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News From 2013

Private wells provide water for thousands of rural homes in Mississippi. The Mississippi State University Extension Service is working with the Rural Community Assistance Partnership and the University of Illinois to help Mississippians with private wells learn more about managing their water supplies. (Photo by MSU Extension Service/Jason Barrett)
March 21, 2013 - Filed Under: Water, Rural Water Association

MISSISSIPPI STATE – Homeowners in small communities and rural areas without a public water supply often have questions about how to manage, operate and protect their private wells.

The Mississippi State University Extension Service is working with the Rural Community Assistance Partnership and the University of Illinois to help Mississippians with private wells learn more about managing their water supplies.

Mississippi State University and the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station will celebrate 75 years of Edam cheese production with a special anniversary event April 20 at 9:30 a.m. at the MAFES Sales store. (Photo by MSU Ag Communications/File Corey)
March 20, 2013 - Filed Under: Community

MISSISSIPPI STATE – Seventy-five years have passed since Mississippi State University began producing its distinctive Edam cheese.

To celebrate this major milestone, MSU’s Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station will host a celebration on Saturday, April 20, outside the MAFES Sales Store. Refreshments will be served at the free public event from 9:30 a.m. to noon.

March 19, 2013 - Filed Under: Commercial Horticulture, Fruit, Food Safety

BILOXI -- Mississippi’s produce growers can evaluate and comment on the new food safety regulations being proposed by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration during three upcoming workshops.

Experts with Mississippi State University’s Extension Service and the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station will help participants understand the Food Safety Modernization Act. The act aims to improve the safety of the food supply by strengthening rules intended to prevent food contamination.

The salmon-colored Bermuda Beach Supertunia combines well with variegated ivy and the light green Sweet Caroline sweet potato vine. (Photo by MSU Extension Service/Gary Bachman)
March 18, 2013 - Filed Under: Lawn and Garden, Flower Gardens

Every spring the home gardener is bombarded with new and improved petunias for the garden and landscape, making it hard to decide which to bring home from the garden center. In my opinion, you simply can’t go wrong selecting any of the Supertunias.

For the past several years, I have been watching and writing about these fantastic garden performers. Whether used as spreading plants in the landscape or as container and hanging basket plants, supertunias have been good performers in Mississippi.

Nesting blocks provide a clean, safe area for Blue Orchard bees to raise young. The Pearl River County Master Gardeners hope to attract more native bees to area backyards by providing nesting blocks like this one in McNeil, Miss. (Photo courtesy of Blair Sampson)
March 14, 2013 - Filed Under: Beekeeping, Insects

PEARL RIVER COUNTY –The Pearl River County Master Gardeners hope to boost the population of the Blue Orchard bee in south Mississippi with a project intended to attract this native pollinator to area backyards.

March 14, 2013 - Filed Under: Technology, Lawn and Garden

Daffodils are giving their last burst of color while the Bradford pear trees are blooming, signaling we have survived another winter. This time of year makes me do crazy things like host a tea party in my backyard for 15 preschool friends and their families, which means I have a lot of landscape work to do.

Mississippi State University Extension experts have a new publication for people interested in raising chickens for eggs and meat: “Managing the Backyard Flock,” available at http://www.msucares.com. (Photo by MSU Ag Communications/Kat Lawrence)
March 14, 2013 - Filed Under: Agriculture, Poultry

MISSISSIPPI STATE – In response to the increasing popularity of raising chickens for eggs and meat, Mississippi State University Extension experts are offering tips for people interested in starting their own flock of backyard birds.

Post-doctoral student Dan O'Keefe, left, works with Mississippi State University fisheries biologist Don Jackson to tag young, university-raised catfish released in a project restoring hurricane-ravaged south Mississippi waterways in 2006. Jackson recently received a conservation award from the Mississippi chapter of the American Fisheries Society. (Photo by MSU Office of University Relations/Russ Houston)
March 13, 2013 - Filed Under: Fisheries, Natural Resources

MISSISSIPPI STATE – The Mississippi chapter of the American Fisheries Society recently honored a Mississippi State University professor with a conservation award.

