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The Rural Voice, 1993-07, Page 22Bruce Schmidt with his prize-winning Jerseys. Waste not, want not Using alcohol by-product proves the key ingredient in helping young couple produce top herd results By Keith Roulston 18 THE RURAL VOICE When you start small and want to build a successful farm business, you'd better use every edge you can get. Seeking an edge led Bruce and Grace Schmidt to be one of the leaders in Ontario in using by-product feeds to increase production in their dairy herd. The Schmidts have been feeding wet distillers grains to their Jersey herd for two years and it has been part of the answer in increasing yield and decreasing the cost per litre of producing milk, Bruce says. In the past year the Schmidts have won awards for the second highest producing Jersey herd in Ontario and the fourth in Canada, won the Perth - Huron Jersey Club high total BCA trophy and will be receiving, in July, the award for the second highest producing herd (all breeds) in Huron County and the most improved herd (all breeds) in Huron County. It's been a long hard struggle for the Schmidts. After Bruce, the son of a Cargill -area dairy farmer married Grace, who grew up on a Blyth -area farm, they went looking for an empty dairy barn they could rent to start farming. They found one just a couple of farms away from Grace's home farm. They rented the barn, house and a few acres and started out with the absolute minimum. They had no land so had to buy all their inputs. They had no farm as collateral so they had to purchase feed and other supplies on a cash basis. Finally in the spring of 1989 they were able to purchase a 73 -acre farm a couple of miles away near Walton. The farm fit the bill, Bruce says, because it had a good dairy barn with a new milking parlour but a small land base that helped keep the cost down. "It allowed us to get in and get rolling," he says. Their first step was to install a computer feeder system and automatic takeoffs in the milking parlour. The Schmidts have plowed every available cent into their farming operation, doing without many luxuries for their personal lives while they accumulated more quota. Despite his best efforts, however, getting his production up was a losing battle. "We were culling heavily and still our BCA (Breed Class Average) was stuck at 160. I wasn't satisfied and started taking a look at how