Horn Flies
Visit MU Extensions's "Walk-Through Trap to Control Horn Flies on Cattle"
Healthy Eating and Fitness for Farmers
The following sites are some additional resources related to healthy eating and fitness.Physical Activity for EveryonePhysical Activity and Public Health GuidelinesThe State of Missourians'...
Flooding and Pasture Lands
For additional information on flooding and your pastures, please visit the following website. www.aragriculture.org/soil_water/default.htm
In the Pasture to Work for All
James and Judy Bell have not always been in the cattle business. In fact, James has a poultry science degree from the University of Arkansas and worked for Tyson Foods before becoming the U.S. division manager and eventually the president of Cobb Vantress. The couple had raised commercial Brangus cattle on and off while James was working, but after retirement, the couple took a new lease on life and began a registered Brangus herd, while also increasing the number of commercial cattle they had been raising on their 900-acre Rocking Bell Ranch.
Bigger Isn’t Always Better
James and Pamela Mason are two firm believers in the old saying that, “great things come in small packages." On their Valley M Miniatures farm in southern Fayetteville, near Greenland, you’ll find 39 head of miniature horses and miniature donkeys, in addition to a kennel of miniature pinschers. There are also a few “full sized” Wirehaired and Brittany Spaniels that James trains in one of his favorite past-times, bird hunting. James grew up on a farm in southwest Missouri where he was surrounded by horses and a family that enjoyed the rodeo lifestyle. Painfully, his past time of riding was cut short when James fractured his back in a riding accident. After being told by his doctor that if he had another accident like that, he’d be in a wheelchair for the rest of his life, James and Pamela decided to slowly divest themselves of their horses. These pet-lovers couldn’t bear to part with all of their horses though, and kept some until their natural deaths.