The Rise of Dairy Farming
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AS WE RECALL the Growth of Agricultural Estimates^ 1933-1961 L M Brooks
^t^f.t.i^A^( fk^^^ /^v..<. S AS WE RECALL The Growth of Agricultural Estimates^ 1933-1961 L M Brooks Statistical Reporting s Service U.S. Department of Agriculture Washington, D.C As We Recall, THE GROWTH OF AGRICULTURAL ESTIMATES, 1933-1961 U.S. OEPÎ. or AGRlCUtTURE NATIONAL AGRICULTURAL UBRARY OECIT CATALOGmC PREP E. M. Brooks, Statistical Reporting Service, U.S. Dept. of Agriculture 1977 I FOREWORD The Statistical Reporting Service, as with any organization, needs to know its past to understand the present and appraise the future. Accordingly, our technical procedures are peri- ^odically set forth in ''Scope and Methods of the Statistical Reporting Service," and the agency's early development and program expansion were presented in "The Story of Agricultural Estimates." However, most important are the people who de- veloped this complex and efficient statistical service for agriculture and those who maintain and expand it today. Dr. Harry C. Trelogan, SRS Administrator, 1961-1975, arranged for Emerson M. Brooks to prepare this informal account of some of the people who steered SRS's course from 1933 to 1961. The series of biographical sketches selected by the author are representative of the people who helped develop the per- sonality of SRS and provide the talent to meet challenges for accurate and timely agricultural information. This narrative touching the critical issues of that period and the way they'^ were resolved adds to our understanding of the agency and helps maintain the esprit de corps that has strengthened our work since it started in 1862. Our history provides us some valuable lessons, for "those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." W. -
What Is DAIRY? COW’S HEALTHY DIET Dairy Cows Are Fascinating Animals
Dairy What is DAIRY? COW’S HEALTHY DIET Dairy cows are fascinating animals. teeth. Calcium also helps our muscles meal and vitamins/minerals. Dairy cows They turn grass and grains into milk. and nerves work properly, and helps also drink 30-50 gallons of water each Heifers are female dairy cattle that have blood clot. Milk products also provide day. That is about an entire bathtub Vitamins/Minerals not given birth to a calf. Once a heifer us with carbohydrates, protein and full of water. With all that eating and 2 pounds gives birth, it is called a cow. All female Vitamin D. You should have 3 servings drinking, are cows stuffed? The simple dairy cows must have a calf to produce of nonfat or low-fat milk and milk answer is ‘no’. They are eating to meet Ground Corn Soybean Meal milk. The gestation (pregnancy) period products each day. One serving of their energy (calorie) needs—they 8 pounds 5 pounds for cows is nine months. Newborn dairy is equal to 1 cup of milk, yogurt do not overeat. Young animals that calves weigh about 80-100 pounds. or ice cream and 1 ½ -2 ounces of are actively growing have greater Hay Male dairy cattle are called bulls and do cheese. requirements for protein than older 20 pounds not produce milk. animals. Corn Silage A 1,500 pound dairy cow eats 100 65 pounds Milk provides your body with calcium, pounds of feed each day. This includes which is needed for healthy bones and corn silage, hay, ground corn, soybean Total: 100 pound per day DID YOU KNOW? National Milk Day Each year, U.S. -
WHAT IS a FARM? AGRICULTURE, DISCOURSE, and PRODUCING LANDSCAPES in ST ELIZABETH, JAMAICA by Gary R. Schnakenberg a DISSERTATION
WHAT IS A FARM? AGRICULTURE, DISCOURSE, AND PRODUCING LANDSCAPES IN ST ELIZABETH, JAMAICA By Gary R. Schnakenberg A DISSERTATION Submitted to Michigan State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Geography – Doctor of Philosophy 2013 ABSTRACT WHAT IS A FARM? AGRICULTURE, DISCOURSE, AND PRODUCING LANDSCAPES IN ST. ELIZABETH, JAMAICA By Gary R. Schnakenberg This dissertation research examined the operation of discourses associated with contemporary globalization in producing the agricultural landscape of an area of rural Jamaica. Subject to European colonial domination from the time of Columbus until the 1960s and then as a small island state in an unevenly globalizing world, Jamaica has long been subject to operations of unequal power relationships. Its history as a sugar colony based upon chattel slavery shaped aspects of the society that emerged, and left imprints on the ethnic makeup of the population, orientation of its economy, and beliefs, values, and attitudes of Jamaican people. Many of these are smallholder agriculturalists, a livelihood strategy common in former colonial places. Often ideas, notions, and practices about how farms and farming ‘ought-to-be’ in such places results from the operations and workings of discourse. As advanced by Foucault, ‘discourse’ refers to meanings and knowledge circulated among people and results in practices that in turn produce and re-produce those meanings and knowledge. Discourses define what is right, correct, can be known, and produce ‘the world as it is.’ They also have material effects, in that what it means ‘to farm’ results in a landscape that emerges from those meanings. In Jamaica, meanings of ‘farms’ and ‘farming’ have been shaped by discursive elements of contemporary globalization such as modernity, competition, and individualism. -
SWP Quick Facts the Nation's Breadbasket from Farm to Table
