15 research outputs found
Biennial report - Kansas State Board of Agriculture.
Other slight variations in title.Mode of access: Internet
Report.
Vols. for 1874-76 include also "Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science."Report year irregular.Vols. for 1874-76 include also "Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science."Mode of access: Internet
Centennial edition of the fourth annual report of the State Board of Agriculture to the legislature of the state of Kansas, for the year ending November 30, 1875 /
Mode of access: Internet
Report.
1969/70-1975/76 also called Annual report.1961/62-1975/76 includes separately paged section called Farm facts.1953-56-1975/76 also called Kansas agriculture.1874-1976 include also "Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science", 1874-1876.Annual, 1872-1876.Mode of access: Internet.Title varies: 1872, Transactions of the Kansas State Board of Agriculture; 1873, Report of the State Board of Agriculture; 1874, The third annual report to the Legislature of Kansas; 1875-1976, Fourth-fifth annual report of the State Board of Agriculture; 1877-78-1883-84, first-fourth biennial report [etc.]; 1885-86-1951-52, Fifth-thirty eighth biennial report of the Kansas State Board of Agriculture
Milking the plains: movement of large dairy operations into southwestern Kansas
Western Kansas has an historical identification with cattle, with a focus on cattle ranching and more specifically since the 1950s, beef-cattle feedlots. Since the mid-1990s large dairy operations have moved into southwestern Kansas. Today more than twenty large dairies house more than 70,000 milk cows. These operate as confined feeding operations similar to beef-cattle feedlots. Regional advantages for the dairy industry include affordable land with wide-open space, local residentsâ cattle- and dairy-friendly attitudes, and other factors. Regional promoters have actively recruited dairies, and a dairy-business support system has emerged. The prospects for continued expansion of dairies in southwestern Kansas are unclear; despite the locational advantages and the possibility that the industry may continue to relocate here, as did the cattle-feeding industry several decades ago, further moves into the area may depend on continued resources availability and additional infrastructure development