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  1. New Extension Forage Agronomist

    https://dairy.osu.edu/newsletter/buckeye-dairy-news/volume-27-issue-1/new-extension-forage-agronomist

    professor and Extension state specialist, her lab focuses on applied forage systems research that helps ... starting trials on summer annual planting dates and stand evaluation methods this year, since that ...

  2. Determining the Grazing Intensity and Move Frequency for Your Rotational Grazing System

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/anr-0160

    system to be adjusted by stocking rate and forage allowance. For instance, during summer drought ... the summer months to allow for better forage recovery when forage regrowth rates are slowed due to ...

  3. Tackle the Big, Hard Stuff, Not the Easy Little Stuff—Your Farm or Agribusiness Will Be Better For It!

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/aede-0028

    as we frequently remind our students, the real magic happens outside a person’s comfort zone (see ...

  4. Box Tree Moth: Range and Spread

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/ent-0099

    example of the potential for summer temperatures to significantly influence caterpillar development. All ... of the caterpillars in a BTM population in Southwest Ohio during the summer were early-instars as ... agriculture.ny.gov/news/nys-department-agriculture-confirms-box-tree-moth-found-western-new-york Proxmire, A., (2024), Box Tree Moth. United States Department of Agriculture, Animal and Plant ...

  5. Dairy Margin Coverage and Dairy Risk Management for 2025

    https://dairy.osu.edu/newsletter/buckeye-dairy-news/volume-27-issue-1/dairy-margin-coverage-and-dairy-risk-management-2025

    potentially increasing feed costs through domestic or internal weather challenges that lower corn and soybean ... challenges from international markets or increases in domestic cow numbers and production. As a risk ...

  6. Hidden Defenses: How Cows Fight Disease

    https://dairy.osu.edu/newsletter/buckeye-dairy-news/volume-27-issue-1/hidden-defenses-how-cows-fight-disease

    their surface area and limit heat loss. Additionally, blood flow will shift to internal organs, leaving ...

  7. VOLUME 27: ISSUE 1

    https://dairy.osu.edu/newsletter/buckeye-dairy-news/volume-27-issue-1

    ...

  8. Giving New Life to Tired Pastures

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/anr-0159

    reduce the severity of the summer slump. This application should occur after grazing. A third option is ... changed or reduced by varying the timing of mowing throughout the late spring and summer growing period ...

  9. Controlling Non-Native Invasive Plants in Ohio Forests: Amur Corktree (Phellodendron amurense)

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/f-0108

    gray (Figure 5). The flowers are produced in late spring to early summer and are upright with 2–3-inch, ... root system remain in the soil. Cutting of seedlings or saplings is best conducted in early summer ...

  10. Controlling Non-Native Invasive Plants in Ohio Forests: Japanese Stiltgrass

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/F-70-11

    Flowers — Delicate, spikelike flowers up to 3 inches long develop in late summer or early fall in the ... these products have no residual effect, control is most effective when applied in late summer just prior ... the growing season through mid-summer. These treatments have been shown to effectively control ...

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