Category: Ag News

Spotty Rains Give Parts of Oklahoma Relief, While Others See Intensified Drought

Thu, 08 Sep 2022 10:04:36 CDT


Spotty Rains Give Parts of Oklahoma Relief, While Others See Intensified Drought

While some parts of the state saw improvements with heavy, but spotty rains this previous week, other parts of the state saw an intensification of drought over the period.

According to the latest drought monitor report, in Oklahoma, exceptional drought is unchanged from the last two weeks at 2.19 percent.

Extreme drought or worse is at 47.7 percent, just a bit higher than last week’s 47.1 percent.

Severe drought or worse is at 84.8 percent, down from last week’s 88.2 percent.

Moderate drought or worse is now at 96.5 percent, down from last week’s 98.9 percent.

Abnormally dry or worse conditions are the same as the past few weeks at 99.9 percent.

The 6-10 precipitation outlook map shows low chances of rain through September 17th with the majority of Oklahoma leaning below a 40-50 percent chance of rain.

To view the Oklahoma drought map, click here.

According to the latest U.S. drought monitor report, the week saw continued improvements on the map across areas of the South, including Texas, in response to another round of localized heavy rainfall during the past week. Overall, the recent rainfall in Texas throughout the past month has started to make a significant dent in the state’s drought conditions in some areas. In contrast, drought conditions intensified in areas of the central and northern Plains with additional degradations on this week’s map. In these areas, recent drought impact reports submitted to the National Drought Mitigation Center indicated drought-related impacts within the agricultural sector including reduced crop yields as well as deteriorating pasture and rangeland conditions. Out West, the big story of the past week has been the heat wave that has impacted the region with record-setting temperatures and critical fire-weather conditions. The hot temperatures and strong winds exacerbated conditions on the Mill Fire, which broke out in Northern California on Friday, forcing the evacuation of the town of Weed, California as well as neighboring communities. In Death Valley, California, high temperatures exceeded 125 deg F multiple times during the past week including on September 1st when the high temperature reached 127 deg F?potentially breaking the record for the hottest temperature ever recorded during September, according to preliminary reports. Elsewhere, shower activity in the Northeast led to isolated improvements in drought-affected areas of Massachusetts and Connecticut, while further to the south conditions deteriorated on the map in Delaware. In the Midwest, short-term precipitation deficits and declining soil moisture levels led to the expansion of areas of drought in northern Missouri and central Illinois.

In the Southern Plains, widespread improvements were made across Texas this week in response to another round of moderate-to-heavy rainfall that impacted isolated areas of the state, with accumulations ranging from 2 to 6+ inches. The recent rains have provided a much-needed boost to soil moisture and streamflow levels. Despite the recent rains, streamflow levels in some areas of the Hill Country have yet to recover, with gaging stations on numerous rivers and creeks reporting below-normal flows (ranging from the 2nd to the 24th percentile), according to the U.S. Geological Survey. Elsewhere in the region, this week’s rainfall led to improvements in eastern Oklahoma, northern Arkansas, northern Mississippi, and western portions of Tennessee. For the past 30-day period, much of the region experienced above-normal precipitation with the greatest positive departures (ranging from 6 to 12+ inches) observed in the Basin and Range and southern portion of the Gulf Coastal Plains of Texas, northern Louisiana, and central Mississippi. Overall, average temperatures for the week were within a few degrees of normal, with larger negative departures (2 to 4 deg F below normal) observed in western Texas.

In the High Plains, on this week’s map, drought-related conditions continued to intensify across areas of southeastern Wyoming, northeastern Montana, Nebraska, southern South Dakota, and western Kansas, as anomalously hot temperatures impacted western portions of the region. According to the National Drought Mitigation Center’s Condition Monitoring Observer Reports (CMOR), numerous drought impact reports have been submitted during the past 30-day period. Impacts include reduced crop yields, poor pasture conditions, and the need for supplemental feeding of livestock. The current drought situation was exacerbated by this week’s intense heat, with average maximum temperatures ranging from 95 to 100 deg F in areas of eastern Montana, northern and eastern Wyoming, and western portions of South Dakota, Nebraska, and Kansas.

In the West, an anomalous upper-level ridge parked over the central Great Basin during the past week-leading to a dangerous heat wave and record-high temperatures across the region. The record heat exacerbated fire-weather conditions across Northern California, the Pacific Northwest, and the Northern Rockies as well as taxed California’s power grid in response to the record-high demand reported this week. Most of the region saw no precipitation this week, except for some isolated storm activity in western Washington, Arizona, eastern Colorado, and eastern New Mexico. On this week’s map, areas of drought expanded in southwestern and central Montana, and in northern Wyoming. Areas of Extreme Drought (D3) in the Four Corners region were trimmed back as part of a re-assessment of the impact of monsoonal rainfall during the past several months. Looking at reservoir storage conditions, the two largest reservoirs in the Colorado River system, Lake Mead and Lake Powell, are currently 28% and 24% full, respectively.

