News Stories - Page 169

In this file photo, an array of pesticides are lined on the shelves of a Griffin, Ga., feed and seed store. CAES News
In this file photo, an array of pesticides are lined on the shelves of a Griffin, Ga., feed and seed store.
Pesticide collection day at Brooks County Extension office Nov. 12
Georgia residents can safely dispose of old pesticides, herbicides, fertilizers and other chemicals at the Clean Day, set for Thursday, Nov. 12, from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the Brooks County Extension office in Quitman, Georgia.
Green acorns lie beneath a tree on the University of Georgia campus in Tifton, Ga. Many species of wildlife can eat acorns with no ill effects, but cows can contract acorn poisoning from eating too many - especially the green ones. CAES News
Green acorns lie beneath a tree on the University of Georgia campus in Tifton, Ga. Many species of wildlife can eat acorns with no ill effects, but cows can contract acorn poisoning from eating too many - especially the green ones.
Lack of pasture grass may lead cattle to feed on dangerous green acorns
Squirrels, birds and small wildlife are known to dine on acorns. Cows, on the other hand, can eat a few acorns, but too many can cause deadly acorn—or “Quercus”—poisoning.
Mosquitoes feed on sugar water in Mark Brown's endocrinology lab on UGA's Athens campus. CAES News
Mosquitoes feed on sugar water in Mark Brown's endocrinology lab on UGA's Athens campus.
Georgia Mosquito Control Association plans for threat of chikungunya next spring
As Georgia’s mosquito season draws to a close, mosquito control professionals are looking back, evaluating the season and planning for the challenges they will face next spring.
Pecans in a tree on the UGA Ponder Farm in Tifton, Ga. CAES News
Pecans in a tree on the UGA Ponder Farm in Tifton, Ga.
UGA Extension specialist optimistic about Georgia's pecan crop
Georgia’s dry summer helped save its pecan crop, according to University of Georgia Extension horticulture specialist Lenny Wells.
CAES News
UGA Extension agent teaching positive financial habits to Lanier County students
University of Georgia Extension agent Rachel Hubbard is instilling lifelong, positive financial habits in Lanier County students.
This picture shows spider mite damage in a peanut field this year. CAES News
This picture shows spider mite damage in a peanut field this year.
Dry summer leads to heavy spider mite damage in non-irrigated peanuts
An abnormally dry and typically hot August provided the perfect conditions for heavy spider mite damage in Georgia’s non-irrigated peanuts.
Dave Hoisington, right, director of the UGA-led Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Collaborative Research on Peanut and Mycotoxin, and Jamie Rhoads, incoming assistant director, check out peanuts in a field in Tierra Muscady, Haiti. CAES News
Dave Hoisington, right, director of the UGA-led Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Collaborative Research on Peanut and Mycotoxin, and Jamie Rhoads, incoming assistant director, check out peanuts in a field in Tierra Muscady, Haiti.
PMIL assistant director helps develop international agriculture Extension materials on aflatoxin control in smallholder peanut production
The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)’s University of Georgia-housed Peanut & Mycotoxin Innovation Lab (PMIL) is helping to create Extension materials that will be used internationally to curb mycotoxin exposure among smallholder farmers.
Art at the Rock logo CAES News
Art at the Rock logo
Art at the Rock holds online auction to benefit Georgia 4-H
Artists participating in November’s Art at the Rock will be selling their wares through an online preview auction for the benefit of Georgia 4-H.
Austin French, a former member of Georgia 4-H's Clovers & Company, performs at the UGA building at the Sunbelt Expo on Tuesday, Oct. 14 in Moultrie. CAES News
Austin French, a former member of Georgia 4-H's Clovers & Company, performs at the UGA building at the Sunbelt Expo on Tuesday, Oct. 14 in Moultrie.
Austin French credits Georgia 4-H for newfound stardom
Cordele, Georgia, native Austin French may have gained nationwide notoriety this summer on ABC’s “Rising Star,” but it was as a member of Georgia 4-H where friends and supporters first recognized his star quality.