Got The Blue Tarp Blues? Here's How To Get A Hurricane-Hardy Roof
Singing the blue tarp blues is no joke. If your home’s roof was damaged by Hurricane Ida, it doesn’t have to happen again. There are now roofing products and methods that can withstand a Category 4 hurricane.
The key is to specify the right types of products and installation methods, according to Claudette Hanks Reichel, LSU AgCenter housing specialist.
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LSU AgCenter Assessing Damage from Hurricane Ida
LSU AgCenter agents are beginning the arduous task of damage assessment and recovery from Hurricane Ida.
Given the geographic area affected, the biggest economic impact is likely to be to agricultural infrastructure and timber, said Kurt Guidry, LSU AgCenter region director and agricultural economist. But sugarcane, livestock, soybeans, fruit and vegetable crops, and the horticulture industry also experienced losses.
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LSU AgCenter Offer Advice For Storm Recovery
Hurricane Ida cut a swath through southeast Louisiana leaving homes and businesses with damage and more without power. Homeowners who need guidance on cleaning up and making repairs following the storm can turn to information from the LSU AgCenter LaHouse Home and Landscape Resource Center.
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Sugarcane Planting Continues With Farmers Watching the Tropics Closely
In Louisiana, sugarcane farmers are busy planting their fields so they can turn their attention to the harvest, which begins next month. This year’s crop is a little short, which is causing farmers to use more cane for seed. Farmers are also watching the path of Ida. LSU AgCenter correspondent Craig Gautreaux has this report from south Louisiana.
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Rice Harvest Nearing Completion, Yields Better Than Expected
They are more than halfway through the Louisiana rice harvest, and many producers are pleased with the results. Less-than-ideal growing conditions throughout the season had expectations low, but yields have been better than anticipated. LSU AgCenter correspondent Craig Gautreaux has the story from southwest Louisiana.
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Entomology Society Fetes LSU’s Blake Wilson With Early Career Extension Award
The Entomology Society of America recently recognized a handful of scientists, educators and students who have distinguished themselves through their contributions to entomology.
Among those was Dr. Blake Wilson of the Louisiana State University AgCenter, who received received the ECP Extension Award. It is given to a student transition or early professional who excels in entomological Extension.
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Program Helps New Farmers with Risk
The LSU AgCenter has received a federal grant for a series of webinars, workshops and farm tours to train new farmers, particularly in the areas of finance and marketing, to help make them more risk-resilient.
The Southern Extension Risk Management Education grant was from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The amount was not reported.
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Drones Beneficial For Survey Duck Broods
Researchers with the LSU AgCenter School of Renewable Natural Resources have found using drones equipped with thermal cameras is more effective and efficient in detecting duck broods than the traditional method of using ground surveys when observing nesting areas.
Brood surveys are used to estimate the productivity of ducks. However, ground surveys may underestimate productivity because ducks tend to seek shelter within the vegetation and are unobservable, according to Kevin Ringelman, a waterfowl ecologist in the school.
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LSU AgCenter To Host Grassfed Beef Workshop
The LSU AgCenter and USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture will be hosting a Grassfed Beef Production and Marketing Workshop November 16th from 9 AM to 4 PM at the Mega Shelter-Evacuation Center on Highway 71 in Alexandria.
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August, 2021, Crop Market Update
The attached August 2021 Crop Market Update for Corn, Soybeans, Rice, and Cotton contains a discussion on the latest supply and demand dynamics. In the August WASDE report, there were several points of interest to the corn market, as traders anticipated two important supply-side variables: U.S. corn (and soybean) yields forecasts and the size of Brazil’s corn crop. The demand-side variables of interest include: U.S. corn export estimates, Brazil shortages in their corn supply, China’s corn import forecast, and renewable biofuel demand.
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Sugarcane Variety Development In Louisiana: Past, Present & Future
Sugarcane is a tall perennial grass of tropical origin that is cultivated for its ability to store sucrose in its stalks. Attempts to grow sugarcane in Louisiana began in the early 1700s. In the 1750s, the French Jesuits were among the first to successfully grow and harvest several crops of sugarcane at their New Orleans plantation. However, it was not until 1795 when Étienne de Boré, aided by experienced “sugar makers” from Haiti, successfully granulated about 100,000 pounds of sugar that Louisiana farmers recognized sugarcane as a potential cash crop.
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LSU AgCenter Researcher Receives $3.2 M Grant For Pregnancy Loss Research
As part of a $3.2 million grant project, LSU AgCenter researcher Zongliang “Carl” Jiang is studying the molecular mechanisms that regulate placenta development — and what role they play in early pregnancy loss — in both large animals and humans.
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Louisiana Crops Newsletter August , 2021
Louisiana Crops Newsletter, August 2021
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Sweet Potato Foundation Seed Program Continues To Thrive
The orange, moist-fleshed sweet potato varieties developed at the LSU AgCenter have become the standard American perception of a sweet potato. Early on it was realized that mutations could occur in orange-fleshed sweet potatoes that resulted in roots that were off-type and light yellow in color. In the late 1940s, LSU pioneered the production of foundation sweet potato seed (storage roots) by developing a method to minimize such mutations.
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LSU AgCenter Scientists Studying Irrigation Of Sugarcane
In a sugarcane field just outside of Cheneyville in Rapides Parish, Stacia Davis Conger and Justin Dufour are drilling, assembling and placing moisture sensors in the ground under stifling conditions.
Conger, AgCenter irrigation specialist, and Dufour, area ag agent for Avoyelles, Rapides and Grant parishes, have started a project looking at irrigation efficiency of sugarcane, a crop grown in areas that typically receive plenty of rainfall. While 70% of Louisiana’s corn crop is irrigated, less than 5% of the state’s 500,000 acres of sugarcane are.
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