News Stories - Page 255

A farmer uses his tractor to bushhog a pasture in Butts County, Ga. CAES News
A farmer uses his tractor to bushhog a pasture in Butts County, Ga.
Farm estate planning workshop set
For many families the farm is their family heritage. However, transferring the farming enterprise from one generation to the next or from one owner to another can be complicated, time-consuming and emotional. An up-coming workshop will help.
Col. Bill Williams with the 201st Regional Support Group's Agribusiness Development Team presents a UGA flag to the faculty and students of the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences at Conner Hall at UGA's Athens campus on June 11, 2012.  The base flag, now autographed and war torn, flew over the unit's base in Logar Province. CAES News
Col. Bill Williams with the 201st Regional Support Group's Agribusiness Development Team presents a UGA flag to the faculty and students of the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences at Conner Hall at UGA's Athens campus on June 11, 2012.  The base flag, now autographed and war torn, flew over the unit's base in Logar Province.
UGA flag flown in Afghanistan returned to campus
A University of Georgia flag flown over the Afghanistan barracks of Georgia National Guardsmen returned to campus June 11.
CAES News
Tomatoes can be picked at breaker stage or later
Gardeners often argue about when tomatoes should be picked — when they’re ripe, almost ripe or green as the stalk that supports them.
Slime molds, like this dog vomit mold, pop up in Georgia every time it rains. 
This mold sprang up next to a corn plant in a Georgia garden this srping. It's not harmful but seems to gross out unsuspecting gardeners. CAES News
Slime molds, like this dog vomit mold, pop up in Georgia every time it rains. 
This mold sprang up next to a corn plant in a Georgia garden this srping. It's not harmful but seems to gross out unsuspecting gardeners.
Alien-looking slime molds come from mulch not Mars
Most of the time when people call their University of Georgia Extension office, they are typically fairly calm, but when they call to report a science-fiction-type growth has taken up residence in their yard, their nerves are usually on edge.
Cooperative Extension Southwest District 4-H'ers play beneath center pivot irrigation at the 2012 4-H20 camp at Stripling Irrigation Research Park in Camilla, Ga. CAES News
Cooperative Extension Southwest District 4-H'ers play beneath center pivot irrigation at the 2012 4-H20 camp at Stripling Irrigation Research Park in Camilla, Ga.
4-H20: Saving water for the future
Dozens of 4-H students playing under the dangling spray nozzle of a center pivot irrigation system may look like a fun way to cool off in the south Georgia heat. But it’s also a lesson in water conservation.
Abbie Whittaker leads a reptile and amphibian class at Rock Eagle 4-H Center in Eatonton, Ga. CAES News
Abbie Whittaker leads a reptile and amphibian class at Rock Eagle 4-H Center in Eatonton, Ga.
June's Saturday at the Rock focuses on reptiles
Spend Saturday, June 16, at Rock Eagle 4-H Center in Eatonton, Ga., and get up close and personal with the center’s reptile and amphibian collection.
Squash vine borer larva inside squash vine. CAES News
Squash vine borer larva inside squash vine.
The squash vine borer: A difficult but manageable garden pest
You can have tomatoes, peppers and cucumbers galore; but no backyard garden is complete without summer squash.
A 10-by-14 structural frame greenhouse built with treated wood and commercial-grade plastic. CAES News
A 10-by-14 structural frame greenhouse built with treated wood and commercial-grade plastic.
Backyard hobby greenhouses are the dream of many home gardeners
With a little effort and forethought, the dream of owning a hobby greenhouse can become reality.
This map shows the amount of precipitation in Georgia in May 2012. Click on "view image" to see an enlarged version of the map. CAES News
This map shows the amount of precipitation in Georgia in May 2012. Click on "view image" to see an enlarged version of the map.
Spring 2012 hits the record books as one of the warmest
Weather conditions in May continued this year's trend of above-normal temperatures in Georgia with some areas seeing higher than normal rainfall and other areas still experiencing drought conditions.