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It’s how you play the game
It’s how you play the game You win some, you lose some, and sometimes you lose them all. We are old hats at recreational soccer. We are recently involved in competitive soccer which bears little to no resemblance to recreational soccer. Recreational soccer is about being active and having fun, competitive soccer is about honing
Buckeye Egg Farm has long history of problems
Buckeye Egg Farm gave black eye to Ohio’s ag industry.
Diesel dilemma – Planting, tilling costs on the rise
SALEM, Ohio – Sunshine and dry days drew farmers into fields earlier this month. Tractors pulling tillage equipment and grain drills crisscrossed fields before last weekend’s snow delayed progress.
Grain outlook: Hold on for the ride
Money will be in holding beans; spring corn price break expected.
USDA says voluntary water quality efforts are working
USDA announces more funding for western basin conservation, says voluntary efforts are working.
Teachers make a huge impact
Judith Sutherland remembers her fourth-grade teacher, Mr. Zimmerman, whose positive influence has accompanied her throughout her life.
FAPRI leader looks optimistically at legislative action on farm bill reform
Farm bill discussion must include debate on how much it takes to sustain U.S. agriculture says policy analyst.
Hog prices: Feed prices deny recent strong bids
The drastic reduction in beef supply stimulated pork demand in the last half of 2004.
Ohio Shale conference: Residents take time to learn how shale boom will impact them
•••••In the Nov. 15 edition of the Farm and Dairy it was reportedthat all of the Marcellus shale wells fracked in the past five years in Pennsylvania, used six days of water equivalent of the Muskingum River in McConnelsville at the low water mark during the drought in June 2010, according to the Muskingum Water
U.S. fertilizer prices are beginning to fall at the wholesale level
WASHINGTON — After increasing for six consecutive years, U.S. fertilizer prices are finally beginning to fall at the wholesale level, according to a report by the American Farm Bureau Federation. “Up until very recently, fertilizer prices were astronomical at both the wholesale and retail level,” said American Farm Bureau Federation senior economist Terry Francl. “Fertilizer






