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Conducting an Agricultural Assessment

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Title: Conducting an Agricultural Assessment


1
Conducting an Agricultural Assessment
  • by Paul Leverenz, AgrAbility of Wisconsin

National AgrAbility Workshop - Omaha,
NE November 13, 2003
2
(No Transcript)
3
AgrAbility of Wisconsin Staff
4
Assessment Preparation
  • What are the needs within my organization?
  • What are my skills and competencies?
  • What are my strengths and weaknesses?
  • Who is the end user of my report and/or
    recommendations and what are his/her needs?
  • Farmer
  • Extension
  • Physical Therapist
  • Division of Vocational Rehabilitation
  • County Social Services
  • Private Insurance

5
Important Note
  • The outcome of the assessment is not equipment.

6
Building a Relationship with DVR as an End User
  • Network and develop relationships
  • Take time to understand their needs
  • Dont make recommendations they cant support
  • Understand parameters of service
  • What governs those parameters?
  • (ex Rehabilitation Act)
  • Know eligibility issues
  • Realize program goals
  • (employment)

7
Assessment Mechanics
  • Prepare for the visit
  • Research the type of farm operation
  • Research disability limitations associated with
    it
  • Know your county extension resources
  • Tools to take along
  • Fish scale
  • Tape measure
  • Angle finder
  • Maintain personal safety
  • Follow your gut
  • Pay attention to the physical surroundings

8
Onsite Farm Visit
  • Meet with farmer with disability
  • Discuss operation in general barriers in
    specific
  • Interview at table or walking around the farm
  • Take an I need your help approach
  • Listen to how farmer describes his/her operation
    for clues to attitude, mood, finances, etc.
  • Have farmer show his/her work routine
  • Observe limitations or barriers as farmer works
    at farm
  • Ask questions to clarify
  • If you have a problem figuring out a solution,
    work backwards through the problem

9
Wrapping-up the Visit
  • Present ideas to the farmer
  • Review what you have covered
  • Together prioritize goals and solutions
  • Review the plan
  • What happens next?
  • Who will do what?

10
Writing the Recommendation Report
  • For every hour on the farm, plan on 10-15 hours
    in research
  • Items to include in the report
  • Possible solutions
  • Actual solutions developed during dialog with
    client, VR and AgrAbility

11
Report Format
  • Background
  • Problems Areas
  • Summary
  • Cost Section
  • Vendor Information
  • Vendor Estimates
  • Problem Area
  • Job Task
  • Limitation
  • Goal
  • Options
  • Implement
  • Cost
  • Vendor and Address
  • Phone
  • Contact
  • Fed Tax ID

12
Report Information
  • Problem Areas
  • Job Task
  • Limitations
  • Goal
  • Caveat Problem areas are prioritized by
    importance and immediacy. All prices are vendor
    estimates and unless noted, all vendors accept
    POs.
  • Continued

13
Report Information
  • Options
  • Implement
  • Cost
  • Vendor
  • Phone
  • Contact Person
  • Federal Tax Identification Number
  • Summary
  • Cost Section
  • Vendor Information
  • Required Vendor Estimates

14
Case Study
15
Jeff Debbie Purvis Purvis Premier
Calves Spencer, WI
16
Custom-raising Calves
17
1 - Medicating Calves
See page 3 in report
  • Job Task
  • When a new group of calves is brought in, each
    calf must be given two shots on the first day. In
    the second week, they must be given a second
    shot, and during the third week, they must be
    dehorned and tested for disease. During the fifth
    week, they must be given another shot, and during
    the seventh week, they must be medicated by a
    nose spray. All of these medications are to keep
    herd health procedures in compliance with the
    contract for raising heifers.
  • Mr. Farmer must be able to control the calves if
    he is to do these activities. To give the shots,
    he currently crawls into the pen, steps over the
    calfs head, pushes the calf against the back of
    the pen, and gives the shot. He needs more
    control in order to dehorn the calves.

