Monday, August 4, 2008
Week 12-The Last One
This week I have just been piecing together all the information I have gathered this summer and calling producers I wasn't able to meet with this summer. I'm going to miss traveling to farms and meeting different people and learning about different production set-ups. When I look back, I have learned so much this summer about the importance of Michigan Milk Producers in the dairy industry, the set-up and operation of a dairy production, and the role I want to play in it someday as a large animal veterinarian. I have been honored to have had the opportunity to work with MMPA and be chosen as their Summer Food Systems Fellowship and am looking forward to sharing my experience with others in the vet school.
Thank you to everyone who has made this opportunity such a success and I look forward to seeing what else is accomplished with this program in the future!
Week 11-Wrapping Up
This week was my last week to finish traveling to all the farms. It's hard to believe that this summer is already almost over and the Summer Food Systems Fellowship is almost completed. I spent a lot of time in the car this week because most of the farms I had left to go to were farther away. In the beginning of the week I traveled up to the Cadillac area and went to a farm that I was saving until the end of the summer. They recently just finished a new parlor and installed new equipment that they've been trying to get set up properly. After tracking the owner down in a hay field, I was able to learn more about their production and how MMPA has been essential in their expansion and development of their new set-up.
I got a kick out of their barn sign:
Later in the week I traveled up around the coast from Spruce, Alpena, Cheboygan, Petoskey, and ended in Traverse City. It was interesting to learn up there how much they rely on MMPA to analyze their milking equipment. There are very few dealers up there who will evaluate equipment like MMPA and when they do, they often charge a ridiculous amount and are dishonest. I heard from several people that they will get charged a dollar a minute to just call a dealer or go into the store and talk to someone! It was good to talk to these producers and learn how much they appreciate and rely on this service MMPA provides.
It was neat while I was in Traverse City I stopped at Leelaneau Cheese Company. I had heard about it from a field rep I worked with earlier this summer. They are famous for their Raclette cheese which comes from cow's milk from the Garvin farm west of Cedar, Michigan. I thought it was neat to see their milk truck parked outside!
I got a kick out of their barn sign:
Later in the week I traveled up around the coast from Spruce, Alpena, Cheboygan, Petoskey, and ended in Traverse City. It was interesting to learn up there how much they rely on MMPA to analyze their milking equipment. There are very few dealers up there who will evaluate equipment like MMPA and when they do, they often charge a ridiculous amount and are dishonest. I heard from several people that they will get charged a dollar a minute to just call a dealer or go into the store and talk to someone! It was good to talk to these producers and learn how much they appreciate and rely on this service MMPA provides.
It was neat while I was in Traverse City I stopped at Leelaneau Cheese Company. I had heard about it from a field rep I worked with earlier this summer. They are famous for their Raclette cheese which comes from cow's milk from the Garvin farm west of Cedar, Michigan. I thought it was neat to see their milk truck parked outside!
Monday, July 28, 2008
Week 10- Back in my "Homeland"
I spent three days this week back in Southwest Michigan where I grew up and also down in Shipshewana and Middlebury, Indiana. It was a great experience to visit some dairy farms in Paw Paw, Berrien Springs, and Zeeland that I never knew existed. In Indiana I was able to visit with some Amish dairy farmers and learned a lot by sitting in their homes and being on their farm about their lifestyle and the ways farming can be different and more challenging for them. I was able also to see lots of buggies on the road and beautiful farmland along the way.
Perhaps the most interesting place I went this week was the dairy farm at Andrews University in Berrien Springs. In all my years growing up in St. Joseph, MI and traveling through Berrien Springs, I never knew they had a dairy farm. I was amazed to pull up the drive and see a brand new, beautiful facility. Once I headed inside I was even more impressed. Inside the main entrance was a large, soon to be finished visitors center. They hope to fill it with posters and information about the dairy industry. There is a window where visitors can watch the cows being milked in the new double twenty parlor and another window where the bulk tanks used for storage can be seen. Right now they are milking around 600 cows but have room to expand to over 1000. I learned how they hope this center will be somewhere students and visitors can learn more about the dairy industry and gain a greater respect for its importance.
Perhaps the most interesting place I went this week was the dairy farm at Andrews University in Berrien Springs. In all my years growing up in St. Joseph, MI and traveling through Berrien Springs, I never knew they had a dairy farm. I was amazed to pull up the drive and see a brand new, beautiful facility. Once I headed inside I was even more impressed. Inside the main entrance was a large, soon to be finished visitors center. They hope to fill it with posters and information about the dairy industry. There is a window where visitors can watch the cows being milked in the new double twenty parlor and another window where the bulk tanks used for storage can be seen. Right now they are milking around 600 cows but have room to expand to over 1000. I learned how they hope this center will be somewhere students and visitors can learn more about the dairy industry and gain a greater respect for its importance.
Friday, July 18, 2008
Week 9- Ag Expo
This week was one of the hottest ones of the summer so it was appropriate for it to be the week for Ag Expo at MSU! Ag Expo is an annual event held at MSU where different vendors and representatives from the agriculture industry come and set up tents with information and free goodies. It's a free event for the public and usually gets pretty crowded. I spent Tuesday and Wednesday out at the Expo at the MMPA's tent talking to people as they came in and also went around and looked at different exhibits and met one day with other vet students who are in the Summer Food Systems Fellowship like I am. This is a picture of the giant cow, Daisy, that a MMPA employee towed for over an hour to get to Ag Expo-probably was a funny sight!
