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Hazard A Guess: Week of April 10, 2003.
Each week Farm and Dairy challenges readers to identify a small tool or gadget.
Truck stops: Touring region’s auto museums
The last week in May, I spent three days in northern Indiana. When I left, the fields around here were still too wet to get into and, although one usually sees dust clouds in every direction across northeastern Ohio and Indiana at this time of year, tractors and chisel plows and disks were all parked.
Farm and Dairy’s week in review: 8/29
This week’s top stories include a limestone mine collapse that’s affecting an Enon Valley farm, the retirement of Dr. Karen Martin, one the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture’s Northwest region’s veterinarians, how to clean up your garden for fall, planting bulbs this fall and more.
Haubner, Kale will be enshrined in Farm Science Review Hall of Fame
The 25th class of honorees will be inducted into the Farm Science Review Hall of Fame during the Vice President’s Luncheon Sept. 16, the first day of the annual three-day farm show.
The Andersons and Lansing Trade Group to acquire Candian grain business
MAUMEE, Ohio — The Andersons and Lansing Trade Group have entered into an agreement to acquire Thompsons Limited, a grain and food-grade bean handler and agronomy input provider, headquartered in Blenheim, Ontario, and operating through 12 locations across the province and in Minnesota. The acquisition, which remains subject to certain customary closing conditions, is expected
New fertilizer plant in Indiana
FAIRFIELD, Ill. — Ohio Valley Resources LLC (OVR) filed an air permit application with the Indiana Department of Environmental Management Sept. 17, to construct a billion-dollar nitrogen fertilizer facility in Spencer County, Ind. The new ammonia plant will be the first new facility of its type to be constructed in America by a U.S.-based firm
Logan County landowners take steps to keep their farmland intact
Logan County landowners donate development rights to state.
Milk goes green: Cows fed rbST reduce agriculture’s carbon hoofprint
ITHACA, N.Y. — Producing milk uses large quantities of land, energy and feed. But cows that receive a biotech product called rbST give more milk, easing natural resource pressure and reducing environmental impact, according to a Cornell study. The carbon hoofprint is being reduced by a biotech product used on American farms for nearly 15
Armyworm moths set to invade crops
PRINCETON, Ky. — In recent days, the number of armyworm moths captured in the University of Kentucky-Integrated Pest Management pheromone trap system has set record levels. This could set up the potential for large enough numbers of armyworms to emerge in the weeks ahead to cause crop damage. For the week ending April 25, capture
Tornadoes tear up Wayne, Stark counties
Stark County tornado ripped mainly through rural areas.






