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  • The Career Path Pedro Pascal Felt He Wasn’t Courageous Enough To Take (Fresh Air+) : NPR

    The Career Path Pedro Pascal Felt He Wasn’t Courageous Enough To Take (Fresh Air+) : NPR

    This week, we’re sharing never-before-aired clips from Tonya Mosley’s interview with actor Pedro Pascal from 2025. The prolific actor opened up about a career path he wished he was more courageous to follow and a creative talent he…

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  • A preliminary study on virtual fencing – Teagasc

    A preliminary study on virtual fencing – Teagasc

    A preliminary study at Teagasc Moorepark aimed to evaluate the performance of virtual fence collars on a herd of cows grazing in paddocks with multiple daily grass allocations. Read about the study here.

    Virtual fencing enables animal containment within, or exclusion from, land areas without physical fences by conditioning animals to a virtual boundary delimited with an audio cue and an electric pulse.

    The technology typically comprises a mobile phone application through which the user maps the virtual boundary, and a neck collar device on the animal which produces an audio cue when the animal approaches the boundary.

    If the animal breaches the boundary, it receives an electric pulse from the collar. This signal pattern engages the associative learning capabilities of the animal so that they can avoid receiving an electrical pulse by learning to stop or turn away from the virtual boundary when the audio cue is emitted.

    This technology has been highlighted in recent research as a benefit to the operation of farming systems, from farmer, animal and production perspectives, as well as representing an innovative solution for protecting and re-vitalising special conservation areas.

    Studies in Australia, Tasmania and Germany have examined virtual fencing in recent years and have reported positive findings with regard to animal containment, learning, behaviour, welfare and performance. The technology was also found to be successful at remotely herding dairy cows to the milking parlour.

    Virtual fencing opens up new opportunities in reducing the labour-intensive task of fencing, allowing remote animal monitoring and control of forage availability on pasture.

    The technology can increase the flexibility of the interaction of herd and pasture management; it can prevent over-grazing or allow time limited access to a specific herbage, e.g. clover.

    However, it is important to investigate the operation of this technology within a conventional dairy herd in Irish pasture-based systems. This preliminary study aimed to evaluate the performance of virtual fence collars on a herd of cows grazing in paddocks with multiple daily grass allocations (three per day, increasing the challenge of containing the herd within smaller areas), compared to a herd managed with a conventional electric fence receiving a single daily grazing allocation.

    The study

    One hundred and sixty-eight spring-calved Holstein-Friesian dairy cows were assembled. Cows were on average 154 days in milk at the commencement of the experiment. Animals were balanced for calving date, milk yield, parity and bodyweight, blocked into groups of two and randomly assigned to one of two treatments.

    Cows in Treatments 1 and 2 were managed by a conventional electric fence and by virtual fence collars (Norwegian company, Nofence), respectively. Cows in Treatment 1 had 22-h (full-time) access to pasture (24 h minus 2 h for morning and evening milkings) with an allocation of 18 kg DM/cow per day.

    Treatment 2 cows received the equivalent grass allocation over 22 h (but with this allocation given in three portions over the 22 h. Forty five percent of the 22 h allocation was given over the 4 h period (08:00 – 12:00) after morning milking; the next 10 % was given over the 3 h period (12:00 – 15:00) until evening milking; and the remaining 45 % was given over the 15 h period (16:00 – 07:00) until the following morning milking.

    Training of the cows to the collar equipment took place prior to the experimental period. Nofence collars were switched off during milking. Treatments were imposed over four weeks from 22nd July. All audio cues and electric pulses emitted to cows were recorded. Grass measurements were carried out daily, and milk yield and composition were also recorded daily.

    Results from the Virtual Fencing study

    Virtual fence data, grass measurements and milk yield and composition data from cow herds with and without virtual fence collars is shown in Table 1. Average number of audio cues/cow per day and average number of electric pulses/cow per day were in line with those observed in other studies. The audio cues outnumbered electrical stimuli, indicating cows generally responded to the benign audio cues alone and avoided receiving electric pulses.

    Pre-grazing pasture biomass and post-grazing height were similar for the two treatments. Likewise, milk yield/cow per day and milk solids yield/cow per day were similar for the treatments.

