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Page 22 - ஓரிகந் நிலை பல்கலைக்கழகம் நீட்டிப்பு சேவை News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Home-grown asparagus worth wait

Mechanical fresh blueberry harvester developed by Oregon State University Extension

KHL Group Log In We have recently updated our website and if this your first time logging in this year you will need to set a new password. Please click here to begin. Using e-mail Log In We have recently updated our website and if this your first time logging in this year you will need to set a new password. Please click here to begin. Using e-mail By Chad Elmore18 February 2021 Harvesting technology developed by a professor, extension agent for OSU Extension Service could reduce cost of harvesting fresh blueberries by thousands of dollars. New harvesting technology developed by Wei Qiang Yang, associate professor and berry extension agent for Oregon State University Extension Service, could reduce the average cost of harvesting fresh blueberries from more than $12,000 to $3000 an acre.

Ask an expert: Compost soil now for plentiful poppies in spring

Ask an expert: Compost soil now for plentiful poppies in spring Updated Feb 14, 2021; Posted Feb 14, 2021 Poppy seeds can be started indoors this winter. Seeds can also be planted directly mid-spring. File photo. Facebook Share We’re well into winter and that means spring and the gardening season is on the way.  If you’ve got questions, turn to Ask an Expert, an online question-and-answer tool from Oregon State University’s Extension Service. OSU Extension faculty and Master Gardeners reply to queries within two business days, usually less. To ask a question, simply go to the and type it in, and include the county in which you live. Here are some queries asked by other gardeners. What’s yours?

Tue 8 AM | Stories Of Southern Oregon: The Value Of Knowing Bugs

Published February 8, 2021 at 10:58 AM PST Listen • 18:11 Oregon State University Some of us still recoil in horror at the arrival of bugs. But we ve learned over the years how beneficial insects and spiders and all their family members can be. Some of the time, anyway. There are plenty of critters that will eat us out of house and home and pass diseases to boot. Richard Hilton knows them well from his work as an agricultural entomologist for the Oregon State University Extension Service. He has many bug tales to share, and we hear some of them in this month s edition of

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