Come Here and Enjoy!::
WWW.Khaky.com
Info@Fafzali.com
Huge farms drive more production
Huge farms drive more production The Age Sun, 12 Jun 2005 7:05 AM PDT Productivity and new technology will increasingly drive Australian agriculture, with its output and economic importance growing despite many farmers quitting the sector, says a leading business analyst. | Get out the duct tape, again Daily News Journal Sun, 12 Jun 2005 4:12 AM PDT SMYRNA Agriculture teacher Marvin Whitworth hopes to provide his students with a new Smyrna High greenhouse instead of asking them to repair the outdated one. | To stay in business, farmers in Miss-Lou The Natchez Democrat Sat, 11 Jun 2005 9:18 PM PDT The latest battles in the farming world aren't just taking place in the fields or in the markets - they're in the labs. No change has affected agriculture as drastically in the last few years as genetically engineered crops that are more resistant to pesticides. | Q&A on organic food industry add on Provo Daily Herald Sun, 12 Jun 2005 0:23 AM PDT QUESTION: What is organic food?ANSWER: Organic food is produced by farmers who emphasize the use of renewable resources and the conservation of soil and water to enhance environmental quality for future generations. Organic meat, poultry, eggs, and dairy products come from animals given no antibiotics or growth hormones. | Free training session set to teach coqui-frog controls The Garden Island Sat, 11 Jun 2005 7:41 AM PDT Leaders in the Pesticides Branch of the state Department of Agriculture (HDOA) will be holding a free training session for residents and representatives of nurseries, to emphasize the proper use of hydrated lime to control coqui-frog infestations. | Horse-and-plow farming making comeback Billings Gazette Sun, 12 Jun 2005 2:12 AM PDT SISTERS, Ore. - If the thought of a farmer patiently working his field behind a plow and horses floods you with pangs of nostalgia, take heart. It's on the rebound. | 2,000-year-old seed sprouts in Israel Seattle Times Sun, 12 Jun 2005 0:20 AM PDT Israeli doctors and scientists have succeeded in germinating a date seed that is nearly 2,000 years old. The seed, nicknamed Methuselah... | Hold your water 06-12-2005 Plainview Daily Herald Sat, 11 Jun 2005 11:21 PM PDT PETERSBURG -- On the South Plains where farmers never know from one year to the next whether they are going to get 30 inches of moisture or 10, anything that will help hold that moisture in the fields so it can soak in is welcome. |
| |
|
[TOP]
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home