Dairy - General

Develop a human resource plan before disaster strikes
Defining your broker’s role is key to making the right choice
Farms that remain in the family are more successful
Interactive tool allows you to submit questions from your field
If livestock producers lock in purchases wisely, they should receive a price break for this protein supplement
A federal judge has issued a temporary restraining order preventing the Hammond Ranch from grazing cattle on their allotments.
Kansas cattle producer Debbie Lyons-Blythe told a U.S. Senate Agriculture Committee hearing on climate change, “The U.S. cattle industry is proud of its history as stewards of our nation’s natural resources.”
Growth-promoting implants, and implant protocols, have evolved considerably since their introduction in 1958.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has issued a warning letter to JBS USA concerning its Souderton, Pennsylvania, rendering facility.
The 74th cattle herd in Michigan since 1998 has been identified as having bovine tuberculosis (TB).
After more than a month since widespread flooding and blizzards devastated cattle producers in Nebraska and surrounding states an animal rights group is using the tragedy to push a vegan diet.
Frank Mitloehner, professor and air quality expert at the University of California, Davis, will receive the 2019 Borlaug CAST Communication Award.
If Meatless Monday were adopted by all Americans we’d see a GHG reduction of just 0.5%.
California’s Cattle Council will soon begin funding programs designed to help consumers understand the positive role cattle and beef production play in the environment, and other issues.
A South Dakota judge presiding over the foreclosure of Robert and Becky Blom has ordered that the nearly 28,000 head of cattle be inspected and sold.
As an advocate of science, Frank Mitloehner believes efforts to reduce meat and milk production globally will only result in “more hunger in poor countries.”
A case of bovine tuberculosis (TB) has been confirmed at a dairy located in the Panhandle region of Texas by animal health officials.
Scientists are one step closer to understanding how dangerous contaminants from fecal matter are entering private wells in a northeastern Wisconsin county.
A farmer and a farm worker are on probation after applying liquid manure onto a field that resulted in runoff into a nearby stream. The farm was fined $50,000.
The U.S. annual Cattle Inventory report found 94.8 million head on farms and ranches, up slightly from last year. The calf crop from 2018 totaled 36.4 million head, up 2%.
Social media has been full of MEME and cartoons that are poking fun at the “farting cows” mention in the Green New Deal’s FAQ sheet.
Green New Deal fact sheet continues to spark controversy with a call for reduction in farting cows.
Hay produced on irrigated grass and subirrigated meadows can be a potential supplementation source throughout Nebraska.
Producers can learn about growing corn for silage and feeding corn silage to cattle.
Severe cold this winter, especially in areas with little to no snow cover, could result in damaged or killed stands of alfalfa.
From what’s being observed in some south Georgia pastures this fall, oats are struggling, with growers seeing issues from cold damage, nutrient and moisture stress, and possible barley yellow dwarf virus.
The competition for world’s biggest bovine has started to heat up with contestants from the U.S. and Canada stepping up to the measuring tape against Australia’s Knickers.
Scientists from USDA developed the tools to mass produce penicillin, which was used for treating wounded soldiers over 70 years ago during World War II.
Meet one of the leading scientists in the world of livestock genetics. Dan Carlson of Minnesota-based Recombinetics is rewriting the future of genetic code of animals.
While it can be easy to get in a rush, avoid barn fires by ensuring your hay is dry enough before you bale it.
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