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PEACHMAN

10/12/13 8:07 AM

#22571 RE: Stocksgreen #22568

Exactly,ranchers will buy Bagasse because it is a better for their business.Lower cost and better health too.Supreme Gold plus bagasse works in rain sleet snow and drought.

Blue line products are better for consumers.Intact nutrition works in rain, sleet, snow, and drought.

Mastic Blast will be bought because it works too.

SB will be bought because it can clean up oil spills and related needs.

IFUS products work no matter map is used in U.S.A.and the rest of the world.

IFUS products right on schedule for long term shareholders.
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Ecomike

10/13/13 7:10 PM

#22614 RE: Stocksgreen #22568

IFUS market Update. Seems the wild climate change, weather driven drought that is causing the need for a new low cost super healthy IFUS livestock feed source, has now turned into a disaster in SD killing 60,000 cattle from a record blizzard. Hard to grow anything in the way of new livestock feed in this kind of weather.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/sns-rt-us-usa-cattle-blizzard-20131008,0,3341315.story

(Reuters) - Disaster aid will be slow to come for South Dakota ranchers who lost as many as 60,000 head of cattle during an historic blizzard over the weekend, industry officials said on Tuesday.

Cattle died of hypothermia or suffocated under snowdrifts after a "perfect storm" brought rain, then record snowfall and strong winds to the portion of the state west of the Missouri River, said Silvia Christen, executive director of the South Dakota Stockgrowers Association.

"It's anyone's guess how drastic this loss will be. The cattle were soaked to the bone. Then the wind and really heavy snow started - it just clung to them and weighed them down," Christen said.

"Many of them just dropped where they were walking," she said, adding that at least 5 percent of the roughly 1.2 million cattle in the western third of South Dakota likely perished.

South Dakota is the sixth largest U.S. cattle producer with about 3.8 million head. The United States has about 89 million head of cattle - its smallest herd in 61 years.


"In Rapid City, in the west-central part of the state, 19 inches of snow fell smashing a nearly 100-year old record for accumulation in October, according to the National Weather Service.'

"For the cattle, the storms came too early in the season for the animals to grow their heavier winter coats. Many of the dead included young calves ready to be marketed as well as cows pregnant with calves that would have been born in the spring."