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Agriculture

  • Ag report: Feb. 8, 2013

    Mandatory tobacco training is March 5 at extension office

    The Shelby County Extension Office has set a tobacco production GAP training program for March 5 at the office on Frankfort Road. The session will be from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

    Starting this year, tobacco companies are requiring that all producers participate in this training annually. GAP stands for Good Agricultural Practices.

    The extension office incorporates this training into its tobacco production update session.

  • WICHE: Don’t forget your root cellar, freezer or pantry

    Perhaps this can be a reminder of the payoff of “putting up” the garden in spring, summer and fall: We have extended our homegrown eating pleasure into the winter months with some basic preservation methods.

    If you froze, dried, canned or otherwise preserved fresh fruits and vegetables in 2012, do not forget about them (or horde them for some unreasonable time).

    First, open the freezer and assess what’s there.

    Blanched Romano beans with some ice crystals forming inside the freezer bag? Plan a stew for dinner.

  • Ag report: Feb. 1, 2013

    Simpsonville’s Trumbo received soybean association’s top honor

    Simpsonville farmer Jack Trumbo has been awarded the highest honor of the Kentucky Soybean Association – the Distinguished Service Award – as one of two he received at the organization’s recent commodities conference.

    Trumbo also received a watch as a symbol of appreciation for his years of service as he retired from the soybean promotion board.

  • Ag report: Jan. 23, 2013

    New programs announced to help vets get into farming

    Agriculture Commissioner James Comer launched two new programs to help Kentucky military veterans find jobs in agriculture and sell their farm products.

  • WICHE: Are some offers too good to be true?

    This time of the year subtle warnings come from professionals reminding the consumer to be skeptical of mail order catalogues or advertisements that claim “new horticultural breakthroughs,” otherwise outrages claims or mass quantities of things for bargain basement prices. There are legitimate “horticultural breakthroughs,” but usually different terminology is used, and you’ll find them at your local stores.

  • Ag report: Jan. 18, 2013

    Comer rallies support

    for Hornback’s hemp bill

     

    Kentucky Agriculture Commissioner James Comer this week praised Senate Bill 50 filed by state Sen. Paul Hornback (R-Shelbyville), the chair of the Senate Agriculture Committee, that introduces legislation to legalize industrial hemp.

  • Ag report: Jan. 11, 2013

    Webinar will discuss strategies for improving pastures, hay

    A special Webinar program at the Shelby County Extension Office, conducted by two experts from the University of Kentucky, will help participants learn more about using and restoring pasture lands.

    The program, at 7 p.m. Jan. 28, will feature Garry Lacefield, UK Extension forage specialist, who will speak on preparing better pastures, and Jeff Lehmkuhler, UK Extension beef cattle specialist, who will address strategies for stretching hay supplies.

  • WICHE: Keep African violets in bloom all winter

    African violets are often purchased in a blooming state. Then many of us wonder why they never bloom again. What have we done, or not done, to turn these dainty flowering plants into something that can only be appreciated for its fuzzy foliage?

  • Ag report: Jan. 4, 2013

    USDA seeks applications

    for wildlife initiative

     

    Natural Resources Conservation Service in Kentucky is currently accepting applications for Environmental Quality Incentive Program Wildlife Initiative, a voluntary program available to landowners to improve wildlife habitat on private property.

  • WICHE: Trunk damage can girdle trees

    The farm looks like a storm hit recently, but it’s really just my husband’s new deer deterrent technique. It seems to be working. In the past we have forgone the Irish Spring soap, human hair and coyote urine for more reliable barriers. Tomato cages, tobacco stakes, wire, spiral plastic trunk wrap, and, yes, an occasional arrangement of lawn chairs, have created distance between rutting and browsing deer.

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