Search Site   
Current News Stories
Ohio farmer has turned to yaks as a way to diversify 
KDA’s All in for Ag Education Week features student-created book
Trump signs deal expanding duty-free US beef access to Indonesia
School zone pesticide bill being fine-tuned in Illinois
Kentucky Hay Testing Lab helps farmers verify forage quality
Track chairs will help those with limited mobility explore state parks
Chyann Kendel wins 2026 Teachers Turn the Key Award
Fulbright Scholar visit reinforces Clark State’s growing role in global ag
United States cheese consumption hits all-time high in 2025
Data center on farmland a cash cow for city and schools
Indiana Corn Marketing Council seeks farmers to serve on its board of directors
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
UK will offer free pasture management seminar on Feb. 6
 
LEXINGTON, Ky. – Although Kentucky is still in the middle of winter, horse owners and farm managers are already thinking about spring pastures. The Kentucky Cooperative Extension Service and the University of Kentucky’s Ag Equine Programs will host Pastures Please!!, a free evening offering the latest information about horse pasture management, Feb. 6 in Lexington.
“The program’s aim this year is to look at management strategies following a drought year,” said Linda McClanahan, UK Cooperative Extension agent for agriculture and natural resources in Mercer County. “The Pastures Please!! workshop will bring timely information to get horse owners on the right track helping their pastures recover following the difficult weather and drought of 2022.”
UK specialists will discuss various topics including pasture renovation and rejuvenation, matching equipment to pasture management needs and weed control following drought.
Kentucky Cooperative Extension agents launched the free Pastures Please!! program in 2007.
“This program offers equine producers knowledge of the best management practices as they relate to pastures, forages and equine health, in turn making their operations more profitable and sustainable,” said Beau Neal, UK extension agent for agriculture and natural resources in Fayette County. “After a year like 2022 with two significant drought periods, pastures could begin next spring severely lacking in nutrient levels and overall production. Pasture health and weed control will certainly need to be addressed in the coming year.”
The program is 5:30-8 p.m. EST at the Fayette County Extension office. To register for the free event, visit bit.ly/3vSo5ye or contact a local Cooperative Extension office for more information. The Fayette County Cooperative Extension office is at 1140 Harry Sykes Way in Lexington.
Kentucky Cooperative Extension and UK Ag Equine Programs are part of the UK College of Agriculture, Food and Environment.
1/16/2023