18
1 Medicating Calves
  • Limitation
  • Mr. Farmer must be able to control the calves if
    he is to do these activities. To give the shots,
    he currently crawls into the pen, steps over the
    calfs head, pushes the calf against the back of
    the pen, and gives the shot. He needs more
    control in order to dehorn the calves.

19
1 - Medicating Calves
  • Goal
  • Mr. Farmer will be able to medicate and dehorn
    his calves.
  • Options
  • Purchase a calf catch, a device that fits over
    the calfs head and can be attached to a fence,
    holding the calf so it cant pull away. Mr.
    Farmer would be able to control the calves for
    medication and release them after he has finished
    performing health care on them.

20
Calf Catcher
21
2 - Feeding Beef Calves
See page 4 in report
  • Job Task
  • Currently Mr. Farmer is raising a separate
    group of Holstein steers to 1,000 pounds.
    Mr. Farmer purchased these outright. He has feed
    for these animals delivered in 50-pound bags, one
    ton at a time. Mr. Farmer must lift the 50-pound
    bags, dump the feed into a wheelbarrow, and push
    the wheelbarrow to the calves. Then he must scoop
    the feed from the wheelbarrow to feed the calves.
  • Limitation
  • Lifting the 50-pound bags, dumping the feed
    into the wheelbarrow, and bending and stooping to
    scoop the feed are difficult and painful for Mr.
    Farmer.

22
2 - Feeding Beef Calves
  • Goal
  • Mr. Farmer will be able to feed his steers
    with less difficulty and pain.
  • Options
  • Replace the wheelbarrow with a seven-bushel Poly
    cart that has 24" air tires. These would bring
    the feed higher from the ground, reducing the
    bending required to lift and push the
    wheelbarrow as well as to scoop the feed.

23
2 Feeding Beef Calves
  • Purchase a hydraulic lift cart, which, through
    pumping with his foot, Mr. Farmer could use to
    raise the feedbags to the height of the cart.
    This would make it possible for Mr. Farmer to
    dump the bags without having to lift them.

24
Final Stage
Feed Cart
25
3 - Feeding Milk Replacer
See page 5 in report
  • Job Task
  • During the first one to five weeks he has new
    calves, Mr. Farmer must feed them milk replacer.
    Mr. Farmer is currently feeding one and a half
    50-pound bags per feeding, two feedings per day,
    or three bags per day at 150 pounds total. This
    activity requires that 50-pound bags be moved
    from the place where they are stored to the
    mixing room, where they are dumped into the
    liquid mixer. The replacer is then mixed with
    water in the liquid mixer, and a hose is then
    attached to the bottom of the mixer. The milk is
    then transferred through a pump. Part of the mix
    goes through a hose to each calf. Mr. Farmer
    currently drags this hose to each calf pen, from
    one end of the 100-foot barn to the other.

26
3 Feeding Milk Replacer
  • Limitation
  • Carrying a 50-pound bag and lifting it to dump
    into the mixer is something that Mr. Farmer
    cannot do it must be done for him. Dragging the
    hose from the mixer to each calf is difficult for
    Mr. Farmer and stressful to his back.
  • Goal
  • Mr. Farmer will be able to feed milk replacer to
    his calves.

27
3 - Feeding Milk Replacer
  • Options
  • It would be possible to use the hydraulic lift
    cart, recommended for moving the feedbags in
    Problem 2, to move the milk replacer from the
    place where it is stored to the room where it is
    mixed. Mr. Farmer could also use the hydraulic
    lift cart to transport the bags to the mixing
    room and lift them to the height of the mixer. He
    can then take them into the mixing room where he
    can cut the bags open and dump the replacer into
    the mixer, add the water, and mix.

