Country Folks, News
Posted on December 3, 2025
There are several primary goals for a profitable beef cow/calf herd – the majority of herd females should achieve viable pregnancies and calves are born alive and healthy. The newborn calf's primary requirement is colostrum. While there isn't a lot of information on colostrum for beef cows, theres s...
Country Folks, News
by Deborah Jeanne Sergeant 
Posted on December 3, 2025
Improving both profits and animal welfare was the theme of “Farm 5.0 and the Future of Dairy Care,” a webinar recently presented by Beverly Hampton Phifer, senior director with National Dairy Farmers Assuring Responsible Management (FARM) program and hosted by the Dairy Cattle Welfare Council. FARM ...
Country Folks, News
by Courtney Llewellyn 
Posted on December 3, 2025
It’s no secret that sugar maples are the preferred variety of trees for sugarmakers. But in the interest of making the most of what’s already growing on your property and diversifying your agricultural portfolio, should you consider tapping other trees? That was the question posed and studied by Dav...
Country Folks, News
by Andy Haman 
Posted on December 3, 2025
“I wasn’t really a poultry guy,” Jacob Horst shared – but that’s all behind him now. He and his family, of St. Johnsville, NY, became a family farm partner with New Hampshire-based Pete & Gerry’s Organic Pasture Raised Eggs. Their impressive new facility, shown to the public during an early November...
News
Courtney Llewellyn 
Posted on November 19, 2025
After being in practice for more than 40 years, Dr. Pam Ruegg, DVM, Michigan State University, has seen many changes not only in how mastitis is detected, but how it’s treated. “What I’m seeing around the U.S. is a lapse in people using DHIA individual cow data, fewer people doing foremilking and re...
News
Courtney Llewellyn 
Posted on November 19, 2025
As water grows scarcer and feed costs climb higher, dairy producers are turning their attention to an old crop with new potential. Sorghum, once seen as a secondary silage source, is moving to the forefront of forage innovation. In “Profit‑Focused Feeding: Sorghum’s Value in Dairy Nutrition,” a rece...
News
Courtney Llewellyn 
Posted on November 19, 2025
A paper published in May 2025 in “Microbiology Spectrum” examined the practice of applying beneficial biofilms to calf hutches. To the authors’ knowledge, it was the first study to evaluate the use of beneficial biofilms in individual pre-weaned calf housing. One of the authors, Sarah Morrison, a re...
News
Courtney Llewellyn 
Posted on November 19, 2025
In a recent presentation, Brook Duer, staff attorney, Penn State Center for Agricultural & Shale Law , shared information on H.R. 1 (the One Big Beautiful Bill Act). The legislation enacted on July 4, 2025 created a reconciliation bill that made appropriations to select agencies and programs. Title ...
News
Courtney Llewellyn 
Posted on November 19, 2025
We are now seeing the end of autumn’s beautiful foliage, with the chill of winter winds reminding us of the cold weather to come. And we’re all getting ready to mark off that checklist of “to-dos” before winter sets in. Safety – Here in the Catskill Mountains of New York, we are at the end of the ea...
News
Courtney Llewellyn 
Posted on November 18, 2025
The inaugural American Dairy XPO (ADX) delivered all that it promised – the latest in cutting-edge technology, global innovation and education as well as plenty of opportunities for socializing and networking. The premier dairy trade show, which took place Nov. 5 and 6 at the Champlain Valley Exposi...
Country Folks, News
Courtney Llewellyn 
Posted on November 12, 2025
BERKSHIRE, NY – Pardon the tree pun, but it’s brilliant marketing that helps the Pennsylvania-based Trees for Graziers Company “branch out” to help farmers and conservation professionals add trees to perennial pastures, hayland, riparian areas and crop ground. Founder and CEO Austin Unruh is on a qu...
Country Folks, News
Courtney Llewellyn 
Posted on November 12, 2025
Many farmers rely on a variety of farm safety net programs to ensure protection for the investments they’ve made in crops and livestock. Jeremy Forrett, retail financial services leader, Farm Credit East, discussed changes in FSA programs and federal crop insurance resulting from the passage of One ...
Country Folks, News
Courtney Llewellyn 
Posted on November 12, 2025
Planting cover crops is like eating your vegetables – just because you know you should doesn’t mean you will. And like vegetables, the good news about cover crops is the same as the bad: they’re just too beneficial to pass up. While the last thing you probably want to do after an autumn harvest is p...
Country Folks, News
Courtney Llewellyn 
Posted on November 12, 2025
Receiving funding through a grant is a huge honor and success, but it takes a lot of work to earn it. Going through the process of applying for a grant can be really overwhelming, but the Tri-State Extension Dairy Team hosted a webinar to make the process easier to comprehend. UVM Extension Dairy Re...
Country Folks, News
Courtney Llewellyn 
Posted on November 12, 2025
Annually, the U.S.’s total greenhouse gas (GHG) footprint is about 6.3 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalents, a unit of measurement that is used to standardize the climate effects of various GHGs. According to Kirby Krogstad, assistant professor of dairy nutrition at Ohio State, agricult...
Country Folks, News
by Laura Rodley 
December 3, 2025
Axel Linde of Lindenhof Farm in Kirkwood, PA, wears a sweatshirt embroidered with the words “Turkey Whisperer” when he sets up the market table where ...
Country Folks, Crop Comments
Crop
December 3, 2025
As I wrote this column, the actual holiday was three days away. The happening should be considered more a season, not just a single square on a calend...
Country Folks
by Ben Simons 
November 25, 2025
On Oct. 21 the Oneida County Farm Bureau hosted their 70th anniversary annual dinner meeting at Franklin Hotel Restaurant in Rome. The dinner menu was...
Country Folks
by Laura Rodley 
November 25, 2025
Shelley Gray and her husband Roger have been raising turkeys for 30 years at Gray Family Farm in New Windsor, NY. First they raised chickens at the fa...
