Blogs
No comparable replacement for 50-year-old herbicide, agronomist reports | Farm Industry News Blog
Atrazine, the second most commonly applied herbicide in the U.S., has been used for more than 50 years and “there is simply no other comparable product that offers as many benefits,” stresses David Bridges, Ph.D., agronomist and president, Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College, Tifton, GA.
New RMA Rule Gives Flexibility in Cover Crop Termination | Conservation content from Corn and
< div class="field-byline" > Source: Purdue University < /div > < p > Farmers have been given more time to terminate their cover crops after the excessively wet spring of last year prevented many of them from doing that in time to meet a crop insurance deadline. < /p > < div
Spring toll evident in North - Over the Hedge - Arable Barometer farmers' diary - FWispace
A noisy night in a Travelodge only 10m from the A1 on the way to Cereals 2008 further confirmed to me how lucky I am to live in a rural setting - well
AllAboutFeed - Weblog: Eat your daily meat
Let me elaborate a little on my grievance against the single issue party for the animals. What amazes me the most is that these idealistic vegetarians (
Wet soils, delayed planting may mean changes in tillage, herbicide application | Farm Industry News
A drive through south central Minnesota and northeast Iowa on Tuesday found farmers hitting the fields with tillage equipment. Multiple tractors with tracks were spotted in several fields as the race was on to cover as many acres as possible. After all, less that 5% of Minnesota’s corn crop
Intensive farming is the root of all evil...apparently (Food for Thought)
What is interesting - actually make that infuriating - about this new foot-and-mouth outbreak is how a procession of 'experts' are being wheeled out to claim that it wouldn't have happened if it wasn't for intensive farming. This makes me...
Foot and mouth - better than 2001? (Food for Thought)
There's no avoiding the horrible truth. Foot-and-mouth disease is back in the UK. As you might expect Farmers Weekly readers are telling us they are shocked and disappointed. But they are completely supportive of the movement standtill put in place...
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