Farm Today barn
 Top  Five  Ag  Exports  in  PA
Milk and other dairy products

Poultry and eggs

Nursery, greenhouse, floriculture, and sod

Cattle and calves

Hogs and pigs

 

 Financial  Services  
 

 Recent  Trends  in  Agriculture  
 

 Agricultural  Directory  
 

 Mailing  List  Archives
 

farm land for sale

feeding operations

backgrounding facility planning

strawberries how to raise

fruit trees

olin sims

crape myrtle

leyland cyprus

fairfax strawberries

dwarf citrus trees

wheat diseases in pennsylvania

plum pox disease

drying gourds

sonic bloom

feeder steer prices

planting strawberries

how to prune a jasmine vine

tomato blossom drop

flowering bradford pear

drying goards

gleening crops

avian flu

bioaerosols and livestock odor

dwarf oleander

cocoa hull mulch

crab farming

john deere

plum trees

lime fertilizer

feeding lots

farming practices

chronic wasting disease

amyrillis bulbs

leyland cyprus spittle bugs

chicken manure

msds and shrimp shell

pictures of sheep

crape myrtle winter

christmas cactus

peach leaf curl

spittle bugs

strawberries in Idaho

iowa pork industry

lefse plant

locating livestock facilities

mad cow disease

dwarf milo

search your own discussions

chigger elimination

lonicera kamchatika

leyland cypress

willie ray doshier

corn detasseling

leyland cyprus trees

bouganvilla pests

operators race

 

 Search  Categories  
Animals
Environmental
Field Crops
Forestry
Genetics
Horticulture
Pests and Diseases
Practices and Systems
Software
Soils
Sustainability
Insurance

 

From: Richard and Carol Conklin (graze-l_at_witt.ac.nz)
Date: 09/01/04


Dave, Your note below contains some of the most positive and stimulating
information I've ever received on any Ag. list! Assuming the info is
correct, what can Farmers do to accelerate the development? Dick
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gneisers" <bonniedave@dotnet.com>
To: <graze-l@witt.ac.nz>
Sent: Monday, August 30, 2004 2:35 AM
Subject: Re: [Graze-l] [SPAM] - Alternative fuels - Found word(s) farm in
the Text body


> >>Does the technology of ethanol production lend itself to on-farm
production?
> >
> >Sure does, after all thousands of moonshiners did it with hardly any
> >technology. <G>
> >
> >Seriously, the biggest obstacle to increasing the use of fuels like
> >biodiesel (where ethanol is used to manufacture it) and ethanol are
> >the archaic rules and regulations regarding distilled spirits. Trying
> >to get a permit to distill ethanol from local sources (we have a lot
> >of things locally that would be good sources) is impossible. Heck,
> >even trying to get a microbrewery or winery license is a PITA!
> >--
> >Oogie McGuire - oogiem@desertweyr.com
>
>
> This is really solar energy at work.  Grazers utilize solar power in the
> form of grass-legume growth to make milk and/or meat.  Corn is a product
of
> solar power, the results are harvested and some of that grain will be
> converted to ethanol.
>
> The spent mash has almost all the starch removed in the fermentation
> process.  But the protein remains along with some other good things.
Lot's
> of dairymen around here feeding the wet mash in the ration now, especially
> when soybean prices went out of sight last winter.   Dried distillers
grain
> has been fed in rations for years.
>
> The biodiesel area is coming along slower than ethanol.  Heck, ethanol
> isn't new.  Henry Ford originally designed the Model T to run on ethanol.
> Soy diesel will be a standard blend into the new, low sulfur, diesel fuels
> (clean air rules) in order to enhance lubrication of engine pistons.
> Otherwise the low sulfur diesel is too dry and those pistons could suffer
> damage from it.
>
> All of this may make the consumer aware of the value farmers are to them.
> Seems to be a disconnect between food in the supermarkets and where it
> actually originates.
>
> Dave G.
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Graze-l mailing list
> Graze-l@witt.ac.nz
> http://graze-l.witt.ac.nz/mailman/listinfo/graze-l
>

Headlines via AgMetaSearchsm ..




FarmToday, The Internet Home for Today's Farmers.. (sm)

Copyright © 2008 Creative Business Concepts
All Rights Reserved





Get Adobe Reader Get Microsoft Office





Thursday, November 20, 2008

Pennsylvania


Dauphin County Edition

Zip Code:  
The zipcode value determines localized news and weather content.
Overcast
Current Conditions in
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania

Weather Advisories

Last Updated:10:56 AM EST November 20, 2008
Conditions:Overcast
Temperature:36° F
Wind Chill:36° F
Humidity:62%
Dew Point:24° F
Wind:North at 0 MPH
Pressure:29.90 Inches
Visibility:10.0 Miles
Sun Rise:06:59 AM
Sun Set:04:46 PM
Moon Rise:No Moon Rise
Moon Set:01:07 PM


U.S. Department of Agriculture

Weekly Weather and Crop Bulletin



paper clip

 Education Key For Migrants

 Funding Needed For Mobile Ag Lab

 A Learning Experience: Fair Queens Reign Over Pa. Agriculture

 Liquor Committee Uncorks Wine Bill

 Opponents, Advocates Hash Out Where Turbines Should Go At Brief Meeting

 Pa. Farmers Should Apply For Funds By Oct. 31

 A Passion

 State Conference Addresses The Balance Between Agriculture And Environment

 Pa. Agriculture Attorneys Allowed To Prosecute Dog-law Violations

 Turnbach Farm Latest Preserved


paper clip

 Area Opposition Group Gains Steam

 Finding Answers To The Farm Bill

 Packing Industry Consolidation Concerns Montana Cattlemen

 AG Secretary ED Schafer Announces Cattlemens Beef Board Appointments

 Cooper Lets Music Shine, Expresses Thanks To Hospice Volunteers

 Watts Water Technologies Recalls Rotor And Shaft Assemblies Due To Fire Hazard

 Indiana Soldiers Train For New Front: Farming

 Two More Rochester Dogs Ordered Restrained After Attacks

 Higher Protein Meals Help Keep The Fat Away

 Inflation Hits Thanksgiving Dinner


paper clip


RSS



Site Map

More Links