A Treat From Paulsen

Chuck Zimmerman

Paulsen HalloweenThanks to Paulsen Marketing I now remember that it’s Halloween and I don’t have any candy for the kids yet. Time to go shopping and pick up my absentee ballot since I’ll be out of town on election day next week.

It looks like the Paulsen office is into the spirit.

The gang at Paulsen Marketing celebrated Halloween by dressing-up. The company is known for its family atmosphere and team-oriented approach to all tasks. Paulsen Marketing Communications is a full service advertising agency and public relations firm specializing in strategic planning and brand development. The Sioux Falls, South Dakota based agency has been in business for over five decades and now has satellite offices in Kansas City and Madison, Wisconsin. Check out their web sites: www.paulsenagribranding.com, www.paulsenmarketing.com and www.paulsenpr.com.

Okay. Now we really need to discuss an ongoing brand awareness plan here on AgWired.

Trick and here’s your treat.

Agencies

Monsanto Commitment to Agriculture Scholarship

Chuck Zimmerman

MonsantoIf you know a high school senior who wants to pursue a career in agriculture then get them to apply for a Monsanto Commitment to Agriculture Scholarship. See a list of this year’s awards here and download the application form (pdf).

Monsanto and the National Association of Farm Broadcasting have teamed up for the third year in a row to offer the Commitment to Agriculture Scholarship Program to high school seniors nationwide. One hundred $1,500 scholarships will be awarded to high school seniors interested in pursuing a career in agriculture who clearly demonstrate excellence in the areas of academics, leadership and real-world agricultural experience.

In order to qualify for the scholarships, applicants are required to come from a farm family, plan to enroll as full-time students in an agriculture-related academic major in an accredited school, and be committed to pursuing a career in agriculture. Applicants will also be evaluated on their academic records, leadership and extracurricular activities, and personal essays submitted as a part of the application process. The scholarship application deadline is February 15, 2007. Established in 1999, the Commitment to Agriculture Scholarship Program has awarded more than three quarters of a million dollars in support of young people interested in agriculture.

Agribusiness, NAFB

Pawsitively Ridiculous

Chuck Zimmerman

PEDIGREE Ice Cream Sandwich Treats for DogsDo not tell Cindy about these. She feeds all my good leftovers to our two house dogs (Crash & CJ). If we’re going to get ice cream sandwiches around here, they’re mine, all mine! However, if this will help the dairy industry then add ’em to the grocery list.

Now, two of the biggest names in the ice cream and dog food industry – Good Humor and PEDIGREE Brand – have come together to create the first real ice cream sandwich formulated especially for dogs. The new PEDIGREE Ice Cream Sandwich Treats for Dogs from Unilever Ice Cream’s Good Humor brand give pet owners the crème de la crème of treats they can reward to their loyal, four-legged friends.
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Dairy

Hall of Fame Food

Chuck Zimmerman

Jay O'Brien - Photo courtesy of Scott Windus PhotographyHall of fame food is what I like. I made a nice roast beef in the oven last night in fact. It looks like the Beef Checkoff is getting some recognition for all the work it does in reaching out to the restaurant industry.

The Beef Checkoff Program is one of only five honorees and the first commodity to be inducted into the Multi-Unit Foodservice Operators (MUFSO) “Supplier Hall of Fame.”

Cattlemen’s Beef Board Chairman Jay O’Brien, a producer from Texas, accepted the award – which is produced by Nation’s Restaurant News, the weekly national news publication covering the foodservice channel – during the MUFSO conference in Dallas Oct. 15-18.

“Each day, nearly a million hardworking men and women go about the business of putting beef on America’s tables, and on their behalf, I’d like to thank the team at Nation’s Restaurant News for our 20-plus years of successful, groundbreaking partnership,” O’Brien said upon accepting the prestigious award.

Ag Groups, Beef, Food

So Long Trans Fat

Chuck Zimmerman

KFCI’m going to feel a lot better about ordering KFC Extra Crispy from now on. KFC’s decision to move to low-lin soybean oil is getting a lot of media attention today.

KFC Corporation announced today it is converting all of its 5,500 restaurants in the United States to a zero grams trans fat cooking oil. The new oil, a low linolenic soybean oil, will replace the partially hydrogenated soybean oil in current use in KFC restaurants. The conversion, which follows over two years of extensive testing of oil options to identify the same taste profile, has already begun in many KFC restaurants and is scheduled to be completed by the end of April 2007 nationwide.

This announcement has made the folks at Monsanto very happy for some very obvious reasons.

VistiveMonsanto applauds today’s announcement by KFC that it will reduce trans fatty acids in fried foods at its chicken restaurants by using oil from low-linolenic soybeans. “We’ve been very pleased with the level of interest from food companies in using VISTIVE™ low-linolenic soybeans in their efforts to reduce trans fats,” said Jerry Steiner, executive vice president of Monsanto.

KFC is the latest company to announce the use of low-linolenic soybeans to reduce or eliminate trans fats in its products. Kellogg Company, for instance, announced last year that it is using oil from VISTIVE low-linolenic soybeans as part of a major trans fat initiative.

Post Update: This statement just came out from Qualisoy:

KFC’s commitment to this new variety is an important step in continuing the development of trait-enhanced soybeans that will offer increasing health benefits and functionality for foods. According to QUALISOY CEO John Becherer, “We applaud Yum Brands Inc. on its movement toward eliminating trans fats from Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) products by transitioning to a low-linolenic soybean oil. This is an important step towards making America’s favorite foods healthier.”

