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Area dairy farmers feeling spring?s rain - Morris Daily Herald
Corn and soybean farmers may be feeling the pinch this year as a result of heavy and long spring rains, but so are area dairy farmers. Cattle depend on the grains and hays that are grown in local fields, and those crops have been pushed back this ...
Vermont farmers lament rainy June - Burlington Free Press
Hay needs to dry for two to three days after it?s been cut so that it can be bailed or chopped into silage. But a two-or-three-day dry period has been tough to find. The National Weather Service in Burlington says June was well short of the record ...
Oral history project recalls the traditions, smells of family farms - Asheville Citizen-Times
With the growing national interest in healthy food, traditional farm values are gaining a renewed appreciation. Area farmers who met with Rebecca Williams, Kaye Myers, Polly Johnson and Nick Lanier for the Friends of Mountain History's museum theme ...
Farmers plant more corn, soy - Madera Tribune
Farmers planted an unexpectedly large crop of corn and soybeans this year, easing some fears of rising food costs. The U.S. Department of Agriculture said Tuesday a record 77.5 million acres of soybeans were planted through June, up 1.8 million acres ...
Farmers lament rainy June - Boston Globe
MONTPELIER, Vt.? Many Vermont farmers are having trouble getting their first summer hay crop in because of recent rains. Hay needs to dry for two to three days after it's been cut so that it can be bailed or chopped into silage. But a two-or-three ...
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