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Deadline Extended for May 4 PQA Plus® Advisor Training Program
AMES, Iowa -- The application deadline for the May 4 Pork Quality Assurance Plus® (PQA Plus®) Advisors certification program being offered by the Iowa Pork Industry Center (IPIC) at Iowa State University (ISU) has been extended. James McKean, IPIC associate director and ISU Extension swine veterinarian, is coordinating the training program and said those interested in participating now have through Friday, April 29, to submit their application to attend.
“A few spaces remain for this session and we want to be sure people have ample opportunity to submit the application,” McKean said. “That’s why we’re extending the deadline to this coming Friday.”
The session will be held in the Ensminger Room in Kildee Hall on the ISU campus and will be taught by ISU animal science and veterinary medicine faculty members who are certified PQA Plus trainers.
McKean said those who qualify and are interested in the program should download, complete and submit the two-page application form available online at www.ipic.iastate.edu/PQAPapp050411.docx. The form also is available by fax by calling Sherry Hoyer at IPIC at 515-294-4496.
“If you’re interested in attending, please let us know by submitting an application as soon as possible so we can contact you after receiving your application," McKean said. "The $75 fee for approved applicants can be paid at the door on May 4.”
The qualifications and other requirements are included in the application form.
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Iowa Beef Producers Invited to Grazing Systems Program
CHARITON, Iowa – Beef producers interested in learning the latest on fescue management and forage-based diet supplementation will want to attend one of two grazing systems workshops in southern Iowa next month. The program brochure is available on the Iowa Beef Center (IBC) website.
Iowa State University (ISU) Extension beef program specialist Joe Sellers said both sessions will have the same speakers and content, so people can choose the most convenient location and date. The sessions are scheduled for Tuesday, May 17, at the Clarke County Fairgrounds in Osceola and Wednesday, May 18, at the Wayne County Courthouse in Corydon. Both begin at 7 p.m.
“Our featured speaker is Craig Roberts from the University of Missouri. He’ll review management practices that reduce health problems and increase cattle production on fescue pastures,” Sellers said. "Fescue toxicosis continues to create problems in Iowa beef herds, particularly where producers have pastures with longer rest periods than normal, resulting in mature fescue with higher alkaloid levels."
Roberts also will help producers determine which grazing systems may work for their operations. Sellers will present information on supplementing forage-based diets and will lead a question- answer session on local issues.
Cost is $10 per person, payable at the door. For more information, contact Sellers by phone at 641-203-1270 or by email at
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Update for Veterinarians Program Planned
CHARITON, Iowa – Veterinarians who work with cattle are invited to sharpen their skills and learn the latest information on a variety of topics at a May 18 workshop in southern Iowa. The 18th annual Update for Veterinarians will focus on topics of specific interest to beef practitioners, according to Iowa State University (ISU) Extension beef program specialist Joe Sellers, who is organizing the event at the ISU McNay Research Farm.
“Our featured speaker is Craig Roberts from the University of Missouri and he’ll review management practices that reduce health problems and increase cattle production on fescue pastures,” Sellers said. "Fescue toxicosis continues to create problems in Iowa beef herds, particularly where producers have pastures with longer rest periods than normal, resulting in mature fescue with higher alkaloid levels."
The program also will include results from a cow feeding trial at McNay farm and the Iowa Beef Center’s hay quality survey, as well as sessions on disease, euthanasia, grazing systems and coproduct feeding. In addition to Roberts and Sellers, ISU presenters are Grant Dewell, Mary Drewnoski and Renee Dewell.
“The Iowa Beef Center at ISU and ISU Extension have put together a great program of current topics and presenters, and it’s been approved for six hours of continuing education credits,” Sellers said.
Registration begins at 8:30 a.m. with the first of four morning sessions starting at 9 a.m. Three more sessions will follow lunch. Those who preregister by May 12 will pay $50 per person, which includes the noon meal. Pre-registrations after May 12 and walk-ins will cost $70.
The brochure with registration form is available on the Iowa Beef Center website. For more information, contact Sellers by phone at 641- 203-1270 or by email at
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Iowa Hosts National 4-H Shooting Sports Instructor Workshop May 15-20
AMES, Iowa – Volunteer shooting sports instructors from throughout the United States will come to Central Iowa for the National 4-H Shooting Sports Instructor Workshop May 15-20.
Iowa State University Extension and University of Minnesota Extension are co-hosting the workshop at the Iowa 4-H Center near Madrid. Registration is open to current adult volunteers in state 4-H shooting sports programs. Participants at national workshops must have the approval of their state’s 4-H shooting sports coordinator, said Bryan Whaley, who coordinates the program in Iowa.
The registration form, schedule and more information are available online at http://www.extension.iastate.edu/4h/projects/ ShootingSports/sessevents.htm. The registration fee is $325 through April 30; after that date the fee increases to $375 per person. No registrations will be accepted after May 4, Whaley said.
“We are training volunteer instructors to work with kids to develop skills for their future — because shooting sports are lifelong activities,” Whaley said. “4-H shooting sports bring together youth and trained adults and emphasize positive youth development through building shooting, wildlife, conservation and outdoor skills.”
During the weeklong workshop, volunteers will receive training to become nationally certified instructors in one discipline of their choosing: archery, rifle, shotgun, muzzleloader, pistol, coordinator, or hunting skills. The certification will enable them to teach other volunteer instructors in their own states, Whaley said.
Participants also will have many opportunities to exchange ideas, both formally and informally, Whaley said. “You can share approaches and tactics that have worked for you and ways you handle situations in your own club, county or state, as well as learn what is going on in other states. We already have people registered from as far away as Alaska, Oregon and Mississippi.”
In 4-H Safety and Education in Shooting Sports (SESS) youth work with trained adult volunteers to learn safe and responsible use of firearms and archery equipment, including sound decision-making, self-discipline and concentration. The shooting sports program promotes the highest standards of safety, sportsmanship and ethical behavior, Whaley said. The program also encourages youth to develop an understanding of natural resources as well as a personal environmental stewardship ethic through participation in shooting, hunting and related activities.
Shooting sports is one of the fastest growing 4-H programs in many states, with an estimated 300,000 youth participating
nationally. These programs across the nation have proven effective in engaging both boys and girls and retaining older youth in 4-H. In Iowa 570 volunteer instructors work with 1,660 youth in 4-H shooting sports activities.
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