Precision agriculture has become a new frontier for technology adoption.
Management
Soybean cyst nematode continues to spread in North Dakota and elsewhere in the country.
Growing cereal forages for hay will be one of the topics covered during this year’s field day.
The center is holding an online information session and an in-person tour July 8.
Prerecorded videos on agronomy will go live July 14.
Producers and others will be able view the center researchers’ work by watching short prerecorded videos shot on location.
The RECs have modified their field days in the interest of public health and safety.
Planting a cover crop can enhance soil health while creating feed for late-season grazing or hay and haylage production.
Reducing the chance of transmitting diseases such as COVID-19 is critical to protecting all employees.
Several North Dakotans receive North Central Region Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program awards.
Farmers, ranchers and their employees need to follow physical distancing guidelines to minimize the risk for themselves and their families.
Here are 10 ways farmers and ranchers can protect themselves, their families and others from COVID-19.
Applicators and dealers who were certified through April 1, 2020, retain their certification.
In 2020, the state average cropland value is $2,063 per acre.
Stored grain needs attention as outdoor temperatures rise.
The current markets are not a good way to make decisions about planting.
The spring thaw could cause problems for dirty-water containment ponds and manure stacking areas.
NDSU Extension offers advice on protecting water wells from flooding.
High-moisture grain could pose a danger to anyone working around it.
Projections are given for the major crop and livestock commodities.
NDSU Extension’s grain drying expert offers advice on drying crops.
The program provides a tool for producers to check the changing scenarios until final planting decisions are made this spring.
Nationwide, less than 1% of base acres were enrolled in ARC-IC.
Insurance providers may allow additional time to harvest, on a case-by-case basis.
Producers have options for using unharvested corn.
Ethiopian producers and university staff learn agricultural techniques from NDSU Extension agronomists.
Wheat remains unharvested in parts of North Dakota.
Allowing containment ponds to overflow is a violation of animal feeding operations permits.
Malting barley germination will be lost if the allowable storage time is exceeded.
The USDA is allowing producers to graze, hay or cut cover crops on prevented-planting acres beginning Sept. 1.
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