Agribusiness, Food

World Championship Appaloosa Show

Chuck Zimmerman

Appaloosa Horse ClubThe 2006 World Championship Appaloosa Show is underway now in Ft. Worth, TX. This is significant because by next year’s show there will be content from the event as it’s happening on a new website we’re developing for The Appaloosa Horse Club. And of course, it’s a blog. It’s not ready yet or I’d direct you to it.

So, if you’re “horsey” as a good friend of mine likes to say, you’ll soon have a place to learn more about what’s going on in the Appaloosa horse business. In the meantime you can see and hear what’s going on via their live web cam.

Ag Groups

Dairycast Is Online

Chuck Zimmerman

DairycastIt looks like Truffle Media Networks has their Dairycast program up and running. It got started in conjunction with World Dairy Expo just a few weeks ago. The farm podcasting choices continue to grow.

DairyCast is an audio program specifically designed to meet the needs of today’s Dairy professional. We’ll talk about production practices, environmental stewardship, animal welfare and a lot more. We’ll tell you what others in the Dairy industry are thinking about and doing. DairyCast is:

* Convenient. Subscribe to DairyCast at home or office. Transfer it to your MP3 player to listen whenever and wherever best for you.
* Timely. DairyCast is delivered via the Internet, or “podcast,” twice a week. The targeted approach with this programming format ensures topical interest and allows for in-depth segments to more completely communicate the information.
* Interest-driven. DairyCast provides an overview of the stories that drive the market, including interviews with experts in the field. You’ll quickly discover that DairyCast does not waste your valuable time with unimportant or obvious information.
* Interactive. The input and experiences of dairy professionals are an important part of each program. DairyCast bridges the distance between dairy professionals and industry insiders by building a community of shared experience.
* International. DairyCast looks beyond the U.S. borders at production practices and economic factors around the world, as well as import/export requirements and legislative trends. DairyCast cuts through the clutter and covers the issues critical to economic success. We invite you to subscribe to DairyCast and join the conversation! It’s easy and free.

Here’s where you can join in the conversation.

Dairy, Podcasts

Farewell To A Friend

Chuck Zimmerman

I just learned that Gary Bradley passed away yesterday. Gary worked many years in the communications area of the National Corn Growers Association. Gary had been involved in a long battle with cancer which he wrote about on his page in Carepages. I will always remember him for his smile and laughter and the times we got to go jogging together at an NAFB convention or somewhere on the road. Since I know that many of you were also friends of Gary I’m posting the information that was last posted on Carepages.

Hello everyone. I wish that there was a way Gary could narrate this posting to me. I know he would use his sense of humor to ease his fears and to show us his strength.

Gary passed away Saturday morning, October 28.

Monday evening
Visitation 4 p.m. – 9 p.m.
Ambruster-Donnelly Mortuary
6633 Clayton Rd.
Saint Louis, MO 63117

Tuesday morning
Mass 10 a.m.
Our Lady of The Pillar Church
401 S Lindbergh Blvd
Saint Louis, MO 63131

May you rest in peace my friend.

Uncategorized

New National FFA Officers

Chuck Zimmerman

New FFA National OfficersThere’s a new national officer leadership team at the FFA. They were elected during the final sesson of the convention.

Beau Williamson from California will lead a whole new slate of student officers in the coming year. Serving with Williamson will be; Kacy Baugher Illinois, Secretary; Janette Barnard, Arizona, Western Region Vice President; Jamie Cecil, Colorado, Central Region Vice President; Jennifer Himburg, Alabama, Southern Region Vice President; and Coty Back, Kentucky; Eastern Region Vice President. The officers were selected from among forty-one members vying for national office. They will serve as ambassadors for the agriculture industry and represent FFA and its members for the following year.

Ag Groups

Beef Board Appointments

Chuck Zimmerman

Cattlemen's Beef BoardI love getting these announcements on a Friday afternoon (not).

Deputy Secretary of Agriculture Chuck Conner today announced 35 appointments and one interim appointment to the Cattlemen’s Beef Promotion and Research Board. All appointees will serve 3-year terms beginning Feb.3, 2007. The interim appointee will serve a 2-year term.

Appointed members representing cattle producers by state and unit are: Judy E. Prosser, Ariz.; I. Jack Cowley and Richard L. Nock, Calif.; Roger L.
Evans, Colo.; Jeffrey L. Clausen and Robert L. Johnson, Iowa; Jerald L. Bohn and Don H. Hullman, Kan.; T. Barrett Porter, La.; Charles E. Markley, Mich.; Aquilla M. Ward, Mid-Atlantic; John C. Schafer, Minn.; Charles R. Hull, Miss.; Jerry R. King, Mo.; Kristy L. Lage and David C. Lamb, Neb.; Preston T. Wright, Nev.; Margaret D. McKeen, N.M.; Roger M. Pendleton, N.C.; Lucinda M. Williams, Northeast; Bill D. Boyer, Okla.; Allen L. Walth and Myron J.
Williams, S.D.; Jennifer A. Senn, Southeast; Robert J. Reviere, Jr., Tenn.; Peter F. Case, Justin P. Dauer, Charles A. Kiker III, and Walter E. Lasley, Texas; Richard V. Nielson, Utah; Mark E. Riechers and Nancy L. Thomas, Wis.; Dianne S. Kirkbride, Wyo.

Appointed to represent importers are: Lawrence I. Bryant, Va. and Greg E. Silpe, Conn.. Michelle A. Gorman, Md. was appointed to serve the remaining 2-year term vacated by Mr. David Palmer, Wash., DC because of his recent resignation.

Ag Groups, Beef, USDA