Site
- Did you mean
- winter resulting barley
Search results
-
Corn Diseases Not Helping Drought-Stressed Plants
diseases even in a drought, means that there is probably going to be a lot of fungi survive the winter on ...
-
Family Fundamentals: Too much clutter? The time to tackle it is today (for October 2007)
next winter? Will we ever use mom's old fondue set? According to Georgene Lockwood, author of ...
-
Drought-Stressed Corn Has Increased Potential for Elevated Nitrate Levels
fermentation and storage for use in the fall and winter and next year,” Clevenger said. Fermentation of corn ...
-
Asian Ladybeetle Infestations May Be Severe This Season
flight to seek an over-wintering site. "The food quality is going down," said Kovach. "The ...
-
Manage Your Woodland as Food for Wildlife at Farm Science Review
nearly enough for sustainability and when winter sets in, those food plots will no longer be ...
-
Researchers Measure Long-Term Impact of Compaction
to the freezing and thawing process during winter, so compaction tends to persist more and its impact ...
-
Agronomist: The Longer Corn Sits in Fields, the Greater the Yield Losses
fall kept some growers out of their fields until that winter. Candace Pollock Peter Thomison False ...
-
Extending the Season: From Winter Sowing to Cold Frames-a First Friday Garden Coffee Chat
https://mastergardener.osu.edu/node/75
Bring a friend, have a cup of coffee or tea, and find out how to extend your gardening season on both ends. Two Medina County Master Gardeners will teach you how to use traditional and not-so-traditional strategies to lengthen your growing time, emphasizi ...
-
Ohio State Food, Ag, Env Calendar Listings as of Jan. 28
25: Friends of Chadwick Arboretum Pancake Breakfast and Winter Walk, 8:30-10:30 a.m., Nationwide and ... 614-688-3479. NEW: Feb. 27: Guided Winter Walk, 2-3 p.m., Secrest Arboretum, Seaman Orientation Plaza, Ohio ...
-
Soybean Rust Moving Slower than Predicted
https://news-archive.cfaes.ohio-state.edu/news-release/soybean-rust-moving-slower-predicted
little inoculum that survived the winter, which for U.S. farmers is actually very good. Another reason is ...