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All farmers should be on high alert
After reading last week’s Dairy Excel, David Marrison believes the advice offered goes for all farmers and crop farmers need to be on high alert too.
Farmers question whether Kasich’s executive order is practical
A state legislative committee heard additional testimony this week, on the governor’s distressed watershed order.
Roundup of gardening news for Oct. 4, 2018
Catch up on local gardening news in Geauga County, Knox County, Mahoning County and Richland County in Ohio and Beaver County, Pennsylvania.
Hiram Farm helps adults with autism learn life skills
This Portage County Farm is run by adults on the autism spectrum.
A proactive approach to pasture management
A little planning and work in the fields now could save you time during the busy grazing season.
Davis automobiles had a short, but interesting, life
O.K., admit it; you’ve never heard of a Davis automobile. Well, neither had I until a visit to the National Truck Museum in Auburn, Ind., a couple years ago. After World War II, during which no new automobiles were built for civilian buyers, there was a huge hunger for new cars and many manufacturers gave
Riding shotgun should have been starting shotgun
Start a tractor by firing a shotgun shell? You’ve got to be kidding! However, the post-World War II Field Marshall tractor used just such a method of starting. Marshall, Sons & Co., Ltd., ran the Brittania Iron Works at Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, in northeastern England. The firm was founded in 1848 and soon began building threshing
Budget crunch hits Ohio State University Extension
SALEM, Ohio — No one is safe from hard-hitting money woes, and this week, another victim came forward: Ohio State University Extension. State budget cuts will eliminate roughly $3.6 million of the state Extension purse now through June 2011 and have forced a massive restructuring and workforce reduction in the state Extension system. “OSU Extension
Tricks of the trade keep costs down
The high cost of fertilizers has led some graziers to conclude that they can no longer afford to fertilize their pastures. Forage has now become an expensive feed. With hay prices expected to remain high in the foreseeable future, forage produced in a pasture situation becomes more valuable, as well. The question might well be:
Four records set at Summit Co. Fair sale
TALLMADGE, Ohio – Strong buyer support yielded four new price records at the






