OFN September 17, 2018

Page 1

Fall Breed Issue • Farmfest Issue • Production Sale Issue $1.25

Competing at a Higher Level

Spartan Valley Shorthorns works to get kids into the show ring

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018 • 44 PAGES

VOLUME 20, NUMBER 18• WWW.OZARKSFN.COM

Focused on Family and Farm

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

The Nissen family began a bucking bull breeding program after an unlikely meeting

A Good Lifestyle with Hard Work

Is it Too Late for Forages?

The Brassfield family have been farming in Howell County, Mo., for decades

Experts say there is a chance for growth going into the fall, if Mother Nature cooperates Serving More Than 34,000 Readers Across Southwest Missouri

1


rumor mill

Suits filed: Vegetarian food-maker Tofurky filed a lawsuit in Missouri to defend its right to describe its products with meat terminology such as “sausage” and “hot dogs,” as long as the packaging makes clear what the ingredients are. The Hood River, Oregon-based company and The Good Food Institute, an advocacy and lobbying group for meat alternatives, say a Missouri law that went into effect in late August that bars companies from “misrepresenting” products as meat if they’re not from “harvested livestock or poultry” is too vague and could be used to go after a range of vegetarian products that use such terminology. The Missouri Department of Agriculture says it will give companies until Jan. 1, 2019 to comply with the new labeling law. The Tofurky suit is not the only legal action facing the new law. The Missouri Department of Conservation Commission and Conservation Director Sara Pauley sued Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley and Missouri Department of Agriculture Director Chris Chinn to stop the law from taking effect due to concern regarding which state agency has the authority over the inspection of captive deer herds. Cole County Judge Jon Beetem blocked a portion of the law dealing with captive deer. The order runs through Sept. 15. Youth wins contest: FFA and 4-H members recently participated in the 2018 Youth Swine Skillathon at the Missouri State Fair in Sedalia. Participants competed in three age brackets during the contest, which is sponsored by the Missouri Pork Association and the University of Missouri Extension. In the age 12 and under division, first place went to Mason Forkner from Richards, Mo. In the age 13 to 15 division, Jenna Perry from Liberal, Mo., was third. State Dairy Judging Contest results: The Missouri State 4-H Dairy Judging Contest was held at the Missouri State Fair in Sedalia. Bailey Groves of Billings was high individual. Second high individual in the senior division was Grant Groves. Third high individual was Blake Wright of Verona. Rounding out the top five were Kelsie Grimm of Aurora and Nicolas Dotson of Marionville. In the intermediate division, Lila Wantland of Niangua was the high individual and Whitney Yerina of Conway was second high individual. The two tied for overall score, but the tie breaker gave Wantland the edge. Rounding out the top five were Molly Archer of Falcon, Kylie Scrivner of Ava, and Logan Archer of Falcon. Teagan Hardy of Steelville was high individual in the junior division, followed by Tyson Droste of Lancaster in second, Molly Melzer of Harrisonville in third, Monique Turner of Springfield in fourth and Ada Bluel of Monett in fifth.

OzarksFarm @OzarksFarm

2

Know a Good Rumor? Do you have a rumor you would like to share with our readers? Mail them to: PO Box 1319, Lebanon, MO 65536; fax them to: 417-532-4721; or email them to: editor@ozarksfn.com

The Ozarks Most Read Farm Newspaper

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

|

VOL. 20, NO. 18

JUST A THOUGHT 3 Jerry Crownover – Sharing the truth about agriculture

8 10 16 20

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

4

Julie Turner-Crawford – From the mouths of babes

MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS 7 The Brassfields have been farming in Howell County, Mo., for generations

8

10

Robert and Susan Salmon are first-generation farmers

12

Remembering the days of the Bushwhackers

Eric Nissen likes his calves to have a little buck in them

14 16

Eye on Agribusiness spotlights B’s Meats

20

Spartan Valley Shorthorns breeds show calves for every budget

21 26

Town & Country features Lindsey Penn

Youth in Agriculture highlights Ashely Freiburger

28

Three generations join together to produce high-quality Red Angus

A pecan picker begins his own line of Missouri-grown products

FARM HELP 29 Opportunities and risks 32 Preg checking females is a valuable management tool

33

Recent rains will help forages as fall arrives

34 35

Giving bulls a little added attention

36

Black vultures can be dangerous to young livestock

The importance of health protocols in swine operations

38

Producers should be cautious when buying hay

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


just a

thought

What’s On Your Mind, Ozarks?

e f i L elpmiS si

Selling 70 Bulls

Including Mellow Yellow Hybrids

By Jerry Crownover

aving been involved in the livestock industry for revmy onwentire orC ylife, rreJI yB know that the vast majority of producers go above and beyond what’s expected, to provide their animals Jerry Crownover farms with the best care that is absolutely possible. in Lawrence County, Mo. For a cattleman to purposefully mistreat or He is a former professor of abuse the source of their livelihood makes Agriculture Education at Missouri State University, about as much sense as a new-car dealer going and is an author and around with a small hammer and deliberately professional speaker. putting dents in their automobile inventory, To contact Jerry, go to or for a clothing store owner to take a knife to ozarksfn.com and click their new line of mens’ suits. But, there’s always on ‘Contact Us.’ the chance that one bad apple could rot the entire barrel, so when I see a headline that reads, “Hidden camera shows widespread abuse at local dairy,” I cringe. When I clicked on the heading: WARNING – GRAPHIC CONTENT! THESE VIDEOS SHOW COWS BEING THROWN TO THE GROUND, DRAGGED, AND SHACKLED, the first thing I noticed was that the video was provided by one of our favorite animal rights groups. The second thing I discovered is that it was not recorded by some kook with a hidden camera, but rather a hack into the dairy’s video recording system that was always on, so that the manager could monitor the cows and his employees 24-hours a day. As the video began, the camera showed a caretaker assisting a cow with a difficult birth, by attaching OB straps to the calf’s legs and pulling it out of the cow. When the calf did come out, it fell on, what looked like to me, about a foot deep of fluffy, clean straw. Once the calf was on the straw, the worker dragged the calf (again, through clean straw) about 10 feet from the rear of the cow to begin drying the newborn with a clean towel. The next clip showed the worker putting a tube down — Continued on Page 5

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SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

27th Edition

Bull Sale

Life Is Simple

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PO Box 1319, Lebanon, MO 65536

Saturday, October 20, 2018 1 p.m. Central At the Ranch • Carthage, Mo.

Visit our website for video’s and sale catalog. LIVE INTERNET BIDDING AT: www.cowbuyer.com

Larry & Peggy Aschermann Carthage, Missouri (417) 793-2855 cell • (417) 358-7879 e-mail: hayhook@gmail.com

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Toll Free: 1-866-532-1960

417-532-1960 • Fax: 417-532-4721 E-mail: Member: editor@ozarksfn.com

Sandra Coffman President

Administrative Eric Tietze, Vice-President Operations Kathy Myers, Marketing Manager Sandra Coffman, Accounting Advertising Kathy Myers, Display & Production Sales Amanda Newell, Classified Sales Circulation Stan Coffman, Circulation Editorial Julie Turner-Crawford, Managing Editor Jerry Crownover, Columnist Frank Farmer, Editorial Page Editor Emeritus Production Amanda Newell, Production Contributors

Jennifer Ailor, Brenda Brinkley, Ashley Craft, Neoma Foreman, Klaire Howerton, Joel Maneval, Kristyn Richner, Megan Richner and Laura L. Valenti .

About the Cover Calin Smith’s goal at Spartan Valley Shorthorns is to get more kids and Shorthorns into the show ring. Read more on page 20. Photo by Jennifer Ailor Ozarks Farm & Neighbor accepts story suggestions from readers. Story information appears as gathered from interviewees. Ozarks Farm & Neighbor assumes no responsibility for the credibility of statements made by interviewees. © Copyright Ozarks Farm & Neighbor, Inc., 2018. All rights reserved. Printed in USA.

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just a thought

Across the Fence

By Julie Turner-Crawford

F

arm kids see the world in ways most their age don’t. We recently had a birthday party for my now 1-year-old great-niece Emmy, comJulie Turner-Crawford plete with Minnie Mouse ears for all who is a native of Dallas attended. County, Mo., where she Kids in my family are farm kids, so when I see grew up on her family’s cute farm-themed toys or clothes, I buy them farm. She is a graduate and Emmy’s birthday was no exception. I found of Missouri State a stuffed animal that’s a 2-in-1 stuffed animal, a University. To contact flip-a-something or another. It’s a pig and when Julie, call 1-866-532-1960 flipped, it’s a cow. Since her parents have pigs and or by email at editor@ cows, I thought it was be perfect for Miss Emmy. ozarksfn.com. Emmy received another pig for her birthday, so I wasn’t alone in my thinking. As the wrapping paper flew and boxes were opened, Emmy was more interested in the bows than the toys, but the other kids were pretty excited to see what wonders those colorful packages held. Emmy’s older sister, 4-year-old Eloise, was helpful and tried out most of the toys for her sister. It didn’t take long for Eloise to zoom in on the pigs. “What do you want to bet she’ll have the little pig nursing the big pig before long,” I said as a nudged my oldest niece. Sure enough, Eloise put the bigger pig on its side and nuzzled the smaller pig up to it. Jennifer didn’t take the bet because she knew it was coming. — Continued on Next Page

Main Dish

Chuck Wagon Turkey Pot Pie Submitted by: Carolyn Peck, Aurora, Mo

Ingredients:

• 5 potatoes, peeled and cubed • 1/2 onion, chopped • 15 ounces frozen peas • 1 1/4 pounds shredded turkey • 8 to 10 uncooked biscuits (premade or homemade)

Directions: Place potatoes and onion in a pot of boiling water and cook until tender. Add turkey, peas, and salt and pepper to taste. While the meat and vegetables cook, mix 2 to 3 tablespoons of flour with equal parts water to thicken mixture. Whisk well to avoid lumps, then add to the pot and stir well. Place mixture in a casserole dish or Dutch oven, then top with biscuits. Bake at 350 degrees until biscuits are golden brown. Know a Good Recipe? Send in your favorite recipe to share with our readers. Mail them to: PO Box 1319, Lebanon, MO 65536; fax them to: 417-532-4721; or email them to: editor@ozarksfn.com

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Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


just a thought Across the Fence Continued from Previous Page Earlier that evening, 4-year-old Molly told me her Poppy (my dad and her great-grandpa) came to her house to help her dad, and that one of her calves was a bull, but now it’s a steer. She then laughed and ran to play with the other kids. Molly has also witnessed the whole AI process more than once and she remains unphased by it all. I envision many awkward conversations in the future for some of my greatnieces’ classmates and teachers. People may feel the need to shield their kids from things in the “real world,” but farm kids see and understand more at a young age than many adults do. Farm kids learn where their food comes from, the importance of taking responsibility, hard work and the circle of life. Experts contend that farm kids are more creative, do better in school, have fewer health problems and become self-reliant adults. I don’t need an expert to tell me that.

Being a farm kid isn’t a bad life. There are days when it’s hard, but there’s no better life. Farm kids have acres, not city blocks, to play on, and they usually have pets around, be it a dog, a cat or a bottle calf. Farm kids play in dirt and mud, and they have special boots and clothes for such occasions. I can’t wait to see what the future holds for my farm kids. I love seeing the older ones take the younger ones by the hand and help them along the path to the barn and down the path of life. Thanks to their farming roots running deep, I think they will all be just fine.

Looking For Freelance Writers Experience in agriculture preferred, but not required. Some photography skills needed. Freelancers should have excellent organizational and time management skills, the ability to produce feature stories following AP style and the guidelines of OFN. Freelancers should have a strong initiative, be able to meet deadlines and follow through with projects. Please send writing samples and a resume to julie@ozarksfn.com.

We’re Not Just a Farm Store!

Life Is Simple Continued from Page 3 the mouth of a newborn to “force feed” the calf, and the last one was only a still photo of a cow “with her legs shackled.” If the news site, or the animal rights group, knew anything about cattle or had done even the least bit of research, they would know that calving difficulty is fairly common and without assistance from a veterinarian or other caretaker, the calf…or cow…or both could die. If they had ever helped deliver a calf, they would also know that the reason the newborn was dragged a few feet away from its mother to clean it, is that within a few moments after calving, the area directly behind her is going to be splashed with substances that my reading audience doesn’t need to have described. The esophageal feeder (the plastic tube placed down the mouth of the newborn) is sometimes required for difficult births because the calf’s tongue may have swollen during the process and can’t SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

(or won’t) suck for few hours. If the calf doesn’t get nourishment within the first few, critical hours, its chance of survival is greatly reduced. So, I ask you, are these examples of animal abuse or are they illustrations of the work and care involved to assure the animals live and thrive? We need to educate non-farmers. As for the hobbles on the cow – they are sometimes necessary (on a small percentage of cows) for first-timers being acclimated to the milking parlor. They are only on the cow for the 10 minutes it takes to milk her and usually needed only for the first few milkings. While viewing that picture, I couldn’t help but think that this farmer could have offered the photographer a real learning experience by allowing him to take an extreme close-up, from directly behind a cow’s first visit to the milking parlor – without the hobbles.

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neighbors Female Production Sale Fair Grove, Missouri

A Good Lifestyle with Hard Work

October 13

By Laura L. Valenti

The Brassfield family has been farming in Howell County, Mo., for decades Jim Brassfield grew up on the family farm in rural Howell County, Mo., on a dairy operation owned and operated by his parents, Leon and Freda Brassfield. Like his brother Mark, who lives just down the road, Jim never moved far from home. Today, he farms with his father Leon on adjacent farms, raising commercial beef cattle, pigs and hay. “I milked for 30 years but we got out of the dairy business in 2008,” Jim said as he

We keep about 100 acres in hay, alfalfa, some of which we sell and some we use for our own livestock. We try to sell 40 steers a year to individuals for butchering. “We’ve had up to 200 head but have dropped back for now. Just have too much to do, keeping up with it all. We have steers now ready for the meat locker, ready for sale this fall.” The Brassfields have recently added participation in one of the local farmers market to their regular activities. “They needed someone at the Sav-

Jim Brassfield, left, and his father Leon Brassfield, right, both operated dairy farms in the past, but today they focus on Angus cattle. Photo by Laura L. Valenti

ers’ Parking Lot location so we sell beef outlined their operation and its history. When asked if he missed the dairy and pork there. There are three differbusiness, he simply grinned. “I miss ent farmers markets here in West Plains. The Go Farm market, the one where the check every two weeks, we sell, meets twice a week and like that’s all,” Jim said. everything else in this business, it’s The dairy cattle have pretty time-consuming.” been replaced with a beef Leon, Jim’s father, shared his herd and a few pigs. views on life on the farm “We have about 150 head of from a senior vantage point. commercial Angus and 10 to West Plains, Mo. “It’s a good lifestyle if you 12 mixed breed sows on 1,000 are willing to work hard. I’ve acres, both owned and rented. SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

done it all my life. Years ago, hogs were a big business for us,” Leon said. “We had 150 sows, which is not big by today’s standards but back then, it was big for that type of business in this area. It’s a good way to raise kids. We raised five kids here and now have 20 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren.” The current area drought has added yet another challenge to Jim and Leon’s regular farming operation as it has for so many other smaller Ozark producers. “We aren’t feeding hay yet like some farmers, but so far this year, we’ve only gotten about half the hay crop we usually get so that’s going to make for problems down the road,” Jim continued. “We won’t have enough to sell or to feed our own if nothing changes.” “It’s pretty depressing with everything being so dry right now,” Leon added. “We sure hope it starts raining soon but we’ll just have to see what the fall brings.” Jim and his wife, Lisa, an office manager at a local doctor’s office, have three grown children, including daughter Jamie, who comes home to help drive the truck during haying season. “They all help out,” Jim continued. “My son is the manager of a tire store in West Plains. I think he likes the farm life but he makes better money where he works now. When we were getting out of the dairy business, I asked him if he wanted to take it over because I would have left it to him and helped him. But he was only 18 and he wasn’t interested in continuing with milking at that time.” Jim and Lisa also have two grandchildren and one of them is very interested in the family legacy. “ “Jack is only 3 1/2, but he loves the cows,” Jim concluded. “So who knows? There may be Brassfields continuing to farm here in the future.”

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meet your neighbors Photo by Brenda Brinkley

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In addition to a commercial cowherd, the Nissen family breeds bucking bulls. Pictured, from left, are 15-year-old Jaysa, 11-year-old Layton, 5-year-old Aria, 12-year-old Lane, and April and Eric Nissen.