Donald Jackson, a professor in MSU’s Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Aquaculture, received the C.A. Schultz Conservation award at the chapter’s annual meeting February 22 in McComb.

Popular flowering plants, such as this vinca, as well as herbs, vegetables and bedding plants will be available for purchase at the Mississippi State University horticulture club's annual spring plant sale April 5 and 6 in the greenhouses behind Dorman Hall. The sale runs from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on Friday and 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Saturday. (Photo by MSU Ag Communications/Gary Bachman)
March 13, 2013 - Filed Under: Lawn and Garden, Flower Gardens

MISSISSIPPI STATE –Mississippi State University’s horticulture club will inspire garden enthusiasts with a wide variety of plants at its annual spring plant sale.

This year’s sale will take place Friday, April 5 from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Saturday, April 6 from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. outside the campus greenhouses behind Dorman Hall on MSU’s main campus. The event is free and open to the public.

Student-grown bedding plants, baskets with flowering plants, perennials, herbs and some vegetable plants will be available.

March 12, 2013 - Filed Under: Community, Pets

MISSISSIPPI STATE – Hundreds of veterinary professionals will gather in Phoenix for the annual American Animal Hospital Association meeting, but part of the conference will originate at Mississippi State University’s College of Veterinary Medicine.

During a March 15 AAHA pediatric spay and neuter session sponsored by PetSmart Charities, Dr. Phil Bushby will demonstrate surgeries and share his surgical expertise. Bushby, the MSU-CVM Marcia Lane Endowed Chair in Humane Ethics and Animal Welfare, will operate on shelter dogs and cats to help them become more adoptable.

Dallas O'Bryant of West Point, a senior at Mississippi State University, waters seedlings in the greenhouses behind Dorman Hall on March 8, 2013. An agribusiness major and owner of Double D Farms, O'Bryant plans to pursue a career growing produce for local consumers. (Photo by MSU Ag Communications/Scott Corey)
March 12, 2013 - Filed Under: Agriculture

By Kaitlyn Byrne
MSU Office of Ag Communications

MISSISSIPPI STATE — A Mississippi State University senior is combining unique course opportunities and farm experience to prepare for a future in agriculture.

Yellow jasmine is one of the most reliable early signs of spring and is native all over the Southeast. The plant seemingly grows up and over almost anything that will support its vine-like growth habit, and in full sun it can be trained to grow on a trellis or as a ground cover. (Photo by MSU Ag Communications/Gary Bachman)
March 11, 2013 - Filed Under: Lawn and Garden

According to the calendar, we are just a few days away from the official start of the spring season. But if you have been watching the garden and landscape like I have, you’ve seen signs of spring for at least several weeks. The plants are starting to wake up.

Yellow jasmine is one of the most reliable early signs of spring and is native all over the Southeast. While you’re driving along the roads and highways in Mississippi, you can see yellow jasmine showing off its vivid blooms.

Durwood Gordon, left, and Judd Gentry examine the native-grass pasture in Gordon's intensive grazing operation in Panola County. Gordon Farms is participating in Mississippi State University's REACH program. (Photo by MSU Ag Communications/Scott Corey)
March 11, 2013 - Filed Under: Agriculture

MISSISSIPPI STATE – A Panola County cattleman is using native grasses in a 200-acre intensive grazing operation that is both efficient and environmentally friendly.

Durwood Gordon owns Gordon Farms, a pasture and cattle farm near Batesville. He is experiencing the kind of success that is the goal of the Research and Education to Advance Conservation and Habitat, or REACH, initiative coordinated by Mississippi State University.

