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1. Animal, fish feed products with melamine recalled
The melamine-tainting problem with dog and cat food was discovered in March, when pet food manufacturer Menu Foods Income Fund of Ontario, Canada, recalled more than 60 million containers of dog and cat food after receiving reports of sick and dying animals. Uniscope, which produces binders that animal and fish feed manufacturers use to make food pellets, has used Tembec resins since 2004, a company spokesman said. The melamine-tainting problem with dog and cat food was discovered in...
Source5/30/2007

2. Horse owners find ways to stretch limited hay supplies
It should contain at least 15 percent fiber if no hay is fed, but nutritionists do not recommend no hay being fed. Drought, blizzards, freeze and other conditions have proven tough on horse owners as well as livestock producers to find suitable feed for their animals. Hansen said producers need to try not to feed less than 1 percent of the horse's weight in good, clean, long-stemmed (hay) forage per day. Many types of hay can be fed to horses, but more nutrient dense hays, such as alfalfa,...
SourceHigh Plains Journal,KS

3. Care and Feeding Your Pet
Pet owners who do or do not want to feed a pet a certain ingredient can look at the list of ingredients to make sure that particular substance is included or excluded. And pet food manufacturers compete for these dollars by trying to make their products stand out among the many types of dry, moist, and semi-moist foods available. Some people prefer to pass up animal by-products, which are proteins that have not been heat processed (unrendered) and may contain heads, feet, viscera and other...
Source6/12/2007

4. Spring freeze, drought cut into hay yield
In good faith you can't charge a livestock producer what it would take to make up the loss. Nationally, drought, winter kill, spring freeze and the switching of hay acres to corn and other crops have cut the hay supply by 30 percent since last year, 46 percent from 2005, according to the U. That acreage should have produced 150 tons of hay. The switch to soybeans reduces Borchers' hay ground this year from 200 acres to 140, matching a national trend. Livestock producers who depend on...
SourceKankakee Daily Journal,IL

5. What's in this Dog Food Anyway?
I am quite sure that it will not surprise you to know that the pet food industry denies that any companian pets are used in pet food. The Labeling Act states that pet food must list the name and address of the company that produced the pet food. It will probably come as no surprise that the pet food industry takes in billions of dollars every year in sales. However, the source of the protein in the pet food can be from practically any source: condemned material from slaughterhouses,...
SourceInjuryBoard.com,FL

6. Are you gonna eat that?
Will it now take an even worse scenario for the FDA to initiate aggressive new changes in the way it inspects imported products for human consumption?As disturbing as that possibility is, nearly six years after the United States was viciously attacked by terrorists, it appears more likely than not, considering the FDA's sorry track record. Will it now take an even worse scenario for the FDA to initiate aggressive new changes in the way it inspects imported products for human consumption?As...
SourceToledo Blade,OH

7. Hay yield down
The high-quality beef that consumers buy is usually fed with hay that is produced during the spring. Hay auction prices indicate that the hay quality is competitive and quality hay is still being made, Carter said. Extraordinary hay crops, farmers say, allow them to produce high-quality beef and livestock. The hay that is there now is good quality if we can get it put up and preserved. Farmers harvest their hay crop between May and late summer in order to raise beef prime for the grill and...
SourceStaunton News Leader,VA

8. High pay for hay
Some producers in traditional Northwest hay areas have also either totally switched from hay to corn production or have planted corn after their first cutting of hay. Hay prices started to climb last winter when there was a shortage of hay because of poor harvesting conditions earlier in 2006, and now they re going to stay up because of increasing costs to grow it. Power rates are going up almost 15 percent, and pumps are necessary to irrigate hay fields beyond the spring rains in order to...
SourceThe NewsReview,OR

9. Drought makes hay scarce for farm animals
Hay reserves aren't nearly as plentiful as usual because of a subpar spring hay crop blamed on an early April freeze followed by the current dry spell. Garry Lacefield, a University of Kentucky extension forage specialist, estimated that statewide hay production was off at least 50 percent this spring. With much of the state in moderate to severe drought, hay is becoming a precious commodity in Kentucky, the nation's leading beef cattle producer east of the Mississippi River. Without some...
SourceKentucky.com,KY

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