pottinger V10+356 Butterfly Mowers, 30’ . .$38,000 Pottinger V10+356ED Triple Mower, Tine Cond. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$38,000 NH 166 Windrow Inverter w/Ext. . . . . . . . . . .$3,900 NH HW340 SP Windrower, 15’ Platform . . . . . . . .$48,750 JD 336W+30 Eject Wire Baler, Manual Control $3,750 JD 347W+30 Eject Baler w/JD 30 Ejector . . . .$3,900 JD 348T+40 Ej Hyd Tilt, Manual Dist Ctrl . . . . .$7,500 JD 466 Round Baler, Good Cond. . . . . . . . . . .$14,900 JD 4995 SP Windrower, 16’ Platform . . . . . . .$69,500 JD 678 8R Large Drum Corn Head . . . . . . . . .$52,500 JD 946 MoCo, Impeller, 2Pt Hitch . . . . . . . . .$14,900 CIH 8312 12’ MoCo, Rubber Rolls . . . . . . . . . .$9,750

MISC. EQUIPMENT Unverferth 22621 6x14 Gravity Box Auger . . .$1,895 Unverferth HT36 36’ Header Cart . . . . . . . . . . .$3,800 Knight DigiStar EZ150 Scale Box . . . . . . . . . . . .$495 JD 280 Farm Loader, Self Leveling . . . . . . . . . .$6,900 JD Unit Mtd Coult for Planters, 12 Rows . . . . .$2,200 Demco HTH Sprayer, 60’ Boom, 700 Gal . . . . .$6,900 PLANTER OR DRILL JD 1590-20 No-Till Drill, Grass Seed . . . . .$47,500 JD 1770-16nt CCS ProShaft, SeedStar Var Rat $82,500 JD 450-12 Drill, Plain Grain, No Grass . . . . . . .$5,750 TILLAGE Unverferth 1225-43 Rolling Basket, 2010 Model .$21,500 Unverferth 130 6 Shank Zone Tiller, Pull Type . . .$17,900 Steiger 2209-12 Chisel Plow, 9 Shank . . . . . . . . . .$4,900 Krause 8238WQF-38 Disk, Used 2 Seasons . . . . .$51,500 JD 2500-7 Moldboard Plow, In Furrow . . . . . .$3,250 TRACTOR JD 3320 33HP, 4WD, Cab, 2011 . . . . . . . . . . .$24,900 JD 5065M + 563SL Ldr, Low Hrs, Excell Cond $36,500 JD 5320 +541 Ldr, 55HP, 4WD, Low Hrs! . . .$25,900 JD 6310 +640 Ldr, 80HP, 4WD, Open Station $33,750 JD 7330 125HP, 4WD, 1900 Hrs . . . . . . . . . .$92,500 WAGON OR SPREADER MENSCH 3375 PT Bedding Spreader, 10 Yd. . . . .$13,900 KNIGHT 2044 Box Spreader, 440 Cu. Ft. . . . . . . . .$18,500 KNIGHT 3050 500 Cu. Ft. Mixer, Aircraft Tire .$16,900 KNIGHT 3150 Comm. Mixer, Hay Maxx . . . . .$18,900 KNIGHT 5168 Vertical Mixer, 680 Cuft. . . . . .$22,500 KNIGHT 8114 Spreader, U. Truck Tires . . . . . . .$7,850 KNIGHT 8124 Spreader, Good Cond . . . . . . . .$16,900 KNIGHT RC160 600 Cu. Ft. Mixer, 2010 . . . . .$37,900 Gehl 7210 Mixer Wagon, 200 Cu. Ft . . . . . . . .$5,900

Partss Department

Phone: 315-255-2796 Orr Tolll Free: 800-664-1740 Fax: 315-253-3949 E-Mail: parts@oharamachinery.com

oharamachinery.com • 315-253-3203 • 1289 Chamberlain Rd., Auburn, NY 13021

To Compliment Our John Deere Line, We Also Handle These Top Brands: * HARDI Sprayers * KNIGHT Mixer Wagons & Spreaders * SCHULTE Rock Pickers * DEGELMAN Front Dozer Blades * UNVERFERTH Equipment * POTTINGER Equipment * MUSTANG Skid Steer Loaders * WESTFIELD Grain Augers


WASHINGTON, D.C. — On May 17, Rep. K. Michael Conaway, Chairman of the House Agriculture Committee’s Subcommittee on General Farm Commodities and Risk Management, continued the third hearing series on agricultural policy in advance of writing the 2012 Farm Bill. Commodity programs and crop insurance were the focus of the two-day hearing. Title I programs and crop insurance form the backbone of the farm safety net that ensures farmers are able to manage a few seasons of volatile prices or devastating weather patterns. This effort ultimately ensures that consumers have a stable food

and fiber supply. The four panels of witnesses included economists and leaders from various commodity and agricultural groups highlighting the diversity of agriculture across the country. Witnesses described how programs are working under current law and how reforms can be made while stressing the need for a fair and effective safety net and a strong crop insurance program. “The clear message from the hearing is that farmers need price protection. If prices collapse, we can’t have policy that collapses right along with them creating a crisis in farm country and calls for expensive, unbudgeted

bailouts in Washington. Calls that cannot be answered because the government is broke. I have concerns that the Senate bill fails to provide that kind of protection. The Senate bill also creates a complicated new program that is so lopsided it actually locks in profits for some while denying any safety net at all to others. In a few weeks, the House Agriculture Committee will begin crafting a farm bill that is both fair and fiscally responsible to all producers across all regions of the country. Our efforts will save money for the taxpayer while providing policy that farmers can depend on when they truly need it,” said Chairman K. Michael Conaway (R-TX). “Yesterday and today we were reminded that the details are critical when designing programs to provide

farmers with assurance and a safety net. I am pleased that over the course of our two day hearing we heard from commodity groups, economists, and insurance agents that we must preserve crop insurance and other farm safety mechanisms that allow producers to feed America and the world. To no surprise, our farmers and ranchers have stepped up to the plate and are ready and willing to dig through the weeds with us to craft policy that will benefit all producers. We must continue to work together to move forward on a House Farm Bill so that we can go to conference and negotiate a final bill that will assist our farmers and feed our communities before further budget cuts place these important programs in jeopardy,” said Ranking Member Leonard L. Boswell (D-IA).

PENNSYLVANIA B. EQUIP. INC. 8422 Wayne Highway Waynesboro, PA 17268 717-762-3193

NEW YORK BOURQUIN FARM EQUIPMENT 9071 Rt. 12E Chaumout, NY 13622 315-649-2415

LONGENECKERS INC. Rt. 866 South Williamburg, PA 16693 814-793-3731

CATSKILL TRACTOR INC. 379 Center St. Franklin, NY 13775 607-829-2600

MM WEAVER & SONS INC. 169 N. Groffdale Road Leola, PA 17510 717-856-2321

NORTH CAROLINA C&R IMPLEMENT 301 Jonesville Road Williamston, NC 252-792-1511

Page 7 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Ag Subcommittee highlights the importance of a fair and effective safety net


Section A - Page 8 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

A View from Hickory Heights by Ann Swanson Music brings an era alive “I awoke in the grey of the morning, and as I lay waiting for dawn, the long lines of the desired poem began to entwine themselves in my mind, and I said to myself, ‘I must get up and write these verses, lest I fall asleep and forget them!’ So I sprang out of bed and in the dimness found an old stump of a pen, which I remembered using the day before. I scrawled the verses almost without looking at the paper.” ~ Julia Ward Howe Just before the Civil War began Julia Ward Howe met a challenge that she received to write better words for one of the American melodies of the time. Her effort was rewarded when the new words were accepted by the populous. The song became one of the most famous of that era. “The Battle Hymn of the Republic” will be sung in churches throughout the land as we celebrate and memorialize the soldiers who fought for this great land of ours. One of the best programs we ever did was a songfest of patriotic melodies. I was still in elementary school. We learned the songs as well as the histo-

ry behind them. It was a unit that I will always remember. There were songs from all of the war eras up to that point. We learned how the songs stirred the patriots to action. We heard how they comforted those left at home to carry on. We heard how the songs were used in funeral processions for those who made the ultimate sacrifice. This song has always been one of my favorites. There are four verses in all. When we sing it I always hope that all of the verses will be included. I do not believe there is a song that stirs the emotions more than this one. The music, of course, contributes to the popularity. Here I digress to mention that my husband and I used to have heated discussions about what popularized songs. He was of the opinion that the words made the song. I took the opposite view. I felt that the melody was what made a song popular. The one with that melody that you just could not get out of your head was the one that stuck. “The Battle Hymn of the Republic” is not lacking in either of these areas. I

am not sure what brought it to the forefront, but it could have been either the strong melody or the words that created pictures of the troops during the battle. This song was a Civil War era song. It is said that when Abraham Lincoln heard it for the first time he had one request. That request was that the song be sung again. During that same school program that I recalled I was lucky enough to be given a solo to sing. I got to sing “America, the Beautiful”. While I sang the American flag billowed behind me. I had to be extremely careful not to get in the way of that fan. The audience applauded with gusto, not because I sang so well I am sure, but because it was a dramatic moment in the program. We have a rich heritage of music. There are hymns as well as patriotic songs that bring us to tears. The sacrifices of the many that fought during the wars that span the years are remembered on this Memorial Day weekend. One of the most impressive parts of the local Memorial Day service is the Roll Call of the Wars. As they call off the wars drums separate them. Take time to teach the value of the

NEW YORK EMPIRE TRACTOR CORTLAND, NY 607-753-9656 CAZENOVIA, NY 315-655-8146 ATLANTA, NY 585-534-5935 Call today for your installation: Spring time may be a good time to turn your cows out for a day of renovating.

BATAVIA, NY 585-343-1822 SYRACUSE, NY 315-446-5656

Call today to pick your installation date 717-442-8850

WATERLOO, NY 315-539-7000

heritage that we have in this country. As wreaths are placed and flags are flown take time to visit a cemetery somewhere. With our population as mobile as it has become not many of us return to the burial ground of our youth. That does not mean you cannot celebrate this national holiday. It means you celebrate with the community that you are a part of. School bands will play. National Guard units will march and do salutes. Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts will be part of this historic weekend. The next generation needs to know the significance of the ceremony that we know as Memorial Day. Patriotism is not dead. It may be lulled to sleep at times, but it must be revived if we are to remain a strong nation. We must feel pride in our country. Politics should not be a part of patriotism. This country was founded on the values of God and country. We cannot whitewash our values and come out on top. First and foremost we owe allegiance to God, then, we owe allegiance to our country. Ann Swanson writes from her home in Russell, PA. Contact at hickoryheights1@verizon.net

NEW YORK GREENVILLE SAW SERVICE 5040 Rt. 81 GREENVILLE, NY 518-966-4346 HIMROD FARM SUPPLY 3141 HIMROD RD. HIMROD, NY 14842 315-531-9497 M.J. WARD & SON, INC. BATH, NY 607-776-3351

PENNSYLVANIA MARSHALL MACHINERY INC. Rte. 652 east of Honesdale, PA Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8 am-5 pm 570-729-7117 www.marshallmachinery.com


Mercer Milling Company, an independent mineral/vitamin premix company based in Liverpool NY, hosted a Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point (HACCP) training class. This introduction to HACCP course was presented by Texas A&M, which is the recognized leader in feed mill HACCP education. HACCP is a management system that provides the development of controls, to help manage the flow of product, thus ensuring the safety of finished goods ultimately being supplied to the end user. Key feed mill management personnel representing mills from New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Maryland, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont, and Maine were in attendance. They committed three days to learning about HACCP and the Food Safety Modernization Act (FMSA). The course was taught by Dr. Tim Herrman and Texas State Investigator

Scott Sanders, whom are both certified HACCP instructors through the International HACCP Alliance. All left the program with the knowledge to develop a HACCP plan and each certified to administer such plans. Mercer Milling is a wholesale ingredient, and mineral premix company, serving feed mills, and consultants throughout the entire northeastern quarter of the USA. In 2011, it became the first mineral/vitamin premix company in the nation to become HACCP certified in compliance with the new 2012 FSMA guidelines. Class participants also toured Mercer Milling Company facilities, to see firsthand, HACCP plan utilization. In addition, Mercer Milling Companys’ commitment to quality was highlighted, both to the industry and the end-user. Management systems that were reviewed included

MID-SIZED LOADER FOR A WIDE RANGE OF AGRICULTURAL AND INDUSTRIAL JOBS. The Bush Hog 2446 QT Front End Loader is your best choice for general contracting, landscaping, cleaning feed lots, handling grain or manure, or lifting large round bales. Lift capacity is 2870 pounds with a maximum lift height of 117 inches. Bucket selections include 60, 72, and 80 inch regular duty buckets, 60, 72 and 84-inch heavy duty buckets and a 96-inch light duty bucket that is ideal for snow removal. A quick attach system is also available. This rugged loader is recommended for tractor PTO horsepower of 35 to 75. Bale spear, fork lift and grapple fork attachments are available. Come in today to learn more about the Bush Hog loader line.

inventory management, complete ingredient traceability, and intensive finished product quality review. For more details about Mercer

NFU encourages judicious use of antibiotics National Farmers Union (NFU) Vice President of Government Relations Chandler Goule discussed antibiotic use in animal agriculture in a presentation at a national stakeholder meeting hosted by the Alliance for the Prudent Use of Antibiotics in Washington, D.C. “NFU supports measures that continue to allow the Food and Drug Administration to permit the use of therapeutic antibiotics approved for use in livestock unless valid scientific evidence proves that the product is unsafe,” said Goule. “NFU believes that antibiotic treatment should be reserved for clinical treatment of illness

ALEXANDER EQUIPMENT Alexander, NY 14005 585-591-2955 CATSKILL TRACTOR INC. 384 Center Street Franklin, NY 13775 607-829-2600 COLUMBIA TRACTOR, INC. Claverack, NY 12513 518-828-1781 FOSTERDALE EQUIPMENT Cochecton, NY 12726 845-932-8611

BUSH HOG, L.L.C. • P.O. Box 1039 • Selma, AL 36702-1039 (334) 874-2700 • www.bushhog.com

DESIGNED FOR PERFORMANCE AND COMFORT.

Operator comfort and operating performance were top priorities in the design and manufacture of Bush Hog’s Series 62 Backhoes. They feature larger operator platforms - 88% more foot pad area and 2.5 times the usable operator’s area. Boom and dipperstick are heavy duty, with reinforcing plates at all stress areas for longer life. These backhoes, available with digging depths of 7, 8 and 9-feet, all have increased capacity in craning, swing forces and digging. And all new hydraulic valves provide smoother operation with 40% less lever effort. The valves are located under the platform for less heat and noise. Come in today and see the finest backhoes available... at an affordable price.

JONES FARM SUPPLY Gouverneur, NY 13642 315-287-3210 R.E. & H.J. McQUEEN Wolcott, NY 14590 315-587-4429 TRI-COUNTY SUPPLY Chafee, NY 14030 716-496-8859 WHITE'S FARM SUPPLY Canastota, NY 13032 Waterville, NY 13480 Lowville, NY 13367 315-697-2214

BUSH HOG, L.L.C. • P.O. Box 1039 • Selma, AL 36702-1039 (334) 874-2700 • www.bushhog.com

Milling Company and their HACCP program, please contact them at 800724-8570.

MARSHALL MACHINERY INC. Rte. 652 east of Honesdale, PA Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8 am-5 pm 570-729-7117 www.marshall-machinery.com

and for judicious use in preventing illness during periods of stress and supports the right of producers to treat their animals with antibiotics to address herd health issues while opposing the constant sub-therapeutic use of antibiotics.” More research is needed to determine the links between antibiotic use for animal health and antibiotic resistance in humans according to two separate GAO reports. “What is clear is that there is a need for additional research and for carefully crafted legislation that is evidencebased,” said Goule.

Baillie e Lumber r Co. Buying Hardwood Veneer, Sawlogs, and Standing Timber Call for our current price sheet! Roadside quotes and trucking available!

IMMEDIATE LOCAL PAYMENTS! Log g Yards s in n Y and d Smyrna,, NY Y Boonville,, NY Boonville Mill Dave Prezyna Tom King Paul Snider Lukas Myers Smyrna Mill Mark Mowrey Phil Day Jonathan DeSantis Sean Karn

315/942-5284 315/436-5329 315/436-0936 315/436-0949 315/263-6909 607/627-6547 315/796-6644 315/436-2766 315/882-8174 315/436-3588

Yourr Partnerr in n Forestt Management

Page 9 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Mercer Milling Company hosts Feed Mill HACCP Training Class


May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Section A - Page 10


NORWICH, NY — If you are a runner and have been training for any of the annual 5K runs that are coming up, we have another one to add to your list — it’s the 5th annual Milk Run at Chenango County Dairy Day. The Milk Run is the kick-off event on Saturday, June 16, at the Chenango County Fairgrounds, starting at 9 a.m. at the race track gate on East Main Street. The course takes an interesting tour around the City of Norwich, and returns to the fair-

Looking into poly ag tanks? Consider this …

grounds.Walkers are also welcome to participate. Registration and sign-in begins at 8:30 a.m., and there are four divisions for the Milk Run — youth male, youth female, adult male and adult female — all of which will receive awards for the top finishers. Entry fees are $10 postmarked before June 9, and $15 postmarked after June 11 or the day of the event. All proceeds will be donated to the Frontier Communications Relay for Life campaign. Registration information

Snyder is the pioneer of rotationally-molded polyethylene ag tanks. For more than fifteen years, farmers and ag chemical dealers have been choosing Snyder for their liquid handling systems. We’ve designed, molded and sold more tanks for agricultural use than any other polyethylene tank manufacturer in North America.

Snyder rotationally molds tanks from ultra-high quality cross-linked polyolefin or tough, linear polyethylene resins for a stronger, longer lasting tank. When you’re seriously looking into ag tanks, you’ll see the obvious weight and maintenance advantages of polyethylene and the advantages of Snyder’s rotational molding process.

FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT

LAWES AGRICULTURAL SERVICE, INC.

LAWES AGRICULTURAL SERVICE 802-247-6874 Champlain St., P.O. Box 117, Brandon, VT 05733 Fertilizers • Pesticides • Hybrid Corn • Lawn Seeds • Spreading Service • Liquid Feed

can be obtained from Bill Davidson at 607-674-6211 or willdale@frontier.com and can also be downloaded from www.facebook.com/DairyDay. The Milk Run is supported by volunteers from Frontier Communications Community Action Team. The Chenango County Dairy Day committee has been busy planning their 12th annual celebration of agriculture at the Chenango County Fairgrounds in Norwich. The 5K Milk Run is just one of several fun activities be-

ing planned for Dairy Day from 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the fairgrounds. A parade that begins at 10:30 a.m. on East Main Street, educational exhibits, a Duck Derby at noon, free dairy products, a stock tank race, games and activities for the kids, animals, dancers and music will all add to the fun and excitement of this free, family activity. For more information contact Marge Davis at 315-837-4741. “Like” us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/DairyDay for updates.

Oswego County dairy farmers searching for their princess What is nature’s most perfect food? Milk, of course. It’s also New York’s official beverage, of course! Milk comes from the beautiful farms of New York and there are over 100 dairy farms in Oswego County. Therefore the Dairy Promotion Committee is looking for candidates to be the 2012-2013 Oswego County Dairy Princess. The Dairy Princess makes appearances throughout the county at schools and grocery stores, health fairs and county fairs, even a parade or two talking about the healthy benefits of milk and milk products in the diet. Dairy Princesses increase the consumption and sale of fluid milk and dairy products through these public appearances, public education, and providing nutrition information to consumers. Candidates must be a resident of Os-

wego County between the ages of 16 and 21, never been married, nor had a child. She must be the daughter of a dairy farmer, farm employee, agribusiness employee or be personally affiliated with the dairy industry through 4-H or FFA. If this sounds appealing to you and you want to help the hard working farms of the Oswego County by promoting their wonderful product please call Lynnette Wright at Cornell Cooperative Extension of Oswego County at 315963-7286 ext 203 or e-mail at lkw39@cornell.edu. The deadline for applications is July 1.

Page 11 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Dairy Day 5K Milk Run for Relay for Life


Section A - Page 12 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Z&M AG and TURF 3517 Railroad Avenue Alexander, NY 14005 716-591-1670 7615 Lewiston Road Oakfield, NY 14125 716-948-5261

Z&M AG and TURF 1756 Lindquist Drive Falconer, NY 14733 716-665-3110 10838 Main Street North Collins, NY 14111 716-337-2563

Z&M AG and TURF 8926 West Main Street Clymer, NY 14724 716-355-4236 13521 Cambridge Springs Road Edinboro, PA 16412 814-734-1552 THE HUDSON RIVER TRACTOR CO., LLC Route 40 Schaghticoke, NY 12154 518-692-2676

THE HUDSON RIVER TRACTOR CO., LLC Route 5S Fultonville, NY 12072 518-853-3405

LAKELAND EQUIPMENT 5614 Tec Drive • Avon, NY 585-226-9680 4751 County Road 5 • Hall, NY 585-526-6325 13330 Route 31 • Savannah, NY 315-365-2888

LEBERGE & CURTIS, INC. 5984 CR 27 Canton, NY 13617 315-386-8568 O’HARA MACHINERY, INC. 1289 Chamberlain Road Auburn, NY 13021 315-253-3203

THE HUDSON RIVER TRACTOR CO., LLC 2173 Route 203 Chatham, NY 12037 518-392-2505

THE HUDSON RIVER TRACTOR CO., LLC #27, 6 1/2 Station Road Goshen, NY 10924 845-294-2500


Investment in agricultural research doesn’t benefit just the 2 percent of the population involved in farming. It’s a matter of national security, job creation, energy independence and human health. That’s according to U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, who visited Penn State May 16 to tour College of Agricultural Sciences research facilities and commemorate this year’s 150th anniversaries of the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Morrill

Act of 1862, which created the landgrant university system. Vilsack spoke to a capacity crowd of more than 200 in the Life Sciences Building’s Berg Auditorium, where he acknowledged current economic challenges while citing a need for continued research funding. “We will be a government that spends less money, but one that must increase investment in education and research,” he said. “Why? Because that is the vehicle through which this

Visit us at www.antiquetractorsRus.com Click and ship right to your door!! Print/View your parts books for FREE from our website

Kuhn’s Equipment Repair Toll Free: 888-839-5778 Parts for Antique & Agricultural Tractors - Engine Kits - Turbos & Mufflers - Hydraulic Pumps - Steering/Oil Pumps - Driveline & PTO - Seats - Bearings - Front Axle

- Alternators - Cab Glass - Seal Kits & Filters - Injectors/Pumps - Fenders - Sheet Metal - Starters/Carburetors - Torque Amplifiers

- Gears & Seals - Decals/Emblems - Magnetos - Generators - Rims - Rear Axle - Cooling System Parts

Equipment Repair 191 Race Rd. Oxford, NY 13830

Salem Farm Supply, Inc.

Parts for All Brands of Tractors

5109 State Route 22, Salem, NY 12865 (888) 768-7902

U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack learns about Penn State biofuels research in a College of Agricultural Sciences greenhouse.

country gets back into the business that it’s always been great at: innovating and creating.” Vilsack cited statistics showing that every $1 invested in ag research brings a $20 return. “As a result of agricultural research, since 1980 agriculture has been the second most productive aspect of our economy,” he said. “The research that’s been done over the last 30 years is nothing short of remarkable. It’s happening here, and it’s a result of partnerships between Penn State and government entities like USDA.”

Bruce McPheron, dean of the College of Agricultural Sciences, said maintaining that university research enterprise and the extension system that translates the science for use in the field is becoming increasingly difficult due to the erosion in public funding in recent years. “When state and federal appropriations are cut or remain flat — and costs continue to rise — we lose capacity to address these critical issues and support a vibrant food and fiber sector.”

Vilsack A14

Page 13 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Vilsack: Ag research and education key to prosperity, security


Section A - Page 14 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Vilsack from A13 After visiting a greenhouse where biofuels research is taking place, Vilsack touted plant-genetics work aimed at finding ways to break down cellulose so that plant sugars can be extracted for fuel. He credited biofuels with helping to reduce U.S. oil imports from 62 percent to 45 percent in the last three years. Vilsack noted that scientists also are developing methods for turning plant and livestock waste into useful and valuable materials — such as chemicals, polymers and fibers — and in turn reducing reliance on petroleumbased products. “The biobased economy is beginning to take hold, which falls right into the vision of a country that creates and innovates,” he said. “And research is at the center of this.” Research also is the most important component of maintaining food safety, Vilsack contended, because of pathogens’ ability to evolve quickly and get ahead of the science. He cited new research-based standards in beef and poultry production that could reduce

foodborne illnesses due to E. coli, Salmonella and campylobacter by 25,000 cases a year, likely saving hundreds of lives. “You’re doing research here that will allow us to better understand (pathogens),” he said, referring to his earlier tour of labs and pilot plants in Penn State’s Food Science Building. “You’re doing research that will ensure that the HACCP [Hazard Analysis of Critical Control Points] plans we put together in processing facilities are what they need to be to stay ahead of the pathogens.” Food scientists also have a role to play in improving nutrition and addressing obesity and related health care issues, such as diabetes. But the challenge, Vilsack explained, is to make healthy choices more palatable for consumers. “How are you going to reformulate the food so you can reduce the sodium, sugar and fat, and still make it the choice?” he said. “You’re doing research here at Penn State that’s going to allow

CAPITAL TRACTOR, INC. 1135 State Rte. 29 Greenwich, NY 12834

Since 1966 www.capitaltractorinc.com

(518) 692-9611 FAX (518) 692-2210

us to understand all the complexities of food choices, from how our brains work to genetics to the taste of food.” Vilsack emphasized that the United States is a food-secure nation, but warned the audience not to take that for granted. He said 85 percent of the food consumed in the United States is grown here, and what is imported is merely for convenience. “We like to have avocados 12 months out of the year instead of six months out of the year,” he said. “We start with a national security advantage because we have the capacity to feed ourselves. That’s directly related to the science that has led to this productivity.” Many countries are not so fortunate. And in light of rising world population and increasing demand for food, USDA has launched its Feed the Future initiative. Land-grant universities have an important role to play, according to Vilsack. “We’ll have to increase agricultural production by 70 percent globally in TRACTORS 2009 NHTD5050 4wd, w/New 825TL Loader, Cab, 90 HP - 2683 Hrs. Excellent Cond.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $38,750 2000 NH TS100 4wd, Cab, 32x32 Shuttle, 2 Remotes - 2135 Hr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $39,995 2007 NH TL100A 4wd, Cab, w/NH 830TL Loader - 2068 Hrs. $43,795 2010 NH TD5050 4wd, ROPS, w/Warranty, 480 Hrs. - Excellent. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $31,875 2010 NH T6030 4WD, Cab, 95HP, w/NH 840TL Loader, 1100 Hrs $67,500 2005 Kubota L3130 4wd, HST w/Loader - 1023 Hrs. . . . . . $13,900 2009 NH TD5050 4wd, ROPS w/NH 820TL Loader. . . . . . . $34,375 1990 Ford 8830 4wd, Cab, Rear Duals, Power Shift - 6650 Hrs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $31,250 1978 IH 986 Tractor, 2wd, Cab - 6448 Hrs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . $10,900 Ford 821 2wd Industrial Tractor w/Loader . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,100 1965 Ford 4000 3cyl. Gas, New Tires - 3590 Hrs.. . . . . . . . . $4,995 2006 Case IH JX109OU 4wd, Cab, Like New - 200 Hrs.. . . $39,995 2006 Kioti DK40 Shuttle, Cab w/Heat, Woods Loader, 4x4 - 662 Hrs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $19,500 1984 Ford 1510 w/Ford Loader, 4wd - 698 Hrs. . . . . . . . . . . $7,000 AGRICULTURE EQUIPMENT 2009 NH 74CSRA 3 Point Snowblower - Like New . . . . . . . $3,450 2003 Challenger SB34 Inline Square Baler w/Thrower, Hyd.Tension Like New. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $14,375 2005 H&S ST420 Rotary Rake. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4,900 WIC Cart Mounted bedding Chopper with Honda Engine . . . $1,450 JD 336 Baler w/Thrower . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4,200 2010 E-Z Trail CF890 Round Bale Carrier/Feeder . . . . . . . . . $4,995 1989 NH 570 Baler w/72 Thrower. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $13,300 1996 NH 1411 Discbine 10'4" Cut w/Rubber Rolls . . . . . $11,800 NH 824 2 Row Corn Head for a N.H. 900. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4,250 Gehl 970 14’ Forage Box on Gear . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,950 Gehl 940 16' Forage Box on Tandem 12 Ton Gehl Gear . . . . $2,995 Wooden Flat bed on Gear . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $350 Krause 2204A 14' Disc Harrow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,780 Knight 3300 Mixer Wagon - Good Cond.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4,200 1995 Kuhn FC400RG Hyd. Swing Discbine - Good Cond. . $10,200 2003 Challenger RB46 Silage Special Round Baler . . . . . . $17,500 2011 H&S CR10 10 Wheel Hyd. Fold Rake - Like New . . . . . $5,295 NH 260 RH Rake . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,000 1998 John Deere 3 Row Corn Head from JD 3970. . . . . . . . $3,200 1988 NH 900 Forage Harvester, Metalert, 900W Pick-up Head $6,720 1999 NH 900 Forage Harvester, Metalert, NH Processor, 824 2 Row, 27P Pickup. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $21,900 2010 Hay Rite 32” Skeleton Elevator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,150

Capital Tractor Carries All The Parts, Equipment & Service That You Will Need www.capitaltractorinc.com

the next 40 years just to meet the needs of the rising human population,” he said. “That’s going to require research and technology transfer in countries and locations that may not have the sophisticated universities like the one we’re at today.” In the end, Vilsack told the audience, agricultural research is about maintaining and enhancing a way of life. “So when you go back to those labs, back to the farm, back to your office, back to school, understand what’s at stake here,” he said. “It’s not just a research project, it’s not just getting money for the university, it’s not just the whiz-bang science and the excitement of discovery. “It’s about saving lives, creating jobs, improving incomes, feeding hungry people, making a nation secure, making the world a better place, preserving the planet and preserving a value system. That’s why research is important.” Secretary Vilsack’s entire speech can be viewed online at http://psu.ag/JHII2U.

Wood Hay Racks on Gears - 2 Available . . . . . . . . . . . . . Each $950 2009 NH BR7060 4x5 Bale, Twine/Net, Silage Special . . . . $25,200 2010 H&S BW1000 Inline Bale Wrapper - Like New . . . . . . $24,500 Case IH 415 Cultimulcher 12’ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7,700 Jaylor 2350 Vertical Cutter/Mixer/Feeder Wagon. . . . . . . . . . $6,300 2007 Krause 7400-24WR 24’ Rock Flex Disc . . . . . . . . . . . $27,500 2002 Gehl 2580 Round Baler, Silage Special, 4x5 Bale . . . . $9,400 2003 Gehl 2580 Round Baler, Silage Special, 4x5 Bale . . . . $7,500 1990 NH 144 Merger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $975 York 5’ 3Pt Landscape Rake . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $450 Gehl 1065 Forage Harvester, Tandems, Metal Stop, Hay Pickup and 2 Row Corn Heads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,750 1999 Case IH 8435 Round Baler, 4x5 Bale, Silage Special, Good Condition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11,900 Landpride AT2572 6’ Finish Mower . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $700 2001 Landpride RCR1560 5’Rotary Cutter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $450 2001 Landpride FD2572 6’ 3pt. Finish Mower . . . . . . . . . . . . . $560 2005 FFC 72” SSL Snow Plow, Hyd. Angle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1,680 Mott 60” 3pt. Flail Mower . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $395 Kuhn FC200 3pt. offset Disc Mower . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5,250 CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT 2008 NH M459 Telehandler 45' Reach - 420 Hrs. . . . . . . . . $62,500 2008 NH W50BTC Mini Wheel Loader, Cab w/Heat/Air, Bucket/ Forks - 375 Hrs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $61,250 2007 NH E70SR Excavator w/Blade, Steel Tracks, Cab w/Heat /AC 400 Hrs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $62,500 2009 NH E135B SR Excavator w/Cab, Dozer Blade, 36" Bucket 1600 Hrs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $105,500 2010 NH L170 Skidsteer, Cab w/Heat, Pilot Controls, Hyd. Q-Attach Plate 72" Bucket - 100 Hrs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $31,875 2007 NH W110 Wheel Loader, 1025 Hrs, Excellent Cond. . $87,500 2007 NH W170B Wheel Loader . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $81,250 2007 Kubota RS205 Mini Wheel Loader, Cab w/Heat, 49 HP - 1080 Hrs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $35,900 2008 NH C185 Track Skidsteer, Cab, Heat/AC, Pilot, Hi-Flow Hyd, 84" Bucket, 932 Hours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $48,750 Mustang MS60P 60" SSL Pickup Broom. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,650 2008 NH L160 Skidsteer w/Cab and Heat, 72" Bucket-3476 Hrs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $15,250 2011 NH L218 Skidsteer w/Cab and Heat, Hyd. Mount plate - 535 Hrs.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $31,500 Kuhn FC200 3pt. offset Flail Mower. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $550 ATTACHMENTS 2008 NH /FFC 66" Skidsteer Tiller - Like New . . . . . . . . . . . . $4,900 2011 NH/McMillon Hyd. Drive SSL Post Hole Digger w/9" Auger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,950


PALATINE BRIDGE, NY — Lee Publications announces the addition of Kathy LaScala to its sales and marketing team. In her role as Digital Media Manager, Kathy will focus on digital product development for the family of Country Folks publications, which serve a variety of agriculture markets. In addition, Kathy will be a part of the sales team, providing agriculture focused companies a platform of regional and national opportunities to extend multi-channel communication and marketing efforts. Prior to joining Lee Publications, Kathy was a national accounts manager at Vance Publishing. She brings extensive experience in sales, strategic positioning, marketing and project development to the team. A native New Yorker, Kathy earned her bachelor’s degree in animal sci-

Kathy LaScala joins Lee Publications.

ence, with a focus on dairy, from Cornell University. Please join Lee Publications in welcoming Kathy to the Country Folks team! Lee Publications produces Country Folks, Country Folks Grower, Country Folks Mane Stream, Wine & Grape Grower and Small Farm Quarterly, along with a line of publications reaching the construction and quarry market.

Page 15 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Kathy La Scala joins Lee Publications


Section A - Page 16 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

New Madison County Dairy Princess crowned

Follow Us On www.facebook.com/countryfolks Gett mid-week k updatess andd onlinee classifieds, pluss linkss too otherr agriculturall organizations.

Madison County’s Dairy Princess and Ambassadors show off their healthy dairy smiles at their Pageant May 6. Seated is newly-crowned Madison County Dairy Princess Nicole Champion. 1st row standing: Jenna & Lacie Head, Erin Curtis-Szalach, Katherine Warner, Kayla Smith, Molly & Natalie Head. 2nd row standing: Kayla McCaulley, Senior Ambassador Cassie Head, Kaitlyn Howard, Madison County Alternate Dairy Princess & Miss Madison County Allie Smith, 2011 Madison County Dairy Princess Emily Livermore, NY State 2nd Alternate Dairy Princess Haley Groat, Tabitha Parker, Alison Eisenhut, and Katelyn Bloss. Photo courtesy of Steve Durfee

Nicole Champion, of North Chittenango was crowned the 49th Madison County Dairy Princess on May 6, at Cornell Cooperative Extension in Morrisville. She was crowned by Emily Livermore of Madison, the 2011 Madison County Dairy Princess. Thirteen Dairy Ambassadors were also recognized. Nicole Champion is the 20 year old daughter of John and Robin Champion of North Chittenango. She has been involved in farming all her life. On her family’s farm, she has cared for dairy and beef cows, horses, chickens, pigs, dogs, and cats. She is employed on Tuscarora Dairy LLC and Garlock farms. Nicole is just finishing her freshman year at Morrisville State College where she is majoring in Dairy Science. Active in 4-H and Junior Holstein Club, Nicole has shown her Holstein pride and joy, Smithland Perfect Medley, at local, regional, and state shows. She is also an accomplished snowmobile watercross racer. She wants to be a dairy princess to give back to the industry that she loves. Current New York State 2nd Alternate Dairy Princess Haley Groat was guest speaker and updated those in attendance on current American Dairy Associa-

tion activities. In her acceptance speech, Nicole Champion said “Drinking milk everyday can help your bones grow strong and healthy, make your teeth shine, and can even put some shine in your hair. The main mineral in milk is calcium. Did you know that drinking three glasses of milk everyday will give you 100 percent of the calcium your body needs? Calcium helps speed up your body’s metabolism which can help you maintain a healthy body weight. It can even help prevent you from getting kidney stones.” In her farewell address, Emily Livermore thanked her Dairy Ambassadors, her mother Nancy Livermore, and her grandparents Shirley and the late Don Livermore for their outstanding support during her eight years on the Madison County Dairy Court, first as an ambassador and then as Madison County Dairy Princess. She also thanked past and present members of her committee, including Amy Kelsey, Julianne Taylor, Natalie Taylor, Colleen Head, Deb Smith, and MaryLou Durfee. She claimed “I’ll never stop promoting the dairy industry.” Allie Smith, of Munnsville, joined Emily

Madison A17

S&L Builders LLC Serving 5 States: PA, NY, MD, NJ, CT

570-398-5948 (O)

570-772-2352 (C)

S&L Builders LLC is proud to announce we are offering all types of masonry and concrete services... foundations, retaining walls, brick, stone, pavers, etc.

We build all types of Pole Barn construction... freestall barns, indoor riding arenas, machinery storage, garages, etc.

We have a 90 foot Clear Span truss available and we are offering the Agriculture Bird Free Truss. We would like to thank our customers for their business! Heritage Hill Farms - Fort Ann, NY 54x242x12 M&M Dixon Farms - Greenwich, NY

40x105x14

Jess Monk - Lisle, NY 24x40x11.6 Scott Bennett - Waverly, NY 36x60x12

Kerry Metiver - Fort Edward, NY 36x84x10

Rick Powell - Owego, NY 30x36x10

Adirondack Tree Surgeons - Gavenport, NY 80x100x16

Beagle Club - Towanda, PA 24x24x11.6

Joe Lawrance - Perryopolis, PA 40x60x16

Charles Petrie - Little Falls, NY 50x96x15

Jay Andreas - West Franklin, PA 66x80x14, 24x32x14

Whittaker Farms - Whitney Point, NY 45x152x14

Tom Andzulis - Clifford, PA 30x32x13.6

Cooperstown Holsteins - Cooperstown, NY 85x40x14, 40x40x14

Mike Galcik - Schuylerville, NY 32x48x11.6

Lavra Fay - Castleton, PA 80x48x16

Christene Huston - Chester Springs, PA 36x48x12 Hope Enterprise - Williamsport, PA 20x24x8

Brian Lebarron - Whitehall, NY 50x100x16

WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD!

FOR ALL YOUR BUILDING AND MASONRY NEEDS, GIVE US A CALL


ALBANY, NY — In July, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS) will conduct its semi-annual Cattle Survey. The agency will ask producers about their beef and

585-534-5935

dairy cattle inventories, calf crop and cattle on feed operations. NASS will publish the resulting statistics in the semi-annual Cattle report on July 20. Producers should receive the survey ques-

585-343-1822

tionnaire in late June and can respond via the Internet as well as by mail or fax. Those who do not respond in one of those ways will have the opportunity for a telephone or personal interview.

