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There are steps farmers can take to get the hay up quickly and reduce the potential for rain damage.
Worms, flies, ticks and lice are all costly to beef producers.
USDA and partners complete first of its kind sale of carbon credits from working ranch grasslands.
Ensure product efficacy by dosing and storing injectable dewormers correctly.
Knowing when to deworm your cattle can be quite profitable.
Veterinarians have an opportunity to help clients improve production efficiency and returns with customized parasite control.
As late spring approaches, livestock producers should evaluate and select pasture fly control options available for their specific management system.
As late spring and early summer approaches, livestock producers should begin the process of evaluating their pasture fly control options for their specific management system.
Don’t forget to keep flies away from your cattle to prevent the spread of pinkeye.
Fly control is one of the summer chores we all dread. It is frustrating, time-consuming and dips into our profits. When dealing with flies on cattle, there are essentially two species involved: horn flies located on the backs of cattle and face flies.
Develop a strategic deworming strategy now to reduce potential problems in the future
The time is now to start planning for parasite control prior to grazing.
Weather, management and worm species play into deworming recommendations
Shed hunting is a late winter and spring sport for millions of landowners and outdoorsmen in the United States, yet, few hunters can match Jimmy Cassell’s consistent totals or antler size. The search for sheds never gets old for Cassell, even after 30 years and over 1,500 specimens.
Wayne Springer is tired of paying $300 for a bag of traited corn seed. Unafraid to change horses in midstream, the 60-year-old producer is transitioning from a row crop farm to a ranching operation.
On Mikey Taylor’s farmland, cover crops and livestock are the vehicle to building high-potential soils.
Loss and risk are an assumption in farming; devastation is not. Crops in the Dakotas and Montana are baking on an anvil of severe drought and extreme heat, as growers and ranchers make difficult decisions regarding cattle, corn and wheat.
What can a farmer drop in the planter when prices are poor? Aaron Base’s planter has room for wine, wheat, weddings, Airbnb, grass fed beef and a 1928 schoolhouse. Revenue beyond the rows can be crucial to an operation, particularly in lean commodity years, and Base is bucking convention by tapping the vein of side-stream income.
New proposal is big on complexity, short on clarity when it comes to redirecting funds
Tyson Seeking to Boost Food Brands as It Hunts for Acquisitions
Divestment plan leads to ownership changes for 11 feedlots
Japan’s imports of U.S. beef jump on strong demand and higher yen.
Ranchers in western Texas want local culinary students to know more than how to cook a good steak.
Livestock producers struggle to rebuild their operations with few resources to date
China’s largest online retailer to buy Montana beef