Monthly Archives: March 2006
Precision feeding helps environment
STATE COLLEGE, Pa. - Phosphorus and nitrogen-containing protein are well recognized as essential components to dairy cattle feed.
Take steps to keep soybean disease at arm’s length
COLUMBUS - Asian soybean rust didn't show up in Ohio or Indiana in 2005, but a lot of other soybean diseases did.
High prices to stay as cow herd grows
URBANA, Ill. - The cattle industry can expect another year of high prices, said a Purdue University Extension marketing specialist.
Corn after corn a continuous challenge for growers
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Conventional wisdom suggests a corn crop be rotated with another crop. Some farmers are disregarding that sage advice and producing high yields by growing corn in the same field year after year.
Construction to start on ethanol plant
MAUMEE, Ohio - The Andersons Inc. will immediately begin construction on the largest, dry-mill ethanol plant east of the Mississippi River in Clymers, Ind.
Past makes present burn brighter
The dairyman stormed into the local paper and demanded to speak to the editor. His tone was "brusque, belligerent" and after he was directed to the appropriate spot, the "short oldish man with a rural turn to his speech, leaned the [butts] of his hands on the desk, stuck out a grizzled chin, and lit into the editor.
Ohio offers hand to Gulf Coast farmers
SALEM, Ohio - With news of an impending hurricane, Louisiana cattlemen hauled their animals from the Gulf Coast to safety farther north.
All in the family
NEWCOMERSTOWN, Ohio - Farming has its way of taking hold of lives, of families, of generations. For Jerry Lahmers' family in Tuscarawas County, Ohio, that hold is particularly tight.
Tuscarawas County dairy farmers earn recognition for herd production
RAGERSVILLE, Ohio - Ridenour Farms and Putt Dairy Farms were recognized as the official top milk producing farms in Tuscarawas County at the county's annual dairy farmers banquet Feb.
Proposed changes to Pennsylvania’s vocational education cause concern
SALEM, Ohio - Ag educators in Pennsylvania are worried a new proposal could put the state's vo-ag programs in danger.