Tag Archives: cows

U.S. Hunger Games: Dairy lawsuits, Beef shortages, Carbon Credits increase consumer costs! Sugarcane means Cow Shit don’t stink?

May 2023 is National Beef Month.  Here is yet more incomplete list of links to recent news reports, and video reports, affecting the cattle/beef/dairy supply in the United States.

Did you know that nine states have more cows than people? Apparently the most recent U.S. Census of Agriculture data claims they are Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota and Wyoming.

U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) says feeding your cows hemp might save you money.

Beef prices expected to remain high, due to shrinking supply!

Companies are trying to find a way to profit off carbon credits and the dairy industry!

CALIFORNIA: A vegan Los Angeles high school student is suing the local school district, as well as the federal USDA, claiming she was not allowed to promote her favorite plant based ‘fake-milk’!

IDAHO:  East Idahoans raising cows on their one acre ‘homestead’;

ILLINOIS: Soybean operators claim they are investing into getting more soy for your livestock feeding needs.

IOWA: Court orders feedlot to change its handling of cow crap, or effectively be shutdown!

KANSAS: Kansas State University partly blames high cattle prices on inefficient feeding of cows!

LOUISIANA: Impact Fusion International claims its new sugarcane waste feed means your cow’s shit won’t stink!

MISSOURI: University of Missouri says feeding cattle through the Winter can kill farmer’s profits, suggests strip-grazing on sorghum to reduce costs.

MONTANA: Big Sky ranchers ranchers forced to adopt the new USDA/Tyson ‘climate smart’ “Brazen Beef” operation (which could raise the cost of beef in the grocery store)?

NEW YORK: Coca-Cola to build big dairy operation, employ 250 people!

OKLAHOMA: Man arrested for buying more than 1-hundred cows with a ‘rubber’ check!

OREGON: Big dairy operation back in action after major refit.

TEXAS: New dairy operation in Amarillo.

U.S. Hunger Games: WHERE’S THE BEEF? BLAME SCAMS, MUTILATIONS, GHOSTS, RUSTLERS & CLIMATE!

IDAHO TO BUILD LARGEST DAIRY RESEARCH CENTER IN THE U.S.! ANOTHER WHITE ELEPHANT?

Hunger Games 2023: Chickens & Cows starving to death, blamed on Union Pacific, Climate Change, Labor Shortage?

06 January 2023 (14:49-UTC-07 Tango 06) 16 Dey 1401/13 Jumada t-Tania 1444/15 Xin-Chou 4720/06 январь 2023 года

For the second time, the U.S. Surface Transportation Board (STB) ordered railroad logistics company Union Pacific (UP) to deliver feed to the Foster Farms operations in Livingston, California.  Millions of chickens and hundreds of cattle are in danger of starving to death, due to ongoing logistics problems with deliveries of feed!

The first time UP was ordered to make the deliveries it blamed lack of employees, now it blames climate change!  UP claims snowy weather, in December 2022, disrupted deliveries to 20 western states.

This latest ‘order’ by the STB is specifically about deliveries to the industrial food producer Foster Farms, which lodged a complaint with the STB.  Foster Farms claims it is being forced to buy much more expensive feed in the meantime. The feed is more expensive because it is being hauled in by tractor-trailers, of course this means Foster Farms will pass on the extra cost to the consumers.

The delivery problems involving UP are not new, the STB got many similar complaints about UP delivery problems in Spring 2022.

More recent problems for UP:  UP joins three other railroad operations to halt STB arbitration order concerning rail shipping rates

Unions, rails clash over hiring data as UP faces regulatory heat

U.S. Hunger Games 2022: AGED INFRASTRUCTURE CUTS OFF WATER SUPPLY TO ARKANSAS SCHOOL/CITY, NATIONAL GUARD DEPLOYED!

Global Hunger Games 2022: STARVATION IN YEMEN? 36-TONS OF FOOD THROWN AWAY, FISHERMEN PREVENTED FROM FISHING!

Bombing Range Bats: Endangered bat nest found on U.S. Air Force base

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced the discovery of the first natural Florida Bonneted Bat roost since 1979, on a U.S. Air Force (USAF) base!

Aline Morrow, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Biologist, happy to be in charge of researching the Bombing Range Bats. U.S. Air Force photo by Technical Sergeant Perry Aston, 19APR2019.

The Florida Bonneted Bat is considered one of the most endangered bats on the North American continent.  The bat nest was found on Avon Park Air Force Bombing Range in 2014 (not even a year after the bat was officially declared endangered), yet its discovery has been kept relatively quiet since then.

Video interview, Aline Morrow explains the discovery:

Deuce-n-a-half truck used for gunnery practice. USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Perry Aston, 19APR2019.

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Perry Aston, 18APR2019.

Parts of Avon Park Range are also home to cattle allowed to graze as part of agreements with local ranchers.  Along with intentional field burns, the grazing is hoped to reduce the chance of wildfires.

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Perry Aston, 19APR2019.

Expended practice bombs are collected and recycled.

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Perry Aston, 19APR2019.

This is what it looks like inside a steel Connex container after being hit with a small practice bomb.

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Perry Aston, 18APR2019.

According to USAF claims, the skeleton of the F-4 Phantom-2 is now intentionally missed by pilots dropping bombs, because they want what’s left to remain.

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Perry Aston, 18APR2019.

Besides being a bombing range, grazing land and animal preserve, Avon Park is on the verge of becoming a National Historic Place.

