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Playing cat and mouse
Ah fall. The season when all of nature attempts to move indoors.
This season’s seed, next season’s harvest: A seed saving primer
In August everyone enjoys eating summer’s garden harvest, especially water and muskmelons. But they are likely spitting those valuable seeds into the trash. Saving seed is a wise economic and environmental choice and it’s easier than you think
Farming gets in your blood at birth: ‘I want to stay out here with the cows’
Farming can get in a family’s blood early on.
Here’s to steady planting progress
With the arrival of mid-May, every farmer I know is feeling the need to push hard through any window of opportunity.
Water… More valuable than gold
Editor: The old saw “To a thirsty man, water is more valuable than gold” has never been more true than it is today. As a tradable commodity over the past 10 years the S&P 500 Global Water index has outperformed the bellwether gold and energy indices. In fact, water outperformed the stock market in the
OSU Extension conferences to help small farm owners
Small farmers wanting to expand or make their farms work more efficiently, or landowners who are new to agriculture and are looking for ways to utilize acreage, can learn entrepreneurial tips from agricultural experts with Ohio State University’s College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences during a series of small farms conferences in March.
Who wants to be a milk millionaire?
Who wants to be a millionaire? If we are talking about owning dollars, lots of people would volunteer. If we are talking about milk sold per worker, we would usually say yes, at least a million pounds per worker. But a funny thing happened this year, or rather last year according to the recently released
Rare 1800s torpedo found off California coast
Marine-trained Navy dolphins found the 100-year-old torpedo.
New York ag leadership program continues
The Empire State Food and Agricultural Leadership Institute, or LEAD New York, recently selected the members of its 15th class.
Digital divide still exists; the poor lose
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Technology can serve as a tool to bridge the digital divide, but it is unlikely to be a complete solution in helping people find jobs and escape poverty. “People really want to believe that the latest technology will help us do all these great things and liberate us,” said Penn State






