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  • Primer reviews soil management after Ida

  • Extension provides training for tourism professionals

    Volunteers, employees and board members of the tourism sector or related organizations can get training and build networks with other tourism professionals in the Excellence in Tourism Leadership Program.

  • MSU Extension welcomes sweet potato specialist

    Mississippi State University recently welcomed a new sweet potato specialist. Lorin Harvey joined the MSU Extension Service after completing postdoctoral work with sweet potatoes at the Pontotoc Ridge-Flatwoods Branch Experiment Station, which is part of the North Mississippi Research and Extension Center.

  • Green leaves are decorated with yellow or pink splotches.

    Crotons have bold, bright foliage for fall

    My favorite plants for the fall season are crotons. These beauties have some of the boldest and brightest foliage found in garden centers. Their warm foliage colors of bright yellow, red and orange shades are perfect for autumnal decorations and displays

  • Large, silver fish swim in blue water.

    MSU part of fisheries study in Gulf of Mexico

    Fisheries experts at Mississippi State University and other research institutions are conducting an $11.7 million study of the greater amberjack, an important recreational and commercial species in the South Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico that is threatened by overfishing.

  • Close-up of a cotton plant.

    Cotton growers seek hot, dry Sept. after rainfall from Ida

  • Round, yellow and green peppers grow on a bush.

    Specialty peppers are fun in gardens and on tables

    As I wrote this column, I also was watching the weather as Hurricane Ida aimed for the northern Gulf of Mexico. As such, I spent time in the garden picking and harvesting various crops that I don’t want to lose. One group of plants I harvested were my specialty peppers that I’ve been babying all through this hot and humid summer. I brought in both biquinho and aji charapita peppers.

  • An adult male turkey is in a field.

    Turkey gobbling activity is related to the weather

    It seems that wild turkeys don’t like humidity any more than people do. That is a finding of a study conducted by the MSU Forest and Wildlife Research Center, or FWRC, in response to concerns that Mississippi’s turkey season was not timed properly.

  • Maroon and white flowers cover a carpet of green foliage.

    Plan now to use fall mums in landscape

    As we’re marching through the gardening year, I just knew it was going to happen. I’m not ready for it; it’s still too hot and humid, and I’m behind on the summer projects still on my to-do list. But when I visited a big box store garden center this weekend, I saw them out on full endcap display. Of course, I’m referring to fall mums.

Mississippi State University Extension Service 130 Bost Drive Mississippi State MS 39762