North Dakota State University Extension and University of Minnesota Extension will conduct the annual Advanced Crop Advisers Workshop as a virtual event Feb. 9-10.
“This workshop is designed to provide in-depth discussion on selected topics to help agricultural professionals enhance their crop production recommendations for farmers,” says Greg Endres, NDSU Extension cropping systems specialist at the Carrington Research Extension Center and workshop co-chair.
Educational sessions during the afternoon of Feb. 9 are:
More acres and less time: How do you address climate weirdness?
What’s old is new again: The art and science of using 2,4-D and dicamba
Managing low-production fields: Soil tests and solutions
Carrington Research Extension Center plans a seminar for livestock feeders in January. Written By: John Steiner | ×
The Feedlot School will help identify areas for improvement, including feed bunk management, health, business planning and marketing. (NDSU photo)
Cattle producers, feeders, backgrounders, feed industry personnel, animal health-care suppliers and others will have an opportunity to learn more about during the annual North Dakota State University Feedlot School set for Jan. 20-21, 2021, at NDSU’s Carrington Research Extension Center.
“Feeding cattle is a decades-old business with lots of new techniques,” says Karl Hoppe, Extension livestock systems specialist at the center. “Making cattle feeding profitable is usually a result of doing many things right, not just one thing better. The Feedlot School helps identify the areas for improvement, ranging from feed bunk management to health to business planning to marketing.”
CREC researching hemp, soybean hulls for cattle feed agupdate.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from agupdate.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Using market information for strategic planning
Budgeting
The school also will include a tour of a commercial feedlot and the Research Extension Center’s livestock facilities. Faculty from NDSU’s Animal Sciences Department, and the Carrington, Hettinger and Central Grasslands Research Extension Centers, as well as others who have extensive experience working with northern Plains feedlots, are instructors for the school.
“The regional cattle experts who teach at the school provide a good overview of management for North Dakota feeders, and the outreach or interaction with the participants continues for years after the school,” says Mary Keena, Extension livestock environmental management specialist at the center.