Agency of Agriculture, Food & Markets UVM Extension and the Northeast Cover Crops Council invite you to attend the 2026 No-Till and Cover Crop Conference on February 19 in Burlington, VT! Every year, ...
The likelihood of seeing a benefit from planting a cover crop, however, is closely related to the amount of biomass produced by the cover crop. Cereal rye has been one of the most, if not the most, ...
A review into how cover crops affect nitrogen uptake in following potato crops has confirmed one thing – it is complicated.
To get a head start on the growing season, start slow-growing perennial herbs such as rosemary and lavender 10 to 12 weeks before your expected last frost. Start perennial herbs with a moderately slow ...
North-central Iowa farmer Doug Adams caught a lot of people’s attention recently when he grew wheat in his field near ...
Unverferth Manufacturing Co., Inc. announces the addition of a mounted cover crop seeder for its Rolling Harrow soil conditioner to provide time-saving, one-pass planting of these profit-enhancing ...
Despite decades of reform and strong public research institutions, Bangladesh’s seed system continues to fall short of meeting farmers’ needs. Structural gaps in access, affordability, and climate res ...
He has planted many cotton varieties over the years, but today he is fully Deltapine. He plants with a rip-strip planter and ...
Since 2023, the company has been driving this development through its camelina program in partnership with Camelina Co. (Argentina), part of the Grapevine Energy group (formerly Global Clean Energy), ...
Oats were once a major Minnesota crop, with about 4 million acres planted annually on average until the early 1960s. But in 2025, oats accounted for only 195,000 planted acres in Minnesota, and those ...
Homes and Gardens on MSN
If you want early crops, then sow these 7 vegetables under cold frames or cloches in February
A guide to 7 vegetables to plant in February in a cold frame or beneath cloches for the first homegrown harvests of the year, ...
Prices for nearly every major crop in the U.S. are below what it costs to grow them, but Mississippi farmers growing rice, which almost nobody is buying, may have it the worst of all.
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