Friday Jan 14
List of speakers:
Dr. Donald Broom----World developments in animal welfare.
Dr. Temple Grandin---Improving animal welfare---A Practical Approach
Dr. Dave Chalack---President and CEO Calgary Stampede--Board ALMA,CFIA Advisory--Building An Animal Care Stategy that goes beyond Public Relations.
Plus others
Dr. Temple Grandin---draws the biggest crowd wherever she travels. I heard her 3-4 times over the years. Involved in chute design, slaughter house design and many more. She arrived late Thursday evening. The directors had a meeting with her (I was invited) to show the RFID data, Placement in ears, The RFID tag, She did not know the CFIA laws and didn't want to even know she wanted to keep her talk on just animal behavior in respect to shute handling of cattle, all ages, beef herd proceedures.
Handling beef cattle---the ears---they are very very sensitive. The tag placement deep in the ear (inside 1/4) where on diagram supposed to be---The rip (Mainly twine ----cow, bull) huge problem.
She now has the pictures on the Canadian CCIA tag in ear placement on slides for her next presentations. First time ever she really had to deal with animal behavior and ear-tagging problems to this extreme.
Again strong speaker---- questions she asked from the floor of other experiences. Dr. Joyce Van Donkersgoed gave low of 1%, feedlot situation--bunk feeders, no twine slaughtered 20 months.
Dairy Cows---high retention rate.
Beef Herds---Top practioners (Calgary) using the best tag (after trial and error knowledge)--4% slippage / yr. Tag mechanical breakdown only ---no external rips from twine or brush.
Beef herds--High loss from poorer tag manufactors types--25% ---35%. Tag mechanical breakdown plus the ripped ears (Twine catch or brush --whatever)
Dr. Temple Grandin Strong in her delivery message, again American ended her talk. The problem is in the RFID tag--Lets fix the problem, The PLacement deep in the ear is a problem and re-tagging re-tagging retagging through the cows life a problem, She held the RFID tag Female and Male ---This RFID feels like a "Board" that is a problem compared to the softer ID tags. Fix it or there is definately an animal welfare problem.
Dr. Grandin complemented the Canadian industry in working trying to make individual ID work to develope into Animal tracking and traceability.
She does not know the CFIA laws nor wants to get into it so she doesn't know the ramifications of that at all.
She received a huge applause. Left the room for another meeting at the University Veterinary College with Dr. Joe Stooky and never returned for the bear pit session at the end of the day.
CFIA were present in the room. Well represented.
Three american Veterinary speakers spoke the day before on their practice management in Texas, Mississippi and Another mid-western state. No talk of ID other than the paper backtag that was used here 30 years ago.
List of speakers:
Dr. Donald Broom----World developments in animal welfare.
Dr. Temple Grandin---Improving animal welfare---A Practical Approach
Dr. Dave Chalack---President and CEO Calgary Stampede--Board ALMA,CFIA Advisory--Building An Animal Care Stategy that goes beyond Public Relations.
Plus others
Dr. Temple Grandin---draws the biggest crowd wherever she travels. I heard her 3-4 times over the years. Involved in chute design, slaughter house design and many more. She arrived late Thursday evening. The directors had a meeting with her (I was invited) to show the RFID data, Placement in ears, The RFID tag, She did not know the CFIA laws and didn't want to even know she wanted to keep her talk on just animal behavior in respect to shute handling of cattle, all ages, beef herd proceedures.
Handling beef cattle---the ears---they are very very sensitive. The tag placement deep in the ear (inside 1/4) where on diagram supposed to be---The rip (Mainly twine ----cow, bull) huge problem.
She now has the pictures on the Canadian CCIA tag in ear placement on slides for her next presentations. First time ever she really had to deal with animal behavior and ear-tagging problems to this extreme.
Again strong speaker---- questions she asked from the floor of other experiences. Dr. Joyce Van Donkersgoed gave low of 1%, feedlot situation--bunk feeders, no twine slaughtered 20 months.
Dairy Cows---high retention rate.
Beef Herds---Top practioners (Calgary) using the best tag (after trial and error knowledge)--4% slippage / yr. Tag mechanical breakdown only ---no external rips from twine or brush.
Beef herds--High loss from poorer tag manufactors types--25% ---35%. Tag mechanical breakdown plus the ripped ears (Twine catch or brush --whatever)
Dr. Temple Grandin Strong in her delivery message, again American ended her talk. The problem is in the RFID tag--Lets fix the problem, The PLacement deep in the ear is a problem and re-tagging re-tagging retagging through the cows life a problem, She held the RFID tag Female and Male ---This RFID feels like a "Board" that is a problem compared to the softer ID tags. Fix it or there is definately an animal welfare problem.
Dr. Grandin complemented the Canadian industry in working trying to make individual ID work to develope into Animal tracking and traceability.
She does not know the CFIA laws nor wants to get into it so she doesn't know the ramifications of that at all.
She received a huge applause. Left the room for another meeting at the University Veterinary College with Dr. Joe Stooky and never returned for the bear pit session at the end of the day.
CFIA were present in the room. Well represented.
Three american Veterinary speakers spoke the day before on their practice management in Texas, Mississippi and Another mid-western state. No talk of ID other than the paper backtag that was used here 30 years ago.
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