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Displaying 1601 - 1610 of 4117
Capital Managed
136,076114,169 Breeding Livestock68 166,979146,320 Machinery … Expense (%)86 23.61 % Avg Livestock Inventories and Sales Beef …
Farm Type
82 Poultry and Eggs5 0 Other Livestock6 -60 Custom Feeding7 2,634 Feed … Purchased8 -130,645-9,845 Livestock Value Produced9 $286,114$43,717 Corn10 … 12,6962,247 Crop Storage-Marketing32 3541,661 …
Census Acres
9,155 Poultry and Eggs5 Other Livestock6 139 Custom Feeding7 Feed … Purchased8 -33,409-54,203 Livestock Value Produced9 $37,786$66,822 Corn10 … 1,7462,573 Crop Storage-Marketing32 5169 …
Capital Managed
253,514223,034 Breeding Livestock68 209,961210,366 Machinery … Expense (%)86 23.39 % Avg Livestock Inventories and Sales Beef …
Acreage
73 Swine4 Poultry and Eggs5 28 Other Livestock6 -1961,390 Custom Feeding7 Feed … Purchased8 -22,167-2,902 Livestock Value Produced9 $53,412$5,314 Corn10 … 5,6643,759 Vet-Med-Drugs31 3,701427 Crop Storage-Marketing32 892124 …
May 9, 2016 USDA METSS Project
16 Crop Marketing Activities in 2012 … 38 Marketing and Product Utilization … by Month and Distance to Market
December 1, 2012 Farm Business and Transition Planning
in machinery, land, and livestock all need to add adequate … producers work with the weather, markets, and other issues. Identification … plan. It may involve crop or livestock enterprise budgets, cash …
May 1, 2018 Production Publications, KFMA Research
                                                                                                                                                    1  A Sample of Kansas Farm Management Association Members Use and  Effects of Continuous No‐Tillage1    Jeffery R. Williams, Professor, Department of Agricultural Economics, Kansas State University  Jason S. Bergtold, Professor, Department of Agricultural Economics, Kansas State University  Elizabeth Canales, Assistant Professor, Department of Agricultural Economics,  Mississippi State University  Noah T. Scrimsher, Undergraduate Student, Department of Agricultural Economics,  Kansas State University    April 30, 2018        No‐Tillage is a common conservation practice on many farms in Kansas and likely one of the first in‐field  conservation practices to be adopted by farmers. An intensification of this practice would be to move from using no‐ tillage for a specific crop to continuous no‐tillage, where no‐till is used for all crops in a rotation. Adoption and  intensification of tillage practices is based on the perceived benefits and costs from the practice. This article examines  the use of no‐tillage practices by farmers in Kansas.   A study was conducted examining farm conservation practice adoption, development and experience in  Kansas in 2013‐2014. Part of this study surveyed a sample of farms from the Kansas Farm Management Association  (KFMA). The KFMA has approximately 2,300 farms across Kansas in their database that produce crops and livestock.  Approximately 76% of th …