Livestock Equipment Technology
Beef producers use the digital tool to improve forage quality and move cattle more easily.
Producers are encouraged to take time this month to note what’s working and what needs to improve their grazing plan.
Direct-to-satellite smart collars remove need for cell towers, enabling ranchers to manage cattle anywhere they can see the sky.
Halter’s Andrew Fraser explains how virtual fencing collars use sound, vibration and GPS to automate rotational grazing, increase pasture utilization and reduce ranch labor.
How Bloody Buckets Cattle Co. is building on legacy and adopting new tools to find new opportunities.
What purchases are producers making today to improve the profitability and productivity of their cow herd?
Beef producers are embracing new technology and using data to make purchasing decisions.
The Odde family finds success focusing on producing the next generation of a profitable cow herd while educating and raising the next generation of beef producers.
Virtual fencing allows grazing to continue after wildfire rips through rancher’s BLM allotment.
Satellite technology makes real-time water monitoring possible from your smartphone.
Virtual fencing provides options for small pasture sizes and not-so-great physical fences.
Virtual fencing helps Texas cattleman move cattle from the comfort of home before the summer heat sets in.
Water monitors and sensors empower producers with real-time data and automation to improve efficiency, sustainability and profitability.
Virtual fencing offers Wild Olive Cattle Company flexibility in grazing the dry, brushy country of their south Texas ranch.
We’re sharing some Smart Farming features to help you be more efficient with your reproduction and cow herd management.
Wearable technology is becoming more available for ranchers to keep an eye on individual animals in their herds.
Monarch says its Autodrive technology is the first commercially available, fully autonomous feature in a driver-optional tractor.
The addition of weave automation allows less reliance on operator skill to make a uniformed bale and streamlines the baling process.
Elon Musk wants his futuristic Optimus robots to clean dishes and scrub carpets. But what if you wanted one of those creepy looking things working in your fields?
The partnership integrates Bunning manure spreaders into the Vermeer lineup serving North American hay, forage and livestock producers.
How one multigenerational Montana ranch continues to ensure long-term viability.
A team of Irish researchers has developed a breakthrough innovation to monitor activity and health characteristics of dairy cows – and it doesn’t involve and wires, chips, batteries, or electronics of any kind.
Traceability in the food animal industry is more than negating disease risk—consumers are demanding more information about their food.
Fifth-generation Nebraska rancher Jaclyn Wilson, and her family, launched an innovative project using advanced technologies to track cattle as verified digital assets.
These programs are not meant to take the place of on-the-ground monitoring and management, but they provide tools for the rancher tool kit to assist in the adaptive management of rangelands.