Thursday, March 11, 2010




Contact Us!

Lincoln Office
1010 Lincoln Mall, Ste. 101
Lincoln, NE 68508-2833
Phone: (402) 475-2333
Fax: (402) 475-0822
Email: nc@necattlemen.org

Alliance Office
204 E. 3rd Street
Alliance, NE 69301
Phone: (308) 762-3005
Fax: (308) 762-3016



Nebraska Feeder Brings Home National Award

Anne Burkholder has found a niche for her feedyard and with it has come success and recognition for her vision and hard work. Burkholder, co-owner and head cowboy at Will Feed Inc., Cozad, was recognized with the 2009 Beef Quality Assurance Award, sponsored by the Beef Checkoff Program, Safeway and Cargill.


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Which Beast Will Dominate in 2009?

NC asked economist Darrell Mark if he believes 2009 will be bullish or bearish for each of the following six Cs: cattle, corn, crude oil, commerce (specifically exports), critters (such as poultry and pork) and currency. Mark provided some very insightful predictions.


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2009 Unicameral – Hot Issues, Busy Season

When former National Football League quarterback Michael Vick got caught and convicted of possession of dogs for the purpose of illegal fighting with gambling implications, it gave the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) and other animal rights groups two important tools. The first was money – large sums of it – to promote efforts to protect all animals better. Second, these groups got a broader base in the media for them to attack others beyond the obvious need to have law enforcement control illegal activity such as dog fighting and improper care of dogs and cats.


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The Half-Full Glass - Member Profile

Born and raised in Holt County on the family ranch near Stuart, Ramm now ranches in Atkinson. His grandparents and parents started and built Valley View Angus Ranch in Stuart where they specialized in producing Angus bred heifers and two-year-old bulls, along with feeder steers that were usually marketed in January.


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Retail Value Steer Challenge Celebrates 10 Years

This is the Retail Value Steer Challenge’s 10th year. Serving as the primary fundraising event for the Nebraska Cattlemen Research and Education Foundation, the RVSC has raised thousands of dollars over the last decade that allowed the foundation to grant additional scholarships, support leadership development programs for both youth and adults, and fund research and education projects and infrastructure development.


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Rendering Rule Review

On April 25, 2008, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) published a final rule in the Federal Register entitled “Substances Prohibited from Use in Animal Food or Feed.” This rule finalizes a proposed rule that the FDA issued for public comment in 2005 regarding some additional feed ban requirements, which according to FDA, are intended to further strengthen existing safeguards against Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE).


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New Leaders – Key Issues

Despite the economy,the discussions, crowd, weather and food were all good for the NC Convention and Trade Show in Kearney Dec. 10-12. NC membership conducted the association’s business with over 500 attendees participating.


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Generous Cattleman Recognized for His Dedication

The Nebraska Cattlemen Hall of Fame Award is one of the association’s highest honors – a way to thank great leaders in the cattle industry for their inspirational service. Honorees are selected for their contributions to the beef cattle industry, to NC and to their communities.


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IANR Bolsters University with New Hires

The Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln has five Spires of Excellence that address key Nebraska needs. These spires, IANR strengths our faculty have built with their expertise, dedication and enthusiasm, include beef systems; water and climate; crops for the future; food, nutrition and health; and youth development


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Busy Councils, Active Members

Few would argue that 2008 was an extremely interesting year. With market fluctuations rarely seen in this business, pooled with the fact that every time we turned around there was negative news for all of us to deal with, you can safely say I was genuinely concerned about how many people would make the effort to attend the NC Convention.


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More Than Pasture Wood

When farmers gaze at the trees that fill their shelterbelts and rim their farms, they see wind protection for their cattle, shade for picnics and habitat for wildlife. But when Duane and Sarah Fanta of Creighton look at the trees that dot their farmstead, including cottonwood, cedars, ash and even mulberry, they see cupboards, tables and buffets. That’s because when the Fantas dreamed of building a new home, they dreamed of building it with wood – inside and out.


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Appreciated Stock – A Gift of Cattle

Al Svajgr gave Diller, his hometown in southeast Nebraska, 48 fat heifers. “I really wanted to give something back to the community in honor of my parents, who were instrumental in my success,” Svajgr says. Svajgr’s parents, Ed and Bessie Svajgr, raised their children on a farm near Diller.


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USDA Report Prompts Interesting ID Questions

This fictitious example can be finished one of several ways. If I were Chuck, I sure wouldn’t be carrying a bid for John based on his identification method. While plenty of bids are carried for folks who are unable to make a sale, I’m confident that a plethora of identification information goes along with the bid. Nobody wants to come home with the wrong bull.


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Here’s Why: Leaders Letter
About two years ago, I was asked to serve the Nebraska Cattlemen membership as an officer. I had been on the Board for a few years, first as a regional director, then as Education Committee chairman. An officer position would take my commitment to serve Nebraska Cattlemen to a new level.
When I sat down with my family to discuss this opportunity, it was kind of a why/why not discussion.

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Outside the Box – A.B. Cox Receives 2008 Leopold Conservation Award

Sometimes it’s good to stay inside the box and then other times, well, the box just doesn’t fit. It’s too small, too short or not long enough or … just too confining. For A.B. Cox, the recipient of the 2008 Leopold Conservation Award (see sidebar for more about this award), the box just didn’t seem to fit.


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Kay Christen Looks to Beef Production, Grasses

Quiet and unassuming, Kay Christen still gets a kick out of the cows she and her family produce. Born and raised in the industry, she’s spent time in the show ring, among the mama cows, tending to the records, on a tractor and out in the pastures. And it’s still the cattle, raised at the Christen Ranch near Steinauer, that she enjoys the most. “People say we ranch,” Christen explains, “but we say we run cattle.”


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A New Bill of Rights?
 
Nov. 4 was a long time ago. We can only say that because time seems to pass so quickly. Of course, only 72 days (approximately) have come and gone. Take into account three major holidays (none of which cattle observe), though, and you have a setting for a lightning-quick passage of time.

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Risk Management: Basis vs. Hail Mary

Do you want to hear some good news? Prices are down, unemployment is up, businesses are failing and it sounds like it will get worse in the coming months. We read these scary headlines every day. The good news is that, in the cattle-feeding business, we always make more money when we’re scared of the future and lose more when optimistic. To confirm this you only have to look back five months to last summer and remember how “good” it was and that it was only supposed to get better ahead.


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Heldt’s Interest is Nutrition, Seedstock, NC
Exhibiting at 4-H and FFA cattle shows as a youngster led Jeff Heldt not only to choose ruminant nutrition for both his master’s and doctorate degrees, but as a side business as well.

“I became very interested in cattle breeding,” Heldt says, and decided to focus on Maine-Anjou after seeing them shown at cattle shows. He’s been raising them ever since.


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NC R&EF Celebrates 40 Years!

