Dairy Grazing: Selecting the Right Forage, Page 21
Reviewed
Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.)
Dairy Grazing: Selecting the Right Forage, Page 24
Reviewed
Annual lespedeza (Kummerowia striata and K. stipulacea)
Dairy Grazing: Selecting the Right Forage, Page 27
Reviewed
Hairy vetch (Vicia villosa Roth)
Dairy Grazing: Selecting the Right Forage, Page 30
Reviewed
White clover (Trifolium repens L.)
Dairy Grazing: Selecting the Right Forage, Page 04
Reviewed
Orchardgrass (Dactylis glomerata L.)
Dairy Grazing: Selecting the Right Forage, Page 07
Reviewed
Reed canarygrass (Phalaris arundinacea L.)
Dairy Grazing: Selecting the Right Forage, Page 10
Reviewed
Tall fescue (Festuca arundinacea Schreb.)
Dairy Grazing: Selecting the Right Forage, Page 13
Reviewed
Big bluestem (Andropogon gerardii Vitman)
Dairy Grazing: Selecting the Right Forage, Page 19
Reviewed
Pearlmillet (Pennisetum americanum (L.) Leeke)
Dairy Grazing: Selecting the Right Forage, Page 22
Reviewed
Alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.)
Food Safety Handout (Bundle of 25)
Revised $12
Get tips for the safe handling of food to prevent illness. This handout includes steps for proper food handling from cleaning to separating to cooking to chilling foods.
The Facts on Fat Poster
Revised $33
This poster explains how much dietary fat is recommended daily and provides a list of foods with healthy fats. It also discusses saturated fat and provides tips on limiting it.
Family Meals Poster
Revised $33
Get tips for putting a healthy meal on the table in a short time, ideas for stocking the kitchen with quick-meal menu items, and involving children in meal preparation.
Understanding Food Labels Handout (Bundle of 25)
Revised $12
Learn to interpret the information shared on a food label. This handout discusses nutrients, percent daily value, serving information, and the ingredients list.
Budding
Reviewed
Budding is a method of grafting in which the scion (upper portion of the graft) is a single bud rather than a piece of stem or twig. Many of the same conditions and materials used for other forms of grafting also apply to budding
Grafting
Reviewed
Grafting is the act of joining two plants together and is a way to change a large tree from an old to a new variety. Visit our site to learn more.
Gardening in the Shade, Page 02
Revised
Learn about these shade-tolerant annual flowers: Ageratum, Flossflower; Begonia, tuberous; Begonia, wax leaf; Browallia; Coleus; Flowering tobacco; Foxglove; Impatiens; Lobelia; Pansy; and Wishbone flower.
Gardening in the Shade, Page 05
Revised
Learn about these shade-tolerant grasses: Bottlebrush grass; Hakonegrass; Maiden grass, Silver grass; Sedge; Soft rush; Tufted hairgrass; and Woodrush.
Gardening in the Shade, Page 08
Revised
Learn about these shade-tolerant understory trees: American hophornbeam, Ironwood; American hornbeam, Blue beech, Ironwood; Carolina silverbell; Flowering dogwood; Kousa dogwood; Ohio buckeye; Pagoda dogwood; Serviceberry, Juneberry; and Sourwood, Lily-of-the-Valley Tree.
Understanding Food Labels Poster
Revised $33
Learn to interpret the information shared on a food label. This poster discusses nutrients, percent daily value, serving information, and the ingredients list.
Growing Black Walnut for Nut Production: Orchard Establishment and Early Management
Revised
Eastern black walnut trees (Juglans nigra) produce high-valued hardwood products and distinctively flavored, highly nutritious, edible kernels.
Gardening in the Shade, Page 03
Revised
Learn about these shade-tolerant deciduous shrubs: Arrowwood viburnum, Bottlebrush buckeye, Burkwood viburnum, Common witchhazel, Highbush cranberry, Japanese kerria, Koreanspice viburnum, Large fothergilla, Leatherwood, New Jersey tea, Oakleaf hydrangea, Redosier dogwood, Shrubby St. Johnswort, Smooth hydrangea, Sweet pepperbush, Virginia sweetspire, and Winterberry.
Potential Diseases and Parasites of White-tailed Deer in Missouri
Reviewed
White-tailed deer are susceptible to a variety of issues. Visit our site to learn about Potential Diseases and Parasites of White-tailed Deer in Missouri.
Gardening in the Shade, Page 06
Revised
Learn about these shade-tolerant groundcovers and vines: Ajuga, Bugleweed; Boston ivy; Common periwinkle; English ivy; Epimedium, Barrenwort; Japanese spurge; Lily-of-the-Valley; Lilyturf; Lungwort, Bethlehem sage; Mock strawberry; Plumbago, Leadwort; Purple wintercreeper; Sweet woodruff; Virginia creeper, Woodbine; Wild ginger; and Yellow archangel, Dead nettle.