28
3 Feeding Milk Replacer
  • We also talked about some options for feeding the
    milk in a way that would not require Mr. Farmer
    to drag a hose around. We discussed using a
    retractable hose, which could be attached to some
    kind of small utility vehicle in which Mr. Farmer
    could drive. Mr. Farmer is interested in a
    stainless steel reel hose because it would be
    easier to keep it sterile, and because he uses
    strong chemicals to clean his hoses and he feels
    the stainless steel would last longer. The vendor
    below is sole service because there is no
    manufactured product for this, as such, and this
    vendor was the only one willing to put together
    the pieces for this. Central Wisconsin Coop,
    Podevels, Bobs Dairy, and Dairy Services Inc
    all said they could not do this.

29
3 Feeding Milk Replacer
  • We also discussed the possibility of mounting a
    steel tank on a utility vehicle if it were
    purchased. Mr. Farmer could drive to the location
    of the milk replacer, which could be dumped into
    the tank, then drive to the location of the
    water, which could be added to the tank. Mr.
    Farmer could complete the mixing and then drive
    on to feed each calf out of the tank. That tank
    could also be used for watering each calf. Such a
    tank would be large and heavy, and a system would
    be needed to move the tank on and off the utility
    vehicle. Or the vehicle could be used only for
    that purpose, which may not be practical.

30
3 Feeding Milk Replacer
  •  If the current stationery mixer is to be used,
    with the current system of mixing milk and
    pumping it, rather than a tank that can be moved
    on a vehicle, the current mixer could be lowered
    to about 36" so that the feed bags would not have
    to be lifted so high and it would not be so
    stressful for Mr. Farmer. He said that he could
    do this.

31
(No Transcript)
32
Hydraulic Lift Cart
33
Old Water Heater
Modified Kawasaki Mule
34
4 - Feeding Grain to Calves
See page 7 in report
  • Job Task
  • Mr. Farmer must individually feed grain and move
    milk replacer, and move bedding to each calf.
  • Limitation
  • Because of Mr. Farmers limitations with his
    back, he cannot do any of these activities.
  • Goal
  • Mr. Farmer will be able to feed and bed his
    calves.

35
4 Feeding Grain to Calves
  • Options
  • Purchase a four-wheel drive Kawasaki Mule. Mr.
    Farmer needs the 4WD for both the weight capacity
    and the weight in the front end of the vehicle.
    Mr. Farmer has tried a John Deere Gator and he
    found it to be too wide to fit down the current
    aisles the vehicle must be less than 4 feet
    wide, which the Mule is.

36
Kawasaki Mule
37
5 - Clean Pens and Move Materials on the Farm
  • Job Task
  • Mr. Farmer has a New Holland 140 skid loader on
    his farm, which he uses to clean the pens as well
    as to move straw and other materials on the farm.
    The capacity for this skid loader is 1800 pounds.

See page 8 in report
38
5 - Clean Pens and Move Materials on the Farm
  • Goal
  • Mr. Farmer will be able to clean the pens, move
    straw, and other materials on the farm.
  • Options
  • Purchase a 44" pallet fork, which would attach to
    the skid loader. The skid loader is equipped with
    a quick attach system, so that fork would need to
    be compatible with the quick attach.
  • Explore adding a suspension under the current
    seat.

39
Fork on Skid Steer
40
6 - Bringing New Calvesinto the Facility
See page 9 in report
  • Job Task
  • Mr. Farmer brings in 160 new calves at a time,
    and each calf must be moved off the truck, into
    the facility, and into an individual pen.
  • Limitation
  • Moving and walking these calves from the truck
    to the pens is very stressful and difficult for
    Mr. Farmer. Often members of the family or others
    must be recruited to help with this process.

41
6 - Bringing New Calvesinto the Facility
  • Goal
  • Mr. Farmer will be able to move new calves off
    the truck and into their individual pens.
  • Options
  • Purchase an enclosed calf cart, into which the
    calf can be moved directly from the truck and in
    which the calf can be moved to the individual
    calf pen at the pen, the calf cart can be opened
    and the calf can walk into the pen. This
    eliminates the need to push and pull the calves
    when he needs to move them.