Focused on Family and Farm By Brenda Brinkley

The Nissen family began a bucking bull breeding program after an unlikely meeting N-Bar 5 Ranch, owned by Eric and Cory, one of the McCoy brothers from April Nissen, is located near Marsh- Oklahoma, who had been on television show “The Amazing Race” was at PFI field, Mo., in Webster County. They have lived there for 15 years, and for signing autographs. It was Cord McCoy. “There was a line and we weren’t going the past four or five years Eric has been raising ABBI (American Bucking Bull Inc.) to wait in the line,” Eric said. “We were getting boots, and Cord said, ‘Hey, come bulls. Eric said he eased into over here.’ We hit it off and have been the bucking bull business. friends ever since. He raises bucking “I just bought 12 cows to bulls, so that’s how we got in it. start and one breed bull,” he We went up to Tupelo, Okla., and said. “We just kept all our heifkind of looked it all over.” ers. This year I’ve sold probably Eric laughed and added, 10 or 12 bucking bulls.” “I didn’t even watch ‘The Eric got his start with ABBI Marshfield, Mo. Amazing Race.”’ in an unusual way. Cord Mc-

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


meet your neighbors

Cattle Handling & Feed Equipment Bulk Bin

Dealer Inquiries Welcome

As a guarantee, Eric had Cord agree to money in it, but you better be willing stay in on half of the first calves. to head out Friday night and travel. I’d ABBI is a registered breed and comes in rather sell mine for whatever.” all different colors. He also raises comEric sells some of his bulls online. mercial cattle and keeps the commercial The goal of raising bucking bulls was to cows and bucking cows separated. give his boys something to do. They’ve “We’re shooting for Jan. 1 babies on already bought a couple of their own. the bucking bulls because that’s the new Eric and April have two budding cowyear,” Eric explained. “If you get a Janu- boys, Lane (12) and Layton (11). This is ary baby, they’ll grow. If you get a June their first year of rodeo competition. baby, he’s six months behind in growth Lane loves steer riding and roping. and still counted the same.” Layton loves mini bronc riding. Young bulls are trained for customers. “Of course we have our pens here to They are trained with a dummy (mechan- train our bucking bulls, so they get on ical box) on their back. The box is ran by some little stuff here,” Eric said. “In remote control and boxes vary in weight. Lane’s third rodeo, he won first in the “There are all kinds of events through- steer riding.” out the year that will pay $100,000 to win, Their daughters don’t compete and and $50,000 to win (if the bull wins),” Eric Jaysa (15) isn’t interested in rodeo, but explained. “They have judges. The bull Aria (5) would like to barrel race. doesn’t even have a rider. They’re scored. Rodeo competition is not new to Eric. That’s where the money is, but they can He competed when he was younger. only compete till they’re four years old. “I did the steer riding and then I rupAfter that they tured my spleen, so can’t compete for my parents made money.” me quit. So then As calves, Eric I started roping,” The bulls get is looking for that Eric siad. one that’s light- massages and baths. Two years ago, footed, and kind of Eric quit his job to They even go to the stand-offish. devote his time to chiropractor. “He stays kind N-5 Ranch Farm/ of away from you Fencing. Up until – Eric Nissen and is light on his then he had people front end. Then on a mature bull, you hired for his business while still holding want a lot of air in the front end. You down a job. want them to kick out in the back and “That’s what we do for a living; build spin,” Eric said. “They have the best life fence.” Eric said. “Farm fencing; pipe of any cow. They get fed better. They corrals, pipe cable, solid pipe, barbed really are so babied. They’re bred to act wire. Mainly I mostly do welding.” like that. These baby calves out here, It is harder to drive posts right now, but tonight when it cools off they will just he has a gas-powered post driver, and he start bucking in the field. They’re just drives the corner posts with a hydraulic bred that way.” driver on the tractor. There is a big misconception, Eric said, He has always liked fencing. He said he that bulls are mistreated to make them likes anything farm-related. Eric’s dad is buck. a welder by trade. “The bulls get massages and baths. “We take a lot of pride in our work,” They even go to the chiropractor,” he Eric said. He quoted Colossians 3:23 explained. which says, “And whatsoever ye do, do His bulls are now 3 and 4 years old. So it heartily, as to the Lord, and not unto he hasn’t had one in the PBR. men.” That is a principle he applies to “I changed my outlook,” Eric said. farming, fencing, and rodeo. “Wanting to have the big one in the “As a family, it’s God first, then rodeo,” PBR is not so much my deal. We don’t he added. “We don’t go to rodeo events have time to haul them. There’s a lot of on Sunday.”

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What started as a family garden in the 1970s now is a 650-acre livestock operation Robert and Susan Salmon began their farming journey with a family garden. The couple, who married in 1974, explained it was a matter of quality over quantity at the time. By the early 1980s, their garden expanded past the point of what their land could handle so the couple moved their family of six to a 55-acre farm near Appleton City, Mo.

be attributed to the power of reading, a positive mindset and good ole trial and error. “When we first started out, as we grew into it, we did a lot of diversified stuff,” Robert explained. “We did some row crop, we did sows and pigs and cattle. We developed over the years into a grazing operation.” As they started to better manage their grass, Robert studied Jim Gerrish’s work Robert Salmon and his wife Susan were able to expand their farming operation by adding land parcels over time.

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Since moving to the farm in 1982, with management-intensive grazing. The the Salmons have added to the land a Salmons started experimenting with grass little bit at a time, growing the opera- management by subdividing their first tion to 650 acres. They now graze more pasture in 1987 and Robert said that’s than 250 head of cattle, some of which when his operation started to take off. By focusing on how the grass was are part of a custom cattle grazing enterprise, and they raise 140 North Country grazed and how much residual he was leaving, Robert saw he could grow more Cheviot sheep. grass without additional inputs. This “It’s just something I always equated to more profit per acre. felt I wanted to do,” Rob“You really are able to up your stockert said. “So we started out ing capacity of your whole entire small. This was our next step farm by managing your grass,” here and we’ve been fortunate enough to add ground over the Appleton City, Mo. Robert said. “Doing more with the resources you have.” years. It just keeps growing.” The family divided their Robert, a first-generation farmland into mostly 10-acre er, explained that his success can

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


meet your neighbors paddocks with high tensile fencing for their cattle and sheep to graze. They put permanent fences into place with a small amount of temporary fence which are used on a seasonal basis. The Salmons then installed piped water sources for the livestock in each paddock. Robert rotates the cattle and sheep before the grass becomes too short. This could be a rotation of every day or every other day, depending on the grass’s condition. As he explained, grass cannot grow back quickly if there isn’t an adequate amount of leaf area left to capture sunlight and protect the soil. Thus proper monitoring is a vital step in the managed grazing process. When looking at the health of the environment and soil, Robert closely moni-

to the soil and the environment in different conditions throughout each season. Additionally, Robert has also had opportunities to see how well the ground will heal itself when adding onto his operation. “We had areas that we bought that had been extensively grazed and were gullied and rutted and everything,” Robert said. “And after a few years of managementintensive grazing the gullies are gone. The grasses are better. … You see results pretty quick.” After farming for more than 30 years, Robert understands the struggles one can endure when first starting out as well as the environmental challenges along the way. However, he explained that individuals who want to break into the farming business or management-intensive graz-

tors the area for dry conditions. In the past, the Salmons have had to sell their cattle due to a drought. His sheep are the last thing he will sell due to their resilience to a dry environment he explained. Thankfully, so far this year his paddocks have seen enough moisture to keep them going this summer. “We’ve been affected by three or four droughts over the years,” Robert said. “It’s just a cyclical thing. We’re dry right now. We’re not in trouble or anything, but we are dry right now.” How the grass is cared for and the condition it is in will affect his operation year to year. Therefore Robert takes great interest in seeing how the grass responds

ing should not lose hope of doing so. “You don’t have to have a huge amount of inputs,” Robert said. “You don’t have to have a huge amount of machinery. It’s not demanding. It’s very profitable. So it’s not something you have to quit because you physically can’t do it. It’s something you can carry on with in your older years.” When looking toward his future, Robert said he hopes to keep managing his farm under the same grass grazing techniques. And he’s also excited to see both of his sons continue to manage their own successful farming operations under the management-intensive grazing he has become so passionate about.

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

Serving More Than 34,000 Readers Across Southwest Missouri

11


ozarks

roots

the people, places and traditions that make the ozarks home

Museums Represent a Unique Look at Regional History

By Neoma Foreman

Photos Courtesy of the Bushwhacker Museum

An old jail and a family collection are the focal points of two museums in Vernon County, Mo. Nevada, Mo., was the Bushwhacker Capital before and during the Civil War with many battles fought on the Missouri-Kansas border. These battles spawned a special breed – Missouri Bushwhackers and Kansas Jayhawkers. Bushwhackers were Confederate and Jayhawkers were Union, but lawlessness prevailed on both sides. In May 1863, Confederate Bushwhackers ambushed a Federal militia party on the Nevada square. Afterwards, the Federals burned some 75 houses and all public buildings, except the schoolhouse and jail, in Nevada to the ground. Three months later, by the terms of the infamous “Order No. 11,” the rest of western Missouri shared the same fateall farm homes and barns in the border counties between Nevada and Kansas City were burned and the people driven away to Federal garrison towns for the rest of the war. In 1964, the Vernon County Historical Society purchased the old county jail building, the oldest building in Nevada to survive Order No. 11. It was renovated to be a museum to showcase the colorful history of Vernon County and the area.

12

The name Bushwhacker Museum was selected and formally opened on June 1, 1965. The jail was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1977. The jail was built in the 1860s and the attached sheriff’s home, added in the 1870s. While it was still used as a jail, the sheriff said it ‘resembles the notorious Black Hole of Calcutta.” The front of the stone jail, the sheriff’s home, boasts original Federal architecture, unique west of the Mississippi, and rare anywhere. It has some of the same lines as most of the colonial mansions built in North America from the 1700s to about the time of the Civil War. Whether town houses or farm houses, the Federal style was the same: The roof was gabled and it sloped toward the street throughout the building’s width. The matching chimneys were usually at the end of the gables and flush with the side walls. This enabled each room to house a fireplace. Some of the stones in the cell room weigh up to 2,000 pounds. A visit to the museum provides many visitors a spinetingling experience once they step into the dark and dank cell room.

Rusty food tins, metal spring cots, heavy metal cages can be found inside the stone jail. Few, if any visitors want the door locked behind them. The jail had such a bad reputation for its discomforts that more than one convict, on being sentenced to a year, would ask if he could serve two years in the state penitentiary instead. Heat was furnished, in theory, by a potbellied stove placed between the cellblocks. Light was even scarcer than heat. Only a single drop cord bulb disturbed the cell room gloom as late as 1964. The woman’s jail was separated from the back cells entirely. It was much roomier and rarely used. The jailer used the front rooms of the jail as a residence. The rooms are like being in another world compared to the jail. They are spacious with a walnut staircase leading to two large rooms upstairs. The furnishings compare to an upper-class home of the period. Some notable decorations include a rare Crown of Thorns Hobo and Tramp Art photograph frame, and a human hair wreath. In addition to the jail, the Historical Society has a more modern way to display the area’s past.

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

In 1996, the Finis M. Moss Charitable Trust provided a new home for the Nevada Library and offered the Historical Society the building’s lower level as new museum space with the trust underwriting the renovations, including an elevator for full handicap accessibility. The Bushwhacker Museum is now a unique regional historical study center to capitalize on the tumultuous history of the Missouri-Kansas border wars. An eminent physician, Dr. J. T. Hornback, began practicing medicine in Vernon County in 1896. After his death in 1936, his home containing his office remained untouched. His wife, daughter and son-in-law continued to live in the house until forced out by death or ill health. The house and entire contents were donated to the Vernon County Historical Society in 1996. The Hornback family kept practically everything they bought in nearly a century they lived in the large house. They left the community a time capsule of family life in a Midwestern town in the first half of the 20th century. Those artifacts are housed in the Bushwhacker Museum. Dr. Hornback acquired the community’s first magnetic machine. The machine SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


ozarks roots was manufactured in 1905, by R. V. Wagner and Co., of Chicago and is a handcranked device, big as an old upright piano, and is nearly as dust proof as possible, encased within a solid oak cabinet. The Wagner Mica-Plate Electrostatic Machine was used to cure (so the accompanying brochure claimed) everything from abscesses to writer’s cramp. For the “shock treatment,” the patient sat on a chair on the lead platform next to the machine and held electrodes in his/her hands, or wore a head piece. The handle was then turned and the moving mica plates created static electricity. The high voltage, along with a very low ampere current, was transferred to the patient’s body, and the resulting static electric charge through the body was supposed to cure ailments. The current was very small, but definitely enough to get a “charge” out of a visit to the doctor’s office. There are six books in the doctor’s office library about healing with magnetism and electro therapeutics. “This was ‘hot stuff’ literally,” said former museum coordinator Terry Ramsey. “It was the newest thing on the market. The doctor was not a quack; he was always looking for the next best treatment.” A jar of human teeth, along with the dentist’s chair and tooth care equipment, are also on display. Hundreds of jars of drugs had to be evaluated by a presentday pharmacist who discovered everything from salves to liquid opium, to small pre-measured doses of strychnine used to treat syphilis. A vast cupboard still holds some of the doctor’s medications (with the dangerous ones discarded). Surrealistic objects atop the case are cathode tubes from various x-ray machines once in the office. In the corner blinks the sign indicating that another of the doctor’s responsibilities was care of the eyes. There is something of interest for all ages in the museum and worthy of a few hours of your time. Admission is $5 for adults and $2 for children from 12 to 17 years old. Children under 12 are admitted for $1. These prices cover admission to both the Museum and the Jail. The main Museum is located at 212 West Walnut and the historic Bushwhacker Jail is located a block away at 231 North Main. One admission price gives access to both locations. SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

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mtn grove - 202 Ac., Hwy 60 frontage, beautiful cattle farm, between Hwy. 60 & Hwy. MM, pipe entrance, barn, ponds, creek, 3 BR home w/bsmnt........................ REDUCED $799,000 Mtn. Grove - 354 Ac., County Line Rd., good rolling pasture land, creek, ponds, springs and waterers, excellent pipe corral & working facilities, barn, shop, 3 bed home..... $805,000 lebanon - 392 Ac., Lark Rd., off Hwy. BB, pasture & hay ground, fenced & cross fenced, with large pond, corrals, barn, 3 bedroom modular home........................................ $894,000 lebanon - 297 Ac., Knoll Rd. just off Hwy 5, beautiful cattle farm w/btm land, creek, ponds, 2 wells, 40x60 shop, walkout basement home, exc. fencing, improved pastures & alfalfa field ............................ WILL DIVIDE $1,015,000 Lebanon - 240 Ac. Hwy. O, Large Custom Built 4 BR Walk out Basement Home, Shop, Barns, Ponds, additional home, Hwy. Frontage, Numerous Pastures.....................$1,120,000 Lebanon - 251 ac. Odessa Drive, Spectacular 4 BR, 1.5 story, walk out basement home, In ground pool, Green house, Barns, Ponds, Waterer’s, plenty of pasture with some woods. ............................................$1,250,000 billings - 257 Ac., Hwy 14, located on west edge of Clever with frontage on Hwy 14 and Metzeltein Road, mostly open with good pasture and possible future development..... $1,289,000 reeds spring - 285 Ac., off Hwy 160, beautiful full log home with w/o basement over 6,000 sq. ft., great picturesque setting with great views, rolling pasture land, close to Branson and area lakes......................................$1,395,000 STOUTLAND - 661 Ac., Starling Dr., rolling pasture land, nice pipe corrals & pens, covered working chute, fenced & cross fenced, ponds, springs, well & waterers..............$1,487,250 Clever - 322 Ac., Old Wire Rd., beautiful rolling pasture / hay ground, 2 older homes, several barns, corrals, creek, big spring, 3 wells, lots of road frontage (site of Dug Spring Civil War Battle)........................$1,500,000 Milo - 632 acres, Hwy. EE, 70’x48 cattle barn, equip shed, machine shed, waterers, fenced & cross fenced w/exc. pasture & hay ground, 2 ponds, 2 acre lake, corrals...........$2,212,000 Falcon - 761 +/- Ac., Hwy K & 32, beautiful cattle farm, mostly open, next to national forest, fantastic barns, 5 springs, ponds, 3,800 sq. ft. brick walkout bsmnt home....$2,300,000 Golden City - 382 Ac., CR 50, state of the art dairy operation, row crop farm, 1,260 cow capacity, 32 cow carousel, 3 free stall barns, commodity barn, hay barn, truck scale, irrigation system, 5 bedroom home........$3,300,000 Flemington - 1,267 Ac., Hwy. 83, approx. 370 ac. tillable in corn, 750 ac. pasture & hay ground, 5 wells, 25 waterers, covered working pens, hydr. chute, office, 6 barns, exc. fencing ............................................$4,117,750 falcon - 2660 Ac., 2 homes, commodity barn, 120 ac. creek btm., 5 ac. lake, numerous springs & ponds, lots of grass.................... $4,829,000

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Training and experience: Brandy Uchtman attended College of the Ozarks where she worked for four years in the university’s processing plant. “You can do classes, but it’s not required,” she said. “I didn’t really take any classes for it.”

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By Brenda Brinkley

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B’s Meats History: While at College of the Ozarks, Brandy had a class project during her senior year. “It was to do a business plan. The only thing that I had ever been around was the processing plant and raising cattle,” she recalled. “So I did something that would be easy to me and went with the processing plant, because I could always refer to the one at school for the project. Then it was more and more a good idea. This place was available and it was here in Fordland. I needed something to do whenever I graduated, so I just went with it.” Brandy opened B’s Meats on the opening day of deer season in 2016. “I didn’t know if I was going to be up and running,” she said. “We were working on the cooler. I went and bought it on a Wednesday and deer season was on Saturday. So I didn’t do any advertising; nothing. We had a couple of hundred deer. The next year it doubled. This year we’re expecting kind of the same thing. More and more people know about it.” Products and Services: B’s Meats offers custom processing. They have re-sale meats and do processed beef, pigs and deer. Brandy buys meat from a wholesale distributor. “We buy it in chunks, so we cut it up when it comes in. I make the seasoning for it. We don’t buy hardly anything store bought that I don’t make, cut down and do something with.” It is hard to say what she processes the most because it varies. She explained, “It just depends on the season. We do a lot of deer. Right now we do a lot of pigs. In the wintertime, there will be a lot of beef.” Custom butchering is by appointment. Brandy has a couple of part-time employees and adds a couple of additional employees during the deer season. Future plans: Brandy said, “We started out really well. There are some days in the winter when we’re packed. So expanding in business is kind of already there.” Philosophy: “Get done what needs to be done, and be clean and honest,” she stated.

