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How to feed the future in a changing world
The future of agriculture looks very different than the past. Tomorrow’s Ag leaders show the way with service, collaboration and value-driven leadership.
All About Grazing: Now is a great time to manage fescue
Infected fescue is insect, disease and drought resistant. It is also a nitrogen scavenger. This gives it an advantage over other forages, especially on poor soils.
Use integrated pasture weed control
Attitude toward pasture weed control has changed.
Are Roundup Ready weeds in your future?
Should glyphosate resistance should be treated differently than weed resistance to other herbicides?
Roundup of gardening news for March 21, 2019
Catch up on local gardening news from Clark and Mahoning counties in Ohio and Lawrence County, Pennsylvania.
Perennial food gardening: The garden that keeps on giving
Perennial food plants are unique because they produce several seasons of crops over many years. Learn why you should grow perennial foods, and get 8 recommendations for perennials to include in your food garden.
Soil testing offers insight to nutrient runoff
Soil testing provides the baseline needed for action in regards to runoff. Learn more about this and other conservation practices to reduce nutrient runoff.
Success in life requires hard work
When I was a young man, I often heard my father say, “Work never hurt anyone.” I guess the reason he reminded me of those words is because there were times growing up that I was not always excited about the word “work” or the word “labor.” However, I always felt good after a hard
Glyphosate resistant weeds a growing problem
DES MOINES, Iowa — With glyphosate-resistant weeds already an issue in many corn belt states and throughout the South this growing season, experts at Pioneer Hi-Bred, a DuPont business, urge growers to scout regularly and carefully for resistant weeds that seem to appear overnight. “Now is the time to be on the watch for potential
USDA: Farmers shifting some acres to soybeans in ’08
WASHINGTON — On the heels of last year’s record-high corn production, U.S. farmers intend to plant 8 percent fewer corn acres in 2008. That’s according to the Prospective Plantings report released March 31 by the USDA’s National Agricultural Statistics Service. 86 million acres in corn. Producers plan to plant 86 million acres of corn this






