Site

Search results

  1. C.O.R.N. Newsletter 2004-32

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletters/2004/32

    samples and requirement for sending samples. It is best to phone the lab and determine costs, turn-around ... Mexican bean beetles in soybeans this past summer. Before adults go to wooded areas to overwinter, they go ... if grain is to be stored in the bin for long periods of time (i.e., into next summer). Empty bin ...

  2. C.O.R.N. Newsletter 2010-05

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletters/2010/05

    growing season. Hot, dry weather in the summer can greatly reduce legume growth and potential nitrogen ... the adult fed on diseased corn in the late summer or fall, it may carry the bacterium that causes ...

  3. C.O.R.N. Newsletter 2012-34

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletters/2012/34

    the problem is available at the Kentucky Pest News site that was written by our colleague, Doug ...

  4. C.O.R.N. Newsletter 2012-03

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletters/2012/03

    a plow layer weighs approximately 2 million pounds. In more recent years soil test labs have moved away ... summer when marestail are still emerging.  Applying later in spring (late April/early May) can reduce the ...

  5. C.O.R.N. Newsletter 2006-25

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletters/2006/25

    aphids per plant will NOT cause a yield reduction. This late summer increase in aphid populations was ... the aphid’s overwintering host to determine the potential for problems next summer. Although there is ...

  6. Summer Coliform Mastitis,

    https://dairy.osu.edu/newsletter/buckeye-dairy-news/volume-6-issue-3/summer-coliform-mastitis

    Dr. Normand St-Pierre, Dairy Management Specialist, Ohio State University (top of page) As I write this column, outside temperatures are well above 80 o F in Ohio and we are just in early May. Is this unusual? Well, considering that the average of our dai ...

  7. Nothing Stands Still: High Moisture Corn and Corn Silage is Different in Summer than in the Fall and Winter

    https://dairy.osu.edu/newsletter/buckeye-dairy-news/volume-13-issue-3/nothing-stands-still-high-moisture-corn-and-corn

    Dr. Bill Weiss, Dairy Nutrition Extension Specialist, The Ohio State University (top of page) pdf file The high moisture (HM) corn and corn silage fed today was  made 9 or 10 months ago, and they are not the same feedstuffs as they were last winter.  If H ...

  8. Planting Small Grains in Late Summer and Autumn for Supplemental Forage

    https://dairy.osu.edu/newsletter/buckeye-dairy-news/volume-14-issue-4/planting-small-grains-late-summer-and-autumn

    Mark Sulc, Professor and Interim Chair, Department of Horticulture and Crop Science and Stan Smith, Program Assistant, Fairfield County, Ohio State University Extension Dairy producers are looking to grow more forage this autumn and early next spring beca ...

  9. The Good News: Feed Costs Have Declined Over the Past Year

    https://dairy.osu.edu/newsletter/buckeye-dairy-news/volume-11-issue-4/good-news-feed-costs-have-declined-over-past-year

      We’ve been tracking the cost of nutrients over the past three years, based on the estimates obtained from SesameIII predictions.  Since last fall, the average cost of nutrients to feed a cow producing 75 lb/day of milk has decreased 70¢/day (Figure 1).  ...

  10. Bean Leaf Beetles Don’t Quit at the End of August (Unlike Your Summer Help)

    https://agcrops.osu.edu/newsletter/corn-newsletter/bean-leaf-beetles-don%E2%80%99t-quit-end-august-unlike-your-summer-help

    As we get into the R5-R6 growth stage of soybean, now is the time to look out for pod and seed feeding insects, especially bean leaf beetles, grasshoppers, and stink bugs.  Last week’s article focused on stink bugs, which pierce the pod and suck out seed ...

Pages