Veterinary Training Program for Rural Kansas VTPRK and Soybean Herbicides Not for Livestock Feed Cool-season Lawns

 

00:01:05 – Veterinary Training Program for Rural Kansas: Beginning today’s show is Tera Barnhardt and K-State's Brad White to discuss the Veterinary Training Program for Rural Kansas. They talk about the impact of the program for veterinarians and rural Kansas.

Veterinary Training Program for Rural Kansas

Kansas Living Magazine - Fighting the Vet Shortage in Rural Kansas

 

00:12:05 – VTPRK and Soybean Herbicides Not for Livestock Feed: Brad and Tera continue their conversation about VTPRK with how it can contribute to rural communities. We are then joined by K-State weed management specialist, Sarah Lancaster, and beef specialist, Sandy Johnson, with information about herbicides on soybeans and livestock.

Check Herbicide Labels Before Using Soybeans for Livestock Feed

Nitrate Toxicity in Drought-stressed Corn and Sorghum

 

00:23:05 – Cool-season Lawns: K-State Research and Extension horticulture agent for Johnson County, Dennis Patton, ends today’s show with how to plant or overseed cool-season lawns.

 

A group of undergraduate students in the College of Agriculture here at K-State are collecting listener data from Agriculture Today for a class project. If you have time and are willing please feel free to take the survey at the link below. 

Link to undergraduate survey on Agriculture Today 

 

Send comments, questions or requests for copies of past programs to [email protected].

 

Agriculture Today is a daily program featuring Kansas State University agricultural specialists and other experts examining ag issues facing Kansas and the nation. It is hosted by Shelby Varner and distributed to radio stations throughout Kansas and as a daily podcast.

 

K‑State Research and Extension is a short name for the Kansas State University Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service, a program designed to generate and distribute useful knowledge for the well‑being of Kansans. Supported by county, state, federal and private funds, the program has county Extension offices, experiment fields, area Extension offices and regional research centers statewide. Its headquarters is on the K‑State campus in Manhattan