Fayetteville, Arkansas July 7, 2005 SeedQuest Thu, 07 Jul 2005 10:06 PM PDT As food for people or livestock, the more the protein, the better the soybean. By that standard, the University of Arkansas (UA) Division of Agriculture is making a better bean. | Chirundu Project threatens wildlife habitat Zimbabwe Independent Fri, 08 Jul 2005 1:15 AM PDT GOVERNMENT is planning a massive agriculture and housing project in the Zambezi Valley on land designated for wildlife heritage, the Zimbabwe Independent can reveal. | County fair honors Dave Mueller Winona Daily News Thu, 07 Jul 2005 10:47 PM PDT The Winona County Fair Board has named Dave Mueller to the 2005 Hall of Fame for his contributions to agriculture in Winona County as the owner and operator of a family farm. | Friday July 8, 03:22 AM Yahoo! India News Thu, 07 Jul 2005 5:28 PM PDT BT may soon come to stand for ‘beyond transgression’ in Punjab. Unleashed onto a state with little or no knowledge of farming bio transgenic crops, Bt cotton is rapidly compromising all agriculture in areas where it is being grown. | Ancient farm community unearthed in Port Rowan The Simcoe Reformer Thu, 07 Jul 2005 8:30 AM PDT AGRICULTURE IN NORFOLK COULD DATE BACK TO 1000 B.C. PORT ROWAN - Archaeologists in Port Rowan are probing the site of the local area s first farmers. The dig has nothing to do with United Empire Loyalists, European settlement or the way settlers lived in the late 18th century. | Welasco, Texas July 7, 2005 SeedQuest Thu, 07 Jul 2005 10:06 PM PDT Vine decline has impacted South Texas melon crops for years. This disease strikes late in the growing season, at a time when most farmers are contemplating harvest. But just as the cantaloupes begin to ripen, plants and profits wither and die. | Horse power Missoulian Thu, 07 Jul 2005 10:35 PM 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. | Eritrean farmers struggle on a daily basis Independent Online Fri, 08 Jul 2005 2:41 AM PDT More than half of Eritrea's population still depend on food aid, and are waiting to see whether donations by the United States and Britain will stop a million people from going hungry this year. |
| |
|
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home