315-655-8146

“In New York, we will contact approximately 250 of the larger beef and dairy cattle operations,” said King Whetstone, director of NASS’s New York Field Office. “The semi-annual surveys enable NASS to pro-

607-753-9656

315-446-5656

vide timely, accurate and unbiased data that all sectors of the U.S. beef industry can use.” “Once published, the information will help producers determine production and marketing strategies and plan

315-539-7000

purchases and capital investments,” he explained. Processors, warehouse and storage companies and the transportation sector rely on the reports to anticipate future volume. Whetstone noted that, as is the case with all NASS surveys, information provided by respondents is confidential by Federal law. “NASS safeguards the privacy of all responses and publishes only state- and nationallevel data, ensuring that no individual producer or operation can be identified,” he said. NASS will publish survey results in the semiannual Cattle report on July 20. These and all NASS reports are available online at www.nass.usda.gov. For more information, call the NASS New York Field Office at 800-821-1276.

Madison from A16 Livermore in a “milk toast” to Madison County’s dairy farmers and cows. Allie holds dual roles of Miss Madison County and Madison County’s 2011 Alternate Dairy Princess. The thirteen Dairy Ambassadors that were recognized were: Cassie, Lacie, Jenna, Natalie, and Molly Head-all from Hubbardsville; Kayla McCaulley of Manlius; Erin Curtis-Szalach of Cazenovia; Katherine Warner of Morrisville; Kayla Smith of Munnsville; Alison Eisenhut and Kaitlyn Howard — both from Chittenango; and Tabitha Parker and Katelyn Bloss — both from Kirkville. Recognized as Senior Dairy Ambassador was Cassie Head. The Senior Ambassador distinction is given to ambassadors who have served at least two years on the Madison County Dairy Court, and who will be at least 14 years old in the current year. The Madison County Dairy Princess Program is made possible through the support of the American Dairy Association and Dairy Council-the local planning and management organization funded by dairy farmer checkoff dollars.

Page 17 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

USDA to conduct survey on cattle inventories


Section A - Page 18 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Cornell Small Dairy team produces new resources CORTLAND, NY – The Cornell Small Farms Program Small Dairy Team has released a series of six new resources to help small dairy farms. The team, which includes farmers and Cornell Cooperative Extension (CCE) educators, received a grant from the Cornell Small Farms Program in 2011 to provide new educational resources and tools to small dairy producers. “Small dairies have borne the brunt of the exodus of dairy farms from New York State. The goal of the project was to provide resources for dairies looking to adapt to ever-changing market factors,â€? says Fay Benson, team leader. The new resources for small farms include: • Financial Bench Marks for Small Dairies: Helps dairies identify the

strengths and weaknesses of their farms compared to other farms of similar size in New York State • Off-Farm Processing Start-Up Fact Sheet: Suggests first steps for dairy farmers considering adding direct sales of value-added dairy products to their business mix • Web based Geo-Map: Shows all the small dairy processing plants in New York state • “Small Dairy Case Studies: Highlights unique solutions to keep four small dairy operations profitable • Production Record-Keeping Book for Grazing Dairies: Formatted and distributed to CCE offices statewide by Cornell Small Farms Program Small

A Fun and Easy Way To Read Country Folks...

Cornell A19

NOW AVAILABLE IN DIGITAL FORMAT DOWNLOADABLE Read it on your computer anytime, anywhere

GET IT FASTER Arrives every Saturday morning

USER FRIENDLY Search and print ads and articles, even from past issues Country Folks has partnered with the New York State Corn and Soybean Growers Association to publish the summer edition of the Association's newsletter, The NY Crop Grower. This will be a special insert to the JULY 9th edition of Country Folks East and West, with details about the 2012 Summer Crop Tour. It will also be mailed to all of the members of the association and to prospective members. Additional copies will be available at Empire Farm Days in the New York Corn and Soybean Association booth.

THINK GREEN Save trees — no ink and paper necessary!

2&# "# "*',# 2- "4#02'1# ', 2&'1 '113# '1 (3,# 2& If you sell harvesting equipment, grain drying equipment, grain storage, seed or provide custom harvesting you need to be in this issue!

2I JF;=? ;H ;> IL NI CHKOCL? ;<ION ;>P?LNCMCHA IJJILNOHCNC?M CH NBCM IL @ONOL? CMMO?M JF?;M? =IHN;=N SIOL !IOHNLS $IFEM M;F?M L?J IL =IHN;=N G? ;N D;H>L?QM F??JO< =IG IL ;N ?RN

Email subscriptions@leepub.com to start a new digital subscription or change your current print subscription to digital.

www.countryfolks.com


The July Issue of Your connection to the Northeast Equine Market www.cfmanestream.com

Will Focus On: Farms & Stables

Light Horse • Pony & Draft Breeds

Special Deadline for Mane Stream’s Fair Horse Events Section is Friday, June 15th DEADLINE: Friday, June 22nd For advertising contact your sales representative today... or call 1-800-218-5586

Dairy Team; printed funded by New York Grazing Lands Conservation Initiative; books are available to grazing dairies at no cost through local CCE office. • Organic Dairy Forage and Grain Survey: Due to fluctuating precipitation in 2011, many farms were short of forage and grain. This is particularly stressful to organic dairies since they have limited options for buying replacement feed. Small Dairy Team member Dana Markley operates a 100-cow dairy in Philadelphia, NY. Markley says, “As a small dairy farmer, it can be challenging to find time to explore new ideas and concepts. This project compiled information to provide small farms with easier access to important resources. The information helps us take advantage of alternatives that can make our farms more cost-effective and helps us fill niche markets that larger farms may find difficult to reach.” For example, the new Off-Farm Processing Start-Up Fact Sheet lists business planning, dairy production, direct marketing, licensing, and food safety resources. It also includes links to a directory of cheesemakers and smallscale food processors. Benson, author of the Off-Farm Processing Start-Up Fact Sheet fact sheet , says, “Direct-to-consumer retail sales of cheese, yogurt and other valueadded products by dairy operators seems like an easy way to increase profits, but research shows very few

on-farm processors enjoy those increase profits. Through off-farm processing, there is less start-up cost in both capital and time.” Benson suggests that farmers interested in direct marketing use the new web-based geo map showing the onfarm processing locations in New York State to help find processors close to their farms. In 2012, the Cornell Small Farms Program is collaborating with educators and farmers to host a series of small dairy field days through late spring and summer. Topics range from incorporating new value-added products to improving nutrition and producing on-farm biodiesel. To view the schedule or register, visit http://smallfarms.cornell.edu. For further assistance, contact your local CCE office, visit www.smallfarms.cornell.edu, or contact Fay Benson, Cornell Cooperative Extension of Cortland County, 607-753-5213, afb3@cornell.edu.

PLAN AHEAD !!!

NE Antique Power Assn. 20th Annual Show Fathers' Day Weekend Fri., Sat., Sun., June 15th - 17th, 2012

Featuring John Deere Planning to have one of every tractor model built from 1925 to 1975 Plowing demonstrations, tractor pulls, vendors, combine demolition derby, entertainment and lots more. Fun for all. Plan on staying all three days and having a great time! All exhibitors welcome!!

Northeast Antique Power Association Show at Sunnycrest Orchards 7869 State Route 10, Sharon Springs, NY More details available at: www.sharonspringstractorshow.com www.sunnycrestorchards.com Abingdon Equipment Abingdon, VA (276) 628-2372 • (423) 335-7601

abingdonequipment.com

Trissel Equipment Sales Harrisonburg, VA (540) 867-9553

Ridgeview New Holland Orange, VA (540) 672-4900

Rockbridge Tractor Lexington, VA (540) 464-3383

John Adams (518) 231-4346 adamsjp@logical.net Joe Quill (518) 424-7540 robbienjoe@aol.com Jim MacFadden (518) 231-8080 info@macfaddens.com

Page 19 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Cornell from A18


Section A - Page 20 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

The Peoples’ Department: 150 years of USDA On May 15, we recognized the 150th anniversary of the founding of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. On that date in 1862, President Abraham Lincoln signed into law an act of Congress establishing USDA. Two and a half years after he established the Department, in what would be his final annual message to Congress, Lincoln called USDA “The People’s Department.” President Lincoln knew the importance of agriculture to our prosperity — particularly at a time when about half of all Americans lived on the farm. And while that number today stands at about 2 percent, our values are still rooted in rural America. As the United States has changed and evolved over the years, at USDA we have not lost sight of Lincoln’s vision. Through our work on food, agriculture, economic development, science, natural resource conservation and a host of other issues, USDA has impacted the lives of generations of Americans. And over the past three years, we have furthered that commitment to this nation. USDA has supported producers — making a record number of farm loans, maintaining a strong safety net, and expanding markets to drive record exports. We’ve stood by rural communities — supporting more than 6,000 community facilities projects, providing more than 50,000 loans to help rural businesses create jobs, and investing in thousands of infrastructure projects that have delivered modern broadband, water and electric services to millions. We’ve enrolled a record number of acres in conservation programs, and laid out a sensible new planning rule for 193 million acres of National Forests to promote job growth while conserving the environment. USDA has continued its history of groundbreaking research. For example, we’ve invested about $320 million to ac-

celerate research on the next generation of renewable energy — so we can create jobs and ensure America’s energy security for years to come. And we’re helping families lead healthy lives. USDA provides nutrition assistance for one in four Americans, enabling them to put healthy meals on the table, even when times are tough, and we’re serving healthier school breakfast and lunch to 32 million kids a day. Today, USDA truly remains a “Peoples’ Department” that touches the life of every American. Folks depend on us. That’s why I’m committed to leveraging the efforts of our Department and more than 100,000 hardworking USDA employees to continue creating jobs, supporting rural communities and helping our country prosper. As we commemorate 150 years of accomplishments, USDA is looking forward to addressing the changing needs of agriculture and rural America. For our small towns and communities look-

ing to compete in a globalizing world, we’ll be there with access to broadband, critical infrastructure and support for new businesses. USDA will continue its support for the next generation of renewable fuels and help promote advanced, bio-based products. And we’ll keep working closely with America’s

agricultural producers to maintain a dependable safety net for their work — which ultimately is connected to 1 in 12 American jobs — and ensure the food supply we need to feed a growing world population. I hope Americans will join us in our commemoration of 150 years of USDA. This is a great time to learn about this

KELLY RYAN BAGGERS New & Used IPESA SILO & KLERK SILAGE BAGS

www.usda.gov/usda150 to learn more about USDA’s history and our plans for the future — as the “Peoples’ Department” continues serving all Americans, every day and every way.

Department’s contributions to the strength of our nation, and to see how we can continue to partner with Americans working to provide a better life for their families. I invite everyone to visit

QUALITY USED EQUIPMENT

New Idea 5209 Discbine

New Holland 1465 Haybine

Fransgard Rake

John Deere 935 MoCo Discbine

ADAM’S SUPPLY DEALERS Tim Furgison Ogdensburg, NY (315) 393-2614 Greg Knapp Cape Vincent, NY (Watertown area) (315) 771-1644 John Mosher Cattaragus, NY (716) 988-3002 Loren Smith Painted Post, NY (607) 936-3412 Ed Richardson Pavilion, NY (585) 768-7940

Jason Heiser Canajoharie, NY (518) 857-9071 Jonas Stoltzfus Vernon Center, NY (315) 794-1769 Thomas Tousant Pulaski, NY (315) 298-6937 Joseph Sega Dryden, NY (607) 844-9598 Frank Albano Stamford, NY (607) 652-9776

ADAMS SUPPLY

814-360-9324

Check Out Our GI Corral!! Great New Deals on Used Equipment in the GI Used Equipment Corral

745 Harry L. Drive, Johnson City, NY 13790 Phone: 607-729-6161

LETT USS DESIGN N ANDD PRINTT YOUR R N BROCHUREE OR R FORMS OWN 4 to 48 Page Tabloids on Newsprint or Offset Paper • Spot Color and Process 4 Color Available 8 1/2 x 11 or 11 x 17 Single Sheets Printed One or Two Sides, Spot Color, Variety of Paper Colors and Weights and Folding is Available In Quantities from 5,000 to 100,000 We can work from your layout or provide a custom designed piece for you.

Let Us Take Out The Headache . . .

Let Us Take Out The Red Tape . . .

Let our expert and professional graphic department create the image you are looking for in all of your business forms, brochures, handouts, newsletters, payroll stuffers, invoice stuffers etc.

No more jumping from the printers to the mail room. No more cutting checks to several out-sourcers to complete one job.

Fast Turn Around On All Your Commercial Print Jobs. Our fast and professional service will keep you on target. No more missed deadlines, no more coordination problems. Let our professionals get the job done...ON TIME!

We offer complete mailing services and mail processing including labeling, inserting and folding!

And All Without Breaking Your Wallet . . . Call us for an estimate on your next job!!

PO Box 121, 6113 St. Hwy. 5, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 LeePublications PublicationsJobJob Printing Depart. 1-800-218-5586 1-800-218-558 6 ext.. 1066 518-673-3237 • 1-800-218-5586 • Fax: 518-673-2699 Lee Printing Depart.

PO Box 121, 6113 St. Hwy. 5, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 518-673-0106 • 1-800-218-5586 • Fax: 518-673-2381


By Judy Van Put

The importance of good pastures for horses by Judy Van Put For some, having a pasture area for your horse is a luxury, especially if your horse is kept at a large stable or in a suburban area. But for many, having a good horse pas-

ture for daily forage needs as well as turnout and exercise can determine whether or not one can afford to own and keep a horse. The horse is naturally a grazing animal; he is de-

2007 JD 3420 telehandler cab, air, 5600 hrs, 6600 lb. lift, bucket & forks, real nice, runs ex . . . . . . . . . . .$35,000 2009 JD 5085 M MFWD, 16x16 trans LHR only 92 hrs, EPTO 3 remotes 16.9x30 and 11.2x24 radials with JD 563 SL loader like brand new . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$40,000 2009 JD 6430 premium IVT cab, air, 1725 hrs, 3 remotes Epto 18.4x38 and 16.9x24 radials front fenders warranty till 2014 like new . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$61,500 2008 JD 6430 MFWD, cab, air, 24 speed auto quad LHR, 2802 hrs, HMS 18.4x38s and 16.9x24s with JD 673 SL loader 92 inch bucket electronic joystick real sharp runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$60,000 2007 JD 6430 premium MFWD cab, air, IVT 2100 hrs, ex 18.4x38 and 16.9x24 radials 3 remotes very sharp runs ex . . . . . . . . . .$55,000 2005 JD 8220 MFWD, cab, air, 1809 hrs, 3 ptos 4 remotes ex 20.8x42 radial axle duals ex 480/70R/30 fronts 18 front weights quick hitch ex one owner tractor very very sharp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$125,000 2004 JD 6420 MFWD, cab, air, 24 speed PQ LHR, 5946 hrs, ex 18.4x38 radials on R+P axles very clean runs ex . . . . . . . .$36,500 2004 JD 6420 2WD cab, air, power quad 1418 hrs, 18.4x38 radials on R+P axles just like new . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$40,000 2004 JD 5420 MFWD, 12x12 trans with LHR 16.9x30 radials rear 11.2x24 fronts dual remotes 3800 hrs with JD 541 loader very clean runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$24,000 2004 JD 6420 MFWD, cab, air, IVT trans ex 18.4x38 and 13.6x28 radial tires buddy seat 3824 hrs, with JD 640 SL loader electronic joystick real sharp clean runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$52,500 2004 JD 6320 2WD, cab, air, power quad, LHR, ex 16.9x38 radials, 540+1000 pto buddy seat 3079 hrs, very clean sharp original . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$32,500 2002 JD 6420 MFWD, cab, air, 24 speed power quad LHR, 2485 hrs, R+P axles ex 18.4x38 and 13.6x28 radials dual remotes and PTO with JD 640 SL loader real sharp ex cond . . . . . . . . . . . . .$55,000 1999 JD 6410 MFWD, cab, air, 24 speed PQ LHR, 3300 hrs, 18.4x38s 13.6x28s clean runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$31,500 1998 JD 6410 MFWD, cab, 16 speed PQ LHR 18.4x38s 13.6x28 clean runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$25,500 1998 JD 5410 MFWD, 12x12 trans left hand reverser 3391 hrs 16.9x30 rears 11.2x24 fronts 540 loader with joystick folding roll bar 73 inch bucket very clean sharp runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$22,500 1990 JD 3155 MFWD, cab, air, 95 hp, 4787 hrs, 18.4x38, 16.9x24 original one owner runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$23,500 1989 JD 2355 2WD add on cab left hand hydraulic reverser dual remotes 3748 hrs, 18.4x30s clean runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$8,000 1988 JD 2955 MFWD, cab, air, 4776 hrs, 18.4x38 13.6x28s front fenders very clean original runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$21,000 1980 JD 4240 cab, air, has turbo inline injector pump and after cooler 6020 hrs, quad range like new 20.8x38 radials dual pto and remotes very clean runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$18,000 1980 JD 3140 2WD 80 hp dual pto and remotes like new 18.4x38s on R+P axles laurin cab very clean original runs ex . . . . . . . .$10,500 1980 JD 4240 cab, air, power shift 18.4x38 dual remotes and pto 7820 hrs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$13,500 2008 Challenger MT475B MFWD, cab, air, 120 hp, 16x16 trans LHR, 4 remotes 1980 hrs, 18.4x38 and 16.9x28 radials ML 97B SL loader very very sharp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$60,000 2006 NH TS100A deluxe cab, air, MFWD, 16x16 trans LHR, 2667 hrs, ex 18.4x38 radials 14.9x28 fronts buddy seat 4 remotes NH 56LB SL loader very clean sharp runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$45,000 1998 New Holland TS100 MFWD, 80 hp, 4083 hrs, 16 speed power

Fencing a pasture into separate paddocks or eating areas in order to preserve and rest the grass in between uses — generally a 3-week rotation is a good one. You would let your horse graze during the first week, then move to the second area for a week and then on to the third. This way when you return your horse to the first area, it will have had two weeks' rest to enable the grasses to regrow to a healthy height (4 -6 inches). In addition to the separated grazing areas, a fourth location is used for a 'sacrifice area.' Horses can be kept within the sacrifice area and are provided with hay and drinking water. Here also they can get exercise and socialize with no harm done to the grazing areas. Sacrifice areas provide respite for pastures exposed to intense grazing. Photo by Judy Van Put warmer months. Another advantage of having good pasture on which to turn out your horse is that it will improve his health and well-being. Enabling your

1981 Case 1490 2WD 75hp, cab, air, power shift ex 18.4x34s, dual PTO & Remotes, 5600 hrs., clean, runs ex . . . . .$7,500

Hesston 4570 inline small square baler with hydraulic drive bale thrower, real nice & clean . . . . . . . . . .$4,500

shift 540+1000 PTO 4 remotes 90% 18.4x34 and 14.9x24 Goodyear super traction radials very clean original runs ex . . . . . . . .$25,000 1998 New Holland TN90F MFWD, cab, air, 5947 hrs narrow orchard tractor 420/70R/28 rears 280/70R/20 fronts creeper super steer dual remotes runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$13,500 1997 New Holland 7635 MFWD, 2700 hrs cab, air, 86 hp, 540 + 1000 PTO 24 speed Quicke 310 loader clean runs ex . . . . . . . . .$24,500 1993 Ford New Holland 7840 cab, air, SLE power shift 7487 hrs, like new 20.8x38 Goodyear super traction radials 800 hrs on new engine with turbo very very sharp and clean runs ex . . . . . . . . . . .$16,000 1989 Ford TW 15 MFWD, cab, air, series 2 20.8x38s and 16.9x28s 10 front weights and rear weights, 6180 hrs 3 remotes very clean runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$20,000 1987 Ford TW15 series 2 MFWD, cab, air, only 3821 hrs, like new 18.4x38 rears 3 remotes dual pto original runs ex . . . . . . .$24,500 1977 Ford 9700 2WD cab, air, 5417 hrs, new 460/85R/38 rears dual power dual remotes and pto clean original runs ex . . . . . . .$12,500 1998 MF 6180 110 hp, MFWD, cab, air, 32 speed dynashift only 1225 hrs, 4 remotes 18.4x38 and 14.9x28 radials quicke alo 6755 SL loader one owner sharp ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$37,500 1979 MF 2675 2WD cab, air, 24 speed power shift like new 18.4x38s dual pto and remotes 4095 hrs, very very clean runs ex . .$10,000 1967 MF 135 diesel new 13.6x28 tires dual remotes 3588 hrs extra nice and clean runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$5,000 1967 MF 135 diesel 14.9x28 tires power steering multi power very clean runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$4,500 2008 McCormick MTX120 MFWD, cab, air, 118 hp, 16 speed power quad LHR, 18.4x38 and 14.9x28 radials 2591 hrs with L165 SL loader very clean runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$47,500 2007 CIH Maxxum 110 MFWD, cab, air, 16x16 power shift LHR, like new 18.4x38 and 14.9x28 Michelin radials 1160 hrs, front weights and fenders very very sharp like new . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$47,500 2005 CIH JX95 MFWD, cab, air, 80 hp, 841 hrs, 18.4x30 and 12.4x24 Goodyear super traction radials front fenders dual remotes like new . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$27,500 1984 IH 684D only 2317 original hrs ex 18.4x30 rears roll bar and canopy with ex CIH 2250 quick tatch loader joystick very clean original one owner hobby farmer ex tractor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$13,500 1983 Case 2290 cab, air, 129 hp 20.8x38s 540+1000 pto 5400 hrs, runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$9,000 1977 IH hydro 86 diesel new 18.4x34s dual remotes ex running good hydro clean . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$8,500 1981 White 4-175 4x4 5641 hrs. 2002 cat 3208 engine 210 HP, 3ph pto quick coupler ex 20.8x38s runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$11,500 White 2-105 MFWD, cab, new 20.8x38 and 16.9x26 radials with self leveling loader clean runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$12,500 1977 White 2-105 cab, 4985 hrs, 3 remotes ex 20.8x38 radials front weights original runs ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$9,500 2001 NH BB940 3x3 square baler last bale ejector, roller bale chute applicator knotter fans real clean . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$32,500 New Holland 570 baler hydraulic bale tension hydraulic drive bale thrower extra nice very low usage baler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$11,500 2 New Holland 575 wire tie balers hydraulic bale tension pickup heads and hitch with NH 77 pan type kicker real sharp ex cond . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$7,000 each 2003 New Holland BR750 4x6 round baler wide pickup head bale ramps netwrap endless belts very nice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$11,000

2000 New Holland 648 silage special 4x5 round baler wide pickup head bale ramps ex belts very nice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$9,000 1998 NH 644 silage special wide pickup head bale ramps twine and netwrap 14000 bales very clean ex original one owner . . . .$8,500 1998 New Holland 644 silage special 4x5 round baler wide pickup head bale ramps ex belts twine real nice clean sharp baler . . . . . . .$7,500 Claas 66 4x5 roll baler wide pickup head ex bale age baler ex cond . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$5,750 2009 JD 582 silage special 4x5 round baler crop cutter edge to edge mesh wrap or dual twine wide pickup 6700 bales very sharp . . . . . . . .$22,500 2004 JD 467 4x6 silage special round baler mega wide pickup dual twine 11000 bales gauge wheels push bar ex cond . . . . . .$12,500 2002 CIH RBX 451 silage special (same as NH) 4x5 electronic wrap wide pickup head bale ramps extra sharp clean low usage off small farm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10,000 2001 JD 467 4x6 silage special round baler mega wide pickup dual twine gauge wheels and push bar ex cond . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10,500 1999 JD 446 4x4 round baler ex belts bale age kit real nice . .$8,500 1996 JD 466 round baler 4x6 netwrap or twine wide pickup head bale ramps ex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10,000 2007 New Holland 1412 discbine impeller conditioner very clean ex low usage discbine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$14,500 2006 NH 1411 discbine rubber rolls 540 pto very low usage real sharp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$14,000 2006 JD 530 discbine impeller conditioner super sharp like new . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$15,000 2005 JD 530 impeller discbine hydra angle on head real clean .$13,500 Late model Kuhn KC 4000G center pivot discbine rubber rolls ex cond . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$12,500 NH 38 flail chopper real nice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2,750 New Idea 325 2 row corn picker with 12 roll husking bed real nice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$4,500 CIH No 10 flail chopper nice one . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2,500 Fransguard SR4200p tandem axle hydraulic lift 13 ft 6 in width rotary hayrake very little use like new . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$5,500 Deutz Fahr KS2.42 rotary rake hydraulic lift . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$4,000 New Holland 258 hayrake rubber mounted teeth in ex cond .$3,000 Kvernland taarup 17 ft hydraulic fold tedder ex cond 2 years old . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$4,000 Fella TH540T 17 ft hydraulic fold hydraulic tilt hay tedder just like new hardly used at all . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$4,500 Taarup 90715 tandem rotary rake rakes 1 or 2 windrows brand new never used . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$15,000 Kuhn GF5001 TH hydraulic fold 17 ft hay tedder ex cond low usage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$4,500 Fanex 500 17 ft manual fold up hay tedder ex cond . . . . . . . .$2,000 NH 144 windrow inverter very nice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,500 20.8x42 T-rail clamp on duals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2,000 20.8x38, 18.4x38 and 18.4x34 clamp on duals Parmiter TR35 trailer type bale wrapper self loading arm very nice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$6250 Wifo bale grabber hydraulic with quicke euro style quick tatch like new . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,500 JD 840 self leveling loader mounting brackets for JD 7000 series tractor high volume bucket . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$7,500 Brand new NH 62lb loader fits TM NHS's or MXM case IH never used . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$5,000

Bures Bros. Equipment

23 Kings Highway Ext., Shelton, CT 06484

1-203-924-1492

horse to graze at will all during the day reduces stress and boredom that comes from keeping the horse confined and limited in his eating habits. In addition, your horse will receive the exercise necessary for maintaining his good health — moving freely through a pasture, no matter at what speed, will increase the circulation in his system and will aid in his respiration, digestion and overall well-being. A happy horse is a pleasant companion, both to his pasture-mates as well as

his human counterpart. If you are fortunate to already have a pasture set up for your horse, you’ll just need to maintain that pasture and improve it if necessary in order to reap all the benefits of pasture grazing; but if you are planning on creating a new pasture for your horse, you’ll need to take into account a number of items. Location is very important. A horse pasture should be in a welldrained area, ideally a

Pastures A23

Eric J. DeSimone, CLU Senior Agent

(518) 877-0525 Farm Family Life Insurance Company Farm Family Casualty Insurance Company United Farm Family Insurance Company Glenmont, NY 12077

258 Ushers Road, Suite 200, Clifton Park, NY 12065 Fax: (518) 877-5287

Page 21 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

HORSE TALES

signed to eat continuously, taking in a total amount of dry matter that ranges from 1 1/2 percent to 3 percent of his body weight each day. For a 1,000-pound horse, that can add up to about 30 pounds of hay per day if no pasture is available. But with well-managed nutritious pastures, turning the average pleasure horse out to graze every day can provide most all of his daily nutritional needs — for ‘free’ — reducing the need for, or completely eliminating, hay or grain supplements. That’s a huge savings! In addition, having pasture on which to turn out your horse each day will result in another savings, in reducing bedding and labor costs. With the addition of a run-in shed in the pasture for cool nights and inclement weather, bedding can be completely eliminated, at least in the


Section A - Page 22 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Trucks

ASA shows support of transportation bill priorities for ag producers As the House-Senate Conference Committee begins their work to develop a Surface Transportation Reauthorization bill, commonly referred to as the “highway bill,” ASA has signed on to three letters to conferees in support of priorities for agricultural producers. Maintaining and clarifying the hoursof-service exemption for agriculture is a top ASA priority for the highway bill. ASA and 18 other agricultural groups signed on to a letter supporting the hours-of-service exemption provisions, stating that without the hours-of-service exemption for agriculture, there could be severe disruptions to the delivery of critical farm supplies to farm operations during peak times of the year. ASA also supports the Realize America’s Maritime Promise (RAMP) Act, which would ensure that monies collected in the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund are utilized in full for their intended purpose of operations and maintenance, including dredging activities. ASA and 11 other agricultural groups signed on to a letter to conferees expressing support for inclusion of

the RAMP Act provisions in the final highway bill. The provisions were included in the House-passed bill. In addition, ASA was one of 12 agricultural groups on a letter to conferees in support of the freight rail provisions in the Senate-passed highway bill. These freight rail provisions are modest steps intended to provide a better balance between shipper and carrier interests in rail policy deliberations at the Surface Transportation Board (STB), and make the agency more accountable, transparent and effective. Specifically, these provisions require STB to post a report on pending complaints every three months; increase maximum relief in rate cases; establish time lines for rate cases; require a study on how STB will apply its revenue adequacy pricing constraint; and require quarterly reports to Congress on the status of regulatory proceedings. Taken together these provisions are intended to bring a better balance between carrier and shipper interests at the STB. Source: ASA Weekly Leader Letter for Thursday, May 10

The Tire Shop Now Offering on the Farm Tire Service

2008 Ford F250 4x4 5.4 V8 XL, Auto, 8ft Box, “Just In” AC, Trailer Tow, 44k

2008 Ford F350 Crew Cab 4x4 Diesel, XL, Stick, Ready to Work, 48,300 miles - Just In

2005 Ford F350 Crew Cab 4x4 Lariat, Leather, Bully Dog 6 Gun, Dual Stacks, Custom Rims, Auto, SRW, 6 Ft. Box

2004 Chevy Silverado XCab 4x4 8 Ft. Duramax Diesel, Allison Auto, 3500, SRW, LS, Full Pwr., White, 73,427 Miles

www.RoyalChrysler.com

IT’S A CARPORT AND MORE!

Calll Scottt att

518-673-5399

Best Quality • Best Service • Best Price

Several To Choose From!

in ler ate t Dea #1 ork S Y New

OPEN: Mon. - Sat. 8-5 Now Located at 155 Erie Blvd. Canajoharie, NY

W E ’ RE J UST A C LICK A WAY

16’ Aluminum Livestock Trailer

Carports Starting at $1,095

ALL NEW VERTICAL ROOF! Snow slides off easily.

Delivery & Set Up On Your Property

starting at

Great to cover your firewood and outdoor furnace. Use for par ties, picnics and family reunions. Use as garage and of course as a car por t. 10% down, balance on delivery.

$9,995!

Many Sizes and Optional Equipment Available

WILLIAMS TIRE and AUTO

See us for

On The Farm Tire Service We Offer Firestone, Titan and Akuret Farm Tires

18’x21’ Delivered & Set Up $1,695

ALL STAR AUTO 6610 State Hwy 23, Oneonta, NY 607-435-9200

BUY WITH CONFIDENCE D LIFETIME WITH OUR CERTIFIED ENGINEE WARRANTY FOR QUALIFIED VEHICLES

Let Us Serve You From One Of Our Two Locations

711 St. Hwy. 80, Pittsfield, NY 607-847-8000 or 1134 St. Hwy. 80, Edmeston, NY 607-965-9308

ALWAYS 4 TRUCKS ON THE ROAD FOR FARM, CONSTRUCTION SITE, AND ROAD SERVICE

BECKER’S BECKER’S TIREE SERVICE,, INC.

Route 30 South

Box 33

Grand Gorge, NY 12434

607-588-7501 • 1-800-LGTIRES

CONTINENTAL • NOKIAN FIRESTONE • RADIAL 240 R4™

CERTIFIED FIRESTONE DEALER

www.hilltoptire.net

RENTAL TRAILERS & CARS AVAILABLE

Tax & Title Down

~ 2009 & newer 4.15% up to 66 mo. ~ 2006 & newer 4.85% up to 60 mo. ~ 2004 & newer 4.6% up to 48 mo. ~ 2001-2003 5.9% up to 36 mo.

268 8 Rt.. 7 • 607-563-4311• Sidney, NY SALES • SERVICE • RENTALS www.chambersohara.com

Winter Hours: Mon., Tues., Thurs. 8am - 7pm, Wed., Fri. 8am - 6pm, Saturday 8am - 3pm

2000 Chevrolet 2500 Reg Cab 4WD 8 Ft. Box, 5.7L V8, Auto, AC, PW, 2005 Chevrolet Colorado Ext Cab LS 4WD 5 Cyl, Auto, AC, PW, PL, PL, Cruise, Tilt, CD, White, 83,804 One Owner Miles Cruise, Tilt, Alloy, CD, Dk. Red, 67,500 Miles WAS $11,475 NOW $10,975 WAS $15,475 NOW $14,975

2005 Chevrolet 2500HD Ext 4WD V8, Auto, AC, Tow Pkg., Tilt, AM/FM, Pewter, 82,907 Miles WAS $13,975 NOW $12,975

2009 Nissan Titan Crew Cab SE 4WD V8, Auto, AC, P. Seat, PW, PL, Cruise, Tilt, CD, Alloy, Blue, 38,152 One Owner Miles WAS $25,975 NOW $25,475

2009 TOYOTA TACOMA DOUBLE CAB SR5 WAS 4WD, 6 cyl, auto, A/C, cruise, tilt, alloy, CD, PW, PL, green, 56,700 one owner miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$24,975 2008 FORD F150 EXT CAB XLT 4WD V8, Auto, AC, P. Seat, PW, PL, Cruise, Tilt, Alloy, CD, Tow Pkg, Red & Silver, 19,301 One Owner Miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$25,475 2008 CHEVROLET SILVERADO LT CREW CAB 4WD V8, Auto, A/C, Leather, P-Winds, P-Locks, CD, Alloy, Cruise, Tilt, Black, 75,649 Miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$23,475 2008 HONDA RIDGELINE 4WD 6 Cyl., Auto, AC, Alloy, CD, PW, PL, Cruise, Tilt, P. Rear Slider, Lt. Blue, 41,651 One Owner Miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$23,475 2008 CHEVROLET 2500 CARGO VAN V8, Auto, AC, Walk Thru Bulkhead, Adrian Storage Compartments, Silver, 25,408 One Owner Miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$18,975 2008 FORD RANGER EXT XLT 4WD 4 Dr, 4.0L V6, Auto, AC, Cruise, Tilt, PW, PL, CD, Alloy, Dk. Red, 48,116 PA One Owner Miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$18,975 2007 GMC SIERRA SLE Z71 REG CAB 4WD 8 Ft. Box, 5.3L V8, Auto, AC, Alloy, CD, PW, PL, Cruise, Tilt, Maroon, 42,800 One Owner Miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$18,475 2007 CHEVROLET SILVERADO EXT LT 4WD 5.3L V8, auto, AC, alloy, CD, PW, PL, cruise, tilt, black, 47,285 one owner miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$23,975 2006 CHEVROLET 2500 HD REG CAB 4WD Duramax Diesel, Allison trans., AC, 7 1/2’ ft. Western Ultra Mount Plow, cruise, tilt, alloy, blue, 77,503 one owner miles . . . . . . . . .$25,975 2006 DODGE RAM QUAD CAB SPORT 4WD Hemi, auto, AC, PS, PW, PL, cruise, tilt, CD, 20” chromes, white, 47,879 PA miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$22,475 2006 FORD F150 EXT CAB XLT 4WD V8, auto, AC, alloy, PW, PL, cruise, tilt, silver, 60,285 miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$18,975 2006 DODGE DAKOTA QUAD CAB SLT 4WD V8, Auto, A/C, Chrome Wheels, P. Seat, PW, PL, Cruise, Tilt, CD, Yellow, 32,364 One Owner PA Miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$19,975

NOW . . . . .$23,975 . . . . .$24,575 . . . . .$22,475 . . . . .$22,575 . . . . .$17,975 . . . . .$17,975 . . . . .$17,575 . . . . .$21,975 . . . . .$23,975 . . . . .$19,975 . . . . .$17,975 . . . . .$17,975

2004 Chevrolet 2500HD Reg Cab LS 4WD 8 Ft. Box, Duramax Diesel, Allison Trans., AC, PW, PL, Cruise, Tilt, CD, Maroon, 93,715 Miles WAS $17,975 NOW $16,975

2006 Ford F350 Supercab Lariat Dual Wheel V10, Auto, AC, P. Leather Seats, PW, PL, Cruise, Tilt, CD, Alloy, Tow Pkg., Black, 27,080 One Owner Miles, A Must See Truck WAS $22,275 NOW $21,775

2006 GMC SIERRA 2500 HD EXT CAB SLT 4WD V8, auto, AC, 7 1/2 ft. Sno-Way plow, htd. leather PS, PW, PL, cruise, tilt, alloy, CD, gray, 54,790 one owner miles . . . . . . . . . . .$22,975 2005 GMC SIERRA EXT CAB SLT 4WD Z71 5.3L V8, auto, AC, P. leather seat, PW, PL, cruise, tilt, alloy, CD, red, 62,131 miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$16,475 2005 DODGE RAM QUAD CAB SLT 4WD 5.7 V8, auto, AC, P. seat, PW, PL, cruise, tilt, CD, alloy, tow pkg, red, 66,593 miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$18,975 2005 DODGE RAM REG CAB RUMBLE BEE 4WD Hemi, Auto, AC, P. Seat, PW, PL, Cruise, Tilt, Chromes, Yellow, 63,742 Miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$18,975 2005 GMC 2500HD EXT SLE 4WD Duramax Diesel, Allison Auto, AC, PW, PL, Cruise, Tilt, CD, Alloy, Tow Pkg., White, 65,180 One Owner Miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$25,975 2003 CHEVROLET REG CAB LS 4WD 8 Ft. Box, Auto, AC, Alloy, Cruise, Tilt, CD, PW, PL, Green, 61,579 One Owner PA Miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$13,475 2003 CHEVROLET REG CAB 8 Ft. Box, V8, Auto, AC, Cruise, Tow Pkg, Cap, Blue, 86,593 Miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$8,475 2002 FORD F350 SUPERCAB 4WD XLT Off Road, 7.3L Powerstroke Diesel, auto, AC, P. seat, PW, PL, cruise, tilt, CD, alloys, complete 5th wheel hitch, silver, 76,940 one owner snowbird miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$19,475 2002 GMC SONOMA REG CAB SLS 6 Cyl, Auto, AC, Sport Pkg., Alloy, CD, PW, PL, Cruise, Tilt, Matching Fiberglass Cap, Exceptionally Clean, One Owner FL Truck, 39,384 Miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10,475 2001 DODGE RAM EXT QUAD CAB 4WD V8, Auto, AC, Rally Wheels, CD Player, Bedliner, Brown, 65,210 Miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10,975 2000 CHEVROLET S10 EXT CAB LS 4WD V6, Auto, AC, Cruise, Tilt, Alloy Wheels, Tow Pkg, Fiberglass Cap, Maroon, 72,500 Miles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$9,975

. . . . .$21,975 . . . . .$15,975 . . . . .$17,975 . . . . .$17,975 . . . . .$23,975 . . . . .$12,975 . . . . . .$7,975 . . . . .$18,575 . . . . . . .$9,975 . . . . . .$9,975 . . . . . .$8,975

Check Out Our Inventory of Over 100 Vehicles at www.chambersohara.com


SUNY Cobleskill is offering four weeks of a Large Animal Health Institute in June 2012. Each week focuses on one or more species and provides hands-on experience in the handling and health care of large animals. In contrast to the hands-on, experiential learning provided by the three previous weeks of the Large Animal Institute, the last week, June 25-29, is an exposure to a range of specialty livestock and out-of-the-ordinary species. This will be a diverse week that introduces students to the more unusual species that animal care personnel may encounter. Each day will be a field experience and an opportunity to talk to the owners/managers and whenever possible, their veterinarian. Each session will address the unique characteristics of the species; behavior, safety

concerns for the handler and the animal, management, anatomy, health and diseases. Professor Emeritus Anne Donnelly, who taught biology for 28 years at SUNY, is coordinating Specialty Livestock and Exotics Health Week. The first day starts with an introduction by Dr. Andrew Montario to working with unusual species that a vet may not normally encounter in veterinarian medicine. This day will also include a trip to a bison farm and a discussion with the owner operator and his veterinarian. This will be followed by a visit to a llama farm where the students will be introduced to camelids. On day two the institute will visit a wildlife rehabilitator who has been active in a major llama rescue and will

then onto an operating alpaca farm. The third day will be a day long visit to a zoo where students will have the opportunity to learn from a zoo veterinarian, senior zoo keeper and their fulltime veterinarian technician. Day four will expose the students to a variety of species starting with elk at an area elk farm followed by an afternoon lecture and discussion by a man who raises emus primarily for the high end cosmetic industry. Later Dr. Mike Losito will tour students through SUNY Cobleskill’s herpetology lab where they will have the opportunity to learn about and handle some of the laboratory specimens. The week will conclude with a trip to Adirondack Animal Land’s 500 animals on 80 acres which does some wildlife propagation and a discussion

with their vet which has over 20 years of experience in this unique field. Interested individuals may participate in one or all of the Large Animal Health weeks. For more information or to register, contact SUNY Cobleskill’s Office of Professional and Continuing Education at 518-255-5528 or pace@cobleskill.edu.