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


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Steven and Jamie Rogers, Jim and Jan Lile team up to produce high-quality Red Angus When asked what advice he plained. “When I bought my first Red might have for young farmers, Angus cattle it was because I wanted Steven Rogers said, “Work closely cattle that were selected based on objective measurements, and Red Angus has with your family; communicate.” He practices those words. Steven and a very solid data base where we collect as his wife, Jamie, help operate Rogers Cat- much information as possible about the tle and Lile Farms Red Angus located cattle. That helps us to get high accunear Strafford, Mo., in Greene County, racy and quality EPDs. So I believe the with Jamie’s father, Jim Lile, and his scientific approach to cattle breeding is really important, because we can get a wife, Jan. “I have lived here since I was 18 lot from using the data. “Red Angus are very functional cattle. months old,” Jim said. So he has lived They are very gentle. We enjoy having there for 63 years. Steven and Jamie moved back to the cattle that are easy to work with. For us farm in the fall of 2010. They have two it’s been a really good fit.” Steven said the Red Angus have an exboys, Eli and Ethan. “We are the third, fourth, and fifth gen- cellent disposition. “We’ve got little boys around here, so erations to live on this farm,” Jamie said. they have to be gentle,” Jamie added. They have been raising Besides disposition, Steven said Red Angus since 2004. they appreciate the Red Angus as “We think all breeds are replacement females. valuable. We believe in “A lot of people are building crossbreeding, so I don’t know their cow herds around Red that we believe one breed is Strafford, Mo. Angus genetics,” Steven better than another. Each said. “They are good mothbreed has their own strengths ers. Since they are Angus, and weaknesses,” Steven ex-

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


meet your neighbors A

they have good carcass-quality traits as here on the farm, a buyer gets a chance a general rule. As a family we believe in to see an animal’s mother,” Steven said. crossbreeding. If someone wants to use They have had their production sales our bulls on their cows or use our re- for four years now. placement heifers with a different breed They do offer some purebred females; bull, they’re going to reap the benefits of whether that’s cow/calf pairs or replacecrossbreeding and hybrid vigor.” ment heifers. Their Red Angus are registered, as are “We also offer about 30 replacement their crossbreed cows. heifers,” Steven said. “That allows us The family has worked hard to “make to meet the demand that’s out there. sure our cattle work in fescue country,” This year we had high demand for our Steven said. replacement heifers.” “They’re adapted to the fescue and They also sell through private treaty. But can handle the toxicity,” he explained. no bulls are sold from December to March. “The neat thing about the drought that “Everything goes to the sale,” Steven we’re going through now, it’s helping us said. “I like for them to be at least 12 to see how well we’ve done at selecting months old when I put them in the for that trait of being adapted to fescue. sale. So if they’re a little younger, we’ll We’re real pleased with where our cattle save them back and a lot of times we’ll are in terms of how they’re handling the save them for Farmfest. So then we’ll summer heat and drought.” have some 18-month-old bulls at FarmEach March, Rogfest. We’ve done ers Cattle and Lile Farmfest at least six Farms hold their years.” own production sale Their calving seaIf someone wants at the farm. son is from Feb. 1 to use our bulls on “We have a lot of to April 15 and they their cows or use our fun the day of the also have a short fall replacement heifers sale,” Steven said. calving season. with a different breed “Getting ready for “We have about bull, they’re going to the sale is a lot of 15 fall cows,” Steven reap the benefits of work. We do it here said. in our own hay barn Jim’s wife, Jan, crossbreeding and and we’ll market keeps a close eye on hybrid vigor. about 40 bulls at aucthe heifers during – Steven Rogers tion. That’s evolved. calving season and It used to be just a cowboy style auction calls if help is needed. where we had the bulls priced. Now we They are utilizing embryo transfer in actually have an auctioneer and this year their breeding program. we incorporated video auction and the “Right now we have six embryo calves Internet, and sold some cattle over the on the ground from this spring,” Steven Internet.” said. “We had one cow that had four “People used to come by and ask if we calves in one day. She had three embryo had any animals for sale,” Jim added. babies (from recip) and then she calved “They were picking and choosing. Peo- herself. That was a fun day.” ple said, ‘Why don’t you wait and let us There is a lot of work and fun on and all bid on the things.’ So that’s when we off the farm. Jim Lile and daughter, Jamie, quit selling to individuals and added one operate Lile Quarry in Northview, Mo., day. It was the public that asked us to do Steven is Southwest District Supervisor this. We didn’t just up and say, “‘We’re for Agricultural Education and FFA. Eli going to have a sale barn.’” The people (8) and Ethan (7) are learning a lot about who had seen our animals wanted a the farm. Eli has shown cattle for two chance to bid on a specific bull. That’s years, but Ethan is just getting started. how it started.” “What we do as a family right now, “Everybody gets a fair chance at an ani- everyday, is shaping these boys for their mal by doing it at an auction. By doing it future,” Steven said.

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17


meet your neighbors

Photo by Julie Turner-Crawford

Making it Work

Darin and Katie Hodges never planned to raise cattle, but they are now living on the farm that has been in Katie’s family for generations and run about 110 cow/calf pairs. Pictured, from left, are Darin, daughter Harleigh, Katie and daughter Caseigh.

By Julie Turner-Crawford

The Hodges find ways to balance their jobs, kids and cattle If someone would have asked Darin and Katie Hodges 30 years ago about their future plans, the phrase “cow/calf producer” was not on the radar. Darin was a young basketball star and had dreams of going pro. Katie, on the other hand, was bucking square bales and thinking all she wanted to do was get away from the farm. “I was going to live in a town where I was going to have a pizza delivered to my house,” Katie recalled with a laugh. The couple have been married for more than 20 years and are living on the farm that has been a part of Katie’s family for more 120 years. They’re in the cattle business, and there’s no place they would rather be. Their farm near Taneyville, Mo., has been in Katie’s family for five generations, making daughters Harleigh and

18

Caseigh, the sixth generation of the “About a year later, I bought six ShowLouis (Hirer) Hires family to call the Me-Select heifers, and now 20 years later, original 1893 farm home. Her parents, I have more than 100.” Roy and Debbie Combs, and grandparBoth have off-the-farm jobs. Darin is ents, Exie M. and Jessie Case, also live the service manager at Tri-Lakes Motors on the original farm. in Branson, Mo., and Katie is a commer“When we got married, we just decided to cial and ag lender at Branson Bank in stay here. My grandparents decided to start Branson, Mo. Their daughters are very phasing out, and now my parents are retired active in sports and other activities, and don’t have cattle anymore. Darin said leaving little extra time in the day, but he thought he might like to get a few head they gave raising cattle a whirl. of cattle and I asked him, ‘Are you sure?’” Darin and Katie came to the family farm Katie’s grandpa actually caused Darin to in 1998 and own and rent a total of 430 get bit by the cattle bug when acres where they run 110 commercial he gave Darin his first cow. cow/calf pairs serviced by four to five “It all started when we got herd sires. The cattle are primarily married and I’d help (Katie’s) Angus, black Limousin, SimAngrandpa on the weekends. One gus and black Gelbvieh. day he asked me if I wanted my Cattle are split into three own cow and I said I would. Taneyville, Mo. herds, divided by age and He just gave me one (cow) and calving season. then it had a calf,” Darin said. “When I started, I wanted Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

to have registered cattle,” Darin said. “The more I got into it, the more realized it wasn’t worth it. (Katie’s grandfather) said, ‘just sell the calves.’ It got so complicated with the registered side we went to just commercial.” Calves are weaned at 500 to 600 pounds. “If I can, I try to pre-condition for 30 days before I sell, but if it’s hot, I’ll go ahead and sell them,” Darin explained. “I would rather get that extra 30 day on the calves because the buyers like them at market. After 30 days, their mouths are dried up and the buyers can tell that, and they’re not bawling in the ring.” Maintaining herd health is a priority for the Hodges family. Cattle are vaccinated and wormed twice a year, and cattle receive one round of Mutimin annually. “Because we both have jobs, he does a lot of preventative care to keep everything healthy because he can’t be there SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


meet your neighbors all the time to watch every cow and calf,” Katie said. “Prevention is a replacement for the time because he doesn’t have to sit and watch them all day.” Females that are not productive or are higher maintenance are culled “If they don’t calve out every year, or if they have bad feet or udders, they’re out,” Darin said. “If they want to stick around here, they have to be productive and get the job done. I’ve got some that maybe have two bad (quarters) and two good ones but raise a good calf, I can look past that, but if it takes 14 months for her next calf, she’s gone.” Darin retains very few heifers for his herd. By not having many, if any, firstcalf heifers, he doesn’t have to worry about birthing issues. “I prefer to buy new genetics,” he said. “If I keep a heifer, it’s pretty few and far between. In this market right now, you can buy a young pair for $1,200, $1,300 and a weaned heifer is bringing $700; it’s a better financial decision to have an animal that’s ready to go and have a calf at her side. I’d rather buy something that’s already doing the job than to waste a couple of years to keep a heifer and get a calf just to find out she’s not going to do the job. That’s a long time to wait on a $700, $800 calf.” “We can also come home and there will be three new calves on the ground without any issues,” Katie added. “We don’t have that worry about pulling calves.” Darin buys his hay, which also saves him time. While some producers are worried about having enough hay his year, Darin said he always buys his hay from his providers very early in the year, so his barn is full for the upcoming winter. Buying hay also allows him to optimize his grazing program. “We can actually run a few more cows,” Darin said. “If you have ground blocked off for hay, you can’t run as many cows. I will buy the hay and run the extra cows. Her dad and grandpa hayed for years and I would help on the weekends, but when we took over, we haven’t done our own hay. Hay doesn’t wait until Saturday or Sunday and that’s the only time I have to do it.” Grazing pastures opposed to haying them means Darin spends a great deal of time making improvements to pastures. SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

“There had never been any herbicides used here,” Darin said. “I use herbicides every spring and spray. It’s pretty amazing what GrazonNext can do. Up until about seven or eight years ago, I would just brush hog and that was my weed control. I talked with some other guys who were using (GrazonNext) and their pastures were nothing but grass; I couldn’t believe it.” Darin is cautious with the use of the weed killer, making sure no water sources come in contact with the product. Pastures are what Darin called “typical rocky Ozarks pastures.” “We don’t have the soil to grow things like alfalfa,” he said. “We have mixed grass and land we have dozed off gets put back into warm-season grasses, usually Bermuda. The areas I have in Bermuda are green and growing. It’s kind of a lifesaver in years like this. I love it because it’s a one and done plant and it spreads. I want something that’s going to grow every year.” In addition to forages, cattle are offered lick tubes, Hi Mag and trace mineral, as well as a salt and trace mineral mix from Vit-A-Zine. With the recent dry conditions, cattle have also been offered 20 percent cubes. Darin said the cubes are also a useful tool when moving or working cows. Darin and Katie feel they represent a new generation of cattle producers, producers who can have jobs in town and have success raising cattle. “If my kids want to take this over one day, they are going to have to have a job because they can’t do it full time,” Darin said. “I’d love nothing more than to just raise cattle, and maybe I’m doing it all wrong, but it’s not going to happen. I love raising cattle, and there’s years it’s good and years it’s bad.” Despite there still being no pizza delivery to their farm, Katie is happy to see the farming way of life continue in her family, and her girls have learned about hard work and responsibility, as well as a few other life lessons. “It’s not always fun and it’s not always easy,” she said. “If your marriage can survive working cattle, it can survive anything. Darin really enjoys it and we make it work.”

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19


meet your neighbors

Photos by Jennifer Ailor

Competing at a Higher Level By Jennifer Ailor

Spartan Valley Shorthorns works to breed show-quality animals for young exhibitors Young Calin Smith of Spartan Valley Shorthorns has an admirable end goal: to get highquality show stock in the hands of kids to be able to compete at a higher level. Those kids, typically in 4-H and FFA, also gain the foundation for a quality herd. “I want them to have a show heifer to compete,” he said. “But most important of all is that heifer can raise calves,” he said. “To me, that’s the future of our farm.” It’s a tactic that just might keep more kids on the farm once they’ve grown up. Calin said he doesn’t know of any stu-

20

Calin Smith grew up showing cattle, and today he breeds his Shorthorn cattle for youth exhibitors.

dents at Logan-Rogersville High School showing animals. And that’s a concern, because taking care of animals, let alone showing them, teaches life lessons of discipline, responsibility and patience. “It really instills a good work ethic at a sume 3 to 5 pounds a day of liquid feed. Calves are weaned by 6 months. The young age,” Calin said. only calves that go to the stockyards He has about 30 Shortare those that don’t make the cut for horns on the nearly centuryeither Calin’s replacement heifers old, 100-acre family farm beor to be a show heifer, show steer tween Sparta and Rogersville. or herd bull for someone else. He leases another 100 acres for “Our main goal is to sell in brome, fescue and grass hay, Rogersville, Mo. our own production sale or which he supplements with a privately at the farm,” he said. little alfalfa. The cattle also con-

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

During the day, Calin works at his own company, SmithCo Construction, specializing in residential construction; shop, barn and home remodels, and framing. But from 6 to 9 in the evening, you’ll find him at the farm with his cattle. This year, his KA-BA Rose 13E heifer took first prize in the Shorthorn — Continued on Page 24

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


town & Photo by Laura L. Valenti

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In the Country: “My husband Rick and I live with our 15-year-old daughter, Kristin, on 60 acres in McDonald County, which is as far down in the southwest corner of the state as you can get. We raise commercial beef cattle. We have about 20 head of Lim-cross, Sim-Angus cross and Angus-cross cattle. Kristin raises Shorthorn show cattle. “There is a lot to this, the showing of the Shorthorn cattle, but I think it’s been really good for Kristin, who is the youngest of five. It’s helped her to become more outgoing and make more friends and certainly, farm work and working with livestock teaches responsibility. It’s a lot of work but it’s also something where we can also see the good results of all of her efforts. “I grew up on a dairy farm so farming and cattle have always been a big part of my life. My grandparents were the force behind the dairy farm but when my grandmother died, that’s when I got out. Still, I love cows and I wanted to stay in agriculture. When we got married, my husband already had commercial cows so ours have just sort of grown from there. We like what we do and we work it together as a family. “We bale our own hay, mostly for our own use, part of it on our land and part of it with the neighbors, sharing it in halves. Rick mows the hay, Kristin and I rake it, and Kristin does square bales, which we then use when we have to feel animals on the road at fairs and shows. Then rest we put up in round bales for use at home.”

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Prepared Foods in it’s poultry processing plant in Southwest City, Mo., for 15 years. “I love it,” she said. “I’m just really lucky to work with a good group of ladies and gentlemen and that makes working there really fun,” Lindsey shared while taking a break from the heat at the Missouri State Fair where she was helping her daughter, Kristin, with her show cattle.

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21


slaughter

market sales reports

bulls

beef

(Week of 9/2/18 to 9/8/18) Buffalo Livestock Market Douglas County Livestock Auctionn

83.50-90.00 † 70.00-86.00*

Mid Missouri Stockyards

65.00-95.00 †

MO-KAN Livestock Auction

60.00-92.00*

Ozarks Regional Stockyard

dairy

Not Reported †

South Central Regional Stockyards - Vienna

60

80

slaughter

100

120

140

cows

(Week of 9/2/18 to 9/8/18) 48.00-59.50*

Buffalo Livestock Market Douglas County Livestock

42.00-56.50 †

Interstate Regional

35.00-62.50 †

Joplin Regional Stock

33.00-62.00 †

Kingsville Livestock Auction

42.50-66.00 † 40.00-58.00*

Mid Missouri Stockyards

37.00-68.00 †

MO-KAN Livestock Auction

38.00-62.50 †

Ozarks Regional

South Central Regional Stockyards - Vienna Not Reported † Springfield Livestock Marketing Center

0

20

No Sale - Holiday †

40

60

cow/calf

80

100

120

pairs

(Week of 9/2/18 to 9/8/18) Buffalo Livestock Market

None Reported* 1000.00-1275.00 †

Douglas County Livestock

None Reported †

Interstate Regional Stockyards - Cuba Joplin Regional Stockyards

900.00-1050.00 †

Kingsville Livestock Auction

None Reported †

Mid Missouri Stockyards

950.00-1350.00 † Not Reported

South Central Regional Stockyards - Vienna

1650

replacement

2150

cows

(Week of 9/2/18 to 9/8/18) Buffalo Livestock Market

950.00-1055.00*

Douglas County Livestock

925.00-1050.00 †

Interstate Regional Stockyards

Prices reported per cwt

935.00-1300.00 †

Joplin Regional

530.00-1200.00 †

975.00-1260.00 † 600.00-1700.00 †

Ozarks Regional South Central Regional Stockyards - vienna

Not Reported †

Springfield Livestock Marketing Center

No Sale - Holiday †

22

1050

1550

300-400 lbs. 400-500 lbs. 500-600 lbs. 600-700 lbs. 700-800 lbs. 300-400 lbs. 400-500 lbs. 500-600 lbs. 600-700 lbs. 700-800 lbs.

1050.00-1300.00*

MO-KAN Livestock Auction

Steers, Med. & Lg. 1

Holsteins, Lg. 3

985.00-1135.00 †

Mid Missouri Stockyards

550

2650

Heifers, Med. & Lg. 1

2050

2550

300-400 lbs. 400-500 lbs. 500-600 lbs. 600-700 lbs. 700-800 lbs.

goats 9/6/18

Receipts: 788 Supply was good and demand was moderate with a near full house on hand at the beginning of the sale. Lamb markets were steady to 30.00 higher, ewes were mostly steady, kids held mostly steady to 20.00 higher. The remainder of the markets held mostly steady compared to last month. Supply was made up of about 31 percent kid goats, 17 percent Does and Bucks, 27 percent lambs, and 6 percent ewes and rams. All prices are per hundred weight (CWT) unless noted otherwise. SHEEP: Feeder Hair Lambs: Medium and large 1-2 30-55 lbs 160.00-195.00. Medium and large 2-3 35-57 lbs 150.00155.00. Slaughter wool lambs: Prime 2-4 62-70 lbs 135.00140.00; 100-175 lbs 105.00-120.00; 225 lbs 35.00. Good 1-2 96 lbs 85.00. Slaughter Hair Lambs: Prime 2-4 58-62 lbs 200.00205.00. Choice 2-3 60-95 lbs 125.00-145.00. Good 1-2 85-95 lbs 110.00-115.00. Replacement Hair Ewes: Medium and Large 1-2 85-130 lbs 55.00-75.00. Medium and Large 2-3 65-78 lbs 80.00110.00. Replacement Wool Ewes: Medium and large 2-3 145-172 lbs 45.00-80.00. Replacement Wool Rams: Large 1-2 305-315 lbs 55.0080.00.