I also spent this week traveling north of Grand Rapids around Fremont and Hesperia and then another day up in the thumb again. After surveying almost 50 producers, the results of my survey are starting to come together and I can see general patterns developing. The survey itself doesn't take more than 20 minutes to go over with the producers but the driving to the different farms is what takes some time. I do see a lot of rural scenery and some oddities along the way. Good thing I always have my camera!
A humorous sign, wind mills (almost 50!), and American Pride.
I also spent this week traveling north of Grand Rapids around Fremont and Hesperia and then another day up in the thumb again. After surveying almost 50 producers, the results of my survey are starting to come together and I can see general patterns developing. The survey itself doesn't take more than 20 minutes to go over with the producers but the driving to the different farms is what takes some time. I do see a lot of rural scenery and some oddities along the way. Good thing I always have my camera!
A humorous sign, wind mills (almost 50!), and American Pride.
Friday, July 11, 2008
Week 8- Back to the "Main Land"
Boy are there some strange things in the U.P.! No not really, but this two headed calf was something I had never seen before. At the beginning of this week I wrapped up my time in the U.P. by heading over to a few farms near Sault Ste. Marie. I never realized how agriculturally rich the area is up there. I even had to chase down a farmer who was busy cutting hay in order to do a survey. I really enjoyed my time in the U.P. meeting different farmers and learning about their opinions of MMPA's programs and the struggles they face being so far removed from larger agriculture areas.
Once back down state I went to farms up by Mt. Pleasant and also spent one day in the thumb. I continue to meet new producers who each do things a little different but continue to strive for the same goal-have healthy cows that produce high amounts of quality milk.
I also went this week to two meetings- the Dairy Industry Review and Advisory Panel and MMPA's board meeting. At the Review and Advisory Panel meeting there were representatives from many different groups in the dairy industry. I was able to listen and learn more about how permits are issued to farms and milk haulers and fines that can be enforced when standards are violated. I never realized how many groups and individuals are involved in inspecting dairy farms and enforcing regulations and insuring that the milk that is produced and marketed is as high of quality as possible. At the board meeting I was able to see some familiar faces of producers I have met this summer. I informed the board about how my survey was going this summer and the progress I have made so far and how much I have been learning from this opportunity.
Week 7- Up in the U.P.
This week was a lot of fun getting to see new farms and learn new things. Earlier in the week I attended MMPA's advisory committee meeting. It was interesting listening to the market update about dairy products and getting a better idea of how the prices of corn, soybeans, crude oil, and natural gas are affecting the market. I learned some more about food price inflation and how the average U.S. consumer spends less than 10% of disposable income in food. With inflation that will increase $100-120 a year which isn't a considerable amount. There also was a lot of talk about ethanol production in the midwest and the affect on the price of corn and gasoline. I didn't realize that it's been estimated that if there wasn't ethanol production in the midwest gas prices would be $.40 higher than they are. With a new Brazilian roommate, it was interesting to learn at this meeting and later talk to her about the sugar cane industry in Brazil. Ethanol produced by sugar cane and electricity generated has made Brazil an independent country for energy. It was also interesting to listen to the three finalists for MMPA's applied research fund. One of the candidates was an Animal Science professor I had worked closely with during my undergraduate studies.
Later in the week I headed to the upper peninsula to survey some dairy farms up there. During the day on Thursday I traveled around to Daggett, Bark River, and Stephenson. I was welcomed into many homes and was able to get a feel for the dairy industry in the western U.P. I was pleasantly surprised to find one farm that was milking over 600 cows and had a long conversation with the producer about how MMPA has helped him expand his operation, his studies at both Michigan State and the University of Wisconsin, and the need for large animal veterinarians. At another farm I learned more about a producers' struggle with stray voltage and how that has affected his cows' production. Overall, I learned a lot more about the U.P. and its agricultural industry.
Monday, June 30, 2008
Week 6- 4-H and more farms
This week started off by helping with the annual 4-H conference held at MMPA's headquarters in Novi, MI. This conference has been an annual event for over 50 years and is an opportunity for many 4-H participants from around the state to gather and learn more about MMPA and the dairy industry. Not only are there presentations and speakers but also a tour of the Michigan Dairy plant in Livonia, MI. All the participants also have the opportunity to take a test at the end and qualify to go to the National Dairy Convention. While I was there I was able to learn more about MMPA and some facts about Michigan's dairy industry. For example, MMPA was formed in 1916 and has 2,300 members representing 1,500 farms and markets 3.8 BILLION pounds of milk annually. Michigan ranks 7th nationally for milk production and dairy is the top ranking segment of Michigan's number two industry: agriculture.
I didn't get to learn fun facts about the dairy industry and watch cheese and milk get processed the whole week though. I continued on my trek around the state to administer surveys to farms. This week I was in the Westphalia area, Webberville, Howard City, McBain, Falmouth, and Lake City. As I go to these different farms I'm seeing a continuous theme. All of these producers are very thankful for the service MMPA provides by evaluating their equipment on a regular basis. By doing this, they are able to detect small problems and fix them before they become major problems that could jeopardize the health of their cows and the quality of their milk. I am beginning to get a better understanding of and respect for the many things a farmer must monitor and keep track of in order to have a successful, productive farm.
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