AJ TaylorFebruary 21, 2021Last Updated: February 28, 2021
The Iowa State University Extension and Outreach dairy team will continue its quarterly dairy goat webinar focusing on “Strategic Kid Management” March 3, 2021, from noon to 1:15 p.m., CST.
This webinar will focus on situating the next generation of replacement does for a successful future. Multiple contagious diseases are transmitted to young goats right around kidding.
During this webinar, Roselle Busch, assistant specialist in Cooperative Extension at UC-Davis, will discuss why recommended management practices help to control and minimize the spread of disease in your herd.
“I will cover the basics for healthy kids in the first month, going over colostrum management, use of automated feeders, and then get into the role that different kid rearing strategies play in mitigating disease transmission,” Busch noted.
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As a conductor of the Underground Railroad, Marylander Harriet Tubman based her operations in St. Catharines, a Canadian town in the province of Ontario just 15 miles from the U.S. border.
Posted: Jan 19, 2021 1:09 PM ET | Last Updated: January 19
The church started fundraising in 2017, and needed thousands to meet Ontario accessibility standards.(Salem Chapel BME)
A 165-year-old Niagara church built by Harriet Tubman and other freed slaves will be preserved for future generations, says one of the trustees and historians behind its restoration effort.
Salem Chapel British Methodist Episcopal church in St. Catharines has been in a state of disrepair and was a safety concern.
Last week, the church was approved for a $100,000 grant through the federal Supporting Black Canadian Communities Initiative, says Rochelle Bush. We re very happy we received the funding, Bush told CBC News. We are extremely grateful because the church will now be preserved for future generations.
Who decides who is Black enough, advocate asks, after hundreds of groups denied federal funding
The Afro Canadian Caribbean Association wants to know “who decides who is Black enough” after Employment and Social Development Canada via a “completely unacceptable” letter rejected hundreds of applications for funding under a program for Black community groups.
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