Monday, April 13, 2015

4/13/15 Monday Morning Ag Clips (50 word min)

CLICK HERE for the link.  No more then 3 per article.



7 comments:

  1. Family Farm Has A Little Bit of Everything:

    Alissa Rhodes would probably rather sleep in, in the morning, but she's usually up getting eggs, and feeding the rest of her animals. She has about 200 clucking chickens, a small heard of sheep, 45 head of cattle, and a dozen horses. All her animals are fed diets free of added growth hormones, drugs, or genetically modified food used by the commercial food industry.

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  2. A Badge, A Gun, and A Box of Oatmeal- Hennepin County Sherif's department of Minneapolis, Minnesota will not only be carrying their normal supplies, such as a gun, or radio and anything else, but also will carry healthy foods with them. The program is run by the nonprofit group known as Matter. The goal of the program is to help out those who are less fortunate than others and give them some healthy and necessary foods for life.

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  3. Women In Ag students value mentors.

    Ag students inNebraska college appreciate role models and career mentors who help guide their careers. When a dozen members of the Women in Agriculture chapter at the University of Nebraska’s College of Technical Agriculture iattended the 30th Nebraska WIA conference, they found many friendly faces and opportunities for discussion. They feel that it always helps to meet other people in the industry, and to learn from their ideas and experiences.

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  4. family farming has everything
    Alissa rhodes gets up and feeds her cattle, sheep, horses, and chickens. All on diets but are alowed to add growth hormones, with special food, drugs. She is a big farmer that loves to do everything she does today.

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  5. Husband cooks wife a year of dinners- A devoted husband cooked a 12 months meals for his wife. 27-year-old Yin Yunfeng is a soldier in the Chinese army. He only see's his wife once a year.

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  6. Meeting growing demand for ag teachers-
    A growing demand for agricultural education and FFA programs in schools across Nebraska, paired with a critical shortage of agricultural education teachers in the state, is bringing the Nebraska Farm Bureau Foundation for Agriculture (NFBFA) and the Nebraska FFA Association together to promote opportunities to encourage more students to look at agricultural education as a career path.

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  7. A growing demand for Ag education and FFA programs in schools across Nebraska, paired with a critical shortage of Ag teachers in the state, is bringing the Nebraska Farm Bureau Foundation for Agriculture (NFBFA) and the Nebraska FFA Association together to promote opportunities to encourage more students and FFA members to look into an agricultural education as a career path.

    ReplyDelete