Wednesday, February 11, 2026
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Florida Representative Seeks Permanent Ban On Horse Slaughter

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It’s been almost a decade since a series of horse thefts and slaughters in Florida sparked anger among area animal activists.

Over that time, U.S. Representative Vern Buchanan has continued to push for a U.S. ban on the killing of horses for meat.

The Congressman lead a bipartisan letter demanding prohibition on the use of any U.S. tax dollars for horse slaughter.

A letter to House Agriculture Appropriations Subcommittee leaders asked that the U.S Department of Agriculture instate a permanent ban on the practice enforced by federal food and safety inspectors.

“This overwhelmingly popular and fiscally responsible policy has been enacted for each year since Fiscal Year 2014 and for all but two years since 2005,” the letter reads. “Horse slaughter is an inherently cruel practice that 83 percent of Americans want to see permanently banned.”

The letter bore the signatures of 120 U.S. House members.

“The slaughter of horses for human consumption is a barbaric practice that has no place in our country,” Buchanan said. “As co-chair of the Animal Protection Caucus in Congress, I look forward to continuing to lead the effort to protect these majestic creatures.”

He has successfully pushed for Congress to impose restrictions in USDA’s budget each year since 2014, but the prohibition must be renewed each year.

The span of time for continuous bans coincidentally dates back to a series of local crimes in 2015 when individuals stole horses off Floria farms, around the same time a show horse was found butchered at another farm.

Deputies at the time told local media they believed that horse had been killed for its meat.

Different regions of Florida continue to see horse thefts, and three horses were found slaughtered earlier this year.

Buchanan the past few years has worked on the legislative effort to ban horse slaughter in the U.S. completely.

The year-by-year restrictions have had an impact, with the last slaughterhouse dedicated to butchering horses closed about 17 years ago.

But some slaughterhouses in the country continue to buy horses and have opposed a ban on the practice of killing horses when the practice, at least at professional facilities, differs little from killing cows and pigs.

An executive for New Holland Sales in Pennsylvania told Horse & Rider magazine last year that many horses sold for slaughter are past their prime and otherwise unwanted by farms.

“If they’re usable and we can find a home for them, I want to do that,” the sale operator told the trade publication. “But some are mentally or physically beyond repair. What are we going to do with the ones that don’t find a home?”

But animal rights groups are working with Buchanan to shut down the practice of butchering horses for good.

They say it’s a cruel way to end the life of many horses and supports a black market leading to the horse thefts and killings investigated around the nation.

“With the last horse slaughter plant in the United States closing in 2007, Congress has continuously agreed that shutting down this predatory industry remains paramount in protecting the economy and loyal companions,” said Tracie Letterman, vice president of Federal Affairs for the Humane Society Legislative Fund.

“The horse slaughter industry is inherently cruel and begins the moment the horse is sold into the hands of the slaughterhouses.”

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More Training Than ‘Miracles’

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“Surely all of the highly trained horses used in Western movies aren’t fed those very expensive drugs and supplements.”

No offense to the owners-management of large veterinary suppliers from which major ranch purchases are made. They are very professional, congenial, helpful, and cooperative in every regard.

However, it is interesting that their fancy four-color slick equine supplies catalogs have so many pages of horse “drugs.” The word “drug” is used loosely because the pages are all dedicated to supposedly health-improving equine medications of sort.

Remainder of the catalog offers every kind imaginable of additives, enrichments, just name it, products “to make horses better.”

Again, “better” is said cautiously, because the “costly stuff” causes customers to generalize healthier, fitter horses with these “miracle products.”

The catalogs also feature extensive equipment indicating to prospective buyers that it’ll readily enhance their horse performance whoever the handler.

Seemingly many viewers take for granted the high caliber of acting ability that horses used in many movies must have.

The horses are trained to fall, lay down, act lame, play dead, buck, rear, and much more, all on command. Their trainers are very knowledgeable with an extreme horse sense.

Admittedly, movie stars riding the horses in general are poor horsemen. Yet, not many fell off, and that must often be credited to the horses taking care of their riders.

Today’s most elite “horse whisperers” and bigtime showring champion trainers are excellent. But what rope horses, cutting horses, reining horses, jumping horses do is incomparable to that of movie stunt horses.

