Search Results for "collards"
News Results 205 of 342 pages
Keystone bred and proud of it: A tomato just for Pennsylvania
A new hybrid variety developed for Pennsylvania is disease resistant and contains more antioxidants than other strains.
Shammoes receive highest award
Louisville, Ohio, couple wins Stark Farm Bureau Distinguished Service award.
Wonder years
As her daughter prepares to graduate from law school, Kym Seabolt reflects on the day she registered her for kindergarten and the woman she’s become.
The ‘raccoon’ frog can’t wait to sing its spring song
If there’s a woodland vernal pool or puddle nearby, you just might hear the peculiar quacking sound of the wood frog’s voice.
Aches and pains
In her column this week, Kym Seabolt gets to the bottom of the strange aches and pains she sometimes wakes with after sleeping funny.
Will the ‘real rural’ please stand up?
Of all the places you’d expect to see a fight between the hard face of ag economics and the warm heart of rural America, it wouldn’t be the New York Times.
Spot early spring amphibians
It’s a little early to hear bullfrogs and toads, but wood frogs always get a head start on spring.
Grandmother’s quilt, Grandfather’s ghost
Alan Guebert visits the ruins of his grandparents’ Depression-era farm.
The best ag economist I ‘never’ met
Before I was lucky enough to keep myself in suds and my family in socks with this weekly effort, my previous boss liked to remind me that I had “the best job in ag journalism.” He was right because I spent most of my time and his money writing profiles of the political and intellectual
Sandhill cranes perform a courtship to remember
The Platte River flows past Kearney, Neb., and in March it can be a cold, inhospitable place. It certainly was back in 1982. I was there for a professional meeting, but I spent my first afternoon shivering in a blind overlooking the river. Waterfowl, mostly Canada geese and mallards, covered the shallows and sand bars.






