It takes five to six months for a pig to reach market weight (about 265 pounds). One market hog provides about 160 pounds of pork for the grocery store’s meat case.

See full fact

Dairy farmers work with animal nutritionists to create recipes that meet the specific nutritional requirements of their cows. A cow’s diet is a combination of hay, grain, silage and proteins,...

See full fact

Output from Kansas agriculture has a direct economic impact of $22.5 billion per year.

See full fact

One bale of cotton can make 4,312 mid-calf socks.

See full fact

There are four main types of sorghum: grain, forage, biomass and sweet. Their most popular uses are: for food (grain sorghum), as livestock feed (forage sorghum), to produce bioenergy (biomass...

See full fact

About two-thirds of the Kansas corn crop is used in-state as livestock feed or in food production. 

See full fact

One bushel of corn fed to livestock produces 5.6 pounds of retail beef, 13 pounds of retail pork, 19.6 pounds of chicken or 28 pounds of catfish.

See full fact

Did you know that Americans consume about 132 pounds of wheat flour per person each year?

See full fact

Did you know that one acre of soybeans can produce 82,368 crayons?

See full fact

Milk is one of the best sources of calcium. Our bodies absorb 28 percent of the calcium found in milk, but as little as 5 percent of the calcium found in other foods like spinach.

See full fact

The average Kansas dairy cow produces about 7 gallons of milk each day. That’s more than 2,544 gallons of milk over the course of a typical year.

See full fact

Pork tenderloin is as lean as a skinless chicken breast.

See full fact

Small engines like lawnmowers and boats can use E10 fuel.

See full fact

A finished bale of cotton weighs about 480 pounds.

See full fact

Enriched white bread and other enriched grain products are a good source of iron and B vitamins (thiamin, riboflavin, niacin and folic acid), as well as complex carbohydrates.

See full fact

Energy experts estimate global ethanol production and use reduces greenhouse gas emissions by 110 million metric tons per year. That’s equivalent to taking more than 20 million vehicles off the road.

See full fact

In pre-refrigeration days, hogs were harvested in the fall and cured for six to seven months, just in time for Easter dinner. That’s how ham came to be the traditional Easter favorite.

See full fact

One dairy cow can produce more than 3,000 gallons of milk in a year. There are about 160,000 dairy cows in Kansas. That's a lot of milk!

See full fact

Mexico and Japan are our top international corn buyers. They buy 50 percent of U.S. corn exports.

See full fact

There are more than 300 licensed dairy herds in Kansas with about 143,000 cows total. In 2015 cows produced about 365 million gallons of milk, making Kansas the 16th largest milk producing state.

See full fact

The journey from the time a calf is conceived to the time beef is consumed takes 24-30 months and thousands of miles—from ranches, farms, feed yards and packing plants to grocery stores and...

See full fact