Mother Nature is imposing changing and challenging Midwest conditions this growing season.
Visiting an American-chestnut tree can still be a celebration even though it’s not what it would have been 125 years ago.
Native warm-season grasses can benefit pastures, especially during the hot summer months. University of Missouri Extension ...
Sunflower acreage for oil-type sunflower is higher this year in North Dakota and South Dakota, according to USDA’s planted ...
For producers, federal conservation programs are complex compared to straightforward transactions with equipment or seed ...
The Nebraska Soil Health Coalition is a collaborative effort to increase sustainable agricultural production and thriving ...
Farmers from across the country are urging the federal government to expedite an investigation of the fertilizer industry as ...
Women play a vital role in U.S. agriculture — contributing through production, advocacy, education, and entrepreneurship, ...
Like two peas in a pod, corn and soybeans have become the common crop rotation for growers in eastern Nebraska, but ...
This column was originally published on March 3, 2003.
Hot, dry weather has taken over the lead in providing direction to the wheat market, as well as the corn and soybean markets.
Hot weather can bring a long list of problems for dairy producers. When cows are heat stressed, they eat less, produce less ...
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