Emily Stevens is a long way from where she grew up in Connersville, Indiana.
dairy
(Spectrum News 1/Nathan Phelps)

What You Need To Know

  • Emily Stevens of Connersville, Indiana, is a student at Lakeshore Technical College in Cleveland, Wisconsin.
  • Her father is a 1984 graduate of the college’s dairy herd management program
  • She plans on graduating from the program in the spring

Four hundred and thirteen miles, to be exact.

Stevens is a student in the dairy herd management program at Lakeshore Technical College near Newton, where she was recently practicing skills on a facsimile cow.

“On this cow, we were doing our dry cow protocols,” she said. “Basically, going over how you would administer drugs into a mammary gland in a cow.”

Lakeshore Technical College happens to be where her dad, John, attended almost forty years ago, when he went through the same program. Stevens is also an intern on the same farm where her dad got hands-on experience working with a dairy herd.

Dairy%20Daughter 2

(Spectrum News 1/Nathan Phelps)

“My dad was like, ‘Have you looked into where I went?’ I said, ‘No,’” Stevens said about choosing her next step after high school. “The next thing I know, I just went ahead and applied because it’s what I want to do.”

Liz Gartman, an agribusiness and fair herd management instructor at the college, said it’s not uncommon to see members of the same family in the college.

But it’s not often they see a father-daughter connection from out of state.

“Family farming is a big industry, but as we see less and less students go back to the farm, it’s a little bit more rare to see that connection,” Gartman said.

Dairy%20Daughter 3

(Spectrum News 1/Nathan Phelps)

That doesn’t mean young people aren’t finding their way onto farms and into agribusiness.

“When we have students who parents work on farms or work in agriculture, they’re a little bit more likely to follow that path because they’ve been exposed to the benefits agriculture has to offer them,” Gartman said.

Stevens is expected to graduate from the program in the spring. She said she’d eventually like to find a job working with cows in Wisconsin.

“I definitely want to be on a farm. Either own my own farm or on a farm with cattle,” she said. “I like being out with the cows. I can work with people, but I like being out with the cows, mostly.”

THE first of the major milk processors to announce a step-up, Fonterra, produced a 15 cent per kilogram milk solids increase to the minimum milk price for the 2024/25 season in Australia during the week.

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