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Livestock precision tools needn t be costly or complex

Livestock farmers coping with multiple production cost hikes have little choice but eliminate non-essential inputs and use essential ones as…

Un journaliste gravement blessé par balles à Amsterdam

Choc aux Pays-Bas après une attaque par balles contre un journaliste Un journaliste gravement blessé par balles à Amsterdam / Le Journal horaire / 47 sec. / aujourd hui à 02:00 Un journaliste néerlandais spécialisé dans les affaires criminelles se trouvait mercredi matin toujours à l hôpital, grièvement blessé par balles la veille au soir à Amsterdam lors d une attaque qui a choqué le pays entier et qui a été qualifiée de crime contre la liberté de la presse par le gouvernement et l Union européenne. Selon les dernières informations officielles, le journaliste, Peter R. de Vries, très connu aux Pays-Bas, se battait pour rester en vie. Des rumeurs circulant sur les réseaux sociaux, selon lesquelles il serait décédé, ont été qualifiées de fausses par l hôpital où il a été admis.

OFF RADAR: simple cells and Bashō in Acadia

OFF RADAR: ‘simple cells’ and ‘Bashō in Acadia’ Former Puckerbrush Review contributor Mark Rutter’s words at play By Dana Wilde “simple cells” by Mark Rutter; InkConcrete, United Kingdom, 2020; 72 pages, paperback, $6.26. Readers who remember the now-retired Puckerbrush Review may be interested to find out that Mark Rutter, a frequent contributor to the magazine, is still hard at work in his home in England and has a new collection of poems, “simple cells.” UMaine professor Constance Hunting founded the influential Puckerbrush Review in 1978, editing and publishing it until her death in 2006; Sanford Phippen then took up the reins for six more years, and the last issue appeared in 2012, a long and distinguished run for a small literary magazine. Rutter, who taught writing at the UMaine Orono and UMaine Machias in the 1990s and 2000s, is a poet well-known to Puckerbrush and Down East readers. He returned to his native England in 2003 and now teaches at the U

They don t belong in a concrete shed – cows still happiest outside | Farm animals

Last modified on Sat 3 Apr 2021 04.25 EDT It’s springtime in the UK and hundreds of thousands of cows are being let outside for the first time since the onset of winter. Social media is full of videos of the animals joyfully jumping and galloping as they rush through farm gates into grassy fields. It’s always a great day when our Mixed Breed Herd of Dairy Cows come skipping back out into the fields! After spending the past few winter months sheltering from the cold and rain in our barn, this joyful moment signifies warmer times ahead as we move into spring.Look at them go! pic.twitter.com/xhyoSlb1yP Riverford Dairy (@riverforddairy) March 4, 2021

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