GOATS: Feeder kids: Selection 2 55.00-65.00 Per Head. Feeder kids: Selection 1 28-41 lbs 230.00-260.00. Selection 2 30-40 lbs 210.00-225.00. Selection 3 28-45 lbs 130.00-160.00. Slaughter Kids: Selection 1 40-78 lbs 220.00-245.00; 68-125 lbs 185.00-200.00. Selection 2 40-87 lbs 190.00225.00. Selection 3 40-80 lbs 112.00-165.00. Replacement does: Selection 1 105-135 lbs 170.00195.00; 210 Per Head. Selection 2 60-155 lbs 117.50145.00. Few Families, Does with twin kids: Selection 2 40.0090.00 Per Head. Slaughter Does: Selection 2 65-110 lbs 100.00-115.00. Selection 3 55-120 lbs 65.00-95.00. Replacement Bucks: Selection 1 80-120 lbs 205.00240.00; 70-215 lbs 130.00-177.50. Slaughter Bucks: Selection 2 and 3 60-235 lbs 100.00145.00. Buffalo, Mo. • Buffalo Livestock Market

stocker & feeder

Buffalo Livestock Auction* 9/8/18

Butler Mo-Kan Livestock† 9/6/18

Cuba Interstate Regional† 9/4/18

1,444

707

856

587

St-4 Higher

St-4 Higher

Steady

-----

183.00-197.00 170.00-184.00 162.00-176.00 153.50-165.25 147.00-152.50

181.00-217.00 165.00-182.00 158.00-178.00 148.00-159.50 145.00-146.50

189.00 170.00-185.00 162.00-175.00 152.00-163.50 147.00

175.00-200.00 160.00-183.00 152.00-163.50 150.00-151.50 -----

----66.00 74.00 ---------

---------------------

---------------------

---------------------

156.00-160.00 145.00-156.00 142.50-154.50 141.00-149.00 -----

145.00-166.00 138.00-160.00 138.00-154.00 135.00-148.00 126.00-132.00

161.00 159.00-163.00 ----141.00-143.00 133.25

152.00-165.00 143.00-159.50 135.00-147.50 130.00-133.00 136.00

prices

Joplin Regional Stockyards† -----

Kingsville Livestock Auction† 9/4/18

Mid Missouri Stockyards* 9/6/18

-----

530

1,301

-----

Steady

Steady

---------------------

178.50 185.00-190.00 178.00-179.50 162.50-174.00 161.25

175.00-200.00 164.00-187.00 155.00-174.00 148.00-166.00 142.00-152.00

---------------------

---------------------

85.00-90.00 85.00-90.00 82.00-88.00 80.00-85.00 80.00-85.00

---------------------

----160.00-170.00 147.50-165.00 154.00 -----

150.00-165.00 150.00-165.00 142.00-152.00 135.00-150.00 130.00-141.00

USDA Reported * Independently Reported

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

8/28/18

Receipts: 1,143 Supply moderate. Demand moderate to good. All prices are per hundred weight (CWT) unless noted otherwise. SHEEP: Feeder Lambs: hair lambs: Medium and Large 1-2 30-50 lbs 170.00-183.00, Pkg 36 lbs 227.50. Medium and Large 2-3 38-59 lbs 150.00-167.50. Small 2-3 Couple Pkgs 120.00-130.00. Slaughter wool lambs: Choice and Prime 2-3 Few 75-98 lbs 130.00-139.00. Choice 1-2 couple Pkgs 105-120 lbs 125.00-126.00. Slaughter Hair Lambs: Choice and Prime 2-4 60-74 lbs 150.00-161.00. Choice 2-3 60-90 lbs 130.00-149.00. Replacement Hair Ewes: Medium and Large 1-2 48-120 lbs 97.50-117.50, Pkg 123 lbs 82.50. Hair Sheep Families: Medium and Large 1-2 Pkg 120 lbs 140.00. Slaughter Ewes: Good and Choice 2-3 81-133 lbs 60.0066.00. Utility and Good 1-2 Few 102-138 lbs 40.00. Replacement Hair Rams: Medium and Large 1-2 75-120 lbs 107.50-142.50, Pkg 115 lbs 217.50. Slaughter Rams: 105-230 lbs 40.00-51.50. GOATS: Feeder Kids: Selection 1 31-44 lbs 200.00-225.00, Few 30-50 lbs 240.00-260.00. Selection 2 38-50 lbs 172.50-192.50. Selection 3 29-57 lbs 120.00-157.50, Few 95.00-102.50.

12 6$/( +2/,'$<

1150

Kingsville Livestock Auction

Ava Douglas County† 9/6/18

No Sale - Holiday †

Springfield Livestock Marketing Center

50

sheep &

Diamond, Mo. • TS Whites Sheep and Goat Sale

1275.00-1535.00 †

Ozarks Regional Stockyards

650

8/28/18

Receipts: 797 The supply was heavy and included four small herd dispersals. The demand was moderate to light with 09 percent springer heifers, 11 percent bred heifers, 21 percent open heifers, 11 percent fresh and milking cows, 10 percent bred and springer cows and 05 percent baby calves. The balance was steers, bulls and slaughter cows. Prices reported are on a per head basis and for Holsteins unless noted otherwise. Springer Heifers bred seven to nine months: Supreme 1000.00-1350.00, Approved 750.00- 950.00, crossbreds 700.00-850.00, Medium 675.00-725.00, Crossbreds 575.00-680.00, Common 250.00-450.00, crossbreds 150.00-525.00. Heifers bred three to six months: Supreme 950.001175.00, few crossbreds 885.00-900.00, Approved 725.00-900.00, crossbreds 800.00-835.00, Medium 510.00- 700.00, few crossbreds 550.00-600.00, Common few 150.00-290.00. Heifers bred one to three months: Scarce Open Heifers: Approved: 165-285 lbs 220.00-250.00, Jerseys 160.00-350.00, crossbreds 140.00-320.00, 319-400 lbs 280.00-350.00, ind Jerseys 300 lbs 330.00, Ind crossbred 330 lbs 270.00, 420-498 lbs 400.00-450.00. ind Jersey 499 lbs 640.00, crossbreds 360.00-410.00, 503-595 lbs 430.00-500.00, crossbreds 455.00-590.00, 612-696 lbs 570.00-580.00, ind Jersey 635 lbs 580.00, few crossbreds 500.00-560.00, ind 705 lbs 620.00, ind Jersey 715 lbs 520.00. Medium: 305-360 lbs 210.00-250.00, ind Jersey 325 lbs 230.00, 448-460 lbs 240.0 -300.00, ind 595 lbs 260.00, ind crossbred 510 lbs 370.00, 612-690 lbs 450.00-500.00. Replacement Cows: Fresh and Milking Cows: Supreme 1000.00-1325.00, few crossbreds 1200.00-1375.00.

Approved 725.00-850.00, ind Jersey 950.00, crossbreds 775.00-850.00, Medium 625.00-725.00, few crossbreds 625.00, Common 385.00-550.00. Springer Cows: Supreme 825.00-950.00, crossbreds 775.00-925.00, Approved 725.00-775.00, Jerseys 650.00700.00, Medium 600.00-660.00, few jerseys 525.00550.00, crossbreds 520.00-675.00. Bred Cows: Supreme few crossbreds 900.00-925.00, Approved ind Jersey 775.00, Medium 510.00-675.00, ind Jersey 625.00, crossbreds 525.00-650.00, Common 500.00-525.00, ind Jersey 500.00. Baby Calves: Holstein heifers- 100.00-130.00, Holstein bulls - 70.00-80.00, ind small 20.00, Jersey heifers - ind 75.00, Jersey bulls - 10.00-65.00, crossbred heifers- 75.0080.00, crossbred bulls - 75.00-105.00, beef cross heifers 120.00-220.00, beef cross bulls 70.00-135.00.

1200.00-1500.00*

MO-KAN Livestock Auction - Butler

150

cattle

Springfield, Mo. • Springfield Livestock Marketing Center

No Sale - Holiday †

Springfield Livestock Marketing Center

40

64.00-92.00 †

Kingsville Livestock Auction

9/9/18

5 Area (Tx-Ok, Ks, Neb, Ia, Colo) Live Basis Sales - Over 80% Choice Steers: 106.00-109.00; wtd. avg. price 107.49. Heifers: 106.00-108.00; wtd. avg. price 107.67. Dressed Basis Sales - Over 80% Choice Steers: 168.00-173.00; wtd. avg. price 170.25. Heifers: 169.00-173.00; wtd. avg. price 170.01.

65.00-88.00 † 70.50-86.00

Joplin Regional Stockyards

20

Midwest - High Plains Direct Slaughter Cattle

68.00-90.00*

Interstate Regional Stockyards - Cuba

cattle

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


reports

mbs: Choice and Prime 2-3 Few 75-98 Choice 1-2 couple Pkgs 105-120 lbs

mbs: Choice and Prime 2-4 60-74 lbs oice 2-3 60-90 lbs 130.00-149.00. Ewes: Medium and Large 1-2 48-120 kg 123 lbs 82.50. es: Medium and Large 1-2 Pkg 120 lbs

ood and Choice 2-3 81-133 lbs 60.00Good 1-2 Few 102-138 lbs 40.00. Rams: Medium and Large 1-2 75-120 Pkg 115 lbs 217.50. 05-230 lbs 40.00-51.50.

tion 1 31-44 lbs 200.00-225.00, 00-260.00. Selection 2 38-50 lbs ection 3 29-57 lbs 120.00-157.50, Few

Western Cornbelt Daily Direct Hog Report

9/10/18

Negotiated Purchase (Including Packer Sold) Barrows & Gilts (carcass basis): 4,500 Compared to Prior Day’s closing weighted average (LM_ HG208): no comparison Price Range: $30.00 - $35.10. Wtd Avg: $31.61. 5 Day Rolling Avg: $29.47. Western Cornbelt Daily Direct Sow & Boar Report

9/10/18

Sows Negotiated Purchase (Including Packer Sold) Sows Purchased (Live and Carcass Basis): 2,563 300-399 lbs: 13.00-32.00. 400-449 lbs: 13.00-33.00. 450-499 lbs: 15.00-34.00. 500-549 lbs: 20.00-34.50. 550/up lbs: 29.32-35.00.

rices Mid Missouri Stockyards* 9/6/18

Springfield Livestock Marketing† 9/5/18

530

1,301

860

Steady

Steady

Steady

178.50 85.00-190.00 78.00-179.50 62.50-174.00 161.25

175.00-200.00 164.00-187.00 155.00-174.00 148.00-166.00 142.00-152.00

174.00-198.00 160.00-174.00 150.00-172.00 150.00-167.50 141.00-155.25

---------------------

85.00-90.00 85.00-90.00 82.00-88.00 80.00-85.00 80.00-85.00

---------------------

----60.00-170.00 47.50-165.00 154.00 -----

150.00-165.00 150.00-165.00 142.00-152.00 135.00-150.00 130.00-141.00

163.00 144.50-160.00 145.00-150.50 139.00-149.00 129.00-142.00

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

Vienna South Central† -----

127 5(3257('

Kingsville Livestock Auction† 9/4/18

West Plains Ozarks Regional† 9/4/18

-----

1,537

-----

Steady

---------------------

190.00-197.50 167.00-176.00 155.00-175.00 151.00-161.00 149.00-157.00 ---------------------

---------------------

157.50-175.00 140.00-153.00 138.00-147.00 139.00-151.00 137.00-138.50

Ava Kingsville

Mo. Weekly Hay Summary

avg. grain prices

Week Ended 9/7/18 Corn Sorghum*

Soft Wheat

* Price per cwt

18

heifers 550-600 LBS. Ava Kingsville

7.94

6

6.22 4.92 4.95 4.97 3.43 3.33 3.22

7.68

7.82

7.96

176.44 165.53

5.65 5.08 3.39

5.82 4.70 3.51

Joplin West Plains

153.16

150.68 154.60 150.44

167.03

154.25

164.14

143.56

162.97

144.69 152.67

155.00 164.07 162.84 179.47 163.85

146.89 153.23 154.36 141.71 142.70

171.97 164.62

147.13

162.53

143.00 *

154.50 163.75 170.58 176.01 157.24

146.65 153.33 155.70 150.00 *

* 156.14

145.55

162.45

145.51 *

169.09 162.01 *** 179.50 164.15

* *** 149.14 149.00 ** 143.80

165.52

7.61

Cuba Vienna

149.25

**

9

Butler Springfield

145.99

162.94

12

0

Joplin West Plains

162.00

15

3

Cuba Vienna

168.99

9/7/18

As expected drought conditions once again showed some slight improvement this week. There is still 60 percent of the state officially in drought status with nearly 20 more still considered abnormally dry as it just takes a lot of precipitation to replenish following such an extended period of little to no moisture. Weather conditions however have made a major U-turn as heavy rains and runoff have caused flash flooding in areas now and many are expecting several inches of rain over the next days as remnants of Tropical Storm Gordon pass over the state. Another twist in what was unexpected just a few short weeks ago is several producers mostly those in non-grain production areas have pulled hay equipment back out and trying to add to their meager hay plies. Farmers should take note there have been multiple reports of army worms now in southwest and south central parts of the state in some cases infestation has reached thresholds for spraying. Hay demand is good, supply is light and hay prices are steady. The Missouri Department of Agriculture has a hay directory available for both buyers and sellers. To be listed, or for a directory visit http://mda.mo.gov/abd/haydirectory/ for listings of hay http://agebb.missouri.edu/haylst/ (All prices f.o.b. and per ton unless specified and on most recent reported sales price listed as round bales based generally on 5x6 bales with weights of approximately 1200-1500 lbs). Supreme quality Alfalfa (RFV <185): 180.00-250.00. Small squares 7.00-9.00 per bale. Premium quality Alfalfa (RFV 170-180): 160.00-200.00. Good quality Alfalfa (RFV 150-170): 120.00-160.00. Small squares 5.00-7.00 per bale. Fair quality Alfalfa (RFV 130-150): 100.00-120.00. Good quality Mixed Grass hay: 100.00-200.00. Small squares 5.007.00 per bale (some alfalfa/grass mix). Fair to Good quality Mixed Grass hay: 80.00-150.00. Small squares 4.00-5.50 per bale. Fair quality Mixed Grass hay: 40.00-75.00 per large round bale. Good quality Bromegrass: 120.00-150.00. Fair to Good quality Bromegrass: 60.00-100.00. Wheat straw: 2.00-6.00 per small square bale.

Butler Springfield

161.39

hay & grain markets

Soybeans

---------------------

pt .1 6 O ct .1 6 No v. 16 De c. 16 Ja n. 17 Fe b. 17 M ar ch 17 Ap ril 17 M ay 17 Ju ne 17 Ju ly 17 Au gu st 17 Se pt .1 7 O ct .1 7 No v. 17 De c. 17 Ja n. 18 Fe b. 18 M ar .1 8 Ap r. 18 M ay 18 Ju ne 18 Ju ly 18 Au gu st 18

Se

steers 550-600 LBS.

Week of 8/12/18

r lambs: Medium and Large 1-2 30-50 Pkg 36 lbs 227.50. Medium and Large 0-167.50. Small 2-3 Couple Pkgs

Cheese: Barrels closed at $1.5000 and 40# blocks at $1.6625. The weekly $100 average for barrels is $1.5844 (-.0346) and blocks, $1.6794 (+.0074). Fluid Milk: Heat and humidity, in the Central and Eastern regions, continue to hinder milk output. Between seasonal milk downturns and school related bottling upticks, processing plants are receiving noticeably lower milk volumes. Midwestern cheese producers reported spot milk loads from $1 to $2 over Class III. Western milk volumes vary by location, but most reports are steady to lower. Bottlers have ramped up across much of the nation as nearly all K-12 schools have opened on or by this week. Flooding in Wisconsin caused multiple plants to temporarily shut down, creating further difficulties for milk and cream handlers in the area. Hauling/trucking problems continue to be regularly reported across the dairy markets. However, Gulf Coast contacts report milk haulers have had few issues during Tropical Storm Gordon late last week. Cream, unlike fluid milk, has become more available in recent weeks. As ice cream manufacturing has slowed, and milkfat is being spun off of school milk, cream prices have held steady or slipped slightly from last week. F.O.B. cream multiples are 1.22-1.35 in the East, 1.22-1.33 in the Midwest, and 1.10-1.27 in the West. SPOT PRICES OF CLASS II CREAM: $ PER POUND BUTTERFAT, F.O.B., producing plants, Midwestern U.S. - $2.8615 - $3.0204.

Week of 8/19/18

Demand moderate to good. All prices eight (CWT) unless noted otherwise.

Receipts This Week: 105,244 Trends Compared To Last Week: Early weaned pigs 3.00 per head higher. All feeder pigs steady on light receipts. Demand good to moderate for moderate offerings. Receipts include 43% formulated prices. Volume By State Or Province Of Origin: Missouri 11.1% Total Composite Weighted Average Receipts and Price (Formula and Cash): All Early Weaned Pigs: 96793 at 30.96 All 40 Pound Feeder Pigs: 8451 at 21.87

$145

Week of 8/26/18

8/28/18

9/7/18

9/7/18

Week of 9/2/18

Livestock Market

hog markets National Direct Delivered Feeder Pig Report

dairy & fed cattle

National Dairy Market

$190

Week of 8/12/18

election 2 65-110 lbs 100.00-115.00. lbs 65.00-95.00. ks: Selection 1 80-120 lbs 205.00130.00-177.50. Selection 2 and 3 60-235 lbs 100.00-

Slaughter Goats: Selection 1 42-66 lbs 200.00-235.00. Selection 2 53-93 lbs 170.00-197.50. Selection 3 50-103 lbs 145.00-168.00. Replacement Does: Selection 1-2 Few 80-110 lbs 145.00-175.00, Pkg 65 lbs 240.00. Selection 2 75-138 lbs 117.50-127.50. Slaughter Does: Selection 2 55-118 lbs 125.00-137.50. Selection 3 65-130 lbs 85.00-117.50. Replacement Bucks: Selection 1 Few 130-145 lbs 152.50-160.00. Ind 110 lbs 300.00 per head. Slaughter Bucks: Selection 2 Few 80-155 lbs 146.00161.00. Selection 3 Couple 68-100 lbs 107.50-120.00.

