Now if I could only stand the winters, Fallows makes it sound inviting.
"The city has been lobbying hard for state and federal help in restoring the rail link that connected Eastport with the Maine Central Railroad until it was abandoned in 1978. But even without a rail connection, it has steadily increased its shipments by sea. One of its specialties is container ships full of (live) pregnant cows, bound for Turkey.
Pregnant cows? European beef and dairy herds, reduced by mad cow disease and other factors, are now being rebuilt, largely with American stock. When cows make the sea voyage while pregnant, their calves can be born on European soil and have the advantages of native-born treatment. To put it in American terms, the mother cows would not be eligible to run for president, but the calves would. A company called Sexing Technologies, based in Navasota, Texas, has devised a sperm-sorting system to ensure that nearly all those calves will be female, a plus for dairy herds. Chris Gardner convinced Sexing Technologies that Eastport would be an ideal transit point, and since 2010 some 40,000 cattle have been loaded aboard ships there."
Blogging on bureaucracy, organizations, USDA, agriculture programs, American history, the food movement, and other interests. Often contrarian, usually optimistic, sometimes didactic, occasionally funny, rarely wrong, always a nitpicker.
Friday, January 10, 2014
Farm Exports Include Pregnant Cows
From James Fallows on Eastport, ME:
Thursday, January 09, 2014
Polar Vortex and the White House Garden
Today's Post had a garden column in which the writer bemoaned the fate of his fall-planted fava beans, but was glad he hadn't built a hoop house because the recent cold weather would have been too severe anyway. Caused me to wonder how the White House garden survived the cold. In past years Obamafoodorama has noted the hoop houses surviving snow, but the cold might have been too much.
On a personal note, my wife harvested the last fall-planted (transplanted) kohlrabi just before the single digit weather. Still good.
On a personal note, my wife harvested the last fall-planted (transplanted) kohlrabi just before the single digit weather. Still good.
Tuesday, January 07, 2014
The Good of Polar Vortexes
Walt Jeffries at Sugar Mountain Farm rather blood thirstily identifies a major major benefit of the current polar vortex. (Joel Achenbach at the Post has the proper fogey attitude towards new-fangled concepts, like polar vortex.)
What's the benefit? Below the break
What's the benefit? Below the break
Friday, January 03, 2014
RMA Done Good?
From a post on "best practices", one of which was an RMA initiative:
To counter fraud, waste, and abuse, the Agriculture Risk Protection Act of 2000 mandated the use of a data warehouse and data mining technologies to improve crop insurance program compliance and integrity. RMA asked the Center for Agriculture Excellence (CAE) at Tarleton State University to create a system to monitor and analyze the program, identifying fraud using satellite, weather, and remotely sensed data to analyze claims filed by farmers for anomalous behavior that could indicate fraudulent or other improper payments. CAE is at the leading edge of application of remote sensing to agricultural insurance.
The RMA program has had several significant impacts, including:
The results: cost avoidance of over $1.5 billion (2001–2007) scored by the Congressional Budget Office. Estimated reductions from prior year indemnities represent more than a $23 return for every dollar spent by RMA on data mining since its inception.
- Identification of anomalous claims, plus monitoring as a preventive measure
- Linking claims histories with weather data
- Integration of the latest MODIS and Landsat satellite data into the data mining process
- Automated claims analysis
One initiative produced a list of producers who were subjected to increased compliance oversight; from 2001 to 2011, this reduced unneeded indemnity payments by approximately $838 million.
Paperless FSA Operations
"The USDA Farm Service Agency offices are moving toward a paperless operation."
That's from a piece on producers receiving material by email.
I remember when the System/36 back in 1984 was being justified as allowing us to move to a paperless office. Not sure that ever worked out.
That's from a piece on producers receiving material by email.
I remember when the System/36 back in 1984 was being justified as allowing us to move to a paperless office. Not sure that ever worked out.
Thursday, January 02, 2014
Duplication and the USDA Cloud
From FCW on the USDA cloud:
In 1962 — in the early days of mainframe computing, punched cards and tape — then-Secretary Orville Lothrop Freeman wrote a memo warning that USDA was headed down a path of duplicative spending on IT programs.Not sure what significance the USDA cloud has, it certainly won't produce rain for drought-ridden areas, but I enjoyed the reference to Freeman. Used to be ASCS had computer centers in New Orleans, Minneapolis, and Kansas City but towards the end of Freeman's tour they got transferred over to the Department. Minneapolis was shut down, along with a satellite center in Portland, if memory serves. Over the years the other agencies in USDA also had some reorgs, but I notice that we still have centers in St. Louis (which I think is the old FmHA center) and Kansas City. I suspect that means that the integration of agency operations into a seamless web where historic divisions are not obvious to the user is not happening. C'est la vie.
