News
Posted on June 24, 2020
Growing fruits and vegetables requires knowing how to plant, provide pest control, irrigating when needed and harvesting at the proper time. But along with the effort it takes to do all this, knowing how to handle the produce after harvest will assure that the grower will sell sound produce that wil...
News
Lee Newspapers 
Posted on June 24, 2020
At this time of various COVID-19 restrictions, you may not be able to serve your customers as you normally would, but communicating with them remains a vital outreach for your business. Think of communications as a three-step process in which you develop and implement the method, message and measura...
News
Lee Newspapers 
Posted on June 24, 2020
We need plants for food. Our livestock need them too. But we tend to focus only on what we can see when we’re growing them. Roots are critically important, and as summer continues to heat up, growers need to consider root health when caring for whole plants, whether they’re in the field or in the gr...
News
Deborah Jeanne Sergeant 
Posted on May 27, 2020
Many fruit farm owners inherit a family farm as their entry into the business after working on the farm for years and perhaps attending an ag school. Others purchase a farm they’ve worked on for many years. Robert Abendroth had never even seen his fruit farm before he bought it. It was just another ...
News
Sally Colby 
Posted on May 27, 2020
Dr. Jill Calabro, research and science programs director for AmericanHort, recently moderated a discussion on Ralstonia solanacearum race 3 biovar 2(R3bv2). “The last find of this bacterial pathogen in the U.S. was 16 years ago in 2004, and it was eradicated then,” said Calabro. “R3bv2 is considered...
News
Sally Colby 
Posted on May 27, 2020
A nice, clean head of lettuce appeals to just about everyone, and hydroponic growing is one of the best ways to produce that lettuce. A good hydroponic system uses a fraction of the space and carries less risk than the same crop grown outdoors. Plants grow suspended in a nutrient solution, develop q...
News
Sally Colby 
Posted on May 27, 2020
In a recent discussion about how to keep farm workers healthy during the COVID-19 outbreak, Dr. Rich Stup, agricultural workforce specialist with Cornell Cooperative Extension, discussed some options for employers. COVID-19 has mainly spread in large, urban areas, “but there’s no doubt it’s on the f...
News
Sally Colby 
Posted on May 27, 2020
A group of experienced farm market experts gathered recently to share thoughts on how to best conduct farmers markets this season. Mary Choate, University of New Hampshire Extension, provides some basic tips. “In addition to being six feet from others,” she said, “limit the amount of time spent in c...
News
Enrico Villamaino 
Posted on May 27, 2020
A team of researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology has developed a sensor that could have large implications for the agricultural industry. As plants bloom and fruits ripen, they produce and discharge a colorless, sweet-smelling gas called ethylene. While the release of ethylene is...
News
Courtney Llewellyn 
March 23, 2026
In time for National Ag Day on March 24, the nonprofit Rural Minds announces the launch of the new Farmer Mental Health Resilience Program in support ...
News
by Karl H. Kazaks 
March 2, 2026
When Rusty Mangrum recently built a new house, he wanted to plant shade trees in the yard – magnolia, serviceberry, 'Autumn Blaze' red maple. To find ...
News
by Enrico Villamaino 
March 2, 2026
Water is waning and landscapes are feeling the squeeze. Lawns and landscapes are increasingly left to languish under water use limits. In response to ...
News
by Sally Colby 
March 2, 2026
A recent shift toward more restrictive weed control measures along with new, mandatory pesticide application rules has been mandated by the EPA. Wesle...