You are here

News From 2014

Lori Irvin, a therapeutic riding volunteer, holds the horse still while Mississippi State University Extension Service agents Jim McAdory and Cassie Brunson make sure Martina Tubby is comfortable for a ride at the Elizabeth A. Howard 4-H Therapeutic Riding and Activity Center in West Point on March 20, 2014. (Photo by MSU Ag Communications/Kat Lawrence)
March 28, 2014 - Filed Under: Agriculture, Family

WEST POINT -- Jim McAdory wants to surround a group of Choctaw teens with academic and professional examples of people who are pursuing or embracing careers in agriculture.

McAdory, an agent with the Mississippi State University Extension Service, is working with the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians to develop an agricultural mentors program for high school juniors and seniors.

March 28, 2014 - Filed Under: Environment, Wildlife

By James E. “Jim” Miller
Professor Emeritus, Department of Wildlife Fisheries and Aquaculture
MSU Extension Service

MISSISSIPPI STATE – Offering feed to wildlife is a trend gaining traction in newspaper outdoor columns, outdoor magazines, catalogs, ads and campfire discussions, but the practice can be harmful to wildlife.

March 27, 2014 - Filed Under: Lawn and Garden

MISSISSIPPI STATE -- A monthly garden series at Mississippi State University gives gardening enthusiasts timely tips and techniques to try out in their own landscapes.

Called the “Last Saturday Garden Series,” these events are hosted by the MSU Extension Service and the Mississippi State Trial Gardens. All the hands-on events are free, open to the public and typically held in the morning.

Michael Resh of Nanih Waiya (left) and Nick Strehle of Noxapater examine soil layers during the land judging competition at Mississippi State University on March 25, 2014. (Photo by MSU Ag Communications/Kat Lawrence)
March 27, 2014 - Filed Under: Natural Resources

MISSISSIPPI STATE – Mississippi youths recently took part in a competition with skills they can take to their graves.

March 26, 2014 - Filed Under: Natural Resources, About Extension

MISSISSIPPI STATE – A new environmental biologist specializing in conservation has joined the Mississippi State University Extension Service.

Jared Harris of Poplarville will serve as the lead contact for 23 southern counties as a coordinator for the Research and Education to Advance Conservation and Habitat, or REACH, program. His work is a new collaborative effort between the MSU Extension Service, REACH, EPA-Gulf of Mexico Program office, U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service and Pearl River Community College.

Participants in the 2014 Mississippi Tax Assessor Education and Certification Program training at Mississippi State University are as follows: Front Row, from left: Kimberly Turner and Ashley Carney (Lauderdale County), Cynthia Biles (Harrison), Sallie Price (Quitman) and Angela Burke (Clarke). Second Row: Darryl Ervin (Hinds), Lorna Wright (Pontotoc), Allison Culver (Desoto), Lee Ward (Hinds) and Alice Smith (Quitman). Third Row: Richard Caston (Hinds), Sandra Lollis (Harrison), Annie Peebles (Neshoba), Su
March 26, 2014 - Filed Under: City and County Government

MISSISSIPPI STATE -- Sixteen tax assessors and appraisers from throughout Mississippi recently participated in the Certified Appraiser School at Mississippi State University.

The March 3-7 and March 17-21 training sessions were conducted by the Mississippi Department of Revenue and coordinated by the MSU Extension Service Center for Government and Community Development.

March 26, 2014 - Filed Under: Lawn and Garden

MISSISSIPPI STATE -- Garden enthusiasts can welcome spring with a variety of plants available for purchase at the Mississippi State University Horticulture Club’s spring plant sale.

The student-run event will be from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. April 4 and from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. April 5 at the greenhouses behind Dorman Hall. The event is open to the public.

Nasturtium flowers and their foliage are edible and can make a nice appetizer that pleases the eyes and the palate. (Photo by MSU Extension Service/Gary Bachman)
March 24, 2014 - Filed Under: Lawn and Garden, Flower Gardens

Shopping in a garden center in the spring confronts visitors with an almost dizzying array of new plants with flower colors that seem to go beyond our imagination.

But today, I’m not writing about any of those plants. I want you to consider an old-time garden staple that many gardeners forget about -- the nasturtium. I’ve been growing nasturtiums in my garden and landscape for the past couple of years and couldn’t be happier with the results.

Leonard Gianessi, a consultant for the CropLife Foundation, spoke to Mississippi State University scientists March 20, 2014, on the important role pesticide use plays in food security for the growing global population. (Photo by MSU Public Affairs/Beth Wynn)
March 21, 2014 - Filed Under: Agriculture, Insects-Crop Pests, Pesticide Applicator Certification

MISSISSIPPI STATE -- How to feed the world’s growing population is a continuing challenge for agricultural researchers and producers, and one expert who spoke Thursday at Mississippi State University said pesticides are essential for meeting that challenge.

Mary Jane Coign runs a cow-calf operation in Starkville. She has overcome challenges to make an impact as a woman in agriculture. (Photo by MSU Ag Communications/Kat Lawrence)
March 21, 2014 - Filed Under: Agriculture, Women for Agriculture, Beef

MISSISSIPPI STATE -- Mary Jane Coign, of Starkville, is no newcomer to the agricultural industry -- or the challenges women face in it.

Coign grew up on a farm as one of four daughters, and her father trained her and her sisters to help with farm chores out of necessity. These skills eventually paid for most of her college tuition at Mississippi University for Women.

