
or a hint to "unlocking" four answers in this puzzle Vie to get Sound of a mouse pointer? Skirt She played Billie Jean King in 2017's "Battle of the Sexes" Formal decrees "_ Creator Omnium" (ancient hymn) Biblical son of Seth Raring to go Francis Drake and Ernest Shackleton, for two Community served by Lambda Legal, in brief Sch. I firmly believe the health of soil, plant, animal and man is one and indivisible and it can be a practical reality on all farms.More answers for ApBeginner, in lingo Beaten via a referee's decision, for short Menial position Words sung twice before "A pirate's life for me" Pint-size Where the terminal dash in "Home Alone" takes place Organized workers Mythical lion's home Apt name for a worrier One driving kids to a rink, say "Roger that" Sticking points? Hindi for "reign" Honor student's pride, for short Put up with Accustoms (to) Like planes and flags Kind of lily Fuel for a mustang? Lucky hit for a Ping-Pong player Non-starters Successfully study Impostor syndrome feeling The Heat, on scoreboards Catch Prefix with sexual Jailers. This is the focus of Whole Health Agriculture. Some things can be managed but there also has to be a mindset change in all those working on the farm. I became fascinated with the process of practical health management – not just looking for alternatives to antibiotics – but how all aspects of the farm and its management create health or dis-ease. My hands-on farming in those early years was milking our commercial Jersey herd. Here, we developed an innovative research and policy programme the Organic Advisory Service and farmer-based initiatives including the Organic Milk Suppliers Co-op and Organic Arable. The challenges involved in this led to my co-founding and then directing for 30 years the Organic Research Centre. In 1976, I began to convert a family owned mixed, dairy to an organic system. “How do we feed ourselves when the oil and other resources run out?” weighed heavily on me. Lawrence Woodward writes of himself “I began my farming life in the early 1970s following the oil crises of those years. Thanking you in advance for your support. You may also come back to it if interrupted but make sure you complete to enter the prize draw! Grab a coffee (or something else) as it can take 30 minutes. Tell your story have your say take our survey: So, whether you are conventional or organic, you run a large commercial enterprise or keep a few animals for home consumption whether you use a single ‘alternative’ product or you are totally ‘drug and chemical free’ – your experience is important! With US food imports on the horizon, it is even more important that successful wholistic farming treatments and methods for animal health are documented and evaluated. Please, farmers who are reading this, help us start to show what your non-conventional approaches can do to produce healthier livestock and healthier food.

Much time and effort has been spent ensuring that we are asking the right questions in the right way so that farmers’ voices are heard and their expertise properly documented. This is a survey for farmers made by farmers with input from researchers. So, this year we are carrying out a survey aimed at learning more about the untapped reservoir of knowledge, experience and wisdom farmers have of natural and alternative practices and treatments, some of which have been passed down through generations. Whole Health Agriculture (WHAg) is a community of farmers, health professionals and consumers dedicated to supporting and promoting farmers who farm for health and learning what they do and what works – what is best practice. The upshot is that overall, we have a blinkered view about what farmers are using and what success they are having in managing their farms and livestock for health. These approaches are often ignored when anti-microbial strategies are presented and discussed. There are conventional and organic dairy farmers who use homeopathy and have significantly reduced vet and med bills others have success with probiotics, apple cider vinegar, Obsalim, essential oils, acupuncture, osteopathy, seaweed, herbs, cold water treatments and others swear by herbal leys, reduced stress and changed production profiles.

But some of these are not getting the recognition they deserve. Do you use ‘alternatives’ to conventional drugs and other interventions to keep your livestock healthy? There are many farmers – conventional, organic and those in-between – successfully reducing or using low levels of antibiotics and they are using many different methods.
