Search Results for "Grapes"
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A life of hostas
More than 1,800 varieties of hostas with shades of greens and whites and yellows, some with leaves as big as elephant ears, are grown by Pete and Jean Ruh at their Geauga County home.
Lending a hand at Lower Creek Airport
This is part two of a series detailing the Hurricane Helene and Milton relief efforts of Farm and Dairy Managing Editor Sara Welch and her best friend.
Ohio farmers need more help to deal with drought: SWCD
Farmers in southeastern Ohio have been hauling water and feeding hay for months. The costs are piling up as their winter feed reserves dwindle.
Save the bee and me
Aaron Dodds recaps a run-in with the thousands of bees in his hive and shares some conservation-minded gardening practices that can benefit pollinators.
Rodale Institute helps Pa. farmers go organic
More than 50 Pennsylvania farmers have committed 4,000 acres to become organic through Rodale Institutes farm consulting program.
Columbiana County Ag Hall of Fame to enshrine Hawkins, Liggetts
The Columbiana County Agriculture Hall of Fame will induct Dwain A. Hawkins, of Unity Township; and brothers Dr. John Liggett, of Perry Township; and Dr. Thomas W. Liggett, of Center Township during the Columbiana County Fair in Lisbon, Ohio, July 31.
Pine Tree Dairy keeps things simple
Matt Steiner said there are only four important components to being a successful dairy farmer, and it doesn’t revolve around the breed of cow you raise or the brand of tractor you drive.
Gerards helped give equine trail riders miles of opportunity
Mike and Barb Gerard helped connect horse riding trails in the Mohican area, and have spent a lifetime serving equine owners.
Ohio foodbank program an option for growers
Last year, Terry Gram’s 45-acre hillside orchard in Paris, Ohio, gave him his biggest crop ever. A couple of decades ago, much of that surplus would have been tossed out. Now, growers like Gram can turn to groups like the Ohio Association of Food Banks and its Agricultural Clearance Program.
States attempt to keep students on four-year path to graduation
WASHINGTON — Millions of college students are taking extra time and extra courses on the road to graduation. Texas is seeking to cut down on that practice — for the sake of the students and the state budget.