High school trained trick horses like Trigger, Champ, and Koko were elite with quite diverse acts through most knowledgeable training.

However, movie stunt horses often ridden by generally low paid unknowledgeable contract actors are the ones deserving greatest applause. Certain horses have a more natural ability to do such stunts, but the training is what is utmost.

Every horse looks nice, but it is a guaranteed bet they don’t get all those fancy miracle drugs and conditioners. Most likely they live on pasture or have a daily ration of prairie hay and water.

Reminded of First Corinthians 9:25: “Now every athlete who goes into training and participates in the acts is disciplined and exercises self-control. They do it intending to please their beloved best friend handler and their own personal satisfaction.”

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XVIII–22–5-27-2024

Ag Marketing Genie

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Thayne Cozart
Milo Yield

Farmers and ranchers are faced with a perpetual dilemma — how to decipher the agricultural markets in ways that hopefully will provide enuf profit from their enterprises to keep them in bizness year after year into future generations.

Alas, deciphering the ag markets is easier said than done and I’ve never known a farmer or rancher who thought he or she had a perfect insight into the markets.

And, to help farmers decipher the ag markets is an entire phalanx of self-declared marketing gurus who, eagerly, for a healthy sum of money, will provide a farmer with marketing advice of all types — personal visits, phone calls, newsletters, podcasts, social media connections, charts, graphs, historic data, brokerage services, etc.

And, yet, after availing themselves of all the offered marketing advice, farmers and ranchers too often still find themselves on the short-end of the assured profit margin.

All the above brings me to this ag marketing story, the nugget of which wuz provided by my height-challenged friend, ol’ Bob Doff. Here’s the story.

A beleaguered, cash-strapped farmer wuz mending a washed-out water gap in a pasture fence when he saw a piece of glass shining through the surface of the mud and muck. When he pulled it out, it wuz a bottle made out of glass so dark he couldn’t see through it to see its contents.

So, to his great surprise he found that the metal bottle top would unscrew easily. Now, imagine his greater surprise when he opened the bottle and before his eyes a magic, smiling genie appeared out of a smoky cloud.

The tiny genie surprised him further when it spoke these words. “Thanks you, kind Sir, for releasing me from my bottle prison. I’ve been washing downstream for months and finally ended up buried in the mud. I thought I was a goner. As thanks for releasing me, I have the power to grant you any one wish. What will your wish be?”

The astounded farmer replied without much thought, “My fondest wish would be to always make a nice profit from any technique I use in the agricultural commodity markets!”

The genie’s smile evaporated into a frown and wrinkled brow. He replied to the farmer, “Do you, Sir, realize how difficult it will be for me to grant you that particular wish? The ag markets are infinitely puzzling from the infinite number of constantly moving parts and factors such as global production, droughts, floods, storms, monopolistic corporations, insider trading, incompetent regulatory agencies, universal greed, ineffective farm bills, government environmental policies, global trade relationships, transportation problems, energy supply and cost, input inflationary prices, constantly changing consumer preferences, and population trends. Those are just starters. Do you see the problem for me? Would you even consider making a simpler wish that I could grant you?”

That put the poor farmer in the horns of a dilemma. Now, he felt sorry for the genie. So, he pursed his lips and said, “Well, I’d settle if you could tell me how to understand women.”

At those words, the genie almost burst into tears, and he replied: “You, Sir, are a tough one. After considering your second wish, I’ll grant you your first wish. From this day forward, I guarantee that any way you use the ag markets will assure you of a commodity price equal to the government’s monthly published 100% parity price. That way every acre of your farm will produce disposable income for you.”

I call that a wishful thinking story with a serious moral to it.

***

I’m finishing this column on Wednesday, May 15, and the previous few days have been eventful. First, all the local Yield family members, including the two great grandsons, met Saturday for an early Mother’s Day meal at the Cupalahunert Restaurant & Brewery. That wuz good eatin’ and a lot of fun.

Then Sunday afternoon Nevah and I drove to Yates Center, Kan., and overnighted with her twin sister and brother-in-law, who stuffed us with steak and trimmings. We spent the evening playing cards and laughing a lot.