To view the contiguous U.S. drought map, click here.

Looking ahead, the NWS WPC 7-Day Quantitative Precipitation Forecast (QPF) calls for moderate-to-heavy precipitation accumulations ranging from 2 to 5+ inches across areas of the Southeast including Georgia, Florida, and South Carolina. Likewise, 2 to 4+ inch accumulations are forecasted for areas of the Upper Midwest in Wisconsin and Upper Peninsula Michigan. Conversely, lighter accumulations (

To view the 6-10-day precipitation outlook map, click here.

To view the 6-10-day temperature outlook map, click here.

To view the monthly drought outlook map, click here.

   

Spotty Rains Give Parts of Oklahoma Relief, While Others See Intensified Drought
   

Cattlemen’s Congress- The Mecca for Domestic and International Cattle Producers

Thu, 08 Sep 2022 10:00:11 CDT


Cattlemen's Congress- The Mecca for Domestic and International Cattle Producers

Click here to listen to audio

Senior Farm and Ranch Broadcaster, Ron Hays, is back with international consultant, PJ Budler, talking about hosting people from all around the world at the 2023 Cattlemen’s Congress.

With experience judging cattle shows around the world, Budler is using his knowledge of the international cattle industry to help Cattlemen’s Congress to come up with a game plan to host international cattle producers. Oklahoma City, Budler said, is a great hub to introduce international cattle producers to the best cattle production in the U.S.

“My philosophy on this is, you set up a program that has something for literally everyone in the cattle industry,” Budler said. “If someone doesn’t like open halter shows, you have an alternative and you have these breeding sales.”

If someone doesn’t like the show side of the industry, Budler said you can have large commercial female shows. Budler also mentioned his idea for a “bull sale boulevard” as many major U.S. bull sales take place in Oklahoma and surrounding states.

Budler said breeders can have displays at Cattlemen’s Congress so local and international cattlemen who are potential customers can meet with them and see what they have to offer, then come back at a later date to their sales.   

“The other thing that we could look at, which has worked very well at shows like Houston and Farmfair International in Edmonton, Alberta is during the show to have an actual cattlemen’s congress where you deal with topics like genetics, herd management, nutrition, animal health, marketing, record keeping, forage management, human capital, and you have leading speakers from the leading U.S. companies addressing the public,” Budler said. “That is a huge opportunity for these companies themselves to get the main speakers in front of a really well-selected group of people in an audience.”

From the start, the concept of Cattlemen’s Congress has been that it is a cattle industry show put on by cattle producers for cattle producers. This concept can be valued not only domestically, but by the international community as well.

“A lot of the really well-produced shows around the world are in Europe, but what you find there is that it is almost like a display for people in the city to look at,” Budler said. “It is certainly not organized by them; it is not convenient for them and it is expensive for them. The events are really not production oriented; it is really just something to show the people in the city. They are immaculate events, but the reward for the attendees or consigners or the people showing the livestock there are very minimal.”

When you take a show like Cattlemen’s Congress that is organized by a group of producers, breeders, and thinkers who are immersed in the cattle industry, Budler said they know exactly what it takes to make a show successful for the exhibitor, and when it is successful for the exhibitor, the industry gets pulled into that as well and it becomes a showcase, especially for them.

“I really believe that having agriculture on display for the local public and the cities is very important, but you don’t need 10,000 head for them to see,” Budler said. “I think these kinds of events need to be by cattlemen, for cattlemen for them to be successful.”

Having a show like Cattlemen’s Congress, Budler said cuts all the bureaucracy and red tape around what it takes to attend one of those shows, and it encourages larger numbers.

“As soon as you over-urbanize these cattle events, it just becomes too expensive and too difficult for producers to attend these shows and to bring livestock and to bring help and all that,” Budler said. “It becomes a lose-lose because it becomes too expensive for them and it is not drawing your true cattlemen to it either, and that is where Cattlemen’s Congress is unique at the moment, globally, is that this is really just a cattle event and if you’re in the cattle industry, it is incredible, it is a mecca.”

To hear Ron and PJ’s full conversation and listen to their podcast, courtesy of Cattlemen’s Congress, click here.

To visit the Cattlemen’s Congress website, click here.

Click the LISTEN BAR below to listen to Ron Hays and PJ Budler talking 2023 Cattlemen’s Congress welcoming all domestic and international producers.

The Beef Buzz is a regular feature heard on radio stations around the region on the Radio Oklahoma Network and is a regular audio feature found on this website as well. Click on the LISTEN BAR below for today’s show and check out our archives for older Beef Buzz shows covering the gamut of the beef cattle industry today.

   

   

Checkoff’s New Product Competition Focuses on Calming Benefits

Thu, 08 Sep 2022 09:51:15 CDT

The Dairy Management Inc. (DMI) New Product Competition is accepting applications for innovative products that focus on dairy’s qualities related to calming.