Week of 8/19/18

s with twin kids: Selection 2 40.00-

550-600 lb. steers

$235

Week of 8/26/18

lection 1 40-78 lbs 220.00-245.00; 200.00. Selection 2 40-87 lbs 190.0040-80 lbs 112.00-165.00. Selection 1 105-135 lbs 170.00ad. Selection 2 60-155 lbs 117.50-

24 Month Avg. -

$280

Week of 9/2/18

tion 2 55.00-65.00 Per Head. tion 1 28-41 lbs 230.00-260.00. Selec0.00-225.00. Selection 3 28-45 lbs

USDA Reported * Independently Reported

140

155 170 185 200 215 * No price reported in weight break **USDA Failed To Report *** No Sale - Holiday

Prices Based on Weighted Average for Steers and Heifers 550-600 lbs.

Serving 34,000 Readers Across Southwest Missouri ServingMore MoreThan Than 34,000 Readers Across Southwest Missouri

110

126

142

158

174

190

* No price reported in weight break **USDA Failed To Report *** No Sale - Holiday Prices Based on Weighted Average for Steers and Heifers 550-600 lbs.

23


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24

division at the Ozark Empire Fair in Springfield, Mo., and the Missouri State Fair, Sedelia, Mo., with plans to compete at the American Royal and other fairs and shows in the Midwest. He credits his father and grandfather with buying their first Shorthorns in 1976, after trying different cattle breeds. The family likes their easy disposition, maternal instincts and calving ease. According to the American Shorthorn Association, crossing Shorthorn bulls with Angus cows over a cow’s lifetime also produces an extra calf. “We have really good genetics built over years and years and years,” Calin said. His herd includes several recip cows, whose implanted embryos come from several sources, including Rodney Rod, a breeder in Sublett, Ill., who sells semen and embryos from a herd of more than 400 Shorthorns. “We never miss a chance to buy genetics from another producer that might help our own herd,” he said, adding that he has three embryo donor cows of his own. All cows are artificially inseminated

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

except for the recips, which he will clean up with his Shorthorn bull. “One reason we clean up with a purebred Shorthorn bull is that calf can be registered as Shorthorn Plus, meaning its 50 percent Shorthorn,” he pointed out. “We sell Shorthorn Plus heifers and invite any commercial producers to come out to look at the calves. They will speak for themselves.” Calin and his brothers, Colt and Cody, grew up showing with their dad all over the country, but Calin is the only one of the trio where showing stuck. His year is anchored by shows and an annual production sale. For example, in early December at Wellington, Mo., which is located near Kansas City, he and a few other producers will have show heifers, bred heifers and cow/calf pairs for sale. Calin has calves priced for anyone’s budget, all with good genetics. “That will help kids get started. I can make a little money and have some fun. Any kid who buys a heifer from us, any questions they have we’ll answer. We’ll try to help them at a show and get ready for one,” Calin said. SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

Serving More Than 34,000 Readers Across Southwest Missouri

25


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Hablamos español!

meet your neighbors

Niche Nuts By Megan Richner

Pecan company expands to include its own product lines Photo by Megan Richner

www.MidAmericaDental.com

Dr. Hildreth & Associates are Missouri licensed General Dentists. They are not licensed in Missouri as specialists in the advertised dental specialty of Prosthetics.

Kris Sisseck, left, and Heather Vestal show some of the products created from pecans at True Missouri Pecans in Nevada, Mo.

26

Golden, flavorful and loaded facility since it opened in January. Their nut product line includes halves, with health benefits. The native Missouri pecan is a popular ingredient large and medium pieces packaged in bakers love to add to their homemade 30-pound boxes or 1-pound vacuum cookies and candies during the holiday sealed bags. They recently added a new season. Their robust flavor coupled with product, an all-natural, cold-pressed penutritional benefits make it a delicious can oil. Ozarks Farm & Neighbor spoke with and healthy food option. True Missouri Pecans, LLC., located Kris Sisseck, plant manager, production in Nevada, Mo., officially opened their and sales oversight; and Heather Vestal, doors in January 2018. The business is office manager and sales representative. “To my knowledge, this is the healthiowned by Brantley True Johnson who also owns Farmers Ag & Grain Supply est oil on the market. I can’t stress enough that it is cold pressed. No steam and no in Deerfield and Nevada, Mo. Brantley has been picking pecans from additives. It is not shelf-stable so it must be Missouri farmers and selling them to refrigerated at all times, ” Kris explained. “It’s a liquid pecan,” Heather added. large, wholesale companies in Texas for Ninety-eight percent of their pecans are more than 15 years. He transitioned into the retail side harvested from native, 100-year-old trees, not commercial groves. Although the when he started True Misnuts from the native trees are smaller, souri Pecans. The company Kris has found them to be more flatakes pride in the fact they vorful and have a higher oil cononly harvest, process and sell tent. The more oil that can be pecans grown in Missouri. extracted from a nut, the more In 2017, they picked more health benefits it will provide. than one million pounds of Nevada, Mo. “K-State has my oil right pecans. They have processed now and I am waiting for a around 400,000 pounds in their Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


meet your neighbors full analysis to come back. A lot of the vitamins are literally off the charts, including Vitamin E and D,” Kris said. Pecans are a seasonal product, with 90 percent of sales occurring August through December. Their eight pickers start harvesting around Oct. 1 through May 1. The employees drive climate-controlled tractors with picking and shaking attachments. First, the pecans are shaken out of the tree with the Savage Tree Shaker. Once the pecans are on the ground, another tractor picks them up with a Savage Picker and dumps them into a bulk wagon or semi. From there, the pecans are transported to the processing facility. “We can process 5,000 pounds per day. We do not work weekends, so on 240 working day schedule, we can process 1.2 million pounds of pecans per year,” Kris said. The whole pecans are sorted by size and cleaned upon their arrival. They are submerged in 180 degree water for sani-

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

tation. They do not use bleach or chemicals. This removes salmonella, E Coli, animal feces, and dirt from the nut. After the pecans are sanitized, they go directly into the shelling machines . These machines will crack, shell, shake, dry, and sort the pecan meat by size.

The packaged pecan meats are stored in refrigeration at 35 degrees or below. The in-shell pecans must be stored at 45 degrees or below or the meats will turn brown and lose flavor. “People not from pecan country think pecans are dark brown because that is

Of all tree nuts grown in Missouri,

pecans had the highest acreage in 2012. Total Missouri pecan acreage – aggregate bearing and non-bearing acreage – exceeded 11,000 acres during 2012.

— Source, University of Missouri Extension

In the final phase of production, the pecan meats travel across a conveyer belt and any small shell pieces are picked out by hand. After this, they are inspected, boxed and ready to be sold. “The pecans are dried to 4.5 percent moisture. I like them a touch drier so they don’t mold,” Kris said.

what they see in the store or as furniture stain. Pecans are supposed to be a golden color,” Kris said. Kris explained how 100 pounds of nuts will only yield 38 pounds of sellable product. It takes an abundance of pecans to accumulate an adequate supply of pecan meat.

Serving More Than 34,000 Readers Across Southwest Missouri

“It is not necessarily weight, but there is a lot of by-product. The shell can be used for mulch and sandblasting. We are burning the shell to heat our water. We are extremely efficient here. We are eventually going to burn the shell to heat our dryers too,” Kris explained. Keeping the facility sanitized is the most important aspect of the job, Kris noted. The facility, including equipment, floors and buckets are cleaned daily. Visitors are kept at a minimum to prevent contaminants and keep the product safe. True Missouri Pecans is not certified organic only because they apply nitrate to their trees to increase yields. Kris said the operation does not have plans to go organic in the future. Since they are a new retail company, they have been using Facebook page to promote their nuts and oil to the public. They hope to soon see their products on the shelves at local stores and plan to expand into the Northeast, Northwest and foreign markets.

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Ashley

Freiburger By Julie Turner-Crawford

Age: 16 Hometown: Verona, Mo. Parents: Tim and Sandy Freiburger Siblings: Jonathan, Evan and Trenton Freiburger FFA Chapter: Verona FFA Advisor: Aaron Crosby What is your involvement in agriculture?

“I live on a dairy farm outside of Verona, which has definitely gotten me involved in agriculture. I’m an officer in my chapter and I participate in the entomology and farm business management Career Development Events. I’m very involved in my FFA chapter and enjoy participating in our chapter events.”

What is your favorite part of being involved in agriculture and living on a farm?

“My favorite part of living on a farm and being involved in agriculture is that I get opportunities to learn new things and gain valuable new experience.”

What are your future plans?

“My future plans include going to college and pursuing a career somewhere in the medical field.”

What is the best advice you have received from adults?

“The best advice I’ve received came from my dad. He always advised me to work hard to accomplish my goals, no matter what they are.”

What are some of the awards you have received?

“I have received recognition for being an officer in my FFA chapter, and I have also received a Greenhand award.”

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


the ofn

ag-visors

Advice from

the professionals

Opportunities and Risks By Joel Maneval

in cash. However, there are many other sceOne of the most useful tools in the narios that point out the risks associated with finance world is the line of credit the LOC. (LOC). This is a commitment to loan up The LOC can make it difficult to tell if to a specified amount of money to an indithe producer is operating at a loss. As notvidual or entity. ed above, the cash cycle for a corn and/or The debt can be borrowed, then paid soybean crop can be pretty long. When a down, then borrowed again – many times producer overlaps that with the cash cycle at the borrower’s discretion. Additionally, for a wheat crop, which starts during a difan LOC is generally secured by short-term ferent time of the year, it’s virtually imposassets like accounts receivable and inventosible to use the checkbook to determine ries. However, it can also use other forms of whether they’re profitable or not. Operating collateral like equipment and real estate. Joel Maneval is the losses could be happening, which won’t be Generally speaking, the LOC is used to fiAgricultural/Commerdiscovered until after they’ve occurred. The nance operating expenses – making it a very cial Lender at Arvest evidence will be a higher residual balance in helpful instrument in the “cash cycle” of a Bank in Joplin, Mo. the LOC. This makes it imperative that the farm operation. For the crop producer, the He and his wife, Tami, producer knows their true operating costs cash cycle starts when funds are used to pay have a small farm with and the prices at which they need to sell in for the next round of crop inputs like seed, their two sons near Jasorder to lock in profits. fertilizer, chemicals, etc. For corn and soyper, Mo., where they Also, the LOC can be used for making beans, this could start with prepaid expenses have beef cows and equipment or real estate purchases, rather right before the calendar year-end. Boer goats. than operating expenses. The cycle then extends through the plantOne might say, “I paid cash for that planter ing season as additional inputs are purchased. It moves on into the growing season, when additional fertilizer (or tractor, or farm, etc.).” And, there may have been cash in the applications and weed control measures occur. Then comes the checking account at the time of the purchase. But, if there was an harvest – when the inputs are officially converted into inventory. outstanding balance on the LOC at the same time, should that Depending on the borrower’s marketing plan, that crop may cash be used to purchase a longer-term asset rather than pay back get sold at harvest – or it could be held for an extended period the LOC? We’ve already noted that it’s hard to tell if one is netafter harvest to take advantage of higher prices. Even if the ting a profit by just looking at the checkbook. Unfortunately, many producers can easily justify “cash” purcrop is sold at harvest, some producers may defer their income until after the first of the year. The important thing to note chases, only to find their LOC has a higher balance at the end is that the cash cycle ends when the last of the crop has been of the cash cycle. Most of the time, that wasn’t excess “cash” as a result of operating profits. That cash should have been paid sold and the payment has been received. So, from beginning to end, a crop producer’s cash cycle can down on the LOC. If the producer really needed the equipment or farm that was last six to 18 months or more. The longer the cycle, the greater the demand for cash along the way. And, funding gaps can cer- purchased, then longer-term financing should have been utitainly arise depending on how much cash or marketable assets lized instead. In summary, the LOC is a powerful and useful tool to help a given producer has during this cycle. Here is where the LOC becomes a very useful tool for today’s today’s ag producer fill in the funding gaps of long cash cycles. ag producer. In one scenario, inventories from the previous While there are many opportunities associated with this incrop year may already be sold for a later delivery date. How- strument, many risks are found as well. If each producer will work to manage this tool properly, they ever, cash is needed now to buy fertilizer. An advance from the LOC can be used to pay for the fertilizer and allow the will reduce their chances of falling into pitfalls like those menproducer to follow through with the marketing plan. Once the tioned above. And, they will be positioned to benefit from the previous crop is sold and payment is received, the producer opportunities as well. Joel Maneval is the agricultural/commercial Lender at Arvest can take those proceeds and pay down the LOC. There are many scenarios like this that demonstrate how the Bank in Joplin. He and his wife, Tami, have a small farm with their LOC can be an effective apparatus for funding short-term gaps two sons near Jasper, Mo., where they have beef cattle.

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

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I

n the last few years there has been a lot of discussion and articles about women farmers being on the increase. Every time I read one of these articles, I laugh to myself and think “women have been there the whole time” Why haven’t all of the people talking about this “new trend” ever noticed the active role that farm wives have always played? I’ve been an agricultural lender for 25-plus years, and in almost every farm meeting I have ever had, both husband and wife were present. Kathy Daily is the Wives have been operating the farm right alongSenior Vice President side their husband for hundreds of years. Maybe of First Financial Bank’s their roles are different than their husbands, but Farm and Ranch Divithat doesn’t make them any less of a farmer. sion. She has been an Some may have the role of bookkeeper, crew agricultural lender for caterer, herdswoman, nursery operator, parts more than 25 years. delivery, hay baler, grain truck driver, marketer, lawns keeper, counselor, nurse, or a multitude of other jobs, but you can bet that their names can usually be found on the farm’s debts alongside their husband’s. So why don’t people see them as farmers? There are some wives who have taken off-farm jobs, but that isn’t usually by choice. When women take off-farm jobs, it is most likely to get affordable insurance for their family. Those wives can usually be found working on the farm in the evenings and weekends. Yes, there are some women who own their own farms, whether through the death of a spouse, inheritance, or just a desire to grow vegetables for their community. Statistics show that most women owned farms have annual sales of less than $10,000. According to the 2012 Census, 30 percent of U.S. farmers are women, but they only control 7 percent of U.S. farmland. The term “women farmers” is generally only given to the women who are the principal operators. But folks, can you name a woman that hasn’t let her husband think he is in charge? The next time you are on a farm, see if you can spot the invisible women operators. They can usually be found working hard right alongside the “principal operator” and stressed about the lack of rain, abundance of rain, low commodity prices, or the late payment on the tractor just like their male counterparts.

According to the 2012 Census, For information, contact: Todd Kanoy 816-726-7420 or 816-726-7421 Lonnie Peetz 816-390-3436 route66simgenetics@gmail.com www.route66simgenetics.com

30

30 percent

of U.S. farmers are women, but they only control

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

7 percent

of U.S. farmland. SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


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farm

help

Making farming

a little easier

Preg Checking Cows for Efficiency By Klaire Howerton

The basic management tool can mean the difference between profit and loss Most cattle producers understand the importance of having productive cows as members of their herd. To ensure they are keeping only productive cows that are worthy of investment, producers should make pregnancy checks part of their management plan. “Preg checking cows is a pretty basic management tool that most farmers should adopt. It costs essentially the same to run an open cow as it does a bred cow for a year and the open cow isn’t going to produce a calf for you to sell and create income,” Andy McCorkill, livestock specialist with the University of Missouri Extension, said. “This year, more than most, it is going to be an important tool in planning for fall and winter forage availability; grass is short, and hay is expensive because we had a poor spring for raising hay and no rain all summer, so there just isn’t much hay out there to purchase worth the money. If we can determine what females in the herd aren’t working for us and just aren’t productive, we can cull them and focus our inputs on those animals that will perform, saving on winter feeding expenses. Saving on the winter feed bill is going to be a major key to staying profitable this year.”

what do you say? How do you prepare your livestock for the fall breeding season?

32

Preg checking will also help with not just profitability, but also will ensure a smooth start to calving season. “Diagnosing pregnancy is an important practice in cattle production. First, it gives the producer a time frame for when to expect calving,” explained Dr. Heidi Ward, assistant professor and veterinarian with the University of Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service. “Knowing the estimated calving date will allow the producer to observe the cows for potential problems such as calving difficulty or not producing milk.” There are some different techniques for preg checking cows, including rectal palpitation, which is the most commonly used method, ultrasound and blood tests. “Pregnancy and stage of gestation can be determined using ultrasound or rectal palpation,” explained Ward. “Although a blood test can confirm conception, it doesn’t necessarily mean the animal is pregnant, especially for first-calf heifers that are at a higher risk of early pregnancy loss. Ultrasound is more accurate and can detect pregnancy as early as 13 days after breeding.” While just one pregnancy check for the whole herd is usually adequate, some situations might require additional checks. “In some instances, there might be the need or desire for multiple preg checks

“We check the body condition on our cattle and try to get that up. We’ll also give them their yearly round of vaccinations in the fall, usually about November.” Brad Eden Webster County, Mo.

at different stages; that’s the case with the Show-Me Select Heifer Program,” McCorkill said. “We require the heifers be preg checked early, by 90 days from the start of the breeding season, and then again shortly before they are sold. The early preg check helps us to narrow down the calving date much closer, to a matter of days in many instances with the use of ultrasound, and the later one just before the sale helps to confirm the heifer is still bred and by that time she should be far enough along to feel pretty certain she will have a calf. Using ultrasound in the appropriate window early in the pregnancy also provided the ability to sex the calf with a high degree of certainty.” Smaller producers might wonder if pregnancy checking is a cost-effective practice. “It is cost effective for small producers and quite possibly more important to them than others,” McCorkill said. “Most estimates put the feeding costs of carrying a beef cow somewhere above $300/year. That figure doesn’t include other costs associated with keeping her for the year so the number climbs rapidly from there. That expense is there whether she raises a calf every year or not. Compared to that, spending less than $10 to get them preg checked is a

pretty nominal expense. Hopefully you will find that 90 percent or better of your cows are bred to calve within your defined calving season.” Once producers have made the decision to invest in pregnancy checks, there is some amount of preparation to ensure that the process goes smoothly. “Have adequate working facilities,” McCorkill advised. The working area should be clean and free of obstructions. Record keeping is also important for preg checking success. “Producers should know the approximate date of breeding to know the best time to have the cows preg checked. Working cattle through the chute is stressful, so getting it right the first time is best,” Ward said. “When it comes down to it, there are a number of reasons to preg check the cow herd, all revolving around simplifying management, targeting feeding to the appropriate nutritional level, and timely marketing of culls, all important to cutting expenses, increasing income or both,” McCorkill said. Producers should consult their veterinarian to schedule their herd’s preg check appointment, and to make sure their herd is up to date on vaccinations to present disease related abortion risks.

