Monday, October 19, 2009

Steers on the Loose

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Stinkin Raccoons

The little *(&#Q*#! are getting in the chicken coop and taking out my girls. If any of you know and effective way of getting rid of them PLEASE let me know.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Pigeons & Farmers

“The only difference between a pigeon and the American farmer today is that a pigeon can still make a deposit on a John Deere.”

- Jim Hightower

Friday, May 1, 2009

Gloves

When the farmer walks in the backdoor waving a pair of plastic gloves at you and says, "Here, can you put these on and help me out by the grain bin for a minute?" RUN - RUN THE OTHER WAY!!!

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Making Bedding

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We just made large bales of cornstalks out of the stubble left on the fields after the fall harvest. It provides nice bedding for the cattle to lay on. It acts as insulation to keep them warm & dry. Darrell loads all of the bales onto the wagon and then we drive them out of the field and down the road to the various barns & sheds we store them in until we need them. Once there, one of our guys unloads and carefully stacks the bales using a skidsteer. Meanwhile, another person is tilling the fields that were already baled to get ready for spring planting.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Just because you see it in the paper...

Eating can be energy-efficient, too
By Elizabeth Weise, USA TODAY

With Americans looking to reduce their "carbon footprints," food seems an obvious place to start.
Choosing a diet with a smaller carbon footprint means choosing foods that are processed in ways that emit less carbon dioxide — a heat-trapping "greenhouse" gas — into the atmosphere. In general, experts say, it breaks down to these guidelines:

Cut down on meat. "That doesn't mean never eat meat, it means eat less of it," says Gail Feenstra, a food systems analyst at the University of California-Davis Agricultural Sustainability Institute.

Meat is less efficient because we eat the animal that eats the grain instead of eating the grain ourselves. It takes about 15 pounds of feed to make 1 pound of beef, 6 pounds of feed for 1 pound of pork and 5 pounds of feed for 1 pound of chicken, the Department of Agriculture estimates. For catfish, it's about 2 pounds of feed per pound of fish.

Add to the feed the cost of raising, transporting and producing cattle, and beef is by far the least energy-efficient meat. Nathan Fiala, a doctoral candidate in environmental economics at the University of California-Irvine, estimates it requires about 15 pounds of carbon dioxide to produce 1 pound of beef.

"A family of four that gives up eating beef one day a week has basically traded in their pickup for a Prius," he says.

You will probably see articles like this in several places today. Unfortunately, the numbers they are using to try to make their point are wrong. For example, they are saying that eating beef leaves a large carbon footprint. The author claims that it takes 15 lbs of feed to make a pound of beef. If that was the feed conversion rate for cattle in this country, no one could afford to feed them. Cattle will normally convert between 6 and 7 pounds of feed into a pound of beef. Also, if you want to reduce the carbon footprint left by transporting beef - BUY & EAT LOCALLY! In order to make informed decisions, consumers need accurate information. It’s the job of producers to make sure that happens.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Earth Day

For a farmer, every day is Earth Day.

 

Order All Natural Family Farm Raised Beef at www.creekbedfarm.com

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