In This Issue:
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Today, my dad and I are headed up the road to Artesian,
S.D. to help our neighbors wean their calves for today's sale in town.
I think it's a great resource to team up with neighbors, whether it be
borrowing equipment or sharing labor forces. Anyway, it has started
raining again, and I think I'm going to be wishing I was back inside
blogging instead of working cattle in the mud and rain; however, this
blogging/cattle ranching business is truly a balancing act, and I feel
very fortunate to be able to do both. Before I head out to the ranch, I
thought I would share a conversation I recently had with South Dakota
State University Cooperative Extension Service Veterinarian, Russ Daly.
Daly, DVM, met with me last week to discuss this ongoing battle between
the animal rights activists and farm and ranch organizations. The SDSU
Extension Service is currently working on developing an outlet to share
unbiased information about agriculture with consumers, and although they
are still in the planning stages, Dr. Daly had plenty of thoughts on
this particular subject. Read on to learn what he has to say about the
animal care debate.
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This issue sponsored by:
Camp Cooley Genetics Annual Production Sale will be held November
20-21, 2009 at the ranch in Franklin, Texas.
Please visit www.campcooleygenetics.com
for a complete schedule, and to request a sale catalog. Sale catalog
and videos also available for viewing online.
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Ohio voters will decide next week whether to create a
board overseeing livestock care in a move that could give farmers in
rural America a blueprint for battling animal rights groups intent on
outlawing cramped cages for chickens and hogs, writes John Seewer for
the Associated Press.
Agriculture industry leaders pushed the issue onto the state ballot,
hoping to thwart an attempt by animal rights activists who were
threatening to force farmers to change how they house livestock.
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Data suggest that dormant winter native range is deficient
in protein for spring-calving cows. Previous data at many Land Grant
Universities and the University of Nebraska suggest that protein
supplementation of spring- calving beef cows grazing dormant Sandhills
range during late gestation does not improve cow reproductive
performance (2006 Nebraska Beef Report, pp. 7-9), namely pregnancy rate,
despite the fact that nutrient requirements are greater than nutrient
content of the grazed forage. In a more recent study (2009 Nebraska Beef
Report, pp. 5), spring-calving cows (3 to 5 years of age) were either
supplemented a pound of a 28% crude protein cube daily or not
supplemented protein while grazing dormant native range and their
performance was evaluated.
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This issue sponsored by:
Advantages Of Grass Planted With Alfalfa
High-quality grass can help increase ration fiber content without
lowering protein, improve drying time and increase yields. Grass also
fills in bare areas, chokes out weeds, reduces winter injury, leaf
diseases, leafhopper damage and lodging and is more palatable to
livestock. Geertson Seed sells high-quality grass and alfalfa seed. Call
us at 800-843-0390 or learn more about seeding grass with alfalfa at www.geertsonseedfarms.com.
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A variety of clinical neurological syndromes exists in
stocker and feeder cattle. Causes may be infectious,
nutritional/metabolic, or toxins. A less common syndrome is referred to
as "nervous" coccidiosis, named so because of the observation that many
of the calves that experience this neurological syndrome concurrently
exhibit clinical enteric coccidiosis.(1) This entity was first reported
in 1921.(2) Nervous coccidiosis can occur at any time of the year but
appears most often in the fall and early winter, coinciding with the
time of the year when many calves move to feedlots. This syndrome
reportedly can occur in up to 30% of the calves affected with enteric
coccidiosis. As many as 10,000 cattle die annually in the U.S. from this
problem.
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Meet BEEF Daily Editor Amanda Nolz. With
her boots planted firmly on the ground as both a cattle producer and an
agriculture writer and speaker, this young cattle industry professional
presents her unique perspective on pertinent industry issues and trends
each Monday to Thursday morning.
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