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Stories 401 to 410 of 4726
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Top 10 agricultural inventions that changed the face of farming |
SALEM, Ohio – There’s no doubt that farming is the backbone of all civilizations in the world. But thanks to modern technology, it has become possible to make things easier than ever before. |
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UK to hold first equine digital photograph contest
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LEXINGTON, Ky – The University of Kentucky Ag Equine Programs has announced that it will be launching its first equine-oriented digital photography contest. Both college students and the general public are encouraged to participate. |
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National Ag in the Classroom conference welcomes teachers of native students |
The National Agriculture in the Classroom Organization (NAITCO) has partnered with the Native American Agriculture Fund (NAAF) to encourage teachers of Native American students to attend the 2021 National Agriculture in the Classroom Conference “Fields of Dreams” scheduled for June 29-July 1 at the Iowa Events Center in Des Moines. |
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The Moody Implement Company now a museum |
Jacksonville, Ill. – Donna Moody, of Jacksonville, has kept her family’s Allis Chalmers dealership intact years after it closed. Moody Implement Co. is a story both of Allis Chalmers history and of the Moody family. Donna came into the business when she came to work as a bookkeeper and fell in love with the owner’s son named Kaywn, although he went by ‘Bub’. “My father-in-law Loren Moody started the business,” Donna said. |
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Having a great dog in your life makes so many things better
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Milk remains widely available for cheese production in the Midwest |
The Agriculture Department continued to raise its milk production forecasts in its latest World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates report issued Feb. 9, again citing higher projected cow numbers for 2021. |
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Winter is a great time to prune berry bushes for best yield |
URBANA, Ill. —- As a child, Kelly Allsup’s grandparents would send her sisters and her to the wilds of their property to pick enough blackberries for a pie. Years later, the University of Illinois Extension horticulture educator recalled the blackberry bushes as gangly, thorny and under-yielding. “Although this was a tactic to get us out of the house, if those wild berries had been pruned in late winter we might have brought back enough for 10 pies,” said Allsup, who now makes her living, in part, advising others how to grow berry bushes. |
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