The Nebraska Cattlemen Research and Education Foundation is celebrating its 40th anniversary this year. During the 1967 Nebraska Stock Growers Association convention, a resolution to form the NSGA Research and Education Foundation was passed.


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Election Recap
 
This election season has largely focused on the federal side, specifically on the presidential race, and rightfully so. Additionally, many important state Legislature races were decided, which will have a large bearing on Nebraskans, especially in the state’s beef industry.

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Schroeder’s New Job – NC President

Aside from being a husband and father, Todd Schroeder has had only two jobs and has loved both. He is anticipating adding another to the list this month – NC president.


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Bull Selection – Beyond the Numbers
It’s shopping time again for ranchers. Soon advertisements will fill the airwaves, and brochures and catalogs will jam your mailbox, all begging your consideration as you decide where to shop for your next herd sire or group of replacement bulls.
Since a bull purchase is a long-term investment, it would be wise for the producer to put some thought and planning into this process.

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On The Road with NBIS
 
It has been a busy summer for the Nebraska Beef Industry Scholars (NBIS). Several in our inaugural class completed internships and also participated in our first industry study tour across Nebraska and Colorado Aug. 13-18. The tour was the product of many hours of planning and researching by the students.

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Meet Now, Talk Later

Meet Now, Talk Later

The Ag Section of Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality has added some new faces to its inspector corps. So in the spirit of continued communication between NC and DEQ, we are providing an introduction of the new inspectors.

Michaele Oleson, Mark Henning and Waylon Hullinger are new program specialists with responsibilities for inspection of animal feeding operations for compliance with Title 130. Our article allows you to meet your inspector before you talk with them. Learn about the background and responsibilities of each inspector here:
Mark Henning
Waylon Hullinger
Michaele Oleson

DEQ Inspectors Nebraska Map

Click map for larger image


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Meet Your DEQ Inspector: Mark Henning

Mark Henning

Mark Henning has been with the Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality since 2001, but just recently changed positions to become a program specialist in the agency’s agriculture section.


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Meet Your DEQ Inspector: Waylon Hullinger

Waylon Hullinger

Waylon Hullinger was hired as a livestock program specialist with the Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality in April, 2008.


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Meet Your DEQ Inspector: Michaele Oleson

Michaele Oleson

Michaele Oleson joined the Nebraska Department of Environmental Quality in June of 2007, and works in the agency’s northeast field office in Norfolk. Oleson is responsible for compliance inspections for the agency’s agriculture section, as well as the waste division. She also is responsible for complaint investigations and compliance assistance.


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Perspective: Who Will Get My Vote?
The silly season is upon us! If you’re like me then you can’t wait until the elections are over! Not that I want to get back to life as usual because I refuse to let the elections cause any change to life. I just want to read, talk and view something other than a political commercial, to be honest.
Nonetheless, we must all endure until Nov. 4.Until then, we’ll continue receiving phone calls asking about candidates, so here’s my advice regarding whom to vote for this November.

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Meyring Family runs fully integrated beef operation

First of all,” Jerry Meyring will tell you, “I’m a Christian, and I’m blessed.” A cattleman who combines a cow-calf operation with a feedlot, Meyring runs beef on 9,000 acres plus leased ground near Alliance.

“The beef industry’s been good to our family,” Meyring says. “It’s been the sole source of our income for six generations.”

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Corn, Ethanol, Cattle – Potential for Synergy?

In 1935, 82 million acres of corn were harvested in the U.S., mostly by hand.  The average yield was 24.2 bushels per acre, totaling two billion bushels. During the next decade, the U.S. became engaged in World War II, which dramatically increased food demand. At the same time, hybrid seed corn was being produced and sold commercially, and Haber-Bosch technology was used to produce nitrogen fertilizer for corn. Because of the “war effort” to produce corn and because of technological developments, corn production exceeded demand.


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Remembering Jim Hanna

In his too-short life, Jim Hanna contributed much to Nebraska’s beef industry. He was a leader because he listened to others and served the industry. When he spoke he did so with an end in mind and a strategy for gaining the support of other cattlemen. Parliamentary procedure was one his most honed tools.


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Perspective: More on Ethanol …

The Lincoln Journal Star article, appearing just after the June 30 USDA crop report, was titled “Crimp in corn price won’t last.” The USDA report revealed that farmers had planted a million acres more than the March survey had shown. The market immediately responded by sending corn down 30 cents at the Chicago Board of Trade. So why the title of the article?


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NC 2008 Midyear Highlights: Wish You Could Have Been There

Participants made favorable comments about all the NC Midyear activities, from the opening golf tournament and steak fry near Ashland to the closing Beef State documentary reception and PAC fundraiser in Lincoln.


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Energy Police Needs Correcting
There’s a new product from Alka-Seltzer that’s supposed to stop that “sledgehammer to the brain thing,” the ad says. Given cattle-feeding losses this year, the inventor could well have been a cattleman.
This year has seen plenty of challenges, every year is a challenge, but the sledgehammer pounding cattle feeders seems bigger this year.

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Industry Youth Programs: What is NBIS?

The Nebraska Beef Industry Scholars (NBIS) program is a unique educational opportunity at UNL. Although the program is coordinated and partially “taught” by UNL faculty, much of the “instruction” and learning experiences come from interactions with Nebraska and beef industry leaders. Incoming freshman who have an interest in pursuing a career in the beef cattle or allied industries, regardless of major in the College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources, are identified through an application process as candidates for the certificate program.


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Bridge of Hope Joins Cattle Producers to Vital Research

For nearly a decade, cattlemen and women – feedlot producers and herdsmen, calf ropers and cowpunchers, trail bosses, top hands and even cowboy wannabes – have sashayed over to the Cattlemen’s Ball of Nebraska.

 


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PEOs Ease Human Resource Concerns for Small Businesses

Managers and owners of today’s feedlots and other ag-related businesses often find themselves rifling through a stack of government paperwork, both state and federal, to comply with employment-related governmental regulations. Unlike large businesses with a 10-member human resources department, many feedlots have one bookkeeper who wears a variety of seed caps and cowboy hats while answering the phone, taking questions from salesmen and tracking cattle in the pen, all the while trying to locate companies with the most affordable insurance packages and recording workmen’s compensation claims.


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Selection, Management May Reduce Trait Variation in Bulls

Traditionally, when selling cattle in any industry segment or marketing channel, the more uniform the lot, the higher the price. Also, retailers are increasingly demanding beef cuts that are more consistent in taste and more uniform in size. In response to these market signals, seedstock breeders search for selection practices that will result in herd bulls with less variation in their offspring.


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Two More Planets By 2050?

Do you look at the food on your plate and appreciate the hands it passed through and the economies created from conception to consumption? 


