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With age comes wisdom
On her birthday, Kymberly Foster Seabolt shares advice for aging and all the lessons she’s learned so far.
Spring forage: Looking beyond rye
Winter wheat, barley, triticale and rye planted in the fall can produce high-quality forage in the spring when harvest is in the boot stage.
Think of key words to stay focused throughout new year
How are you doing on your New Year’s resolutions? Dairy Excel columnist David Marrison recommends focusing on just one word a year.
Deciding which perennials to divide in the fall
When deciding which plants to divide in the fall, there are a few hard and fast rules to follow. Find out which plants you should divide this fall.
It’s a weather grain market (again)
The crops are ahead of normal in development, well on the way to an early harvest. Here’s veteran grain merchandiser Marlin Clark on the current grain market.
Picture this: Life is fleeting
I easily snap 3,000 photos every month. It’s probably closer to 10,000, but I edged the number down so as not to appear entirely crazy.
Health care is about care, not politics
When you’re sick, nothing—not money, politics or even religion—matters more than getting well. And, yet, when you’re healthy, those items matter more in any health care policy debate than the goal of the policy being debated: healing you when you’re sick. This disconnect isn’t just personal, it’s national, regional and local and it continues to
A piece of land and the ones you love
In the past couple of weeks, I have had the good fortune to sit and chat with some good people about how farm life and the land itself molds us in to who we are.
How does Santa do it? Researcher explains how the jolly old elf delivers
RALEIGH, N.C. — Don’t believe in Santa Claus? Magic, you say? In fact, science and technology explain how Santa is able to deliver toys to good girls and boys around the world in one night, according to a North Carolina State University researcher.
Diversity key to herbicide weed management, fighting resistance
WOOSTER, Ohio — Weed resistance to herbicides has been a concern among crop farmers since about 1998, but the fact that it’s no longer new is no reason to become complacent. Grain farmers in Ohio and certain parts of Pennsylvania are in an ongoing battle against herbicide resistance and the spread of stubborn weeds like






