Thursday, December 31, 2015

Grain Meeting Set for January 4th at 8am



Upcoming ANR Programs

Jan 4th 8am, Grain Day at McLean Co. Extension Office
Jan 5th 6pm, Beef Producers Meeting
Jan 6th 8am, Pesticide Training
Jan 11th         5pm, Ag Festival Committee Meeting
Jan 15th         Commodity Conference, Bowling Green
Jan 15th-16th KY Cattlemen’s Association Convention, Owensboro
Jan 18th         Noon, Tobacco Producers Mtg & GAP Training
Jan 22nd         9am, Dealing with the Media Program at Grayson Co. Extension Office (will carpool)
Jan 27th         Owensboro Ag Expo (Grain Day)
Jan 28th         Noon, Hemp Meeting
Jan 29th         8am, Winter Round Table Series- Grain Sorghum Production
Jan 29th         10am, Pesticide Training
Feb 1st-3rd Ag Marketing, Risk Management & Economics Program
Feb 10th-13th National Farm Machinery Show
Feb 17th         10am Soils 101-Learning the Basics of the Soils We Farm
Feb 19th    8am, Winter Round Table Series- Disease Issues in 2015 & How to Prevent in 2016
Feb 25th         Noon, Economics of Grain Storage Mtg
Feb 26th         8am, Winter Round Table Series- Liquid Fertilizers
Feb 27th         Extension Dodge Ball Tournament to Raise Funds for 4-H Camp
March 2nd IPM Training, Princeton
March 12th Small Farm & Garden Conference at Henderson Co. Extension Office
March 15th 8am, Annual Fiscal Court Breakfast
March 16th 9am, Women in Ag Program
March 18th 8am, Winter Round Table Series- NEW Poultry Litter Decision Tool
March 24th Disaster Preparedness Program
March 29th Farm Safety Program, Myer Creek Park
April 13th Cover Crops Field Day, Mark Howard’s Farm


Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Learn to Use Body Condition Scores as Indicators of Herd Health


Early winter is an optimum time to prepare your spring-calving herd for reproductive success. Adequate nutrition from about 50 to 80 days prior to calving is critical to maximizing a cow’s ability to rebreed and maintain a 365-day calving interval. If a cow gets inadequate nutrition or is thin at calving and breeding, she will take longer to come into heat and will require more services to conceive.

According to Dr. Les Anderson, UK Extension Beef Specialist, the best method to evaluate the nutritional status of your herd is to do body condition scores. A body condition score is an estimate of the degree of body fatness of an animal, which gives us an estimate of the amount of body energy reserves available to the cow. Scores range from 1 to 9, with 1 meaning a cow is emaciated or extremely thin, while a 9 is an animal that is extremely obese. Beef producers should train themselves to identify cows that are too thin, cows that are marginal and cows that have an optimal body condition score for rebreeding. Body condition scoring is a tool to help plan your supplemental feeding program so you can maintain adequate productivity in your herd.

You can determine body condition score by looking at the degree of sharpness or thinness in several areas of the cow’s body. The ribs and backbone are two primary regions you need to examine to help establish body condition score. Other important areas are the tailhead, shoulder and brisket regions of the cow. In general, cows with more fat appear smoother in these areas to the point that individual bones are difficult to see.

Cows that are too thin, scores of 3 or less, have easily identifiable fore and rear ribs, sharpness across the backbone, sharpness over the hook and pin bones near the tailhead and sharpness across the shoulders. These cows need to gain approximately 150-200 pounds before calving if you want them to rebreed in a timely fashion.

Cows that are borderline have a body condition score of 4. These cows have easily identifiable 12th and 13th ribs, but their fore ribs are covered. The backbone and hooks and pins are still prominent but are not sharp in appearance. The shoulders are less defined. These cows need to gain about 75 to 100 pounds before breeding season.

Cows that are in optimal body condition have scores of 5 or 6 and have a good overall appearance. No ribs are visible unless the animal has been shrunk. The backbone, hooks and pins appear rounded and not easily seen and the area around the tailhead is filled in but not mounded. These cows simply need to maintain their weight until calving.

