Summer Surge Barrel SeriesRepeating Event
FeaturedThe Expo At Glenrose
202 E Bo Gibbs Dr Glen Rose , TX 76043
The Expo At Glenrose
202 E Bo Gibbs Dr Glen Rose , TX 76043
Marshall City Arena
3310 Popular Street Marshall, TX 75671
(JCSP) Johnson County Sheriff's Posse Indoor & Outdoor Arena
1315 North Main Street, Cleburne, TX 76033
M7 Arena
8001 FM3136, Alvarado, TX 76009
Northcrest Equestrian Center
3900 CR 805 B Cleburne , TX 76301
Parker County Arena
1010 Farm to Market Road 1885, Weatherford, TX 76088
T8 Arena
837 Lumas Rd, DeRidder, LA 70634
Extraco Events Center
4601 Bosque Boulevard, Waco, TX 76710
Nolan County Expo Center
220 Coliseum, Sweetwater, TX 79556
From exclusive video to exhaustive and exemplary “behind the scenes” news and information, blogs, and photographs, BloodHorse.com gives industry professionals and racing fans 24/7 unmatched coverage in one convenient location. Lexington, Ky. – April 27 – The “greatest two minutes in sports” will be preceded by the greatest week in sports at BloodHorse.com. With expanded video segments, including live streaming video on Derby Day, and our award-winning news, BloodHorse.com has you covered throughout Derby week!BloodHorse.com’s coverage of Derby week begins today, breaking from the gate with a thundering fury for a week-long stretch run of fresh perspective, insightful “on-the-spot”
Preliminary test results indicate that a dairy in west Texas is infected with cattle tuberculosis (TB). Cattle TB is caused by theMycobacterium bovis bacteria and can cause internal lesions in animals. Milk from commercial dairies is pasteurized, killing bacteria with heat, so there is not public health concern from this herd detection. “Animals from the 2,600-head dairy were being prepared for sale and some reacted to TB skin tests. The follow-up blood tests on these animals also were positive,” said Dr. Bob Hillman, Texas state veterinarian and executive director of the Texas Animal Health Commission, the state’s
The Texas Animal Health Commission (TAHC) has released from temporary preventive quarantine more than 375,000 acres in Maverick, Dimmit and Webb counties. The preventive quarantine had been imposed on the three counties more than a year ago to prevent the spread of dangerous cattle fever ticks. Further south in Zapata and Starr counties, however, more fever tick-infested ranches are being detected at a disturbing rate, and concerns remain for sustainable fever tick program funding, fever tick surveillance and the approval of new products for treating fever tick hosts. Cattle fever ticks are capable of carrying and transmitting