Pastures from A21 slightly sloping area with no low or wet areas. Muddy, wet pastures can actually be harmful to your

horse, as they harbor bacteria and fungal organisms which can lead to diseases such as

Automatic Wagon Hitch • Works on tractors, pickups, choppers • Built tough to pull even the largest grain wagons • Makes chopping silage fun • Increases productivity up to 25% • Bolts to drawbar • Works with PTO • Iowa State University Tested

BERGMAN MFG. 2866 Quail Ave., Arthur, IA 51431

800-551-4554 • www.bergmanmfg.com

thrush and rainrot, as well as becoming a breeding ground for biting insects and the diseases they carry, such as the deadly West Nile Virus. Muddy ground leads to slippery footing and can result in injuries as well. Important also for unlimited turn-out is a good source of fresh drinking water; this can be as simple as having access to a stream or freshwater pond in your pasture, or having a water trough filled with fresh water piped in from a spring or other water source that you provide. In addition to plenty of

open space for grazing and exercise, it’s a good idea to have a source of shade for your horse’s comfort. Our pastures are south-facing, and are tree-lined on either side. We notice that during the summer and warmer days, the horses spend their mornings grazing on the east side of the pastures under the trees, and then in the evenings move to the west side so as to take advantage of the shade those trees provide. In addition, we’ve left a number of wild apple trees scattered in the middle of the fields for additional shade. Fencing is an important consideration in setting up your pasture. Due to the fact that the sides of our fields are lined with trees leading into the forest, we opted to take advantage of the treeline and used barbless wire. The initial price of barbless wire is very low; our annual maintenance usually involves replacing or re-stapling fence wire that has been

stretched or damaged by the resident deer that travel through the property and go either under, over or through the wire. For the north and south sides of the pasture we opted for post and board fence — more labor-intensive but much longer lasting, especially since we dipped the posts in a marine water-proofing solution before placing them in the ground. There are many fencing products on the market, including electric fence, fence tape, slip-boards and the like. Note that barbed wire is never recommended for use in horse pastures. Be sure that you have created enough pasture land for the number of horses you keep (generally, about two acres of pasture per adult horse.) The condition and make-up of your pasture soil is very important in creating a grazing area for your horse’s good health. Before embarking on a project of creating new pasture, be sure to

have your soil tested. Your local Extension office can provide assistance — either by sending out an agent to do a physical inspection or by providing a source for having a soil sample you’ve collected sent out for testing. A soil pH of between 6.2 and 6.5 is considered ideal for good grass-legume pastures. Important nutrients for horse pastures include adequate phosphorus and potassium. A yearly addition of lime is also recommended in many areas, especially when the pH is too low and results in acidic soils. Make your grass seeding choices dependent on the type of soil in your pasture area; whether it is welldrained or poorly drained. Remember that ideal horse pastures will have different requirements and make-up than those used for grazing cows or goats. For assistance in choosing the proper types of grasses to seed, consult your local Equine Extension agent.

CATTLE HOOF TRIMMING TILT TABLES 4 Models To Choose From

• Portable • Stationary • Skid Steer Mount • 3Pt Hitch • 20 Years Experience in the tables design • Right or left layover chutes • We deliver to your door • All chutes now have a self catching head gate • All chutes have a hydraulic belly lift • We also have an optional hydraulic lift for our portable tables for work height adjustments. • Galvanized cattle hoof trim chutes • Rubber mat on table and headboard

Call or visit us on our Web site at

www.berkelmanswelding.on.ca

519-765-4230 BERKELMANS’ WELDING & MFG. AYLMER ONTARIO, CANADA

Page 23 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Large Animal Health Institute Specialty Livestock and Exotics: June 25-29


Section A - Page 24 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Are You Involved In More Than One Industry? We Are Here to Help You. FREE E SUBSCRIPTIONS S BY Y REQUEST * Regional/National Solid Waste Recycling (monthly)

Regional Heavy Construction (monthly)

- Send me Ì YES Hard Hat News!

Handling Ì YES - Send me Waste Equipment News!

Hard Hat News focuses on heavy equipment construction including excavating, construction/demolition, paving, bridge building, and utility construction in the northeastern third of the United States. TITLE 1 Ì President/CEO 2 Ì Manager/Supervisor 3 Ì Other NUMBER YOUR PRIMARY BUSINESS #1, SECONDARY #2, ETC. 1 Asphalt Paving _____________________ 7 Construction Demolition _________________ 2 Concrete Paving ___________________ 8 Landscaping __________________________ 3 Oil & Stone Paving__________________ 9 Land Clearing _________________________ 4 Bridge Construction ________________ 10 Logging _____________________________ 5 Excavating ________________________ 11 Other _______________________________ 6 Utility/Underground _________________

National Aggregate

Ì

(bi-monthly)

Recycling professionals involved in the wood waste, C&D, scrap metal, asphalt & concrete, and compost recycling industries will find Waste Handling Equipment News a valuable source of new products, product innovation and site adaption. J Owner/President/VP J J J J

TITLE J Operations Manager TYPE OF BUSINESS (Check all that apply)

J Other

J Asphalt/Concrete Recycling J Scrap Metals Recycling J Ferrous J Non-Ferrous

Construction Demolition Recycling Construction Demolition Landfill Woodwaste Recycling/Land Clearing Composting

Regional Horticulture

Paid Subscription

monthly

Folks Ì YES - Send me ) CountryGROWER!

YES - Send me North American Quarry News!

Country Folks Grower is the regional newspaper for all segments of commercial horticulture. Each issue is filled with important information for the Greenhouse, Nursery, Garden center, Landscaper, Fruit, Vegetable Grower and Marketers.

North American Quarry News covers quarries, sand and gravel pits, HMA and ready mix concrete operations in the United States. NAQN provides a combination of strong editorial and advertising for industry professionals.

*This publication costs $24 for one year. *This publication costs $40 for two years.

Your company produces these products or services: 1 2 3 4 5

Ì Ì Ì Ì Ì

(Check All That Apply) Crushed stone and sand & gravel 6 Ì Industrial minerals Crushed stone 7 Ì Machinery/equipment manufacturer Sand and gravel 8 Ì Equipment dealer/distributor Recycled materials, concrete/asphalt 9 Ì Drilling Lime 10 Ì Blasting

(

Regional Agriculture

Paid Subscription

weekly

Ì YES - Send me Country Folks!

Business Type: K Greenhouse K Tree Fruit K Nursery

)

Business Type: K Dairy K Sheep

K Beef K Alfalfa

K K K K

K Farmers Market K Direct Market K Vegetable

Northeast Equine Market

Small Fruit Christmas Garden Center Supplier

(monthly)

Mane Stream is a monthly horse publication reaching Maine to Northern Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. Not only does Mane Stream go to horse owners who request it, but it goes to all of our Affiliated Horse Association Members.....29 Associations Strong and Growing! In addition, issues of Mane Stream are shipped to tack shops, feed stores, stables, auction barns, and where horse people frequent.

Our premier weekly agricultural newspaper has four editions covering agriculture from Maine through North Carolina. Every issue is loaded with national, regional and local agricultural news, equipment, service advertising and auctions.

*This publication costs $47 for one year.

(Check All That Apply)

*This publication costs $78 for two years. (Check All That Apply)

K Poultry K Corn

National Vineyard

K Horse K Soybeans

K Goat

Subscription (Paidbi-monthly )

Wine & Grape Grower offers features, news and information on growing grapes, and making and selling wines. Learn tips on how to start or improve your business.

How Many Horses Do You Have?_____

LEE PUBLICATIONS, INC. PO Box 121, 6113 State Hwy., Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 800-218-5586 • FAX 518-673-2381

SUBSCRIPTIONS 888-596-5329 email: subscriptions@leepub.com Name _______________________________________________ Farm/Business Name ___________________________________ Address______________________________________________ ______________________________________________ City ________________________ State _____ Zip __________

Business Type: K Grape Grower K Vineyard

(Check All That Apply)

K Wines K Supplier

County ____________________Email _____________________ Phone (

) _______________Fax (

) _________________

Date ___________Signature______________________________


Your Country Folks Classified Ad Representative I’m here to make it easy for you to place your ad.

Call Me FREE On Our 800 Phone Line From Anywhere in the Continental United States

1-800-836-2888 Or Fax (518) 673-2381 Attn. Peggy E-mail: classified@leepub.com

Deadline is Wednesday at 3 PM

We Accept MasterCard, Visa, Discover and American Express

Payment May Also Be Made by Check or Money Order

RATES

(Per Zone) FIRST 14 WORDS

One Week . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9.25 Two or More Weeks . . . . . . . . . $8.25 ea. wk. Each Additional Word . . . . . . . 30¢ per wk.

Lee Publications, Country Folks Classified, PO Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428

Page 25 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Hello I’m P eggy


Section A - Page 26 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Home,, Family,, Friendss & You Good Housekeeping Mixed grill 1/2 cups orange marmalade 2 tablespoons lemon juice 1 tablespoon fresh rosemary, or 1 teaspoon dried rosemary leaves, chopped, crushed 3/4 teaspoon salt 6 fully cooked bratwurst, knockwurst or frankfurters 1 (3 1/2-pound) chicken, cut into quarters Tomato wedges, for garnish 1. In small bowl, mix orange marmalade, lemon juice, rosemary and salt. 2. Cut a few slashes in each bratwurst to prevent them from bursting while cooking. 3. Place chicken quarters on grill over medium heat; cook until golden on both sides, about 10 minutes. Then to avoid charring, stand chicken pieces upright, leaning one against the other. Rearrange pieces from time to time and cook until fork-tender and juices run clear when pierced with knife, about 25 minutes longer. During last 10 minutes of cooking, place bratwurst on same grill. Brush chicken quarters and bratwurst frequently with orange-marmalade mixture. 4. Garnish with tomato wedges to serve. Serves 6. • Each serving without tomatoes: About 613 calories, 39g total fat (13g saturated), 162mg cholesterol, 875mg sodium, 30g carbohydrate, 41g protein.

German potato-salad packet Grill spuds with bacon pieces, then toss with a cider-vinegar dressing.

2 1/2 pounds (medium) red potatoes, cut into 1-inch chunks 2 slices uncooked bacon, chopped 1/2 teaspoon salt 1/4 teaspoons coarsely ground black pepper 2 green onions, chopped 3 tablespoons cider vinegar 2 teaspoons sugar 1. In large bowl, toss potatoes with bacon, salt and pepper until potatoes are evenly coated. 2. Using 18-inch-wide heavy-duty foil, layer two 20-by-18-inch sheets to make a double thickness. Spray with nonstick cooking spray. Place potato mixture on center of stacked foil. Bring long sides of foil up and over potato mixture and fold over several times to seal well. Fold ends to seal in juices, making sure not to fold in too far in order to leave room for heat circulation inside. 3. Place packet on grill over medium heat and cook 30 minutes or until potatoes are fork-tender, turning packet over once halfway through grilling. 4. Remove packet from grill and carefully open; add green onions, vinegar and sugar to potato mixture, tossing gently to combine. Makes 8 (3/4 cup) servings. • Each serving: About 140 calories, 3g total fat (1g saturated), 4mg cholesterol, 180mg sodium, 25g carbohydrate, 2g dietary fiber, 4g protein. For thousands of triple-tested recipes, visit our website at www.goodhousekeeping.com/ recipefinder/. (c) 2012 Hearst Communications, Inc.

Dairy Princess events Hi! this is Courtney Luskin, The Rensselaer County Dairy Princess. Looking forward to June we will be stepping off the month with a Rodeo at the Schaghticoke Fairgrounds hosted by the Painted Pony Rodeo on Saturday, June 2. The dairy princess will be at the Rodeo to give away coloring books for children and award prizes to the rodeo's youngest participants. Please be sure to stop by the information table and say "Hi". On Sunday, June 3 Hender'Son's Bar and Grill in Schaghticoke will be the site for our Annual Grill Cheese Eating Contest. The Contest will kick off at 2:30 with registration and at 3 p.m. the fun will begin when contestants will eat as many grill cheese as possible in a set amount of time. This is a fun time for all, no professional eaters allowed. We hope everyone will show their patriotic spirit by displaying the red, white and blue this Memorial Day. The Rensselaer County Dairy Princess program is made possible through the support of American Dairy Association and Dairy Council, the local planning and management organization funded by dairy farmer checkoff dollars. Dairy Farmers work hard to provide us with dairy products. One way to incorporate your 3 dairy products per day is this fun recipe, it would be great with a tall glass of milk. Drinking milk and eating other dairy foods makes it easy for kids to get the bone-building calcium and other nutrients their growing bodies need.

Red White and Blue Dessert 2 packages (8 ounces each) cream cheese, softened 1/2 cup sugar

1 teaspoon vanilla extract 2 cups heavy whipping cream, whipped 2 quarts strawberries, halved, divided 2 quarts blueberries, divided In a large bowl, beat cream cheese, sugar and extract until fluffy. Fold in whipped cream. Place a third of the mixture in a 4-qt. bowl. Reserve 20 strawberry halves and 1/2 cup blueberries for garnish. Layer half of the remaining strawberries and blueberries over cream mixture. Top with another third of the cream mixture and the remaining berries. Spread the remaining cream mixture on top. Use the reserved strawberries and blueberries to make a "flag" on top.

This week’s Sudoku Solution


On May 4, Amanda Rhodes, daughter of Gary and Jolene Rhodes of Henderson was elected to serve as the 2012-2013 New York State FFA President. Her duties begin this summer with advanced leadership training, followed by the New York State Fair and travelling to visit some of the 90 FFA chapters in New York. Amanda’s family owns and operates one of the largest greenhouse operations in Northern New York, Rhodes Greenhouses. She has worked there ever since she can remember planting, watering, and selling plants. This has developed into her supervised agricultural experience (SAE), or work outside of classroom time. Amanda earned the top award in Diversified Horticulture Production of her

outstanding SAE. Amanda became involved in FFA in 9th grade participating in many chapter events. As a sophomore she was able to attend the Washington Leadership Conference, a weeklong conference in Washington, D.C., where she was able to develop a “living to serve” plan for her community. In her junior and senior year she was selected to be a soloist and member of the National FFA Chorus. When asked about what she looks forward to the most this year she said influencing younger FFA members and helping to make a difference in their lives. She can’t wait to start her training and is excited to make memories of her team.

CHS Foundation awards $75,000 in scholarships ST. PAUL, MN — The CHS Foundation has awarded nationwide 75 $1,000 scholarships to college students studying agriculture. This year’s recipients include 50 high school seniors and 25 two-year college students from 27 states. The CHS Foundation is the major giving entity of CHS Inc., (Nasdaq: CHSCP) the nation’s leading cooperative, owned by farmers, ranchers and co-ops across the United States. “The CHS Foundation values the opportunity to help build the next generation of leaders in the production, science, technology and business of agriculture,” says William J. Nelson, CHS Foundation president. “We are proud to support these promising students who will play an important role in the future of agriculture.” An independent, external committee selected recipients based on their career goals, essays,

extracurricular involvement, transcripts and reference letters. See below for a list of high school and two-year college scholarship recipients from the Northeastern United States. North Carolina Caroline Wade Clement of Clinton, attending North Carolina State University Lindsay Carlisle DeMers of Sophia, attending Virginia Tech *Lydia Lauren Register of Zebulon, attending North Carolina State University *Tyler Keith Douglas of Washington, attending North Carolina State University New York *Mary-Elizabeth Foote of Harford, attending State University of New York at Cobleskill

Amanda Rhodes, the new 2012-2013 New York State FFA President. Photo courtesy of Belleville-Henderson FFA

Pennsylvania Garrett James Richardson of Glen Campbell, attending The Pennsylvania State University *Lindsay Rae Upperman of Chambersburg, attending Butler Community College *Denotes two-year scholarship recipients; all others are high school scholarship recipients.

Pine Plains FFA attends State Convention The Pine Plains Central School District helped send 21 FFA members to the New York State FFA Convention. Over 1,000 members and guests participated in Convention Sessions, tours, workshops and competitions.

Amazing keynote speakers presented, FFA talent was showcased and members of our New York State Assembly and Senate were heard. The Pine Plains FFA sent three teams to Sr. Quiz bowl and rocked the

competition placing 1st (team of Gain Stagnaro, Ethan Arsenault and Sara Murphy), 2nd (Kara Porell, Shannon Fletcher, Samantha Seipp and Paige Walsh) and 3rd (Colleen & Monica Smith & Abigail Arsenault). Two teams were sent for Jr. Quiz bowl placing 1st (Olivia Stagnaro, Frances Snyder, Tarique Hayden and Emma Hotaling) and 3rd (Clair Norman, Rebekah Koch, Aidan Arsenault & Tarrah Region). Clayton Stephens came home with an armful of awards, placing 3rd in the State for Swine Production, winning District #2 Star in Agricultural Production, placed 2nd in Discussion Meet and 5th in the State for Extemporaneous Speaking. Four students received their Empire Degrees: Jonathon Weinberger,

Clayton Stephens, Ethan Arsenault and Sara Murphy. Ashley Bartholf and Kristen Pelletier proudly represented us on a hard working, sequestered nominating committee selecting the future State FFA Officers. Ethan Arsenault ran a tremendous race for a State/ District Officer position amongst a very tough field. Samantha Seipp won the jacket award and was selected to show case her guitar playing and singing talent as the first talent to be seen in the event during the 1st pre-session. Congratulations to all students for all of their accomplishments. Highlights can be seen at: www.ihigh. com/nyffa/broadcast_224546.html?sil verlight=1.

Collegiate FFA seeks Ambassadors for Agriculture

Four students received their Empire Degrees: Clayton Stephens, Sara Murphy, Ethan Arsenault and Jonathon Weinberger. Photo courtesy of Pine Plains FFA

College students will serve as industry advocates INDIANAPOLIS – Collegiate FFA, a program of the National FFA Organization, is now accepting applications for its National Collegiate Agricultural Ambassador program. Twenty selected students will serve during the 2012-2013 school year. During their term, ambassadors will deliver presentations to elementary, junior-high and high school classes, community organizations and other groups interested in learning about the industry of agriculture. The presentations will focus on food safety and security, sound science, sustainable

agriculture as well as other current agricultural topics. Ambassadors will earn scholarship money during their year of service. College students ranging from sophomores to graduate students who have the desire to promote agriculture may apply to be an ambassador. The application deadline is June 1. Visit www.FFA.org/collegiate for more information. The National Collegiate Agricultural Ambassadors program is sponsored by BASF, Syngenta, CSX Transportation and the National Pork Board as a special project of the National FFA Foundation.

Page 27 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Amanda Rhodes, elected New York State FFA President


ARKETPLACE

FARMALL H 1948, parts or project $500. 716-337-0449.(NY)

JOHN DEERE corn planter parts model # 1240. Call Paul 716-741-2654.(NY)

JD CORN HEAD 2 Row narrow, new condition, S.N. 000RCX916742 $3,200. Four Row Lilliston Cultivator $1,100. 802-2654496.(VT)

3 YEAR OLD Painted Clydesdale gelding broke to drive $1,500. 585-554-5357.(NY)

NH 664 ROUND baler, net or twine, always under roof 5’x6’. One owner 2100 bales, good cond. $5,500. Lanc. PA. 717-3672567 1PR. IH rear wheel weights $150. 8ft. JD finish mower $1,200. NH model 165 vertical mow conveyor with curve $500. 570557-1140.(PA)

WANTED: Flat bottomed grain bin 14’16’W. 8’H. FOR SALE: Farmall M on steel wheels G.C. Penn Yan, NY. 315-536-3182 GEHL CB-700 Forage Harvester, 550 PTO Hay head $600. New Holland Forage Harvester 782, 1,000 PTO, electric controls, hay head $900. 518-829-7194.(NY) 4 WEEK OLD BUNNIES, some are colorful others are a solid color $5. a piece. No Sunday calls. Lloyd Nolt. 607-2437556.(NY)

GEHL 250 BU manure spreader, needs work $450. New Idea model 512 Haybine $875. older unit. 802-442-5105.(VT) OATS FOR FEED Rodeo approximately 400 BU. test weight 33 lbs. 585-3463577.(NY) 2004 WILDERNESS 5TH wheel 28’ one power slide, front power leveling jacks, Dlx. cabinets, queen bed, Dbl. refrigerator, 17’ awning. 845-877-3132.(NY) WORK SHOES mens size 12 new, one pair 6” Rocky’s $75., one pair Rhino Work Oxfords $40. 518-725-6309.(NY)

TEAM OF BELGIAN Geldings, (smooth) dependable workers on all farm machinery. Schwartz 2157 Huth Sayer Rd., Oriskany Falls, NY 13425.

WANTED: John Deere number 3 mowing machine useable or for parts, no Sunday calls please. 315-843-6055.(NY)

JD 2630 80HP, good condition $7,500; JD 46A loader with brackets $800. 6 Row Noble cultivator $1,500. No Sunday calls. 315-536-7841.(NY)

FORD 6000 FARM tractor, 6 cylinder turbo diesel, 80hp., runs good, 540 and 1,000 speed PTO, good 3pt., $6,100. obo. 860614-5066.(CT)

WINPOWER GENERATOR on trailer 50/80 kw. 540 PTO with plug-in and heavy duty cables, excellent condition. 518-9932795.(NY)

EXCELLENT CONDITION Hesston small square baler $7,900., Vicon 4 Star tedder $2,900., IH 700 5 bottom auto reset plow $2,500. 315-348-6149.(NY)

WANTED: Polled Hereford Yearling service bull to lease or buy, need by June 30th, 8ft. Skeleton elevator section. T-burg, NY. 607387-6908 N.H. 316 BALER; N.H. 492 Haybine; Kuhn Tedder; N.H. 258 Rake; N.I. 3615 Manure Spreader, all in excellent condition. 585786-5505.(NY) WANTED: Looking for younger breeding age Red Angus bull or possibly Black, call 315-527-4731 or 315-829-4684.(CNY) 5’x10’ WELDING TABLE 3/4” top $900. Oliver 3 bottom trailer plow, cylinder, rubber tires, $450. Magnetic drill $350. 315699-4157.(NY) 42FT. SKINNER bale elevator, double chain with paddles, G.C. $2,000. obo. Lester Byler 8811 St. Rt. 274 Holland Patient, NY 13354. NH 258 hay rake, roller bar, nice shape, $1,950; JD Gator, 4x6 dsl., w/roof, good shape, $3,200. 315-374-2788(NY)

JOHN DEERE bale thrower, model 40 came off Deere 348 baler. Call Darrell $650. 804-514-9845.(VA)

WANTED: 1969 VW Camp mobile, running or repairable. 518-654-6620.(NY)

32’ MULKEY ELEVATOR with electric motor $2,000. John Deere 10’ fertilizer and lime spreader $500. 315-331-1184.(NY)

SAME EXPLORER 90 4X4 w/cab loader, Massey 253 diesel w/turbo both low hrs., good condition, kicker hay wagon wood 8x16. 607-865-5678.(NY)

AYR. HF. due Sept. to Percy $1,400.; 14’ Brillion Spring Tooth drags on wheels $1,400. 518-269-9590.(NY)

15K- PTO GENERATOR, antique hay rake, 12ft. hyd. dump, 6- produce wagons, scales, 1/2 bu. baskets, Oliver 77 manual, Allis cultivator + plow manuals, B.O. 315853-5889.(NY)

PERCHERON GELDING 17yr. old, does full days work, kids horse $750. Red Heeler pups $50. 35029 Elm Ridge Rd. Philadelphia,NY 13673.

BELGIAN MARES 9-10yrs. old, broke to all farm equipment, good pulling, logging team, fancy. Enos Schmucker 1061 Whiskey Rd. Waterloo, NY 13165.

782 CHOPPER, good condition hay corn heads $1,500.; Gehl 99 blower parts condition $100. 518-848-1822.(NY) 4 HORSE TRAILER needs work $700. Windham, NY area. 518-734-3198

CHICKENS READY to start laying. All Pullets are golden reds. $12.50 per bird. Call for more information 315-858-0088 or 315313-3534.(NY)

FORD 501 sickle bar mower 7ft. 3pt. hitch $1,000. 315-845-8341.(NY)

3 BOTTOM OLIVER plow 3pt. hitch trip bottoms $840. 585-735-3065.(NY)

SUBSCRIBE Country Folks The Weekly Voice of Agriculture

Your paid subscription to Country Folks earns you 1 FREE Farmer to Farmer Marketplace ad Each Month.

INCLUDE Your Mailing Information Found on the Front of Your Country Folks Paper!

EE D RS W02888 ***************CAR-RT Chec Are You LOT**R002 R I E F Eleg k You A 1 P IB r L1/01/11 YOUR NAME abel ible? For T TO CR LY YOUR MAILING ADDRESS he “A S ” B YOUR CITY & STATE, NY 13428 N U O S

Your Label Looks Like This Gray SAMPLE Label

You Must Include The ( A ) That Is Found In This Area Of Your Label, It Signifies That You Are A A PAID SUBSCRIBER

YOUR Label Is Found On The Lower Right Hand Corner Of The Front Page Of Your Paper

YOU MUST MAIL THIS FORM & YOUR LABEL TO: Country Folks FARMER TO FARMER MARKETPLACE PO Box 121 Palatine Bridge, NY 13428

WANTED

_______________________________________________ 2ND word 3RD word 4TH word 1ST word _______________________________________________ 6TH word 7TH word 8TH word 5TH word _______________________________________________ 10TH word 11TH word 12TH word 9TH word _______________________________________________ 14TH word 15TH word 16TH word 13TH word _______________________________________________ 18TH word 19TH word 20TH word 17TH word ( ) _______________________________________________ Area Code & Phone Number (Counts as the 21ST word)

Please PRINT Clearly!

FOR SALE

REQUIREMENTS: 1. P a i d S u b s c r i b e r s a r e allowed ONE Farmer to Farmer Marketplace ad Per Month. (Ads Will Appear For 1 Issue Only) 2. Must MAIL this form & your Current Label to us. (NO Phone Calls, NO Faxes, NO E-Mails, NO Photo Copies Accepted). 3. (21) Word Limit. Please Print Clearly.

(If we can’t read your writing we can’t enter it in the paper.) 4. Include your Phone Number with area code. (Phone #’s count as 1 word).

5. The following types of ads WILL NOT be accepted: BUSINESS, Personals, Help Wanted, For Lease, For Rent, Wanted To Rent, Wanted To Lease. The above types of ads WILL NOT be accepted. 6. Information not received

in our office by Noon on Wednesday will be held until the following issue.

Lee Publications staff has the right to reject and/or edit any Farmer To Farmer Marketplace ads.

A nd 1 Fa F G M rme R et ar r T E E ke o F E

TO

FARMER TO FARMER MARKETPLACE

Please PRINT Clearly!

May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Section A - Page 28

FARMER T O FARMER M

ve tp a ry lac rm Mo e er nth Ad !

CALL Toll Free 888-596-5329

or FAX form with credit card information to (518) 673-2699 or e-mail your request to subscriptions@leepub.com

Rush This Subscription Form with Check or Credit Card Information To:

Country Folks

Country Folks is Published Weekly By Lee Publications, Inc.

P.O. Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428-0121 Name ______________________________________________ Farm/Company Name__________________________________ Address ____________________________________________ City __________________________State ____Zip ________ Signature ______________________________Date ________ Phone (

) ____________________________________

E-mail ______________________________________________ Fax (

) ________________________________________

- Publication Country Folks Eastern Edition Country Folks Western Edition Country Folks New England Farm Weekly Country Folks MidAtlantic (Farm Chronicle)

Print Digital

- Subscription Price 1 Year (52 issues) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$47.00 2 year (104 issues) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$78.00 Canadian (52 issues) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$140.00 Canadian 1st Class (52 issues) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$265.00 New Renewal (include label from paper if possible) Gift Subscription Signature __________________________________Date ________ Payment Method VISA MC AMEX DISC Exp. Date

____

Acct. # ________________________________________________

One Year (52 Issues) $47.00 Two Years (104 Issues) $78.00 Every Week

Country Folks

Brings You: • Award Winning Editorial • Feature Stories • Latest in National, Local, and State News • New and Used Equipment for Sale • Auctions

New Subscribers Please Allow 3-4 Weeks Delivery

NOW AVAILABLE DIGITALLY!!

Get your copy every Saturday from anywhere you have web access!! By getting your subscription digitally you also will have access to our archived issues since January of 2009 and have the ability to search your current issue or the past issues.


3 Ways To Enter!

John Deere Gator 825: 4x4 Gator provided by Z&M Ag and Turf

1. Buy a subscription to Country Folks 2. Place a classified ad in Country Folks Per zone, Reader ads cost $9.25 for 1st 14 words and 30¢ per additional word. - Phone it in: Call Peggy at 800-836-2888 - Fax it in: Fax attn: Peggy @ 518-673-2381 - Mail it in: Country Folks Classifieds, PO Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 - Email it in: classified@leepub.com

3. No purchase necessary. Send a post card with your name, farm or company name, complete mailing address, phone number, email address and date of birth to CF/Gator Sweepstakes, Country Folks, PO Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 Contest closes June 1st, 2012, mailed entries must be postmarked May 31st, 2012 or before. Employees and relatives of Lee Publications, John Deere and Z&M Ag and Turf are not eligible. Winner must be 18 years of age or older. All taxes are the responsibility of the winning entry. Contest open to readers of Country Folks, Country Folks Grower, Wine & Grape Grower, Country Folks Mane Stream, Hard Hat News, WHEN & NAQN.

Fill out this form to subscribe, 2012 Country Folks Subscription Prices: One Year (52 issues) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . By Mail $47. . . . . . . . . . OR By Email $25 . . . . . . . . . . . . OR Both $60 Two Years (104 issues). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . By Mail $78. . . . . . . . . . OR By Email $45 . . . . . . . . . . . . OR Both $85

This purchase automatically enters you in the CF/Gator Sweepstakes First, Give Us Your Info: Name __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mailing Address ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ City/State/Zip ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Phone ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Email __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ 1) __ Yes, Please Begin or Extend My Subscription __ One Year

__ Two Years

2) If Giving a Gift Subscription, Give Us the Name and Address of the Recipient: Recipient’s Name ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mailing Address ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ City/State/Zip ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ __ Please send me an opportunity to give this gift again when this gift subscription lapses by sending me a notice/invoice. 3) __ I Would Prefer to Receive My Subscription to Country Folks Via Email. __ Email Me a Subscription to Country Folks in Addition to My Mailed Subscription. Send to (email address) ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Payment Info: __ Payment Enclosed (Make Check out to: Country Folks) Amount Enclosed $ ______________________________________________________________________ __ Charge my Credit Card (Mastercard/Visa/Discover/American Express) Card Number ______________________________________________________________________________ Expiration Date ____________________________________ Your Name as it Appears on the Card ________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Mail this form to: Country Folks Subscriptions, PO Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 OR Fax this form to 518/673-2322

Page 29 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Enter Our Country Folks Sweepstakes For A Chance


Section A - Page 30 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

• Since 1964 • Specializing in Trade Publications, Trade Shows, Commercial Printing & Mailing Services

r Ou t u n o Ab uctio ng k A s ti A rse Lis o r a H nd e Cal

Having A Horse Auction?

Running your ad in the Country Folks Auction Section? Don’t forget to ask your Country Folks Representative about the Special Rates for Country Folks Mane Stream.

Issue Date

July 1 August 1 September 1 October 1 Nov. & Dec. 1 Jan. & Feb. 1, 2013 Early Deadline

Deadline Date June 22 July 20 August 24 September 21 October 19 December 20

www.countryfolks.com

LEE PUBLICATIONS

Serving the agricultural, heavy construction, aggregates, solid waste, commercial horticulture and equine industries.

MARKET TO ANY OR ALL OF THESE INDUSTRIES WITH ONE CALL! Country Folks

Farm Weekly Newspapers - since 1972, serving fulltime farmers in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic market areas. The number one agricultural publication in this market! Target your audience with 4 regional editions. Monthly Equine Publication covering New York, New England, Northern Pennsylvania, and New Jersey. Reaching the horseowners in this market area as the official publication of over 25 Associations. Since 1979, serving heavy construction contractors, landscaping, aggregate producers and recyclers in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic Markets every month. Qualified readership is guaranteed to get you results. Country Folks

Since 1990, serving the commercial greenhouses, vegetable

GROWER W and fruit growers, and nurseries in the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, Midwest and Northwest market areas. Reach your target audience with this monthly publication that is by far the number one media for these industries.

FREIPETION

SUBSCR R OFFE

Follow Us On

Published by the Lee Publications, Inc. PO Box 121, 6113 State Hwy. 5, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 Mail this form back or Fax to 518-673-2381

Is our newest publication. Started in 2011 to serve an important and growing segment of horticulture, this newspaper is targeted at businesses active in commercial scale growing and winemaking in the United States. In addition to a six times a year mailing, a searchable version is available to our online readers. WASTE HANDLING EQUIPMENT NEWS, since 1992, serving asphalt/concrete recyclers, composting facilities, construction demolition companies, wood waste recyclers and scrap metal recyclers with 2 monthly editions that cover the entire United States.

ARE YOU INTERESTED IN HORSES? SIGN UP NOW TO RECEIVE COUNTRY FOLKS MANE STREAM AT NO CHARGE!

NORTH AMERICAN QUARRY NEWS since 1998, serving the quarry, sand & gravel, hot mix asphalt and ready mix concrete industries with one national edition. This is the fastest growing publication for these markets.

Name ___________________________________________ Farm/Company Name _______________________________ Address _________________________________________ City ____________________________________________ State ___________________________ Zip _____________ Signature _______________________ Date _____________ Phone ( )______________________________________ Fax ( )________________________________________ Email ___________________________________________ How Many Horses Do You Have?_______________________

TRADE SHOWS

www.cfmanestream.com

Lee Publications produces trade shows, both regionally and nationally for each of the markets listed above. Go to our website at www.leepub.com for more information or call 800-218-5586.

COMMERCIAL PRINTING

We specialize in short run (5,000-100,000) copies) web offset printing. Tabloid style print jobs like this publication are available in increments of 4 pages in black & white or full color. Complete mailing sources are available as well as insertions in any of our publications

LEE PUBLICATIONS PO Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 Phone 518-673-3237 Fax 518-673-3245

info@leepub.com


Page 31 - Section A • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012


May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Section A - Page 32


Section B

AUCTION SECTION and MARKET REPORTS Double Crop Buckwheat may be an option in the Northeast this spring Given the current state of the wheat crop, this could be the year many North East growers could slide in buckwheat after wheat. Information on growing buckwheat: A. Climatic Requirements: Buckwheat grows best where the climate is moist and cool. It can be grown rather far north and at high altitudes, because its growing period is short (10 to 12 weeks) and its heat requirements for development are low. The crop is extremely sensitive to unfavorable weather conditions and is killed quickly by freezing temperatures both in the spring and fall. High temperatures and dry weather at blooming time may cause blasting of flowers and prevent seed formation. Generally, buckwheat seeding is timed so that the plants will bloom and set seed when hot, dry weather is over. Often seeding is delayed until three months prior to the

first killing frost in the fall. B. Soil Requirements: Buckwheat grows on a wide range of soil types and fertility levels. It produces a better crop than other grains on infertile, poorly drained soils if the climate is moist and cool. It is an efficient crop in extracting phosphorous of low availability from the soil. In addition, buckwheat tends to lodge badly on fertile soils. It is often better suited than most other grains on newly cleared land, on drained marsh land, or on other rough land with a high content of decaying vegetative matter. Buckwheat has higher tolerance to soil acidity than any other grain crop. It is best suited to light to medium textured, well-drained soils such as sandy loams, loams and silt loams. It does not grow well in heavy, wet soils or in soils that contain high levels of limestone. It grows well where alfalfa

LAKEVIEW HOLSTEINS Friday, June 1st, 2012 at 11:00 AM Great Market for High Quality Cattle at this Auction Specializing in registered and grade dairy cattle, Jerseys, complete dairy herds, heifers, and service bulls. Set up for interstate transportation. Reasonable commission rates. Great dairy location. Licensed and bonded. Auction held every first Friday of the month. Excellent ventilation, all cattle vaccinated upon arrival and vet checked by Keseca Vet. 1. Group of 20 600-800 lb. Holstein Heifers, all from one farm, vaccinated, AI sired, excellent condition 2. More top quality registered animals from Bill Brown, one milking 110 lb. 3. 4 reg. purebred heifers due in June from one farm with a 25,000 lb herd average & with very good and excellent dams behind them. Pedigrees at ringside, sires are from Moscow and Monument. 4. 3 crossbred heifers from Keith Brubaker, one will be fresh till sale day. 5. 5 nice Holstein heifers from Jonas Wengerd from Clyde with one fresh and 4 springing. 6. Group of open Holstein heifers from Western NY. 7. 3 springing heifers from John Hershberger. 8. 3 fresh heifers from Stephen Sauder, AI sired. 9. 4-8 fresh and springing heifers from one farm, AI sired and bred, 24,000 lb herd average. 10. Local farm sending few fresh heifers, selling them as they freshen. 11. Purebred service bull, sire is Marvelous-ET, dam was from Ramos, dam was 82 point 2 year old next dam 89 points, born 12-25-10. 12. 4-800 lb Holstein open heifers from Virgil Phelts. 13. 3 Heifers due in Sept and Oct from local dairy. 14. 4 Boumatic Flo-Star Claws, 4 DeLaval Large Flow Claws, 2 Milk Meters for tie stall 15. From Pine Hollow Dairy 14 #1 Heifers, 12 to 14 months old, all AI sired, sires are from ABS bulls, 27,300 lb. herd avg. (nice, big heifers), all open & ready to breed, avg. wt 800-900 lbs. 16. Lots more groups until sale date.

