David Haupt has joined the Center for Agricultural Profitability as a financial analyst, offering free, confidential one-on-one consultations to help Nebraska farmers and ranchers evaluate financial decisions and strengthen their business plans.
David Haupt has joined the Center for Agricultural Profitability as a financial analyst, offering free, confidential one-on-one consultations to help Nebraska farmers and ranchers evaluate financial decisions and strengthen their business plans.
A wealth of research has linked protein to favorable lifestyle markers such as healthy body weight and/or weight loss, maintaining and building muscle, and overall diet satisfaction. Plus Nebraska-raised beef is simply delicious.
Local feedlot owner Preston Franzen stands near the feeding bunk of a pen of feeder calves at his Franzen Feeders yards near Stockham. As a former Western Nebraska ranch kid and now the president of the York-Hamilton County Cattlemen, he loves to talk about the challenges, opportunities and future of the beef industry.
Ethan Freese uses a tool called a drip torch to drop burning fuel into the dry grass at Gjerloff Prairie on April 30 as part of a controlled burn.
Sarah Bailey, PPRI’s conservation and education director, helps with a control burn April 30 on the Gjerloff Prairie west of Marquette.
Weather, drought and the daily demands of farming and ranching can take a toll on mental well-being. Healthy coping strategies, support resources and early recognition of stress can help Nebraska producers protect their health, their families and their operations.
A Case IH 2388 combine with a John Deere 1293 corn head is shown outside the Bish Enterprises shop in this photo from the late 1990s to early 2000s. (Bish Enterprises photo)
Beck’s plant manager Ryan Petr stands in front of a seed corn bagging/boxing machine in the huge processing facility near Phillips. Though empty now, the plant will begin to fill up with locally harvested seed corn starting in September.
Along with the excitement and enthusiasm produced by the advent of a new planting season often come anxiety and depression brought on by the uncertainties and increased isolation that come with it. Counselor Annie De La Cruz of Seeds of Change Counseling says farmers and their families need to be aware of the warning signs of depression.
How farmland is titled can significantly affect whether heirs receive a full, partial, or no stepped-up basis. Understanding these ownership structures can help Nebraska farm and ranch families make more informed transition and estate planning decisions.