National Farm Safety & Health Week

Chuck Zimmerman

We’re coming up on National Farm Safety & Health Week. With the 2010 harvest upon us it’s a good time to think safe. The folks at the National Education Center for Agricultural Safety have a farm first aid kit you can purchase.

To hear some reasons why you should think safe you might enjoy a video clip from Cattlemen to Cattlemen featuring an interview with Mike Deering, NCBA. Mike also wrote about the subject on the NCBA Blog, Beltway Beef. You can participate in an online discussion on the subject of farm safety tomorrow evening. It’s the topic for this week’s AgChat, which I’ll be guest moderating. Please join us from 8-10pm ET. There are many mechanisms to participate with but a good one is Twubs.

Ag Groups, Audio

Soybean Growers Can Expect Plenish From Pioneer Hi-Bred

Chuck Zimmerman

You may not find a bottle of Plenish high oleic soy oil on your local supermarket shelf just yet but that doesn’t mean there isn’t some taste testing going on. At the Farm Progress Show Pioneer Hi-Bred conducted a cooking demonstration and had samples of food cooked with the product outside their exhibit.

Farmers want a soybean with strong agronomics and increased demand. Enter Plenish™ a Pioneer® brand soybean with an enhanced oil profile and increased oil stability. Plenish™ high oleic soybean oil will have 0g trans fat and 20 percent less saturated fats than commodity soybean oil and 75 percent less saturated fat than tropical palm oil.

There are currently more soybean acres cultivated in North America than any other oilseed crop, making Plenish™ high oleic soybean oil a cost-effective and sustainable trans fat solution.

I learned more about it from Russ Sanders, Marketing Director. He says Plenish represents a significant re-making of soybean oil. They’re making it “like olive oil” from the standpoint of taste and health benefits. It will begin appearing in fast food and snack food products in coming years. It will allow labels to carry the no trans fats label. For farmers, Plenish, will come in Pioneer Y Series genetics.

You can listen to my interview with Russ here: Interview With Russ Sanders

Farm Progress Photo Album

Agribusiness, Audio, Farm Progress Show, Pioneer, Soybean

Concerns With Proposed GIPSA Rule

Chuck Zimmerman

During the recent USDA/DOJ public workshop on competition in the livestock industry I spoke with Dr. Stephen Koontz, Associate Professor, Colorado State University. He has a degree in agricultural economics from University of Illinois.

Proposed new rules from the Grain Inspection, Packers and Stockyards Administration (GIPSA) was the main topic of conversation and Dr. Koontz has some concerns. He says these rules are an attempt to clarify vague language in the law that has been troubling, especially from a legal standpoint. However, when you look at the proposal he says it not only covers production contracts for the poultry and pork sectors but beef as well. It was disappointing to him to see the cattle industry “lumped in with everybody else.” This is because the cattle industry is very different than the other industries and in fact, so is the pork industry. To just treat them all as one is very troubling he says. Another thing that bothers him is how the proposed rules treat production contracts. He says that there is good research showing the benefit of these contracts to producers and consumers and the proposed rules “treat them in a very heavy handed way.” The rule basically says that if there is any preferential pricing in a contract that it has to be documented and justified. He says that opens the packing industry to the potential of having to explain every premium and discount and then it opens them up to legal action. It adds costs and risk which ultimately will be passed along to the cow/calf producer and then the consumer.

His take on the proposed rule is summed up by a friend of his at Oklahoma State University who says, “If you look closely at the rule it’s the simple, easy to understand, wrong answer.” He says it’s being pitched as “big vs. little” but he sees it more as targeting the good producer who is innovative, who is trying to do something different and now whatever they are trying to do has to become public knowledge and that “stomps pretty hard on creativity and innovation.” Interview With Dr. Stephen Koontz

Audio, GIPSA, University

Chicken Whisperer Promotes Healthy Flocks

Cindy Zimmerman

If you want to raise chickens in your backyard, the Chicken Whisperer is the man for you!