June is Dairy Month - Customer Appreciation - Free Ice Cream to All Customers AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: We have a nice quality group for this month. We take extra measures in having a clean, healthy environment for our cattle. Come be part of this successful auction. Last month we marked 165 head with the top coming to $1,950.

Terms: Cash or honorable check. Nothing to be removed until settled for.

FOR TRUCKING AND CONSIGNMENT CALL: Elmer Zeiset 315-729-8030 Jay Martin 315-521-3123 Raymond Zimmerman 315-531-8521

Specializing in Agriculture & Construction Public Auctions Jay Martin Clyde, NY 14433 315-521-3123

Elmer Zeiset Savannah, NY 13146 315-729-8030

or red clover would not. On soils high in nitrogen, lodging may occur and cause a reduction in yield. Once lodged, a buckwheat plant does not return upright. Crusting on clay soils may result in an unsatisfactory stand because of poor seedling emergence. C. Seed Preparation and Germination: Buckwheat will germinate at temperatures ranging from 45 degrees to 105 degrees F. Freshly harvested seed of some types may not germinate until after 30-60 days of drying and storage. The seed may retain its viability for several years, but seed that is no more than one year old is best to use for planting. Buckwheat plants will emerge from the soil 3-5 days after planting. The time required is influenced by depth of seeding and the temperature and moisture content of the soil. Cultural Practices: A. Crop Sequence and Rotation: Serious diseases affecting other dicot field crops have not been important in buckwheat; therefore the volunteer plant problem is the main problem in

crop sequences. Volunteer sunflower, rapeseed, mustard, and corn can be serious weeds in buckwheat planted before June 15. Volunteer buckwheat can be a problem in crops following buckwheat, but herbicides will control these in most crops. B. Seedbed Preparation: A firm seedbed is best for successful buckwheat production because of its relatively small seed size and its shallow root system. A firm seedbed facilitates absorption of nutrients essential for rapid growth, and tends to reduce losses from drought. If soil has been plowed for a previous crop which has failed, only disking or harrowing may be required. Rolling or cultipacking the seedbed just prior to seeding is sometimes helpful. C. Seeding Date: Buckwheat may be sown at any time after all danger of killing frost is past. Since the crop grows rapidly and matures in a short growing season, the

Buckwheat B2

DAIRY CATTLE & HEIFER SALE FRIDAY, JUNE 1, 2012 • 11:00 A.M. Directions: Sale to be held at Jack Wood's Sale Barn, located on Taylor Valley Rd., Cincinnatus, NY-2 mi. north of Cincinnatus, just off of NYS Rte. 26. Watch for auction arrows. Robertt & Brendaa Price: Selling (50) Head dairy. (22) 1st calf heifers, with top 2nd calf heifers. Cows are in good condition, up on udders. Averaging 60 lbs. out of the tank. Good Holsteins, (3) R&W, & (8) Black Crosses. Cows show milk, with (25) recently fresh. Several due for June & July. Good cows, milking well, and safe in calf for fall. Price Farm has always received milk awards. Last SCC: 75,000. 4.0 F, 3.2 P. Milked in tie stalls, and used to pasture during the day. (1) Holstein Service bull. (25) Consignments, (10) from one place selling as they bag or freshen. (8) Bred heifers, from short bred to springing. (7) Milk cows from one place, some are Jersey's and Black Crosses. (28) Good open heifers from 300 lbs. to breeding age. Most are used to Free Stall. (Nice heifers). Misc.. Items: NH 717 Chopper w/grass & corn head. (Ready to use). JD 8250 Grain Drill, 18 hole. NH 30 ft. hay elevator, with (2) 10 ft. sections. Gates; 12 ft.-16 ft. JD pull behind brush mower w/hyd. lift. (1) Wooden hay wagon w/running gear. Other misc. items being sold. Salee Managedd by:

Gene Wood’s Auction Service, Inc. Cincinnatus, NY 13040

Tel: (607) 863-3821

Visit us on the Web @ genewoodsauctionserviceinc.com JUNEE 15,, 2012: Pedersen Farms, Brookfield, NY; (100) Head of Hi Grade cattle. The farm has been in the family for over 80 yrs. Years of AI breeding. Top cows, heifers in excellent condition. Machinery: JD 3950 chopper, w/ 2 row corn head & hay head. JD 2600 plows. H&S Forage wagon. Gehl 640 Forage wagon. NH 489 Haybine. Gehl 1500 Round baler. Kuhn 4 star tedder. NH 56 rake. (3) Wooden hay wagons on running gears. Many more items & misc. items found around the farm.

Page 1 - Section B • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Country y Folks


Section B - Page 2 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Pork Checkoff presents PORK Academy at World Pork Expo On June 6 and 7 the Pork Checkoff is sponsoring Producers Opportunity for Revenue and Knowledge (PORK) Academy at World Pork Expo at the Iowa State Fairground in Des Moines. Expo continues through noon on June 9. PORK Academy is a series of seminars designed to provide information for pork producers about current industry challenges in a way that can be applied to their own operations. The seminars will cover a variety of topics, such as herd health, pork exports, transport bedding, economic outlooks and the We Caresm initiative. “Every producer attending World Pork Expo is invited to join us for the PORK Academy Seminars,” said Mary Langhorst, chair of the Pork Checkoff’s Producer and State Services Committee. “These seminars are a wonderful way to get timely and accurate information on topics that are vital to producer’s operations.” The PORK Academy agenda is below. All sessions are in the Varied Industries Building, Room C, including a business seminar luncheon on the upper level: Wednesday June 6 • 9:15-10 a.m.: Doing What’s Right vs. Looking for the Camera — Lynn Becker, Pork Producer; Sherrie Niekamp, National Pork Board; Cindy Cunningham, National Pork Board During this session producers will learn about daily on-farm practices and why they are important to their pigs, barn workers and the industry. You’ll also learn what to do if confronted with an undercover video on your farm. And you’ll hear first-hand from a producer who dealt with this issue on his farm.

• 10:15-11 a.m.: Transport Bedding — Can Less Be Better? — Avi Sapkota, Texas Tech University This session will provide research results that could help you save money. • 11 a.m.-Noon: PRRS Regional Elimination — Procedures for Taking PRRS out of the Breeding Herd — Bob Morrison, University of Minnesota. This session will share standard operating procedures that you can use. • 12-2:30 p.m.: Business Seminar Luncheon Weather Outlook — Elwynn Taylor, Iowa State University Economic Outlook — Steve Meyer, Paragon Economics • 1:30-2:15 p.m.: Biosecurity of PRRS — Pros & Cons of Filters — Dr. Jim McKean, Iowa State University; Dr. Bryan Myers, Pipestone Clinic Dr. McKean will focus on “Getting Back to Basics in Biosecurity”. Understanding of how pathogens move from pig to pig, and whatsteps can be done to block transfer. Dr. Myers will provide an overview of PRRS filtration and how a farm is filtered from start to finish, information in the decision making process of whether or not to filter a farm and lastly, what determines the success of PRRS filtering on a farm. • 2:30-3:15 p.m.: Ingredient Availability & Cost — Joel DeRouchey, Kansas State University This session will provide information on optimizing diets with current prices. Thursday June 7 • 9:15-10 a.m.: Advances in PRRS Research — Dr. Butch Baker, Iowa State University PRRS research results that have

yielded practical benefits for producers will be shared in this session. • 10:15-11 a.m.: The Threat of Foot & Mouth Disease to the Swine Industry — Dermot Hayes & Jim Roth, Iowa State University More countries in the world currently have Foot & Mouth Disease (FMD) in their livestock than those that are free from the disease. Learn about the economic impact to the swine industry and efforts to develop business continuity plans in the event of an FMD outbreak in the United States. • 11:15 a.m.-Noon: Leading by Example - Showing We Care sm at the Barn Level — Bryn Jensson, National Pork Board Looking to increase your knowledge of the We Caresm initiative and how you can share it with your employees or production partners? This session will highlight the recently developed We Care barn worker kit. This tool provides We Care posters and training guides (available in both English and Spanish) which display the initiative’s six ethical principles. Don’t miss your chance to discover how you can inspire your employees — lead by example. • 12-2:30 p.m.: Business Seminar Luncheon Weather Outlook — Elwynn Taylor, Iowa State University Economic Outlook — Steve Meyer, Paragon Economics • 1:30-2:15 p.m.: Biosecurity of PRRS — Pros & Cons of Filters — Dr. Jim McKean, Iowa State University; Dr. Bryan Myers, Pipestone Clinic • 2:30-3:30 p.m.: Export Issues & World Markets — Becca Hendricks, Na-

tional Pork Board; Laurie Hueneke, National Pork Producer’s Council; Paul Sundberg, National Pork Board Participants will hear an update on the current U.S. export activities and markets, a review of market access and policy issues, scientific barriers to trade and see a presentation of pork usage in Mexico, the number one volume market for U.S. pork exports. The Pork Checkoff is sponsoring other activities at World Pork Expo in addition to PORK Academy. Producers are invited to visit the Pork Checkoff hospitality tent on the north side of the varied industries building for food, fun and information. National Pork Board members and staff will be serving food throughout the day and hosting events including information sessions and recipe demonstrations. A full schedule of events and more information about the hospitality tent can be found at www.pork.org/wpx. Information about PORK Academy is available at pork.org, or by contacting Sharlotte Peterson, speterson@pork.org, 515-223-2600.

yield of the following crop. Typical nutrient removals by the grain for a 1200 lb/a crop are 9 lb/a N, 3 lb/a P2O5 and 12 lb/a K2O. However, in Minnesota, a 2000-pound yield of seed removed 40 pounds N, 20 of P2O5 and 13 pounds per acre of K2O or about the same as a 2000 pound crop of sunflower seed. The crop grows well on acid soils and gives little response to liming above a pH of 5.0. It has about the same acid tolerances as oat and potatoes. Soils should be limed for the crops grown in rotation with buckwheat. It is unlikely that buckwheat will re-

spond to additional P or K at soil tests above 30 lb/a P or 300 lb/a K. E. Method and Rate of Seeding: The most satisfactory method of sowing buckwheat is with a grain drill that plants the seed one to two inches deep. Poor stands are likely when seedings are more than two inches deep. A seeding rate of 36 to 72 pounds per

acre or 16 seeds per square foot of clean, viable seed is sufficient. At least 48 pounds per acre should be used of largeseeded varieties such as Pennquad. Source: This information was shared with Country Folks by Jeff Miller, Cornell Cooperative Extension Oneida County, New York.

Buckwheat from B1 most common practice is to seed the crop only 10-12 weeks before a killing frost is expected. For Wisconsin, seeding in mid-June is advised. Thin stands of buckwheat produce strong plants that branch and resist lodging on good land. Thick stands produce plants that are spindly and have short branches and poor seed set. D. Fertilizer and Lime Requirements: Buckwheat has a modest feeding capacity compared to most other grains, and if fertilizer is not applied, the removal of nutrients by a buckwheat crop may have a depressing effect on the

E S TAT E A U C T I O N

TOOLS

LAWN & GARDEN EQUIP

SOME HOUSEHOLD

SATURDAY, JUNE 2, 2012 • 9 A.M. SHARP

LOCATION: 9411 Hayes Rd, Town of Marcy. Only 10 minutes from Utica & New Hartford. 5 mi. north of Village of Whitesboro. Take Rt. 291 north to Hayes Rd 2 miles to auction. From old Rt 49 to Cavanaugh Rd Marcy 2 mi. north to Hayes Rd and 1 mi. west to auction. Follow arrows from Hayes Rd and Cavanaugh Rd. REASON FOR SALE: A fine tool sale from the estate of a fine well known kitchen countertop and cabinet maker the late Mr. Erwin Stepanowicz.

FOR LISTING & PICTURES GO TO WWW.AUCTIONSBYLESPORTER.COM INSPECTION: One hour before sale. TERMS OF SALE: Cash or Good Checks. 10% BUYER’S PREMIUM. Announcement's day of sale take precedence over written advertising. FOOD AVAILABLE BRING YOUR LAWN CHAIR ions

by

Auctionn by Less Porterr - Auctioneer r

rte es Po

Auct

L

REMSEN, NY 315-831-2191 auctionsbylesporter.com

Absolute Real Estate Auction (4) Multi-Family & Sgl. Fam. Rental Homes & Vacant Lot All Situated In The Village Of Fort Plain

Saturday

June 9, 2012

2:00 PM

Auction To Be Held @ The Vacant Lot Parcel, Sale Parcel #4 @ 6-8 South St., Fort Plain, NY (4) Multi & Sgl Family Homes & Vacant Lot In Village Of Fort Plain - All Selling For 1 Owner Properties Include: Parcel 1 Single Family Home, 2-Story @ 19 Clyde St., Tax Map ID#: 46.45-1-6; Nice 2 Sty. Home, Currently Rented; Parcel 2 - (2) Multi-Family Homes Situated On 1 Lot @ 47-49 Division St.; Both Homes Have (2) 2 BR Apt’s. In Each, Both Currently Rented, Both Homes Are In Good Rentable Condition; Tax Map ID#: 46.54-1-2.2; Parcel 3 - Multi Family Home On Corner Lot @ 10-12 South St.; Tax Map ID#: 46.54-1-1; Home Has (2) 3 BR Apt’s., Both Currently Rented; Parcel 4 - Vacant Village Lot @ 6-8 South St., Nice Open - Vacant Lot, 61’ FF x 63’ Deep; Note - All Parcels Have Village Utilities, Water & Sewer; All Homes & Apartments Pay Their Own Utilities. Some Apts. Are HUD Subsidized & Approved. Open Houses: Sat., June 2, 2012 From 2-3:30PM; Day Of Auction, Sat., June 9 From 1-2PM; Terms & Conditions: 10% Buyers Premium Applies, To Be Added To Each Bid Price And Becomes Part Of The Purchase Price. 15% Down Payment Due Day Of Auction On Each Parcel In Cash or Good Check (Personal Or Company Checks Accepted). Balance Due @ Closing In 30 Days. Parcels Sell With Warranty Deeds & Good Abstract Of Title. Properties Sell “As-Is, Where-Is” - No Contingencies!! Inspect Properties Before Bidding. If Any Tests Are Wanted Or Needed They Must Be Done Prior To Auction. Statements Made Day Of Auction Take Precedence Over Printed Materials. For More Details & Pictures Refer To Our Website @ www.manasseauctions.com Owner: Ralph DeAngelis Licensed Real Estate Brokers & Auctioneers

Licensed Real Estate Brokers In NY, NJ & PA Whitney Point, N.Y. 13862 607-692-4540 / 1-800-MANASSE www.manasseauctions.com


ALBANY, NY — How many acres of corn did farmers plant this growing season? Which percentage of those acres were planted to biotech varieties? Will actual planted acreage be above or below farmers’ reported planting intentions? These are a few of the critical questions the New York Field Office of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Agricultural

Statistics Service (NASS) will soon ask more than 1,300 producers statewide as part of the June Agricultural Survey. “The June Agricultural Survey, also known as the Crops/Stocks Survey, is the most important survey conducted each spring by NASS,” explained King Whetstone, director of the NASS New York Field Office. “This survey will pro-

vide the first clear indication of the potential production and supply of major commodities in the United States for the 2012 crop year. NASS will mail the survey questionnaire in late May, asking producers to provide information about the types of crops they planted in 2012, how many acres they intend to harvest and the amounts of grain and oilseed they store on their farms. NASS encourages producers to respond via the Internet but also welcomes mail or fax responses and offers non-responding producers the opportunity for a telephone or personal interview. NASS will compile and analyze the survey information and publish the results in a series of USDA reports, including the annual Acreage report and quarterly Grain Stocks report, both to

be released on June 29. Survey data also contribute to NASS’s monthly and annual Crop Production reports, as well as the annual Small Grains Summary and USDA’s monthly World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates. As with all NASS surveys, information provided by respondents is confidential by law. “NASS safeguards the privacy of all responses and publishes only state- and national-level data, ensuring that no individual operation or producer can be identified,” stated Whetstone. All reports are available on the NASS website at www.nass.usda.gov. For more information on NASS surveys and reports, call the NASS New York Field Office at 800-821-1276.

Page 3 - Section B • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

USDA to gather data on crop acreage and stocks


May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Section B - Page 4


Page 5 - Section B • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012


May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Section B - Page 6


MIDDLESEX LIVESTOCK AUCTION Middlefield, CT May 21, 2012 Calves: 45-60# .45-.65; 6175# 1.35-1.40; 76-90# 1.651.70; 91-105# 1.7750-1.80; 106# & up 1.85-1.91. Farm Calves: 1.9750-2.30 Started Calves: .70-.75 Veal Calves: 1-1.40 Open Heifers: 1.35-1.4250 Beef Heifers: .80-1 Feeder Steers: 1.20-1.30 Beef Steers: 1.0750-1.16 Stock Bull: .75-1.5750 Beef Bull: .90-.97 Sows: one at .40 Sheep (ea): 95-105 Lambs (ea): 150-195 Goats (ea): 100-280; Kids 23-70. Canners: up tp 84.50 Cutters: .85-.89 Utility: .9025-.95 Rabbits: 5-40 Chickens: 4-25 Ducks: 6-22 On the Hoof, Dollars/Cwt ADDISON COUNTY COMMISSION SALES East Middlebury, VT May 21, 2012 Slaughter Cows: Breakers 75-80% lean 88-96.50; Boners 80-85% lean 84-89; Lean 85-90% lean 60-85.50. Feeder Calves: Hols. Bulls 92-125# 95-235; 80-92# 95195; 70-80# 135-155; Vealers 90-100# 70-90; 80-90# 60-88; 70-80# 65-81; 60-70# 50-56. COSTA & SONS LIVESTOCK & SALES Fairhaven, MA May 23, 2012 Cows: Canners 50-80; Cutters 81-92.50; Util 93-98.50. Bulls: 108.50-111 Steers: Ch 120; Sel 99-105; Hols. 101. Heifers: Hols. 92 Calves: 51-147 ea. Feeders: 89-140 Sheep: 100-123 Lambs: 115-125 Goats: 70-281 ea.; Kids 47118 ea. Hogs: 47-51.50 Feeder Pigs: 59-84 ea. Roaster Pigs: 100-124 ea. Chickens: 2.50-12 Rabbits: 2-22.50 Ducks: 3-19.50 * Sale every Wed. @ 7 pm. FLAME LIVESTOCK Littleton, MA May 8, 2012 Beef Cattle: Canners 50-70; Cutters 70-81; Util 78-85; Bulls 90-100; Steers 100114; Hfrs. 80-95. Calves: Growers 1.40-2.50; Hfrs. 1.50-1.75; Veal .901.10. Hogs: Sows 35-45; Boars 22-25; Market 50-60 ea. Sheep: 60-100; Lambs 1.50-2.20. Goats: 90-150 ea; Billies

150-235 ea; Kids 30-100 ea. NORTHAMPTON COOPERATIVE AUCTION, INC Whately, MA May 22, 2012, 2012 Calves (/cwt): 0-60# 4557.50; 61-75# 55-95; 76-95# 40-85; 96-105# 70-71; 106# & up 60-81. Farm Calves: 100-245/cwt Start Calves: 103-123/cwt Feeders: 50-145/cwt Heifers: 89-100/cwt Bulls: 86/cwt Canners: 63-75/cwt Cutters: 76-82/cwt Utility: 83-90.50/cwt Sows: 33-56/cwt Hogs: 47-94/cwt Boars: 26-27/cwt Shoats: 90-120 ea. Feeder Pigs: 60-92.50 ea. Lambs: 170-255/cwt Sheep: 52.50-100/cwt Goats: 29-240 ea. Rabbits: 1.50-3 ea. Poultry: .50-20.50 ea. Hay: 3 lots, 2.40-2.90/bale northamptonlivestockauction.homestead.com HACKETTSTOWN AUCTION Hackettstown, NJ No report CAMBRIDGE VALLEY LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC Cambridge, NY No report EMPIRE LIVESTOCK MARKET BURTON LIVESTOCK Vernon, NY No report CENTRAL BRIDGE LIVESTOCK Central Bridge, NY No report CHATHAM MARKET Chatham, NY May 21, 2012 Calves: Hfrs. 100-150; Grower over 92# 190-230; 80-92# 150-185; Bob Veal 76-82. Cull Cows: Gd 89-93.50; Lean 79-85; Hvy. Beef Bulls 94. Beef: Feeders 398-725# 145-175; Hols. Hfr. 97.50. Lamb/Sheep:Feeder 210250; Market 185-230; Slaughter Sheep 65-70. Goats: Billies 120-145; Nannies 60-70; Kids 60-70. Swine: Feeder Pig 85. *Buyers always looking for pigs. *No Sale May 28 - June 1. CHERRY CREEK Cherry Creek, NY No report DRYDEN MARKET Dryden, NY No report

GOUVERNEUR LIVESTOCK Governeur, NY No report Gouverneur

PAVILION MARKET Pavilion, NY No report BATH MARKET Bath, NY No report FINGER LAKES LIVESTOCK AUCTION Penn Yan, NY May 23, 2012 Dairy Cows for Slaughter: Bone Util 78-94; Canners/Cutters 50-82. Dairy Bulls for Slaughter: HY Util 94-103.50. Dairy Replacements (/hd): Open 710-990. Slaughter Calves: Bobs 95110# 55-67.50; 80-95# 4565; 60-80# 35-62.50; Vealers (grassers) 250# & up 71-108. Dairy Calves Ret. to Feed: bull over 95# 125-227.50; 8095# 100-242.50; 70-80# 75220; Hfr. Calves 150-190. Beef Calves Ret. to Feed: bull over 95# 100-217.50. Beef Steers: Ch grain fed 114-123.50; Sel 104-109; Hols. Ch grain fed 100-107; Sel 93.50-97. Hogs: Slgh. Hogs US 1-3 46-50; Sows US 1-3 45; Feeder Pigs US 1-3 9-40. Feeder Lambs: Ch 50-80# 190-212.50. Market Lambs: Ch 80-100# 125-145. Slaughter Sheep: M 44-68 Goats: Nannies L 45-90

FINGER LAKES PRODUCE AUCTION Penn Yan, NY May 23, 2012 Flats: Flowers 3.50-14; Vegetable Plants 2.50-15. Hanging Baskets: 5-17.50 Planters: 10-50 Pots: .10-3.75 Asparagus: 2.10-2.50 Eggs: 1.45-2 Radishes: .40-.70 Rhubarb: .85-1.20 Spring Onions: .75-.90 Strawberries (qt): 6 Produce Mon., Wed. & Fri. at 9 am sharp, Hay Auctions Fridays@ 11:15. FINGER LAKES FEEDER SALE Penn Yan, NY No report FINGER LAKES HAY AUCTION Penn Yan, NY May 18, 2012 Hay: 1st cut 125-205; 2nd cut 140-350. Straw: 230 * Hay Tuesdays & Fridays @ 11:15 am. Produce Friday @ 9 am sharp!

Canandaigua Pavilion Penn Yan Dryden Cherry Creek

Bath

Vernon New Berlin

Cambridge

Central Bridge Chatham

HOSKING SALES New Berlin, NY May 21, 2012 Cattle: Dairy Cows for Slaughter Bone Util .70-.92; Canners/Cutters .58-.70; Easy Cows .60 & dn. Bulls: Bulls & Steers .721.06. Calves: Bull Calves 96-120# 1.50-2.70; up to 95# .10-2; Hols. under 100# 2. BELKNAP LIVESTOCK AUCTION Belknap, PA No report BELLEVILLE LIVESTOCK AUCTION Belleville, PA May 16, 2012 Slaughter Steers: Sel 1-3 986# 99. Slaughter Cows: Breakers 75-80% lean 90, lo dress 8285; Boners 80-85% lean 8589, lo dress 80.50-81.50, very lo dress 70-75; Lean 8590% lean 79-79.50, hi dress 85.50, lo dress 74-78; Light Lean 85-92% lean 71-74, lo dress 68-70, very lo dress 51-60. Slaughter Bulls: YG 1 1380# 91.50. Feeder Cattle: Steers Hols. L 3 348-425# 94-102; 554902# 78-98. Holstsein Bull Calves: No. 1 96-120# 190-230; 82-92# 195-212; No. 2 94-120# 170200; 80-90# 155-200; No. 3 74-112# 100-175; Util 72100# 30-100. Holstein Heifer Calves: No. 1 85-110# 210-300/hd; No. 2 70-100# 100-195/hd. Feeder Pigs: US 1-3 30-55# 29-52; Roasting Pigs 160200# 75-110. Slaughter Sheep: Lambs Ch 2-3 56-66# 190-197; 7298# 187.50-212; Yearlings 104-158# 95-125; Ewes Gd 2-3 130-168# 70-77; Util 1-2 130-194# 37-55; Rams 252#

67. Slaughter Goats (/hd): Kids Sel 1 40-65# 137-190; 90# 170; Sel 2 40-50# 85-140; 70# 125; Nannies Sel 1 10# 105. CARLISLE LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC Carlisle, PA May 22, 2012 Slaughter Heifers: Hfrs. cpl not finished 106-108; one Hols. 1435# 98.50. Slaughter Cows: Prem. Whites cpl 98.50-99.50; Breakers 88.50-93.50; Boners 85-93.50; Lean 89-98; Big Middle/lo dress/lights 7886.50; Shelly 75 & dn. Bulls: 1230-2210# 94.50108.50. Feeder Cattle: Steers M&L 1 880-1105# 97-103; Hrs. M&L 1 935-1170# 100-103; Hols. 860-1105# 91-92.50; Feeder Bulls Hols. 970# 91. Calves Ret. to Farm: Hols. Bulls No. 1 80-120# 220-230; No. 2 80-120# 210-220; No. 3 80-120# 135-190; Util 87105. Swine: Hogs 225-265# 6265; Sows US 1-3 325-400# 46.50-52.50; 405-470# 5052.75; 510-570# 49.7553.25; Thin/Weak/Rough 405-415# 46-47; Boars 175245# 53-54; Shoats 175245# 53-54. Goats (/hd): S Fleshy Kids 72-97; Small/thin/bottle 1582. Lambs: Gd & Ch 40-60# 155-185; 60-80# 155-177; 80-90# 160-170; 1 100# thin 142. Sheep (all wts): 68-92 Sale every Tuesday * 5 pm for Rabbits, Poultry & Eggs * 6 pm for Livestock starting with calves. * Special Fed Cattle Sales May 29 & June 5 & 19. * State Graded Feeder Pig Sale June 22.

Receiving 7:30 until 10 am. CARLISLE LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC Carlisle, PA May 22, 2012 Rabbit Family: 12.50 Rabbits: 6.50-28 Bunnies: 2-9.75 Hens: 2.75-7 Roosters: 3-8.50 Pullets: 1-1.50 Peeps: .50-2.50 Turkeys: 15 Pheasants: 16 Ducks: 4-14 Ducklings: 3.50 Guinea Pigs: 1.50-2.50 Pigeons: 2-4.75 Guineas: 8.50-10.50 Hamster: 1 Quail: 4.50 Eggs (/dz): Jumbo Brown 1.75; XL Brown 1.10-1.90; L Brown 1.75-1.95; M Brown 1.60; S Brown 1.20; XL White 1; L&M White .85-1.10; Fertile Quail 1; Fertile Old English Game 1; Fertile Guinea 1; Fertile Mixed Brown .501.75; Pigeons 2-4.75; Guineas 8.50-10.50; Hamster 1; Quail 4.50. All animals sold by the piece. Sale starts at 5 pm. CARLISLE LIVESTOCK MARKET, INC State Graded Feeder Pig Sale Carlisle, PA May 18, 2012 US 1-2: 6 hd, 34# 160; 25 hd, 52-59# 100-104; 97 hd, 6469# 100; 4 hd, 61# 82; 183 hd, 72-79# 85-100; 55 hd, 81-82# 80-89; 39 hd, 94-98# 86-94; 29 hd, 105-122# 8588; 4 hd, 139# 76. US 2: 21 hd, 50# 90; 38 hd, 63-69# 87-101; 7 hd, 79# 83; 17 hd, 98-122# 81-87. As Is: 3 hd, 30-35# 100; 4 hd, 57.5-60# 40-44; 10 hd, 75# 67; 2 hd, 87.5# 35. *Next State Graded Feeder Pig Sale May 18.

Page 7 - Section B • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

WEEKLY MARKET REPORT


Section B - Page 8 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

WEEKLY MARKET REPORT Receiving 7:30 - 10 am. Sale time 1 pm. DEWART LIVESTOCK AUCTION MARKET, INC May 21, 2012 Holstein Steers: Hi Ch & Pr 3-4 1192# 107.50; Ch 2-3 1416-1504# 100.50-104. Slaughter Cows: Breakers 87-94; Boners 84.50-90; Lean 71-88.50. Bulls: G 1 2104# 99 Feeder Steers: L 1 640# 134; L 2 334# 132. Feeder Heifers: L 1 400500# 133-140; L 2 350-500# 120-127. Feeder Bulls: L 1 400-500# 149-153; L 2 350-500# 128137. Calves: 199. Bull Calves No. 1 94-124# 230-252; 78-92# 235-270; No. 2 94-126# 215235; 76-92# 200-235; No. 3 76-116# 150-210; Hfrs. No. 1 86-110# 225-275; No. 2 80102# 135-205; non-tubing 68-78# 75-130; Util 70-100# 57-82; 60-68# 25-45. Hogs: 228-290# 58-62. Lambs: 40-50# 180-195; 5060# 177-195; 60-70# 185197; 70-80# 180-195; Ewes Gd 1-2 164-192# 67-70; Util 1-2 132-138# 52-60. Goats (/hd): Kids Sel 1 under 20# 30; 20# 110; 100# 150; Nannies 90-120# 100162. EarCorn: 2 lds, 215-220/ton. Hay (/ton): 15 lds, Grass 180-230; Mixed 120-220; Timothy/Grass 125-180. Straw (/ton): 1 ld, 220 EIGHTY FOUR LIVESTOCK AUCTION New Holland, PA May 21, 2012 Slaughter Cattle: Steers Ch 2-3 1120-1240# 111-116; Sel 1-2 1090-1385# 102-109; Hfrs. Ch 2-3 1400# 118.50; Sel 1205-1465# 109.50-113. Slaughter Cows: Prem. Whites 65-75% lean 99-106; Breakers 75-80% lean 94.50-98.50; Boners 80-85% lean 86.50-92, hi dress 94.50, lo dress 85; Lean 8590% lean 77-83, hi dress 8486, lo dress 72-76. Slaughter Bulls: YG 1 12051660# 104-117; YG 2 12801680# 92-99. Feeder Steers: M&L 1 300500# 185; 500-600# 146; 800-900# 138; M&L 2 800900# 115. Feeder Heifers: M&L 1 300500# 150-162.50, one at 177.50; 600-700# 139; 700900# 107-118; M&L 2 400500# 120; 600-700# 115. Feeder Bulls: M&L 1 500600# 150; 700-800# 117.50119. Ret. to Farm Holstein Bull Calves: No. 1 85-120# 240265; No. 2 80-120# 180-230; No. 3 80-120# 120-170; Util 70-120# 65-100; Beef type 100-255# 182.50-215.

Pennsylvania Markets Mercer

Jersey Shore

New Wilmington

Dewart Leesport Belleville Homer City

New Holland Carlisle Lancaster Paradise

Eighty-Four Slaughter Hogs: Barrows & Gilts 45-50% lean 265-290# 56-59; Boars 380# 15. Slaughter Sheep: Lambs Ch 2-3 40# 175; 60-80# 142.50-170; 80# 163; 100# 161; Ewes Gd 1-2 155-230# 58-68. Slaughter Goats: Kids Sel 1 50# 107.50; Sel 2 30-40# 2037.50; Billies Sel 1 130# 112.50/cwt; Sel 2 95# 102.50. GREENCASTLE LIVESTOCK AUCTION Greencastle, PA May 21, 2012 Slaughter Steers: Hi Ch & Pr 2-3 1362-1582# 123.50127.50; Ch 2-3 1244-1510# 118-123.50; full/YG 4-5 115.50; 1602-1682# 115119; Sel 1-3 1152-1412# 114-117; Hols. Hi Ch & Pr 23 1348-1550# 106.50109.50; Ch 2-3 1244-1594# 101.50-106.50; 1782# 101; Sel 1-3 1070-1326# 95100.50. Slaughter Heifers: Hi Ch & Pr 2-3 1142-1350# 118-123; Ch 2-3 1106-1398# 114117.50; Sel 1-3 1128# 113. Slaughter Cows: Prem. Whites 65-75% lean 98; Breakers 75-80% lean 90.7595.50, hi dress 97.50, lo dress 85.50-91.25; Boners 80-85% lean 86.50-91, hi dress 90.25-93.50, lo dress 81.75-86, very lo dress 7377.50; Lean 85-90% lean 81.50-87.50, hi dress 87.5091.50, lo dress 76-81, very lo dress 68.50-75; Light Lean 85-92% lean 78-81.50, lo dress 72-76, very lo dress 62-70. Slaughter Bulls: YG 1 10601996# 98-110; hi dress 11250, very hi dress 140,2148-2150# 98-104; YG 2 1086# 90. Feeder Cattle: Steers M&L 1 525# 151; 786-860# 110125; M&L 2 640-660# 106112.50; Hols. L 3 255# 102.50; 490# 113; 895# 108; Hfrs. M&L 1 430-480# 140155; 508-605# 137.50-155; M&L 2 407# 140; 735# 100;

Bulls M&L 1 430-460# 157.50-187.50; 540-580# 132-145; Hols. Bulls L 3 354# 117; 856# 99. Ret. to Farm Hols. Bull Calves: No. 1 Hols. 94-122# 227.50-242.50; 82-92# 230247.50; No. 2 94-122# 190227.50; 76-92# 195-235; No. 3 70-120# 110-195; Util 56108# 40-115; Hols. Hfrs. No. 1 98# 230; No. 2 70-88# 100170. Slaughter Sheep: Lambs Ch 2-3 49-68# 180-210; 70109# 180-230; 112-122# 170-227.50; Yearlings 91# 157.50; Ewes Gd 2-3 134164# 67.50-70, 214-267# 6062.50; Rams 156# 90. Slaughter Goats: Kids Sel 1 50-75# 115-155; Sel 2 under 20# 12.50-35; 20-40# 32.5067.50; 45-55# 77-110; Nannies Sel 1 120-160# 137.50165.50; Sel 2 90-130# 115140; Sel 3 90-130# 70-75; Billies Sel 1 130# 200; Wethers Sel 1 160# 215; Sel 2 170# 180. INDIANA FARMERS LIVESTOCK AUCTION Homer City, PA May 17, 2012 Slaughter Steers: Hi Ch & Pr 2-3 1320-1462# 120.50122.25; Ch 2-3 1216-1446# 116-120; Sel 1-2 1096# 115; Hols. Ch 2-3 1272-1676# 100-103.50. Slaughter Heifers: Ch 2-3 1416# 119.50; Sel 1-2 1364# 113. Slaughter Cows: Prem. Whites 65-75% lean 98.50; Breakers 75-80% lean 9094.50; Boners 80-85% lean 84-87.50, hi dress 88.50, lo dress 81-83; Lean 85-90% lean 77-81, lo dress 70-76. Slaughter Bulls: YG 1 12121984# 98.50-104.50; YG 2 1140# 92. Feeder Cattle: Steers M&L 1 600-700# 132.50; M&L 2 400-500# 142.50; 500-600# 120-132.50; Hfrs. M&L 1 500-700# 122.50-127.50; M&L 2 400-500# 112.50; 500-700# 110-122.50; Bulls M&L 1 600-700# 125.

Ret. to Farm Calves: Hols. Bulls No. 1 85-120# 210-240; No. 2 80-120# 185-210; No. 3 80-120# 110-170; Util 70120# 30-70; Hols. Hfrs. No. 1 80-86# 175-200. Slaughter Hogs: Sows US 1-3 400-500# 49; Boars 318# 15. Goats: Kids Sel 1 70# 125; Sel 2 80# 150. KUTZTOWN HAY & GRAIN AUCTION Kutztown, PA May 19, 2012 Alfalfa: 1 ld, 150 Mixed Hay: 5 lds, 125-305 Timothy: 3 lds, 160-350 Grass: 8 lds, 120-235 Straw: 2 lds, 155-205 LANCASTER WEEKLY CATTLE SUMMARY New Holland, PA May 18, 2011 Slaughter Cattle: Steers Hi Ch & Pr 3-4 1240-1595# 116-121; Ch 2-3 1165-1575# 113-119; Sel 2-3 1135-1325# 112.50-114; Hols. Hi Ch & Pr 2-3 1350-1690# 105-110; Ch 2-3 1245-1595# 102.50106.50; Sel 2-3 1240-1550# 93-101; Hfrs. Hi Ch & Pr 3-4 1140-1460# 114-117; Ch 2-3 990-1405# 110-113.50. Slaughter Cows: Prem Whites 65-75% lean 90-94, hi dress 98-100, lo dress 8590; Breakers 75-80% lean 88-94.50, hi dress 94.50-98, lo dress 82-87.50; Boners 80-85% lean 84-89, hi dress 89-94.50, lo dress 77-82.50; Lean 85-90% lean 76-83, hi dress 84-88, lo dress 70-76. Slaughter Bulls: YG 1 9401950# 97-105, hi dress 106113, very hi dress 116-126, lo dress 91-97. Graded Bull Calves: Thurs. No. 1 114-128# 197-204; 106-112# 216-226; 86-104# 230-242; No. 2 106-118# 190-217; 88-104# 220-232; 80-86# 261; No. 3 90-130# 200-205; 80-88# 245; 72-78# 170; Util 60-110# 90-97; Hols. Hfrs. No. 1 95-100# 260-275; No. 2 75-120# 130150.

