Showing posts with label sheep meat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sheep meat. Show all posts

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Goat & Sheep to be Raffled

Agri Plain Talk

By ZAC B. SARIAN
September 22, 2010, 6:52pm
There is one more reason why farming enthusiasts should attend the Agrilink trade show that will be held on October 7 to 9 at the World Trade Center–Metro Manila at the corner of Puyat Avenue and Macapagal Blvd., Pasay City.

Each show goer will have the chance to bring home a live goat or sheep for free. Ben Rara, president of the Goat and Sheep Producers Association of the Philippines, said that more than a dozen goats and sheep will be raffled off to lucky attendees.

He said that since the main focus of this year’s Agrilink will be small ruminants, the members of the association decided to hold an Animal Show where goats and sheep will compete in about 18 categories. The winner in each category will donate a live goat or sheep which will be raffled off to the attendees. The attendee will not pay any fee to participate in the raffle. He will just have to register at the booth of the association. By the way, Mrs. Soledad Agbayani has pledged to donate two sheep for the raffle even if her sheep will not win any prize.

In each breed, there will be categories like Best Boer Buck, Best Boer Doe, Best Boer Buckling, Best Boer Doeling, Best Anglo Nubian Buck, Best Dorper sheep, and so on.

Ben Rara said that there will be a booth inside the World Trade Center building where processed goat products will be available for tasting.

These include different kinds of cheese from goat’s milk, different styles of sausages, ice cream and yogurt. There will also be health and beauty products like soap with goat’s milk.

The Manila Bulletin will have its booth indoor where issues of Agriculture Magazine will be sold. The old issues dating from 1997 will be available for sale at only P100 per three copies. Of course, the current issues will also be available at the usual price.

Exotic fruit trees will also be available at the outdoor exhibits. There will be grafted Golden Queen mango, Peach mango, Eating Green, Chokanan and Many Babies mango from Thailand; sweet pummelos from Vietnam and Thailand and our own Magallanes pummelo. There will also be grafted seedlings of Longkong and duku lanzones, R5 and Super Red rambutan and others from the Teresa Orchard & Nursery.

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WINNING IDEA. Renting a neglected orchard can be a winning strategy, if you have the right know-how. Just like what our friend Severino Belviz has been doing. When we met him several years back, he was renting a 10-hectare farm owned by a doctor who did not have the time to properly manage the plantation of 1,500 ten-year-old pummelo trees. He struck a five-year lease with the orchard owner. In the first year, he paid him P80,000 and then promised to increase the rent by P10,000 each year. Both the owner and Belviz were happy. The owner no longer had to spend anything to maintain the farm and he was assured of an annual income.

Belviz was happy, too, because with proper care, the trees could be productive right from the first year. He spent around P30,000 per hectare to rehabilitate the trees that included fertilizing, pruning, spraying against pests and diseases, irrigation, etc. During the first year, he was already able to recover all the expenses and the rent.

In the second year, Belviz spent around P300 per tree. That’s really a small amount, according to him. He explained that each tree could produce 200 to 400 marketable fruits each year, each weighing 600 grams to 1.2 kilos each. That’s a minimum of 120 kilos per tree and could be much more. Belviz sold his fruits at P25 per kilo ex-farm. That 120 kilos would already be worth P3,000. So the gross income is 10 times the expenses in maintaining the trees.

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POULTRY SHOW. There will be a three-day poultry show starting tomorrow, Sept. 24, at the SM Megamall in Mandaluyong City. It will be participated in by various stakeholders in the poultry industry where new technologies, products and services will be showcased. Sandy Itchon, for one, will be selling dressed naturally-farmed chickens, pure chicken sausages, burgers and pate.

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WHITE CHICKENS FOR THE RANGE. Meanwhile, Dr. Rey Itchon discussed the possibility of raising the white broiler chicks as free-range chickens instead of the colored birds in our radio program. This is because there is an oversupply of white broiler chicks that some hatcheries are selling for as low as P6 to P10 per piece. The oversupply is expected to extend to next year because there is an excess of imported parent stocks that produce the day-old chicks.

According to Dr. Itchon, initial trials in raising the white broiler chicks as free-range chickens is very promising. They have to be raised to two months so that they become more muscled and therefore will have better flavor than their 33-days-old counterpart grown in broiler houses.

Published in Manila Bulletin Sept. 27, 2010.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Agri Magazine features sheep



By ZAC B. SARIAN
August 25, 2010, 2:09pm
There’s a good money-making potential in raising sheep as featured in the September issue of Agriculture Magazine which is now off the press. It is possibly the reason why the forthcoming Agrilink trade show from October 7 to 9 will be placing special emphasis on small ruminants which are principally goats and sheep.
The September issue features the tandem of Jonie and Jeff Valencia who run the Ebenezer Goat Farm in Capas, Tarlac. Raising sheep has its own advantages. The animals are very docile and they could be raised not only for meat but also as browsers that will keep down the weeds in an orchard.
Of course, sheep meat is also a delicacy. The lamb chop you order in upscale restaurants is expensive. Sheep could be cooked into a lechon that has its special taste. Our friend Dr. Rene Sumaoang who has almost a hundred sheep in his farm in Tarlac says that one sheep lechon he made during a celebration of his daughter’s passing the medical board was able to feed no less than 50 people.
Of course, there are other interesting stories in the September issue of Agriculture Magazine. One of them is Madre de Agua as a cheap chicken feed. One native chicken raiser in Batangas is able to reduce the cost of feeding by feeding his flock with 50 percent chopped Madre de Agua and 50 percent commercial feed. He said he could make a P100 net profit from one native chicken raised in five to six months.
There is also the inspiring story of the self-sustaining demo farm in Calauan, Laguna – the Center for Rural Technology Development or CRTD. This center showcases doable technologies that farmers can adopt. These include integrated farming, vermiculture-based projects, tilapia breeding and hatchery, livestock-based farming system, aquaculture-based farming system and several other projects.
Dr. Rafael D. Guerrero III reports on the vermicomposting project of Mountain View College in Valencia, Bukidnon. The college started with a hundred kilos of African nightcrawler in 2006. Today, Dr. Guerrero reports, it has an estimated 3.5 tons of earthworms that churn vermicompost out of locally available raw materials. Everyday, the vermi project produces about 800 kilos of vermicompost which is mostly used for the school’s farm projects.
You will also read about the new pole sitao varieties and Arabica coffee varieties approved recently by the National Seed Industry Council. The new pole sitao varieties, Hitik and Rikit, were developed by researchers of the BPI station in Los Banos. The three approved strains of Arabica coffee, on the other hand, were developed by the BPI station in Baguio City.

Published in Manila Bulletin August 26, 2010.
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52 Practical/Scientific Reasons to go to Church...
besides the obvious ones.

Reason No. 3 - Happier Marriages


Can going to church improve your marriage? There is considerable evidence for this.
Take for example, one study published in the Review of Religious Research in 1990. The study was conducted by M.G. Dudley and F.A. Kosinski. They tested 228 married Bible Christian couples for private religious practice (personal and family prayer, Bible reading), intrinsic religiosity (how the person feels about religion), and religious practice (going to church, witnessing, financial support). After controlling for a number of variants, the best predictor of happy marriage was found to be consistent religious practice -- including attending church and personal and family devotion. This study is one of many that corroborate these findings across many faiths.
Dudley, M.G., and F.A. Kosinski, "Religiosity and Marital Satisfaction: A Research Note," Review of Religious Research 32 (1990): 78-86.




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