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All Roads Lead To the Classic
Cattlemen from all across the Midwest should mark their calendars for the 17th Annual Classic, Feb. 19-24. The Nebraska Cattlemen’s Classic has put together a great week for cattlemen, both young and old.
The annual show and sale is becoming a tradition for cattlemen all across the Midwest. It’s a weeklong event featuring a Ranch Horse Competition and Sale, Working Dog Trials and Sale, 14 breeds of cattle shows and sales, Replacement Heifer Pen of 5 Sale, live cattle displays, a commercial trade show and a Junior Show.

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Beermann Receives Industry Award

Don Beermann promotes beef. He doesn’t stand at the grocery store with a tray of delectable beef products for customers to sample or broadcast over radio air waves the benefits of a diet that includes beef. And he doesn’t necessarily promote beef by scooping corn into feedbunks.


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Bob Kremer Latest Hall of Fame Member

Not every Nebraska legislator can say they were sent out to plow the family farm at the tender age of nine. Not every Nebraska legislator can say that their father warmed their seat in the Nebraska Unicameral, serving as a legislator decades before they got there. And not every Nebraska legislator has been named to the Nebraska Cattlemen’s Hall of Fame as Bob Kremer was.


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Change is Hard but the Future Is Bright

Change is hard. For many, it’s more comfortable to settle into a routine than it is to forge ahead into new territory. Memories and pride make it difficult for us to critically evaluate programs we helped create long ago. There’s no doubt it takes much more effort to create new, successful programs. Some folks embrace these new challenges and others resist. There is healthy skepticism that new initiatives will accomplish their intended purpose.


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College Program Gives Beef Cow Ownership Advantage

A college student graduates with an ag degree in hand, eager to make farming or ranching a lifelong career. He or she works 10 or 20 years, with plans to buy the ranch one day, only to find that there is no option to buy once the original owner retires. By that time, a lifetime of work has been invested in vain.


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Something for Everyone – NC-NCW Convention Draws Crowds, Activity, Business
The discussions, crowd, weather and food were all good for the Nebraska Cattlemen Convention and Trade Show in Kearney Nov. 28-29. NC membership conducted the association’s business with over 500 attendees participating. 
The following are key resolutions and policy statements members adopted.

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Buckle up for 2008 Unicameral

The second session of the 100th Legislature offers interesting if not unique issues in the Unicameral’s history. 2008 will be the last year for 15 term-limited senators while 20 freshman senators graced the halls of the state Capitol building in 2007. Three previous ballot measures to enact term limits were passed by Nebraskans, but were struck down by the courts for various reasons.


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Operation Haylift

The Blizzard of 1948-49 staggers the imagination. A series of storms began in November and continued through February. The snow stopped trains, buried houses and threatened nearly 4 million head of cattle. Operation Haylift was a massive, perhaps desperate, effort to save livestock. In 1950 this story hit the silver screen in Operation Haylift, a B movie starring Bill Williams and Ann Rutherford.


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Consumer Confidence – Our First Priority

Every Monday morning, your NC staff gathers by conference call for a staff meeting. We review the past week’s activities as well as those coming up. We discuss current issues and the strategies we should employ to be both proactive and reactive, depending on the issue.


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North Platte Livestock First Annual BQA Sale a Success

The North Platte Livestock Market in North Platte held its first annual Beef Quality Assurance calf sale Oct. 23, 2007. North Platte Livestock’s owner, Holly Hullings Roeser, understands the BQA program’s importance and the need for its implementation in the industry.


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Christen Family Receives Leopold Award

Near the small southeastern Nebraska community of Steinauer, in the midst of rolling grasslands, lives the Christen family – Rod, Amy and their children, Rod’s sister, Kay, and their parents, Richard and Sharon.


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Dennis Henrichs – Auctioneer and Friend of Cattlemen

If I can get a smile on their faces, I can get in their pocketbooks.” That’s the modus operandi of Beatrice auctioneer Dennis Henrichs. With the personality of a stand-up comic, the enticing power of a snake charmer and the salesmanship of a world-class auctioneer, Henrichs gets people to participate.


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Nebraska FFA Members Receive National Awards

Four young men and women from Nebraska were among the nation’s FFA students excelling in ag production this year, so much so that they have been named national winners. The four received Agricultural Proficiency Awards at the 80th National FFA Convention. Their projects focused on beef, soybean, canine and swine production.


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In with the New

One of the most common questions both Nebraska Cattlemen members and the media have asked me is: What are your goals for your year as NC president?


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Top Hands Recruit for Association

Nebraska Cattlemen’s membership continues to grow thanks to our members’ recruiting efforts. As part of the NC Top Hand Cash Reward program, NC members who recruit three new members with dues totaling $300 earn three percent in a cash-back rebate. Top Hand members for the past recruitment year were recognized at the Annual Convention Trade Show Reception. As has become the tradition, many of the rebate winners donated their checks to the Nebraska Cattlemen Research and Education Foundation.


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Beef Checkoff – Producers Are in Control!

The 2007 Nebraska Cattlemen Annual Convention was a great success! Attendance and participation were excellent! Over 500 beef producers attended the event. Jay Wolf, NC immediate past president, put it best when he said, “There is no event that a cattleman can attend where he will receive more information about his business and industry than the NC Annual Convention.”


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Can Harnessing Wind and a Public Power Policy Work?
As the Legislature convenes on Jan. 9, 2008, there may be issues related to beef producers that will be introduced, debated and either killed or passed. Nebraska Cattlemen leadership and staff will be present in the upcoming 60-day session, working for members and their policy.
One issue that will be further debated is the implementation of wind energy as part of the state’s portfolio in the creation of energy.

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Activism – A New Religion?

The Merriam-Webster online dictionary provides the following as a definition of religion: “a cause, principle, or system of beliefs held to with ardor and faith.” Interesting! Notice that first word – “cause.” A synonym for cause could be activism, don’t you agree? If you ponder for a moment the activist movements that champion animal rights and environmentalism, you may find yourself thinking that activism is a new religion.


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Smith Takes the Reins

Three miles southwest of Ashland, tall shade trees guard the Platte River Valley. It is in this valley that Larry Smith started his first purebred Angus cattle herd. Smith began his one-year term as Nebraska Cattlemen president at the annual convention in Kearney Nov. 28-30.


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Private Treaty Sales a Great Option

A number of outside forces influence livestock prices – the cost of pasture ground, the abundance of rain, the outlay for corn, the proximity of an ethanol plant, and the rise and fall of the futures market. Ultimately though, livestock prices are determined in the various markets where the animals are sold, whether cried out by an auctioneer in the sale ring, the marketing expert at the terminal market or the individual producer by way of private treaty sales.


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Can Harnessing Wind and a Public Power Policy Work?

As the Legislature convenes on Jan. 9, 2008, there may be issues related to beef producers that will be introduced, debated and either killed or passed. Nebraska Cattlemen leadership and staff will be present in the upcoming 60-day session, working for members and their policy.


Click here to Read More...

Activism – A New Religion?