LEBANON VALLEY LIVESTOCK AUCTION Fredericksburg, PA No report LEESPORT LIVESTOCK AUCTION Leesport, PA May 16, 2012 Slaughter Cattle: Steers Hols. Ch 2-3 1335-1600# 100.50-103.50; Sel 1-3 12551415# 92-98.50; Hfrs. Hi Ch & Pr 3-4 1215# 119.50; Ch 23 995-1270# 110-117.50; YG 4-5 106-109. Slaughter Cows: Prem. Whites 65-75# lean 9294.50; Breakers 75-80% lean 89-92; Boners 80-85% lean 87-90, hi dress 91-94; Lean 85-90% lean 82-86.50, hi dress 88.50-90.50, lo dress 76.50-81.50. Bulls: YG 1 1210 98. Feeder Cattle: Hfrs. M 2 320# 145; Bulls L 3 Hols. 885# 101. Ret. to Farm Calves: Hols. Bulls No. 1 95-125# 230247.50; 80-90# 225-240; No. 2 95-120# 215-235; 75-90# 200-225; No. 3 95-115# 165200; 75-90# 130-180. Slaughter Hogs: Barrows & Gilts 45-50% lean 210-270# 53.50-58. Slaughter Sheep: Lambs Hi Ch & Pr 2-3 40-56# 245-265; Ewes Cull 1-2 115-180# 5072. Goats: Kids Sel 1 50-60# 122.50-126; 70# 161; Sel 2 30-40# 70-103; Nannies Sel 1 200# 190; Sel 2 80-120# 160-168; Sel 3 100# 95122.50. MIDDLEBURG LIVESTOCK AUCTION Middleburg, PA May 15, 2012 Slaughter Steers: Hi Ch & Pr 2-3 12001505# 120-123; Ch 2-3 1110-1570# 117.50121; full/YG 4-5 115-118.50; 1600-1675# 113.50-118; Sel 1-3 1105-1595# 112-116.50; Hols. Hi Ch & Pr 2-3 13351520# 107-109; 1625# 105.50; Ch 2-3 1240-1560# 102-107; 1630-1680# 100103; Sel 1-3 1160-1570# 95101. Slaughter Heifers: Hi Ch & Pr 2-3 1265-1415# 119-122; Hols. 1355-1485# 105; Ch 23 1090-1440# 115118.50;1205-1510# 95-101; Sel 1-3 1070-1170# 108.50115.50. Slaughter Cows: Breakers 75-80% lean 89-91.50, hi dress 98.50, lo dress 83.5088.50; Boners 80-85% lean 83-88.50, hi dress 88, lo dress 78.50-82, very lo dress 74; Lean 85-90% lean 77-83, lo dress 71-76, very lo dress 60.50-69.50; Light Lean 8592% lean 74-78, lo dress 6872.50, very lo dress 51-57. Slaughter Bulls: YG 1 9251695# 91-107; hi dress 112;

YG 2 1130-1600# 86.50-91. Feeder Cattle: Steers M&L 1 640-710# 127-138; 795-910# 120-127; M 2 485# 130; L 3 Hols. 315# 110; 715-895# 97-98; Hfrs. M&L 1 625-640# 122-135; 745-895# 107-130; M&L 2 430# 110; 560-720# 92-122; 835# 87; Bulls M&L 1 315-400# 145-159; 550# 143; M 2 635-700# 95-117; Hols. Bulls L 3 770-1060# 8795. Ret. to Farm Calves: Hols. Bulls No. 1 95-120# 220-245; 75-90# 240-262; No. 2 95115# 190-235; 70-90# 200237; No. 3 70-100# 105-185; Util 60-95# 47-112; Hols. Hfrs. No. 1 80-105# 200-240; No. 2 75-95# 110-190. Slaughter Hogs: Barrows & Gilts 49-54% lean 220-276# 61-62.75; 280-325# 61-62; 45-50% lean 240-277# 5762; 290-335# 59-60.75; Sows US 1-3 385# 38; 520# 49; Boars 580-590# 23.5024; Jr. Boars 305-330# 3549. Feeder Pigs: US 1-3 40-55# 50-67; 60-90# 62-66; Roasting Pigs 145-155# 75cwt. Slaughter Sheep: Lambs Ch 2-3 35-65# 170-215; 70100# 142-212; Ewes Gd 2-3 132-170# 67-70; Util 1-2 140# 57; Rams 195# 62. Slaughter Goats: Kids Sel 1 75-100# 147-190; Sel 2 under 20# 20-35; 20-45# 60115; 50-70# 80-150; Nannies Sel 1 140-170# 142-175; Sel 2 100-120# 95-130; Sel 3 90100# 70-90; Billies Sel 1 150-200# 172-255. MORRISON’S COVE LIVESTOCK AUCTION Martinsburg, PA May 21, 2012 Cattle: 149 Steers: Ch 110-117; Gd 103108. Heifers: Ch 108-115; Gd 100-106. Cows: Util & Comm. 85-95; Canner/lo Cutter 82 & dn. Bullocks: Gd & Ch 96-98 Bulls: YG 1 85-98 Cattle: Steers 75-135; Bulls 80-120; Hfrs. 95-130. Calves: 106. Ch 135-160; Gd 120-135; Std 15-100; Hols. Bulls 90-130# 150-245; Hols. Hfrs. 90-130# 150-200. Hogs: 62. US 1-2 58-60; US 1-3 54-57; Sows US 1-3 4348; Boars 20-35. Feeder Pigs: 14. US 1-3 2050# 39-65. Sheep: 42. Lambs Ch 160180; Gd 140-160; Sl. Ewes 45-80. Goats: 50-196 MORRISON’S COVE HAY REPORT Martinsburg, PA May 21, 2012 Alfalfa: 190 Alfalfa/Grass: 270 Grass: 95-145 Mixed Hay: 100-175


Round Bales: 140-180 ea; 30-35/bale. Hay Auction held every Monday at 12:30 pm. MORRISON’S COVE LIVESTOCK, POULTRY & RABBIT REPORT Martinsburg, PA May 21, 2012 Roosters: 4-9 Hens: 2.75-5.50 Banties: 1.50-4.75 Pigeons: 2-3.50 Guineas: 5 Ducks: 5-8 Geese: 10-13.50 Bunnies: 4.25-7.50 Rabbits: 9-19 Auction held every Monday at 7 pm. NEW HOLLAND SALES STABLES New Holland, PA May 17, 2012 Slaughter Steers: Hi Ch & Pr 3-4 1320-1530# 118-122; 1600-1655# 114-118; Ch 2-3 1275-1500# 115-119; Sel 1-3 1205-1320# 112.50-114; Hols. Hi Ch & Pr 2-3 13051605# 106-110; Ch 2-3 1245-1510# 103-106.50; Sel 2-3 1240-1430# 95-101. Slaughter Heifers: Hi Ch & Pr 3-4 1160-1405# 116-117; Ch 2-3 990-1405# 110113.50. Slaughter Cows: Prem. White 65-75% lean 90-94.50, hi dress 98-100; Breakers 75-80% lean 88-93, hi dress 93.50-94.50, lo dress 83.5087.50; Boners 80-85% lean 84-88.50, hi dress 90.5094.50, lo dress 77-82.50; Lean 88-90% lean 78-83, hi dress 84.50-87, lo dress 7176.50. Slaughter Bulls: YG 1 9801950# 97-103.50, hi dress 106-110.50, very hi dress 116-122; lo dress 96-97. Graded Bull Calves: No. 1 114-128# 197-204; 106-112# 216-226; 86-104# 230-242; No. 2 106-118# 190-217; 88104# 220-232; 80-86# 261; No. 3 90-130# 200-205; 8088# 245; 72-78# 170; Util 60110# 90-97. Holstein Heifer Calves: No. 1 95-100# 260-275; No. 2 75120# 130-150. NEW HOLLAND PIG AUCTION New Holland, PA No report NEW HOLLAND SHEEP & GOATS AUCTION New Holland, PA May 21, 2012 Slaughter Lambs: Non-Traditional, Wooled, Shorn Ch & Pr 2-3 40-60# 178-212; 6080# 164-194; 80-90# 172190; 90-110# 170-185; Hair sheep 60-80# 160-194; 8090# 162-174; 90-110# 158169; Wooled & Shorn Ch 2-3 50-60# 154-176; 60-80# 160-

172; 80-90# 155-170; 90110# 149-162; 110-130# 142-155; Hair sheep 40-60# 160-180; 60-80# 156-174; 90-110# 154-164. Slaughter Ewes: Gd 2-3 M flesh 120-160# 75-90; 160200# 68-82; 200-300# 70-76; Util 1-2 thin flesh 90-110# 7590; 120-160# 72-82. Slaughter Goats: Kids Sel 1 30-40# 104-120; 40-60# 122150; 60-80# 144-169; 80-90# 172-188; 100-120# 195-220; Sel 2 30-40# 85-105; 40-60# 90-131; 60-80# 124-155; 8090# 145-170; Sel 3 20-40# 40-71; 40-60# 74-100; 6080# 100-121; 80-100# 106129; Nannies/Does Sel 1 80130# 166-181; 130-180# 177-189; Sel 2 80-130# 135155; 130-180# 156-172; Sel 3 50-80# 91-104; 80-130# 112-127; Wethers Sel 1 100150# 210-234; 150-250# 236-256; Bucks/Billies Sel 1 100-150# 210-234; 150-250# 236-256; Sel 2 100-150# 160-180; 150-250# 165-185. NEW WILMINGTON LIVESTOCK AUCTION New Wilmington, PA No report NEW WILMINGTON PRODUCE AUCTION, INC. New Wilmington, PA No report PA DEPT OF AGRICULTURE Grain Market Summary Compared to last week corn sold .05-.10 lower, wheat sold .05-.20 lower, barley sold .30-.40 lower, Oats sold .05 to .10 lower & Soybeans sold .10-.15 lower. EarCorn sold 1-2 lower. All prices /bu. except ear corn is /ton. Southeastern PA: Corn No. 2 Range 6.64-6.95, Avg 6.79, Contracts 5.19-5.25; Wheat No. 2 Range 5.906.53, Avg 6.18, Contracts 5.88-6.34; Barley No. 3 Range 4.50-5.50, Avg 5, Contracts 4.50; Oats No. 2 Range 4.50-4.80, Avg 4.65; Soybeans No 2 Range 14.03-14.43, Avg 14.24, Contracts 12.95-13; EarCorn 200. Central PA: Corn No. 2 Range 6.64-6.95, Avg 6.77; Wheat No. 2 6.03; Barley No. 3 Range 5; Oats No. 2 3.50-5, Avg 4.16; Soybeans No. 2 Range 12.95-14.22, Avg 13.58; EarCorn Range 195-220, Avg 207.50. South Central PA: Corn No. 2 Range 6.70-6.75, Avg 6.73; Wheat No. 2 Range 5.15-6.10, Avg 5.62; Barley No. 3 Range 4.15-5.10, Avg 4.62; Oats No. 2 Range 3.75-4, Avg3.87; Soybeans No. 2 Range 13.55-14.08, Avg 13.81; EarCorn 190. Lehigh Valley Area: Corn No. 2 Range 6.55-6.88, Avg

6.72; Wheat No. 2 Range 6.90; Oats No. 2 Range 4.70; Soybeans No. 2 Range 13.90-14.34, Avg 14.08; Gr. Sorghum 5.92. Eastern & Central PA: Corn No. 2 Range 6.55-6.95, Avg 6.76, Month Ago 7.10, Year Ago 7.77; Wheat No. 2 Range 5.15-6.90, Avg 6.11, Month Ago 6.38, Year Ago 7.79; Barley No. 3 Range 4.15-5.50, Avg 4.85, Month Ago 5.07, Year Ago 5.54; Oats No. 2 Range 3.50-5, Avg 4.28, Month Ago 4.40, Year Ago 4.11; Soybeans No. 2 Range 12.95-14.43, Avg 13.88, Month Ago 13.40, Year Ago 13.44; EarCorn Range 190-220; Avg 200, Month Ago 201.60, Year Ago 181.66. Western PA: Corn No. 2 Range 5.90-6.50, Avg 6.19; Wheat No. 2 Range 5.75; Oats No. 2 3.80-5.30, Avg 4.33; Soybeans No. 2 14.33. PA DEPT OF AGRICULTURE Weekly Livestock Summary May 18, 2012 Slaughter Steers: Hi Ch & Pr 2-3 118-122.50; Ch 1-3 116-121; Sel 1-2 112-117.50; Hols. Hi Ch & Pr 2-3 105109; Ch 2-3 100-105; Sel 1-2 95-101. Slaughter Heifers: Hi Ch & Pr 2-3 117-121.50; Ch 1-3 110-117.50; Sel 1-2 106.50113. Slaughter Cows: Breakers 75-80% lean 87-93; Boners 80-85% lean 84-88; Lean 8590% lean 77-83. Slaughter Bulls: hi dress 110.50-119.50; Avg dress 99-105; lo dress 91-94. Feeder Steers: M&L 1 300500# 175-200; 500-700# 144-170; M&L 2 300-500# 130-167.50; 500-700# 127151. Feeder Heifers: M&L 1 300500# 155-177; 500-700# 130-159; M&L 2 300-500# 130-155; 500-700# 122-147. Feeder Bulls: M&L 1 300500# 151-193; 500-700# 147-167; M&L 2 300-500# 122.50-152.50; 500-700# 113-135. Vealers: Util 60-120# 30105. Farm Calves: No. 1 Hols. bulls 80-120# 210-260; No. 2 80-120# 190-240; No. 3 80120# 140-230; No. 1 Hols. Hfrs. 84-105# 200-350; No. 2 80-105# 130-200. Hogs: Barrows & Glts 4954% lean 220-270# 5966.50; 45-50% lean 220270# 56-60. Sows: US 1-3 300-500# 4549; 500-700# 48-52.50. Graded Feeder Pigs: US 12 20-25# 210-230; 25-30# 145-180; 30-40# 130-140; 40-50# 120-140; 50-60# 110140; 60-70# 140; US 2 20-

30# 170-200; 30-40# 130165; 50-60# 115-125. Slaughter Sheep Lambs Ch & Pr 2-3 40-60# 220-240; 6080# 178-230; 80-110# 186218; 110-150# 175-180; Ch 1-3 40-60# 170-194; 60-80# 170-192; 80-110# 140-178; Ewes Gd 2-3 120-160# 7694; 160-200# 74-90; Util 1-2 120-160# 80-95; 160-200# 72-86. Slaughter Goats: Kids Sel 1 20-40# 100-112; 40-60# 118161; 60-80# 160-174; 80100# 181-202; Sel 2 20-40# 79-92; 40-60# 108-144; 6080# 140-164; Sel 3 20-40# 60-77; 40-60# 69-102; Nannies Sel 1 80-130# 165-181; 130-180# 180-200; Sel 2 80130# 142-164; Sel 3 50-80# 98-111; 80-130# 118-142; Billies Sel 1 100-150# 230247; 150-250# 245-264; Sel 2 100-150# 231-246; 150250# 264-290. PA DEPT OF AGRICULTURE Hay Market Summary Hay & Straw Market For Eastern PA: All hay prices paid by dealers at the farm and/ton. All hay and straw reported sold/ton. Compared to last week hay sold steady to 40 lower & straw sold steady. Alfalfa 140-250; Mixed Hay 130-220; Timothy 130-295; Straw 100-190; Mulch 60-120. Summary of Lancaster Co. Hay Auctions: Prices/ton, 151 lds, 37 Straw; Alfalfa 150-345; Mixed Hay 135400; Timothy 190-330; Grass 147-370; Straw 135-215. Diffenbach Auct, April 36, 63 lds Hay, 15 lds Straw. Alfalfa 150-315; Mixed Hay 135-400; Timothy 195-300; Grass 147-370; Straw 135215. Green Dragon, Ephrata: May 4, 37 lds Hay, 9 Straw. Alfalfa 180-345; Mixed Hay 185-340; Timothy 217-330; Grass Hay 170-310; Straw 160-200. Weaverland Auct, New Holland: April 26, 22 lds Hay, 6 Straw. Alfalfa 210-270; Mixed Hay 140-285; Timothy 305; Grass 210-310; Straw 160205. Wolgemuth Auction: Leola, PA: May 2, 29 lds Hay, 7 Straw. Alfalfa 315; Mixed Hay 165-335; Timothy 190-295; Grass 195-295; Straw 140185. Summary of Central PA Hay Auctions: Prices/ton, 142 Loads Hay, 18 Straw. Alfalfa 180-300; Mixed Hay 75-360; Timothy 140-275; Grass 70-360; Straw 97.50230. Belleville Auct, Belleville: May 2, 27 lds Hay, 0 lds Straw. Mixed 100-320. Dewart Auction, Dewart: April 30, 20 lds Hay, 1 Straw.

Mixed Hay 120-360; Straw 205. Greencastle Livestock: April 30 & May 3, 7 lds Hay, 2 Straw. Alfalfa 250-270; Mixed Hay 155; Timothy 140; Grass 200-275; Straw 97.50-100. Kutztown Auction, Kutztown: May 5, 29 lds Hay, 5 Straw. Alfalfa 210-300; Mixed Hay 205-270; Timothy 205-240; Grass Hay 165360; Straw 165-230. Middleburg Auct, Middleburg: May 1, 26 lds Hay, 2 Straw. Alfalfa 240-275; Mixed Hay 75-290; Timothy 180215; Grass 180-230; Straw 100-220. Leinbach’s Mkt, Shippensburg: April 28 & May 1, 33 lds Hay, 8 Straw. Alfalfa 115245; Mixed Hay 88-280; Timothy 185-275; Grass 70-160; Straw 147.50-192.50. New Wilmington Livestock, New Wilmington: May 4, 3 lds Hay, 0 Straw. Alfalfa 190; Timothy 195; Grass 230. VINTAGE SALES STABLES

May 15, 2012 Slaughter Cows: Prem. Whites 75-80% lean lo dress 85-90; Breakers 75-80% lean 88.50-92.50, hi dress 95-98, lo dress 82.50-87; Boners 80-85% lean 84-88, hi dress 89-91, lo dress 78-81; Lean 88-90% lean 76-82, hi dress 84.50-85.50, lo dress 70-75. Slaughter Bulls: YG 1 13401905# 99.50-104. Holstein Bull Calves: No. 1 103-121# 185-197; 85-101# 240-260; No. 2 112-114# 215-216; 90-102# 222-242; pkg 84# 267; No. 3 94-109# 215-232; pkg 83# 242; pkg 74# 180; Util 80-105# 45-60. Graded Holstein Heifers: No. 1 94-100# 340-350; pkg 82# 190; No. 2 pkg. 90# 260; pkg 82# 175; non-tubing 7393# 50-70. WEAVERLAND AUCTION New Holland, PA No report WOLGEMUTH AUCTION Leola, PA No report

Page 9 - Section B • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

WEEKLY MARKET REPORT


Section B - Page 10 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

New York sees start to recovery in funds to protect farmland by American Farmland Trust staff in New York State Like the state’s overall economic recovery, this past fiscal year has shown brighter signs for efforts to protect farmland from development in New York. In Fiscal Year 20112012 the state’s Department of Agriculture and Markets, working with farmers, communities and private land trusts, was able to close on 19 farmland protection projects, paying out more than $13 million, with an additional $2 million approved for disbursement in April. “We are encouraged that New York is once again investing in our farmers and protecting the land that we need for farming and growing food,” said David Haight, New York State Director for American Farmland Trust (AFT). “Governor Cuomo and legislative leaders have stabilized Environmental Protection Fund (EPF) dollars that are enabling the Department of Agriculture and Markets and local partners to make a significant dent in the backlog of farmland protection projects.” For Fiscal Year 20122013, which began April 1, the state’s Farmland Protection Program has again been allocated $12 million from the EPF. AFT estimates that at least 16 farms across the state are already on deck to close this year, with a total closing cost of approximately $16 million. Legislation has been proposed to grow the EPF by directing revenue from unclaimed bottle deposits into the fund. Though this measure was seriously con-

sidered during budget negotiations, the legislation ultimately was not included in the final 2012-2013 State Budget and it will remain under active consideration during the remainder of the 2012-2013 Legislative Session. Increasing funding for the EPF would increase money for conserving farmland, aiding farmers in protecting water quality and other important environmental programs. According to AFT, at the end of Fiscal Year 2012-2013, approximately 25 farmland protection projects will remain in the backlog with estimated closing costs at just over $25 million. This is an enormous reduction in the oncedaunting backlog of nearly $70 million of awards made to protect 60 farms. The large backlog was the result of disproportionate cuts to the EPF and the Farmland Protection Program. This project backlog has resulted in no new projects being solicited since 2008. New York’s Farmland Protection Program was established in 1992 under the leadership of then Governor Mario Cuomo to provide funds to towns and counties to develop community-specific strategies for strengthening business opportunities for local farmers and protecting farmland. The program also awards funds to communities to purchase permanent conservation easements on working farmland. The state’s Farmland Protection Program provides funding to communities to purchase conservation easements

on farmland, ensuring that the land remains available to grow food for future generations. This voluntary program pays farmland owners for permanently protecting their land for agriculture. Participating farmers are generally offered the difference between the fair market value of their land and its value if it is restricted. A 2009 study by the New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets found that many participating farmers use these funds to reinvest in their farm businesses by reducing business debt, buying new equipment, constructing farm buildings, purchasing additional land or establishing family retirement funds. Brothers Brian, Eric and Stuart Ziehm received funding from the New York State Farmland Protection Program to protect their 343-acre Tiashoke Farm in the Town of Easton in Washington County and used the proceeds to reinvest in their dairy operation. Stuart Ziehm explains, “The money we received through the state’s farmland protection program has helped us build a modern, 300cow free-stall barn with a special maternity area. This has allowed

us to continue to grow our operation and has improved our calf care.” The Agricultural Stewardship Association (ASA), a regional land trust that works with farmers and communities in Washington and Rensselaer Counties to protect farmland, has assisted Deep Roots Holstein Farm along with many other farms throughout the process of protecting their farmland. “We currently have four great projects which have been awarded funding from the state’s Farmland Protection Program,” said Teri Ptacek, ASA’s executive director. “If the money becomes available this fiscal year and these projects are completed it would give these farmers an important opportunity to reinvest in their operations and act as a boost to our local economy.” Since 1996, the Farmland Protection Program has awarded more than $173 million to protect more than 200 farms encompassing roughly 73,000 acres. The program has been popular with farmers, but was subject to drastic budget cuts starting in 2008. In 2008, the Farmland Protection Program was originally budgeted to receive $30 million from the state’s EPF. By 2010, the funds available from

Full Line of Agricultural Spray Materials Corn, Alfalfa & Grass Seeds Feed, Hay & Straw

T&P SALES and SERVICE & Richardson Farms Buddy Richardson • (315) 829-8000

FEEDER CATTLE SALE

D SALES STABLES , IN HOLLAN W NELocated 12 Miles East of Lancaster, PA Just Off Rt. 23, New Holland C.

Friday, June 1 • 6 PM

Dairy Cow & Heifer Sale

For info call: 585-394-1515 FINGER LAKES LIVESTOCK EX. 3 Miles East Of Canandaigua, NY on Rt. 5 & 20 Visit Our Web Site www.fingerlakeslivestockex.com

Next Feeder Cattle Sale Fri., July 13, 2012 @ 6 PM

Wed., May 30TH • 10:30 AM All Consignments Welcome: Cows - Heifers - Bulls From Weaned Calves to Mature Cows Please send all info w/Truckers-Tues., May 29th

Thank You

SALE MANAGED BY: New Holland Sales Stables, Inc. David Kolb 61-L

717-354-4341 (Barn) 717-355-0706 (FAX)

Reminder: Special Heifer Sale TH

Wednesday, June 13

the EPF to protect farmland had been reduced to $5.5 million. Saving farmland from suburban sprawl is critical to sustaining the state’s nearly $5 billion agricultural economy which employs more than 100,000 New Yorkers. Though farmland serves

as the basic infrastructure for the state’s robust farm and food economy the state continues to lose farmland to development at a rate of one farm every 3 1/2 days. Between 1982 and 2007, New York State lost 449,000 acres of farmland to development.

PROVEN N SUPERIOR! S.C.C. UDDER CREAM Test It For Yourself! 500 ml. • $15.00 12 Jars = Free Shipment Ingredients: Peppermint Oil, Tea Tree Oil, Oregano Oil, Menthol, Herbs • ORGANIC SAFE

FREE Sample Excell 7000 The Alternative For Today

SYNERGY ANIMAL PRODUCTS 1681 Schubert Rd. • Bethel, PA 19507

1-800-507-9361 WEEKLY SALES EVERY MONDAY HOSKING SALES - FORMER WELCH LIVESTOCK Weekly Sales Every Monday 12:30 Produce, Misc. & small animals; 1:00 Dairy; **We will now sell lambs, goats, pigs, feeders immediately following Dairy. Calves and cull beef approx. 5:00-5:30PM. Help us increase our volume - thus making a better market for everyone. **We are Independent Marketers - working 24/7 to increase your bottom line. Take advantage of our low commission rates. Competitive marketing is the way to go. Monday, May 21st sale - cull ave. .72, Top cow .92 wt. 1413 $1091.70 cows up to $1299.96 Bulls/Steers top $1.06 wt. 1502 $1592.12, bull calves top $2.70, heifer calves top $2.00. Monday, May 28th - Memorial Monday we will be open for business for the farmer's convenience. Special Plant Auction we will be starting at 10AM selling several loads of hanging baskets, bedding plants, vegetable plants, shrubs, trees all you need for your gardening needs - Come Spend the Day! We will start with the misc. & small animals at 12:30 our normal schedule will follow. We will have 2 Auctioneers if needed. Monday, June 4th - Monthly Feeder & Fat Cow Sale. Monday, June 11th - Monthly Heifer Sale. Monday, June 18th - Monthly Sheep, Lamb & Goat Sale. Possible goat herd dispersal. Watch future ads. Saturday, Oct. 13th - OHM Holstein Club Sale. Brad Ainslie Sale Chairman 315-822-6087. Saturday, Nov. 3rd - Fall Premier All Breed Sale - Call early to consign to make catalog and advertising deadlines. Café is now open for breakfast and lunch - great food! LOOKING TO HAVE A FARM SALE OR JUST SELL A FEW - GIVE US A CALL. **Trucking Assistance - Call the Sale Barn or check out our trucker list on our Web-Site. Call to advertise in any of these sales it makes a difference. Directions: Former Welch Livestock 6096 NYS Rt. 8, 30 miles South of Utica & 6 miles North of New Berlin, NY. www.hoskingsales.com Call today with your consignments. Tom & Brenda Hosking 6096 NYS Rt. 8 New Berlin, NY 13411

607-699-3637 or 607-847-8800 cell: 607-972-1770 or 1771


high feed prices will likely be countered by lower milk prices for the balance of 2012,” USDA said, “With some recovery likely in 2013.” On balance, the milk-feed price ratio is not expected to signal expansion until later in 2013, according to the report. The total number of milk cows for 2012 was raised slightly from April to 9.23 million head. The Milk Production report indicated higher than expected cow numbers and, despite weakening returns, producers were not reducing herds as quickly as expected. The dairy herd in 2013 is expected to decline to 9.17 million head, reflecting 2012’s high feed prices and lower milk prices. Milk per cow for 2012 was boosted to 21,880 pounds from the April projection. Production per cow is forecast at 22,100 pounds for 2013. The rise in milk per cow this year is due to nearly ideal production conditions in much of the U.S. Next year’s projected increase in production per cow reflects the moderating feed price outlook. Looking “back to the futures;” after factoring in the announced Class III milk prices and the remaining futures, the average Class III milk price for the first six months of 2012 stood at $15.65 on March 2 and $15.70 on May 10. The last half of 2012 was averaging $15.95 on April 20, $15.61 on April 27, $15.08 on May 4, $15.44 on May 11, and was trading around $15.68 late morning May 18. Lower futures prices for feedstuffs could reduce Milk Income Loss Contract (MILC) payments, according to the University of Wisconsin’s Dr. Bryan Gould and reported by Dairy Profit Weekly (DPW). USDA has already announced MILC payments of 38.9 cents per cwt. for February and 82.6 cents for March. Using May 14 settlement futures prices for

penny on the week and 25 cents below a year ago. Only one car of each traded hands all week. The AMS-surveyed block price slipped a penny to $1.5269, while the barrels averaged $1.4938, also down a penny. USDA’s Dairy Market News reports that cheese production remains high as milk looks to find a home away from Class IV production. Discounts are being offered to prompt cheese plants to take extra milk but are cautious to build inventory. Domestic sales are moderate as some buyers are waiting to see if prices will go lower before committing to added purchases. Export sales remain above year ago aided in part by CWT assistance, which was Friday’s DairyLine topic. DPW editor Dave Natzke reported that global dairy product

sales are a “bright spot,” because USDA’s March dairy trade report indicates exports were valued at a record $484 million, topping $400 million for the 13th consecutive month. Paced by record-high cheese sales and continued strong sales of high-value whey products, export values were up 11 percent from February and 15 percent more than March 2011. Monthly butterfat volumes also improved to a nine-month high, Natzke said. In contrast, March 2012 imports, at $258 million were up just 5 percent from February, and down about 7 percent from a year ago. “When we look at trade balance,” Natzke said, “March exports were equivalent to 13.6 percent of U.S. milk solids production for the month, while imports

equaled about 2.8 percent of production. So far in this fiscal year, exports are estimated at more than $2.6 billion, up 24 percent from the same period a year ago. Imports, at $1.6 billion, are up 9 percent, resulting in a dairy trade surplus of more than $1 billion through the first half of the fiscal year. Natzke also pointed to National Milk’s CWT program. So far in 2012, CWT has assisted its members to export about 50 million pounds of cheese and 43 million of butter and anhydrous milk fat (AMF). The milk equivalent of those exports is about 1.4 billion pounds, or the annual production of more than 66,000 cows. Another 28 requests for export assistance were announced this

Mielke B14

Page 11 - Section B • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Will Falling Feed Prices Help? Issued May 18, 2012 The Agriculture Department’s latest Livestock, Dairy, and Poultry Outlook says “Current year milk and dairy product prices continue a downward glide as milk production continues to expand despite lower producer returns in the face of high feed prices. Next year’s milk production increase is expected to be slight as the cow herd contracts and demand becomes somewhat stronger, lifting prices.” On a brighter note, the Outlook reported that corn prices are moderating for the current crop year and for 2012/13. Corn was projected at $5.95-$6.25 a bushel in 2011/12, a decline from April’s projection, and then slip to $4.20-$5.00 next year. Higher corn plantings and higher expected yield could lead to a recordhigh supply in 2012/13 despite tight carryin stocks. The recent Crop Progress report showed a crop well ahead of average development for this time of year. While USDA admits this is no guarantee of above-average yields, it “minimizes the risk of yield loss due to late planting.” Soybean meal continues to inch upward. This month’s forecast calls for prices to average $360 a ton for the current crop year, up from April’s forecast. For 2012/13, prices are forecast at $335-$360 a ton. The April Agricultural Prices reported the preliminary estimate of alfalfa hay at $207 per ton. Hay could move downward with the 2012/13 crop. The benchmark 16-percent protein dairy ration was calculated at $11.20 per cwt. for January-March 2012. Given crop price forecasts, the ration value will likely head down later this year and could fall further in 2013, according to USDA. “For dairy producers, the welcome relief from

MILC-related contracts, Gould revised his estimates for the remainder of 2012 and early 2013. He looks for MILC payments to peak in spring and summer and top $1.00 per cwt. in April and July. For April, Gould projects an MILC payment of $1.18; May, 75 cents; June, 91 cents; July, $1.03; August, 81 cents; September, 38 cents; and October, 11 cents. Updates are posted at his “Understanding Dairy Markets” website. Meanwhile, cash dairy prices saw a little strength the week of May 14, especially on butter as the markets awaited Friday afternoon’s April Milk Production report which I will detail next week. Cash block cheese closed Friday at $1.50 per pound, unchanged on the week but 20 3/4-cents below a year ago. The barrels closed at $1.46, up a


Section B - Page 12 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Country Folks

Proud to be the Official Publication of: • Northeast Dairy Herd Improvement Association • New York Ayrshire Club • New York Forage & Grasslands Council • New York Beef Cattlemen • New York Brown Swiss Association • New York Corn & Soybean Growers • New York Meat Goat Association • New York Milk Producers • New York Pork Producers • Empire Sheep Producers • FARMEDIC • Maine Beef Cattlemen • New England Milk Producers Association • New England Sheep & Wool Growers Association • Vermont Dairy Herd Improvement Association

Country Folks Your weekly connection to agriculture.

www.countryfolks.com 518-673-3237

Published by Lee Publications, Inc. PO Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428


Penn State’s Department of Dairy and Animal Science (DAS) will become the Department of Animal Science on July 1 as part of a plan to restructure the College of Agricultural Sciences’ academic departments. The reorganization decreases the number of departments from 12 to nine, and moves the present Department of Poultry Science into the new Department of Animal Science. College Dean Dr. Bruce McPheron announced that Dr. Terry Etherton will be the head of the Department of Animal Science. Etherton has been head of DAS since 1998, and has been a member of the DAS faculty since 1979. Etherton was named distinguished professor of animal nutrition in 1996, after serving as professor of animal nutrition. In making the announcement, McPheron said, “I am very pleased that Terry is willing to embrace this critical leadership position. He will be an extremely effective leader.” Etherton said, “As the transition to the Department of Animal Science

moves forward, we will focus on continuing to maintain the high standard of excellence that makes the Department of Animal Science one of the elite in the country. We have partnered closely with the Department of Poultry Science throughout the years in our undergraduate and graduate teaching programs and that longtime collaboration will help ensure a seamless transition.” Etherton said he will work closely with faculty, staff and students as well as the poultry industry to ensure that programs and activities will continue to provide great value and opportunity. “We believe the merger will enhance opportunities for all.” He noted that the department will now encompass all major food production animals as well as companion animals. With food animal production being a major driver of the Pennsylvania and regional economies, the new Department of Animal Science will provide leadership in providing the science

CRAIGMOOR FARM DISPERSAL

ERIC & JOEL CRAIG SATURDAY JUNE 9, 2012 • 10:00 AM 1552 CR 22 NORTH BANGOR, NY 12966 • 518-232-2770

DIRECTIONS: TAKE RT. 11 WEST OF MALONE, NY. TURN ONTO CR 22 AT THE FOUR CORNERS IN THE VILLAGE OF NORTH BANGOR. WATCH FOR AUCTION SIGNS. JOIN THE CRAIGS FRIDAY EVENING PRIOR TO THE SALE FOR AN OPEN HOUSE AND “PIG ROAST” 140 HEAD OF OUTSTANDING TYPE & HIGH COMPONENT DAIRY CATTLE!!! SHOW CATTLE OF ALL AGES!!! SCC 153,000 65 REG. GUERNSEYS SELL!!! 34 COWS— 10 BH— 21 YEARLINGS & CALVES— SERVICE BULL A SAMPLING OF THE GUERNSEYS SELLING TUFFY EX-90 OVER 15,000 0F 4.5%BF & 3.4%P. SHE WAS THE 1ST PLACE SR. 3YR OLD @ 2011 NY SPRING SHOW DAM IS VG-88, NEXT DAM EX-90. ALSO SELLING IS HER FRESH DAU. BY FAYETTE BRYCE VG-87 2-08 305 14260 4.9% 704 3.3% 474. RES. GRAND @ NY SPRING SHOW 2011. LOOKS FANTASTIC AND READY TO GO!!! BOBBIN: PROJECTED AS A 2YR OLD TO OVER 24,000 OF MILK ERVINA: CALVES AT 1-11 PROJECTED OVER 20,000 OF MILK WITH FIRST CALF SIRES OF GUERNSEYS SELLING INCLUDE: ADACKA, AARON, MENTOR, SIVERADO, SHOWTIME, SENSATION, FAYETTE, SMOKEY, POKER, DYNAMIC AND SKIPPER. SERVICE SIRES INCLUDE: TILLER, AARON, PRADA, MENTOR, JUDGEMENT, JUMBO, WELCOME JT AND SENSATION. 61 REG. JERSEYS SELL!!! 34 COWS— 12 BH (BRED TO SEXED SEMEN)— BALANCE YEARLINGS & CALVES TAKE A LOOK AT THIS SAMPLING OF THE OUTSTANDING JERSEY QUALITY SPICE: VG-87% 1ST CALF MILKING @ 60LBS./DAY. SHE IS SOMETHING SPECIAL AND CAN STAND IN ANYBODYS BARN. VIREO: VG-88% MILKING 91 LBS/DAY WITH 5.8%BF VICTORY: EX-93% PROJECTED OVER 19,000 AND DUE IN JUNE. 12 MEMBERS OF THIS FAMILY SELL MARCELA: ACTION DAU. PROJ. OVER 20,000 AS A 3YR OLD. JERSEY SIRES INCLUDE: LEGION, ACTION, COMERICA, MILITIA, JACE, PITINO, AWARD, IATOLA, REGION, LOUIE, JUSTICE, EXCAVATE, JACINTO, MAESTRO, GOLD AND HEADLINE. SERVICE SIRES INCLUDE: HEADLINE, COMERICA, LEGION, SULTAN, TBOLT, MAXIMAN, REGION, IATOLA AND PREMIERE 12 REG. R&W HOLSTEINS SELL!!! 7 COWS— 4 BH— CALF SUPER QUALITY RED & WHITES OPTIMUS: VG–89, PROJECTED OVER 24,000 AND BRED BACK OSARIO:VG-87@2YR., BY WISCONSIN, PROJ. OVER 24,000 ONYX: ADVENT DAU. PROJECTED OVER 20,000 AS A 2YR OLD AND DUE IN AUGUST INT. YEARLING: SIRED BY WISCONSIN. DAM 85 AND OVER 100,000. THIS ONE IS READY TO WIN!!! SIRES OF R&W: ADVENT, INFERNO, STAR, WISCONSIN AND ATTITUDE SERVICE SIRES: ACCOLADE, RAPID FIRE AND DAGGER ERIC AND JOEL HAVE DEVELOPED A HERD OF OUTSTANDING TYPE AND PRODUCTION. THE BREEDING IN THIS DAIRY HAS PRODUCED CATTLE THAT MEET TODAYS HIGH STANDARD OF PRODUCTION AND LONGEVITY. THEY HAVE SOLD NUMEROUS CATTLE THAT HAVE DEVELOPED INTO TOP PRODUCERS AND SHOW WINNERS FOR THEIR NEW OWNERS. THIS WAS A VERY DIFFICULT DECISION FOR THE CRAIGS. DON’T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE HIGH QUALITY OF BREEDING AT CRAIGMOOR. THE HERD IS HOUSED IN FREESTALLS AND MILKED IN TIESTALLS!!! CATALOGS AVAILABLE ONLINE AT WWW.USGUERNSEY.COM/GMS.HTM MACHINERY SELLING!!! KUBOTA M105S 105HP 4WD, CANOPY, WEIGHTS, ONLY 1100HRS. 2008 IN EX CONDITION IH 656 DIESEL - MF 50 GAS - NH LS250 SKIDSTEER GAS KNIGHT 3042 MIXER TOP CONDITION - WIC MDR48 ROUND THE BARN TMR MIXER MILLER PRO REAR UNLOAD FORAGE WAGON TANDEM SUPER CONDITION - HESSTON DOUBLE 5 V-RAKE EX. - 2 HYD REAR DUMP FORAGE WAGONS ON HIGH PROFILE TIRES - JD 327 BALER - GALLIGNAM BALE WRAPPER - STOLL R 353 ROTARY RAKE; NH 25 BLOWER; NH 790 CHOPPER; NH 782 CHOPPER; ROSSI SINGLE ROW TEDDER; 5’ BUSH HOG BRUSH CUTTER; 7’ BACK BLADE; HYD. POST POUNDER; PIPE HAY WAGON 18’BALE SPEAR 3PT.; BLOWER BONNETS (2); JD 10’ HARROWS; STEEL SCAFFFOLDING; SNOWBLOWER 5’ 3PT HITCH; TIRECHAINS 4 SETS (18.4x30 & 18.4x34) MOTORS ELECTRIC; CALF HUTCHES (8); WASH VATS; WATER TUBS; DYNA DP 4500 PORTABLE GENERATOR 16.7 AMPS; WIC 11-90 GRAIN MIZER W/ WIC 301 COMPUTER; AUGER PORTABLE 20’ W/MOTOR; FANS PORTABLE FLOOR LARGE; SNAPPER LT 12 RIDING LAWNMOWER NEW BATTERY & BLADES; MOHAWK 340 POWER WASHER; HAY CART STEEL 5’ FOR SQUARE BALES; ONAN GENERATOR 21 AMP SIDE MOUNT FRAME W/PULLEY & BELT FOR TRACTOR; OLIVER WHEEL HARROWS 10’; DRILL PRESS; 20 TON PRESS; WHEELBARROW DUAL WHEELS; GUTTER GRATES (13); WATER BUCKETS 20; PLATFORM SCALES; TRUCK STORAGE BOX; SILO CABLE 300 FT. NEVER USED; FIFTH WHEEL PLATE HD COMPLETE BOU-MATIC DOUBLE 6 MILKING PARLOR DISASSEMBLED & READY TO GO!!! MACHINERY HOUSED UNDERCOVER AND IS READY TO WORK!!! VET CHECKED FOR PREGNANCY- INOCULATED FOR SHIPPING FEVER-TESTED FOR INTERSTATE SHIPMENT TERMS: CASH OR GOOD CHECK DAY OF SALE. NOTHING TO BE REMOVED TILL SETTLED FOR. OUT OF STATE BUYERS MUST HAVE A “BANK LETTER OF GUARANTEE” MADE PAYABLE TO DELARM & TREADWAY. CATALOGS AT RINGSIDE.

