Uh-Oh!
By Avery Davidson, LSU AgLeadership Class XV member
When you’re thousands of miles away from home, those are two words you never want to hear. However, within five minutes of arriving at our first hotel in Madrid, those two words exited my mouth.
When you travel to another country, like Spain, you know that you’re going to need an adapter for all of your electronic devices. I shoot video, still pictures, have a computer, smartphone, iPad and an electric razor. I REALLY need to charge a lot of batteries… every night… every day… every stop.
Read More
America; Just a Young Buck!
By Karl McDonald, LSU AgLeadership Class XV member
1492 Columbus sailed the ocean blue… We know that one by heart. In America, we have a very colorful history and for the most part it is pretty easy to remember. That could be because it really only spans about 500 years, well, 400 if you really look at the details (Jamestown settled in the early 1600s). No matter where you are in the US, you have a healthy lesson on our patriotic history, young as it may be. Small as it may be, it is emphasized in all we do and are. World history on the other hand… well, we all took a lesson or two on it and your teacher may have dictated more of your interest or involvement. American pride still prevails and we can connect that history to what we know with little effort.
Read More
Three Cultures, One City: Born in Antiquity, Cordoba Still Shapes the Modern World
By Neil Melançon, Louisiana Farm Bureau Information & Public Relations Assistant Director
In the 1950s when the city of Cordoba decided to expand its city hall, excavators stumbled across what is likely the most important Roman temple in the city’s history. It dates back to a time when the the city was an important Roman capital in the richest province in Pax Romana.
It’s fitting, then, that as the city sought to expand it’s seat of power, it discovered one in antiquity. The city seems to find its way to the top century after century. With throngs of tourists in the streets, it could be climbing there once again.
Read More
Olives and Cordoba
By Bobby Soileau, Ph.D., LSU AgLeadership Class XV Coordinator
We left our view of the Mediterranean Sea this morning and headed north for Cordoba. On the way we stopped at OleoAlgaidas, an olive co-operative and mill. It is an 800 member co-op that has suffered from a lack of rain. They will harvest 25,000 metric tons of olives which is more than 55,000 pounds.
Read More
Do They Have to Take a Two-Hour Lunch?
By Brian Barham, LSU AgLeadership Class XV member
The towels are too big, the showers are too small, the food’s edible and the experience may never be matched!
It’s Friday morning and as my wife Laura and I await the sunrise in our hotel room, all that can be heard is the sound of the Mediterranean Sea as it rolls onto shore.
Read More
Why is the Cheese Green?
By Bobby Soileau, Ph.D., LSU AgLeadership Class XV Coordinator
It was a typical adventurous morning for our trip. A number of us were waiting on the hotel restaurant to open up for breakfast. Hotel Alfonso VI, in the beautiful city of Toledo, had an unusual breakfast, practically everything was cold. In fact, the scrambled eggs were cold.
But it was the green sliced cheese that caught my attention.
Read More
Globally John Deere Green
By Karl McDonald, LSU AgLeadership Class XV member
As a John Deere employee we all begin being told we work for a global company. We see the maps. We know who makes each model. Even with all of that… it is still easy to get into your day to day role and forget what “global” means.
Read More
Let’s Get Down to Business
By Avery Davidson, LSU AgLeadership Class XV member
The building is gray, modest and obscured by trees. The marble dove sculpture sitting upon a pedestal at the entranceway has a broken olive branch in its mouth. This building lacks the grandeur and splendor of many in Madrid, but the people inside represent and work Spain’s number 1 export: Olives.
Read More
From Monroe to Madrid: LSU Ag Leadership Class XV Tours Spain and Portugal
By Neil Melançon, Louisiana Farm Bureau Information & Public Relations Assistant Director
Neil here. I'm blogging on Tuesday morning at breakfast, where it's still dark at almost 8 am. The Spanish don't observe Daylight Saving Time and it's as far north as New York, so it's darker longer, throwing off my already wacky sense of time.
