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Farmers Await Details on Second Round of Trade Aid Payments

 
USDA is expected to soon announce the details of a second round of assistance for soybean, wheat, sorghum, cotton, dairy and pork farmers hurt by upheaval in foreign markets.
 
The most damaging of the trade disruptions are steep tariffs put in place by China on many U.S. agricultural goods as China and the U.S. go tariff-for-tariff in a trade war. With aggregate agricultural exports to China falling more than 65 percent year-over-year in August 2018, the list of U.S. commodities under pressure is long. For example, total dairy and pork product exports to China have fallen by nearly half in recent months, while soybean exports were down 97 percent in the first two months of the new marketing year.
 
The first round of Market Facilitation Program payments was announced in late August and will help support farm income this year and help family farmers service the record levels of agricultural debt they hold. In many cases, the MFP payments are being used as collateral for operating loans, American Farm Bureau Federation President Zippy Duvall noted in a letter to Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue.
 
In the run-up to USDA’s announcement that it had decided to move forward with the second—and final—round of MFP payments, Farm Bureau urged the department not to eliminate or reduce the trade aid.
 
“Instead, we propose you both evaluate the ongoing trade damages and reconsider the great need for more Market Facilitation Program payments to be delivered expeditiously to farmers and ranchers. With debt at record levels, operating loans increasing substantially, and debt-to-asset ratios climbing even more, financial support is needed across agriculture,” Duvall emphasized in the letter.
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Cleaning Sheep Barns & Setting Up Chutes

Video: Cleaning Sheep Barns & Setting Up Chutes

Indoor sheep farming in winter at pre-lambing time requires that, at Ewetopia Farms, we need to clean out the barns and manure in order to keep the sheep pens clean, dry and fresh for the pregnant ewes to stay healthy while indoors in confinement. In today’s vlog, we put fresh bedding into all of the barns and we remove manure from the first groups of ewes due to lamb so that they are all ready for lambs being born in the next few days. Also, in preparation for lambing, we moved one of the sorting chutes to the Coveralls with the replacement ewe lambs. This allows us to do sorting and vaccines more easily with them while the barnyard is snow covered and hard to move sheep safely around in. Additionally, it frees up space for the second groups of pregnant ewes where the chute was initially.