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School for
Successful Ranching set for March 23-24
FORT
WORTH, Texas, December 21, 2006―Both novice and seasoned
beef cattle producers can learn proven methods for “Running
Your Ranch Like A Business” from renowned instructors at
Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association’s 2007
School for Successful Ranching.
The
13th annual school, scheduled for March 23-24 in conjunction
with TSCRA’s 130th annual convention in Fort Worth, will
feature presentations from staff of Texas Christian
University’s Ranch Management Program and the Noble
Foundation. Sponsors are Dow AgroSciences and Pfizer Animal
Health.
TCU’s
Ranch Management program, based in Fort Worth, has been
training some of the best ranch managers in the business since
1955. Alumni currently manage an estimated 7.7 million acres
of land and 740,000 head of cattle around the world.
The
Noble Foundation’s Agricultural Division has been providing
regional producers with consultation, education, research and
demonstration services since 1945. The division serves 47
counties in Texas and Oklahoma within a 100-mile radius of the
foundation’s headquarters in Ardmore Okla.
School
topics will include managing native pastures, business
principles, bull selection, basic herd health and nutrition,
fences and fenceline weaning, land fragmentation, managing
improved pastures, adding market value to a calf crop and
theft prevention tips. All presenters will participate in a
wrap-up panel discussion on “How do you make this ranch run
like a business?’”
Sessions
will be held from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Friday, March 23 and 8
a.m. to noon on Saturday, March 24. CEU’s will be offered
for the Texas Beef Quality Producer Program and the Society
for Range Management.
A $100 registration fee ($60 for TSCRA members) covers
presentations and a hot lunch on both days. As a bonus, school
participants will be admitted free to TSCRA’s 250-exhibit
trade show on both days.
Deadline
for pre-registration is March 14, 2007. To register online go
to www.texascattleraisers.org .For more information, call Mark
Perrier at 1 (800) 242-7820, ext. 118 or e-mail mperrier@texascattleraisers.org
. Onsite registration will be held from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m. on
Friday, March 23; classroom presentations begin at 8 a.m.:
Friday, March 23
8
a.m. to 10 a.m.
Range and Pasture Management―Managing Native
Pastures, presented by Kerry Cornelius, TCU Ranch
Management. Includes principles of growth, reproduction and
management of rangeland. Also, adjusting stocking rates,
distribution of grazing, grazing methods and supporting
practices.
Basic
Herd Health & Nutrition, presented by Eric Brast, TCU
Ranch Management. Because you can’t manage what you don’t
measure, this session will explore how to use records
(production records, benchmarking records, etc.) to develop a
business plan for your ranch. Also examines the various types
of risk associated with ranching (production risk, market
risk, basis risk, etc.)
10 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.
Break
10:30 a.m. to noon ―Four concurrent sessions
Bull Selection, presented by Chris Farley, TCU
Ranch Management. What’s available to help you in selecting
your next genetics, i.e., your bull power? Considers goals of
the ranch, characteristics of the cow herd, establishing
target markets, evaluating bull selection tools, economics of
heritability, physical bull characteristics and determining
bull value.
Basic
Herd Health & Nutrition, presented by Eric Brast, TCU
Ranch Management. Rediscover how basic herd health and
nutrition interact. Looks at basic herd heath programs for the
cow herd and the calf crop, including what vaccinations to
give and when. Plus, value-added practices in health and
nutrition you can use at the cow-calf level to expand
marketing opportunities for your calf crop.
Fences
and Fenceline Weaning, presented by Chuck Coffey, Noble
Foundation. Learn about the cost, design and construction of
fences. Also, using fences to manage grazing and a low-stress
technique for weaning calves in their own familiar pasture.
Land
Fragmentation, presented by Dr. Neal Wilkins, Texas
A&M University; Russell Stevens, Noble Foundation; and
Scott Boyd, Noble Foundation. Describes land fragmentation
trends, managing in a fragmenting landscape by negotiating
good grazing leases with landowners, and how landowners with
small acreages are banding together for wildlife management
areas.
Noon
to 1 p.m.
Hot lunch provided.
1
p.m. to 3 p.m.
Managing Improved Pastures, presented by Kerry
Cornelius, TCU Ranch Management. Learn about utilizing
fertilizer, stockpiled forage, limit grazing in improved
pastures and how to manage thin stands, weeds and roots. Also
covers mining of nutrients, stocking rates and costs of
improved pastures.
Business
Principles (morning session repeated)
3 p.m.
TSCRA Trade Show opens
Saturday, March 24
8
a.m. to 10 a.m.
Health, Nutrition and Adding Market Value To A Calf
Crop, presented by Jeff Geider and Eric Brast, TCU Ranch
Management. Who buys your calves and why? How do your calves
perform for your customers? Why are these questions important
to your animal husbandry duties? This session answers all
these questions and shows how health and nutrition programs
can enhance or hurt marketability.
How
to keep your cattle and equipment from being stolen,
presented by TSCRA’s Law Enforcement Division. Special
Rangers reveal how they solved some recent high-profile cases
and describe the best ways to protect your property.
11 a.m. to noon
Panel discussion and wrap up. A panel composed
of all school speakers and moderated by John Merrill, sums up
“How To Make Your Ranch Run Like a Business.”
Noon
Lunch in the Trade Show
TSCRA President Dick Sherron reminds producers that
they don’t have to be a TSCRA Members to attend the school.
“Don’t
miss this school,” says Sherron. “Learning to run your
ranch like a business will increase your personal profit
opportunities. And producers who run their ranches like a
business improve the profit potential for all of us!”
Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association is a
129-year-old trade organization whose 14,300 members manage
approximately 4.9 million cattle on 66.6 million acres of
range and pasture land, primarily in Texas and Oklahoma.
TSCRA-30-2006 |