Monday, January 26, 2015

1/30/15 Morning Ag Clips (50 word min)

The link will be posted later in the week as new "Clips" become available.  Check back on Wednesday for the link.

Here is the Link


7 comments:

  1. 2015 World Pork Expo- The dates have been set for the 2015 World Pork Expo in Des Moines, Iowa. It is June 3-5 at the Iowa State Fair Grounds. The Expo has a wide range of activities such as the world's largest pork-specific trade show, educational seminars, and swine shows and sales.

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  2. Reinventing the potato
    Potato enthusiasts envision a revitalized American potato market. Around the country, determined plant breeders, farmers, and chefs are joining forces to reinvent the potato and the transform the way Americans perceive the versatile tuber. A man talks about his trip to Peru, the birthplace of the potato, and how interesting the potato can be.

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  3. Good Recordkeeping Benefits Small Farmers:
    Farm fuel and mileage are two deductions small farmers often overlook. But they add up, especially when we’re running the tractor non-stop making hay all summer. All farms, regardless of size, require sales and expenditure records to file accurate state and federal taxes.

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  4. Good Recordkeeping Benefits Small Farmers- Farm fuel and mileage are looked at the most. It helps because Tractors run almost non-stop in the summer. They deal with federal taxes too.

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  5. 2015 World Pork Expo- The dates have been made for the 2015 World Pork Expo in Des Moines. It is June 3,4,5 at the Iowa State Fair. The Expo has a lot of activities new this year also.

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  6. reinventing the potatoes: Ferris like a lot of american thought that potato didn't have something special until she went to Peru and discovered all the diversity of this vegetable.

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  7. The Dollar: Add it to your watch list:
    Since 2011 the U.S. dollar has begun to strengthen. Because exports are a critical component of grain demand, americans decided that it would be important to look at how strength in the dollar impacts the prices that foreign buyers of U.S. grain face. The most recent USDA WASDE projection is for exports to account for 12.9% of corn usage, 48.3% of soybean usage, and 43.8% of wheat usage.

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