BILL DELARM & SON N.BANGOR, NY 518-483-4106

SALE MANAGER DELARM & TREADWAY WWW.DELARM-TREADWAY.COM

E.J. TREADWAY ANTWERP, NY 315-659-2407

base to address issues from production to processing for food animal systems. The new department will continue to offer exceptional undergraduate and graduate academic programs, along with the important wide-ranging educational opportunities and programs available outside the classroom. The quality of these programs has been responsible for steady growth in numbers in recent years. The restructuring will align all county-based Penn State extension educators with responsibilities in the dairy, equine, livestock and poultry industries with the new department. Etherton said this change will create closer and more effective collaboration, maximizing the connections between educators in the field and faculty in the department. “Our stakeholders throughout the state will benefit from this closer alliance, while continuing to receive the benefits of the high level of excellent programing offered by our talented extension educators,” he noted. The merger is the result of a two-year strategic planning process, the Ag Futures Initiative, designed to change the college’s business model to adjust to new economic and social realities and needs. Throughout the process, faculty, staff, stakeholders and the university’s faculty senate studied proposals and weighed the best opportunities to strengthen programs and maintain excellence. Etherton has taught undergraduate and graduate courses in animal nutrition, energy metabolism, metabolic

Terry Etherton regulation, animal growth and development, and integrated animal biology. He received his bachelor’s degree in agricultural science from University of Illinois, his master’s degree in animal science from the University of Illinois, and his doctorate in animal science from the University of Minnesota. He has provided leadership in a variety of regional and national organizations, including service as president of the American Society of Animal Science as well as the Federation of Animal Science Societies. He is a leading authority on the role of agricultural biotechnology in food production systems, and has published

Penn State B16

www.aaauctionfinder.com

REGISTER FREE!!! Find Auctions Near You!! Auctioneers Register FREE!! List all your upcoming auctions with us!! Brought to you by: Country Folks, Country Folks Grower, Wine & Grape Grower, Hard Hat News, Mane Stream Waste Handling Equipment News, North American Quarry News, Small Farm Quarterly and by Lee Publications Inc. Palatine Bridge, NY 13428 www.leepub.com (800) 218-5586

Page 13 - Section B • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Penn State College of Agriculture Sciences is restructuring


Section B - Page 14 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Mielke from B11 week to sell 2.617 million pounds of cheese and 1.461 million pounds of butter and AMF to customers in Asia, Central America, North Africa and the Middle East. Back to the cash markets butter gained another 3 1/2-cents on the week adding to the penny it gained in the previous week’s reversal of six weeks of losses. It is now trading at $1.3550, but is still 71 1/2-cents below a year ago when it jumped 12 cents and then picked up another 11 cents the following week, to peak at $2.18 for the year. Seven cars were sold the week of May 14. The AMS butter price dropped 3.9 cents, averaging $1.3750. Butter producers and handlers indicate that churning schedules are seasonally strong, according to USDA. Cream offerings to the churn remain plentiful. Many butter producers report that cream offerings are surpassing their capacity. Current churning is generating butter stocks that are outpacing demand, thus clearances to inventory are occurring. Butter demand is “fair at best.” Analyst Jerry Dryer wrote in his May 11 Dairy & Food Market Analyst; “Don’t hold your breath waiting for butter prices to continue to march higher. Domestic inventories are heavy; ditto for inventories in other parts of the world.” But he also warned, “If you prefer lower prices don’t get over confident.” Typical seasonal factors are coming into play, he said. With schools closing, less cream flows from bottlers to churns. As Mother Nature turns up the thermostat, there is less cream produced, and ice cream demand is picking up. Cash Grade A nonfat dry milk inched a quartercent higher this week, hitting $1.1250. Three cars were sold on the week. Extra Grade remained at $1.0825. AMS powder averaged $1.1467, down 7 cents, and dry whey averaged 53.4 cents per pound, down 3.7 cents on the week. Meanwhile; milk production in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions

has leveled off and indications are the two regions are at or near the seasonal peak. Manufacturing milk supplies remain heavy. Class I demand is steady. Various Midwest handlers report their milk intakes are steady to dropping slightly. Component values are also on a slow, seasonal decline. Milk availability in the region declined while sales into ice cream and ice cream mix facilities increased. Milk production in California remains uneven. Areas in northern California are seeing production move higher, while others are flat to occasionally lower. Temperatures are warming up, but not impacting cows yet. Arizona production is trending lower, moving away from the recent seasonal peak. Processing plants continue to work on extended schedules to handle the milk supply. Milk production in the Pacific Northwest is still heavy, although showing some relief from excess production. Utah and Idaho production is following expected levels. The Oceania milk production season continues to run stronger than previously projected. New Zealand output continues to run 9 to10 percent higher than last year at this time and is 4 to 5 percent higher in Australia. Market analyst Mary Ledman, who now co-edits the Daily Dairy Report, writes in her May

14 edition that New Zealand is the world’s largest exporter of dairy products but produces less than 5 percent of the global milk supply. The country’s dairy herd increased 259,000 head versus the prior year to 6.17 million as of June 2011, according to Statistics New Zealand. The milking herd was estimated at 4.82 million head, up 136,000 from the prior year. Given strong milk prices during the 201112 production season, there is no doubt that the New Zealand dairy

herd continued its expansion mode this past year, according to Ledman. The New Zealand production season runs June through May. To subscribe to Ledman’s all new Daily Dairy Report, log on to www.dailydairyreport.com. DPW also reported this week that March 2012 U.S. female dairy cattle exports dipped to 3,007 head, the lowest monthly total since February 2011. For the fifth time in six months, Russia was the leading destination, according to USDA. March exports brought

the year-to-date (Y-T-D) total to 13,954 head, compared to 17,766 head for the same period in record-setting 2011. Last March, more than 9,600 head were exported, including nearly 7,400 head to Turkey alone. Russia imported 1,158 U.S. dairy replacement females in March 2012, bringing its Y-T-D total to 8,196 head, or about 59 percent of U.S. exports so far this year. Last year’s female dairy cattle export market leader, Turkey, imported 988 head in March, for a three-month total of

2,942, according to DPW. And; FC Stone’s May 15 Insider Closing Bell reported that traders saw a steep drop in prices on GlobalDairyTrade (GDT) this week. The tradeweighted price index on GDT fell 6.4 percent from the May 1 auction. Average prices across contract periods from June through November fell 11.9 percent for anhydrous milk fat, 8.9 percent for whole milk powder, 5.4 percent for skim milk powder, 1.3 percent for milk protein concentrate, and 0.2 percent for cheddar cheese.


New Holland 4630, 650 Hrs, 8x8 Trans, Excellent Condition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$17,975

New Holland 790 Forage Harvester, Metal Alert Hyd Swing, Excellent Condition . . . . . . . . . .Call For Pricing

(2) New Holland H7230 Disc Mower - 10’4” Working 8330 Case Mower, 9’ Working Lift, Rolls . . . . . . . .$4,775 Width, Roll Conditioning, Excellent Condition . . .$18,475

Sitrex Mower H90D10, Hyd Lift, New Condition $4,775

Kuhn GA300 - 9’ Working Width, Field Ready . . . .$2,475

H&S Wheel Rake, 12 Wheels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$3,975

Kverneland 3Pt 2424, 8’, No Conditioner . . . . . . .$8,975

John Deere 726 Soil Finisher . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$38,500

Hesston 4590 Inline Square Baler with Thrower . .$10,975

Page 15 - Section B • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Ford 2000 with Bush Hog Loader, Power Steering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$6,275

2009 New Holland Boomer 8N - Excellent Condition, CVT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$23,975


Section B - Page 16 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Professional dairymen kick off development forums HARRISBURG, PA — The Professional Dairy Managers of Pennsylvania (PDMP) kick off their professional development Dairy Issues Forums this year on June 7, with a look at the inside of a business line that more and more dairy producers are focusing on to increase their bottom line — beef sales. According to the state Beef Council, 50 percent of the beef supply in Pennsylvania, comes from dairy cows. When better quality cows leave the farm and reach the market place, the producer, packer, and consumer all benefit. Pennsylvania dairy producers have embraced animal care and quality assurance because it is the right thing to do; but they have also gained through increased profitability. The condition of dairy market cows at the end of their productive life is a reflection of animal care, handling and marketing decisions, as is the quality of the beef harvested from these market dairy cows. Anywhere from $300 to $425 per cow may be left on the table when producers sell animals in poor condition. On June 7, PDMP, with their partners at the PA Beef Council and the

Penn State Department of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences, will show dairy producers how to identify management processes that can be improved for a better quality beef product. Attendees will spend the morning rotating between three stations, including the Penn State Meats Laboratory where they will get an up close look at how injections, and other cow handling practices impact pounds of yield and what dairymen are paid for their cull cows. Health issues like lameness, weight loss, bull calf care, residue issues and rehabilitation prior to sale will be covered. And as with all PDMP Issues Forums, networking with other progressive producers and subject matter experts will continue throughout the day. Lunch will be a unique experience; picnic style at Medlar Stadium, home of the State College Spikes. Then participants will tour Kish View Farm, east of State College, in Belleville where they will see the Spicher family’s methane digester and new rehabilitation area for reconditioning cull cows. Veterinarians can earn three continuing educa-

Penn State from B13 more than 100 peer-reviewed scientific journal articles and presented more than 190 invited seminars nationally and internationally. He received the Booster Award from the Penn State Stockmen’s Club, the Service Award from the Penn State Dairymen’s Club and was the dedicatee of the 87th Little International, selected by the Block and Bridle Club. He is a recipient of the Alex and Jessie C. Black Award for Excellence in Research in the College of

Agricultural Sciences; the University Faculty Scholar Medal In Life and Health Sciences from Penn State, the University’s highest honor for excellence in research; and the Hoffmann-LaRoche Animal Growth and Development Award from the American Society of Animal Science in recognition of his research accomplishments. Beginning July 1, the Department of Animal Science website will be http://animalscience.psu.edu .

tion credits by participating in the June 7 Issue Forum. Registration information and a program brochure are available at www.pdmp.org. To request a copy of the brochure, e-mail info@pdmp.org or call 877-326-5993 with contact information. Registration fees include lunch and are $75 for non-PDMP members and $25 for PDMP members.

www.aaauctionfinder.com

Search for all types of auctions at any time. New w updatess alll thee time!!

TRACTORS Case IH 9110 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $23,900 . . . . . . . . Fultonville Cat 416 Backhoe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $19,800. . . . . . Schaghticoke Farmall Cub . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,750 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 750 B Crawler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $28,500 . . . . . . . . . Chatham JD 2950 cab/MFWD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $16,500 . . . . . . . . . . Goshen JD 4430. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $15,900 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 5045D . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $14,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 5075 w/553 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $32,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 5325 2WD/cab. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $24,900 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 5525 cab, loader . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Coming In. . . . . . Schaghticoke JD 6430 Rental Returns (3) . . . . . . . . . . . $65,500 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . JD 7130 Rental Return . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $71,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 7400. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $32,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville (3) JD 7930 IVT. . . . . . . . . . . Starting at $123,000 . . . . . . . . Fultonville AC CA 2btm/cult . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,750 . . . . . . . . Fultonville COMPACT TRACTORS MF 1220 w/mower. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6,595 . . . . . . . . . . Goshen JD 850 w/cab . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5,500 . . . . . . . Clifton Park JD 375 backhoe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4,850 . . . . . . . . . Chatham JD 755 Loader/Mower/Blower. . . . . . . . . . . $6,895 . . . . . . . . . Chatham JD 855 w/cab, & loader. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9,800 . . . . . . . . . . Goshen JD 1600 wam . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $29,900 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 2210. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9,750. . . . . . Schaghticoke JD 2520 Loader/Mower. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $16,500 . . . . . . . . . Chatham JD 3120 w/300CX. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $14,900 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 3120 w/300CX. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $13,900. . . . . . Schaghticoke JD 3320 w/300/448. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $23,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 3720 w/blower . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $18,900 . . . . . . . Clifton Park JD 4410 w/420 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $13,800 . . . . . . . . Fultonville Kioti DK455 TLB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $20,000 . . . . . . . . . . Goshen Kubota L39 TLB, canopy . . . . . . . . . . . . . $24,900. . . . . . Schaghticoke NH TC45D cab/loader . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $27,500 . . . . . . . . . . Goshen NH TZ25DA. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $11,900 . . . . . . . . . . Goshen SKID STEER / CONSTRUCTION 72” Sweepster broom. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4,200 . . . . . . . . . Chatham 78” skid steer blower . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 96’ pwr rake . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6,800 . . . . . . . . . Chatham NH LS 180 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $17,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville Cat 236 cab, heat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $19,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville NH L175 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $21,500. . . . . . Schaghticoke NH LS180 cab/heat . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $19,500 . . . . . . . . . . Goshen MOWERS CONDITIONERS Gehl DC 2412 mo-co . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9,500 . . . . . . . . . Chatham NH 1411 mo-co . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Coming In . . . . . . . . . Chatham Kuhn FC 302 mo-co . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville Kuhn FC 313 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $16,500 . . . . . . . . . Chatham HAY AND FORAGE Claas 870 SPF H w/heads . . . . . . . . . . $169,500. . . . . . Schaghticoke NH 256 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1,850 . . . . . . . . Fultonville NH 1465 Moco . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8,950 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 74 rake. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,850 . . . . . . . . Fultonville

Miller Pro rake . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,750 . . . . . . . . Fultonville Miller 1416 merger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $28,500. . . . . . Schaghticoke (2) JD 2 Row Corn HD . . . . . . . . $2,850 / $3,250 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 3960 forage harv., base unit . . . . . . . . . $3,800 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 3970. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville Gehl 860 w/2R 6’ po . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4,950 . . . . . . . . Fultonville NH 166 inverter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,850 . . . . . . . . Fultonville Pronovost wrapper. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $9,500 . . . . . . . . . Chatham Pequea fluffer 81⁄2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville Fahr KH500 tedder. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1,200 . . . . . . . . Fultonville Vicon 4 Star tedder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,200 . . . . . . . . . . Goshen Vicon 423T rotary rake. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,000 . . . . . . . . Fultonville Krone 550 tedder . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,650 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 1217 MoCo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,900 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 640B Pickup Head . . . . . . . . . . . . . Coming In . . . . . . . . Fultonville PLANTING / TILLAGE Frontier RT 1280 Roto Tiller . . . . . . . . . . . $5,500. . . . . . Schaghticoke JD 750 15’ No-till drill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $13,900 . . . . . . . . Fultonville IH 710 4 bottom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,200. . . . . . Schaghticoke JD 1450 4 bottom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 2000 6 bottom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 2500 5 bottom (nice) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 8300 23 x7 drill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,950 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 8300 23 x7 drill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville BALERS Claas 46 RB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 458 R baler silage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $25,000 . . . . . . . . . Chatham Krone 1500 w/knives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $15,000 . . . . . . . . Fultonville NH 326 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8,900. . . . . . Schaghticoke JD 335. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $8,000 . . . . . . . . . Chatham JD 348 w/ 1/4 Turn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $16,900 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 348 w/40 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Coming In . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 446 round baler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $12,500 . . . . . . . . . . Goshen JD 457 silage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $19,000 . . . . . . . . . Chatham JD 567 RB w/Mesh. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $19,800 . . . . . . . . Fultonville NH 316 baler. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4,500 . . . . . . . . . . Goshen Gehl 1470 RB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7,500 . . . . . . . . . Chatham Hesston 560. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $4,500 . . . . . . . . . Chatham Hesston rounder. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,250 . . . . . . . . Fultonville MISCELLANEOUS 300 HUSKER w/243 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $6,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 390 flail mower . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5,500 . . . . . . . . . Chatham JD 920 Flex HD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $12,500 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 6600 combine w/215 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $7,800 . . . . . . . . Fultonville JD 7000 Series 3 pt./PTO, front hitch . . . . $4,950 . . . . . . . . Fultonville Hardi Ranger 2200 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $21,900 . . . . . . . . Fultonville Bush Hog 4 ft. mower . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $850 . . . . . . . . . Chatham 7’ loader blade . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $875 . . . . . . . . Fultonville Woods 1035 backhoe. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,650 . . . . . . . . . Chatham Woods RB72 rear blade . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $425 . . . . . . . . . Chatham Degelman R570 rock picker . . . . . . . . Coming In . . . . . . . . Fultonville

HUDSON RIVER TRACTOR COMPANY LLC FULTONVILLE 518-853-3405

GOSHEN 845-294-2500

CHATHAM 518-392-2505

SCHAGHTICOKE 518-692-2676

CLIFTON PARK 518-877-5059


1-800-836-2888 classified@leepub.com

CUSTOM FORAGE BAGGING

ADVERTISING DEADLINE Wednesday, May 23rd

Serving Western NY & Surrounding Areas

For as little as $8.25 - place a classified ad in

KILN DRIED BULK BEDDING

Call Peg at 1-800-836-2888

Delivered all of NY & New England or you pick up at mill.

Ag Bags

Ag Bags

9’ & 10’ Ag Bag Machines w/Truck Table Reasonable Rates ~ Responsible Service Brett (cell) 585-689-1857 William (cell) 585-689-1816 (Home) 585-495-6571

Bedding

Country Folks or 518-673-0111

or email classified@leepub.com

Bedding

Leray Sealed Storage Announcements

315-783-1856 • • • • • • • • •

Up North Silage Bags (6'x200'-14'x5090') Bunker Covers (25'x100-60'x1000') in stock Silo Shield (oxygen barrier film, 50'x200',50'x100') Special Order Bunker Covers (80'x100'-100'x1000') Sunfilm Bale Wrap (white, black, green) Net Wrap (48"x9840', 51"x9840') Poly Twine (9600', 4000'/440, 20,000) Bale Tubes, Elastic Tubes (4'x150' b/w) Kelly Ryan Baggers (new, used, parts, rental)

~ Serving Agriculture Since 1985 ~

Ag Chemicals

BE WISE Check Our Prices

Announcements NEED BUSINESS CARDS? Full color glossy, heavy stock. 250 ($45.00); 500 ($60.00); 1,000 ($75.00). Call your sales representative or Beth at Lee Publications 518-6730101

CHECK YOUR AD - ADVERTISERS should check their ads on the first week of insertion. Lee Publications, Inc. shall not be liable for typographical, or errors in publication except to the extent of the cost of the first weeks insertion of the ad, and shall also not be liable for damages due to failure to publish an ad. Adjustment for errors is limited to the cost of that portion of the ad wherein the error occurred. Report any errors to 800-836-2888 or 518-673-0111

Atrazine to Ziram

FOR SALE: Kobalt air compressor, 110 or 220 volts; Also, 90 amp flux wire welder. Call 518-993-5897 or 518844-8344

110 Cu. Yd. Trailer Loads

Ground Unground

$125.00 $115.00/Ton $165.00/Ton

e Oak Farm Bedding, LLC W h it Barn Repair

YARD SIGNS: 16x24 full color with stakes, double sided. Stakes included. Only $15.00 each. Call your sales representive or Beth at Lee Publications 518-673-0101. Please allow 7 to 10 business days when ordering.

BARN REPAIR SPECIALISTS: Straightening, leveling, beam replacements. From foundation and sills to steel roofs. HERITAGE STRUCTURAL RENOVATION INC., 1-800-735-2580.

Bedding

Bedding

BEDDING SAND

Announcements

508 White Oak Rd. New Holland, PA 17557 Wendell • (717) 989-4153 Wesley • (717) 587-7192

USA Gypsum Bedding Low On Bedding? Add Gypsum! Stanchions - Free Stalls - Bed Packs

for COW STALLS

# # # # #

• Stones • Gravel • AgLime

ADVERTISERS Get the best response from your advertisements by including the condition, age, price and best calling hours. Also we always recommend insertion for at least 2 times for maximum benefits. Call Peg at 1-800-836-2888 or 518-673-0111

Bale Covers

Load Size

“Specializing in Dairy Bedding”

in Crop Chemicals

Air Compressors

New York Prices Quoted • Call for Prices Elsewhere

Works Great in Both Freestall & Tiestall Barns

From

315-823-1656

PEANUT HULL BEDDING

Mark J. DuPont, Owner Cell 315-796-5084 Home 315-845-8471 Bale Covers

Gypsum Bedding • Cheaper than sawdust shavings or straw. • Reduce mastitis & cell counts. • Use in place of Hydrated Lime. • Improves your soil • Available in bulk or bag.

GRIP X 1 Barn Dry • Barn dry filling your gutters & tanks? Gypsum dissolves. • Use less! More absorbent than lime products.

MAX TECH BALE WRAP

Try Grip X1 Today! www.usagypsum.com • Phone 717-335-0379

20”x6000’ or 30”x5000’ Also Net Wrap 48”x9840’ & 51”x9840’ Now Carrying - Stretch-O-Matic Fully Automatic

Dealers wanted in select areas Also Available at:

Tubular Wrappers - All At Competitive Prices (1) Available in Stock Also Selling - Bale Thrower Racks 8-1/2’x20’, Creek Bank Bale Wagons & Barn Feeder NEW - CREEK BANK 25’ BALE WAGON w/12 Ton Tandem Running Gear & Tires 9000’ Brazilian Green • 20,000’ Poly Twine 9,600’ Poly Twine (same as 7200’Twine) • Others Available

315-823-1656

Central Dairy & Mech. Country View Ag Products Elam Miller Himrod Farm Supply Homestead Nutrition Levi Fisher Martin’s Ag New Bedford Elevator Norm’s Farm Store Robert Rohrer Steve B. Stoltzfus Walnut Hill Feeds

Martinsburg, PA Moravia, NY Ft. Plain, NY Penn Yan, NY New Holland, PA Honey Grove, PA Shippensburg, PA Baltic, OH Watsontown, PA Millmont, PA Lykens, PA Shelby, OH

ph ph ph ph ph ph ph ph ph ph ph ph

814-793-3721 315-374-5457 518-993-3892 315-531-9497 888-336-7878 717-734-3145 717-532-7845 330-897-6492 570-649-6765 570-898-1967 717-365-3804 419-342-2942

Seward Valley 518-234-4052 WOOD SHAVINGS: Compressed bags, kiln dried, sold by tractor trailer loads. SAVE! www.pinebec.ca 1-800-6881187

Beef Cattle ALL NATURAL grass fed Angus/ Baldies feeders 400600lbs. Other ages available. For more information. 845629-1000 GRASS FED Dexter Cattle, Heritage breed, dual purpose, “raise your own beef”. Call for more info. 518-339-6030 or email tlippert@hughes.net MURRAY GREY BEEF CATTLE: 4 yearling heifers, 1 bull. Excellent for cross breeding. 607-849-6630 RED DEVON CATTLE: All grass fed genetics, cows w/new calf at side, breeding bulls, yearlings. 401-423-2441 REG. ANGUS BULL, New Penn Matrix, born 4/1/2011. Weight 4/20/2012, 1005 lbs. 607-836-6394 REG. ANGUS BULLS Embryo Yearlings out of Final Answer, $2,000; show heifer and market steer prospects. 802-3766729, 518-436-1050 REG. HEREFORD BULLS ex. EPD’s-carcass. 717-6429199, 240-447-4600. TROWBRIDGE Reg. Black Angus Bull for sale, proven, gentle, 3 years old, $1,600. 845-758-3332 or 845-8764111 WANTED: American Bison. Washington County, NY. 518854-7700 WANTED: Feeders 250 lbs+ up, year round buyer. Beef for sale, 700 lbs. plus. 518-7961818

Building Materials/Supplies #1-40YR painted steel, galvanized & galvalume, also #2 available w/all trim & accessories. Complete Building Packages. Before you buy call Mohawk Metal Sales, 315-853-ROOF(7663) FACTORY SECONDS Foam Insulation, various thickness. 4x8 sheets of recycled blueboard. Adirondack Metal Sales, 315-429-3627

Page 17 - Section B • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Sell Your Items Through Reader Ads P.O. Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428


Section B - Page 18 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Sell Your Items Through Reader Ads P.O. Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428

1-800-836-2888 classified@leepub.com Building Materials/Supplies

Building Materials/Supplies

Cars, Trucks, Trailers

Cars, Trucks, Trailers

R A R E & FA S T ‘06 Caddy CTS-V

Custom Butchering

Custom Services CUSTOM PLOWING & DISKING. Reasonable rates. Call 315-985-5415

LARRY’S CUSTOM MEATS

MOBILE WELDER/MECHANIC Specializes in fabrication & repair of agricultural equipment. $50/hr. Joe 315-5323186

• USDA Facility • All Processing Available • Smoking Done on Premises

Spr ing Lak e Far ms

3487 St. Hwy. 205 Hartwick, NY 13348 (607) 293-7927

CUSTOM PROCESSING For All Organic & Conventional Animals

Midlakes Metal Sales • Metal Roofing and Siding in Many Colors • Gluelam Poles, Lumber, Trusses

Beef, Pigs Lambs, Goats, Chickens and Turkeys

(Direct Shipments - Wholesale, Retail)

• Polebarn Packages - Any Size up to 80x600

607-869-9483 Buildings For Sale

Buildings For Sale

6.0 liter V-8, 6spd std, all options, black w/tan leather interior, 48,000 miles.

Reduced to $21,000

Buildings For Sale

518-221-4103 3 orr 518-673-0104

FA R M R A I S E D H O M E BUILDER, featuring Bill Lake Homes. Your plans or ours. www.kdhomesny.com Call Dave KD HOMES 315-841-8700 kdhomes@frontiernet.net

Cattle

Collectibles

REG. TEXAS LONGHORNS: Cow/calf pairs, heifers, bulls, exhibition steers. See www.triplemlonghorns.com Tom/Julie (w)607-363-7814, 607-287-2430

WANTED TO BUY: Old Grit newspapers (not the Grit magazine). 518-568-5115

518-673-1073 or 518-774-7288 • Dairy Facilities • Machinery Sheds • Pole Barns • Free Stall Barns • Tie Stall Barns • Garages • Gravity Flow Manure Systems • Horse Barns • Riding Arenas

Construction Equipment For Sale CAT 931B Track Loader. Sullivan Country,NY 845-2927618

Buildings For Sale

Double O Builders LLC

Cow Mats

Cow Mats

Eklund’s Processing Inc

w/3 Bale Accumulator

607-435-8171 Office 607-435-9375 Cell

Clinton Zimmerman

www.eklundprocessing. intuitwebsites.com

Savannah, NY

315-729-1066

GOT MEAT? WILL TRAVEL. Brandt Mobile Slaughtering offers custom processing of beef, pork, sheep, poultry & venison. Call Jordan at 315493-9120

Custom Butchering

Custom Butchering

New York Custom Processing, LLC Rt. 8, Bridgewater, NY

Now Open & Booking Animals

No Lines ~ No Waiting All Cuts Vacuum Packed and Bar-Coded for Tracking and a Complete Printed Inventory of Your Product Call For Appointment

Call today and join our family of satisfied customers!! Business Opportunities

BIG SQUARE BALING

USDA Certified

24 ga, 26 ga, 28 ga, 29 ga, Plus Aluminum

~ Quick Turn-Around, We Ship Anywhere ~ Located in the Heart of the Fingerlakes

Quality Services You Can Count On Custom Farming “Since 1995” 50 Mile Radius

315-204-4089 or 315-204-4084 Business Opportunities

Do You Grow Grapes? Do You Make Wine? CHECK OUT

A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words USDA FACILITY RETAIL STORE OPEN! Hickory Smoking on Premises

ON SPECIAL

Whole Boneless Pork Loins $1.99 Lb. Also 10 Varieties of Link Sausage

www.wineandgrapegrower.com Or Call For a Sample Copy

800-218-5586

It’s easy & economical to add a picture to your ad!

For Information Call

1-800-836-2888


1-800-836-2888 classified@leepub.com Custom Services

Custom Services

B.K. Transfer 5324 County Rd 14 Odessa, NY 14869

“A Farmer Friendly Direct Marketing Service” Barb Kelley Owner/Operator Licensed & Bonded

Toll Free 1.877.208.0123

• Accepting All Types of Livestock

Local 607.703.0052

• Competitive Pricing • Trucking Available

Cell 607.227.5282 Working With You, The Farmer

Monday 9am - 4pm Thursday 9am - 3pm

Dairy Cattle

Dairy Cattle

Dairy Cattle

Dogs

BOSS LIVESTOCK: WANTED Holstein Jersey or Mixed Dairy Herds, immediate payment and removal. Also Dairy Cows For Sale: One or 100your choice, quality replacements. Call Chris Boss 315219-0590(cell), 315-8581651(home).

SCC Over 100,000? Call Us. Only 13 cents/cow. 39 years easy use. Effective, no withholding, results. PH: 800-876-2500, 920-650-1631 www.alphageneticsinc.com

- WANTED -

BORDER COLLIE puppies AKC. B&W and merles. Top bloodlines $350. 607-7328662

Jack Gordon (518) 279-3101

Farm Equipment

COMPLETE JERSEY HERD, 55 milkers, 10 bred heifers, 15 ready to breed, 40 yearlings to calves. 315-323-2462

Herd Expansions

USED COWS WANTED

All Size Heifers

Call 607-722-5728 Anytime

Also Complete Herds Prompt Pay & Removal

AMERICAN RENDERING CO. BINGHAMTON, NY

315-269-6600

1-800-777-2088

WANTED

HEIFERS

300 Lbs. to Springing Free Stall Herds & Tie Stall Herds

OPEN HEIFERS NEEDED Call Us with your information or email

(ALL SIZES)

518-791-2876

www.cattlesourcellc.com

BASKIN LIVESTOCK 585-344-4452 508-965-3370

Dairy Cattle

Dairy Cattle

jeffking@kingsransomfarm.com

ALWAYSS AVAILABLE: Dairy Cattle

Dairy Cattle

25 REGISTERED Jerseys tiestall & freestall trained $1,100 each. 203-263-3955

8 MONTH OLD GUERNSEY Bull, good pedigree. Make offer. 607-263-2409

50 LARGE Holstein Heifers due August thru year-end. Vaccinated, dehorned, AI Holstein bred. 315-298-2009

Whether you’re looking for a few heifers or a large herd, we have a quality selection of healthy, freestall trained cattle. Herds ranging in size from 30-200+ tie or freestall.

Strong demand for youngstock, heifers and herds.

Visit Our New Troy, NY Location! DISTELBURGER R LIVESTOCK K SALES,, INC.

50 WELL GROWN Freestall Heifers due within 60 days. Joe Distelburger 845-3447170.

95 WELL-GROWN freestall trained Holstein heifers due June & July. Had all shots. 315-269-6600

Dairy Cattle

Dairy Cattle CLIP & SAVE

FREE REMOVAL

Down - Disabled - Dead Cattle ~ SERVING ~ • Delaware • Otsego • Schoharie • Chenango • Montgomery

Middletown, NY (845)) 344-71700 buycows@warwick.net

ATTENTION FARMERS Operating 6 Days~Monday thru Saturday

WANTED

Down, Disabled & Fresh Dead Cows for Rendering

PINE TREE RENDERING Route 37, Brier Hill, NY

315-375-8459

ATTENTION FARMERS

WA N T E D

1-855-3CATTLE

Down - Disabled & Fresh Dead Cows

Please call by 8am

For Rendering - Courteous Service

1-855-322-8853

EMPIRE DOGFOOD

WANTED: Registered Red & White yearling Holstein service bull. 315-287-3647

Dairy Equipment

DEAD - DOWN - DISABLED CATTLE

WANTED

Heifers & Herds

315-793-0043

USED DAIRY EQUIPMENT Bulk Milk Coolers, Stainless Steel Storage Tanks, Pipeline Milkers, Milking Parlors, Vacuum Pumps, Used Milking Machine Plus Agitator Motors, Stainless Steel Shells, Weigh Jars, Etc.

CJM Farm Equipment 802-895-4159 DeLAVAL VP84 vacuum pump, $500; Double 16 Surge parlor, Omni take-offs, air cylinders & exit gates, make offer. 315-737-7859 SEVERAL USED Double 6 and 8 parlors w/ATO’s and 3” low lines complete. Several 2”: pipelines, used vacuum pumps, receiver groups, claws, ATO’s, washer boxes, etc. 585-732-1953

BUILDING & REBUILDING OF Self-Unloading FLAT BED and

HAY WAGONS FEEDER WAGONS Also SILAGE CONVEYORS For Estimates Call

518-673-8536 518-461-8933 FOR SALE: 1979 Jantz combine/sprayer trailer. Best offer. 518-537-6509 FOR SALE: 65 Norbo calf pen gates, $25.00 each. Call 315376-3215. JD 337 Square Baler with kicker. Excellent condition. Kept under cover. Used s p a r i n g l y. $10,000. E:dresserhillfarm@aol.com T:508-765-3444

Westfalia/Surge double 6 milk parlor ato, 3”lowline, 2” washline, 2000 gal. Surge milk tank. 860-465-7366

McCORMICK BIG 6 horse drawn sickle bar mower, in barn since 1955, all original, extra parts, works great, will demo, delivery available, $400; NH 461 haybine, works great, field ready, $750. 607829-6817

Farm Equipment

Farm Equipment

THINK SPRING! IH & WHITE PLOWS & PARTS

JD 4050 MFD PS . . . . . . . . .$25,500 CIH 9170 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$32,500 CIH 5140 MFD NICE . . . . . . .$26,500 CIH 4366 NICE . . . . . . . . . . .$10,500 IH 3588 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10,250 IH 1086 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$11,250 IH 1066 CAB . . . . . . . . . . . . .$10,750 IH 1066 MFD . . . . . . . . . . . . .$12,500 IH 1066 W/LDR . . . . . . . . . . .$10,500 IH 1066 FENDER & NEW TA .$10,900 IH 966 FENDER . . . . . . . . . . .$8,250 IH 856 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$8,250 IH 806 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$6,900 IH 656 WEAK HYDRO . . . . . .$3,500 IH 424 W/LDR . . . . . . . . . . . . .$3,500 FD 4100 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$6,500 BOBCAT CT225 W/LDR NEW $14,900 JD 9510 4WD . . . . . . . . . . . .$69,900

JD 9510 2WD . . . . . . . . . . . .$53,000 JD FLEX HEADS . . . . . . . . . . .CALL JD CORN HEADS . . . . . . . . . .CALL KILLBROS 350 GRAVITY BOX NICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2,750 CORN PLANTERS . . . . . . . . . .CALL ELWOOD 4WD UNIT . . . . . . . .$5,500 IH & WHITE PLOWS 4X-10X . .CALL FRONT END LOADERS NEW & USED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CALL CASE 8430 ROUND BALER . .$5,000 1ST CHOICE GS520-4 TEDDER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$4,250 ROCK PICKER . . . . . . . . . . . . .CALL CHISEL PLOWS 9-17 SHANK .CALL 33FT AL DUMP TRAILER . . . .CALL LOTS OF DUALS . . . . . . . . . . .CALL IH, JD, FD TRACTOR WEIGHTS .CALL

Alternative Parts Source Inc. Chittenango, NY •

315-687-0074

Page 19 - Section B • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Sell Your Items Through Reader Ads P.O. Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428


Section B - Page 20 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Sell Your Items Through Reader Ads P.O. Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428

1-800-836-2888 classified@leepub.com Farm Equipment

Farm Machinery For Sale

RICHARDTON 1400 dump wagon, no roof, $4,000. 585746-5050

Farm Equipment

L

Farm Equipment

PACK YOUR SILAGE TIGHT

Now with Changeable Hookups

MARTIN’S MACHINING & WELDING 717-892-2717 Concrete Weights setup for quick hitch & 3pt CAT. 2, 3, 3N, 4’ & 4N, 3500 lb, 5000 lb, 6000 lb, 7000 lb & 8000 lb.

SPRING

B A R GA I N S !!