42
Calf Cart
43
7 - Performing Herd Health Tasks on Larger Beef
Calves
See page 9 in report
  • Job Task
  • The beef calves that Mr. Farmer finishes for
    himself are over 1,000 pounds when he sells them.
    He needs to do medical work on these calves as
    well as castration and dehorning. As the calves
    get older and larger, Mr. Farmer needs to be able
    to restrain them so that they cannot jerk or move
    suddenly, which could pose a secondary risk of
    injury for Mr. Farmer.
  • Limitation
  • Because of limitations to Mr.. Farmers back, he
    cannot hold his large calves for performing herd
    health.
  • Goal
  • Mr. Farmer will be able to perform herd health
    on his larger calves.

44
7 - Performing Herd Health Tasks on Larger Beef
Calves
  • Options
  • Purchase a headlock squeeze chute, which Mr.
    Farmer would keep on the farm. If the chute were
    mobile Mr. Farmer could move it from pen to pen,
    or wherever else he needed it, set it up, and
    move the cattle one by one into the chute. With
    the headlock, Mr. Farmer could restrain the
    cattle from moving in and out, and with the
    squeeze chute, Mr. Farmer could move the sides
    together around the calf, protecting himself from
    being kicked, and making it impossible for the
    calf to jerk or move while he is medicating,
    castrating, or dehorning it. Because Mr. Farmer
    would be working on varying sizes of cattle
    anywhere from 400 pounds to 1200 pounds the
    squeeze chute should be able to make it possible
    for him to work with varying sizes with one
    chute. Mr. Farmer has a For-most headlock, and
    the vendor below sells all parts for For-most. So
    he can get a chute that would attach to Mr.
    Farmers headgate.

45
7 Performing Herd Health Tasks on Larger Beef
Cattle
  • Because Mr. Farmer is selling on contract he also
    has to weigh his cattle as well as corral and
    house them. If a model of headlock squeeze chute
    were purchased that included a scale on it, it
    would eliminate the need to handle the cattle a
    second time, reducing the stress and pain in his
    back associated with these activities. Therefore,
    I recommend a headlock squeeze chute with a
    scale, and I recommend that this be mobile so
    that Mr. Farmer can use it wherever he needs it.
  • The vendor from Buetsch Implement can also supply
    load-bars for the scale, and the scale itself.
    Mr. Farmer said that he could put the load bars
    on for the scale. There is a portable chute for
    1,635.00. This vendor also suggested moving the
    chute with the pallet fork recommended in problem
    5 above. Mr. Farmer felt that this would work for
    him.

46
Squeeze Chute
47
8 - Moving Calves to Larger Pens
  • Job Task
  • When the calves get older, Mr. Farmer moves them
    from 4 x 4 cubicles to larger pens that hold
    groups of calves. Mr. Farmer must move panels for
    each pen to effect this change.
  • Limitation
  • Mr. Farmer cannot move these panels and must
    rely on others to perform this task.

See page 12 in report
48
8 - Moving Calves to Larger Pens
  • Goal
  • Mr. Farmer will be able to move the panels
    independently to change his calves housing as
    they mature.
  • Options
  • Fabricate and install plastic dividers with a
    hinge system. When the time comes to move the
    calves into larger pens, Mr. Farmer would simply
    open the panels against the wall, making a larger
    pen for a group of calves.
  • There are no other vendors who sell these
    dividers already cut to size, and so this is
    offered as a sole source.

49
The Nursery
50
Calf Hutches
Housed here for 7 weeks
51
The Nursery
52
Transition
53
Super Hutches
54
Transition
55
(No Transcript)
56
Smiling for the camera!
57
Once a free stall barn
Bull Pens
58
Before
59
After
60
Feeding Time
61
(No Transcript)
62
(No Transcript)
63
(No Transcript)
64
Any Questions???
65
Memorandum of Agreement
  • Agreement with Wisconsin DVR
  • the power of closure stats

66
Important Note
  • The outcome of the assessment is not equipment.

67
AgrAbility of Wisconsin
Promoting Success in Agriculture for People with
Disabilities
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