chickenKind of reminds me of the old radio spoof Chickenman – “He’s everywhere, he’s everywhere!” Mild mannered Andy Schneider has made himself into the go-to expert on raising backyard poultry. He is host of an Internet radio show and is also a contributor for Mother Earth News Magazine, Grit Magazine, and Farmers Almanac. He’s been featured on CNN, HLN, FOX, ABC, CBS, NBC, NPR, as well as in The Wall Street Journal, TIME Magazine, The Economist, USA Today, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, New Life Journal, and countless other local and national publications and has recently signed a book deal. Schneider broadcasts his radio show at noon every weekday online from his home office, and occasionally on Saturday takes the show on the road. He claims regular listeners from the Netherlands and Australia, among other far-flung destinations. A recent guest to his chat room was from Taiwan. “It’s become, which is really cool, a worldwide show!” he said. He’s also on Facebook, Twitter and is founder of the 1,200-member Meetup group for backyard chicken fans in the Atlanta area.

To top it all off, he is the official spokesperson for USDA’s Biosecurity For Birds program, an outreach campaign geared toward educating backyard poultry owners about keeping their birds safe from infectious poultry diseases. He really is everywhere!

Watch it here:

Poultry, USDA, Video

New Registrations for BASF Products

Cindy Zimmerman

BASF Crop Protection recently received a couple of new registrations.

basfStamina® F3 HL fungicide seed treatment has received EPA registration for commercial seed treatment use on wheat and barley. Stamina F3 HL is applied at the rate of 1 oz. per 100 lbs. of seed and contains no color, allowing seed-treating companies the ability to add their own color. Available for sale this fall on winter wheat, Stamina F3 HL can be mixed with Axcess® insecticide seed treatment for protection against wire worms, aphids, Hessian flies, grasshoppers and other insects.

basfAlso, Kixor® powered Treevix™ herbicide, has received approval from the California Department of Pesticide Regulation for use in California, to control broadleaf weeds for tree nut, pome fruit and citrus growers.

Treevix offers a unique chemistry that complements glyphosate for fast, complete burndown of more than 60 of the toughest broadleaf weeds including difficult species, such as common groundsel, hairy fleabane, cheeseweed and pigweed.

BASF

The Fields Are Aglow With Fire

Melissa Sandfort

About a month ago, we were on our way to Lincoln when I looked out the car window to see the skies filled with smoke and the fields aglow with fire. It’s a farming practice I see every once-in-a-while…controlled burning.

Controlled burning is used in agriculture as a part of field preparation for planting or as a management practice used to improve native grasslands.

Often called field burning, this technique is used to clear the land of any existing crop residue as well as kill weeds and weed seeds. Field burning is less expensive than most other methods such as herbicides or tillage and, when done properly, control burning produces a “cool” fire that suppresses many undesirable plants through proper timing and intensity of the burn. It also suppresses certain undesirable plants, and improves the environment for the better plants.

While herbicides and tillage certainly play a role in proper field management, controlled burning is also a method used by farmers to “refresh” the land and prepare it for next year’s crop.

(Photo courtesy of USDA NRCS, Bob Dayton, Iowa)

Until we walk again…

Uncategorized

SFMid Brings Together Successful Farming and Farm Market iD

Chuck Zimmerman

SFMiD Data Solutions is a partnership between Successful Farming and Farm Market iD and was announced this morning. Between the two companies they are now offering the “most comprehensive agricultural and rural lifestyle database in the industry.”

The combined data solution will offer unsurpassed options for multi‐sourced farm and rural lifestyle data. In addition, SFMiDTM will offer customized solutions to help agrimarketers better understand owner/operator relationships, establish electronic communication data points, and know the farmer as an individual person.

“Farm Market iD has the most current data available – built from multiple federal, state, county and proprietary sources – combined with satellite imagery and common land unit data,” says John Montandon, President of Farm Market iD. “We are thrilled to expand on this offering to generate new data and insights for marketers through the trusted relationship Successful Farming has with farmers.”

