Search Results for "Lima Beans"
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USDA project aims to promote produce
COLUMBUS — A new pilot project from the Ohio Farm Service Agency will permit producers in Ohio to plant cucumbers, green peas, lima beans, pumpkins, snap beans, sweet corn or tomatoes for processing on base acres under the Direct and Counter-Cyclical Program. Ohio has been approved for 4,000 acres in the new pilot project. Authorized
Beans, beans, homegrown proteins
Beans can provide homegrown protein for individuals who want to grow their own food.
No-good, horrible, and very bad days
Columnist Kymberly Foster Seabolt was jarred recently into keeping her ‘bad days’ in perspective.
Watch love grow
SALEM, Ohio — Anyone can give chocolate for Valentine’s Day, but now there’s a vegetable that allows you to declare your undying devotion. The I Love You Bean is rather self-explanatory — it’s a lima bean with the words I Love You etched onto the bean. As it sprouts, the words of affection appear. It’s
Determining pasture fertility and lime needs
If it’s been a while since you’ve evaluated the lime and fertility needs of your pastures, it’s time to develop a plan to collect samples.
Read it Again: Week of March 1, 2001
Each week Farm and Dary takes a look at what was making news in years gone by.
Little Sister and Ori together again
They are together again, Ori and Little Sister. Never before has this house been utterly silent. Never before has this house been virtually empty except for Lisa who misses her friend almost as much as I do.
How to eat seasonally this summer
This summer, take advantage of the variety of the fresh fruits and vegetables available at farmers markets, roadside stands and in grocery stores.
A roundup of 4-H news for the week of April 2, 2015:
News from the Goshen Good Growers, the Salesville Stitch and Stock, Geauga Beef and Swine, Chagrin Falls’ Granny’s Kids and Middlefield’s Sew Sew Sweet clubs.
Making the most of flat storage
PRINCETON, Ky. – With grain prices limping along, farmers are looking for creative ways to store grain that normally would have been sent directly from the field to the grain elevator.






