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Grow more with less: Cut and grow-again garden vegetables
Whether you have limited planting space or limited time to sow second and third crops, grow-again vegetables produce higher yields with less work.
UW-Madison study evaluates bat deaths near wind turbines, possible causes
MADISON, Wis. — It’s something of an ecological murder mystery — countless numbers of bats are turning up dead near wind farms.
Ohio Power Siting Board approves eight more wind turbines at Hog Creek
COLUMBUS — The Ohio Power Siting Board recently approved an agreement authorizing Hog Creek Wind Farm to construct eight additional wind turbines in northwest Hardin County.
Snowy owl sighting makes trip special
Julie Giess ponders how rare it is to see a snowy owl in the wild following a sighting along the bank of the Grand River recently.
Grain market gurus turn over the flop
The U.S. Department of Agriculture, in their infinite wisdom, played some big cards in the grain markets recently. Marlin Clark weighs in on these changes.
DFA turns social currency into real milk
Throughout June, Dairy Farmers of America will help raise awareness and provide relief towards the summer nutrition gap felt by nearly 18 million students.
Camp life: Short trips, but lasting memories
Despite the cost in time and money, Kymberly Foster Seabolt enjoys the memories that are made on her family’s week-long camping trips every summer.
How to turn sustainably grown trees into homes
NEW PHILADELPHIA, Ohio — Dan Ogonek, owner of Ogonek Custom Hardwoods in Barberton, will be the featured speaker at the April 4 meeting of the East Central Ohio Forestry Association, where he will relate stories of turning tree farm trees into custom timber-frame homes and decorative accent pieces. The meeting begins at 8 p.m. ECOFA
Research turns steel mill waste into bricks
Scientists are reporting successful testing of a new way of using a troublesome byproduct of the global steel industry as raw materials for bricks that can be used in construction projects.
The drought could be worse; we still have options
I went to southern Illinois last week to do some programs and I was taken aback by the severity of the drought in that region. Corn and pasture fields were not only dead, they were very dead. Many areas of corn fields were not that golden brown like you may see when harvest takes place,






