Search Site   
Current News Stories
Indiana Soybean Alliance donates tires containing soybean oil for state FFA vehicle
Ohio Roth Scholar hopes to show young people the jobs available in ag
Kristen Eisenhauer took her love of farming to the classroom
UK study looks at impact of arthroscopic surgery on horses with knee chips
Controlled breeding, calving season can improve efficiency
Alto Ingredients hosts facility tour  and discusses year round E15
Horses on the Hill brings therapy, beauty to Cincinnati neighborhood
Farmers learning from farmers at Purdue-sponsored farm visit 
Iowa State: Relay cropping could help improve farm profitability, soil health, crop diversity
Field day at Purdue to focus on the benefits of drainage tile
Brazil’s farm economy outlook bleak; interest rates, commodity values cited
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
Indiana Junior Beef Cattle Association names grant recipients
 
INDIANAPOLIS – The Indiana Junior Beef Cattle Association (IJBCA) has awarded $500 grants to two Indiana county 4-H extension programs. This is the first year for the IJBCA to offer a grant to youth organizations in Indiana. The purpose of the IJBCA Grant is to fund organizations that intend to further support and promote Indiana’s beef industry.
The grant recipients are Adams County 4-H and Purdue Extension Area Two (Harrison, Crawford, Orange, Lawrence, Jackson, Washington, Scott, Clark and Floyd Counties).
Adams County plans to utilize the grant to purchase The Ohio State University Extension Beef Learning Lab Kit. This kit will provide educational hands-on materials for their beef committee to utilize when putting on a Beef Day of Education. Amy Rumschlag, Adams County 4-H youth development extension educator, said it’s been a personal mission of hers to educate the youth in Adams County 4-H that they are so much more than “little ole rural Indiana farm kids raising animals for the 4-H Fair.”
Purdue Extension Area Two will utilize the grant to create a Feed Lab Kit that will help achieve education in livestock nutrition through hands-on activities for 4-H members. “Youth participating in livestock activities...need access to materials to teach and guide them toward good management and stewardship of their animals,” said Miranda Edge, Harrison County agriculture and natural resources extension educator. Edge said that one of the most important and costly parts of raising livestock is creating a cost-effective, well-balanced diet.
6/10/2021