    Table 1: Virtual fence data (audio cues and electric pulses), grass measurements and milk yield and composition data from cow herds with and without virtual fence collars and receiving one or three grazing allocations per day

    Treatment 11 Treatment 21
    Average number of audio cues/cow per day (Week 1: 7.3)(Week 4: 10.9)
    Average number of electric pulses/cow/day (Week 1: 0.3)(Week 4: 0.3)
    Pre-grazing herbage mass (kg DM/ha) 1,344 1,308
    Post-grazing sward height (mm) 50 52
    Milk yield/cow per day (kg) 16.7 16.6
    Milk solids/cow per day (kg) 1.55 1.50
    1 Treatment 1: herd managed with a conventional electric fence and receiving one grass allocation per day; Treatment 2; cows wearing virtual fence collars and receiving three grass allocations per day

    Conclusion

    This preliminary study on virtual fencing showed that the virtual fence retained cows in the areas specified without apparent negative implications for cow behaviour or welfare. But further work is required to interpret the potential for, and implications of, combining grass measurements with virtual fence collar data to create a decision support tool that could optimise grassland management and grazing efficiency while optimising animal performance and welfare, with minimum labour requirement.

    Acknowledgements

    Appreciation is extended to placement students who contributed towards conducting grass measurements, providing grass allocations and cow behaviour data collection. The authors also acknowledge receipt of funding to carry out this research work.

    The above was authored by Bernadette O’Brien, Ilan Halachmi, Violet Ryan and Ricki Fitzgerald and published in the Moorepark 2025 Open Day proceedings (PDF).

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  • Bride and groom among 8 killed in gas cylinder blast at wedding in Pakistan

    Bride and groom among 8 killed in gas cylinder blast at wedding in Pakistan

    A gas cylinder explosion during a wedding reception in Pakistan’s capital has killed at least eight people, including the bride and groom, and injured seven others

    ISLAMABAD — A gas cylinder explosion during a wedding reception at a home in…

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  • Vice President Pays Floral Tribute to Lal Bahadur Shastri on Death Anniversary

    Vice President C.P Radhakrishnan paid floral tributes to former Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri on his death anniversary at the Vice President’s Enclave on Sunday. In a social media post, the Vice President highlighted that the former…

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  • How Dubai’s nightlife is expanding to include families, day-time beach activities – Kenya Association of Travel Agents

    Dubai is slowly changing the way it hosts music and cultural events. Instead of only late-night concerts in closed venues, the city is seeing more festivals that start in the afternoon and continue into the night, mixing music with food,…

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  • 'It was emotional to see what Manx litter-picking has achieved' – BBC

    'It was emotional to see what Manx litter-picking has achieved' – BBC

    1. ‘It was emotional to see what Manx litter-picking has achieved’  BBC
    2. BILL DALE talks rubbish! Beach Buddies 20 years on – One to Three  Manx Radio
    3. Charity of the Week : Beach Buddies – One to Three  Manx Radio
    4. BEACH BUDDIES BIG BIRTHDAY  Manx Radio

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  • 23-year-old Hindu farmer shot dead by landlord in Pakistan’s Sindh

    23-year-old Hindu farmer shot dead by landlord in Pakistan’s Sindh

    A 23-year-old Hindu farmer has been shot dead in Pakistan’s Sindh province allegedly by his landlord for building a shelter on his land, leading to widespread protests by the Hindu community.

    The police arrested the landlord Sarfaraz Nizamani,…

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  • ‘Crosby Wombles litter picking helped me after my husband’s death’

    ‘Crosby Wombles litter picking helped me after my husband’s death’

    Dawn D'Auvin Dawn D'Auvin is pictured with her arms around her husband during a walk along a canalDawn D’Auvin

    Dawn D’Auvin, pictured with her husband, said she wanted people to feel that they were “uniquely important”

    When Dawn D’Auvin set up the Crosby Wombles litter-picking collective three years ago, her supportive husband Adrian was by her…

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  • ‘Crosby Wombles litter picking helped me after my husband’s death’

    ‘Crosby Wombles litter picking helped me after my husband’s death’

    Not even a recent hip operation could stop fellow rubbish collector Anthea Stewart from putting in a shift.

    The 90-year-old said: “I want to be here. I love it. I want to do a useful thing,” said Anthea with a litter stick in one hand and a…

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  • East Kent NHS project manager by day is R&B artist at night

    East Kent NHS project manager by day is R&B artist at night

    Nwodoh, who also works as a voiceover artist, said she “fell out of love with law” and started to look at creative opportunities.

    “I had a lot of time on my hands, as many people did, and started to think more seriously about music as a career,”…

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