“We vaccinate, and worm everyone. We don’t semen test every year but will every other year or so. We will be semen testing our yet unproven young bull.”

“We give a Triangle 5 HB or Vira Shield 6 HB shot, whichever is available, a blackleg shot, a Multimin shot and an oral wormer.”

“I strive to maintain my herd of dairy goats in optimum condition year round so they are always ready for breeding.”

Beth Robidoux McDonald County, Mo.

Wayne Johnson Wright County, Mo.

Kristin Kostik Dade County, Mo.

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


farm help

Is it Too Late for Forages? By Klaire Howerton

Purebred Corral

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

“Rotational grazing will nearly double utilization,” Schnakenberg said. “Strip grazing or multiple paddocks work exceptionally well for rationing out stockpiled fescue. If you have Bermuda fields, don’t forget that you can also stockpile them using nitrogen and closing gates.” Producers should consider planting additional forages for fall and winter to help with the lack of forage now. “Consider seeding poor stands of fescue with winter annuals. Do not seed annuals into strong stands of fescue. If it rains, the fescue will out-compete emerging seedlings, if it doesn’t rain, those seeds won’t germinate well,” Schnakenberg said. “Unless producers can find enough hay, their only option (before selling livestock) is to try to grow more forage for fall and winter,” said Jennings. “Our research has shown good fall forage production from brassicas, rye, wheat, and spring or winter oats planted in September. These should be planted on lightly disked soil and fertilized at planting. No-till planting works as well, but fields should be sprayed first with glyphosate to make sure weeds and sod don’t outcompete the winter annual forages. Oat and brassica have the highest and earliest fall growth potential followed by rye then by wheat. Ryegrass produces less fall growth but seed cost per acre is lower. Early planted oat may grow large enough to winterkill but can offer much more fall forage to graze. Planting some acres early to brassica or oat and other acreage later to rye, wheat, or ryegrass spreads out production and risk. Specific planting information can be obtained through the county Extension office.”

Charolais Ranch

Angus, Simmental, SimAngus

Experts say there is a chance for growth going into the fall, if Mother Nature cooperates With the drought that has taken place in the Ozarks over the summer, grass and hay are in short supply. It’s been so dry that producers are wondering if the forage can bounce back even if the region receives and maintains adequate rainfall. While it is likely too late for summer forages to make a comeback, if the conditions are right fescue could come to the rescue of livestock producers. “Grazing this fall is still possible with adequate rainfall. Cool season pastures, like fescue, usually go dormant in the summer and have slow growth. In the fall they increase growth again,” Jill Scheidt, agronomy specialist with the University of Missouri Extension, said. There is a slight potential that fescue could aid in having a fall cutting of hay. “If we receive adequate fall moisture and a warm fall, fescue will surprise you with growth. Some may even be tall enough for an October hay crop,” Eldon Cole, University of Missouri Extension livestock specialist, explained. “I’d probably lean towards using it for grazing rather than hay that late.” Fertilizing stockpiled pastures can help aid producers in having grass to help carry them through the winter, according to John Jennings, professor of forages at the University of Arkansas. “A good option is to fertilize fescue pastures for stockpiled pasture. Stockpiled fescue can produce significant growth during fall if conditions improve and can be grazed all winter depending on acreage,” he said. Tim Schnakenberg, Extension agronomy specialist, recommends 40 to 60 pounds of nitrogen per acre on stockpiled fescue. Following fertilization and the recommended growing period, a rotational grazing program needs to be implemented to maximize forages.

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farm help HUMANE CASTRATION

Seasonal Bull Management By Kristyn Richner

Herd sires need a little extra attention once the breeding season is over

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Bulls make up half the genetic material in a cattle operation, so off-season bull health and management is important to protect an investment. However, not all producers need to consider the same off-season management techniques. There are many factors to consider which they will vary across operations. For instance, young bulls will require additional attention in the off-season compared to mature bulls. With that in mind, there are a few factors that all producers should consider post-breeding season.

Sorting

Generally, at the close of breeding season, bulls should be pulled from the rest of the herd. Separating bulls from the rest of the herd ensures they are kept in moderate body condition and minimizes the chance of injury. The first thing to do post breeding season is determine the body condition score (BCS) and begin sorting bulls, typically, into three different categories. Bulls should be categorized based on maturity and maintenance, age and special requirements (additional quality feed, young bulls, etc.), and cull stock. The cull stock should consist of old or crippled bulls that have completed their reproductive years and need to be removed from the breeding stock. After culling, it’s important to determine the number of bulls an operation will require for the next season and determine a strategy early for replacement.

Feed

Some animal nutritionists recommend a bull be fed 2 percent of its body weight in feedstuffs daily. All bulls should have access to quality mineral mix. Phosphorus is a mineral that is often not found in adequate amounts in dry or harvested forage. Another important vitamin for reproduction is Vitamin A; which is typically found

in growing forage or high-quality hay. According to the Noble Research Institute, it is not uncommon for a bull to lose one to one-and-a-half body condition points during a tightly controlled breeding season. For most healthy bulls, this isn’t an issue and they should be able to recover fairly quickly without a lot of supplemental nutrition. However, if it is the first or second breeding season for a young bull then additional supplemental nutrition would likely be required to fully recover. Consider additional supplemental nutrition prior to the first frost of the year. Research indicates that it is far easier to increase BCS in the growing season vs. the winter months. It is recommended to achieve a BCS of 6.5 prior to turnout time in the spring.

Health Management Bulls should receive immunizations in the off-season. All bulls should receive a viral respiratory complex vaccine booster and they should also receive vaccinations to prevent against Leptospirosis and Vibriosis. It’s also important to ensure that bulls have cover in harsh winter conditions. Frostbite can have extreme effects on bull fertility. Every effort should be made to ensure bulls have protection from extreme temperature situation, including wind chill, to avoid the development of fertility problems. Tissue damage from frostbite is clinically indicated if you notice tissue discoloration, scabs, or sloughing of the lower portion of the scrotum. Contact your vet if you suspect frostbite in your bull herd throughout the severe winter months.

Structural Soundness

When determining structural soundness, start with the head, neck, brisket,

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

shoulders, front legs and feet. Let’s first take a look at the importance of head size. Considering the size of a bulls head and ensuring it is proportionate to their body structure is important to prevent issues with calving. Pay attention to eye placement as well. The eyes should have enough structure above them that the animal has protection from direct sunlight. Eye cancer is an inheritable trait and most commonly related to sunlight exposure and eye placement. Pay attention to muzzle length too. Verify the muzzle is wide enough for grazing and the lower jaw doesn’t protrude too much. When evaluating the brisket, consider fat deposition. Choose a bull that is trim in the brisket, this helps ensure that the progeny have high-yielding carcass weights. Choose a bull that has naturally sloping shoulders, around 45 degrees is ideal. Bulls that are too straight or too angled in the front legs may be prone to problems down the road, such as arthritis or wearing of the hooves. When viewed from the front, the legs should be straight from the point of the shoulder, through the knee, to the middle of the claw. It’s also important to pay attention to their gait, hind legs and feet, and sheath.

Fertility

Bulls should be breeding about one cow per every month of age, between ages 2 and 4, equating to roughly 25 and 40 cows bred per bull during a breeding season. A semen analysis should be performed on bulls about 30 to 60 days prior to breeding season. Not all producers utilize the breeding soundness exam (BSE), especially those with smaller herds; however, it is one of the most effective ways to determine subfertile or infertile bulls and should be utilized, especially for larger operations.

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


farm help

Buying Hay

Gast Charolais & Friends Bull & Female Sale

Sunday, October 7, 2:30 p.m.

By Klaire Howerton

Producers in the market for hay should take precautions before taking delivery With the summer drought in the Ozarks, buying hay for the winter could be a slippery slope to navigate. Prices are high, and yields are low, and there are concerns that there’s not enough to go around. Ozarks Farm and Neighbor has compiled some tips to make savvy hay purchases this year. Ask Questions: In order to make sure producers are getting at least adequate quality for their money, they should ask questions of their hay supplier. “Producers have very limited options for buying hay locally due to the low availability. Some questions to ask are the typical ones such as bale size, hay type (fescue, Bermuda, mixed, etc.), forage maturity when harvested, weed content, storage conditions, and when it was baled,” advised John Jennings, professor of forages at the University of Arkansas. If producers are making their purchases from out of state, some additional research might be required. “If buying from Southern states, be aware of the possible importation of fire ants. Check the USDA, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) to determine if the hay is coming from a quarantined county. Ask the supplier to ensure the hay is free of fire ants or that it is certified for movement by the state from which it is shipped,” Jill Scheidt, agronomy specialist with the University of Missouri Extension, said. Get a Hay Test: “Producers should always ask or take a hay test to see what nutritional value that hay will provide and if supplementation is needed,” Scheidt said. Some hay suppliers may offer a hay test along with the purchase, but generally the buyer will have to do the test. “Most hay sellers seldom offer a hay test and those that sell hay only occasionally very likely won’t offer a hay test. Due to the high demand for hay, buyers probably SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

Springfield Livestock Marketing CenterSpringfield, Missouri

won’t have the luxury of choosing among those with vs without hay tests. Buyers should plan on testing any hay they buy because the quality of hay will vary widely this year,” Jennings explained. Things to Avoid: “This is a year in which anything will be baled that can hold hay twine. Some will be full of weeds, briars and other foreign material. Certainly avoid hay that has been stored outside uncovered if it is severely rotted,” Jennings cautioned. “Hay quality degrades little when stored in a barn so hay 3 or 4 years old can still be good quality if it was good quality when first stored.” “I tell producers to try and avoid buying low quality feed that will have extensive waste, which could be 30 percent or more,” advised Eldon Cole, livestock specialist with MU Extension. “And I’d avoid hay that looks like it’s been setting in the fence row or under trees for a year or more. Avoid hay that may have weed seeds you do not want spread on your farm, such as Johnsongrass.” Consider the Price: Prices for hay have certainly skyrocketed compared to favorable seasons, so producers should do their best to find a fair price if possible. “When buying older hay, consider the amount of waste and increase in supplementation for cattle in order to determine the price you are willing to pay,” Scheidt said. “And consider the nutritional value of the hay and what type of livestock you intend to feed it to.” “Most commercial hay producers produce a good quality product. Their business depends on word of mouth and repeat customers, so it helps to deal with a hay producer they trust or have done business with in the past,” suggested Jennings. “If possible, buyers should actually look at the hay before buying to see if it acceptable. Hay price is high this year, but hauling costs add up quickly. Sometimes hauling can be negotiated into the purchase price.”

Selling:

40 Spring 2017 18-month-old Charolais & Range Fire (Red Angus x Charolais) Bulls 22 Purebred Charolais Bred Heifers, Bred AI to LT Landmark 5052 Pld, due to calve in the spring 25 Commercial Charolais Cross Bred Heifers, Bred AI to Red Angus Sires, due to calve in the spring

Lot 11

Lot 35

B/B CATTLE BRADLEY

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Black vulture populations are growing, as are the risks to young livestock A vicious bird is being seen more and more in the Ozarks region, and there have been reports of groups attacking young livestock, making it a threat to the agriculture industry. The black vulture, according to Missouri Department of Conservation State Ornithologist Sarah Kendrick, is native to Missouri, but their occurrence in the state is increasing due to expansion of their range since the early 2000s. Prior to 2004, black vultures were only known to breed in the extreme southeast or southern tier of counties in south-central and southwest Missouri. Since that time, their range has crept up into the Ozarks and a fairly large wintering population occurs below Table Rock Lake. Farmers and ranches are feeling the impact of the increased population ‑ and it’s appetite. Producers have reported losses of newborn calves, some hours old or less, and older calves. Black vultures have also attacked cows while calving. Because cows often leave the safety of a herd to calve, they are quickly outnumbered while trying to protect their new calf from the predators. Birds typically attack the eyes of an animal to disorient it before going for the kill. Over the course of two years, Dylan Massa of Liberal, Mo., said his family lost 15 calves to black vultures. “A momma might lay her calf down in the shade and as the day went on, she would move, but the calf would stay,” he told OFN. “She might not get 10 feet away from that calf and they were on it… I saw it happen, my dad saw it happen

and so did my grandpa, but we couldn’t always get to them quick enough to get them away from the calves.” The biggest death-loss years for Massa were in the late summer and early fall of 2011 and 2012. Despite being a threat to livestock, producers like Massa are not allowed to kill the offending birds. The black vulture is protected by federal law under the Migratory Bird Treaty. “The MBTA makes it illegal for anyone to take, possess, import, export, transport, sell, purchase, barter or offer for sale, purchase, or barter, any migratory bird, or the parts, nests or eggs of such a bird without valid federal permits,” Kendrick told Ozarks Farm & Neighbor. “The MBTA was signed 100 years ago this year and protected birds at a time when many species were being killed for their feathers or body parts. The Migratory Bird Treaty was signed in 1916 between the U.S. and Canada (technically Great Britain for Canada) and the MBTA was the law that followed in 1918. Additional treaties were later signed with Mexico, Japan, and Russia to protect our nation’s shared bird species that migrate across borders.” There are an estimated 20 million black vultures worldwide, Kendrick said, and data from annual Breeding Bird Surveys and Christmas Bird Counts show

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

an increase in the bird’s population in Missouri in the last 50 years. Missouri Department of Conservation Wildlife Damage Biologist Joshua Wisdom said attacks appear to be more frequent in the early fall and in the spring months, following the migration pattern of the vultures. Calves are not the only targets, according to Wisdom. Goat kids and lambs are much smaller than calves, making them easy targets for vultures.

Deterring birds Both Wisdom and Kendrick said there is no “silver bullet” to end the issue between livestock producers and the black vulture, but there are options. Every case is different, Wisdom said, when trying to keep vultures away from pastures and livestock, but what seems to be the most effective is an effigy. “It works better if you can take an animal from that group or flock and hang it in a tree, but you’ll need a permit for that,” Wisdom said. “Hanging the dead bird in a prominent location as an effigy where the other vultures will see may keep them from returning,” Kendrick added. Effigies can also be Canada goose decoys or wings attached to bowling pins that are painted black. SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


farm help “I’ve also seen silhouettes made out of plywood or rubber matting,” Wisdom said. “There are also Halloween decorations that look like vultures, and people have had some success with those.” The harassment of birds is also legal, as long as birds are not being injured or killed. “You can shoot pyrotechnics in the air, shoot guns in the air, bang pots and pans together, shoot a cannon or whatever,” Wisdom said. “If birds are roosting on top of your barn or hanging out in tree tops, you can use a green or a red laser.” Kendrick said green or red 200mW laser can spook the birds, and are not hard to find. However, lasers have to be used in low-light conditions to work well. The removal of dead tress from along fence lines dramatically reduced the number of birds spotted on the Messa farm, and they have had few losses that can be attributed to black vultures since the removal. It’s also recommended that producers move livestock that are close to giving birth or with young off spring to a location that can be closely monitored at all times. “You have a smaller space to monitor,” Wisdom said. “Some of these guys loosing calves aren’t able to check on them multiple times day.” “Flocks of 20 to 50 birds can do some damage, but black vultures’ distribution across the landscape is very sporadic. If you can pen or watch your vulnerable or

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young animals for a few days, the flock will usually move on,” Kendrick said.

Getting a permit Producers may apply for a depredation permit through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Producers must obtain a Form 37 from the USDA Wildlife Service to accompany their permit. State conservation departments do not issue permits. “You’re not going to be able to shoot your way out of this,” Wisdom said. “You’re not going to get 200 birds, and you’re not going to get a permit to do that, but all that information will come from Fish and Wildlife, and they might put restrictions on that permit.” If a producer obtains a permit, they are reminded not to destroy the birds, but use them as an effigy. The permit application-processing fee is typically $100, according to the Fish and Wildlife Service. Kendrick said despite the threat to livestock, the black vulture has its place. “They play an irreplaceable ecological role of reducing disease by removing animal carcasses from the landscape and are amazing creatures,” she said.

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Reporting MDC officials encourage those who see black vultures nesting in their area to contact their local conservation office.

Payments for Livestock Loss The Livestock Indemnity Program (LIP), which is part of the 2014 Farm Bill, provides benefits to livestock producers for deaths in excess of normal mortality caused by adverse weather, attacks by animals reintroduced into the wild by the federal government or protected by federal law, including avian predators. Information from the Farm Service Agency states that livestock owners or contracted growers must provide evidence acceptable to the FSA providing the loss occurred directly caused death. LIP payments for owners are based on national payment rates that are 75 percent of the market value. For more information, contact your local Farm Service Agency.

