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Articles Tagged with ''legacy''

Time management is not really about time

August 11, 2010
How many of the following statements apply to you and your farm? • Working as hard as you can but always one step behind. • Frequently caught between work and personal/family expectations and obligations. • Often cannot find time for things you know are important. • Constantly focused on crises and emergencies. • Rarely have time to think and plan ahead. • Not able to implement what you already know.
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Managing the workers that manage your dry cows

August 11, 2010
Too often, dry cows get minimal herdsman attention on many dairies. Drying off cows can be accomplished through routine protocols that minimize risk and maximize results when done correctly. When done poorly, mastitis, lameness, low-quality colostrum and open dry cows can result. I wrote an article for herdsmen in the August Issue 4 of El Lechero to help them understand facts regarding dry cow management. I’d like to summarize that information for you and suggest that you tighten up implementation of your dry cow protocols as necessary.
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Model developed for manipulating Vitamin D levels in calves

August 11, 2010
A new model for manipulating vitamin D levels in young calves has been developed by Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists who say it could help establish just how much of this important nutrient the young animals need to promote optimal growth and health. Newborn dairy calves get crucial Vitamin D in the colostrum from their mothers as they nurse during the first few days after birth. Later, the neonatal calf often receives Vitamin D in commercial milk replacers. But levels of Vitamin D in these supplements may need to be re-evaluated, given recent evidence suggesting Vitamin D status influences not only bone growth, but also immune function.
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Now more than ever: Check records and talk to your veterinarian before you ship the cow

August 11, 2010
“Drug misuse on dairy cows prompts federal warning,” Star Tribune, Nov. 21, 2009 Newspaper headlines such as the above are becoming too common. The Star Tribune published an article in November 2009 recounting the reprimand of two local Minnesota dairy producers by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for sending cows to slaughter with “dangerously high” violative drug residue levels in their system.
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Mr. Chairman, Thanks for the meeting, but...

August 11, 2010
The following are responses by producers and industry experts who participated as panelists or provided testimony at the Department of Justice/USDA antitrust hearing in Madison, Wisconsin, June 25. What good may come from the USDA/DOJ workshop? I believe that it was very significant to the future of our dairy industry that Secretary Vilsack and Attorney General Holder recognized the importance of conducting workshops, such as the one held in Madison, Wisconsin. This event provided representatives of our industry an opportunity to focus the attention of our public officials, in addition to everyone in our industry, on their views about the critical issues we need to solve in order to restore economic stability to our industry.
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Go big or go home!

August 11, 2010
A few years ago country music duo Brooks & Dunn released a song called Only in America. The premise is that only in America can a regular kid grow up to be whatever he or she dreams possible. They sing that it’s only here “where we dream as big as we want to, we all get a chance, everybody gets to dance.” I always love hearing what kids want to be when they grow up. The answers range from pro athlete, U.S. president, fire fighter, doctor, movie star and everything in between. It’s great to see that the notion of “limited potential” has never occurred to them.
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3 open minutes with David Carter

August 11, 2010
During a recent trip to New Zealand Progressive Dairyman Editor Walt Cooley sat down with New Zealand’s Minister of Agriculture David Carter at Fieldays, the country’s largest ag trade show exhibition. Carter discusses the country’s transition to food production without government subsidies and how his country’s recent signature into the Kyoto Protocol will impact New Zealand’s global ag competitiveness. What’s your background in agriculture? CARTER: I am a sheep-based farmer. I was originally an agricultural farm student and graduate and then immediately went into farming. I had quite a significant involvement in the introduction of some European cattle breeds into New Zealand in the days when embryo transplanting was first developed. I’ve continued to farm since, and I have two properties down in the Canterbury Region (the middle of New Zealand’s south island).
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Top25

Margin outlook not as strong for 2011

August 11, 2010
This article was #7 in PDmag's Top 25 most-well read articles in 2010. Summary: In August, Chip Whalen shared how forward profit margins were beginning to deteriorate. Profit margins for Q3 2010 through Q1 2011 were down between 29 cents per hundredweight and 38 cents per hundredweight from where they were three months previously and were currently projecting either breakeven scenarios at best or margins that are only slightly above that level. Because this article was so popular, we asked Whalen a follow-up question:
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1210pd yale 1 full

Don’t look past the statehouse on issues affecting dairymen

August 11, 2010
The Great Dairy Shock of 2008-2009 (and still trembling) created a tremendous effort at evaluating the current dairy policies and designing ones that would eliminate another such shock, or at least limit its impact. The focus is on national policy. Congress has held hearings on the issue. The USDA has created a dairy industry advisory committee. The Department of Justice has held field hearings on the issues of antitrust and dairy. National trade groups have together, and separately, considered various approaches to the policies. State, regional, breed and other groups are actively developing their own ideas. Those efforts, as well as discussions in this magazine, focus on the national, sometimes international, issues of marketing orders, pricing mechanisms, price support, supply management, milk protein concentrates and more.
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Solutions require more than one appearance

August 11, 2010
When New Zealand holds its annual agricultural exhibition, one of similar size and exposure to our World Ag Expo show, the minister of agriculture makes an appearance. And sometimes more than just a one-day, couple of hours’ appearance. This past year he was on the Fieldays show grounds twice during the four-day event.
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