RB32-270 A Seven Year Study of a Milk Supply


Autoria(s): Downs, P.A.
Data(s)

01/01/1932

Resumo

The amount of butter produced by the grain-belt states is evidence that a great many cows are milked by the midwestern farmer. Most of this milk is separated on the farm, the cream is sold, and the skimmilk is fed to hogs and other livestock. As the market for fluid milk has developed, many farmers near the cities have turned to the sale of milk, because it affords a better return for the butterfat sold. Much of the milk produced for sale as fluid milk is produced under practically the same conditions as milk which is produced primarily for the same of cream. The Department of Dairy Husbandry of the University of Nebraska, in conducting its instructional and investigational work, comes in contact with the milk producer. An effort has been made, therefore, to study the relation of milk quality to farm conditions as found among the milk producers or patrons who have delivered milk to the department. The study was carried on in an effort to find possible ways of bettering the conditions without upsetting the economic balance existing between the production of cream and fluid milk.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/extensionhist/1864

http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2869&context=extensionhist

Publicador

DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln

Fonte

Historical Materials from University of Nebraska-Lincoln Extension

Palavras-Chave #RB32-270 #Seven Year Study of a Milk Supply #seven year #study #milk #supply #barns #methods of stabling #milk houses #utensils #cooling equipment #butterfat #quality #milk grading #cleanliness #bacterial count #temperature #milking machines #hauling #farm #farmer #dairyman #dairy farm #dairy husbandry #animal husbandry #research bulletin #extension publication #Agriculture #Curriculum and Instruction
Tipo

text