The State Water Project Supports One of California’s Largest Industries: Agriculture The State Water Project (SWP) provides clean, reliable water to support California’s agricultural production – one of the state’s largest and most important industries: • $54 billion in revenue • $100 billion in related economic activity • 422,000+ direct agriculture jobs • 76,400 farms and ranches The Nation’s Breadbasket SWP Quick Facts • $21.02 billion in total agricultural exports • Serves 27 million Californians • 13% of the nation’s total agriculture value • Irrigates 750,000 acres of farmland across the state • 40% of the nation’s organic production • Provides 3/4 of California’s disadvantaged communities with some or all of their water supplies • 400+ commodities • Made up of 34 storage facilities, reservoirs, lakes and 701 • 33%+ of the nation’s vegetables miles of open canals and pipelines • 67% of the nation’s fruits and nuts • Carries water from the Sierra Nevada mountains, through the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, to communities throughout the state from the Bay Area to San Diego California’s top commodities for • Without the SWP, California would need to replace up to 2018-2019: 4.2 million acre-feet of high-quality water annually to meet state demand Dairy Products, Milk — $7.34 billion, 18.1% Almonds — $6.09 billion, 100% From Farm to Table The agriculture industry goes beyond farms to support jobs in Grapes — $5.41 billion, 94.6% restaurants, grocery stores and more: Cattle and Calves — $3.06 billion, 4.6% Strawberries — $2.22 billion, 87.9% 2.8+ million $119.30 billion jobs in wages Pistachios — $1.94 billion, 100% Lettuce — $1.82 billion, 52.3% Walnuts — $1.29 billion, 100% Floriculture — $1.22 billion, 25.5% $369.19 billion in $25.42 billion in direct output exports Tomatoes — $1.17 billion, 73.4% *Percentages reflect California’s share of total U.S. -
Sustainability and Dairy Farming Fact Sheet
SUSTAINABILITY AND DAIRY FARMING FACT SHEET Striving to protect the natural resources (such as soil, water, and air) needed for current and future food production is not a new endeavor, although the present-day pressures on all of Earth’s resources have generated widespread interest in this important effort. The core aspects of sustainability have always been an integral part of dairy farmers’ personal values and daily on-farm practices. Understanding Sustainability What is sustainability? While there was some degree of discussion of sustainability in the 1970s, it wasn’t until the 1980s that a specific characterization for sustainability in agriculture was developed.1 The U.S. Government, in the 1990 Farm Bill, defined it as follows—a definition that was adopted by the U.S. Department of Agriculture2 (USDA) and many others: Sustainable Agriculture is an integrated system of plant and animal production practices having a site-specific application that over the long term will: • Satisfy human food and fiber needs; • Enhance environmental quality and the natural resource base upon which the agricultural economy depends; • Make the most efficient use of nonrenewable resources and on-farm resources and integrate, where appropriate, natural biological cycles and controls; • Sustain the economic viability of farm operations; and • Enhance the quality of life for farmers and society as a whole. Sustainable farms must meet all five elements of the USDA definition. For instance, a farm that stresses environmental quality while not being economically viable is not sustainable. Likewise, one that focuses on short-term profits without making the most efficient use of nonrenewable resources would not fit the definition. -
Dairy Sheep a Publication of ATTRA - National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service • 1-800-346-9140 •
ATTRA Dairy Sheep A Publication of ATTRA - National Sustainable Agriculture Information Service • 1-800-346-9140 • www.attra.ncat.org By Margo Hale and The sale of sheep milk or milk products is often more profitable than selling only lamb or wool. This Linda Coffey publication explores the dairy sheep business and helps producers decide whether it is a viable option NCAT Agriculture for their farms. Regulations governing the industry are discussed. Also addressed are production issues, Specialists animal health, stock selection, and nutrition issues surrounding dairy sheep. References and resources ©2006 NCAT follow the narrative. Contents Introduction ..................... 1 Getting Help .................... 2 Getting Started ............... 2 Labor ..............................2 Marketing ..................... 3 Processing ....................3 Regulations ..................4 Budgeting .................... 5 Production Notes ........... 6 Selecting Stock ...........6 Lacaune dairy sheep. Photo by Yves Berger, courtesy of University of Wisconsin Spooner Ag Research Center. Nutrition ....................... 7 Milking ...........................7 Introduction the time and effort to learn about product development and marketing. Production Records ..8 prospective dairy-sheep producer Health ............................ 8 faces many potential challenges. First Sheep exhibit a natural ability to efficiently Conclusion ......................10 Aof all, any dairy operation requires process forage into meat, milk, and wool. References ..................... -