2008 Agco Hesston 7433 3x3 square baler, like new condition, preservative kit, only 5000 total blades since new! . . . . . . . . . . . . .$65,000 ‘08 MF 3635 4WD w/cab & Ldr, LH reverser, 78HP, 274 hrs! $35,000 IH 966 Black Stripe w/ROPS & canopy, 6000 hrs., nice 18.4-38, good original paint, a hard combination to find! . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$12,750 Case IH 800 9x flex frame reset plows, good unit . . . . . . . . . . .$9,500 IH 4166 4WD, 3100 orig. hrs., 3pt., straight as an arrow! . . . . .$9,500 DMI 7 shank disk ripper, pull type, Very Good . . . . . . . . . . . . .$12,500 Hesston 765 5x6 round baler w/netwrap, Like New . . . . . . . .$12,500 Hesston 730 round baler, 500 lb. bale, Brand New . . . . . . . . . .$8,900 White 273 23 ft. rockflex discs, very low acres, big axle . . . . . .$15,000 14 sets of IH, White, JD spring reset plows 4-x all VG to EX . . . .Call Claas RC250 Rotocut 4x4 silage baler w/net wrap, good condition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$13,750 IH 1586 w/cab, new tires, 1981, 4200 hrs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$14,900 Case IH 1620 combine w/15’ grain head, very good . . . . . . . .$18,000 IH 5488 4WD w/duals, late S/N, w/inline pump, good rubber, cheap power! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$19,500 Landini Vision 105 2WD w/cab & Tiger boom mower, 2400 hrs, 99HP, nice! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$25,000 Gehl 2580 Silage Special Round Baler w/Wide Pickup, Very Good Condition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$8,750 NH TB120 4WD, ROPS, 115HP, 200 Hours, 2008, Excellent Condition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$31,500 (4) NH 315-316-320 Balers w/Throwers . . . . . . . . . . . . .$4,000-$7,500

K

17 WAGONS IN STOCK. 21 GEARS IN STOCK. 7 ROUND BALE CARRIERS IN STOCK. Stoltzfus hay wagon 9’x18’ $3,600; 9’x20’ $3,800; w/8 ton WIDE TRACK gears. ALL STEEL w/PT.Floor E-Z Trail wagon 9’x18’ $3,700. 8 ton 890W E-Z Trail WIDE TRACK gear. 12 bale 31’ long low profile round bale carrier, $3,500. Round bale, headlock & slant bar feeder wagons. 3PT.H. round bale wrapper, $9,400. Round bale grabber w/QA included, $2,000. BIG DISCOUNTS FOR TWO OR MORE ITEMS! 518-885-5106

Farm Machinery For Sale

Farm Machinery For Sale 2 VANDALE surface drive unloader, one new & one used. 315-404-6721, 315495-6506. (2) 2005 JD 9580 sidehill; (2) 9550 SH, 2-9510 4x4 SH; (2) 9510 4x4 SH; (2) 9500 SH plus many Levelands. 1 year motor & trans. warranty. Zeisloft Farm Eq. 800-9193322 2-16’ DION self-unloading wagons w/roof 3 beaters & tandem running gears $1,500 each or $2,500 both. 1-16’ Dion self-unloading wagon w/2 beaters, $800. 518-4410289

Farm Machinery For Sale

NH 648 Baler, Net Wrap, Excellent . . . . . . . . . . .$13,500.00 JD 2950 Belting Wheels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$12,500.00 Case 1840 SS Loader, 3400 Hrs. . . . . . . . . . . . . .$6,800.00 Kukar 500 gal. Sprayer, Tandems . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,800.00 IH 480 Disk, 14’ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2,200.00 NH 824 Corn Head . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$2,400.00 NI Single Axle Apron Spreader . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,400.00 Miller Pro Spinner Rake, Tandem . . . . . . . . . . . . .$3,800.00 2004 Case IH DX101 Disc bine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$7,800.00 2010 Kuhn Double Spinner Rake, Excellent . . . .$17,500.00 Dari-Kool Plate Cooler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,200.00 6+4 Row S-Tine Cultivators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$600-$900 Agway Breeding Wheel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$200.00

Free Trucking to Penn Yan Closed Sundays 518-529-7470

MARTIN’S

You can’t afford downtime! Use Dual-Cut Rolls For Peak Performance

Y QUALIT TEED N A R A GU

Farm Machinery For Sale

2004 CASE 580 Super M backhoe w/grapple bucket, 2200 original hours, $30,000; 1998 Manac 53’ long drop deck trailer, new tires, new floor w/winch, $10,000. 518358-2419

EXCELLENT CONDITION John Deere 3955 forage harvester, 2 row corn head & grass head, $17,000; Knight 3030 Reel Auggie mixer wagon, $2,900. 978-544-6105

2005 JOHN DEERE HX14 rotary cutter, excellent condition. Ithaca, NY 607-273-8070 2006 PEQUEA 4000 turbo tedder, excellent condition, $4,500 OBO; New Holland 467 haybine, works good, $1,000. 607-263-2409 3100 REESE MOWER, 10’3” cut. Call 315-595-2537 (4) USED BATWING Mowers: JD, Bush Hog, Woods. Zeisloft Farm Eq. 800-919-3322 4x4 JOHN DEERE round baler, model 446, excellent condition, $8,000. 315-7830595 5 Ton Fertilizer spreader, $2,500; JD axle mount duals plus hubs, 20.8x38, $1,250. 607-279-6232 days, 607-5334850 nights. 510 INTERNATIONAL 18 hole grain drill, no seeder, field ready. 315-826-3816 59 JOHN DEERE 630, narrow front, no 3pt., new tires, runs excellent, $5,800/OBO. 607263-2409 800 INT. 12 row corn planter, $8,000 OBO; F15B Amco disk, $6,500; Bodco tri-axle spreader, 7200 gallons, $20,000; 65 high pressure sodium lights, 110 or 220, $100 each or make offer; mow elevators. 315-737-7859 ALL STEEL 8’x18’ kicker rack wagon; NI 3626, 260B spreader; NI 323, 1-row corn picker; MW gravity wagon; 16’ steel gates. 315-219-9090 AUTO BALE WAGON, New Holland 1034, 105 bale capacity, very good condition, $6,000. 315-783-0595

MACFADDEN & SONS INC. 1457 Hwy. Rt. 20 • Sharon Springs, NY 13459

518-284-2090 • email: info@macfaddens.com

www.macfaddens.com Lots More On Our Website!

Farm Machinery For Sale

Questions? Call us. PH#

BEST BUY ON ROUND BALE GRABBERS! $1,250 until 5/31/12. Afterwards $1,500. MARTIN’S WELDING 315-531-8672

Farm Machinery For Sale

Farm Machinery For Sale

BOBCAT 642 Skid Steer $4,800. Call 315-893-7867

$1,000 OFF Most All Corn Heads & Grass Heads. Huge Selection. Zeisloftequip.com 800-919-3322

1968 JD 3020 diesel w/new engine & good tires, $8,500. JD 4030, 4 post, $12,500. JD 4040, 4 post, $13,500. All tractors ready to work. 607334-5918

BUSH HOG chisel plow, 8’, very good condition, $1,300. 315-896-6144

1256 IH turbo w/cab, 18.4x38 radials, $8,500; IH 720 5 bottom plows, $2,800; Hesston 7155 chopper, $3,000; 1981 Chevy C60 w/silage dump body, $3,500; old JD rake, $500; Int. 400 gas tractor, $1,800; Harsh 303 mixer, $5,500; Harsh 290 mixer wagon, for parts, $1,000. 607286-9362

1978 JOHN DEERE 8430, 4WD, 3Pt., quick hitch, PTO, 3 hydraulic outlets, factory axle duals, good condition. Ithaca,NY 607-273-8070 1987 LN8000 10 wheel dump truck, 17’ body, $9,400. 978544-6105 2 BOBCAT’s, early 70’s, 600 model, need restoration, $3,000 for both. 518-577-6916 or greycattle@gmail.com

Gifford’s TEMCO Replacement Parts & Supplies For Agricultural Equipment All Types of Repairs and Welding 136 Kardas Road • Valley Falls, NY 12185

(518) 753-6207

Hours: M-F 8-5, Sat: 8-3

CASE IH Zone Tiller (DMI), 6 rows, very good condition, done less than 100 acres, $13,500. 315-813-1366 DISCBINE: CAT Challenger PTD12, 12’ hydroswing, roller conditioner, 1000 rpm, new condition, same as Massey Ferguson & Hesston. 585392-7692, 585-424-0795 E-Z TRAIL WAGONS, all in excellent condition, 2 on JD gear, $2,500 each; 3 on Kory gear, $3,000 each. 315-7830595

FORD 3000 Diesel (Call for details)

VanDusen Machinery 607-529-3294 570-888-5370 GEHL 970 Forage Wagon, 3 beater, roof, 12 T tandem, V.G., $7,000. 518-284-2476 GEHL 970 self-unloading wagon, 3 beater tandem running gear, very good shape, $4,000. 607-648-9533

Getting Out Of Farming Case IH DCX 101 discbine, like new condition, around 600 acres through machine . . . . . . . $14,500 John Deere 960 field cultivator, 24’ wide w/7” JD perma lock sweep . . . . . . . . . $9,000 20’ Round Bale Wagon w/IH running gear $3,500

585-356-2634 HYDRAULIC Stretch Round Bale Tuber, $2,500. Call 607753-7678 evenings or 607423-0816 & leave message IH 800 8 thru 12 bottom plows. White 449 8 bottom trailer. White 588, 598, 549, 4,5 & 6 bottoms & many more. Gravity bins 200 to 400 bushel, 10 to choose from. New Holland LS180 skid loader. International Glencoe & Bush Hog disc chisel plows, 9 tooth, good condition. 315536-3807 INT. PUMA 195 CVT trasmission, 210 hours, Michelin tires, loaded, owner downsizing, $135,000. 518872-1386 JD 1020 TRACTOR, 1500 hours, $5,950; NH 277 baler with 54B thrower, new paint, excellent condition $3,500. NH 27 forage blower, new tires, new band and paint, excellent condition $1,350. 12’ AC 2300 finishing disc, good for black dirt, $2,950; 9 shank Glencoe chisel plow, $2,950; NH 353 grinder mixer, $3,850. 845-496-4907 JD 1217 haybine, $4,500; International 430 baler w/kicker, $3,500; NH 256, $2,600. 518-842-4552 JD 3940 forage harvester, 2 row corn head, haylage head, direct cut mower bar unit head, good condition, $5,100. Orange County,NY, 845-2398102 JD 5303 2WD, 265 hours, like new, $15,900; NH 355 grainder/mixer, very good condition, $5,000. 315-436-6071


1-800-836-2888 classified@leepub.com Farm Machinery For Sale

Farm Machinery For Sale

JD 4055 mfwd cab,powershift, $25,000.00; JD 7200 4row corn planter, monitor, dry fert. $4,500.00.860-4657366

JD 450B Bulldozer, $5,000; JD offset harrow, $1,000; 23pt. hitch, 2 row cultivators; JD 6310, 4x4, 640 loader, $26,000; JD 6405, 2WD w/loader, low hours, $26,000; IH 986, 2WD, $8,500; JD 5320, 2WD, $13,000; NH 492 haybine; NH 575 baler w/thrower, $11,000; NH 311 baler; NH 256-258 rakes; JD 660 rake; New Pequea 11’ rotary rake; New 17’ Morra hydraulic fold tedder; New & Used metal kicker wagons; NH 590 tandem axle spreader, $8,500; JD & IH front and rear wheel weights. COMING IN: NH 315 w/thrower. Augur Farms, 203-530-4953

JD 4450 MFWD with 7350 hrs, power shift 3 SCV, 20.8 R38 and 14.9R28 fronts (all like new), clamp on duals with 30% tread remaining, Heavy cast rear wheels, lift assist on 3 pt hitch, and dual PTO’s. Very clean tractor from grain operation. $41,000. Call 914474-0908. JD 4755, MFWD, 180hp, duals, very nice. Also JD 4850 w/duals, JD 4650 w/duals, AC cold, power shift, 3.5% fin. Zeisloft Eq. 800-919-3322

Call 800-836-2888 to place your classified ad.

JD 7000 4RN Dry Soybean cups, monitor, bug boxes, excellent condition, very little use $4,500. 315-749-4431

JD 946 MoCo, $14,900; H&S M9 hay merger, brand new, $17,500. 315-436-6071

Farm Machinery For Sale

Farm Machinery For Sale

JD 7210 cab, 4WD, power quad trans. . . .$24,800 JD 7405 ROPS, 4WD, power quad trans .$19,500 JD 5510 ROPS 4WD, pwr reverser w/541 ldr. $17,500 JD 2855N 4WD, hi-lo, on steel or rubber . .$9,800 JD 5210 ROPS, 2WD, 4300 hrs, on steel or rubber Call Snap-on Duals 18.4x38 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$1,000 Penn Yan, NY

315-536-8919

Farm Machinery For Sale

Farm Machinery For Sale

Farm Machinery For Sale

JD 7800 2 WD with 5200 hrs., Power Quad, 18.4R42 matched axle duals, 3 SCV’s, and right hand door. Very clean tractor from grain operation. $52,000. Call 914-474-0908

JOHN DEERE TRACTOR PARTS

MACK ENTERPRISES

JD 825 cultivato,r 6x30, Stine, rolling shields, $1,050; White 378 cultivator, 6x30 Stine, shields, $950; JD 8300 drill 23x7, double disc, seeder, packer wheels, $3,800; Case IH 5100 soybean special, 21x7, seeder, double disc, press wheels, $5,100; 2 hardi sprayers, 45’, foamers, $5,400 & 4,000. Mike Franklin 607749-3424 JD BALERS with Ejectors: 347, $5,800; 338, $7,900; 338, $9250; 348, $14,900; 40’ bale elevator, $3,400; 9x24 wagon, tandem gear, $3,800; Hesston 10 wheel rake, $3,150. New Tedders, Wrappers, Crimpers. JD Canopy’s. JD Baler Parts. 585-526-6705 JD blower belt, JDE62661 for 3960, 3970, 3975 chopper, $70; Steel wheels off McCormick 22-26, also fits 15-30, W-40 & WD-40, $450. 315-393-0378

FOR SALE IN NEW YORK JD 100 Big Square Baler, Real Nice Condition, Right In Season!!

$22,800

(585) 261-8844 - Jimmie

Combine Salvage

K & J Surplus 60 Dublin Rd. Lansing, NY 14882 (607) 533-4850 • (607) 279-6232

TRANSPORT HAY ELEVATORS 1 1/2” square tubing, 14 gauge 24’ - 48’ Includes Motor & Wheels Other sizes available Call for prices.

We Custom Build Wagon Gears - 8, 10, 12, 14, 16 Ton

MILO MFG. • PENN YAN, NY

315-536-8578

For Sale

Bulk Feed Body with Auger Unload System

$4000 OBO 518-537-6509

JOHN DEERE 2500 518 plow, excellent, $3,000. 315-8966144 JOHN DEERE 3010 DIESEL, w/front-end loader, new tires, new batteries, runs well, $7,300. 315-697-3241 JOHN DEERE 3020 tractor, recent engine overhaul, $6,200; Gehl 1475 silage baler, field ready, $6,000. 315684-3228 JOHN DEERE 350 dozer, new rollers, 6-way blade. $5,500 OBO. 315-822-6929 JOHN DEERE 3970 chopper, hay head, 2 row snapper head, ready to go to work. 518-744-1703 JOHN DEERE 40 kicker, $1,500; 2-16x8 kicker wagons w/running gears. 607-2863391 JOHN DEERE 4955, excellent condition, 4 wheel dr., very low hours, $49,500. 413-5305369 JOHN DEERE 930 discbine, newer model, works well, needs yoke for PTO shaft, asking $6,000. or best offer. 315-717-2587

Many New Parts in Stock RECENT MODELS IN FOR SALVAGE:

•6215 burnt •3020 •4240 •L4020 • E3020 syncro • E3020 PS • 4030 • 3010 • 2955 4WD • 2840 • 2630 • 2550 4WD • 830 We Rebuild Your Hydraulic Pumps, SCV Valves, Steering Valves, etc. All Units are Bench Tested Many Used Tractor Parts Already Dismantled CALL FOR YOUR NEEDS

NELSON PARTS Penn Yan, NY

800-730-4020 315-536-3737 KELLY RYAN BAGGERS: 1999 9’ w/200’ cables, hyd. rewind, bag lift; 1998 8’ w/150’ cables, new tine caps; 1998 7’ custom w/150’ cables. Leray Sealed Storage, 315-7831856

Kennedy Tractor of Williamstown, NY 315-964-1161 “We Deliver” Bush Hog Legend 2610L Batwing 10’ Mower Excellent shape, 540 PTO; Landpride RCR 2510 10’ Mower 540 PTO, super clean demo $5,650; Schulte 6’ Rotary Mower heavy duty gearbox $1,275; 3Pt SB Mowers: NH 451, Int 100 & others; 4x4 Landini Globus 75-80HP Dsl w/Full Glass Cab w/AC & heat, dual outlets, clean! $15,900; NH 4835 6065HP Dsl, w/sd mt. sicklebar mower, canopy, 2000 hrs, very clean; Ford 540B Industrial w/Sd Mt. SB Mower Dsl, low hrs; 4x4 Kubota B1750 w/Ldr & Belly Mower 20HP Dsl, low hrs $7,500; Oliver 550 (All Original) PS live PTO, (1) owner w/5’ Woods rotary mower $4,500 Pkg; ‘04 2x4 JD 5520 w/JD Ldr & Deluxe Cab w/Heat/Stereo & AC 75-80HP Dsl, only 2500 hrs, 12 spd power reverser, dual outlets, “a super clean tractor” $24,500; 4x4 Kubota 85-90HP Dsl dual outlets, new tires, lots of weights, full factory cab w/AC & heat $11,900; 25 Bu Ground Drive Spreader (New) all galvanized $1,875; PTO Generators; 10’ Brillion Seeder $2,750; Vermeer Trencher w/front blade, low hrs, Dsl $3,950; 6’ used finish mower, 3pt, very good $1,150; MF 85 62HP, gas, live PTO, PS, 3pt $2,950; JD 440 Ldr $3,950; Gehl 970 SU Wagon; (1), (2) & (3) Btm plows; Disk 6 1/2’, 8’, 10’ & Lots More

Randolph, NY

(716) 358-3006 • (716) 358-3768 Ship UPS Daily www.w2r.com/mackenterprises/

NEW HOLLAND 315 BALER w/kicker; International 16” 3 bottom plows, auto reset; hay or silo elevator, 32’; New Holland 25 blower; 16’ wooden kicker wagon; New Holland forage box, no running gear; Melcan rock picker; Chevy 350 motor. 607-363-7128 NEW HOLLAND 329 manure spreader, very good cond., $2,200 OBO; New Idea side delivery rake, on steel, $500 OBO; running gear, new tires, 6 hole 16” rim, front-end tight, $500. WANTED: 13.6-38 Power Mark long-bar shortbar, at least 50% tread. 315717-6922 NEW HOLLAND 790 Chopper, 890W Hay Head, 824 Corn Head, 1,000 RPM, electric controls $4,500. 845-3615209 845-361-5239 NEW SKID LOADER ATTACHMENTS: Buckets, Manure Forks, Pallet Forks, Bale Spears, Round Bale Grabbers, Feed Pushers, Adapter Plates, Skid Steer Hitch, 3pt. Bale Spears. Tire Replacements for tire scrapers. Truck Freight Available. MARTIN’S WELDING, 315531-8672 NEW STEEL BALE WAGONS, all steel, 2”pressure treated floor, 9x8x18 w/wide track 8T gear, $3,950. 10 bale round bale carrier, 6x12”box beam, $3,299. Feeder wagons all sizes. 570-446-3170

We are taking orders for shredded 2012 CS from those with and those wanting their CS harvested

PleasantCreekHay.com Compare our Claas Rotocut Baler, Triple Mowers, Roll Over Vrn’land Plows, Front PTO Tractors, Speed Options and Prices.

Smiley’s Equipment JD dozer, 6 way blade, $9,000; 4x4 tractor with cab, $9,000; JD 4x4 ldr., $7,500; Ford 4x4 compact, $4,500; Hitachi excavator, $10,500; MM excavator, $12,500; Case backhoe, $5,000; MF backhoe, $3,000; Case 1150C dozer, 6 way, $18,500; scraper blades, $200 up; hay wagons, $850 up; Int. dump, $5,500; skid steer, $7,000; landscape trailers, $850; new 5 ton trailer, $5,000; JD discbine, $7,000; Kuhn discbine, $3,500; NH hay rake, $1,500; tedder, $850; NH tedder, $1,250; JD hay rake, $1,200; like new JD round baler, all the bells & whistles, $17,500; Hesston round baler, $2,500; NH round baler, $2,000; JD square baler, $1,500; NH square baler, $1,250; York rake, $400; new rototillers, $1,650; post diggers & pounders, $350 up; 2-3-4 bottom land plows, $200 up; harrows, $150 up; 3pt. and tow behind disc’s, $450 up; brush hogs, $300 up; finishing mowers, 3pt., $350 up; corn planters, $500 up; Brillion seeder, $1,500.

22 Acres of Equipment Buying Equipment Dead or Alive

518-634-2310 TANCO 580S individual bale wrapper; Steiner 21’ wooden silage conveyor. 315-7784467, 315-482-3055 TRUCKLOAD of JD 750 no-till drills, just arrived, $13,500. Zeisloft Eq., Bloomsburg, PA 800-919-3322

KUHN TEDDER 6-Star hydraulic fold, GF7802, 1-year old, excellent condition, $11,000. 315-794-1969

LOADER TRACTORS: Case IH 5230 MFWD w/loader; Ford 6710 MFWD w/loader reduced to $21,900; JD 7200 w/loader, open. zeisloftequip.com

Maine To N Carolina

New & Used Tractor & Logging Equipment Parts

KICKER BALE WAGONS $2,400; 8 & 10 Ton Running Gears, $1,450-$1,550; 20’ Bale Carriers, $2,850. Horst’s Welding, 585-526-5954

KUHN-KNIGHT 8110 Slinger Spreader, single axle, 540 PTO, super clean, well maintained shape. For details call 315-245-4361 lve. msg, all calls returned.

Farm Machinery For Sale

NH 316 Baler, w/pan thrower, $2,500; JD 224 wire baler, $1,200; NH 56 rake, $950. 607-279-6232 days, 607-5334850 nights. PEOPLE WILL PAY TO HUNT on your land. Earn top $$$ for hunting rights. Call for a FREE quote and info packet toll free 1-866-309-1507 or request at www.BaseCampLeasing.com

WANTED

Massey Ferguson 165, 175, 265, 275, 285 Any Condition

814-793-4293 WHITE 5100 no-till planter. 518-436-1050

corn

Page 21 - Section B • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Sell Your Items Through Reader Ads P.O. Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428


Section B - Page 22 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Sell Your Items Through Reader Ads P.O. Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428

1-800-836-2888 classified@leepub.com Farm Machinery Wanted

WANTED

Feed, Seed, Grain & Corn

WANTED GROUND DRIVEN hay tedder, also 3pt hitch backhoe attachment. 315684-3654

Custom Roasting and Cooling Your Soybeans,Corn, etc. At Your Farm or Mill Serving All of NY State

WANTED TO BUY: Used farm & construction equipment, all makes and models, running or not, 1980’s & newer. Will 315777-2357

WEILER’S GRAIN ROASTING

John Deere 5460, 5820, or 5830 Choppers

814-793-4293

Farm Supplies CHICKEN WIRE Long Lasting Black PVC Coated 1” Hex 20G, GBW and GAW cage wire for all your agricultural needs. Call KB Mfg 518-9934837 for sizes & pricing.

(315) 549-7081 FOR SALE: 1500 tons corn silage, 1500 tons haylage. All in Ag Bags. 607-565-9677

CORN & GRASS SEED, Seedway Conventional, $168; Garst RR, $175; Sudax, $47$49. Silage, inoculants & preservatives. 315-855-4353

Green Haven Open Pollinated Corn Seed ***Silage, Grain, Wild Life Plots ***Available Certified Organic ***Early Varieties ***Free Catalog ***Green Haven Open Pollinated Seed Group

LOCUST POSTS, POLES, Split Rails, 6x6’s, 4x4’s. Other hardwood & softwood boards and planks, custom cut. Also lots, land cleared, woodlots wanted. 518-883-8284

HI-MAG LIME

Delivered by the Truckload Also BEDDING

SAND

for Horse Arenas or Cattle FOB McConnellsville, NY

• Livestock Feeds • Ration Balancing • SeedWay Seeds • Crystalyx Products

Delivery Available

888-339-2900 ext. 10

Buying Corn, Feed Wheat & Oats

(315)) 549-82266 Romulus, NY 14541

Fertilizer & Fertilizer Spreading

AG LIME

Fencing

HI-MAG

ELECTRIC FENCE CONTROLLER REPAIRS. Factory authorized warranty center for Zereba, ParMak, many others. No charge for estimates. Quick turn-around time. Send or bring to our shop, any make, any model. 518-284-2180

Fertilizer & Fertilizer Spreading

SCHAFER LIQUID FISH FERTILIZER, 100% Organic OMRI listed. For pricing call WIGFIELD FARMS, Clyde, NY 14433, 315-727-3910

Fertilizer & Fertilizer Spreading

Spreader & Spreading Available

Call T J Allen 315-845-6777 315-868-2438 Fencing

E FARM FENCE & SUPPLY EMPIR “Miles of Quality Start Here”

• High Tensile • Split Rail • Misc. Types of Fence • Energizers • Fencing Supplies

GENERATORS GENERAC SERVICE CENTER PTO Units in Stock 25 & 40 KW. Portable & Standby •Shipping Available•

GREENVILLE SAW SERVICE, INC. 518-966-4346 FAX 518-966-4647 Call 800-836-2888 to place your classified ad.

Fertilizer & Fertilizer Spreading

ROY’S

3 0 To n M i n i mu m Large Quantity Discount ALSO BEDDING SAND & CHICKEN MANURE

Generators

SPREADING SERVICE LLC New Lime Hi - Cal

Spreader By Float

cell#

607-434-1024

Roy Van Warner

607-432-7476 Financial Services

Financial Services

For Rent or Lease

Grain Handling Equip. Bins & Dryers

607-566-9253

www.openpollinated.com

Feed, Seed, Grain & Corn

Feed, Seed, Grain & Corn

Grain Roasting On Your Far m

Soybeans • Corn Barley • Wheat

Waterville Grain Roasting Oneida Co., NY

YOUR SOURCE FOR:

Fencing

Fencing

Feed, Seed, Grain & Corn BALEAGE SECOND CUT grass mix. Pat Oare Johnstown, NY. 518-361-4333

Feed, Seed, Grain & Corn

315-534-8948

4097 Rt. 34B, Union Springs, NY 13160 RUSTIN WILSON

(315) 364-5240

E & A FENCE

771 State Highway 163, Fort Plain, NY

Bringing Security For Them Peace of Mind For You ~ Sales & Installation of All Types of Fence ~ Visit Our Retail Location by Appointment

518-993-5177

Quality First - Always

ROASTED CORN & SOYBEANS FOR SALE

TRY ROASTED CORN AND SOYBEANS AND DISCOVER THE DIFFERENCE!

Higher Digestibility - Research studies show that roasted corn is more digestible than raw corn. • Energy levels increased by 30% with roasted corn. • Roasted corn has gelatinized starch just like steam flaked corn but is less costly to produce. • If your fecal starch levels are above 2.3% roasted corn will increase profitability. • Most dairymen are feeding 10% less roasted corn than raw dry corn. • Some dairymen are seeing an increase in BF. Purer Feed - Flame roasting can effectively remove mold spores and reduce toxin levels that are harmful to livestock, swine and poultry. • Better herd health.

Pricing & Availability on Request

518-537-6509

DAVE KIMBALL - CUSTOM GRAIN ROASTING

POST T POUNDER R FOR R RENT

All your fencing supplies at one location Treated posts of all sizes, high tensile accessories, energizers, gates and much more.

2033 Brothertown Rd., Deansboro, NY 13328 Phone: (315) 841-4910 Fax: (315) 841-4649 Hrs.: Mon.-Fri. 8am-4pm; Sat. 8-Noon www.williamsfarmfence.com Supplier of Organic Feed and Fertilizer

FREESTALL BARN FOR RENT in Norwich,NY. Will hold up to 100 head. Rent to include daily feeding. Best situated for dairy heifers or feeders. 607-336-3221 LARGE 500 COW freestall barn with 16 unit milking parlor 4,000 gallon refrigerator tank. Barn is also suitable for heifer rearing or beef production. (13339) 516-429-6409

Grain Handling Equip. Bins & Dryers

5,000 BUSHEL bin 21’ diameter, 18” fan, easy sweep aeration floor, $5,500; Brock 3,500 bushel, 21’ diameter, 16” fan, easy sweep, $4,500; 18’ Grain Bin, 4,000 bushel w/drying floor, $3,500. Dismantled. 570-966-9893 NEW AND USED Grain Dryers: GT, MC, GSI. Call anytime toll free 1-877-422-0927

Grain Handling Equip. Bins & Dryers

A N MARTIN GRAIN SYSTEMS 315-923-9118

Clyde, NY

WE SPECIALIZE IN • Sukup Grain Bins • Dryers • Grain Legs • Custom Mill Righting

• Hopper Feed Bins • Transport Augers • Crane Service • Dryer Service


1-800-836-2888 classified@leepub.com Grain Handling Equip. Bins & Dryers

Grain Handling Equip. Bins & Dryers

Hay - Straw For Sale

Premium Western Alfalfa Bright Clean WHEAT STRAW All Hay Tested

Reasonable Prices - Delivered

Large Square Bales Semi Load or Half Load

800-747-3811 845-901-1892 adenbrook.com

Greenhouse Equipment

Hay - Straw For Sale

GREENHOUSE BARGAINS: 20’ bows $75.00 each, including enough perlin, ground stakes, perlin clips, wiggle wire & channel, spring clips to fasten plastic. Or we will build complete on your property. 10% discount on first 5 orders. 607-869-5581 between 7:30am-8:30am

GOOD QUALITY HAY & STRAW. Large Square Bales. Will load or ship direct. 802849-6266

Hay - Straw For Sale

STANTON BROTHERS 10 Ton Minimum Limited Availability

518-768-2344 BALEAGE, 250 Bales; Dry Hay, 50 round bales. Albany,NY area. James Frueh, 518-436-1050

FARMERS We are Looking for Farms Who are Using and Buying Dry Hay We are producing a large quantity of dry round bales. Delivery Available by the Semi Trailer Load

CF FARM LLC

HAY SAVER Plus Hay Preservative, 68% Propionic Acid. 87¢ per pound. Product available in Waterloo, NY. Delivery Available. Conoy Ag, Elizabethtown, PA 717-367-5078

REDUCED PRICES-NEED ROOM FOR NEW CROP 3x3x8 Squares Bales; 4x5 Round Bales Really Early Cut & Timothy Hay. All Hay Stored Inside on Pallets. Outside Round Bales, Good for Beef Cattle Picked Up or Delivered, Any Amount, Large Quantity

H AY Wet and Dry

Hay - Straw Wanted

Farmer to Farmer

Round & Square Bales

1st, 2nd & 3rd Cut Hay

ALWAYS WANTED

STRAW

TIMOTHY MIXED HAY ALFALFA MIXED HAY

Also Square Bales of

CALL STEVE

1st, 2nd & 3rd Cuttings Also Small Square Mulch

519-482-5365

Call 4M FARMS 315-684-7570 • 315-559-3378

LARGE SQUARE BALES, processed first & second cut. Call 802-864-5382 or 802578-7352

HAY & STRAW

ONTARIO DAIRY HAY & STRAW

For Sale All Types Delivered Cell 717-222-2304 Growers, Buyers & Sellers

Quality Alfalfa Grass Mix Lg. Sq. - 1st, 2nd & 3rd Cut

315-497-0095 FOR SALE: Horse quality first & second cut grassy hay, big & small square bales. Delivered.-315-264-3900

Call for Competitive Prices

Low Potassium for Dry Cows

NEEB AGRI-PRODUCTS

Giorgi Mushroom Company, located in Berks County now buying the following materials:

HAY CORN STOVER STRAW

519-529-1141

All bale sizes and types, including ROUND BALES, accepted.

Hay - Straw For Sale

Spot Buys or Long Term Contracts Small or Large Quantities Quick Payment

The Best Method For Covering Hay Stacks

2012 Contracts Now Available Contacts: Allen Hollenbach 610-929-5753 ahollenbach@giorgimush.com

PROTECT YOUR FEED FROM THE WEATHER Save money in prevented feed losses & up to 5 seasons of use Large Inventory • Next Day Shipping

ROCKY MEADOW FARM

Kevin Eickhoff 610-926-8811 ext. 5216 keickhoff@giorgimush.com Michele Fisher 610-926-8811 ext. 5189 mfisher@giorgimush.com

810 South 14th Ave., Lebanon, PA 17042

1-866-887-2727 • 1-717-228-2727 www.supertarp.com • rockymeadowfarm@evenlink.com

WANTED

HAY & STRAW

Trailer Load Lots Janowski Bros. 315-829-3794 315-829-3771 Heating

WANTED: 1st & 2nd cut big & small squares. 315-363-9105

Heating

Help Wanted

CENTRAL BOILER E-Classic OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACES. Cleaner and Greener. 97% Efficient. EPA Qualified. Call today Halloran Farm 845-482-5208.

600 COW DAIRY FARM looking for worker for general animal and field work. Tractor & cow experience a plus. Located in Skaneateles,NY area. Please call Eric at 607-745-7568

Central Boiler E-Classic OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACE. Buy NOW and save up to $1500! The next generation of cleaner wood furnaces has arrived. 97% Efficient. Call Today Border Drive Heating/Royal Stoves 570537-2447

ASSISTANT HERDSMAN on family dairy farm in VT. Seeking experienced person for milking, herd & calf health, AI & IV’s, and parttime feeding (tractor/loader operation). Modern facility. nefarmer2@gmail.com

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

CENTRAL BOILER EClassic OUTDOOR FURNACES. Cleaner and Greener. 97% Efficient. EPA Qualified. Call North Creek Heat 315-8663698

EXPERIENCED D AGRICULTURE E TECHNICIAN N AND/OR R CONSTRUCTION N TECHNICIAN

Help Wanted

wanted to fill immediate opening at our St. Johnsville or Richfield Springs locations. Full time position with excellent pay and benefits. Please send resume to: sspringersinc@roadrunner.com Or apply within at either: Springer’s Inc, 55 West Main St. Richfield Springs or 7403 State Hwy 5, St. Johnsville

518-929-3480-518-329-1321 ROUND BALES for sale 4x5, net wrap, Fairhaven, Vermont. 860-836-1524

ALSO CERTIFIED ORGANIC

Hay - Straw For Sale

RECENTLY disabled farmer looking to sell out of field. Different grades, sometimes straw, small squares. 518641-3779

Hay - Straw Wanted

Page 23 - Section B • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Sell Your Items Through Reader Ads P.O. Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428


Section B - Page 24 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Sell Your Items Through Reader Ads P.O. Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428

1-800-836-2888 classified@leepub.com Help Wanted

WANTED: Ag Service Tech

Cazenovia Equipment Company, a premier John Deere Dealer is looking for experienced service technicians to join our team in any of our eleven locations in New York. The right candidate has strong mechanical skills, understands the performance of farm equipment and implements applications. The job requires computer knowledge and good communication skills. John Deere equipment repair knowledge and experience is a plus. Technicians have access to state-of-the-art computer diagnostic information, John Deere education programs, as well as performance incentive programs. Cazenovia Equipment offers competitive compensation package, 401K retirement program, employee discount, personal leave days many group employee benefits.

Apply now... Fax Resume to (315) 655-8433 Email Resume: jobs@cazequip.com

www.cazenoviaequipment.com

CDL-A-Drivers

For Feed Deliveries Full Time Position Available Based in Western NY. Experience Needed. Must have Ag background.

315-567-9308 FEEDING MANAGER Position is available at OAKWOOD DAIRY

Involves feeding an 1800 cow dairy with 1700 heifers, managing bunk silos and feed deliveries, and working with the Herd Managers and nutritionist. Oakwood Dairy is a progressive, high production dairy with excellent facilities, equipment and management located near Auburn, NY.

For more information call

315-252-0652 315-730-9046 (Bill) or oakwood@cnyemail.com HERDSPERSON WANTED: Must have high level of cow knowledge, communicates well, efficient, self motivated, positive attitude, time management skills, cares about animals and coworkers. Must be calm around cattle at all times. Only serious applicants need reply 802-897-7917

Help Wanted Herdsman Wanted:Jasper Hill Farm seeks a candidate to help grow our farmstead cheese business. Responsibilities include managing the herd health and breeding programs for our herd of 45 registered Ayrshire cows, milking and raw product quality oversight, management of farm operations including wheyfed pork production, field work and staff supervision. Dairy experience required. Competitive pay. Contact: Emily 802-533-2566 x106 or work@cellarsatjasperhill.com ORGANIC DAIRY Farm in Western NY seeks an Assistant Manager. Responsibilities will include milking and breeding cows, fix and operate equipment. Will consider a new graduate. Call after 5pm 216-401-1052

Help Wanted

Hogs Berkshires from our American Berkshire Registered & Certified Herd. All vegetarian diet, no antibiotics, chemicals nor hormones. Straw bedded & pasture access. Feeder Pigs<10-$110 each; 10 or more $100 each; Butcher Hogs$1.10/lb 4 or more-$1.00/lb liveweight. Breeding Stockboars & gilts. 717-488-8090. Lancaster County, PA 17555

Horses

HORSE BOARDING/ RIDING LESSONS Victoria Acres Equine Facility

3771 Western Turnpike Altamont, NY

Stall Rental $125/mo Full Board $300/mo Daily Turnout Outdoor Riding Arena

Hoof Trimming

518-859-2932

DAN & JEN WILLIAMS HOOF TRIMMING • 28 Years Experience • VET RECOMMENDED • 607-591-0885

PONIES FOR SALE 5 year old chestnut mare and 2 year old stallion. 518-866-9264

Horse Equipment PROFESSIONAL MADE LOG CARTS - Horse Drawn. 315963-3586 call before 7pm

Help Wanted

WORK FOR COUNTRY FOLKS SALES REPRESENTATIVE Established Accounts with Room For Growth Lee Publications Inc, a trade publication publisher for 47 years, is looking for a self-motivated, professional sales representative to sell advertising and trade show space for its group of industrial and agricultural magazines, websites and trade shows . This is a phone and email marketing position located at our main office in Palatine Bridge, NY with occasional travel required. Computer skills are a must. Titles Include: Country Folks, Country Folks Grower, Wine & Grape Grower, Country Folks Mane Stream Hard Hat News, Waste Handling Equipment News & North American Quarry News

Please email questions or your resume to dwren@leepub.com

Lawn & Garden MANTIS Deluxe Tiller. NEW! FastStart engine. Ships FREE. One-Year Money-Back Guarantee when you buy DIRECT. Call for the DVD and FREE Good Soil book! 877439-6803

Lumber & Wood Products LOCUST 4x4’s, fence posts, split rails, lumber. Natural, chemical free non poisonous alternative to pressure treated that has strength and lasts a lifetime. 518-883-8284

Poultry & Rabbits

Real Estate For Sale

Poultry Goslings, ducklings, chicks, turkeys, guineas, bantams, pheasants, chukars, books, medications.

Clearview Hatchery PO Box 399 Gratz, PA 17030

500 ACRES PRIME Tiled Farm Land. First on the land for Spring work & Fall Harvest. Easily accessible from state road, $5,000 an acre. 315767-1075 CENTRAL VERMONT DAIRY for sale, 394 acres, double 8 parlor, 200+ cow capacity, slurry store, Harvestore, bunk silos. $750,000 firm. Cows, machinery, and feed available. Call 860-836-1524

(717) 365-3234 Call 888-596-5329 for Your Subscription

Day Old Chicks: Broilers, Layers Turkeys, Ducks

518-568-5322

CHRISTMAS TREE FARM and split level house. Unique entrepreneurial opportunity, earn a second income, fourth bedroom off family room and office, large closets and pristine floors, open kitchen atmosphere, 2½ baths. $249,900.00 Bloomfield,CT 860-989-2783

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

NEPPA Hatchery Jill & Ken Gies 660 Fordsbush Road Ft. Plain, NY 13339 email: giespasture@frontiernet.net Write or call for prices & availability

Van Billings Real Estate, LLC Van Billings, Broker/Owner 14 S. Main St., Dolgeville, NY 13329

315-429-0300

www.vanbillingsrealestate.com

Parts

NEW, USED & RECONDITIONED PARTS FOR CONSTRUCTION & AGRICULTURE Case-JD-IHC Crawlers Case-JD-Ford-IHC TLB’s Case-JD-Wheel Loaders Skid Loader Parts SPECIAL: MultiKey Construction Sets $45

GOODRICH TRACTOR PARTS

Rt. 38 & 38B, Newark Valley, NY

607-642-3293

Parts & Repair

IH TRACTOR SALVAGE PARTS BATES CORPORATION 12351 Elm Rd BOURBON, IN 46504

New, Used & Rebuilt We Ship Anywhere CHECK OUT OUR MONTHLY WEB SPECIALS! Call the IH Parts Specialists:

Our Web Address: www.batescorp.com

1-800-248-2955 STARTERS, ALTERNATORS, and GENERATORS for all domestic and import engines. Also HIGH TORQUE DIESEL STARTERS. Prompt Service 315-826-7892 Gary Sneath

Want To Sell Your Farm or Land? Call Van! FARMS

Oppenheim - 37.1 Acres - $110,000 Beautiful old multi-level barn would make an excellent home. A drilled well, 2 septics and electricity already on the property. 37.1 acres of nice farmland, great hayfields, beautiful and magnificent distant views all makes a perfect spot for a retreat.