March 21, 2014 - Filed Under: Forestry, Natural Resources

STARKVILLE – Mississippi State University and its leaders earned national recognition recently for promoting and maintaining healthy trees and inspiring faculty, staff, students and community members to conserve.

The Arbor Day Foundation named the university a Tree Campus USA. The program honors campuses that implement proper urban forestry management principles and promote environmental stewardship.

Beekeeping is a popular activity in Mississippi. The state has 12 full-time commercial beekeepers, 35 part-time honey producers and several hundred hobbyists. (Photo by MSU Extension Service/File Photo)
March 21, 2014 - Filed Under: Beekeeping

MISSISSIPPI STATE -- If thoughts of keeping bees have been buzzing in your head, you’re not alone.

“Beekeeping can be a fascinating hobby, a profitable sideline, or a full-time occupation,” said Jeffrey Harris, beekeeping specialist with the Mississippi State University Extension Service.

Mississippi is home to approximately 12 full-time commercial beekeepers, 35 part-time honey producers, and several hundred hobbyists. The state ranks twenty-eighth in the nation in honey production, with about 2.25 million pounds of honey produced each year.

March 19, 2014 - Filed Under: Natural Resources

JACKSON -- Twenty-five people interested in environmental science and natural history can take eight weeks of classes as part of the process of becoming Master Naturalists.

The Mississippi State University Extension Service is partnering with the Mississippi Museum of Natural Science to offer the training. Classes will be held 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. each Tuesday from May 6 to June 24 in the museum at 2148 Riverside Drive in Jackson.

The Mississippi State University College of Veterinary Open House will welcome preregistered school groups April 4 and the general public April 5. Students can enjoy hands-on activities and demonstrations. (Photo by MSU College of Veterinary Medicine/Tom Thompson)
March 19, 2014 - Filed Under: Animal Health, Community

MISSISSIPPI STATE -- The Mississippi State University College of Veterinary Medicine is inviting visitors of all ages to attend its 29th annual Open House April 4 and 5.

The veterinary college doors will open from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. at the Wise Center, located on the south side of campus off Spring Street. The April 4 program is for preregistered school groups, while the community is welcome to attend April 5.

Mississippi State University professor of animal and dairy sciences and Extension beef cattle specialist Jane Parish uses an application on an iPad to review cattle break-even prices while in the field at the Henry H. Leveck Research Farm on the south side of the MSU campus in December 2013. (File Photo by MSU Ag Communications/Scott Corey)
March 18, 2014 - Filed Under: Beef, Technology

MISSISSIPPI STATE -- Today’s cattle producers have a variety of technological applications available on their smartphones, which are about the size of the little notebooks their predecessors once carried in their shirt pockets for record keeping.

Brandi Karisch, an assistant professor of animal and dairy sciences and Extension beef cattle specialist at Mississippi State University, said use of smartphones and their apps is growing among beef cattle producers.

March 18, 2014 - Filed Under: Community, Children and Parenting

MISSISSIPPI STATE -- Registration is now open for three summer camps where kids can participate in arts and crafts, cake decorating and academics.

Dawg Daze of Summer, sponsored by the Mississippi State University Center for Continuing Education and the MSU Extension Service, offers two weeklong camps with emphases on creative and academic experiences for children ages 5-7 and 8-10. The camps will join together for certain events throughout the week. Activities include Artful Antics, Critter Crafts, Silly Sticky Slimy Science and Data Data Data.

Oakleaf hydrangea flowers are clusters made up of smaller, individual flowers growing in a cone shape. They start white and transition to pink shades. (Photo by MSU Extension Service/Gary Bachman)
March 17, 2014 - Filed Under: Lawn and Garden, Flower Gardens

The signs are all around us.

Red maples and redbuds are flowering, and yellow jessamine is scrambling and blooming along fences and way up in trees. This winter’s low temperatures have the ornamental pears really putting on a show.

Daylight Savings Time has kicked in, and we’re almost to the Spring Equinox. This can only mean one thing: Warmer weather has to show up sometime in the near future.

Okolona poultry grower Joe Ellis, left, watches as Mississippi State University poultry scientists Morgan Farnell, center, and Tom Tabler dig litter samples from the floor of one of his broiler houses on March 6, 2014. MSU researchers are collecting samples from houses across the state to update fertility data. (Photo by MSU Ag Communications/Linda Breazeale)
March 14, 2014 - Filed Under: Poultry

OKOLONA – Okolona poultry grower Joe Ellis did not even want the Mississippi State University Extension Service professor to get out of his vehicle unless he had practical experience raising chickens.

Tom Tabler was new to Mississippi, but he was not new to the challenges poultry growers like Ellis face every day -- and sometimes night.

“I know what it feels like to wake up to alarms going off at 3 in the morning,” said Tabler, the MSU Extension poultry specialist.

March 14, 2014 - Filed Under: Wildlife Youth Education, Urban and Backyard Wildlife, Waterfowl

MISSISSIPPI STATE -- The days are getting longer, and the temperatures are warming up. Spring is almost here, and soon the birds will arrive.

More than 200 bird species migrate northward every spring from their wintering grounds in the southern U.S. and Central and South America.

March 12, 2014 - Filed Under: Lawn and Garden

MISSISSIPPI STATE – The New Albany Home and Garden Show will offer two packed days of exhibits and speakers as they celebrate “Wings into Spring” April 4 and 5.

The Union County Master Gardeners will host the sixth annual event at the Union County Fairgrounds. The show is free and open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday and 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on Saturday. Tickets are already sold out for the Lunch and Learn Seminar on Friday.

Pages

Archive