The program, formerly the National Dai…

Meristem Announces Two New Tech-delivery Systems Designed to Boost the Performance of Biologicals

Thu, 08 Sep 2022 09:48:47 CDT

Meristem announced here today the commercial launch of two patent-pending biological delivery systems – BIO-CAPSULE™ and MICROBILIZE™ – building on their effort to bring real productivity gains t…

Summit Nutrients? Acquires AGVNT? to Further Strengthen and Accelerate Its Technology Platform and R&D Capabilities

Thu, 08 Sep 2022 09:45:47 CDT

Summit Nutrients, LLC., a precision-based manufacturer and marketer of bio-nutritional and fertilizer products, announced today that it has acquired AGVNT, LLC., an R&D company known for pioneering the indus…

Schantz Farms Field Day Coming up Next Week, September 15, in Hydro, Okla.

Thu, 08 Sep 2022 09:06:14 CDT

Click here to listen to audio

KC Sheperd, Farm Director, had the chance to visit with Merlin Schantz from Schantz Farms talking about the upcoming Schantz Farms Field Day in Hydro, Okla. on September 15…

Read an Accurate Ag Book Week Features Leaders from Across the State

Thu, 08 Sep 2022 08:22:30 CDT


Read an Accurate Ag Book Week Features Leaders from Across the State

Read an accurate Ag book Week kicked off for Oklahoma Ag in the Classroom. The Event runs September 6th through September 9th and features guest readers from across the state
A program of Oklahoma Ag in the Classroom, agriculture leaders across the state will have the opportunity to join together in telling the agriculture story and sharing the importance of agriculture.
This week has featured some fantastic Agriculture readers and some excellent books on Agriculture.

Representative Dell Kerbs participated in the Event reading “How to Grow a Monster.” Author Stephanie White read one of her books, “The Pig in My Barn,” Amanda Radke, Author and fifth-generation rancher from Mitchell, S.D, who has dedicated her career to serving as a voice for the nation’s beef producers, read one of her excellent books, “Levi’s Lost Calf.” Laramie Sparks, 2023 Oklahoma Future Little Miss United States Agriculture read “B is for Buckaroo.” Rose Bonjour read about George Washington Carver, And our very own KC Sheperd enjoyed reading about DIRT with “The Dirt Book, Poems about Animals That live Beneath our feet.”

More Great readers are lined up for the rest of the week.
THURSDAY: SEPTEMBER 8th

9:30-9:55       Oklahoma Central District Ag-Ed Program Specialist Rose Bonjour
Book: In the Garden with Dr. Carve

10:00-10:30 Oklahoma Author Una Belle Townsend
Book: Blazer’s Taxi

1:00-1:30       Oklahoma State Senator Blake “Cowboy” Stephens
Book: Barn at Night

FRIDAY: SEPTEMBER 9th

9:30-9:55       Oklahoma FFA State President Braden Burns          
Book: John Deere That’s Who

1:00-1:30       Oklahoma 4-H State President Abby Logan
Book: I Love Strawberries

Past Readers include Ag Secretary Blayne Arthur, Secretary of Education Ryan Walters, President of Oklahoma National Stockyards Kelli Payne, Former Miss United States Agriculture Cambrey Jo Hull, State Representative Anthony Moore, Congressman Frank Lucas, and more!

To find out more about the Oklahoma Ag in the Classroom program, click here:

   

USMEF Statement on Advancement of Chief Agricultural Negotiator Nomination

Thu, 08 Sep 2022 08:04:55 CDT


USMEF Statement on Advancement of Chief Agricultural Negotiator Nomination

Today the Senate Finance Committee reported favorably on the nomination of Douglas McKalip to serve as chief agricultural negotiator for the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative.

U.S. Meat Export Federation (USMEF) President and CEO Dan Halstrom issued this statement:

In addition to USTR’s ongoing efforts to improve and maintain international market access for U.S. red meat, several new Biden administration trade initiatives are underway that will benefit from Mr. McKalip’s agricultural experience and expertise. USMEF thanks the Senate Finance Committee for advancing his nomination and we urge prompt approval by the full Senate.

   

Meristem Announces Two New Tech-delivery Systems Designed to Boost the Performance of Biologicals

Thu, 08 Sep 2022 08:02:26 CDT

Meristem announced here today the commercial launch of two patent-pending biological delivery systems – BIO-CAPSULE™ and MICROBILIZE™ – building on their effort to bring real productivity gains t…

AFBF Supports Advancement of Doug McKalip for Chief Agricultural Negotiator

Thu, 08 Sep 2022 07:59:58 CDT

American Farm Bureau Federation President Zippy Duvall commented today on the Senate Finance Committee vote to advance the nomination of Doug McKalip for chief agricultural negotiator at the Office of the Un…

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