28. With higher prices, farmers may plant more corn this spring Corn prices have risen in the past year with demand for ethanol, prompting some seed suppliers to predict area farmers will increase their corn acreage this spring. Carhart said northern Wisconsin farmers who buy his company s seed corn are more likely to be dairy farmers, who grow corn to feed to their livestock. And anticipating continued strong sales, he said he probably will plant 10 percent to 15 percent more corn than usual this year to produce seed that farmers will plant in 2008....
Source • River Valley Business Report •
29. Chicken feed may present arsenic danger A study by Duquesne University researchers has found that the organic arsenic added to chicken feed is chemically transformed into inorganic arsenic, a known carcinogen, much more quickly than previously thought. That increases the risk that the inorganic arsenic will contaminate surface water and groundwater drinking supplies in farming areas where the chicken litter fertilizer is spread repeatedly, said John Stolz, professor of biology at Duquesne and co-author of the study reported in...
Source • Pittsburgh PostGazette •
30. Woman blames possibly tainted food for cats' ills You feed your pet the best food you can afford. However, data from the nation's largest chain of pet hospitals, Banfield, suggest it is as high as hundreds a week during the three months the food was on the market. But Iams was included in the recall, along with about 90 other pet food labels. As to Nixons quality of life as long as he is playing,eating (and complaining when you are late)Chasing the dogs and walking on his new leash 3 times a day he is pretty darn happy He is the king...
Source • The Palm Beach Post •
31. Meat Contaminated with Drug-Resistant Bacteria sits on Supermarket ... Environmentalists say GPA residues are found in food, fish and streams and food activists say they make farm conditions possible that would otherwise kill. Now a bill introduced by Senator Edward Kennedy (Democrat-Massachusetts) and Senator Olympia Snowe (Republican-Maine)--and by Representative Louise Slaughter (Democrat-New York) in the House, a microbiologist--would phase out nontherapeutic use in livestock of "medically important antibiotics. GPAs are thought to produce growth by...
Source • 3/12/2007 •
32. Flower pots growing greener Most is converted to animal feed that provides little nutritional value and makes no profit for producers. They don't decompose, and they're not usually made of the plastic recycled in these parts. Add concerns over mad cow disease and avian flu, says Marc Teffeau, "and it's conceivable in the future that the Food and Drug Administration might ban the feeding of animal byproducts back into the production cycle. Peat pots have been around for a while, but peat supplies are finite. But...
Source • 3/27/2007 •
33. Pasture management workshop for horse owners scheduled for May 3 Horse owners wanting to learn more about the nutritive value of purchased hay or enhance knowledge of forage production and management can attend an all-day workshop scheduled May 3. The workshop will cover such topics as horse pastures, production, selection and feeding of various hay and processed roughages. Pasture management workshop for horse owners scheduled for May 3 Delta. Pasture management workshop for horse owners scheduled for May 3 Delta. Attendees will also receive a cap...
Source • Southwest Farm Press,KS •
34. Forest cat sickened by tainted pet food containing melamine The petite 6-year-old is among pets throughout Central Virginia that may have been sickened by eating food containing adulterated wheat gluten from a supplier in China. Food and Drug Administration said tests of the food, urine and tissue samples of sickened cats have isolated melamine, a substance used in making plastics and also as a fertilizer. We re assuming it s a case involving the food, if the animal has a history of eating the food prior to the symptoms, particularly if (the...
Source • Lynchburg News and Advance,VA •
35. Pressed for time: Compressors aid shipping, delivery of cash crop Ward Rugh employees sweep up hay Thursday afternoon around the forge compactor, which is used to compress bails of hay and cut them to certain specifications for customers. The hay compacting is actually a process using four to six workers. The hydraulics allow the machine to compress 120-pound field bales into denser, more easily transportable bales that are half the original size. As they go by, a worker cuts the twine and the hay is pushed into the compactor, compressed and retied. The...
Source • Daily Record,WA •
36. Oswalds honored for conservation efforts His current goal is to open up more feed for his cows and provide forage for the nearly 500 head neighborhood elk herd and keep them off his lower elevation forage base. The couple raises grass fed only beef so Steve takes his forage seriously. Like most conventional operations, they put up hay from their irrigated meadows and fed in the winter. He continually monitors the land and makes adjustments to the schedule throughout the year depending on forage conditions. The Oswald's direct...
Source • Ag Journal,CO •
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