Search Results for "Peach"
News Results 601 of 1000 pages
Erie County Boy Scouts win Pa. Envirothon
A team from North East High School in Erie County won the 18th annual Pennsylvania State Envirothon.
Copeland: We could be in for a cold winter, lots of snow
MILLPORT, Ohio – Summer stayed with us as we ushered in the next season, according to Edwin R. Copeland, U.
Organic farming with gene editing? Yes
Learn more about the differences between genetic engineering, CRISPR and mutation breeding.
Sharing World War II experiences helps family understand veteran’s sacrifice
Judith Sutherland helps her late father-in-law, Don Sutherland, compose a transcript of his World War II diary to give to his sons for Christmas.
Reflecting on the freedom of pants
It wasn’t until Judith Sutherland’s freshman year of high school that the school board changed the dress code to allow girls to wear pants to school.
Grain farmers facing ‘slow-motion disaster’
Compounding the poor planting season, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced June 10 that unplanted acres will not qualify for 2019 Market Facilitation Program payments.
Natural gas prices lowest in almost 20 years
Natural gas spot prices in 2016 averaged $2.49 per million British thermal units (MMBtu) at the national benchmark Henry Hub, the lowest annual average price since 1999.
Ohio FFA Camp builds game-changing facility
CARROLLTON, Ohio — Driving into Ohio FFA Camp Muskingum will never be the same. A large two-story building now dominates the landscape at the bottom of the hill. And with that changed face, the future of the camp is energized with enhanced leadership and personal growth opportunities. Since the ground-breaking ceremony in September 2015, a
New app gives recommendations for nitrogen applications
The free Web-based tool, Adapt-N, draws on local soil, crop and weather data — including high resolution climate data stored at the Northeast Regional Climate Center at Cornell — to provide better estimates of nitrogen fertilizer needs for corn, in real time, throughout the season.
If it flooded once, it’ll flood again
ST. LOUIS — Midwesterners have to be wondering: Will April be the cruelest month? Patterns in the Midwest this spring are eerily reminiscent of 1993, and 1994, back-to-back years of serious flooding, with the Great Flood of 1993 causing nearly $20 billion of economic damage, damaging and destroying more than 50,000 homes and killing at