The memo was unearthed earlier this year by someone in USDA’s National IT Center (NITC) around the time the group was pushing for certification for its private cloud under the government’s Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program (FedRAMP). In June, USDA’s cloud offering became just the sixth infrastructure as a service to receive provisional certification under those federal security standards. It joined private-sector giants such as Amazon, Hewlett-Packard, CGI Federal, Autonomic Resources and Lockheed Martin.
Wednesday, January 01, 2014
Good News for the New Year: Going on to College
I think I owe a hattip to Wonkblog for a link to 13 data tables from Pew Research, all of which are interesting, though most are depressing. But the one which is good news to me is this, showing that Hispanics who graduate from high school are going on to college at a higher rate than whites, and both blacks and Hispanics have improved their rates over the past 12 years.
Monday, December 30, 2013
Weird Sentence of the Day--Obamacare
From Wonkblog on Obamacare:
Sorry--in my math 2 million is a tad over 60 percent of 3.3, which in my dictionary is "pretty far off" from 3.3.
(I think I know what he was trying to say, but he didn't say it.
""The fact that they have about 2 million enrolled is not that far off from 3.3 million."
Sorry--in my math 2 million is a tad over 60 percent of 3.3, which in my dictionary is "pretty far off" from 3.3.
(I think I know what he was trying to say, but he didn't say it.
Saturday, December 28, 2013
A Myth of Vietnam
The process of creating history about events in which I've been a (small) part is somewhat disorienting and rather disturbing. It makes you wonder about the accuracy of history generally.
For example, Vietnam.
In season 3, episode 7 of Mad Men, which is set in 1963 Don Draper picks up a hitchhiking couple who are trying to evade the draft for fear the man will be sent to Vietnam. Baloney. We didn't have many troops in Vietnam then. As advisors, very few draftees would have been included. Through 1964 only 1 percent of the troops who were killed were draftees. There were 200 deaths in 1955-63, and another 216 in 1964.
The first draft cards were burned in the summer of 1964, and Joan Baez leading an anti-war demonstration of 600 people in San Francisco is the earliest noted in Wikipedia.
While Vietnam attracted a lot of press attention in the early 60's, I don't remember it as having much impact on the general public. Apparently Gallup didn't start polling until August 65, when 61 percent of the public said Vietnam troops wasn't a mistake.
Now comes the Coen Brothers with a new film: Inside Llewin Davies, in which they create a funny song: Please Mr. Kennedy from the kernel of a real song, which supposedly in 1961 asked JFK not to draft the singer and send him to Vietnam. Hitflix has a piece on it, including links to relevant songs. The 1962 song does not refer at all to Vietnam; it's just a potential draftee asking not to be drafted because Peggy Sue loves him, he hopes.
Because the 60's ended with Vietnam being a seemingly all-absorbing topic, people today are assuming it was a big deal all the way through the decade. It wasn't.
I write the above as someone who had a student deferment while in college, but who was drafted in 1965 and did some time in Vietnam (REMF).
For example, Vietnam.
In season 3, episode 7 of Mad Men, which is set in 1963 Don Draper picks up a hitchhiking couple who are trying to evade the draft for fear the man will be sent to Vietnam. Baloney. We didn't have many troops in Vietnam then. As advisors, very few draftees would have been included. Through 1964 only 1 percent of the troops who were killed were draftees. There were 200 deaths in 1955-63, and another 216 in 1964.
The first draft cards were burned in the summer of 1964, and Joan Baez leading an anti-war demonstration of 600 people in San Francisco is the earliest noted in Wikipedia.
While Vietnam attracted a lot of press attention in the early 60's, I don't remember it as having much impact on the general public. Apparently Gallup didn't start polling until August 65, when 61 percent of the public said Vietnam troops wasn't a mistake.
