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Renay E. Watt Memorial Shootout

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When:
September 14, 2018 – September 16, 2018 all-day
2018-09-14T00:00:00-05:00
2018-09-17T00:00:00-05:00
Where:
Oak Meadow Ranch
440 Red Top Rd
Valley View, TX 76272
USA
Contact:
936-344-2608

Renay E. Watt Memorial Shootout

Sept. 14-16

Oak Meadow Ranch, 440 Red Top Rd., Valley View, Texas 76272.
The Renay E Watt Memorial Shootout will be held September 14 through September 16 in Valley View, Texas. This Valley View rodeo is held at Oak Meadow Ranch and hosted by Gulf Coast Mounted Shooters. This year is the 3rd Annual Renay E. Watt Memorial Shootout. For more info call 936-344-2608 or email [email protected].

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Farm & Ranch

Hazards of Backyard Poultry

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When:
September 14, 2018 – September 16, 2018 all-day
2018-09-14T00:00:00-05:00
2018-09-17T00:00:00-05:00
Where:
Oak Meadow Ranch
440 Red Top Rd
Valley View, TX 76272
USA
Contact:
936-344-2608

By Barry Whitworth, DVM

Having backyard poultry is a popular agriculture enterprise. According to the United States Department of Agriculture, 0.8 percent of all households in the United States have chickens. People keep chickens for a variety of reasons with table eggs being one of the more common reasons.

Unfortunately, some of these poultry producers are not aware of the hazards that come with keeping poultry because many times they carry pathogens but appear healthy.
Chickens are carriers of several zoonotic diseases. These are diseases that can be passed from animals to humans. According to a recent survey in Pennsylvania, a majority of backyard poultry producers were aware of the dangers of avian influenza. However, this study also revealed that far fewer producers were aware of the risk of possible exposure to Salmonella and Campylobacter.

The lack of knowledge about the hazards of raising poultry likely contributes to the continued issues of Salmonella outbreaks associated with backyard poultry. In 2023, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 1,072 illnesses of Salmonella linked to backyard poultry, and 272 of those patients required hospitalization. Oklahoma reported 43 individuals with the disease.

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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Outdoor

The Garden Guy

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When:
September 14, 2018 – September 16, 2018 all-day
2018-09-14T00:00:00-05:00
2018-09-17T00:00:00-05:00
Where:
Oak Meadow Ranch
440 Red Top Rd
Valley View, TX 76272
USA
Contact:
936-344-2608

By Norman Winter | Horticulturist, Author, Speaker

The National Garden Bureau has designated 2024 as the ‘Year of the Angelonia’ and I am in full celebration mode. As I was preparing for my contribution to the celebration, I was, however, sent into taxonomic trauma.

For the last 26 years of deep love for the Angelonia, or summer snapdragon, I have told everyone via newspaper, radio and television that they were in the Scrophulariaceae family. Since most gardeners don’t like those words, I modified or simplified the snapdragon family, but somebody has tinkered with green industry happiness and moved Angelonia to the Plantaginaceae or plantain family. I immediately reached out to my friend Dr. Allen Ownings, Horticulture Professor Emeritus with the Louisiana State University AgCenter. I said, “Did you know this, or better yet, did you do it?” He said, as I expected, that the Taxonomist group had done it. This reminded me that someone once said taxonomists have to eat, too.

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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Country Lifestyles

A Mountain Out of a Molehill

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When:
September 14, 2018 – September 16, 2018 all-day
2018-09-14T00:00:00-05:00
2018-09-17T00:00:00-05:00
Where:
Oak Meadow Ranch
440 Red Top Rd
Valley View, TX 76272
USA
Contact:
936-344-2608

By Nicholas Waters

As winter plods along – come Spring and gopher mounds – homeowners and farmers find themselves playing a familiar song – fiddling while Rome is burning.

Let’s make a mountain out of a molehill. Those mounds on your lawn and pasture could be moles, but they’re more than likely gophers; Plains Pocket Gophers to be pragmatic – Geomys bursarius to be scientific.

These rodents dig and chew, and the damage they can do goes beyond the mounds we mow over. Iowa State University cited a study in Nebraska showing a 35 percent loss in irrigated alfalfa fields due to the presence of pocket gophers; the number jumped to 46 percent in decreased production of non-irrigated alfalfa fields.

The internet is replete with academic research from coast-to-coast on how to curtail gopher populations, or at least control them. Kansas State University – then called Kansas State Agricultural College – also published a book [Bulletin 152] in February 1908 focused exclusively on the pocket gopher.

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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