Extreme heat and humidity killed thousands of cattle in Kansas this week so far. An estimated 10,000 heads of fat cattle dead.
— Ian Miles Cheong (@stillgray) June 15, 2022
pic.twitter.com/RtiVXzOTQO
Extreme heat and humidity killed thousands of cattle in Kansas this week so far. An estimated 10,000 heads of fat cattle dead.
— Ian Miles Cheong (@stillgray) June 15, 2022
pic.twitter.com/RtiVXzOTQO
AgGrad99 said:
Someone more knowledgeable than me explain....the heat killed them? Like a heat stroke? Or something related to the heat?
If they had no shade to get out of the sun, then yeah the heat probably got them. Cows don't like heat, especially dark cows. Don't see any shade structures in the picture. I can't imagine someone would be running a cattle operation of any size without some sort of shade available.AgGrad99 said:
Someone more knowledgeable than me explain....the heat killed them? Like a heat stroke? Or something related to the heat?
Quote:
"It just can't get any worse"
Artorias said:If they had no shade to get out of the sun, then yeah the heat probably got them. Cows don't like heat, especially dark cows. Don't see any shade structures in the picture. I can't imagine someone would be running a cattle operation of any size without some sort of shade available.AgGrad99 said:
Someone more knowledgeable than me explain....the heat killed them? Like a heat stroke? Or something related to the heat?
It reads as 10k across the whole state, not in one operation.Marcus Brutus said:Artorias said:If they had no shade to get out of the sun, then yeah the heat probably got them. Cows don't like heat, especially dark cows. Don't see any shade structures in the picture. I can't imagine someone would be running a cattle operation of any size without some sort of shade available.AgGrad99 said:
Someone more knowledgeable than me explain....the heat killed them? Like a heat stroke? Or something related to the heat?
There are 10k head. Thsts a crap ton of money. Of course no rancher is going to run an operation like that.
Something not right.
Quote:
HICAGO, June 15 (Reuters) - Extreme heat and humidity killed thousands of cattle in Kansas in recent days, the state said, and sizzling temperatures continue to threaten livestock.
The deaths add pain to the U.S. cattle industry as producers have reduced herds due to drought and grappled with feed costs that climbed as Russia's invasion of Ukraine tightened global grain supplies.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment knew of at least 2,000 cattle deaths due to high temperatures and humidity as of Tuesday, spokesperson Matthew Lara said. The toll represents facilities that contacted the agency for help disposing of carcasses, he said.
Artorias said:
Edit: watched the video, that is still alot of money worth of cattle in that one location.
It happened in YellowstoneCanyonAg77 said:AgGrad99 said:
Someone more knowledgeable than me explain....the heat killed them? Like a heat stroke? Or something related to the heat?
I'm a farmer, not a cattle guy, but this is triggering my BS meter.
Cattle dying in Kansas, but not Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Louisiana?
Doesn't the heat make that grow???n_touch said:
They ate clover in Yellowstone
Could be. Could also be lack of water source. In the weather we are seeing now my foreman checks water at least every other day and rotate pastures much more often.Brush Country Ag said:
Looks like to me they ate something that got them. Prussic acid could be a culprit here.
In Office Space 2, this guy'd have a Moderna stroke-out before he could snap his fingers:Good Poster said:
Honestly, I wake up every day and see something depressing in our world and always tell myself it can't get worse.
And then I wake up again and prove my previous day's claim to be wrong.
Considering how they are piled up on the fence, good prediction.CanyonAg77 said:Artorias said:
Edit: watched the video, that is still alot of money worth of cattle in that one location.
My prediction: that video will turn out to be deaths from a grass fire.
AgGrad99 said:
Someone more knowledgeable than me explain....the heat killed them? Like a heat stroke? Or something related to the heat?
So higher than covidCanyonAg77 said:Quote:
HICAGO, June 15 (Reuters) - Extreme heat and humidity killed thousands of cattle in Kansas in recent days, the state said, and sizzling temperatures continue to threaten livestock.
The deaths add pain to the U.S. cattle industry as producers have reduced herds due to drought and grappled with feed costs that climbed as Russia's invasion of Ukraine tightened global grain supplies.
The Kansas Department of Health and Environment knew of at least 2,000 cattle deaths due to high temperatures and humidity as of Tuesday, spokesperson Matthew Lara said. The toll represents facilities that contacted the agency for help disposing of carcasses, he said.
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/heat-humidity-kill-least-2000-kansas-cattle-state-says-2022-06-15/
For reference, there are about 6.5 million cattle in Kansas. So a death toll of 2,000 represents a death rate of 0.03%
Brush Country Ag said:
Hate to be the guy stacking them when they start popping.
While nothing is impossible, this makes zero economic sense. It also discounts how most ranchers feel about their cattle. Not a logical conclusion in any way.TamuKid said:
Someone trying to collect a big insurance payout?
I'm not sure, but where they are piled looks burned out, too.Urban Ag said:Considering how they are piled up on the fence, good prediction.CanyonAg77 said:Artorias said:
Edit: watched the video, that is still alot of money worth of cattle in that one location.
My prediction: that video will turn out to be deaths from a grass fire.
Seeing the cattle piled up and hung up in the fences in Bastrop Co in 2011 was just terrible.