Permaculture in the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria: Ecology As a Pillar in the Construction of an Alternative Political Society in Rojava
Permaculture in the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria: Ecology as a pillar in the construction of an alternative political society in Rojava Marcus P. Lomax Student Number: S192665 [email protected] Supervisor: Heba Taha Introduction My research will aim to address the following research question: what role does permaculture play in Rojava and what implications does it have for Kurdish nation-building in northern Syria? The Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria, also known as Rojava, is a majority Kurdish region located in Northern Syria. The Syrian uprising in 2011 and the subsequent political unrest that ensued, eventually turning into a civil war, offered the Kurds in Northern Syria with a political opportunity for self-rule. The Kurds in Northern Syria exploited Syria’s fragility, and the Syrian government’s preoccupation with rebel forces and later on Islamic State fighters, to carve out a part of Syria for themselves. The distracted Syrian government, having to ‘divert its attention elsewhere in the country, especially to Damascus’ (Van Wilgenburg, 2016) and the relative geographical isolation provided the Kurds with fertile ground to bring about autonomous rule for the Kurds in Northern Syria. The Syrian opposition represented by the Syrian National coalition and the Islamic state represented a far greater threat to the Syrian government and its leader Bashar al Assad than did the burgeoning Kurdish region that was located far from Syria’s capital and centre of political power – Damascus. The Kurds wanted autonomy. A loose coalition of the opposition coalesced and formed the Free Syrian Army in order to overthrow Bashar al Assad (Holliday, 2012). -
Expanding Cashew Nut Exporting from Ghana's Breadbasket
Int. Jrnl. of Soc. of Agr. & Food, 2019, Vol. 25, No. 2, pp. 152-172 Expanding Cashew Nut Exporting from Ghana’s Breadbasket: A Political Ecology of Changing Land Access and Use, and Impacts for Local Food Systems Paper first received 5 April 2019; Accepted: 27 June 2019; Published in final form 4 September 2019 1, a 2 JAMES BOAFO AND KRISTEN LYONS Abstract. The Brong Ahafo region supplies most of Ghana’s staple foods and is often described as the ‘breadbasket’ of Ghana. Despite the important role of this region in the provision of local food, farmers are shifting towards the cultivation of cashew nuts for export. The increasing production of cashew for export is driven by multiple factors across scale; including historical legacy of export-led agriculture, increasing global demand for cashew nuts, and a number of local level socio-cultural factors. While farmers may benefit from cashew production, the conversion of land into production of cashew poses local level socio-cultural and economic challenges. In this paper, we adopt a critical perspective through the lens of political ecology to demonstrate how the transition towards the production of cashew is driving land accumulation, social differentiation, alongside a decline in access to land for local food provisioning. Through the use of a range of qualitative methods, including interviews, focus group discussions, observation and policy document analysis, this paper reports on in-depth data collected from cashew farmers and local agricultural actors in the Brong Ahafo region. Findings demonstrate that cashew production is transforming land tenure relations through individualisation, alongside the acquisition of communal land for cashew cultivation. -
Nationalism, Empire and the Triumph of Canadian Wheat, 1890-1940 Nicholas Tošaj
Document generated on 09/25/2021 11:39 a.m. Journal of the Canadian Historical Association Revue de la Société historique du Canada Weaving the Imperial Breadbasket: Nationalism, Empire and the Triumph of Canadian Wheat, 1890-1940 Nicholas Tošaj Volume 28, Number 1, 2017 Article abstract Canadian wheat has occupied a prominent place in the global market since the URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1050901ar late 19th century. Ideal for bread-baking, the high-protein wheat grown on the DOI: https://doi.org/10.7202/1050901ar Canadian prairies was a highly valued export. The efforts undertaken to adapt wheat to Canadian agriculture, and the subsequent success of Canada’s wheat See table of contents export market, contributed to building Canadian nationhood both at home and abroad. The prominence of Canadian wheat is a testament to the success of imperial agricultural developments and the connections woven by empires. Publisher(s) Britain’s creation of an agricultural hinterland within Canada through the expansion of its empire’s food supply defined how a new nation emerged through The Canadian Historical Association / La Société historique du Canada an old-world dependency on wheat. The wheat produced by Canadian farmers flowed into both the British and French empires, filling crucial roles throughout ISSN each of these imperial structures. Divergent reactions to these imports speak to wheat’s importance both as a staple foodstuff and a bearer of cultural 0847-4478 (print) significance. 1712-6274 (digital) Explore this journal Cite this article Tošaj, N. (2017). Weaving the Imperial Breadbasket: Nationalism, Empire and the Triumph of Canadian Wheat, 1890-1940. -
The Environmental Impact of Dairy Production in the Eu
