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Copperhead or milk snake or rat snake?
Last week my wife informed me she had seen the first big black rat snake of the year stretched across the road in front of our house. “What are you going to do about it?” she asked/demanded. I answered as I always do: “Nothing. I’m not about to kill a snake simply because it has
Online ag newsletter is useful farm management tool
Isn’t autumn in northeast Ohio a wonderful time? I hope your harvest season is going well. While area farmers are in the field, we at OSU Extension are planning our late fall and winter Extension management meetings for producers. Watch future columns for details about many of these programs which will be held in northeast
Keeping good time means regular oil changes, for your clock and your car
Taking care of your timepiece investment takes time.
Squirrels, kids, dogs and dads
Jim Abrams shares a squirrel hunting story from his youth and shares tips for choosing a good squirrel hunting dog.
Ohio hosting international Envirothon competition
The Envirothon provides the opportunity for students to work together, solve problems and unite in creating a hopeful future for our planet.
More people turning to canning to preserve food this year
Home food preservation is expected to be very popular this year, as many people have taken on new hobbies to pass time while staying home during quarantine.
It’s deer season and it’s a jungle out there
Anyone who lives in deer country knows fall is the most dangerous time of year. It’s when deer-vehicle collisions peak. In many areas, it’s not if you hit a deer, it’s when you hit one. Over the last 20 years I’ve hit six deer. One totaled my car, and another did $3,000 in damage. Fortunately
Family vacation: Sunny days or bust
As if Andrew and Rita didn’t do enough damage, pity the great state of Florida which now has the Seabolts to contend with. When the unexpected but delightfully generous offer of a beach-front condo dangled in front of us, we jumped on it. Granted, with the spate of midwestern blizzards that have beleaguered us lately,
At some point, life will always catch up with you
Judith Sutherland muses over the capabilities of young bodies, running, jumping and climbing with ease.
Low hay supply could lead to high prices in Pa., Midwest
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Pennsylvania forage growers should hope for a long fall season with good weather to help their hay crop and pastures, said a forage specialist in Penn State’s College of Agricultural Sciences. Marvin Hall, professor of forage management, said that an extended autumn with rain can make up for some of this