Read More
Spain & Portugal, Here we Come!
By Avery Davidson, LSU AgLeadership Class XV member
And we're off! This is the moment for which many of us in LSU Ag Leadership Class XV have been waiting. We're on the international trip which culminates two years of lectures, tours, trips to the east and west coasts and several speeches.
Read More
The End of Our Journey
by Dr. Bobby Soileau
Bad internet service and more than 30 hours of travel has led to a late final posting for our trip to South Africa. Today I wanted to reflect on our trip and thank some people who have supported our program.
Read More
Kruger National Park
by A.J. Sabine
It’s 5:00 a.m. in the morning. Class XIV and I climb aboard our bus with a mission on our drowsy minds: Capture pictures of the “Big Five.” Let me explain. In South Africa, the “Big Five” include: lion, leopard, elephant, rhino and the cape buffalo. With a lurch, the bus moves forward toward Kruger National Park–a 21,000 square kilometer park that the big five call home. Most of us have never, ever been on a safari before. Even the word safari brings to mind images from films like Out of Africa or Tarzan, The Ape Man or for real film buffs, the African Queen. However, nothing prepared me for a 4x4 trek through Kruger National Park.
Read More
What a Beautiful Country
by Dr. Bobby Soileau
Today we traveled south of Cape Town to view the peninsula. It was our one sightseeing day as a group. There were so many beautiful sites throughout our trip today. It will be best told through the wonderful pictures from Jim Monroe. But here are a few details.
Read More
Moving Forward While Moving Backward
By Kassi Berard and and Patrick Frischhertz
On our visit to South Africa’s sugarcane industry, we were struck by their agronomic potential and how the apartheid and anti-apartheid movements have shaped the present and future of the industry. We were met with a fantastic first impression with sugarcane growing on rolling hills and the silhouette of mountain ranges in the distance. For a flat land Louisiana sugarcane farmer, it was quite a sight to see.
Read More
So Long J.B.
by Dr. Bobby Soileau
Our tours are dependent on good bus drivers. They can often make the difference in the quality of a tour because of their ability to maneuver a large vehicle.
J.B. has been our driver since we arrived in South Africa last week. Today when we left for Cape Town we said goodbye to J.B. He has been a great driver getting us into many places most couldn’t.
Read More
Things Aren't Always as They Seem
by Lee Fairchild
While preparing for my trip, I began to imagine the row crop farms that I would be seeing. In my mind, I expected very little use of technology. In my mind, I prepared to see small farms with "skippy" stands of crops, fully expecting a big yield lag from the U.S. While their yields aren't quite what we do in the States, I have been impressed. The farms that we visited, Schoeman Boerdery and Leeubank, were the furthest thing from my thoughts.
Read More
A Universal Language
by Lance Bruce
When the announcement was made that Class XIV would be traveling to South Africa I definitely had a preconceived idea of what we would be seeing. My ideas were so wrong. From the time we landed I have been so impressed with the people and the farms, especially the cattle operations.
Read More
Khombi's Cotton
by Thomas Crigler
Touring Khombi’s farm was an eye-opening experience. It is always a pleasure to visit with somebody who is passionate about what they do, and Khombi’'s passion for agriculture was palpable. When questioned as to his favorite crop, without hesitation he answered “cotton." As a fellow cotton farmer, I immediately knew I liked him.
Read More
Mercy, Mercy We Met Percy
by A.J. Sabine
Percy MacCaskill is the epitome of a character. He has a wit about him that will constantly make you laugh. But there is much more about Percy that had an impact on our class.
Read More
I'll Stick With the Gators
by Leigh Godchaux
I never would have thought a crocodile farm would feel homey, but straight off the bus we were welcomed with four noisy little dogs and a smiling staff, offering homemade juice and a hot meal with a beautiful fruit and vegetable spread. The entire facility including the crocodile ponds were impressive and clean.
Read More