Monday, after breakfast, we continued our trip down to Parsons to attend the memorial service for our son-in-law’s mother. She lived a long and productive 89 years.

While in the Parsons area, we met a number of treasured friends and even squeezed in time for a short visit with my old friend and compatriot Markus Parkus and his wife.

Our drive through the Flint Hills coming and going wuz simply beautiful and inspiring. The Flint Hills are now at their most appealing. Thanks to an abundance of rain this spring, the tallgrass prairie is verdant and from the road looks like a million acre golf course with plenty of rocky hazards. After the severe drought the past few years, it was refreshing to see all the ponds brimming full.

And, the wheat fields we saw are headed out and look very promising for a good harvest. Sadly, a few fields we saw had been inundated and ruined by recent flood waters.

***

Seldom a day goes by that I don’t receive by regular mail or email several solicitations to make a political donation. To me, it seems any donations made at this time are wasted. Name me a voter who doesn’t already know everything there is to know about Biden, Trump, and even Kennedy? I don’t think any amount of money, or any method of persuasion, will change the mind of any voter. That’s why I shred all the donation mail and, appropriately, make garden compost out of it.

***

I’ve finally got all my garden planted. Now, I’ve got to put my effort into maintaining what I’ve got planted. My gardening words of wisdom for the week are: “When weeding, the best way to make sure you are removing a weed and not a valuable plant is to pull on it. If it comes out of the ground easily, it is a valuable plant.” Have a good ‘un.

KU media advisory: Airborne electromagnetic survey of aquifer conditions planned in northwestern Kansas

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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Media advisory

Contact: Jim Butler, Kansas Geological Survey, 785-864-2116, [email protected]

Airborne electromagnetic survey of aquifer conditions planned in northwestern Kansas

LAWRENCE — Beginning in late May and continuing for much of June, residents of northwest Kansas may see a low-flying helicopter towing a large hexagonal frame. This unusual arrangement is part of a project to map groundwater conditions in the Ogallala aquifer in Northwest Kansas Groundwater Management District No. 4.

Through funding from the Governor’s Office and the Kansas Water Office, GMD4 and the Kansas Geological Survey, working with Aqua Geo Frameworks LLC of Fort Laramie, Wyoming, have planned the helicopter flights to develop a better understanding of the Ogallala aquifer. AGF has performed more than 20,000 miles of similar airborne electromagnetic surveys in Nebraska, Colorado and Wyoming, but this will be the first of its kind flown in Kansas.

Scientific equipment will hang below the helicopter 100 to 200 feet above ground. The equipment is designed to map geologic structures and groundwater resources to depths of approximately 1,000 feet below land surface. The helicopter will be flown at about 50 mph by pilots who are specially trained for low-level flying and have a great deal of experience with airborne electromagnetic surveys. Flights will not occur over residential areas and other buildings, livestock feeding operations or wind turbines.

The Ogallala aquifer is the major water resource for agricultural, industrial and municipal use in GMD4. Intensive pumping of the aquifer over the last 60-plus years has resulted in large groundwater level declines in Sherman, Thomas, Sheridan and Cheyenne counties. The information obtained in these flights will allow GMD4 and the Kansas Geological Survey to better assess the nature and continuity of water-yielding materials in the aquifer.

The ultimate objective of the project is to obtain information that will assist GMD4 in developing strategies for charting more sustainable paths for the Ogallala aquifer in the district.

For further information about the planned survey, contact Shannon Kenyon, GMD4 manager (email or 785-462-3915), Jim Butler of the Kansas Geological Survey (email or 785-864-2116), or Jared Abraham of Aqua Geo Frameworks (email or 303-905-6240). A video describing previous airborne electromagnetic surveys in Nebraska is available on the GMD4 website.

The Kansas Geological Survey is a nonregulatory research and service division of the University of Kansas. KGS scientists study and provide information about the state’s geologic resources and hazards, including groundwater, oil and natural gas, rocks and minerals, and earthquakes.