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SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

Serving More Than 34,000 Readers Across Southwest Missouri

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Producers are reminded to follow a health protocol in their swine operations Pigs are generally hardy animals, but they are susceptible to a variety of diseases. Often times in Missouri and the world in general, swine production occurs within close quarters. This type of environment increases the risk for pigs to develop diseases and then spread them across the rest of the herd. For that reason, health management in the swine industry is crucial to ensure hogs are healthy and have the ability to maximize production.

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Swine are susceptible to roundworms, whipworms, nodular worms, threadworms, kidneyworms, and lungworms. Hogs should be dewormed multiple times, including prior to breeding and prior to farrowing in gilts and sows. Piglets should have one or more deworming doses around weaning and throughout growth. Many producers don’t typically worm piglets until they are on soil and eating out of a creeper. Your local veterinarian can always advise a deworming schedule based on your operational practices.

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There are seven major swine diseases that are important to protect against with either early immunization, routine vaccination or practice management.

Erysipelas

Erysipelas is an infectious disease that most commonly develops skin lesions on

hogs. Growing swine are most susceptible to Erysipelas, especially in confined situations. If left untreated, it can cause sudden death, fever, severe skin lesions, and arthritis. It’s important to vaccinate all gilts and young boars at roughly 6-8 weeks of age prior to adding them to the breeding herd. Sows should receive their vaccination three to four weeks prior to farrowing and boars should receive their vaccination every six months.

Leptospirosis

Clinical signs can be limited with Leptospirosis. Most commonly, infected pigs will have reproductive failure that can present as infertility or spontaneous abortion. Abortions most generally occur two to four weeks before term or piglets may be weak at birth and die shortly after. Female hogs should be immunized two to three weeks prior to breeding.

Pneumonia

Pneumonia typically presents with clinical indications of coughing or wheezing. This respiratory disease is caused by a bacteria and usually doesn’t result in death. Some strains of pneumonia can be vaccinated against, however, most commonly best practice and herd management is the best way to alleviate any concerns of pneumonia. It’s important to practice good sanitation and isolate infected animals. Providing cover from dusty conditions and dampening soil during periods of drought or extreme temperatures can help protect pigs from pneumonia.

disease; however, if obtained this virus cannot be treated and has high death rates in young pigs. Clinical indications include paralysis, fever, spontaneous abortion or stillborn births in sows. Veterinarians recommend a “zero tolerance policy” when it comes to Pseudorabies because the virus can spread quickly through a herd.

Rhinitis

Vaccination should occur in piglets and in sows. Rhinitis is caused by a bacteria that reduces facial bone structure, particularly the snout, of hogs. Producers should pay attention to consistent sneezing in hogs; however, significance of this disease has declined substantially through the years.

TGE

Transmissible Gastro Enteritis (TGE) is a highly infection diseased caused by the coronavirus. Vaccines are available but the results are variable. It’s important to maintain quality colostrum in sows for transmission to piglets so intramuscular vaccinations tends to have a poor response. The disease causes severe diarrhea and most commonly affects young pigs. Many diseases in swine are based on environment and condition. It’s best to ensure hogs are in clean, sanitary environments with a regular vaccination schedule and proper care.

PRRS

Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome (PRRS) is a virus that creates a twofold problem. One problem is failure to breed or reproductive problems. The second problem is respiratory disease in pigs. PRRS can occur in hogs at any age and is a worldwide problem. Clinical indications include abortions, mummified pigs, stillbirths, and respiratory issues. Vaccination can occur at any age.

Pseudorabies

Vaccinations for Pseudorabies are available to prevent the spread of the

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


ozarks’ farm

calendar

September 2018 18 Brown Bag Lunch Garden Series Tried and True Plants for the Ozarks – noon – Master Gardeners Demonstration Garden, 122 Felkins Street, Forsyth, Mo. – 417-546-4431 or taneyco@missouri.edu 18 5th Annual Salute to Century and Family Farms Event – 6-9 p.m. – historic Round Barn Event Center, Walnut Grove, Mo. – 417-881-8909 18-20 Management Intensive Grazing School – Marshfield, Mo. – contact Webster County SWCD at 417-468-4176 ext. 3 or jody.lawson@swcd.mo.gov 18-10/16 Etsy Craft Entrepreneurship Program (5-Part Series) – Tuesdays, 6-8 p.m. – OTC Table Rock Campus, Hollister, Mo. – free to attend, but must pre-register at www.sbtdc.missouristate.edu/etsy, or 417-837-2617 20 Webster County Cattlemen’s Association – 6:30 p.m., complimentary dinner provided – Dr. Vince Caldwell’s Arena, Marshfield, Mo. – 417-468-2520 20-22 58th Annual Hootin’ an Hollarin’ Festival – Gainesville, Mo. – hootinanhollarin.com 21 Ozark Family Century Farm Scott and Linda Brown – Gainesville Square, Gainesville, Mo. – 417-679-3525 21 5th Annual Garlic Workshop – 5–8 p.m. – Cost: $15 – Springfield-Greene County Botanical Center, 2400 S. Scenic, Springfield, Mo. – advanced registration required – 417-859-2044 or http://extension.missouri.edu/greene. 21-22 Fiber Daze – MARC Center, Mount Vernon, Mo. – www.fiberfolksofswmo.com 22 Southwest Missouri Cattlemen’s Tour – 1:30 p.m. – contact the Lawrence County MU Extension Center, Mount Vernon, Mo. at 417-466-3102 22 Christian County Master Gardeners Annual Fall Plant Sale – 8:30 a.m.-noon – intersection of Hwy. 14 and Main Street in Nixa, Mo. – 417-581-3558 23 Christian County 4-H Informational Meeting – 2-4 p.m. – 4-H building, Finley River Park, Ozark, Mo. – for more information call 417-581-3558 25 Milk Dairy Seminar – Mt. Grove, Mo. – call 417-847-3161 for details 26 Milk Dairy Seminar – Bolivar, Mo. – call 417-847-3161 for details 27 Milk Dairy Seminar – Mt. Vernon, Mo. – call 417-847-3161 for details 27 Moles, Voles, Gophers & Armadillos – Cost: $10 – 6 p.m. – Pulaski County Courthouse, 301 Rte 66, Waynesville, Mo. – register at 573-774-6177 or http://extension.missouri.edu/pulaski 30 Pulaski County 4-H Council Inaugural Open House – 2-4 p.m. – Waynesville Farmers Market Building, Waynesville, Mo. – 573-774-6177 October 2018 1 4-H Enrollment Open for All Missouri Counties – contact your local extension office for more information 3 Bull Breeding Soundness Clinic – Cassville, Mo. – contact Lawrence County Extension office for more information 417-466-3102 6 4-H Chicken Barbecue – 5-8 p.m. – Vernon County Fairgrounds, Nevada, Mo. – call 417-448-2560 for tickets 6 1st Annual Pulaski County Farm Run – First bike out at 9 a.m., last ride in at 3 p.m. – $15 Rider/Poker Hand, $5 Passenger, $5 Extra Hand – Pulaski County Extension Office, Waynesville, Mo. – call 573-774-6177 to pre-register 6 Craft & Vendor Fair – 8 a.m.-3 p.m. – First Free Will Baptist Church, 280 Van Buren St., Lebanon, Mo. – 417-531-3137 or 417-664-1494 8 Learn to Grow Series: Creating a Garden Sanctuary – 6-7 p.m. – Cost: $5 – Botanical Center, Springfield, Mo. – register at 417-891-1515 9-11 2018 Grazing School – West Plains, Mo. – 417-256-7117 ext. 3 or regain.hughston@swcd.mo.gov to register 10 Missouri Steer Feedout Sign-Up Deadline – for steers born after Jan. 1, 2018 – delivery is set for Nov. 6 – entry fee is $20 per head – for more information contact your local MU extension livestock specialist or visit http://extension.missouri.edu/lawrence/livestock.aspx SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

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View inventory and prices at billgrantford.com NEW TRUCKS 2018 Ford F350 4X4 Dual Rear Wheel - XL, 6.2 Liter, White...........................................................$40,327 2018 Ford F350 4X4 Dual Rear Wheel - XL, 6.2 Liter, Red..............................................................$40,683 2018 Ford F350 4X4 Dual Rear Wheel - XL, 6.2 Liter, Silver...........................................................$40,593 2018 Ford F350 4X4 Dual Rear Wheel - XL, 6.2 Liter, White...........................................................$40,585 2018 Ford F350 4X4 Supercab Dual Rear Wheel - XL, 6.7 Liter, Grey.............................................$50,937 2018 Ford F350 4X4 Single Rear Wheel - XL, 6.2 Liter, Gray..................................................................$37,519 2017 Ford F450 4X4 Crewcab - 86” C/A, 6.8 Liter, White................................................................$39,415 2018 Ford F350 4X4 Crewcab Dual Rear Wheel - Stx, Appearance, 6.2 Liter, Black.....................$47,007 2018 Ford F350 4X4 Crewcab Shortbed - XLT, 6.2 Liter, Red..........................................................$45,188 2018 Ford F350 4X4 Crewcab - XLT, 6.7 Liter, White.......................................................................$56,766 2018 Ford F350 4X4 Supercab Dual Rear Wheel - XLT, 6.7 Liter, Stone..........................................$58,444 2018 Ford F250 4X4 Crewcab - XLT, 6.2 Liter, Grey........................................................................$48,083 2018 Ford F150 4X4 Longbed - XL, 0%-60 Mo, 3.3 Liter, White.....................................................$30,687 2018 Ford F150 4X4 Longbed - 0%-60 Mo Opt, 5.0 Liter, Stone......................................................$33,956 2018 Ford F150 4X4 Supercab - XLT, 0%-60 Mo Option, 5.0 Liter, Black.......................................$40,805 2018 Ford F150 4X4 Supercab - Stx, Sport Pkg, 2.7 Leb, Red........................................................$35,696 2018 Ford Supercrew 4X4 - XLT, Cap Chairs, 0%-60, 3.5 Leb, White..............................................$41,234 2018 Ford Supercrew 4X4 - XLT, 0%-60 Mo Option, 5.0 Liter, Red.................................................$42,394 2018 Ford Supercrew 4X4 - Lariat, Sport Nav, 0%, 3.5 Leb, Black...................................................$53,598 2018 Ford Supercrew 4X4 - Lariat Diesel!, 3.0 Ltd, Black................................................................$66,095 2018 Ford Supercrew 4X4 - Lariat Diesel!, 3.0 Ltd, White................................................................$63,405 2018 Ford Supercrew 4X4 - XLT, Sport Pkg, Nav, 2.7 Leb, Grey......................................................$41,883 2018 Ford Supercrew 4X4 - XLT, Sport Appearance, 2.7 Leb, Silver................................................$41,227 2018 Ford F150 Shortbed - XL, 101A, Sport, 0%-60, 2.7 Leb, Black...............................................$28,161

pre-owned trucks 1999 Ford F350 4X4 Crewcab Single Rear Wheel - Knapheide Box, 7.3 Liter, Red, 265,467...........................$8,500 2016 Ford F350 4X4 Dual Rear Wheel - XL, Deweze, 6.7 Liter, White, 15,463..............................................$44,500 2014 Ram 3500 4X4 Crewcab Dual Rear Wheel - Hydra-Bed, 6.7 Liter, Red, 54,836....................................$53,900 2014 Ram 3500 4X4 Dual Rear Wheel Tradesman - Flatbed, 6.4 Liter, Black, 62,376...................................$30,900 2001 Ford F350 4X4 Dual Rear Wheel - Flatbed, 6-Speed, 7.3 Liter, Beige, 217,400.......................................$9,900 2009 Dodge Ram 3500 4X4 Crew Laramie - Slt, 6.7 Liter, Grey, 190,051......................................................$19,900 2007 Ford F350 4X4 - XLT, 6.0 Liter, Black, 215,709........................................................................................$11,900 2000 Ford F350 4X4 - Lariat, 7.3 Liter, White.......................................................................................................$6,400 2000 Ford F350 4X4 - XL, 7.3 Liter, White, 260,928............................................................................................$6,400 1999 Ford F250 4X4 - Auto, 7.3 Liter, White, 180,974.......................................................................................$14,900 2015 Ford F250 4X4 Crewcab Shortbed - Lariat, 6.2 Liter, White, 19,420.......................................................$44,900 2014 Ram 2500 4X4 Crewcab Laramie - Leather, Nav, 6.4 Liter, Gray, 100,614.............................................$31,900 2005 Ford F250 4X4 Supercab Longbed - 6.0 Liter, White...................................................................................$3,900 2005 Dodge Ram 2500 4X4 Quad - Slt, 5.7 Liter, White, 89,886....................................................................$18,900 2002 Ford F250 4X4 Crewcab - XLT, 5.4 Liter, Silver, 134,185.........................................................................$11,400 2001 Ford F250 4X4 Supercab - XLT, 5.4 Liter, Blue, 237,551............................................................................$7,800 1998 Dodge Br1500 4X4 Pickup - 5.2 Liter, White, 215,542..............................................................................$4,800 1997 Ford F150 4X4 Supercab Lariat - 4.6 Liter, Maroon.....................................................................................$3,850 2016 Ford Supercrew 4X4 Lariat - 5.0 Liter, Bronze, 40,916..............................................................................$36,800 2015 Ford Supercrew 4X4 Lariat - Moonroof, 5.0 Liter, Silver, 46,215.............................................................$34,900 2015 Ford Supercrew 4X4 Platinum - 3.5 Leb, Silver, 61,482............................................................................$36,800 2014 Ford Supercrew 4X4 - XLT, Leather, 3.5 Leb, Brown, 66,665..................................................................$27,800 2008 Ford Supercrew 4X4 - XLT, 4.6 Liter, White, 149,884...............................................................................$12,400 2005 Ford Supercrew 4X4 Lariat - 5.4 Liter, Stone, 199,660................................................................................$8,800

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40

ozarks’

auction block

September 2018 15 Hudspeth Farms & Guest The Gathering Sale – Cattleman’s Livestock Auction – Harrison, Ark. – 870-439-2285 22 Satterfield Charolais & Angus Bull & Female Sale – at the Farm, Evening Shade, Ark. – 785-672-3195 29 2S Angus Sale – at the Farm, Seneca, Mo. – 417-438-9886 October 2018 6 Journagan Ranch – Missouri State Genetically Yours Bull & Female Sale – Springfield, Mo. – 417-948-2669 6 Route 66 Sim Genetics Bull & Female Sale – Springfield Livestock Marketing Center, Springfield, Mo. – 816-726-7420 6 Jac’s Ranch 30th Annual Production Sale – at the Ranch, Bentonville, Ark. – 479-366-1759 7 Gast Charolais & Friends Bull & Female Sale – Springfield Livestock Marketing Center, Springfield, Mo. – 785-672-3195 12 Smith Valley Angus Production Sale – at the Farm, Salem, Mo. – 573-729-3616 12 J Bar M Gelbvieh Complete Female Dispersal – Neosho, Mo. – 417-632-4925 12 Ozark & Heart of American Beefmaster Fall Sale – Locust Grove, Okla. – 417-879-7285 13 Judd Ranch 28th Annual Cow Power Gelbvieh, Balancer & Red Angus Female Sale – at the Ranch, Pomona, Kan. – 800-743-0026 13 Missouri Charolais Breeders Association Fall Bull Sale – Springfield Livestock Marketing Center, Springfield, Mo. – 785-672-3195 13 Bonebrake Registered Herefords Female Production Sale – Fair Grove, Mo. – 417-588-4572 13 Lucas Cattle Company Fall Open House Bull Sale – at the Ranch, Cross Timbers, Mo. – 417-399-7125 13 Big D Ranch Production Sale – Center Ridge, Ark. – 501-208-6119 14 Heart of Missouri Limousin Association Sale – Laclede County Fairgrounds, Lebanon, Mo. – 402-350-3447 18 Kirkes Black Angus Bull & Female Sale – at the Ranch, Talihina, Okla. – 918-465-7830 20 Circle A Ranch Fall Bull & Heifer Sale – at the Farm, Iberia, Mo. – 1-800-CIRCLE-A 20 Square B Ranch & Cattle Company Open House – at the Farm, Warsaw, Mo. – 660-438-2188 20 Seedstock Plus Fall Bull Sale – Joplin Regional Stockyards, Carthage, Mo. – 877-486-1160 20 Aschermann Charolais 27th Edition Charolais Bull Sale – at the Farm, Carthage, Mo. – 417-358-7879 20 Angell-Thomas Charolais 7th Annual Bull & Female Sale – at the Farm, Paris, Mo. – 573-682-7348 20 Heart of the Ozarks Angus Association Fall Sale – Ozark Regional Stockyards, West Plains, Mo. – 734-260-8635 20 Missouri Dexter Association Fall Sale – Webster County Fairgrounds, Marshfield, Mo. – 417-849-0768 21 Reynolds Herefords Annual Production Sale – at the Farm, Huntsville, Mo. – 660-676-3788 23 B&D Herefords/Angus Fall Bull Sale – at the Ranch, Claflin, Kan. – 620-786-9703 24 New Day Genetics Ranch Ready Bull & Female Sale – Cattlemen’s Livestock Auction, Harrison, Ark. – 573-453-0058 26 Spur Ranch Fall Performance Herd of the Heartland Sale – at the Ranch, Vinita, Okla. – 918-633-2580

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


Cattlemen’s Seedstock Directory Angus Matthews Coach’s Corral - Fair Grove, MO - 417-838-4088 - www. matthewscoachscorral.com matthewscoachscorral@gmail.com Mead Farms - Barnett, MO 573-216-0210 - 573-280-6855 Pitts Angus Farms - Hermitage, MO 417-399-3131 www.pittsangusfarms.com Balancers B/F Cattle Company - Butler, MO 660-492-2808 Bob Harriman Genetics Montrose, MO - 660-492-2504 Hilltop Farms - Asbury, MO 417-642-5871 - 417-529-0081 Charolais Beiswinger Charolais Ranch Halfway, MO - 417-253-4304 Mead Farms - Barnett, MO 573-216-0210 - 573-280-6855 S&J Charolais - LaRussell, MO 417-246-1116 Gelbvieh 4AR Simmental/Gelbvieh Conway, MO - 417-689-2164 Hilltop Farms - Asbury, MO 417-842-3225 - 417-529-0081 Herefords Jim D. Bellis - Aurora, MO 417-678-5467 - 417-466-8679 Journagan Ranch - Mtn. Grove, MO - 417-948-2669 Mead Farms - Barnett, MO 573-216-0210 - 573-280-6855 R&L Polled Herefords -Halfway, MO 417-445-2461 - 417-777-0579 Limousin Pinegar Limousin - Springfield, MO - 1-877-PINEGAR Red Angus Dunseth Farm - Halfway, MO 417-445-2256 Salers Dunseth Farm - Halfway, MO 417-445-2256 Sim/Angus Bob Harriman Genetics Montrose, MO - 660-492-2504 Matthews Coach’s Corral - Fair Grove, MO - 417-838-4088 - www. matthewscoachscorral.com matthewscoachscorral@gmail.com Simmental 4AR Simmental/Gelbvieh Conway, MO - 417-689-2164 Matthews Coach’s Corral - Fair Grove, MO - 417-838-4088 - www. matthewscoachscorral.com matthewscoachscorral@gmail.com

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PERSONAL PROPERTY AUCTION Saturday, September 29, 2018 • 10:00AM Mrs Robert Horman 2813 Meyers Hollow Rd Marshfield, MO 65706 Directions: From Marshfield Take A Hwy South Approx 7 Miles Then Right On FF & Right On Meyers Hollow To Auction.

