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   November
 Home>News Archive>2004>November>
Pick Pears Before Completely Ripe, Advises LSU AgCenter Horticulturist
(Distributed August 2004) Pears are adapted to most of Louisiana. It is not unusual to find 40- and 50-year-old trees still producing fruit, according to LSU AgCenter horticulturist Dr. John Pyzner.
LSU AgCenter Horticulturist Hot About Cool Gardens
(Distributed November 2004) November in Louisiana means cooler weather, but LSU AgCenter horticulturist Dr. Tom Koske says it doesn't mean you have to hang up your garden tools for the year. "Some garden plants withstand cold weather, so you can keep your garden filled and growing until spring," the horticulturist explains.
Workshop To Focus On Forest Management, Wildlife
(Distributed 07/02/04) The LSU AgCenter and others are sponsoring a workshop in Alexandria July 21-22 that is designed to help forest landowners get the most from managing their land while also keeping thriving wildlife populations.
Shift Up and Throttle Back to Save Fuel, LSU AgCenter Engineer Suggests
(Distributed August 2004) As fuel prices rise, tractor owners are looking for ways to reduce fuel consumption. LSU AgCenter engineer Dr. Dick Parish says that when performing light-duty operations such as mowing grass or making hay, it’s sometimes possible to reduce fuel consumption by shifting to a higher gear and reducing engine rpm.
fertilizer
LSU AgCenter Engineer Discusses Advantages Of Hand-cranked Spreaders
(Distributed August 2004) In some situations, a hand-cranked spreader is more practical than a wheeled model for spreading lawn and garden fertilizer or pesticide granules, according to LSU AgCenter engineer Dr. Dick Parish.
fire ants harveting
Parasite Offers Hope For Controlling Fire Ants
(Distributed 08/11/04) It may be a while before their work bears fruit, but researchers at the LSU AgCenter and others across the South are investigating how to assist the spread of a microscopic parasite that could reduce the number of red imported fire ants.
LSU AgCenter’s Audubon Sugar Institute Shares $500,000 Federal Grant
(Distributed 07/12/04) The LSU AgCenter’s Audubon Sugar Institute and the Michigan Biotechnology Institute have been awarded a $500,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Energy.
LSU AgCenter Horticulturist Hot About Cool Gardens
(Distributed November 2004) November in Louisiana means cooler weather, but LSU AgCenter horticulturist Dr. Tom Koske says it doesn't mean you have to hang up your garden tools for the year. "Some garden plants withstand cold weather, so you can keep your garden filled and growing until spring," the horticulturist explains.
Get It Growing Image File
Follow These Tips On Harvesting Winter Vegetables
(For Release On Or After 11/26/04) The vegetables we grow here during the cool season are some of the most delicious and nutritious that our home gardens can produce. Better yet, many of the vegetables we planted in late summer and early fall are ready to harvest – or they will be soon.
Freshen ‘Tired’ Flower Beds
(Distributed 08/06/04) Forlorn flower beds past their prime and overrun with weeds are an all too familiar sight in late-summer landscapes. But there are ways you can freshen up those "tired" beds.
Don’t Be Your Plants’ Worst Enemy
(Distributed 08/13/04) You can be one of your plants’ worst enemies – unless you’re cautious with mowers and string trimmers, avoid damaging roots and exercise care when using pesticides and fertilizers.
Rooting Cuttings One Way To Share Plants
(Distributed 08/20/04) When gardeners get together, and a plant is complimented, it is not unusual for the admirer to be offered a "piece" to take home and root.
Prune Roses Now For Beautiful Fall Flowers
(Distributed 08/27/04) We are so fortunate that our everblooming roses produce two really great seasons of bloom.
Get It Growing image file
It’s Best Time For Planting Trees, Shrubs
(For Release On Or After 11/12/04) I wish more gardeners understood that fall is a primary planting season in Louisiana. For years horticulturists have tried to get the word out that November through February is the ideal time to plant hardy trees and shrubs in the landscape.
Get It Growing image file
Follow These Tips On Harvesting Winter Vegetables
(For Release On Or After 11/26/04) The vegetables we grow here during the cool season are some of the most delicious and nutritious that our home gardens can produce. Better yet, many of the vegetables we planted in late summer and early fall are ready to harvest – or they will be soon.
Get It Growing image file
Fall Great Time To Plant Parsley, Other Herbs
(For Release On Or After 11/05/04) Fall is an outstanding time to plant many of the hardy culinary herbs, and one of the most popular is parsley.
Get It Growing image file
Add Fragrance To Cool-Season Flower Beds
(For Release On Or After 11/19/04) Now is the perfect time to plant cool-season bedding plants that will brighten our landscapes over the next five or six months. Of course, while you’re at it, don’t make the mistake of many gardeners and forget that some cool-season bedding plants are wonderfully fragrant.
Rice Harvest Disappointing For Many Farmers
(Distributed 08/26/04) LACASSINE – Farmer Donald Berken of Lacassine had anticipated that his rice crop would bring a handsome yield this year. But the harvest for Berken and many others has been anything but a bumper crop. Average yields from last year appear to be down, while production costs were up, according to LSU AgCenter experts.
Cicada Killers Appear Threatening, But They’re Not
(Distributed 08/26/04) Summer afternoons often are filled with sounds of cicadas singing. This song is music to the cicada killers’ ears.
Officials ‘Break Ground’ For New Louisiana Emerging Technologies Center
(Distributed 08/25/04) Calling it a "significant event in our evolution and development," William Jenkins, president of the LSU System, and several other dignitaries officially "broke ground" today for the new Louisiana Emerging Technologies Center already under construction on the LSU AgCenter’s campus.
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