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   June
 Home>News Archive>2006>June>
Organic Mulch Good For Summer Vegetable Gardens
(Distributed June 2006) Organic mulches can help keep your vegetables producing during Louisiana’s hot summer months. Although mulch is usually applied to control weeds and conserve moisture, it has several other useful functions, according to LSU AgCenter horticulturist Dr. Tom Koske.
Coaches: Start Your Grasses!
(Distributed June 2006) Our sports fields are made up of Bermuda grasses. These grasses may be hybrids, improved seeded selections or just common Bermuda grass. But they all need to begin serious growth in June, according to LSU AgCenter horticulturist Dr. Tom Koske.
Groundcover
Tips Offered For Managing Shaded Lawns
(Distributed June 2006) Having a good lawn in a tree-shaded landscape is a challenge since all of the warm-season turfgrasses were developed to grow best in full sun, according to LSU AgCenter horticulturist Dr. Tom Koske.
Time To Plant Heat-tolerant Veggies
(Distributed June 2006) June is a pivotal time for Louisiana vegetable gardens. It’s the transition from spring to hot summer conditions. At this time many crops are fully in harvest or have been pulled out to make room for new crops.
Hedger
AgCenter Expert Offers Insights On Choosing Hedge Trimmers
(Distributed June 2006) Hedge trimmers may not be as popular now as a few years ago because more people now realize that it’s healthier for plants to be selectively pruned rather than sheared.
More Ways To Get A Handle On Garden Tools
(Distributed June 2006) Most garden tools have fixed handles that may be made of wood, fiberglass or metal. But an LSU AgCenter engineer says some tools now are available with separate handle and toolhead components that can be interchanged as desired.
Layering Often Overlooked As Means For Propagating Plants
(For Release On Or After 06/23/06) Plant propagation is fun and provides you with extra plants for your landscape or to share with friends. Layering is one method that’s often overlooked by gardeners who are unfamiliar with the technique.
Caladiums Made For Shade, Offer Summer Color
(For Release On Or After 06/09/06) Gardeners crave color in shady areas of their landscapes just as much as they do in sunny areas. Unfortunately, shade-loving plants generally are not so flamboyant, and the selection of colorful bedding plants for shady gardens is limited. Thank goodness for caladiums.
Dry Weather Makes Proper Watering Even More Important
(For Release On Or After 06/02/06) Dry weather has been common around the state since last summer, and most of us have received less than the typical amount of rain this year. Who knows how much rain will fall this summer? But one thing is fairly certain – we will need to water our landscapes during periods of hot, dry weather.
Disposing Of Grass Clippings Can Be A Pain But Alternatives Exist
(For Release On Or After 06/16/06) As if mowing the lawn wasn’t trouble enough, dealing with and disposing of grass clippings is a major pain.
Too Much Shade Means Lawn Problems
(For Release On Or After 06/30/06) Shade trees often are the things people plant first in new landscapes As time goes on, however, sun-loving lawn grasses and shade trees don’t go together particularly well.
Asian Soybean Rust Disease Confirmed On Kudzu In Louisiana
(Distributed 06/30/06) LSU AgCenter scientists confirmed on Friday (June 30) that Asian soybean rust is in Louisiana. This is the first finding of the disease for 2006, and it was found on kudzu, another plant besides soybeans susceptible to the disease.
rice field day
Field Day Participants Told Rice Prices Expected To Be Strong
(Distributed 06/30/06) Rice prices worldwide will be strong the next two years because rice stocks in Asia have declined significantly, a rice marketing expert said Thursday (June 29) at the annual LSU AgCenter Rice Research Station Field Day.
People holding fawns
LSU AgCenter Makes Advance In Artificial Insemination Of White-tailed Deer
(Distributed 06/30/06) LSU AgCenter researchers are working on a new technique that has the potential of improving wild and captive white-tailed deer herds in the state. Dr. Dearl Sanders, LSU AgCenter professor and resident director at the Idlewild Research Station near Clinton, says artificial insemination research on deer at the station could be the breakthrough for bigger, healthier deer.
Youth Heading For LSU AgCenter Horse Show July 10-15 In West Monroe
(Distributed 06/30/06) Young people from across Louisiana will compete in the 37th annual Louisiana 4-H and FFA State Horse Show July 10-15 in the Monroe-West Monroe area.
Field Days Set Across Southwest Louisiana
(Distributed 06/30/06) Four field days for farmers will be held in July in several Southwest Louisiana parishes.
Field Days Set Across Southwest Louisiana
(Distributed 06/30/06) Four field days for farmers will be held in July in several Southwest Louisiana parishes.
LSU AgCenter Holds Seminar On Stormwater Management
(Distributed 06/30/06) The LSU AgCenter recently conducted an Urban Stormwater Academy to help engineers, architects and municipal officials learn about practices that will both reduce stormwater runoff and its contaminant load at construction sites.
Watermelon
Watermelons A Summer Tradition In Louisiana; Washington Parish Family Among Those Carrying It On
(Distributed 06/29/06) In Washington Parish, you generally don’t need a calendar to tell when July 4 is near. All you’d have to do is drive around and count the number of people selling watermelons on the roadside or at produce stands. The same is true in many other areas across Louisiana where watermelons are grown and sold this time of year.
LSU AgCenter Sugarcane Field Day Set For July 19
(Distributed 06/29/06) Two new sugarcane varieties released earlier this year will be featured at the LSU AgCenter’s Annual Sugarcane Field Day July 19 at the St. Gabriel Research Station.
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