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Box 3 • 23660 Hwy Z

Kevin Coffman • Lebanon, MO

Tractors & Skidsteers: 6405 JD 4x4 Tractor w/Cab, 4098hrs, 16spd, Left Hand Reverse, 640 Loader, Bucket & Balespike • 6115D JD 4x4 Tractor w/2111hrs, 9spd, Cab, H310 Loader, Bucket, Power Reverser • 1025R JD 4x4 Tractor w/Front Blade & 397hrs • 1972 AC 185 Tractor w/Canopy 3637hrs, Good Rubber, Dual Hyd - 1 Owner • JD4020 Gas w/Wide Front, 3pt, Power Shift, 2200hrs • Alice Chalmers 210 Pulling Tractor • JD250 Skidsteer 1000hrs, Brand New Rubber • JD250 Skidsteer 1838hrs, Brand New Rubber • 1991 Hesston Skidsteer w/Bucket & 3700hrs • AC 7045 Tractor w/Cab, Power Shift & 5545hrs • 1993 AC 6680 Tractor w/Cab, Dual Hyd 2409hrs • D15 Series II Tractor w/Hand Clutch • AC 6080 Tractor w/1838 Hrs • AC 6060 Tractor w/460Loader • AC 7080 Cab Tractor Vehicles, Trailers, Gators & Mower: 1989 Chevy 4x4 454 Dually 117k Actual Miles •1986 GMC Dump Truck, 3208cat Kodiak, Dual Tandem, 15spd • 5x3, 189k Miles • 2013 Delta 20’ Stock Trailer • 32” Gooseneck Bale Trailer • 20’ Gooseneck Double Axle Flatbed Trailer • 20’ Gooseneck Lowboy Flatbed Trailer • 16’ Stock Trailer • 2014-2015 Gator 825I XUV 4x4 980hrs • JD 620 Gator 4x4 Gas 4500hrs • JD 737 Zero Turn 54” Deck 1124hrs • International Cab & Chasis • Older International Silage Truck - For Parts Holstein Cattle - 100 Head: 20 Bred Holstein Heifer (10001100lb) • 25 Open Holstein Heifer (600-800lb) • 19 Heifers (400-600lbs) • 20 Heifers (300-400lbs) • 5 Jersey Bulls (300400lbs) • 2 Yr Old Jersey Bull • 15 Steers Holstein & Crossbred (200-700lb) Farm Equipment & Hay/Silage: AC Gleaner Combine Gas 6cyl 10 Header • JD 468 Round Baler Net Wrap 9000Bales • NH 900 Chopper • MF124 Square Baler w/Kicker • 2012 JD 3955 Chopper-Like New • Frontier MS1227 Manure Spreader- Like New • 1994 JD 876 Manure Spreader • Kuhn Knight 5143 Mixer Wagon w/Scales & Verticle Mixer • Dempster 6ton Fertilizer Buggy • Richardson Silage Wagon • Heider 300BU Hyd Dump Wagon • 4’ Farm Wagon w/Running Gears • 3pt Bushog • 2010JD 630 Disc Mower w/Impeller • JD Hx10 Bushog - Like New • JD7000 6 Row Corn Planter Seed Boxes w/Markers • Brilliant Seeder w/Packer Attachment & Small Grain Box • NH892 Corn Head & 2 Grass Heads 880head • 500gal Fuel Tank w/Pump • 300gal Storage Tank • Sitrex RT5200H Tedder 4 Basket w/Hyd Fold • Sitrex Magnum KK10-12 12wheel Hyd Hay Rake • Miller 4435 16’ Offset Disc • 13 Concrete Bunk Feeders • Kewanee 10-10 20 Wing Up w/Finishing Disc Attachments • Best Way 32 800gal Sprayer w/Hyd Pump • 20’ Kewanee Chisel Plow • Hyd 16’ Brillion Cultipacker • 12’ Water Filled Field Roller • Danhuser Hyd Post Driver • Generac 80000kw Sugar Land Trailer Mount Generator Welder • 3pt Bale Carrier • 130X Blade • 3pt 7’ Tire Scraper • Bale Rings • HD 7’ Bushog Blade • Brillion 3pt 11’ Shank Chisel Plow • Oliver 5 Bottom Plow • AC 3pt 4 Bottom Plow • Mineral Bunks • 700-800 Tons Corn Silage • 300- 4x5’ Net Wrap Hay Bales • 40- 4x5’ Round Bales Of Straw

Farm Equipment

417-491-4271 417-849-1774 417-849-7405

TFN

Farm Equipment

Baler Belts for All Round Balers

10/29/18

(NO LITTER) Serving SW Missouri

Hefley Farms Harrison, Arkansas

Farm Improvement

Made in the USA!

870-715-9929 TFN

Free Freight On Belt Sets

1-800-223-1312

www.balerbeltsandaccessories.com 9/17/18

• Fencing • Trailers • Livestock Equipment 1-866-531-3087

tank coatIngS rooF coatIngS

Available for metal, composition shingles or tar roofs. Long lasting and easy to apply. We also manufacture tank coatings for concrete, rock, steel, galvanized and mobile tanks.

Land Services

GET THE

MOST OUT OF YOUR LAND!

Virden Perma-Bilt co.

806-352-2761 www.virdenproducts.com

GoBobMissouri.com

9/17/18

Farmers Mutual Insurance Company of Dade County Serving Farm Families Since 1892

Call Today 417-232-4593

LanD cLEarIng caLL (417) 860-4036

9/17/18

Livestock - Cattle

810 Main St., Lockwood, MO 65682 • Email: dadecounty@keinet.net

Storage Containers & Trailers Ground Level Containers 20’, 40’, 45’ & 48’ Available • Sale or Lease

9/17/18

Check Out Our Website!

ozarksfn.com

Manure

We Are Your Best Value!

1-866-999-0736 • BestValueMobileStorage.com

Missouri Dexter Breeders association

Show & Sale october 20, 2018

Webster Co. Fairgrounds Marshfield, MO

8 a.m. Show 2 p.m. Sale

Dexter Cattle – “The Ideal Small Acreage Cow”

417-732-1485

www.missouridexter.com 10/8/18

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

Serving More Than 34,000 Readers Across Southwest Missouri

41


Livestock - Cattle

Livestock - Cattle

Limousin Bulls, Open & Bred Heifers, Blacks & Reds

ONLINE HEREFORD FEMALE SALE

Double J Ranch

417-842-3353 Will 417-350-9810

10/8/18

October 1, 2018 smartauctions.co Open House Sat., Sept. 29, 2018

Call Steve Glenn

Walnut Grove, MO 417-838-8690 • 417-880-6810

LanD aUctIon FrIDaY, SEPtEMBEr 28, 2018 at 11 aM

135 +/- ACRES IN NEWTON COUNTY!

Columbia, Mo. abracattleco.com

Making tough

jobs easier

See us at www.lucoinc.com or call

1-888-816-6707

Box 385, Strong City, KS 66869 12/10/18

9/17/18

Gentle, Top Quality, Delivery Available

ozarksfn.com

www.Horseheadranch.net

Machinery

RUSCHA MACHINERY SALES L.L.C.

417-594-0283

Roofing • Siding •Trim • Insulation Overhead Doors • Windows, Etc,…

Haybuster, Krone Verona, Mo. • 16251 Lawrence 2220 3 mi. west of Aurora, MO 65769 between Bus. 60 & U.S. 60

Soft Winter Wheat Varieties

AgriMaxx 415 Certified Truman AgriMaxx 444 SOOULDT Forage Maxx AgriMaxx 463 Kentucky 31 Fescue AgriMaxx 473 AgriMaxx 475 AgriMaxx 480

OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY

Do You Have a Favorite Family Recipe? Send in your favorite family recipe to share with our readers.

DIAMOND

S

AUCTION

& REAL ESTATE CO. See our website for complete Auction listings and photos

417-246-5510

9/17/18

417-326-2828 877-907-3000

diamond-s-auction.com

650 ESH RD. • VINITA, OK atlassteelproducts.com

877-289-7835 / 918-256-6232

9/17/18

Sell Your Farm Equipment with a classified ad for as low as $13.68 per issue! Call today for details!

PO Box 1319 Lebanon, MO 65536 julie@ozarksfn.com

David Stutenkemper

10 Miles East of Carthage, MO on Hwy 96 & 2 Miles North

417-883-SOLD EssickAuction.com

With Beds In Stock

9/17/18

8327 Lawrence County Ave. LaRussell, MO 64848 417-246-5335

Call for Price!

Atlas Steel Now Carries

417-498-6571

Serving the Metal Building Industry

Andrews Farm & Seed

PARCEL B 55.53 ACRES +-

Heavy Duty Spike Hay Beds

Seed Treatment Available

42

No problems with either Tractor. Both come with 10 bolt Duels, both are quad range.

9/17/18

Graber Metal Sales

800-246-5335

Real Estate/Auction Terms: 10% down day of sale. Cash or check only, balance in cash on or before 30 days. Bank Letter of Credit required Day of Sale addressed to Essick Auction Service for September 28, 2018 only. Announcements made on sale day will take precedence over any other printed materials. Not responsible for accidents, lost or stolen articles on or near sale site.

AUCTIONEER/REALTOR

’79 - 4440 JD - New Air, 9200 hours. asking $22,500.

2/11/19

Parcel a: 80 +/- acres TRACT #2 TRACT TRACT Will be sold in a combination of 20 ACRES +#4 #3 tracts or its entirety. Currently 20 20 ACRES ACRES all tracts in crops and leased; TRACT #1 ++20 ACRES +possession will be at harvest approximately Nov. 1, 2018. City water line on east & north side of property. tract 1: 20+/- acres w/Hwy 59 road frontage tract 2: 20+/- acres w/Hwy 59 & Aspen Rd. road frontage tract 3: 20+/- acres w/Aspen Rd. road frontage tract 4: 20+/- acres w/Aspen Rd. road frontage

DUSTY ESSICK

’79 - 4440 JD - New Air, Turbo, Alternator, Air Ride Seat, little over 100 hours on Under-haul, 8500 hrs total. asking $27,500.

918-695-2357

address: Parcel a - Corner of Hwy 59 & Aspen Rd., Diamond, MO 64840 Parcel B - 1/4 mile South of Aspen Rd. on Panda Rd., Diamond, MO 64840 DIrEctIonS: From I-44 come south on Hwy 59 about 3 miles to Aspen Rd. turn right on Aspen & go approx. 1/2 mile to sale on left. Auction will be held in the west corner of Parcel a on tract 4. Look for Essick Auction signs! real Estate Info: Beautiful land just 3 miles south of I-44 on Hwy 59 in Diamond, MO ready for many uses - crops, pasture, building sites! All land located just outside city limits!

Parcel B: Will be sold as a whole. 55.53 +/- acres located 1/4 mile south of Aspen Rd. on Panda Rd. Currently used as pasture. Currently leased, possession will be at end of lease date, approx. Jan. 1st, 2019. Small shed on property.

573-864-6475

registered Brangus Bulls $2,000 Heifers $1,250

DISCOUNTS for VETERANS

JOHN DEERE 4440

Selling Your Choice, Due to Drought

Hydraulic Chutes • Working Circles Cake Feeders • Continuous Fencing Panels & Gates

Don’t miss a single issue! Subscribe Today!

7/8/19

Machinery

Luco Mfg. Co.

BULLS FOR RENT Farm Raised: Angus Gelbvieh - Charolais & Others - No Sundays Please!

Livestock Equipment

866-532-1960

 PErSonaL ProPErtY aUctIon

Saturday • September 22 • 10 a.m. The Compton Residence 11608 Farm Rd. 188 • Billings, Mo.  MULtI-ProPErtY rEaL EStatE aUctIon Thursday • October 18 • 6 p.m. Smith Restaurant 1340 State Hwy U • Bolivar, Mo.

See Us at Farmfest october 5, 6 & 7 E-Plex • West Hall

9/17/18

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


Machinery

JOHN DEERE LOADERS

740 JD Self leveling loader with Joystick, control box and brackets. asking $7,500.00

Sam 417-328-9137 chase 417-399-1904 chance 417-298-1751 EStatE aUctIon Billie Dittmer Wednesday September 19 9:30 a.m. O’Bannon Center Buffalo, Mo.

EStatE aUctIon Mary Clark Saturday September 22 10:00 a.m. Linn Creek, Mo.

EStatE aUctIon John & Linda Majkowski Saturday September 29 10:00 a.m. Elkton, Mo.

Cross Timbers, Mo. • 417-998-6629 www.crawfordauctionservice.com

720 Jd loader with Brackets. asking $4,500.00

If you eat, sleep, dream, breathe, live and love farming...

Selling Cattle?

417-594-0283

9/17/18

You Need The Cattlemen’s Sweetspot!

SubscruiCbaen Also By Visitin O g Our W nline ebs Yo

Vets Christian County Veterinary Service, LLC

Large & Small animal Vet clinic

There’s No Better Way To Reach The Top Beef Producing Area in the Ozarks.

www.oza

Darren Loula, DVM Joe Evans, DVM katie Loula, DVM cherie gregory, DVM

417-743-2287 8748 State Hwy 14 West, clever, Mo

www.christiancountyvet.com 9/9/19

Website

Trade Website Design For Fresh Beef If You’re Looking For A Website For Your Farm, Here’s Your Chance. I’m Looking To Do Some Trading For Fresh Beef. Turn-Key Package Includes Full Website Design, 1 Year of Hosting and 1 Year of Domain Name Registration.

www.2cylplus.com A subscription makes a great gift for your friends and family. If you know someone who eats, sleeps, dreams, breathes, lives and loves farming, be sure to send them a subscription to Ozarks Farm & Neighbor.

I am enclosing:

tractor & Farm Equipment repair: Minor to major • $45/hr. over 20 years experience

$17.00 - 1 year

I don’t receive the paper. $30.50 - 2 years

$43.00 - 3 years

Add $7 for out-of-state orders

We Carry a Full Line of Late Model Equipment!

Specializing In: Tractors Round Balers • Disc Bines

TFN

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018

1-866-532-1960

Then Subscribe to

I am now receiving the paper.

417-322-4711

it

e at rksfn.com

NAME ___________________________________ ADDRESS ________________________________ CITY _________ STATE ____ ZIP CODE ________ PHONE __________________________________ EMAIL ADDRESS ___________________________ Mail check to:

2-cylinder Plus tractor Salvage

4 miles SW of Conway on Y to WW, 1 1/2 miles, follow signs

417-589-DEER • 417-589-2634

PO Box 1319, Lebanon, MO 65536

9/17/18

Serving More Than 34,000 Readers Across Southwest Missouri

Toll Free: 1-866-532-1960 www.ozarksfn.com

43


Feeding cattle in drought conditions

Early weaning is a tool cow-calf producers can use to save limited forage supply. Dry cows will need less feed. Weaned calves in a dry lot can put on the desired weight very efficiently utilizing MFA Cattle Charge or Full Throttle.

Stop by the MFA Booths in the

E-Plex West Hall to learn more about MFA Shield Technology

Talk to an MFA representative for a customized program that fits your operation needs. Contact your MFA Agri Services for additional information, or call (573) 874-5111.

Ash Grove - 417-751-2433

Fair Grove - 1-877-345-2125

Lowry City - 417-644-2218

Stockton - 417-276-5111

Bolivar - 417-326-5231

Freistatt - 417-235-3331

Marshfield - 417-468-2115

Urbana - 417-993-4622

Buffalo - 417-345-2121

Golden City - 417-537-4711

Ozark - 417-581-3523

Walker - 417-465-2523

Cassville - 417-847-3115

Lebanon - 417-532-3174

Springfield - 417-869-5459

Weaubleau - 417-428-3336

MFA Agri Services MFA Agri Services

MFA Dallas Co. Farmers Exchange MFA Agri Services

44

MFA Farm & Home

MFA Farmers Exchange MFA Agri Services

MFA Farmers Produce EX #139

MFA Agri Services MFA Agri Services MFA Agri Services MFA Agri Services

MFA Farmers Exchange

MFA Agri Services Dallas Co., Farmers CO-OP MFA Producers Grain CO #5 MFA Agri Services

www.mfa-inc.com

Ozarks Farm & Neighbor • www.ozarksfn.com

Ozark Farm & Neighbor: “Drought Conditions B 2018” 91⁄2" x 10" Art director: Craig J. Weiland cweiland@mfa-inc.com MFA Incorporated

SEPTEMBER 17, 2018


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