1. Home /
  2. Pet service /
  3. UCCE Sheep and Goat Health and Production

Category



General Information

Locality: Davis, California

Phone: +1 530-574-8208



Website: ucanr.edu/sites/sheepngoat

Likes: 38

Reviews

Add review

Facebook Blog





UCCE Sheep and Goat Health and Production 20.02.2021

The goats are here! The BLM Central Coast Field Office at Fort Ord National Monument (FONM) will be hosting bands of goats from Goats R Us for the next six mon...ths. This week they brought the first band of 600 goats to the Monument, with another 1,400 to join them soon. They are knocking down dry weeds, brush, and grass to reduce fire hazards and will continue their work until next summer! Currently the goats are working adjacent to residential neighborhoods along State Route 68 on the Monument. This will be the fourth year that goats have grazed at FONM under a partnership arrangement to reduce fuel loadings in this urban setting. Last year, 2000 goats were used to help reduce fire hazards on 2,700 acres of wildland urban interface. #NotYourOrdinaryJob BLM

UCCE Sheep and Goat Health and Production 09.02.2021

DID YOU HEAR?.. Goats are now included in the Coronavirus Food Assistance Program (CFAP 2)! And so are adult sheep! Applications for finding to offset losses due to the pandemic are being accepted from now until Dec 11, 2020. . USDA CFAP 2 Producer webinar on Thurs, Sept 24. For more information use link in bio to go to USDA CFAP 2 website.

UCCE Sheep and Goat Health and Production 22.01.2021

Fire season is upon us. Check out the new page for resources on disaster preparedness and recovery assistance. Stay safe! ..link in bio.. #ucanr #ucce #calfire

UCCE Sheep and Goat Health and Production 09.01.2021

Recently, I had the pleasure to talk with @jake.thorne about vaccines available to help prevent and control diseases in sheep. What a fun topic! If you have 30 minutes, have a listen... let me know what you think! Link in bio #sheep #eatlamb #wearwool @sheepranchersusa

UCCE Sheep and Goat Health and Production 01.01.2021

#Repost @chancellor.may with @get_repost I can’t breathe. These were the last words uttered by Eric Garner as he was being murdered on Staten Island in 2014. I can’t breathe. These were among the last words spoken by George Floyd as he suffered the same fate under hauntingly similar circumstances in Minneapolis on Monday evening. In 2014, I tried to explain the Garner incident to my daughters. Yesterday, I tried to explain the Floyd incident to myself. In both cases, ...I fell short. Murder captured on video defies explanation. Needless to say, these tragedies hit my family and me hard. I know it’s touched a deep nerve with many of you as well. You have reached out to express your support, concern, sadness and anger, and I appreciate it. To be honest, it’s been difficult for me to know how to address this because it is so personal. I lived in Georgia for nearly 30 years, where Ahmaud Arbery was hunted and killed. George Floyd could have been any African American man, including me. Beyond the constant barrage of fear of the negative consequences of birding while black, shopping while black, cooking out while black, exercising while black it is just exhausting. And I’m tired. I can’t claim to speak for all African Americans or all people of color. And to ask me or others like me to do so is a burden others don’t have to carry. So I have thought a lot about how America got here, so long ago, and why we haven’t made as much progress as we often claim. The events of this week also cause me to believe even more strongly, if that’s possible, in building an inclusive environment that recognizes and respects people of all backgrounds and experiences. I remain committed to that and hope you will do what you can to eliminate racism, sexism, and other negative influences on our progression as a nation. Perhaps higher education can be that positive influence on lives beyond an education. Perhaps here we can create a way forward. Perhaps here we can breathe.