The Merriam-Webster online dictionary provides the following as a definition of religion: “a cause, principle, or system of beliefs held to with ardor and faith.” Interesting! Notice that first word – “cause.” A synonym for cause could be activism, don’t you agree? If you ponder for a moment the activist movements that champion animal rights and environmentalism, you may find yourself thinking that activism is a new religion.


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Smith Takes the Reins

Three miles southwest of Ashland, tall shade trees guard the Platte River Valley. It is in this valley that Larry Smith started his first purebred Angus cattle herd. Smith began his one-year term as Nebraska Cattlemen president at the annual convention in Kearney Nov. 28-30.


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Private Treaty Sales a Great Option

A number of outside forces influence livestock prices – the cost of pasture ground, the abundance of rain, the outlay for corn, the proximity of an ethanol plant, and the rise and fall of the futures market. Ultimately though, livestock prices are determined in the various markets where the animals are sold, whether cried out by an auctioneer in the sale ring, the marketing expert at the terminal market or the individual producer by way of private treaty sales.


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Environmental Fate of Hormones Not Well Understood

Concerns about the concentration of hormones in animal waste produced from concentrated animal-feeding operations (CAFOs) have recently attracted the attention of the European Union Regulatory Agencies, Environmental Protection Agency and livestock industry groups.


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Priceless!

How do you calculate the value of something? Is it what you paid for it? Is there a depreciation or appreciation schedule attached? Is it what you would sell it for? Do you include the worth that you received while you used it? How about the opportunity costs (all you ag economics guys rejoice)? Just how do you calculate the true value of something?


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PAC Auction Benefits NC

With some spectacular items – like the NC stained glass pictured at left – up for auction at the annual banquet during the NC Convention in Kearney, the winning bidder is the beneficiary as are all NC members and supporters.


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Nebraska Cattlemen Past Presidents Gather

NC President Jay Wolf, the NC Executive Committee and the Board of Directors strive to use all resources available to benefit members. The group of past presidents and leaders from the Nebraska Stock Growers, the Nebraska Livestock Feeders and the Nebraska Cattlemen are a valuable asset to be tapped. 


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2007 Nebraska Cattlemen Beef Pit at the Nebraska State Fair

For 24 years, the Nebraska Cattlemen has operated the Beef Pit at the Nebraska State Fair, promoting Nebraska beef and beef producers. The 2007 Beef Pit had another successful year and, once again, Certified Angus Beef teamed up with the Beef Pit to serve great-tasting prime rib, roast beef and BBQ brisket meals to fairgoers. This year’s Beef Pit served over 12,500 meals during the 11-day event, a 5 percent increase over 2006. 


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The Market Through a Wide-Angle Lens

With this likely my last column for 2007, I’d like to take more of a “big picture” look at the marketing arena as we prepare for 2008 and beyond. In that spirit, let’s start out by looking at the biggest recent change in the ag commodities marketplace – and one that has had and will continue to have wide-reaching effects on many production ag sectors and eventually the consuming public.


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Be Proud of What We’ve Done Together

Let’s take a minute together and look back over the Nebraska Cattlemen’s past year. I’d like to do it in the context of the goals NC set out as the year began.


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UNL Moving Forward

President J.B. Milliken’s goal for the University of Nebraska is that we will be the best university in the country in terms of serving the interests of the citizens of the state. As a fervent believer in the land grant university system, I say amen.


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Cowboys In Japan

It’s easier to understand the term foreign country when you see 6’3” Dave Hamilton (taller in his western boots and hat) towering above everyone in a sea of Japanese. Or, when a bunch of Nebraskans sit on the floor to eat dinner and they can’t pronounce anything that is served, but it sure looks like raw fish.


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Membership Dues Proposal Taking Shape

The NC Board has begun discussion on changes to the dues structure. NC’s dues structure is complex in that it tries to be fair to all segments involved in the organization. Some changes the Board has been looking at are a student membership for our youngest cattlemen; an adjustment to the cap on feedlot dues at $16,500; and an increase in the investment from members of the Seedstock, Farmer Stockman and Cow-Calf Councils.


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Vet Shortage To Be Addressed in Next Legislative Session

The Unicameral won’t convene until Jan. 9, but that doesn’t mean little is happening in regards to potential legislation. In fact, successful legislation often is rooted in the months preceding a session. Nebraska Cattlemen is an active participant in many different issues leading up to the second session of the 100th Legislature.


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NC R&E Foundation’s 8th Annual RVSC Results

The Nebraska Cattlemen Research and Education Foundation’s Eighth Annual Retail Value Steer Challenge (RVSC) awarded its winners at Nebraska Cattlemen’s Midyear Conference in Columbus, June 7-8.


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Perspective

Summer is over, school has begun and I am ready for some football! However, before I jump headlong into the fall season, I need to give you a quick recap of a few items.


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I Thought I Had a “Permit”

The state operating permits of small and medium animal feeding operations (AFOs) expired on Dec.31, 2005 – a result of amendments to Title 130, Livestock Waste Control Regulations.


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Trailing the Boslers from Pennsylvania to Nebraska

In Longsdorf Cemetery, New Kingstown, Pa., stands a large granite headstone. The engraving on the headstone tells the story of the man buried beneath it.


