CapitalPress.com Friday, June 4, 2021 SPRING MACHINERY SALE 1982 John Deere 4040 with 158 loader, new tires, 3 remotes . $32,500 Oldenkamp Dairy Joe and Ben Oldenkamp with their Lely Vector automatic feeder. The feeder measures the components and detects how much to add to existing feed as it passes along the feed fence. OLDENKAMP DAIRY New made in the USA Loader GENIE S-60, 60 ft reach, duetz air Buckets, 6’ 7’ 8’ ...... Starting at $850 cooled diesel, 5400 hrs ......... $25,000 Putting robots to work By BRENNA WIEGAND For the Capital Press Atlas Copco Compressor 375 CFN, MAXXUM 115, 5800 hours, 1760 JD 4.5 diesel engine, 1720 hrs ........... Leader, 3 remotes .................. $40,000 ................................................ $14,500 * AG EQUIPMENT * * SALVAGED TRACTORS * * CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT * * PARTS * JD 915 7-Shank Ripper .......... $3,500 (Save up to 50% buying used parts.) Nyssa Tractor & Implement Celebrating 31 years in the agricultural machinery business. Our yard has 5 miles of road, with machinery on both sides. FREE TOURS GIVEN DAILY. LOCATED NYSSA, OR Call Toll Free: (833)372-4020 www.nyssatractor.com • sales@nyssatractor.com S223534-1 6 TILLAMOOK, Ore. — You might say the cows at Oldenkamp Dairy have the run of the place. Joseph and Sheri Olden- kamp purchased the farm with Joe’s father in 1975 and the pair now run it with their two sons, Luke and Ben. They continued to build up the Oldenkamp herd and until about three years ago had a standard milking par- lor and overall setup for their 420 cows. They also farm about 350 acres of grass and corn, which is harvested as silage to pro- vide all the herd’s forage. The Oldenkamps were able to focus on management and other tasks around the farm until a heightened labor shortage piled milking onto their other duties. They decided to enlist robots to lighten the load and in 2018 invested in six Lely Astronaut A4 milking robots and an automated feeding system. A couple years earlier they had installed 400 water- beds for the cows to cut down on work, keep the ani- mals cleaner, their bedding more consistent and provide even distribution of the cows’ weight while resting. At that time, they also installed an automated alley scraper. “We used to need to run a scraper tractor in the barn when we would bring cows into the milking parlor but that was only twice a day,” Oldenkamp said. “The peri- odic passes of the automatic scraper make for a much cleaner facility.” Alley scrapers also help the cows’ footing, improve hoof health and reduce ammonia emissions from manure. The robots resulted in a free fl ow barn where cows can get themselves milked, feed or lie down whenever they choose. “They’ve got access to all of that without going through any gates,” Luke Oldenkamp said. “Their collars send information to a computer or my cell phone and I can pull up anything you want to know about a cow — super handy.” Three robots milk the Jer- seys and the other three milk the red and white Holsteins. The dairy milks two diff erent breeds of cows because they are paid premiums by cream- eries for high fat and protein components. The larger Hol- steins provide quantity, while the Jerseys produce higher components. “The Jerseys are just awe- some with robots,” Olden- kamp said. “They’re such curious animals and very food driven so the grain they get in the robots makes them eager to go in.” Upon putting in the milk- ing robots the Oldenkamps decreased the size of their herd from 420 to 350 to bet- ter fi t the new layout. The cows, once milked twice a day in the conven- tional parlor, are now milk- ing themselves an average 2.8 times a day. The daily vol- ume of milk per cow has gone from an average of 65 pounds to about 80 pounds. The time and physi- cal demands have gone way down. “It’s a huge lifestyle change — more freedom and a lot fewer physical demands,” Oldenkamp said. “We get off a lot earlier; the last shift is gone by about 5:30 p.m. and the farm gets pretty quiet.”