U.S. corn harvest largest on record
REYNOLDSBURG, Ohio - U.S. farmers are on pace for the largest corn crop on record, as growers expect to harvest the most corn acres for grain since 1933.
Warm winter a blessing and a curse
WASHINGTON - National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration forecasters are calling for above-average temperatures over most of the country and a continuation of drier-than-average conditions across already drought-stricken parts of the Southwest and Southeast in its winter outlook for the United States.
Ohio farmers opposed to power line running through their cropland
GEAUGA COUNTY, Ohio - Farmers in Montville, Thompson and Huntsburg townships are wired about CEI/FirstEnergy's determination to run transmission lines through crops and woodlands just east of state Route 528.
Pressing on: Sorghum complements farm’s maple syrup production
JELLOWAY, Ohio - One of the first lessons they teach in economics class is economics is about getting the most benefits from resources that are scarce.
U.S. submits domestic support notices to the World Trade Organization
World’s biggest tractor breaks world record
WARWICKSHIRE, England - By cultivating an area the size of a football field every two minutes, the world's biggest tractor - a 570hp, AGCO Challenger MT875B - has set a world record.
Facing challenges the mustang way
SALEM, Ohio - Dave McClelland won't get the manure spreader he was hoping for, but he did make an important addition to his farm this summer.
Dairy alliance program helps bring employee management to forefront
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. - "What they teach in business school really works on the farm!" That's the realization Joel Stauring, an agricultural finance specialist with Dehm Associates of Geneseo, N.
How should U.S. deal with China?
COLUMBUS - Economic imbalances of two of the world's major players - the United States and China - could shake things up in the global market, but Congress' protectionist stance against China to right the economic problems of both countries is not the solution, said one economist.