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Video Auctions a Win/Win for Buyer, Seller
Head ‘em up! Move ‘em out! At one time it took weeks to drive cattle from Texas and Montana ranches to railroad towns where they were shipped east. But it’s been a few years since trail drives routinely moved cattle from range to market. In more recent times, stockyards and sale barns provide marketing sites where ranchers with calves to sell connect with feeders looking for cattle to fill their feedlots.
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Cornstalks – Bioenergy’s Diamond in the Rough or Fool’s Gold?
Many publications, radio and television programs subliminally accuse (and convict) you of participating in the sudden, imminent death of this planet. Everything from what you drive to what you eat, wear, sleep on, and brush your teeth with is somehow responsible for the coral reefs dying, penguins becoming endangered, hurricanes breeding like rabbits, piping plovers not breeding, and the possibility of several metropolitan centers around the world becoming beachfront property because of melting ice.
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Who’s Gonna Fill Their Shoes?
Remember that ol’ country song crooned by George Jones entitled, “Who’s Gonna Fill Their Shoes?”
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Greetings from the Sandhills
The Nebraska CattleWomen has two new promotion projects we are excited about. The first was developed by Gerri Monahan and the Area 30 (Lincoln) CattleWomen.
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A Butcher, a Baker, a Candlestick Maker
Recently I went with a member to visit with a couple of businesses from which he purchases input items for his ranch. He told me they need to be Nebraska Cattlemen members, but he was unsure how to approach them. At both places he introduced me and told them we were there to talk with them about a supporting membership with Nebraska Cattlemen. He explained that I was there to answer any questions they might have that he could not answer.
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Livestock Insurance Web Site Launched
In the last several years, cattle feeders and swine finishers have experienced increased volatility in both their output selling price and their major commodity input costs. For cattle feeders, these main risks include changes in fed-cattle, feeder-cattle and corn prices
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Strong Feeder Prices Predicted This Fall
As I pen this in very early August, cash fed-cattle markets have rebounded considerably from early summer lows, which coincided with the most numerous fed-cattle numbers of the year in Nebraska and other Corn Belt feeding states.
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Challenges? What Challenges?
Everyone in the cattle business faces daily challenges; some are as old as the business itself. We all spend time battling Mother Nature to keep calves alive, to get feed to cattle or to get trucks to ship cattle during a winter storm. Mother Nature is a force we can’t control, yet we spend time preparing our operations to deal with the problems she may throw at us.
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Discussions Draw Crowds
Three issues vital to Nebraska beef producers have been the subject of informational meetings planned and presented by the Nebraska Cattlemen. Nebraska Cattlemen invited producers to 10 meetings in July and August at various locations throughout the state to gain a feel for beef growers’ response to the beef checkoff
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Hansen Continues Service to Nebraska
Tom Hansen recently completed his first session of his initial year as the state senator representing the 42nd District. People in North Platte, Lincoln County and the beef industry have known for a long time what an outstanding, service-orientated individual Hansen has been. Now, since serving in the Unicameral, the whole state gets to benefit from his efforts.
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French Agriculture from a Student’s Perspective
The Monday after my college graduation, nine other CASNR students and I were on a plane to France for a two-week, activity-packed European excursion.
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Environmental Regulatory Update Requesting a DEQ Inspection – LB 677
Nebraska Cattlemen’s recent legislative success in passing LB 677 has generated an extraordinary amount of dialog and a number  of questions. That is a good thing.
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A Series of Summer Meetings
As the heat of summer builds, so does the momentum for a set of fantastic meetings across the state, hosted by Nebraska Cattlemen. The meetings will feature three very important subject areas that should be of interest to all cattle producers. These free meetings will provide all interested cattle producers the opportunity to share their comments and learn more about three important areas within our industry.
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NC Hires New Sales Rep
Nebraska Cattlemen has hired Amber Barthel as its in-state and regional sales representative for all NC publications – the Nebraska Cattleman, NC Post newsletter, Today’s News electronic newsletter, and the NC Web site. In addition, Amber will be offering NC’s related advertising services such as advertising placements and logo, catalog and Web site development. NC is expanding its services to be a one-stop shop for advertisers.
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Midyear Sponsors
Thank you to the following sponsors for their support of the 2007 NC Midyear Meeting.  It was a great success and their support is greatly appreciated!
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Know Your Brand Committee
No matter how you slice it, there’s no getting around the important role the Nebraska Brand Committee plays in Nebraska’s livestock business. Here’s a brief rundown of the committee’s players and their functions.
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2007 Legislative Wrap-up
The 100th  Nebraska legislative session began with much anticipation for many reasons – 22 freshmen senators, a governor elected after a highly contested primary, probable tax cuts due to a healthy state economy, much needed water management and many more.
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Groundwater Monitoring Affects Everyone
Environmental issues are once again at the top of the agenda, whether it is water, dust or nutrient management as they relate to manure application. I would like to visit with you about groundwater monitoring and the Step 7 Investigations.
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NC Board of Directors Meeting Highlights

Jeff Bash requested the minutes reflect that the NC Classic delivered the 2007 Classic commission check at the April 10 Board meeting. Seeing no other corrections, Homer Buell moved to accept the minutes as corrected. Steve Niemeyer seconded. Motion passed unanimously.

President Jay Wolf asked for approval of the May 8-9 NC Executive Committee minutes previously mailed to all Board members. Larry Smith moved to accept the minutes as presented. Todd Schroeder seconded. Motion passed unanimously.


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Cold Weather Effects on Bull Management
Generally, bulls go through winter with minimal problems related to cold weather or nutritional stress, but the severe cold, snow and wind-chills this winter have created the possibility of frostbite and reduced body condition that could have long-term effects on the breeding season.
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Legislative Issues
As the Unicameral passes the midway point of the 100th Legislative Session, the chaotic process (With 22 freshman senators and all-new committee chairmen, how could the process not be chaotic?) and ultimate outcome has become clearer.
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Animal ID Is About Integrity
Animal Identification is an issue that spawns more cussin’ and discussin’ within our industry than any other. Some of the tirade is based on misinformation and even fear, while some is probably based on false hopes. Animal
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2007 Nebraska Cattlemen’s Classic Show Results

2007 Nebraska Cattlemen’s Classic Show Results


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This Sounds Like Déjà vu All Over Again!
One more year of making up  *&^%!” read the inside of a recent birthday card my favorite son-in-law, Nick, gave to me. Although some may categorize the issues below as *&^%, I assure you they are serious matters begging the attention of Nebraska Cattlemen members. Month by month, year by year we find ourselves in challenging times, facing issues that require long-term vision and a willingness to be criticized for making hard choices.
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Master Cattle Transporter Training Program – Closing the Quality Assurance Circle
Every beef producer benefits from a little bit of education. Knowledge is what makes our operations profitable, keeps our pride in tact and motivates us to the next level of success. Education and knowledge are the cornerstones of quality assurance programs for the beef industry.
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Students – a Highlight of NCBA Convention
I just got back from Cattle Industry Annual Convention and Trade Show and am more enthusiastic than ever. That’s partly because I had the honor of taking four students and Anita Ferrell, UNL Animal Science admissions coordinator. What a pleasure it was to introduce students to the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA). Anita coordinated our presence at the trade show booth, sponsored by the Nebraska Department of Agriculture.
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Be a Member and Be Heard
Why be a Nebraska Cattlemen Member? That is a fair question and one I am often asked. It is one that deserves an answer and I’ll give you my best shot. My first response is to look at what NC does for its members.
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NC Is an Important Cog in the Legislative Wheel
The start of every year in Nebraska commences the legislative process in our state. This new year brought typical resolutions for self-improvement, never-before-seen devastation from two ice storms and 22 new state senators originating from voter-approved term limits. With the abundance of freshman senators gracing the Capitol halls came concerns of what may or not happen during this congressional year.
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Tough Winter, Costly Corn, Plentiful Fed Cattle = Big Feeding Losses
Let’s just say that “Happy New Year” doesn’t exactly fit for the cattle feeding industry in early 2007. As I pen this piece in early February, tough feeding conditions, grain costs that are roughly double what they were a year ago and plentiful fed cattle numbers shoved up against seasonally soft beef demand have plunged the industry into a vat of red ink that’s likely to last for quite some time.
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Ethanol Changes Economics of Cattle Feeding, Ranching

The National Agricultural Statistics Service projects that slightly over 2 billion bushels of corn will be used for fuel ethanol production in the 2006-07 marketing year.

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Caption: Darrell Mark addresses the crowd at the Cattle, Corn & Ethanol – Challenges and Opportunities seminar held in January, where he presented information on the economics of ethanol.


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Nebraska Goes to Nashville

    Nebraska cattle producers and feeders were over 250 strong at the recent Cattle Industry/National Cattlemen’s Beef Association Annual Convention in Nashville, Tenn. Nebraska Cattlemen was very well represented in areas of issues management, committees, policy and just having fun. 

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Caption: NC members gathered at the state caucus to review policy that would later be presented – and accepted – at the Region VII caucus 


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NC Left Its Mark at the National Convention
After attending the Cattle Industry Annual Convention and Trade Show in Nashville, I always like to take a moment to reflect on the issues, debates and events that took place.
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The Vigilantes of Wyoming and Nebraska – Part II
This two-part article, the first of which appeared in the February issue of the Nebraska Cattleman, compares the development of vigilante groups in early Nebraska and Wyoming. Research indicates that Nebraska may have had a quicker restoration of law and order due to its less “colorful” population. While Nebraska was for the most part settled by farmers looking to build a stable community, Wyoming was settled by fortune seekers, rebels and outlaws brought by the expansion of the railroad
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Technically Speaking Is My Ranch a CAFO?
In some specific cases the answer is yes, but it depends! It will take some explaining and you may not be aware of how your marketing decisions may have impacted the answer and created a very significant financial liability.
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NC Research & Education Foundation Supports UNL Programs

A highlight of the recent Nebraska Cattlemen Research and Education Foundation (NC R&EF) luncheon at the 2006 NC Convention in Lincoln was a presentation by UNL Animal Science Department Head Don Beermann.  He gave an update on the activities and status of UNL’s Animal Sciences Department and outlined the department’s programs, enrollment status and strategic plan.

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The Vigilantes of Wyoming and Nebraska

   This two-part article compares the development of vigilante groups in early Nebraska and Wyoming.  Research indicates that Nebraska may have had a quicker restoration of law and order due to its less “colorful” population. While Nebraska was for the most part settled by farmers looking to build a stable community, Wyoming was settled by fortune seekers, rebels and outlaws brought by the expansion of the railroad.

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Production Practices, Conservation – Cowboy Style
Three different environments. Three different management schemes. Three different production systems. One similar goal. Conserve the land so that all can benefit from it and it can sustain itself – and us – for generations to come. This is the common theme in the conservation practices of the three ranching operations that were finalists for the 2006 Leopold Conservation Award. As varied as these three operations are, their commonalities far outweigh their differences.
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Perspective
One of Robert Kennedy’s most notable quotes is actually him quoting George Bernard Shaw in his play Back to Methuselah, “You see things and you say ‘Why?’  But I dream things that never were and I say ‘Why not?’”
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At Your Service
Alot of attention is given to the work Nebraska Cattlemen does with the Legislature and the regulatory agencies – and rightly so!  Nebraska Cattlemen does a very effective job in policy development and communicating the importance of those policies.  But there are many other services that are a benefit of membership.  Here are a few to remind you.
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Changin’ Horses
I have had the honor of serving the NC membership as a Board member and, for the past three years, as an officer. My term ended with NC’s annual convention in Lincoln. Now, I have a unique opportunity to serve NC in a different capacity.
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Let’s Talk Ethanol
No topic generates more passionate discussion in the beef industry right now than the explosive growth of ethanol.  Corn prices have doubled this fall, despite the third largest harvest on record.  What has been the primary cause?  Demand for corn from the ethanol industry certainly tops the list. 
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The Convergance of Agriculture and Energy

This commentary is from the Council for Agricultural Science and Technology (CAST) and the primary author, Kenneth Cassman, spoke at the recent Corn, Cattle and Ethanol summit co-sponsored by NC.  The article provides an objective overview of corn and ethanol production.

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NC Board of Directors Meeting Highlights Nov. 28, 2006, Lincoln

NC Board of Directors Meeting Highlights  Nov. 28, 2006, Lincoln

Animal Health & Nutrition Chair Anne Burkholder provided an update on the BQA program including the effort that is starting to get the entire beef industry “on board” to promote BQA – from farm to fork

NC Executive Vice President Michael Kelsey reviewed the NC Board actions of 2006.


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Charlie Hunt Inducted into Nebraska Cattlemen Hall of Fame
   Charlie Hunt, Oxford, was inducted into the Nebraska Cattlemen Hall of Fame at the recent NC convention in Lincoln.  The NC Hall of Fame is the highest honor that Nebraska Cattlemen bestows on one of its members and has been awarded to many great leaders.
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Wilson Ranch Wins Leopold Award

   The Nebraska Cattlemen, in collaboration with Wisconsin-based Sand County Foundation, named the Wilson Ranch near Lakeside the 2006 Nebraska winner of the Leopold Conservation Award. The Wilsons received a crystal award and a $10,000 check during the Nebraska Cattlemen Convention & Trade Show in Lincoln.

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Looking into Nebraska’s Water Supply Crystal Ball
   Nebraska is in a unique historic position, similar to where Nebraska was in the 1880s when barbed wire and windmills combined to “close” the open range, except today easy, unlimited access to the state’s water is closing. In Nebraska, we have been fortunate to have experienced above-normal precipitation during the 1980s and 1990s, only to embark on a drought in 2000 that persists to the present and may extend into the future.
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Nebraska Cattlemen Year in Review – 2006 Summary of Success
   At the 2006 Nebraska Cattlemen Annual Convention, I gave a summary report outlining NC’s successes over the past year. Quite a few folks requested to see that information in the magazine. Request granted. By the way, your association did very well in 2006. Congratulations!
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Ambassadors Are an Asset to the Beef Industry
   Nebraska is the Beef State. Young and old alike should be actively involved in promoting beef. Do you know a youth between the ages of 8 and 20? Why not get them involved in the Nebraska Beef Ambassador contest. Who better to be promoting our product than our future state leaders?

 


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Nebraska Cattlemen Honors Members
  Nebraska Cattlemen honored the following outstanding members during its Annual Convention in November. Each award recognizes members who make exceptional contributions to the industry. Affiliates were asked to nominate one member for each of these awards. Final selections were made by NC staff.
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Top Hand Club Members Showcased at Convention
   The Nebraska Cattlemen annual convention is always hectic, trying to cover so much business crammed into two days and nights. With so much to accomplish, it is tough to find time to say thanks to those who donate their time to our association; however we did honor our Top Hand Club.
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Leader’s Letter, Looking Back Down the Trail Before Moving On
 Before we begin the whirlwind that will be 2007, I’d like to take a moment to look back on 2006. NC had a great year. With NC Membership Chairman Scott Reynolds leading the charge, we achieved our goal of 500 new members.
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Nebraska Cattlemen Awards
   The NC Industry Service Award is presented each year to recognize an outstanding non-producer for his or her contributions to the beef cattle industry. In 2006, the award was presented to two very deserving men who have spent years giving of themselves to the Nebraska cattle industry. Jim Gosey, Lincoln, and Ivan Rush, Scottsbluff, each received the NC Industry Service Award at the NC Annual Convention banquet in Lincoln.
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Producer Profile, Generations – The Fickes of Nebraska
   Johann Ficke first laid eyes on American shores in the winter of 1860. He came to a country on the verge of civil war, but found peace on the prairie of Wisconsin. He left behind all he knew – the comforts of his family’s 200-year-old farm, and the traditions of his native home, the German village of Klethen.
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Convention Highlights Policy, Issues, Fun – Dominate NC Convention
   Under cloudy skies and a cold November wind, nearly 500 Nebraska cattle producers and feeders gathered for the annual Nebraska Cattlemen Convention. Nebraska’s capital city was this year’s location, which proved to be a prime location for many interested in learning more about their industry and taking part in developing NC initiatives, policy and directives.
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Taking The Reins - Jay Wolf – 2007 NC President
   Incoming NC President Jay Wolf and his family own and manage the Wagonhammer Cattle Company, a diversified cattle operation with farming, feeding and ranching enterprises near Albion and Bartlett. It includes a reputation registered Angus herd that supplies performance-tested bulls and heifers to commercial cattlemen throughout the central U.S. Calves from a 1,500-head commercial cowherd and purchased calves are finished in the family’s feedlot. The tradition of mobilizing past presidents has been renewed in the past couple years and Wolf plans to continue that effort. “The past presidents are many of our industry’s best leaders.
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Membership Recruitment ‘The Duke’ Style

   The 2007 NC Top Hand Recruitment Program is now underway. Any new memberships received by the NC Lincoln office between Nov. 1, 2006 and Oct. 31, 2007, will count toward the 2007 program totals. For more information on how you can be part of the NC Top Hand Recruitment Program, contact an NC Member Services staff person.


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Corn Market Poised to Establish New Trading Range
The cattle industry’s rollercoaster ride called 2006 will soon draw to a close, but not without one last good reason to reach for the king-sized container of Tums. Skyrocketing demand from ethanol producers has helped fuel a dizzying harvest-time rally in the corn market that has caught the majority of the feeding industry off guard and ill prepared
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Executive Vice President’s Perspective
December is a unique time of year. I can remember in my childhood that the first 24 days always seemed to take an eternity to pass. Now they seem to fly. Not only has my sense of time changed, but so have my responsibilities. As a child, I tried to open presents during those first 24 days … now I try to keep children from opening presents. Christmas is a joyous season, don’t you agree?
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Cattlemen’s Digest

A mountain of paperwork and about three years of navigating through governmental red tape has finally paid off for Nebraska business and it’s owner, Dave Deitloff.

CC Ag, LLC – a composting company based in Norfolk – recently received funding from a value-added producer grant provided by the U.S. Department of Agriculture as part of the 2002 federal farm bill.


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Nebraska Cattlemen Beef Pit Serves 12,000 Nebraska State Fair Goers

The Nebraska Cattlemen Beef Pit, a Nebraska State Fair tradition for 23 years, had another successful year serving great-tasting Certified Angus Beef® prime rib, roast beef and BBQ brisket meals to fairgoers. This year’s Beef Pit served nearly 1,000 more meals than in 2005, with the final tally nearing 12,000 meals during the 11-day event.


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Nebraska Cattlemen Kicks Off $150,000 Fund Drive to Assist UNL

By Jay Wolf

    The Nebraska Cattlemen Research & Education Foundation has announced a $150,000 fundraising campaign to support the University of Nebraska at Lincoln’s (UNL) College of Agriculture. “This is a major project for our foundation,” said David Bruntz, NC Foundation chairman. “We have looked at the state beef industry’s needs and believe these dollars are necessary if we expect UNL to continue to meet those needs.”


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Mad As Hell

By Duane Gangwish

    In the movie Network, a 1976 satire on “trash TV,” the lead character, played by Peter Finch, is a news anchor who is fed up with the situation and encourages his viewers to “Go to the window and shout as loud as you can, ‘I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take it anymore!’”


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Reflect … and Look Ahead!

By Pete McClymont

    Another year draws to a close. Along with it, the tenure of one volunteer leader concludes, allowing another talented producer to step forward to lead our great association and beef industry. Thus, it is the proper time to reflect and to look ahead.


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Task Force Recommendations Are Stepping Stones to Greater Success

By Michael Kelsey

    The Industry-wide Beef Checkoff Task Force recently completed its work of reviewing and making recommendations. This committed group of people has produced a document with four recommendations for improving the beef checkoff. Most notable of this group’s work, however, was their unanimous agreement that the beef checkoff has played a significant positive role for our industry over its 20-year history.


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NC Board of Directors Meeting Highlights
President Pete McClymont welcomed everyone at 9:15 a.m. and introduced Weldon Sleight, Jo Bek, Dave Smith and Seth Hasenauer who provided an overview of NCTA. President McClymont introduced Gary Roberts, Central Nebraska Livestock Commission, who is the new ex-officio NC Board of Directors LMA representative.
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Youth Leadership Symposium Encourages Commitment to Beef Industry

The fourth annual Nebraska Youth Beef Leadership Symposium will be held November 4-6 at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s Animal Science Department. The symposium is a dynamic, interactive program designed for high school juniors, but sophomores and seniors can also participate. We want to help students become “corner posts for tomorrow’s beef industry”!

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Thoughts on Trade

By Michael Kelsey

No matter what political affiliation you claim, we all have at least one thing in common – trade. We all do it, maybe not on a global scale, maybe only at your local grocery or lumber store. On second thought, that can be dependent upon global trade as well.


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Nebraska’a Valuable Natural
Natural resources are arguably Nebraska’s most critical element to the cultural and financial well being of our state’s future. For argument’s sake, lets examine the value of our state’s natural resources in the context of ranching, ethanol from corn production, cattle feeding with distillers grains and gluten referenced back to land and water.
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Nebraska Corn-Fed Beef Returns to NC
Nebraska Corn-Fed Beef, Inc., is adapting to the current business atmosphere of the cattle industry and is making changes to the program that has served Nebraska cattlemen and women for 10 years. The NCFB mission was to provide added value for Nebraska producers who participated in the Program and to provide a branded product to consumers, guaranteeing them a pleasant dining experience. Mission accomplished!
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Nebraska’s Burdensome Estate Tax

Nebraska Cattlemen members need to be aware of the Nebraska estate tax burden imposed on Nebraska residents. All NC members, their families and tax advisers are encouraged to aggressively seek a repeal of the tax.


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Membership Myth Busters

By Melody Benjamin

    The best part of the Member Services job is the time we spend with members and prospective members. However, there are a number of misperceptions around the country about what Nebraska Cattlemen members represent. Following are some reoccurring myths that the staff hears constantly, as well as the “busted” myth.


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Market Reporting Service Offers Web Site and Text Messaging

By Jeff Stole

Over 250 feedyards throughout Nebraska, Iowa and South Dakota now have the advantage of receiving up-to-the-minute fed-cattle market information and breaking industry news at a new level of speed, convenience and flexibility via the Market Reporting Service (MRS) Web site and text messaging service (detailed later in this article). At an additional cost of only $20 per month to Market Reporting Service subscribers, the information package offered by the MRS Web site is unmatched in its ability to put real-time and historical market information at customers’ fingertips, whether those cattle feeders are in the office, in the yard reading bunks, in the combine picking corn, or three states away taking delivery of feeder cattle.


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IRS Extends Livestock Replacement Period

The Internal Revenue Service is allowing cattle producers impacted by the nation’s ongoing drought additional time to purchase replacement property for livestock they were forced to sell

The agency has granted an extension of the capital gains tax deferment for cattle producers who previously sold cattle as a result of drought-related conditions. Producers will have until one year after the drought ends to defer their capital gains or purchase replacement cattle.


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Ranchers Get in on Ethanol Boom with Energy-Packed Distillers Grain

By Don Hutchens

Corn growers and ranchers in Nebraska have something new in common – distillers grains. For years, the feedlot industry has been getting used to feeding wet distillers grains, and it appears Nebraska will be home to many more ethanol plants, which are expected to produce nearly 6 million tons of distillers grain by 2010.

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Nebraska’s Golden Triangle

By Duane Gangwish

    Nebraska has, as some have coined it, the Golden Triangle ‑ cattle, corn and ethanol! As I see it, the glass is half-full and the glass is getting bigger.
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NC Board of Directors Meeting Highlights

August 8, Whitman

President Pete McClymont welcomed everyone to the Gudmundsen Sandhills Lab at 8:10.

Don Adams and Andy Applegarth provided an overview of the Lab.


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NC Takes a Realistic View Toward Working with Legislature

By Pete McClymont

With Nebraska facing historic changes in its next Unicameral legislature, it ‘s an appropriate time to consider some elements of our state’s political process and how Nebraska Cattlemen is involved.


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NC R&E Foundation Announces 2006 Scholarship Winners

The Nebraska Cattlemen Research and Education Foundation (NC R&EF) announced the winners of its scholarships during the Nebraska Cattlemen/Cattlewomen Midyear Conference in Holdrege in June.


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Cattle Feeding Emerging in Kazakhstan

I was intrigued when Dave Hutchison, retired Texas A&M beef nutritionist, approached me earlier this year about a feedlot consulting opportunity in Kazakhstan. Easthides of London started a feedlot near Almaty, Kazakhstan, and was looking to grow its current yard from 625 head to 50,000. A 2005 feasibility study concluded that a large feedlot would be profitable, so a trial lot began. The company wanted a feedlot consultant for a three-month commitment to help with management problems. I knew I couldn’t commit that long since farming and the dehy season was on the horizon here at home, but we had an interest and some knowledge of the country from hosting a Kazak exchange student who had stayed in Nebraska.

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How Can We Help?
The value a Nebraska Cattlemen membership can be reflected in many ways. Many NC members make the choice to be members because they want to take an active role in establishing policy for the industry. Some decide on membership for representation of their interests to legislators and regulators. Still others pay dues so that they can be kept abreast of information through NC’s communications and educational seminars. A few members have said that they belong because of other people who are members. However, the greatest part of being a member could be that NC is a group of people with integrity, compassion and values that each of you can be proud to be a part of.
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BQA – A Matter of Integrity

Executive Vice President’s Perspective
By Michael Kelsey
“Because it’s the right thing to do!”

I remember those words from a very good friend and beef producer, Burke Healey. Burke was a leader not only in the beef industry, but in many other respects as well. I have often stopped to reflect on many of Burke’s comments and actions. Sports figures often occupy the hero status for boys and young men. Burke was a hero in the beef industry!


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Beef Documentary Production Underway

It has been a long time coming, but the documentary being co-produced by the Nebraska State Historical Society and NET (Nebraska Educational Telecommunications) is officially underway. In late June and early July, senior producer Olive “Mel” Bucklin made a scouting trip to the Nebraska panhandle. Later in July, her travels took her north to visit the area around Bassett.

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August issue of NC Magazine Published!

The latest issue of Nebraska Cattlemen Magazine is now available online! View it at: www.nebraskacattlemen.org

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NC Unveils Plan to Help UNL Through Budget Crunch

About a year ago, concerned with 10 years of declining agricultural enrollment at the University of Nebraska, NC President Tom Hansen formed a task force to see how this association could help out the college.


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2006 Is Shaping up as Year of Contra-Seasonal Price Moves

The first half of 2006 was anything but business-as-usual from a fed-cattle marketer’s perspective. The fed market struggled as low as the upper $70s on a live basis in late April and early May, and then rallied back to the lower to mid $80s into mid to late June. A number of factors were involved in this contra-seasonal pattern, and some of them will continue to affect the fed market through the second half of the year.


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In This Market, There’s More Reason to Use USDA’s Insurance

With on-again, off-again import and export trade agreements and quickly changing domestic consumer beef demand characterizing the past couple of years, it seems that cattle prices have become more volatile. And the data supports it. The coefficient of variation (a “unitless” measure of risk created by dividing standard deviation by the average) for fed-cattle futures increased from 8.11 percent during 1990-2000 to 11.77 percent during 2001-05. Similarly, feeder-cattle futures saw an increase in its coefficient of variation from 11.53 percent to 14 percent during this period.


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Nebraska to Get Its Own Leopold Conservation Award

NC is partnering with the Sand County Foundation, a Wisconsin conservation group, to help sponsor the foundation’s first Aldo Leopold Conservation Award in the state. The news was announced at NC’s Midyear Conference in June at Holdrege.

Nominations are due Aug. 18 for the $10,000 prize, which goes to a Nebraska landowner who demonstrates responsible stewardship and management of natural resources.


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Feedlots Can’t Stand in the Way of Change
Agriculture is the foundation for economic prosperity in Nebraska. The feedlot sector of the beef industry will continue to contribute with exciting opportunities ahead. The growth of the ethanol industry within the state will provide byproducts like distiller’s grain that allow Nebraska feedlots a chance to explore new competitive advantages.
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Pay Attention to Replacement Cost of Structures

For many reasons – hurricanes, cost of petroleum and inflation – the past three years have shown tremendous pressure on the cost of building structures of all types. Whether it is a dwelling, machine shed, feed mill, office or other type of structure, the cost to build new has increased in many instances by at least 15 to 30 percent. With that in mind, cattlemen, especially feedlots with their computerized feed mills and extensive constructed facilities, should consider a review to verify that current limits of insurance are adequate.


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EVP Column: Campaign Promises: Theirs and Ours

Election years come and go. It seems that when they come, so do parades, politics and of course promises. Campaign promises have become more disguised. I haven’t heard a politician say “Read my lips” lately, but promises still abound. Of course, the promise is usually tailored to the audience being addressed.