The KOMA (Kansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, and Arkansas) Beef Cattle Conference will be coming back to Kansas on Jan. 24 after a long hiatus. The four-state areas premier beef cattle conference is designed to help cow-calf producers make better managerial decisions. Next years hosts include the Southeast Area Research and Extension Center of Kansas State University, Southwind Extension District, Wildcat Extension District, and Cherokee County Extension.
The conference will take place at Greenbush Education Service Center in Greenbush, 947 W. 47 Hwy. Girard, beginning at 10:30 a.m. with registration, and the chance for producers to visit with sponsoring agricultural businesses. Educational sessions will begin at 11 a.m. and end at 3:45 p.m., with a free catered lunch included.
The focus of this meeting will be From Grass to Cash. Presenters from Kansas, Oklahoma, and Missouri will address forage management, cow-calf management, cow herd diseases, and economics of production.
The day will begin with Dr. Glynn Tonsor of Kansas State University. Tonsor is a professor in the Department of Agricultural Economics. Tonsors current research and extension efforts focus on cattle and swine industries. Tonsors interests span areas of production supply issues to end-user consumer demand issues in regards to the meat supply chain. The title of Tonsors presentation will be Feeder Cattle Marketing Outlook. He will address marketing strategies for 500- to 800-pound calves.
Dr. David Lalman of Oklahoma State University will be the next speaker with a presentation titled, Matching my cows to my environment. Lalman is a professor and Extension Beef Cattle Specialist at Oklahoma State University. Lalman holds the Harrington Endowed Chair with split extension and research appointment. He works primarily in the beef cattle industry focused on cow/calf and stocker cattle production. His extension and applied research program includes beef cattle nutrition and management with emphasis on beef cattle grazing and genetic by environment interactions in beef production systems. His program goals are to provide producers with information and tools to facilitate production system profitability, improve cow herd efficiency and to improve product quality. Lalman will discuss the historical changes in cattle phenotype we have been observing and discuss the benefits and possible pit-falls of this changing herd population.
Dr. Gregg Hanzlicek, DVM of the Kansas State University Veterinary School will provide the health component of the program. Dr. Hanzlicek is the director of Production Animal Field Investigations within the Veterinary College. Hanzlicek works with pathologists and microbiologists within the laboratory to diagnosis bovine health events. Hanzliceks research activities include disease surveillance and monitoring systems for beef and dairy health programs and disease surveys. For the KOMA Beef Conference, he will specifically be addressing blood-borne diseases of the cattle herd such as anaplasmosis.
Dr. Jordan Thomas from The University of Missouri will discuss, Optimizing reproductive performance. Jordan Thomas is an Assistant Extension Professor and State Beef Reproduction Specialist in the Division of Animal Sciences at the University of Missouri. Dr. Thomas is a Missouri native and University of Missouri alumnus, having earned his Ph.D. in Animal Sciences with an emphasis in Reproductive Physiology in 2017. In addition to extension and education programming associated with the National Center for Applied Reproduction and Genomics, Dr. Thomas maintains an active applied research program in reproductive management of beef cattle. The primary research focus of the Thomas lab is control of the bovine estrous cycle, specifically to facilitate use of reproductive technologies such as timed artificial insemination and embryo transfer.
The final speaker will be economist Wesley Tucker who is a field specialist in agricultural business from the University of Missouri. Tuckers work currently focuses on farm transactions and productivity and profitability of beef cattle. The title of Tuckers presentation is Keys to profitability for beef producers. He will address forage production with the goal of economically maximizing grazing.
Sponsors of the event include Ag Choice of Hepler, Frontier Farm Credit, Girard Coop, GNBank, MultiMin, and Zoetis. These sponsors will have trade show style booths. Bring your questions and thank them for their sponsorship and support of beef cattle production.
Please register with the Southeast Research and Extension Center by Jan. 18. To register contact Karen Walters, 620-820-6127 or [email protected] or Jaymelynn Farney, 620-820-6125 or [email protected]. You may also RSVP on the Southeast Research and Extension Website, https://www.southeast.k-state.edu/animalscience/index.html.