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Cattle farmer, 79, known for crazy Kentucky-fan costumes
A federal judge in Nevada is considering crucial rulings about what jurors will hear in the trial of six defendants accused of stopping U.S. agents at gunpoint from rounding up cattle near Cliven Bundy’s ranch in April 2014.
A public hearing on imposing potential 100 percent import tariffs on some 90 European products -- particularly targeting agricultural products from France, Germany and Italy -- will be held February 15 in Washington, DC by the Office of the US Trade Representative (USTR).
Witness testimony is beginning in Las Vegas for six defendants accused of taking up arms to stop a federal roundup of cattle near Nevada cattleman Cliven Bundy’s ranch in April 2014.
Colorado livestock could be eating hemp under a bill that passed the state Senate Tuesday.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture has notified livestock industry groups that it will move forward with proposed Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards Act (GIPSA) rules proposed in 2010.
Proposed all-Australian bid won’t need government approval.
Three wolves in Wyoming are being pursued by wildlife officials after repeated attacks on cattle.
Cattle have been shot in North Dakota with both a gun and arrows.
The farm economy has been struggling for a while now, especially with weak cattle prices and disease issues in wheat.
Key question as ‘America first’ focus comes from administration.
President Donald Trump’s vow to accelerate construction of a “contiguous, physical wall” along the Mexican border is slamming into a Washington reality _ who’s going to pay for it and how?
Waste flows downhill, and that’s what worries folks in Hendricks, Minn.
Supporters of cattleman and anti-federal government figure Cliven Bundy are protesting a presidential decision to give national monument protection to public land where Bundy grazes cows near his southern Nevada ranch.
As America’s cow herd dropped to 60-year lows two years ago, ranchers saw an economic incentive to save and breed replacement heifers. Demand for the young females spiked, creating a profitable niche market which now appears to have flamed out.
A ranch in Kansas needed a little help heading into the holidays, so they hired an elf. But he doesn’t spend much time on the shelf.
R-CALF has been ruled in favor against the USDA on the use of beef checkoff funds.
Polar Vortex Blasting U.S. Dealt a Short Life by Dueling Weather
Northern U.S. gets cold in a La Nina, while the South warms.
A majority of cattle producers in Iowa voted to reinstate a $0.50 per head checkoff.
Without a surge of beef moving off shelves in the retail sector, prices will have a hard time rebounding in 2017.
A pair of bulls in Montana have tested positive for brucellosis.
Texas ranchers have 600,000 more cattle and calves than they did two years ago, according to the Texas Cattle Feeders Association. Packing plants have less competition and plenty of cattle to choose from, so they’ve dropped the amount they’re willing to pay for wholesale cattle.
The mood was somber as ranchers from western South Dakota met in Fort Pierre to discuss ways to limit beef imports and protect the cow-calf operators.
The fear of bovine tuberculosis spreading has deer hunters dealing with strict inspections in Indiana.
We know the majority of ranchers and land managers see open land as the foundation for food production.
Bullish fund holdings signal ‘change in sentiment’ for prices.
A small packing plant in Oregon has been cited for inhumane slaughter practices.
More cows, and even bison have been mysteriously killed and butchered in North Dakota pastures.
A lawsuit over the beef checkoff is being heard in the U.S. District Court of Montana.
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