The SCN Coalition received a national award for outstanding public relations campaign.
All Crops
Participants will receive updates on crop pest and soil management recommendations.
The recorded Getting-it-Right virtual meetings are available on the NDSU Ag Hub website.
The procedures for producing certified seed will be one of the main topics.
Visitors will be able to learn about crop production, the drought, farm stress and NDSU’s Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering Department.
The greenhouse, which is on the west side of the NDSU campus, now is the Jack Dalrymple Agricultural Research Complex.
The North Dakota State Board of Agricultural Research and Education (SBARE) is looking for public input on state needs.
If corn for silage is sold standing in the field, producers need to know how to determine a fair price for the standing crop.
Web-based mapping for field management and crop cultivar selection are among the topics that will be covered.
Cover crops, pulse crop breeding and weed issues will be among the topics discussed.
Topics for this year’s field day include cereal forage and corn silage variety trials and winter grazing crop residues.
The organic tour’s focus will be on issues and opportunities in raising crops organically.
Weed management, wheat diseases and seed treatments, and industrial hemp are among the topics for this year’s field tour.
Weed, pest and disease control, crop production and soil issues will be among the topics discussed.
Grain yield potential may have declined to a point where harvesting the small grains as forage makes more sense than waiting to harvest the crop as grain.
Participants will have an opportunity to view research trials and receive current production information.
Drought, root rot in peas and soybean research will be among the topics covered during the field day.
Soybean varieties, an update on current small-grain disease issues and current disease issues in broadleaf crops are among the topics that will be discussed.
Topics that will be covered include variety performance, plant nutrition and disease management.
Producers and others will learn about hemp production, processing, marketing and regulation.
Participants will receive updates on crop pest and soil management recommendations.
Drought may lead to widespread winter-killed alfalfa this year.
The new recommendations provide a more precise guide for establishing soybean stands.
Farmland values across the state are up a modest 1.74% while cropland cash rents are up 0.77%.
Vertical farms produce fresh leafy greens and herbs in indoor environments for sale in a local urban area.
Weed seeds pass unharmed through the digestive tracts of animals such as cattle and sheep.
4-H’ers bring home honors from the North Dakota state 4-H crop judging contest.
The survey provides information on dry bean production, pest problems and pesticide use in Minnesota and North Dakota.
A new Extension publication addresses questions about rye as a cover crop.
Participants will learn about tile drainage design and management.
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