Research has shown that cows with scores less than 5 at calving have lower pregnancy rates and take longer to rebreed than cows with scores of 5 or higher. The optimum body condition score for mature cows is a 5 or 6. Heifers that are calving their first calf need to have a score of at least 6 to maximize rebreeding success.

The best way to use body condition scoring is sort cows according to their score at 90-100 days before calving and feed these groups according to their score and nutrient needs to optimize reproduction. Each body condition score typically represents 75 to 100 pounds of body weight. Analyze your feedstuffs so that you can accurately balance rations to meet the needs of each group of cows. This method not only ensures adequate breeding potential of your cowherd, but is also an efficient method of supplying nutrients to your cows.

For more information on scoring body condition in your cowherd, contact the McLean County Cooperative Extension Service at (270)273-3690.  Educational programs of the Cooperative Extension Service serve all people regardless of race, color, sex, religion, disability or national origin.

Upcoming ANR Programs
Dec 18th 11:30, Post-Harvest Mtg for all Field Trial Cooperators at Hopkins CES
Dec 22nd 8am, Pancakes with Santa
Dec 25th-Jan 1st Extension Office Closed
Jan 4th 8am, Grain Day at McLean Co. Extension Office
Jan 5th 6pm, Beef Producers Meeting
Jan 6th 8am, Pesticide Training
Jan 15th Commodity Conference, Bowling Green
Jan 15th-16th KY Cattlemen’s Association Convention, Owensboro
Jan 18th Noon, Tobacco Producers Mtg & GAP Training
Jan 22nd 9am, Dealing with the Media Program at Grayson Co. Extension Office
Jan 27th Owensboro Ag Expo (Grain Day)
Jan 28th Noon, Hemp Meeting
Jan 29th 8am, Winter Round Table Series- Grain Sorghum Production
Jan 29th 10am, Pesticide Training

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

What are we teaching about agriculture?

A couple of weeks ago Bro. Tommy asked us all a question in church that has stuck with me and now crosses my mind every day.  When he asked us “What are we teaching our children?” my mind starting racing.  I immediately started questioning myself and thinking about what all I have and have not taught Fisher.  Of course for the next few days I thought long and hard about what we have been teaching Fisher about Christ and about Church.  Then, I began to think about what are teaching Fisher about hard work, manners, helping others and of course about agriculture.

Growing up a family farm I understood the events that occurred there.  I understood where my food comes from, how it was produced and all of the hard work that was put into that food source.  I also assumed that everyone else understood these concepts as well.  I then understood how far off I was with my assumption once I left Smith Mills.

While some do realize the hard work, time and money that is invested in producing our food, sadly there are people that do not understand where their food comes from.  Unfortunately too many people would rather believe what they read on social media or listen to bogus rumors about their food sources instead of taking the time to do their research and educate themselves about their food using reliable, science based information.  If the general public claims to be so health conscious, then why won’t more people believe the real facts about farming and food production rather than what they read on social media?

Which brings me back the original question, what are teaching our children?  I have the privilege of conducting school programs and have the opportunity to talk with our youth.  While they are such a joy to be around and extremely polite, many of them do not understand where their food comes from.  I feel like as a parent and as an educator, I have a responsibility to educate about our food sources and how blessed we are to live where we have access to the world’s safest food supply.  However, this is isn’t something that can be done by one person.  This is something that takes a whole community of agriculture advocates; parents, volunteers, teachers, farmers, the media, etc.

The most important things we all can do is to educate ourselves using reliable, science based resources.  The most reliable sources of science based information comes from universities.  I suggest maybe starting with Dr. Paul Vincelli’s blog on insights into food system sustainability at http://out-of-the-box-vincelli.blogspot.com/ or one of his papers at http://www2.ca.uky.edu/ANR/PDF/QuotesConsumingGMOCrops.pdf.  Once we have educated ourselves, then we need to educate our children so that they understand the amount of hard work, time and money that farmers invest in producing a safe and abundant food supply for us all.

For more information on educating ourselves and our children about our food sources and about agriculture, contact the McLean County Cooperative Extension Office at (270)273-3690.  Educational programs of the Cooperative Extension Service serve all people regardless of race, color, age, sex, religion, disability or national origin.