Now comes the Coen Brothers with a new film: Inside Llewin Davies, in which they create a funny song: Please Mr. Kennedy from the kernel of a real song, which supposedly in 1961 asked JFK not to draft the singer and send him to Vietnam. Hitflix has a piece on it, including links to relevant songs. The 1962 song does not refer at all to Vietnam; it's just a potential draftee asking not to be drafted because Peggy Sue loves him, he hopes.
Because the 60's ended with Vietnam being a seemingly all-absorbing topic, people today are assuming it was a big deal all the way through the decade. It wasn't.
I write the above as someone who had a student deferment while in college, but who was drafted in 1965 and did some time in Vietnam (REMF).
"Mr. Custer"
was a 1960 Larry Verne ditty written by Al DeLory about a soldier's
plea to General George Armstrong Custer in the Battle of Little Big Horn
not to send him off into battle. It was parodied one year later by Jim Nesbitt with "Please Mr. Kennedy," about blue collar America reaching out to the President for a helping hand. Then there was Mickey Woods' 1962 Motown track, also called "Please Mr. Kennedy"
about a Vietnam draftee pleading with the President not to ship him
away until his girlfriend marries him (because he's convinced she'll run
off with another man while he's away).
Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/in-contention/how-please-mr-kennedy-was-born-and-why-its-not-eligible-for-oscar-consideration#eOsbjo8XKUFF0cZp.99
Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/in-contention/how-please-mr-kennedy-was-born-and-why-its-not-eligible-for-oscar-consideration#eOsbjo8XKUFF0cZp.99
"Mr. Custer"
was a 1960 Larry Verne ditty written by Al DeLory about a soldier's
plea to General George Armstrong Custer in the Battle of Little Big Horn
not to send him off into battle. It was parodied one year later by Jim Nesbitt with "Please Mr. Kennedy," about blue collar America reaching out to the President for a helping hand. Then there was Mickey Woods' 1962 Motown track, also called "Please Mr. Kennedy"
about a Vietnam draftee pleading with the President not to ship him
away until his girlfriend marries him (because he's convinced she'll run
off with another man while he's away).
Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/in-contention/how-please-mr-kennedy-was-born-and-why-its-not-eligible-for-oscar-consideration#eOsbjo8XKUFF0cZp.99
Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/in-contention/how-please-mr-kennedy-was-born-and-why-its-not-eligible-for-oscar-consideration#eOsbjo8XKUFF0cZp.99
"Mr. Custer"
was a 1960 Larry Verne ditty written by Al DeLory about a soldier's
plea to General George Armstrong Custer in the Battle of Little Big Horn
not to send him off into battle. It was parodied one year later by Jim Nesbitt with "Please Mr. Kennedy," about blue collar America reaching out to the President for a helping hand. Then there was Mickey Woods' 1962 Motown track, also called "Please Mr. Kennedy"
about a Vietnam draftee pleading with the President not to ship him
away until his girlfriend marries him (because he's convinced she'll run
off with another man while he's away).
Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/in-contention/how-please-mr-kennedy-was-born-and-why-its-not-eligible-for-oscar-consideration#eOsbjo8XKUFF0cZp.99
Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/in-contention/how-please-mr-kennedy-was-born-and-why-its-not-eligible-for-oscar-consideration#eOsbjo8XKUFF0cZp.99
"Mr. Custer"
was a 1960 Larry Verne ditty written by Al DeLory about a soldier's
plea to General George Armstrong Custer in the Battle of Little Big Horn
not to send him off into battle. It was parodied one year later by Jim Nesbitt with "Please Mr. Kennedy," about blue collar America reaching out to the President for a helping hand. Then there was Mickey Woods' 1962 Motown track, also called "Please Mr. Kennedy"
about a Vietnam draftee pleading with the President not to ship him
away until his girlfriend marries him (because he's convinced she'll run
off with another man while he's away).
Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/in-contention/how-please-mr-kennedy-was-born-and-why-its-not-eligible-for-oscar-consideration#eOsbjo8XKUFF0cZp.99
Read more at http://www.hitfix.com/in-contention/how-please-mr-kennedy-was-born-and-why-its-not-eligible-for-oscar-consideration#eOsbjo8XKUFF0cZp.99
Friday, December 27, 2013
GMO Q and A
I'm usually, not always but usually, opposing the crunchies and the food movement. But this assessment of GMO varieties strikes me as solid. And his recommendation for labeling GMO's, which I disagree with, may in fact end up as the only practical way to go. After all, if everything we eat in the US is labeled "GMO", then nothing is.
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