'LVFODLPHU 7KHYLHZVVHWRXWDQGDQDO\VLVSUHVHQWHGDUHWKRVHRIWKHDXWKRUVDQGGRQRWQHFHVVDULO\UHSUHVHQWWKH YLHZVRIWKH&RPPLVVLRQLQJHQHUDORURIWKH(19,5210(17'* Final report for European Commission (DGXI ) Submitted by CEAS Consultants (Wye) Ltd Centre for European Agricultural Studies and The European Forum on Nature Conservation and Pastoralism Telephone: 01233 812181 Fax: 01233 813309 THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF DAIRY PRODUCTION IN THE EU E-mail: [email protected] CEAS 1779/BDB April 2000 THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF DAIRY PRODUCTION IN THE EU: PRACTICAL OPTIONS FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT FINAL REPORT 2 THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF DAIRY PRODUCTION IN THE EU Contents S1. Executive summary............................................................................................................................ iii 1. Introduction ......................................................................................................................................... 1 1.1. Objectives ..................................................................................................................................... 1 1.2. Methodology................................................................................................................................. 1 1.3. Report structure ............................................................................................................................ 2 PART 1: DAIRY SYSTEM CLASSIFICATIONS AND ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT....................... 3 2. A review of dairy production -
Driving Sustainability in Dairy Farming from a TBL Perspective: Insights from a Case Study in the West Region of Santa Catarina, Brazil
sustainability Article Driving Sustainability in Dairy Farming from a TBL Perspective: Insights from a Case Study in the West Region of Santa Catarina, Brazil Antônio Zanin 1,* , Cristian Baú Dal Magro 1 , Diones Kleinibing Bugalho 1 , Francieli Morlin 2 , Paulo Afonso 3 and Andrzej Sztando 4 1 Department of Social and Applied Sciences, Community University of the Region of Chapecó, Chapecó (SC) 89809-900, Brazil; [email protected] (C.B.D.M.); [email protected] (D.K.B.) 2 Department of Social and Applied Sciences, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Florianópolis (SC) 88040-900, Brazil; [email protected] 3 Department of Production and Systems, Algoritmi Centre, University of Minho, 4710-057 Braga, Portugal; [email protected] 4 Department of Spatial Economy and Self-Governed Ministration, Wrocław University of Economics and Business, 53-345 Wroclaw, Poland; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected] Received: 19 May 2020; Accepted: 29 June 2020; Published: 28 July 2020 Abstract: All companies in agribusiness supply chains need to be aware of the best use of available resources, which demands an integrated assessment of environmental, economic and social aspects, i.e., the Triple Bottom Line (TBL). Such analysis allows us to get a more balanced and complete understanding of the real performance of companies, supply chains and industries. Companies in the upstream of agribusinesses supply chains present some limitations, but can contribute significantly to the overall sustainability of the entire value chain. The objective of this research was to understand the role of the drivers of sustainability in dairy farming from a TBL perspective, such as assistance to producers and the value chain, and the use of better technology and management practices. -
Factors and Components Affecting Dairy Smallholder Farmers and the Local Value Chain— Kvemo Kartli As an Example
sustainability Article Factors and Components Affecting Dairy Smallholder Farmers and the Local Value Chain— Kvemo Kartli as an Example Rami Al Sidawi 1,*, Teo Urushadze 2 and Angelika Ploeger 1 1 Specialized Partnership in Sustainable Food Systems and Food Sovereignty, Faculty of Organic Agricultural Sciences, University of Kassel, 37213 Witzenhausen, Germany; [email protected] 2 School of Agricultural and Natural Sciences, Agricultural University of Georgia, Tbilisi 0159, Georgia; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +49-055-42981621 Abstract: Smallholder farmers are the cornerstone of the livestock sector and an essential element in building and developing the local dairy value chain, critical for developing its local economy. In Georgia, and despite the efforts made since independence from the Soviet Union until now, farmers still face many problems that prevent them from participating effectively in developing the dairy value chain, especially heavy metal pollution that afflicts the study region. This research study refers to smallholder farmers’ viewpoints in the Kvemo Kartli region on the dairy production sector and the problems these farmers face. This study also investigates the effect of several factors (ethical factors, traditions, animal welfare, cultural factors, etc.) on the dairy value chain. The convergence model was used in the mixed-method approach’s triangular design as a methodology for this research study. As part of the social data, 140 farmers who produce and sell milk and cheese in the Kvemo Kartli region were interviewed. The results showed the influence of the ethical, cultural, and traditional factors in developing the value chain.