Manheim - 42 Acres - $135,000 Barn on about 42 acres with apartment built into barn. Includes the business of Zook’s storage shed, lawn furniture and food goods, but does not include the inventory. Excellent main roadbusiness site.

Minden - 81.6 Acres - $299,900 Superb Horse Farm - 36x96 Morton Building with 8 gorgeous stalls. Plus old dairy barn, turn out sheds, equipment shed, pond, all fenced. Remarkable post and beam passive solar design on home with very open floor plan. Spectacular private setting at end of road. Any offer is subject to court and bank approval.

Manheim - 83 Acres - $440,000 Vintage brick farmhouse fully restored with beautiful floors and trim, keeping the original look, yet with a modern kitchen and baths.The main house has 3200 sq ft including 3 bedrooms and 3.5 baths. There is a 1 bedroom, 1800 sq ft apartment with a huge great room, amazing fireplace and wonderful views. Could be used as a 2 family or in law apartment. Set on 83 magnificent acres of useable farmland this property is ideal for horses or a small sustainable farming operation. There is an old barn and two modern steel barns. The Morton pole barn, 40X80 has water and electricity. Part of a larger parcel, taxes to be determined.

Little Falls - 58 Acres - $165,000 Classic Eyebrow Colonial on 58 Acres, Gracious rooms include a kitchen with lots of cabinets, a family room with heatilator fireplace and a center hall foyer. Put up a barn and have a small farm. Extensive road frontage for possible extra lots. Seperated from the property are two trailers way down the road that have rights to water from the property.


1-800-836-2888 classified@leepub.com Real Estate For Sale

DEMEREE REALTY Little Falls, NY 13365 Phone (315) 823-0288

www.demereerealty.com • demeree@ntcnet.com #40 - DAIRY OF DISTINCTION - Very nice 395 acre river bottom dairy farm w/240 tillable, 70 pasture & 80 woods - 350 ft. stone barn w/108 tie stalls & room for 75 young stock - 1500 gal. B.T. & 2” pipeline - 6 stall garage & 100x25 ft. carriage barn - 4 concrete silos w/unloaders & 40x80 ft. bunk silo - 3 bdrm. brick home & 2 fam. tenant house - also 5 rm. mobile home - 1 lg. pond, 2 springs & 100 ft. well . . . . .Asking $1,500,000 - machinery available #1 - UNIQUE PROPERTY with much potential & lovely views of valley - 400 rolling acres, 200 A. tillable, some lg. fields, nice woods & pasture land - restored & elegant victorian home - 11 lg. rooms with victorian period decor is a step back in time - 130 yrs old & in VG condition - 4 bdrms., lg. LR, DR, fam. rm. - nice library & 3.5 baths - lg. windows upstairs & downstairs - attached 2 car garage - patio area - also carriage house in entrance to 120x36 ft. dairy barn - 72x25 ft. mach. shed & attractive tree lined entrance to property - A MUST SEE FOR BUYERS LOOKING FOR SOMETHING OUT OF THE ORDINARY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$898,000 #722 - Dairy farm w/378 A. - 230 tillable - 180x34’ barn w/70 new tie stalls & 2” pipeline - flat barn parlor for summer - mach. shed & heifer barn - EX. soils - Slurrystore for manure - v.g. 18 rm. home w/2 baths - also 2nd set of bldgs. w/house & 2 story barn for 42 head . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$900,000 #69 - Farm w/150 A. - 130 tillable, 20 woods, nice apple orchard, outstanding looking property w/very good 2 story home w/beautiful lawns and nice in-ground swimming pool - also outside wood furnace, 2 story barn with lg. heated shop at one end - nice creek borders property - located across the road from #70. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Priced at $435,000 REDUCED TO $400,000 C-82 Newly constructed in 2006, ranch home located on 10 A. level land in western Montgomery County; 3BR, 1 1/2 baths, full basement with 8’ ceiling; rear deck; 24x30 twostall detached garage with automatic door openers and concrete floor; nice home on open lot in country location, priced under assessed value. . . . . . . . . .Asking $149,000 C-71 - Well-kept 50 A. Hobby Farm, recently surveyed; 5 A. woods, remainder tillable; 25x56 modular home on slab, 3BR, 2 full baths, central air, new steel roof; drilled well. 28x52 barn used for hay storage; 40x60 heated shop w/two 12’ overhead doors w/openers; 14x32 pole bldg. addition w/overhead doors; 28x38 open pole shed; 14x28 shed w/overhead door; 22x26 storage bldg. This property has a SPECIAL USE VARIANCE PERMIT (Agricultural or Commercial). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Asking $299,000

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

POSSON REALTY LLC 787 Bates-Wilson Road Norwich, NY 13851

(607)) 334-97277 Celll 607-316-3758 www.possonrealty.net possonrealty@frontiernet.net David C. Posson, Broker

Richard E. Posson, Associate Broker

FARMS WANTED We have several good qualified buyers looking to farm here in NY State. Tie Stall, Free Stall operations and bare land. If you are thinking of selling your farm please give us a call. We can help you to determine a good marketable price, market it to in state and out of state buyers getting you top dollar for your farm. Please give us a call at Posson Realty LLC. 40+ years in the business of selling farm and land only. New w - 2337 7 - 137 7 acree parcell off baree land. Located mins south of Utica, NY. 30 acres in fields rented to local farmer. 20 acres of pasture balance woods. 2 man-made stocked fish ponds. Lots of deer and turkey. Property would make an

Real Estate For Sale

CORTLAND COUNTY

Organic Farmette, 11 acres. Good 2 story barn, 19 tie stalls for horses, barn cleaner, hay storage. Insulated workshop, creek runs through. 2 story farm home, 4 bedrooms, 1 bath. Nice location. Owners are serious sellers who will consider all offers, $99,500. 2 car garage plus outside wood furnace. t

1s

Call

Carol Wood Realty

607-863-4143

FEATURE E PROPERTY Fishing g & Hunting g Hideaway (2 1/2 hours from G.W. Bridge)

Nestled in the mitts of thousands of acres owned by NYC with easy access to the Cannonsville Reservoir. For some of the best fishing, sailboating, kayaking and canoeing in the state. Situated on 36 mostly wooded completely private acres with an excellent trout stream running through. This cozy 3 bedroom, year-round cottage has lots of rustic charm featuring cathedral ceiling, exposed beams and wrap-around deck. The nicely landscaped site is equipped with an underground irrigation system and cannot be seen from the road. Abutts NYC land for hunting. If you are looking for a place to get away from it all, “THIS IS IT”! $225,000 By Appointment Only

FREE E BROCHURE: Farm, Country, Hunting, Lake & Income Properties NYS Big Diamond R.E. 607-843-6988 Mcdonough, NY www.bigdiamondre.com

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For Sale

excellent place to build or have for the weekend. Property is mins from the Brookfield Equine Trail System. Priced right . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Askingg $195,000 Note* Owner would consider holding a large mortgage with a qualified buyer. New w - 2336 6 - Otsego o County,, Cooperstown n NY. 88 acre Gentleman's Farm. Bordering a beautiful year round trout stream. 45 acres in fields. Excellent ground. Balance woods. 2 story partially remodeled farm house. New septic and well. Farm would work well for horses, or beef, make hay or vegetables. Phenomenal fishing and hunting. Great location for kids. REA electric. Cooperstown School District . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Asking $174,900 4 - Lewiss Countyy Dairyy Farm. 150 acres mostly tillable. 2324 High Lime well drained soils. Grows excellent alfalfa and corn. Modern 150 stall 3 row free stall barn w/drive thru feed. 30x50 heifer barn for 30 head of large heifers plus some machinery storage. Good 2 story 60 stall barn with dbl 6 flat barn parlor with large holding area. Calf pens, side addition for 36 head of young stock. 30x100 bunker silo. Very nice remodeled 2 story 6 bdrm home. Farm is turn-key. Good dairy area. Machinery and feed dealers close by. Great milk market . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Askingg $450,000 2223 3 - Maadison n Countyy Freee Stalll Operation n - 500 acres, 330 tillable well drained high lime very productive soils w/additional 200 acres rented with more land available. 2 Modern Barns w/305 free stalls 2 other barns for 100 head of young stock or dry cows. 36x80 machinery building with heated shop. Large pad for corn silage and haylage. Separate heifer facility for 200 head of heifers available for rent close by. Good remodeled 2 story 3 bdrm home. This is a great area of Central NY to farm in. Everything is close by. Long growing season, 5 million good milk markets . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Askingg $1.35

Real Estate For Sale

Silos, Repairs, Silo Equipment

ONEIDA COUNTY, town of Vienna, 80 acres, 40 acres fenced, year round streams, 2680 ft of road frontage also separate commercial frontage $94,900. Call 315-264-3624 www.coldwellbankerprime.com/ laura.loomis

HARVESTORE GOLIATH unloader parts, used. 802864-5382, 802-578-7352

ORGANIC DAIRY FARM/ CREAMERY, 318 acres. 8 miles from Cooperstown,NY. Two 3 bedroom homes, 100 cow freestall, Double 6 milking parlor. Many outbuilding for young stock, hay & equipment. New cheese room, aging facility & solar electric system. 200 acres fenced for grazing. $998,500. 607-2869362 TOWN OF MINDEN, near Fort Plain,NY, 60 acres of open fields, 2800’ frontage on paved road, great views, $142,000. Also smaller parcels available. Owner financing. 518-861-6541 www.helderbergrealty.com

Real Estate Wanted FAMILY LOOKING for dairy farm w/tillable land to support the herd. Serious buyer. Finances arranged. 518-9653725 RESPONSIBLE AND ETHICAL hunter looking to lease farmland and wetlands for waterfoul hunting, reliable, references available, hunting activity will be low. Call Joe Sarno 516-924-5532

MARTIN’S SILO REPAIR Specializing in Teardown & Rebuilding New & Used Staves Silos • Shotcrete Relining • Distributors • Fill Pipe • Replacement Doors • Roofs • Chutes • General Repair

Will Buy Good Used Concrete Stave Silos SHOTCRETE SERVICE Repair Retaining Walls Strength Existing Masonry Walls Stanley, NY

585-526-6575

Roofing

Roofing

ROOFING & SIDING e Metall Roofing g & Siding.. BUY DIRECT – We manufacture

ABM M & ABX X Panell - Standingg Seam m - PBR R Panel LOW PRICES - FAST DELIVERY – FREE LITERATURE

A.B. MARTIN ROOFING SUPPLY, LLC Ephrata, PA 1-800-373-3703 N e w v i l l e , PA 1-800-782-2712

Full line Pole Building material. ~ Lumber - Trusses - Plywood.

www.abmartin.net • Email: sales@abmartin.net

Seeds ALFALFA SEED FOR SALE: Fresh grown from South Dakota. Trask Family Seeds the Non-GMO Source for Protein. Call 845-978-0054, 845800-6523 or 877-798-5413 Volume Discounts

Sheep DORPER X KATAHDIN Hair Sheep Rams, born January 2012, $250. 518-673-3565

800-836-2888 To Place Your Classified Ad

800-836-2888

Speciall Thankss to o Alan n Shoemakerr and d the Shoemakerr Family for allowing us to sell their beautiful Madison County Showplace Farm. The Shoemakers are known for their hard work and superb farm practices. They have built and maintained one of the best dairy tie stall operations in the state. They are known for their fine registered cattle and high milk production. We wish Alan the best in retirement and we welcome the Brink Family who are going to continue to milk cows on this good farm.

Real Estate For Sale

800-836-2888

Real Estate For Sale

Just Ask For Peggy or send her an e-mail at:

classified@leepub.com

Page 25 - Section B • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Sell Your Items Through Reader Ads P.O. Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428


Section B - Page 26

Sell Your Items Through Reader Ads P.O. Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428

1-800-836-2888 classified@leepub.com

May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

Silos, Repairs, Silo Equipment

SOLLENBERGER SILOS, LLC, 5778 Sunset Pike, Chambersburg, PA 17201. Poured Concrete silos since 1908, Manure Storage and Precast Products. For Information: Ken Mansfield 717-503-8909 www.sollenbergersilos.com “1908-2008” Celebrating 100 Years

MID-STATE TECH INC. 6024 Greene Rd. Munnsville, NY

315-495-6506 315-404-6721 David Stanek

St. Lawrence Silo Service

Pre-Owned Tanks & Silos NRCS Approved Slurry Storage Systems

• New Stave Silos

New Conventional Silos

• Stave Replacement • Silo Retensioning • Shotcrete Relining

Silo Unloaders Van Dale Jamesway Patz

• Footer Repairs • Fill Systems • Silo Parts

FULL LINES

• Chute Repairs

N-TECH NORBCO RISSLER Conveyors & Carts GRAETZ LAIDIG All Silo Repairs Conveyors & Mixers Utility Augers

CALL FOR ESTIMATE

(315) 393-3399 Lisbon, NY 13658 www.slsilo.com

Hammer Mills

Tires & Tire Repair Service # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # ## # # # # ## ## # #

# # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # ## # # # # # # #

New Stave Silos

# # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # #

For All Your Automation and Filling Needs Call:

Center State Ag. Service Morrisville, New York

315-684-7807

JAMESWAY & VAN DALE

Equipment, Parts & Service Authorized Harvestore & Laidig Dealer Sales, Service-Repair

PATZ DEALER Parts-Sales-Service

VALMETAL DEALER Sales-Service-Parts

DAIRYMASTER DEALER

Trailers

Silos, Repairs, Silo Equipment

# # # # # # # # # #Sales-Service-Parts # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # #Mixers, # # Stationary # # # & #Trailer # # #

of # # # # # VENTILATION # # # # # # #We # carry # #a full # line # #

# # All # Types # # of#Systems # # # milking # # # # # #for#tie# # equipment # # # # # # # # # # #stalls # #& parlor # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # #

SILO REPAIRS - Blower Pipe, Vinyl & Steel, Distributors, Silo Hoppers, Poly Chute Hoppers, Chute Replacements, Chute Liner, Klean Chute Tubing, Wood Doors # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # WOOD CONVEYORS - Single & Double Chain, # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # Taper Board Feeders

# # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # #

CIRCLE L TRAILER SALES All Aluminum Horse & Livestock Trailers Starting at

7,495

$

EAST

Calendar of Events

NOTE: Calendar entries must arrive at the Country Folks office by the Tuesday prior to our publication date for them to be included in the calendar of events. Email: jkarkwren@leepub.com

Trucks

Trucks

Apr 18 - Nov 14 Groundswell’s Sustainable Farming Certificate Program Now Accepting Applications For aspiring and beginning farmers and market gardeners, providing 124 hours of classroom training, hands on workshops, farm visits and supervised work experience on sustainable farms. Tuition is on a sliding scale and ranges from $125 to $800, with substantial support offered to people of color, new immigrant & limited resource trainees. Applications are now online. Visit www.groundswellcenter.org to learn more and apply today. May 29 Farming for Life Webinar: Using Body Mechanics & Other Tools to do What You Love Longer Online. Webinars are free

NEW Steel Livestock Trailers Bumper Pulls Starting at $4,095 Goosenecks at $5,800 ALSO Aluminum Skin & Steel Horse Trailers In Stock

1992 Kenworth T-800 350 Cat, Jake, 8LL Trans, 20,000 Front, 12,000 Steerable Lift, 46,000 Rears, Hendrickson Walking Beam, 17 1/2’ Body Priced To Sell Or Trade

1994 Vantage 40’x102” Aluminum Dump Trailer, 2 Way Gate, Grain Chute, Roll-Over Tarp, 10’ 2” Spread, Air Ride, Air Lift Front Axle, Cheap! Priced To Sell Or Trade

1988 Fruehauf 34’ Aluminum Dump Trailer, Air Lift Axle, Liner, Roll-Over Tarp, Spring Susp, Minor Damage, Cheap! Priced To Sell Or Trade

1992 Mack RD688 E7-350 Mack, Jake, 8LL Trans, 14,600 Front Axle, Mack 44,000 Rears, Hendrickson Walking Beam, Double Frame, 2 Line Wet Line, Cheap! Priced To Sell Or Trade

ALSO

UTILITY • CARGO MACHINERY • HYDRAULIC DUMP LANDSCAPE TRAILERS

Large Selection at All Times M-F 9-4 • Sat 9-3

3032 State Hwy 30 Gloversville, NY 12078

518-661-5038 FAX 661-6658

TEITSWORTH TRAILERS: Over 400 in stock now! PJ Goosenecks, Dumps, Tilt Tops, Landscape, Car Haulers, Skid Steer & more. Best prices, largest selection. 585-243-1563

ADVANTAGE TRUCKS (716) 685-6757 www.advantagetrucks.com

WE DELIVER

“Exporters Welcome”

Trucks

CALEDONIA DIESEL, LLC TRUCK & EQUIPMENT SALES & SERVICE “The Diesel People!”

2905 Simpson Rd., Caledonia, NY

585-538-4395 • 1-800-311-2880 Since 1982

Just 1 mile south of Route 20 on 36 south

Trucks

(4) 18.4R42 GOODYEAR Dyna Torque 70% tread $500.00 each. 18x42 Bolt on Steiger rims $450.00 each. Hill Top Tire, 518-993-2235

Tractor Parts NEW AND USED TRACTOR PARTS: John Deere 10,20,30,40 series tractors. Allis Chalmers, all models. Large inventory! We ship. Mark Heitman Tractor Salvage, 715-673-4829

Tractors

1995 A35C Volvo Articulating Haul Truck 6 x 6 $37,000. (716) 433-3373 1997 DODGE, extended cab, 4x4, dually, cummins, std., 243,000k, running, $4,900. 518-577-6916

Wanted

1985 2950 JD MFD Open Station Serial No. 551299 7000 Hrs. 30 Day Powertrain Warranty $18,500. Wayne County, NY. Phone 315-7296708

WANTED TO BUY: Old Grit newspapers (not the Grit magazine). 518-568-5115

Trailers

Trailers

2000 Kenworth T800 Tri-Axle Dump Truck, Cummins N-14 435hp, 13 speed, Chalmers suspension. 16.5’ aluminum body with electric tarp and coal chute, 537k miles, 74,120 GVW $27,900

1994 Volvo Custom Toy Hauler, Registered as an RV, 400hp Cat, 10 speed, 28’ box with ramp, 11’ living quarters, too many options to list. 540k miles $42,500

2006 Case 750K Dozer, 1960 hours, very clean, 6 way blade, ready to go $41,500

AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION! 2001 Mack MR688S Cab and Chassis, 350hp, 19’ of frame (double) behind the cab, 20k front axle, 46k rears, 160k miles $36,500

2004 IH 4400 Cab & Chassis UT 530, 10 speed, tandem axle, 29’ of frame behind the cab, 240” C-T, Rubber 95%, 277k miles. Very Clean $26,900

2007 IH 9900i Eagle Cat C-15 475hp, 18 speed, mid roof-single bunk, 417k miles, 46k full locking rears, air ride, 24.5 rubber at 90%, aluminum wheels $52,900

Please check our Web site @ www.caledoniadiesel.com

# # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # #

# #

# # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # #

NORTHEAST SILO DEMO: Need a cheap, quick & easy way to get your silo down? Will travel, give us a call. 518568-3560

REPLACEMENT SILO DOORS & HARDWARE AGRI-DOOR

Horse • Livestock • Dump • Cargo Equipment • Landscape • Motorcycle Snowmobile • ATV • Car and More

2008 Lufkin 38’ Frameless Trailer LIKE NEW! Steel body, spring suspension, 46” sides, electric tarp $23,900

1997 Peterbilt Curtain Side Van Truck, Cummins 350hp, Allison Automatic, 16k front axle, 40k full lockng rears, 28’x102” body, 308” wheelbase, 230” C-T. We will separate the body from the chassis. $25,900

Trailer Parts & Towing Accessories

Jake Stoltzfus 649 South Ramona Rd. Myerstown, PA 17067

717-949-2034 Toll-free 1-877-484-4104

2005 Freightliner Columbia Daycab Cat C15 435hp, 15 speed, 180” wheelbase, Air ride, very clean $39,250

Route 12, North Norwich, NY

2002 Peterbilt 357 Mixer Truck, Cummins ISM 305hp, 8LL, 128k 1998 Deere 744H Wheel Loader, very good condition, GP bucket, EROPS with AC, miles, 20k front axle, 46k full locking rears, McNeilus 10.5CY mixer, rubber 75%, we will separate the mixer from the chassis. good rubber, 18K hours 17’ of frame behind the cab, 145” C-T. Super Clean. $37,500 $58,500

2008 Cat D5G LGP 2690 hours, PAT 6 way blade, OROPS, U/C very good, work ready $69,900


1-800-836-2888 classified@leepub.com Trucks

Trucks

Martin’s Farm Trucks, LLC

Trucks for All Your Needs - Specializing in Agri-Business Vehicles

1998 Freightliner FLD112SD, 16.5’ Steel Dump Body, M11 Cummins 400HP, Jake, 8LL, Chalmers Susp, 20/20/46 Axles, Quad Locks, 420k Miles, Cold AC, Nice Condition $37,900

1988 Int S2574 TA Water Truck, NTC Cum 315HP, Jake, 8LL, 14.6/44 Axles, Hend Spring, Double Frame, 2600 Gal Water Tank, Kubota Eng, Berkeley Pump, Spray Heads, 147k Miles $19,500

888-497-0310 Calendar of Events and do not require preregistration. To join simply click “webinars” at www.uvm.edu/newfarmer. To request a disability related accommodation to participate, contact Jessie Schmidt at 802-223-2389, ext. 203 or 866-860-1382 by May 22. Contact Jessie Schmidt, 802-223-2389, ext. 203 or e-mail newfarmer@uvm.edu. May 29 & 30 Intro to Social Media for Ag Business • May 29 - 123 Lake St, Cooperstown, NY. • May 30 - 173 S. Grand St, Cobleskill, NY. 6:308:30 pm both days. There is a $10 program fee. Space is limited and preregistration and payment is required prior to workshop. Call 607-547-2536 ext. 226. Jun 1 2012 Farm Fest Brabant Farms, 6166 Happy Valley Rd., Verona, NY. 4:30-9 pm. Rain or shine. A $1 donation appreciated. Contact CCE Oneida Co., 315736-3394. On Internet at www.cce.oneida.com Woodlot Management Slate Hill, NY. 2-6 pm. $25/person; Pre-registration and payment is required by May 31. Registration is limited to the first 30 people. Call 845344-1234 or e-mail cah94@cornell.edu. Jun 1-3 Ole Time Power Show Fireman’s Field, Route 12B/Route 26, Oriskany Falls, NY. Contact Lee Edwards, 315-750-9464. Jun 2 Got Woods - Keep Woods CCE of Wayne County, 1581 Route 88 North, Newark, NY. 9:30 am - 1 pm. Registration is $10.

Limit of 25 participants. Contact Laurie VanNostrand, 315-331-8415. Plant Swap and Sale Forsyth Nature Center at Forsyth Park, Lucas Ave., Kingston, NY. Plants to swap can be dropped off that Saturday morning between 9 and 10 am. Swappers will receive vouchers for the number of plants they drop off. And then return at 11 am to swap vouchers for plants! At 11:30 am the swap will open to the public for sale. Contact Dona Crawford, 845-3403990 ext. 335. On Internet at www.cceulster.org Jun 3 Third Annual Holstein Heritage Event Smithfield Community Center, 5255 Pleasant Valley Rd., Peterboro, NY. 2 pm. The site is open in 2012 on weekends from 15 pm from May 19 to Sept. 23, for special events and by appointment. Admission is $3 and free for students. For more information: 315-280-8828, info@gerritsmith.org or www.gerritsmith.org. Jun 5, 12, 13 & 14 NYFVI Grant Writing Workshops The New York Farm Viability Institute is accepting proposals for grant funding for projects that assist New York farmers in improving profitability. The requests for proposals for all three NYFVI grant programs are online at www.nyfvi.org. • June 5 - 10 am - 3 pm, Farm Credit East Office, 4363 Federal Dr., Batavia, NY • June 12 - 10 am - 3 pm, CCE of Cortland Co., Cortland Co. Office Building, 60 Central Ave., Cortland, NY • June 13 - 10 am - 3 pm, CCE of St Lawrence County, Extension Learning Farm, 2043 State Highway 68, Canton, NY • June 14 - 10 am - 3 pm, CCE of Ulster County, Kingston Plaza, 232 Plaza Rd, Kingston, NY.

Participants must register by June 1 for the workshops at http:// db.nyfvi.org/. Applications are due by 11:59 pm on Aug. 12, 2012. Jun 6 Beef Producer Marketing Roundtable Education Center, 123 Lake St., Cooperstown, NY. 10 am - 2 pm. Featuring Mike Baker, State Beef Cattle Extension Specialist, as the keynote speaker. $20/person includes lunch. Space limited. Payment and pre-registration required. Call 607-547-2536 ext. 226 or e-mail ajc378@cornell.edu. Jun 7 Small Grains Management Field Day Musgrave Research Farm, 1256 Poplar Ridge Rd., Aurora, NY. 10 am noon.Registration begins at 9:30 am. Contact Mary McKellar at mem40@ cornell.edu or 607-2552177 or Gary Bergstrom at gcb3@cornell.edu. June 7, July 5, Sept. 6, Oct. 4, Nov. 1 & Dec. 6 Maple Training Webinars 7-8 pm. Webinar connection details are available at http://maple.dnr. cornell.edu/webinar.html A high speed internet connection is necessary to participate. Access is free of charge. No preregistration is required. Contact Stephen Childs, email slc18@cornell.edu. Jun 8-9 Growing Farmers Initiative (GFI) Stone Barns Center, Pocantico Hills, NY. Lambing and Kidding Pasture Walk will be held on June 8 & Internal Parasites in Sheep & Goats/ FAMACHA Certification will be held on June 9. It is highly recommended that participants attend both workshops. Register at www. stonebarnscenter.org. Jun 12 PA Forest Web Seminar The title of June’s presentation is Management Strategies for Eastern Forests Threatened by Hemlock Woolly Adelgid. Mary Ann Fajvan, Research Forester with the Northern Research Station, USDA Forest Service,will be the presenter. Seminars are scheduled for noon and again at 7 pm. To register and take part in the live seminars or to view the

upcoming seminars schedule, visit http:// extension.psu.edu/ private-forests/toolsresources/webinars. Jun 13 Erosion & Sediment Control Training Holiday Inn, Oneonta, NY. Training is required every three years. Preregistration is required. Contact SWCD Office, 607- 547-8337. Jun 14 Beginning Farmer Learning Group Meeting Chris Lincoln & Tammara Van Ryn farm, 99 County Route 52, Greenwich, NY. 7:30 pm. There is no cost to attend this meeting, but registration is suggested. For more information about the learning group, contact Steve Hadcock at 518-3801497 or by e-mail at seh11@cornell.edu. Contact Gale Kohler, 518765-3500 or gek4@ cornell.edu. Jun 14-16 Eastern New York State Wool Pool Washington County Fairgrounds, State Route 29, Greenwich, NY. The pool hours will be noon - 4 pm on Thursday, June 14 and 9 am - 4 pm on Friday & Saturday, June 1516. Contact Mary Jeanne Packer, 518-692-2700 or e-mail mjpacker@ battenkillfibers.com. Jun 16 Meat Goat Seminars New York State Fairgrounds, Goat Barn, Syracuse, NY. 6-11 am. These seminars are an excellent opportunity for meat goat producers, 4-H Youth and interested individuals in general to learn more about maintaining meat goats as well as maximizing a goat’s assets in the show ring. Contact Deb Borden, 607-937-3324 or e-mail hillplacefarm@att.net. Jun 19 Breeding & Genetics: Considerations for Organic Dairy Farms Online. For more information or to register visit www. extension.org/pages/25242 Jun 19 & 28 CCE Offers Landowner Property Issues Workshops Education Center, 123 Lake St., Cooperstown, NY. 6:30-8:30 pm. First workshop will cover estate planning and transitions. Second will focus on landowner property legal issues. $10/per person. Refreshments included. Space limited. Payment and pre-registration is required. Call 607-5472536 ext. 226 or e-mail ajc378@cornell.edu

5 Easy Ways To Place A Country Folks Classified Ad

1. PHONE IT IN FAX IT IN - For MasterCard, Visa, 2. American Express or Discover customers, fill out the form below completely and

FOR BEST RESULTS, RUN YOUR AD FOR TWO ISSUES!

Just give Peggy a call at 1-800-836-2888

Cost per week per zone: $9.25 for the first 14 words, plus 30¢ for each additional word. (Phone #’s count as one word) If running your ad multiple weeks: Discount $1.00 per week, per zone.

FAX to Peggy at (518) 673-2381

3. calculate the cost, enclose your check or MAIL IT IN - Fill out the attached form,

credit card information and mail to:

Country Folks Classifieds, PO Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428

4. E-MAIL E-mail your ad to classified@leepub.com - Go to 5. ON-LINE www.countryfolks.com and follow the Place a

West

East

New England

Classified Ad button to Mid-Atlantic place your ad 24/7!

Place my ad in the following Zones: Country Folks East Country Folks West Country Folks of New England Country Folks Mid-Atlantic Farm Chronicle Number of weeks to run___________ Name(Print)________________________________________________________________ Farm/Company Name_________________________________________________________ Street___________________________________________County_____________________ City____________________________________________State______Zip______________ Phone_______________ _______________ ____________________________________ Fax_________________ _______________ ____________________________________ Cell_________________ _______________ ____________________________________ e-mail address: _____________________________________________________________ Payment Method: Check/Money Order American Express Discover Visa MasterCard Card # ______________________________________________Exp. Date ______________ (MM/YY)

Name On Credit Card(Print)____________________________________________________ Signature: ________________________________________ Todays Date: ______________ (for credit card payment only)

15

(MM/DD/YY)

16

1 Week $9.55 per zone / 2+ Weeks $8.55 per zone per week 1 Week $9.85 per zone / 2+ Weeks $8.85 per zone per week

17

18

1 Week $10.15 per zone / 2+ Weeks $9.15 per zone per week 1 Week $10.45 per zone / 2+ Weeks $9.45 per zone per week

19

20

1 Week $10.75 per zone / 2+ Weeks $9.75 per zone per week 1 Week $11.05 per zone / 2+ Weeks $10.05 per zone per week

21

22

1 Week $11.35 per zone / 2+ Weeks $10.35 per zone per week 1 Week $11.65 per zone / 2+ Weeks $10.65 per zone per week

23

24

1 Week $11.95 per zone / 2+ Weeks $10.95 per zone per week 1 Week $12.25 per zone / 2+ Weeks $11.25 per zone per week

Jun 21-22 Clean Energy Conference Conference Center at Lake Placid, 2608 Main St., Lake Placid, NY. 5-9 pm on June 21 & 9 am 5 pm on June 22. Registration can be made by May 15 by contacting the Adirondack North Country Association at energy@adirondack.org or 518-891-6200.

Jun 23 16th Annual Herb & Flower Fest Farm & Home Center, Oriskany, NY (just off Judd Rd.). The theme of the event is ‘Sustainable Landscaping.’ A free class taught on this subject will be offered plus 7 other free classes relating to ‘potpourri’ of gardening topics. Contact Extension office, 315-736-3394.

Page 27 - Section B • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS • May 28, 2012

Sell Your Items Through Reader Ads P.O. Box 121, Palatine Bridge, NY 13428


Section B - Page 28 May 28, 2012 • Let Them Know You Read COUNTRY FOLKS •

ROY TEITSWORTH INC. SUCCESSFUL AUCTIONS FOR 42 YEARS

PH (585) 243-1563 FAX (585) 243-3311 6502 Barber Hill Road, Geneseo, New York 14454 WWW.TEITSWORTH.COM

Special June Auction

Teitsworth Auction Yard, Construction Equipment, Heavy & Light Trucks, Landscape Tools, Building Materials - Nursery Stock

Saturday, June 2, 2012 @ 8:00 A.M. Groveland, NY (Geneseo Area) Consignments being accepted Early list... SELLING: Construction Equipment: 2003 Komatsu PC200 2006 Komatsu WB146 Challenger MT 295 compact tractor, 4WD, w/ldr, 82 hrs. Bobcat CT235 compact tractor, 4WD, w/ldr/backhoe Sky Jack 46TK boom manlift

Vermeer wood chipper Tractors & Farm Equipment: Challenger MT 295 compact tractor, 4WD, w/ldr, 82 hrs. Bobcat CT235 compact tractor, 4WD, w/ldr/backhoe L2556 Dion forage wagon Kubota tractor MF 65 tractor 2001 ASV 4810 2002 Bobcat 763 Skid Steer loader forks

Skid Steer loader rock hound (2) Skid Steer loader power brooms Trailer: 2001 EZ dump, dump trailer 6 Ton cam-line trailer Cars, Trucks, and Vans: 2003 Chevy pickup 2001 Dodge 3500 dump, 4WD, w/plow, gas, 22K 2007 Ford F-150, 4x4, ext cab loaded

Lok-N-Logs Sawmill Consolidation Auction Saturday, June 9, 2012 @ 10:00 A.M. 1046 Cty. Rd 23, Sherburne, NY Notice: Jim Webb, company owner has decided to consolidate 2 operations into 1 so that he can better utilize labor & space. * Much of this equipment was purchased new and has low hours of running time Saw Mill Equipment: HMC MM10 sawmill 4 block, 60hp electric in feed, out feed, turner, 50" blades IR 25hp compressor- Like new Yates American 820-12 planer (2) break down hoists Golden Eagle 3 band saw Morebark 414 post peeler Roto Chopper Mulch maker horizontal grinder E200 w/300hp electric power 24x80 Radial stacking conveyor 26x40' and 26 by 20' paddle chain conveyors Stump Grinder Edger 8+ live decks of various widths and lengths Several roll cases, 3&4 strand log decks, log turners, conveyors, barn cleaners and more. Truck shop & rolling stock: Mohawk 25,000 lb truck lift Lincoln portable welder Thermal Dynamics Air plasma cutter Clarke mig welder Chem Free parts washer Over 100 sections of Pallet Racking (14) Cantilever racking Dustkop dust tower & air handling system Shop tools & equipment

Dorsey walking floor trailer Caterpillar 924G loader w/bucket & forks Caterpillar 267 track skid steer loader w/bucket & forks Grove 60' manlift 2005 GMC C7500 roll back truck, 24' body, 40k miles 2004 Mack Log truck, TA, cabover, Hood 8000 log picker, 65k miles, sells with log trailer '76 Ford TA 66' crane truck, 66' crane, 15,000 lb cap Misubishi FD 35 forklift with cab, 8,000 lb cap and much more... Other Equipment: 32' framing table with 12' pneumatic nailing bridge 5 spindle vertical boring machine Hendrick panel saw Grizzly sander Powermatic vertical band saw Dario scroll saw Baker Products horizontal band saw Dayton 600,000 BTU heater Buss 36"x7" I sided planer www.teitsworth.com for terms, updates, and pictures Owner: Lok-N-Logs 607-674-4447 TERMS: Full payment auction day, cash, check, MC/Visa. 2% buyer's fee waived for payment with cash or check. 10% buyer's fee for items under $1,000.

2002 Chevy Camero, 52,000 miles, never drove in the winter, extra nice 2001 Chevy 1500 ext cab, 4x4 2001 Jeep Cherokee Sport, 4x4, 4dr 2000 Dodge darango, 4dr, 4x4 2000 F250 Utility 2001 F350 Diesel 2001 F350 Gas 2000 Dodge 2500

Misc.: Vertical SS tank Hobart welder Tow behind air compressor Pipe laser 3" pump 6'x8' Aluminum trench box Stone box 42" bucket Terms, pics and updates available at www.teitsworth.com

Jefferson County Area Municipal & Contractor Equipment Auction

SATURDAY, JUNE 16, 2012 @ 9:00 A.M. JEFFERSON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS WATERTOWN, NY Notice- At the request of the Jefferson County Highway Superintendents Association, we will conduct an auction of municipal surplus & contractor equipment.

Here is an early list... Selling: Cars and Pickups: 2011 Ford F-250 4WD Ext-Cab, V-8, A/C, PW, PL, Cruise, Snowplow, Approximately 31,000 miles. 2002 Ford F-350 4WD Utility/Plow Truck, Gas, Automatic 2001 Ford F-350 4WD Dump/Plow Truck, Gas, Automatic (3) 2001 Ford Taurus's, 95K, 99K and 139K 2001 Crown Vic (Police pkg), 75K miles, 2001 Ford E-350 Van Truck, V-8 Gas, Auto, 12' Van Body, 66k 2000 Ford E-450 Bus, 7.3L Diesel, Automatic, Seats 10A, Wheel Chair Lift, 200K 1997 Ford E-350 14' Van Truck, Gas, Automatic, 97K 1997 Chevy 2500 4WD Pickup w/plow, 173K miles Large Trucks: 1994 White/GMC T/A Dump Truck, Cummins N-14, 8LL trans., Tarp, 18K miles Equipment: 1980 Barber Greene SB-131 Ext-a-mat paver, JD Diesel, Walking beam, 1850 hrs

1992 Gradall 660E T/A Hydraulic Excavator, 2 bks & Grapple, 36K miles (2) Military 30KW Gen-Sets, Diesel (trailer mounted). Bobcat 8811 Backhoe Attachment w/30" bucket (Like new) (2) John Deere X300 Lawn tractors w. 38" Mowers JD 770 BH Motor grader 2003 Caterpillar 938G Series II wheel loader JLG 80' diesel boom lift, 4x4 Genie S60 diesel boom lift, 4x4 2003 JLG E300 boom lift, electric, articulated Skyjack rough terrain scissors lift, 4x4 Cat 252B Skid Steer w/cab, 1216 hrs Cat 287B Track skid steer, 793 hrs Skid Steer loader pavement grinder Skid Steer loader forks Walk behind trencher 2006 JD 110 tractor-ldr-backhoe, 1499 hrs Ford 2310 tractor, 621 hrs Ford-Tiger 6610 boom mower tractor w/cab Moffitt M5000 fork lift, 874 hrs JD 6x4 diesel gator w/cab, 360 hrs Kubota RTV 900 (2) King Kutter 6', 3pt Rototiller Sales Manager - Richard Gray at 585-7219554 Visit our Web site www.teitsworth.com for terms, updates & pics

“WE SPECIALIZE IN LARGE AUCTIONS FOR DEALERS, FARMERS, MUNICIPALITIES AND CONTRACTORS”


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.