For more than 108 years, Successful Farming has worked to forge a strong relationship with farmers and farm families. This relationship allows Successful Farming to collect exclusive data on brand and product use.

“The combined efforts of Farm Market iD and Successful Farming will offer a unique compilation of farm, farmer, and consumer data, enabling agrimarketers the opportunity to learn even more about their customers,” says Scott Mortimer, Publisher of Successful Farming. “This will add value to any marketing campaign.”

Media

Zimfo Bytes

Melissa Sandfort

    Zimfo Bytes

  • The deadline for submitting your entries into the Best of NAMA competition is Friday, Oct. 8 by 5 p.m. Central time.
  • The U.S. Grains Council is pleased to announce Rebecca Bratter accepted the position of director of development. Bratter will aid the Council in developing strategies and managing programs to obtain market access and foster sales of U.S. grain and grain products in specific emerging international markets.
  • Mark your calendars for the 2010 AGMasters Conference on Dec. 2-3 at the University of Illinois I-Hotel and Conference Center. Speakers will focus on climate change and its impact on Illinois agriculture, with a special emphasis on weed management challenges.
  • Sept. 14-16, Monsanto, Husker Harvest Days and Heartland United Way are sponsoring a food drive to benefit local Nebraska food pantries. In addition, Monsanto will donate $1 per every pound of food collected, up to $20,000, to Heartland United Way and the local food pantries it is affiliated with.
Zimfo Bytes

And the Winner Is…Iowa

Joanna Schroeder

Ok. So it has come as no surprise to most people that Iowa has won the Grid Iron game…this year anyway. The final score was Iowa 35, Iowa State 7. Earlier today, I asked many of the Iowa corn growers who would win the game and I must admit, the majority picked Iowa.

But the real winners today are the football fans who have had the opportunity to learn more about how much their daily lives are impacted by corn and the farmers who grow it as part of the Iowa Corn Fed Game Day promotion.

From the moment you wake up until the moment you go to bed, you have been touched by corn. It’s in your toothpaste, your breakfast cereal and even the milk you pour on top. It’s in your fuel and in your tires and in the plastic containing your water. It’s also in your hair products and the carpet fibers in your office floor. Every day, Iowa corn farmers, and corn farmers around the world make the things you enjoy possible with their hard work and dedication. Each year they are meeting the country’s and the world’s demands by growing more corn per acre using less inputs and less land. Pretty amazing.

So let’s take a moment to thank our corn farmers and congratulate the University of Iowa for a game well played and give some props to ISU who played with a lot of heart.

We’ll see you next year and you’d better bring your game, Iowa, because the game is in Ames and ISU will be bringing it on!

You can see pictures from game day in the Iowa Corn Fed Game Day photo album.

Corn, Education, Ethanol, Farming, Food, Video

ICGA CEO Craig Floss Interviews Captain Cornelius

Joanna Schroeder

For us Iowa State fans, this has been a tough game to watch. But hey – we are playing the #9 ranked team in the country and this is an ISU re-building year with a new coach, Paul Rhoads. In case you are following the Iowa State versus Iowa football game via this site, the score is now Iowa 35, Iowa State 0 with 10 minutes left in the second half.

For you football fans, if ISU doesn’t score a touchdown in this game, this will be the third year in a row they’ve failed to visit the end zone. Even so, they have won in the past three years – on field goals.

While many Iowa corn growers were making predictions on the game, Captain Cornelius was also making a prediction, for both teams. He is impartial – or at least that what we think he mimed when Iowa Corn Growers CEO Craig Floss interviewed him in the member tent this morning before the game. I guess this means that Captain Cornelius’ predictions were right.

After his insightful interview, Captain Cornelius headed to the ICGA consumer tent where he met the football fans and encouraged them to learn more about all the products that are made with corn.

You can see pictures from game day in the Iowa Corn Fed Game Day photo album.

Corn, Ethanol, Events, Video