USAF photo by Technical Sergeant Perry Aston, 18APR2019.

Archaeologists have been busy finding ‘ancient’ remains.  Already a small storehouse of boxes of artifacts could qualify the range for the National Register of Historic Places.

NEW JERSEY NATIONAL GUARD SAVING PETS IN QATAR!

TO SAVE THE ANIMALS, U.S. MILITARY DEPLOYED TO GEORGIA!

Operation Jupiter : New TB killing deer & beef cattle!

13 April 2017 / 19:38 UTC-07 Tango 06 (25 Farvardin 1396/17 Rajab 1438/18 Jia Chen 4715)

“I can’t explain how this is moving around.  My concern is it is moving in something.”-Bret Marsh, Indiana State Board of Animal Health

In the United States, the Indiana State Board of Animal Health warning of what appears to be a new type of Bovine tuberculosis (TB) hitting both wild deer and domestic cows.

Supposedly Indiana’s cattle industry was TB free from 1984 until about nine years ago.  U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) testing revealed that the most recent cases of Bovine TB in wild white-tailed deer and domestic cattle are of the same strain of TB.  Also of interest is that one raccoon also tested positive for the same TB strain.

The particular strain of Bovine TB first popped up in 2008 in domestic cattle in Indiana. In 2009 the first wild deer case was found, also in Indiana, and it has spread across the United States.  Since then thousands of cattle and several types of wild deer and elk have been culled.

Last month South Dakota’s Game Fish and Parks Department discovered a herd of cattle infected with TB (the first time since 2011), they will be culled at U.S. taxpayer expense (the USDA will compensate the farmer).  Even the cows that tested negative will be killed.

In February this year the USDA identified cows from Nebraska as being infected.  It was also revealed that infected cows were found in feed lots in Nebraska and South Dakota in November 2016.

Bovine TB is considered the most infectious across animal specie, but I’ve discovered that until 1994 Bovine TB was considered rare in wild animals. Michigan Department of Natural Resources says until 1994 only eight wild deer were documented to have the disease. However, for some publicly unexplained reason, in 1995 Michigan required that wild deer killed by hunters, or found dead, had to be tested for the disease.  Since than not only have deer been found infected but so have elk, black bear, bobcat, coyote, opossum, raccoon, and red fox (‘You big dummy!’ No not that Redd Foxx).

Michigan’s domestic cattle industry is also being hit.  Earlier this month the USDA confirmed that a cow in Newaygo County tested positive.   A study by Michigan State University concluded that the main culprit in the spread of Bovine TB are salt licks set out by cattle ranchers.  Basically the wild deer come onto the farms at night to lick the salt, then move on during the day.  They pick up the TB from the domestic cows and then spread it across state lines.

The country of New Zealand reporting great progress in fighting Bovine TB.  In the Gregorian year of 2000 there were at least 7-hundred documented cases in deer and cattle.  Today the Operational Solutions for Primary Industries reports that there are currently 41 cases.

In the country of Ireland it’s reported that from the 1st quarter of 2016 to the 1st quarter of 2017 at least 2-thousand 8-hundred cases of Bovine TB were confirmed!  Interestingly wild deer are being blamed (even though it’s actually domestic cattle who should be blamed) and the Manor Kilbride Deer Management Project is demanding that hunters be allowed to kill-off as many as 50-thousand deer just in the tiny county of Wicklow!  Local news reports revealed that cattle farmers are blaming the deer for the TB epidemic in the hopes of freeing up more grazing land for their domestic cows.

In the United Kingdom, the Chief Veterinary Officer for Wales and County Hall is demanding an elk cull, not because they have Bovine TB but to find out if they do!   Turns out that the elk roam on private lands and are not required to be routinely tested, as domestic cows are required to be.

OPERATION JUPITER: RACCOONS HIT WITH UNKNOWN DISEASE?

Global Food Crisis & What Economic Recovery? Beef production crashing in Idaho

No thanks to the closing of a beef processing plant in Nampa, Idaho’s beef production is down 80% from the year prior!  That’s according to the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service.

According to the State stats, and contrary to the stereotype, potatoes are not the number one agriculture product of Idaho!  Dairy products are number one, followed by cattle/beef production, so you can see why it’s so important to Idaho’s economy.

Not only is Idaho’s beef production down from last year, it’s been dropping like a rock, 52%, from January 2011 to November 2011.

The USDA pointed out that overall beef production in the entire United States was down 2% from last year.

Government Incompetence: The number of Cesium contaminated cows, that made it to market, hits 578, Cesium more widspread than first thought!

Add Niigata and Miyagi Prefectures to the growing list of cattle, and hay farms, hit with high levels of cesium.  Local officials now believe at least 578 contaminated cows made it to the consumer markets.

In Fukushima Prefecture, officials now say the level of cesium found on cattle feed is 520 times the national limit of 500 becquerels per kilogram of cesium. At least seven Fukushima farms are known to have contaminated cows.

Now cattle on farms in Niigata Prefecture have been found to be internally contaminated as well.  The feed for the cows came from Miyagi Prefecture.

The high amounts of cesium contamination proves that the disaster at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant is worse than officially stated, and continuing.

The amazing thing is that cattle farmers have not been ordered to stop shipping their cows to market, at this point it is just a request to voluntarily stop shipping their cows.  Fukushima officials expect the number of contaminated cows, reaching consumer markets, to go up.