March 11, 2013 - Filed Under: Forestry, Waterfowl

MISSISSIPPI STATE – Three Mississippi State University graduate students earned recognition for presentations on bottomland hardwoods at a recent meeting in the Delta.

The Bulldogs competed at the 60th Annual Southern Hardwood Forest Research Group Meeting held Feb. 21 in Stoneville with students from several universities around the region, including the University of Mississippi, the University of Arkansas and Louisiana Tech University.

March 8, 2013 - Filed Under: Agriculture

STONEVILLE – Two Mississippi State University students placed in competitions at the Southern Branch of the American Society of Agronomy annual meeting February in Orlando, Fla.

MSU agronomy student Jennifer Corbin of Cleveland placed second in the graduate division for her oral presentation on crops. Corbin is a research associate in rice at MSU’s Delta Research and Extension Center in Stoneville.

Joshua White of Ackerman, a doctoral student in agronomy, placed second in the graduate student crops poster contest. White managers forage variety testing at MSU.

Mississippi State University food science, nutrition and health promotion students Crecencio Deleon of Hattiesburg, Anna Hansen of Long Beach, Keonshae Freeman of Biloxi and Shelly Johnston of Mount Olive serve Edam cheese and Greek yogurt March 6, 2013 at the Institutions of Higher Learning Day at the State Capitol in Jackson. (Photo by MSU Ag Communications/Scott Corey)
March 8, 2013 - Filed Under: Food and Health
B.J. McClenton, Monroe County Extension coordinator (left), and Charlie Stokes, area Extension agent, unload water from a semi-trailer to distribute to tornado victims in Monroe County in 2011. (Photo by MSU Ag Communications/Scott Corey)
March 7, 2013 - Filed Under: Disaster Response, About Extension

ABERDEEN – B.J. McClenton’s appreciation of horses and livestock attracted him to a career with the Extension Service, but his desire to help people sealed the deal.

The Monroe County Extension coordinator and 4-H youth agent said the educational aspect of Extension appealed to his desire to work outside the classroom, especially with adults. That desire to help others led him to a brief job at the West Point Fire Department. He also became a certified EMT, a path that paid off in April 2011 when an F5 tornado hit Monroe County.

March 6, 2013 - Filed Under: Agriculture, Crops, Livestock, Forestry

BILOXI -- Agricultural producers in the coastal region shared their needs and concerns during a Mississippi State University meeting Feb. 25.

The sixth annual Producer Advisory Council meeting was held at MSU’s Coastal Research and Extension Center.

Mississippi State University graduate student Kira Newcomb, left and technician Scott Bearden release female black ducks fitted with very high frequency radio transmitters on Feb. 3, 2011, at the Duck River Unit of Tennessee National Wildlife Refuge in New Johnsonville, Tenn., as part of her research on the ducks' declining population. (Submitted Photo)
March 6, 2013 - Filed Under: Wildlife, Waterfowl

MISSISSIPPI STATE – A Mississippi State University graduate student in the Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Aquaculture recently took second place in a competition at an international symposium.

Kira Newcomb won for the delivery of an oral presentation on black duck winter survival and habitat use at the sixth North American Duck Symposium and Workshop held Jan. 26-31 in Memphis, Tenn.

Kipp Brown, area meat goat agent in the Carroll County Extension Service office, led the small ruminant and swine commodity group's discussion during the Producer Advisory Council meeting Feb. 26 at Mississippi State University's Central Research and Extension Center. Nine commodity groups were represented at the meeting. (Photo by MSU Ag Communications/Susan Collins-Smith)
March 5, 2013 - Filed Under: Agriculture, Crops, Livestock, Forestry

RAYMOND -- Producers and industry professionals from the central district gathered Feb. 26 to share needs and ideas with agents, specialists and researchers of Mississippi State University’s Extension Service and Mississippi Agricultural, Forestry and Experiment Station.

The Central District Producer Advisory Council meeting was held in conjunction with Alcorn State University’s Extension Program and Hinds Community College.

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