F&R Livestock Resource Fall 2020

Page 1

F&R LivestockResource

Fall 2020 | Volume 4, Issue 1

Your direct source for livestock news and information

Published by Farmers & Ranchers Livestock, Salina, Kansas

In this Issue: 1 Rural America’s State of Mind (Part 2)

Recognizing unhealthy behaviors are often difficult to admit personally and even more difficult to address as a family member or friend. Part 2 of Paige Nelson’s series on addressing mental health problems in rural America is spot on. The individual effected and the entire support system each have a role to play.

10 Market Jolt!

By now, the cattle market rapid downturn as a result of the pandemic has been widely reported. Industry economists are conducting data-driven, economic-guided insights and recommending rigorous vetting and careful considerations to any changes to the current marketing structure.

14 Steady to Hopeful

Wes Ishmael reports cash markets will continue to struggle to stabilize until 2021. With the backlog of finished cattle resulting from plant closures nearly erased, revised data indicated significant improvement for cattle prices beginning in 2021.

18 Winter Forage Management

It’s no secret, feed costs are the single most significant cost for cow-calf operations. Opportunities to manage winter forage and hay costs are upon us and can be the difference between profit and loss.

20 Grackled!

If you haven’t experienced the frustrating nuisance of a flock of Grackles, consider yourself lucky. Hooter McCormick’s Aunt Pinky takes ’em on and we can all relate to her success (or lack of)!

Rural America’s State of Mind: Part Two Equipment breaks down, human beings do too. By Paige Nelson

Hey farmer! “When the combine crashed in the field and you needed a new belt that was 70 miles away, what did you do?” asks Melba Sutton, a specialist clinical social worker licensed by the state of Kansas. Growing up on a farm in western Kansas, taught Sutton a thing or two about farm life and those she calls “nurturers of the land.”

So, what do you do when a belt breaks? Sutton asks, “You, the farmer rely on your strengths—you go to work to fix the problem,” is her answer. When a mental health struggle or chronic stress is the problem, the answer is the same: Go. To. Work! “Perhaps part of your work today is

Continued on page 4 ________________________________________

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