Farm & Ranch
Ranching Down Under
By Samantha Hall
Australia is home to some of the most geographically isolated people in the world. Some of the toughest, kindest and hardest working Australians and their families can be found living in the far remote reaches of this wonderful huge continent.
With communities being few and far between in certain areas of Australia, some people may live hours away from town on remote stations and farms.
One way for the children in these families to gain an education is through School of the Air.
School of the Air allows children living in the remote areas to gain education to a certain level without having to be sent away to boarding school at a young age.
My grandmother was sent away at five years of age to boarding school in the Blue Mountains of Sydney, which was a 15 hour train ride away from her sheep station home of Brewarrina in Western New South Wales.
To read more pick up a copy of the May 2017 NTFR issue. To subscribe call 940-872-5922.
Farm & Ranch
Ag Elsewhere: Wyoming
By Tressa Lawrence
Babies are tucked away in every nook and cranny. Many ranchers across Wyoming have baby animals popping up all over this time of year.
Farm & Ranch
Ag Elsewhere: Montana
By Lindsey Monk
Another load of grain in to keep feeding the calves until the green grass can really start popping.
Farm & Ranch
Meanwhile, Back at the Ranch….
By Rayford Pullen | [email protected]
Spring has sprung and hopefully the rains will continue where our country will heal from the previous droughts and our grasses will thrive. We are especially hopeful for the Panhandle of Texas where our neighbors and friends have been dealt a deadly blow to homes, ranges, livestock, and people. Keep them in your prayers as they will not be able to return to normal for many years if at all. Having lost their ability to benefit from this great cattle market is a double whammy for all of them.
Now is the time of year when we need to take care of business as it relates to our new calves that have been hitting the ground this spring. First and foremost is vaccinating for Blackleg followed by deworming with a white wormer and the IBR complex. Blackleg is a soil-born disease and with pastures extremely short this spring our calves have been grazing the green grass as soon as it shows itself, making them even more vulnerable to picking contaminates from the soil.
To read more, pick up a copy of the April issue of NTFR magazine. To subscribe by mail, call 940-872-5922.
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