Search Results for "Green Beans"
News Results 71 of 257 pages
Given what we don’t know, why do we act like we do know?
Given our broad ignorance of Africa, why do we still think we know what’s best for this incredibly diverse, enormous continent’s farm and food sectors?
Imagine: McCormick-Deere instead of McCormick-Deering
When the farm implement giant, International Harvester Company, was formed in 1902 by the merger of the McCormick, Deering, Milwaukee, Plano and Champion harvester lines, it immediately gave the new firm about 90 percent of the binder and 80 percent of the mower production in the U.S.
Free to a good home: Grant adds Pa. wind turbine sites
SALEM, Ohio – Small wind turbines will be coming to four western Pennsylvania communities, thanks to a grant that lets public properties receive the machinery without cost.
Toledo water ban draws attention to algae, and city’s water treatment plant
Toledo water ban underscores importance of algae issue, and water plant issues.
Vacation with us…Seabolt
Where do farmers (and farm wives) take a break? At a farmer meeting, of course. Our very own “Life Out Loud” columnist Kymberly Foster Seabolt (front, making friends with the bear) spoke at the Dairy Farmers of America Young Cooperator meeting at the Cherry Valley Lodge in Newark, Ohio, March 11. More than 100 farmers
A trip down memory lane
Twenty years ago on April 4, I awakened to a white glare outside the bedroom window, realized the glare was from snow, laughed aloud, burrowed back beneath the covers, and snoozed for another 30 minutes.
Lessons from 22 tons of education
Today’s Southern breeze gently rustles the heavy-headed tulips outside my office window before sweeping through the apple tree to sprinkle a shower of blossom petals onto an emerald lawn.
Indiana farm fatalities up for the second consecutive year
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — The 2008 Indiana Farm Fatality Report, compiled by Purdue University’s Agricultural Safety and Health Program, documents 28 agricultural-related fatalities in 2008, up from 24 in 2007. Report online Gail Deboy, Purdue agricultural safety engineer and report coordinator, and Bill Field of Purdue’s Department of Agricultural and Biological Engineering collected farm accident
Acorn poisoning is a threat to cattle and sheep herds
Acorns from this year’s fall crop could cause kidney failure in animals, particularly in cattle and sheep.
Free degree for those hit by tariffs
Penn State Fayette has been approved to offer four associate degrees to individuals who have lost employment to increased imports or shifts in production.