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KU News Service

1450 Jayhawk Blvd.

Lawrence KS 66045

Phone: 785-864-3256

Fax: 785-864-3339

[email protected]

http://www.news.ku.edu

 

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

 

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs

KU News: Well-Fit Center for Youth Wellness and Fitness will take STEM approach to help children thrive

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Contact: Alicia Marksberry, [email protected]

Well-Fit Center for Youth Wellness and Fitness will take STEM approach to help children thrive

LAWRENCE — The Achievement & Assessment Institute (AAI) has announced the opening of Well-Fit | Center for Youth Wellness and Fitness. The center is based on the principle that youths should be provided knowledge and skills through STEM learning and in-person programming to improve physical wellness and fitness.

 

Led by Trent Herda, associate professor in the University of Kansas Department of Health, Sport & Exercise Sciences and director of the Neuromechanics Laboratory, Well-Fit builds upon Herda’s research interest in examining the effects of exercise and physical activity on skeletal muscle composition, motor skills and overall health.

 

“I want to give children the opportunity to gain insight and knowledge on healthy growth and development and a better understanding of the positive benefits of exercise, physical activity and proper nutrition. We’re not really meeting those needs right now,” Herda said. “We’ve found that attacking this problem through STEM programming could be really effective.”

 

The center will use three different approaches to accomplish its goals: online educational content, in-person exercise programming and research.

 

The online branch of the center is represented through Sci-FIIT Academy, an online educational component to improve physical fitness and wellness. The content is delivered via interactive and engaging STEM learning. Courses are developed to be used by afterschool programs and KU’s Sports Skills and Physical Activity Camp. Herda hopes to eventually see this online programming accessible to children via school districts.

 

“This type of education doesn’t necessarily have to be delivered by a P.E. instructor. There’s a lot of STEM learning that happens in the classroom and is self-paced. Physical fitness and wellness are at the intersection of science, technology, engineering and math,” Herda said.

 

The in-person programming is done through the Sports Skills & Physical Activity Camp at KU, which provides children the opportunity to develop their sports and physical fitness skills, as well as Jayhawk Performance, a youth strength and conditioning program at KU. Both programs are within the KU health, sport and exercise sciences department.

 

Research is conducted through both the online and in-person programs and through collaborations with the Center of Children’s Healthy Lifestyles and Nutrition (CHLN) and laboratories at KU Medical Center.

 

“Strong collaborations have developed with members of CHLN. We’re working on pediatric neuromuscular projects now that five years ago I never even would have dreamed about,” Herda said.

 

Much of Well-Fit’s in-person programming will occur in the new Youth Exercise and Sport Center (YES Center), located in renovated space inside Robinson Center. The new athletic space features 25 yards of synthetic turf, 17 yards of rubber flooring, five squat racks, resistance training equipment, plus additional equipment for sprinting speed, agility and power development.

 

Joining Herda at Well-Fit is Quincy Johnson, Well-Fit associate director and program coordinator for Jayhawk Performance, and Ken Murfay, program coordinator for the Sports Skills and Physical Activity Camp. Both Johnson and Murfay are currently faculty members within the KU health, sport and exercise sciences department.

 

“Dr. Herda, Dr. Murfay and I are each passionate about the health, physical fitness and wellness of youth populations and are looking forward to sharing our expertise and serving Lawrence and the surrounding communities,” Johnson said.

 

Regarding the program he leads, Johnson said the vision for Jayhawk Performance is to provide safe, sound and affordable strength and conditioning programs for local youth athletes that are in alignment with the tenets of widely accepted long-term athlete development models.

 

For Neal Kingston, AAI director, offering Well-Fit a home within AAI aligns closely with the institute’s goal of supporting applied research and unique approaches as it relates to its mission of improving the lives of children and adults.

 

 

“Well-Fit’s mission to provide fitness and wellness knowledge through STEM learning is an innovative and exciting way to help improve the lives of children,” Kingston said. “I saw Trent’s presentation on the platform and thought AAI would be a great home for it and would benefit both AAI and Trent’s research.”

 

“This is definitely different from what my day-to-day research life has been up to this point, but I am all in,” Herda said. “I’m most excited about getting children enrolled and getting them learning about daily healthy habits to really improve their long-term health.”

 

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KU News Service

1450 Jayhawk Blvd.

Lawrence KS 66045

Phone: 785-864-3256

Fax: 785-864-3339

[email protected]

http://www.news.ku.edu

 

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

 

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs