Monday, November 25, 2024
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Conservation compliance is a big part of new farm bill.

The low whimpering and muffled whining heard in farm country this month are not the gripes and grunts of corn and soybean growers trudging through 2015's purgatory of under-$4 corn and less-than-$10 beans.

Meetings to educate producers and landowners.

A proposed rule change announced by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Dec. 15 would expand an exemption from national research and promotion check off orders to include 95 percent organic farmers, handlers, marketers and importers — otherwise known as “primary organic” operations.

Landowners will need to decide whether or not to update their property’s crop yields and determine whether or not to re-allocate the farm’s base acres by Feb. 27.
data

Today, more than 60 percent of farmers have access to precision technology, and about 90 percent of farm machinery can connect to the Internet and transmit data, but almost all of that data isn't used by farmers.

Plenty to criticize in the new farm bill.
FSR 2014 ag econ

The 2014 Farm Science Review is underway, with new terms and technologies on display.

Dairy and ag economics experts from Ohio State University's College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences will hold meetings across Ohio as part of an effort to help farmers learn more about the 2014 farm bill and how it will impact dairy producers.

Expert panel moderated by Ohio Farmers Union will include federal experts.