News Stories - Page 662

News from the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences

CAES News
21 Georgia ants

One Sunday afternoon, a "Discovery Channel" program about dangerous insects had a segment on imported fire ants. My daughter, still scratching from the fire ant stings she'd gotten a few days earlier, was very interested.

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22 2003 Gold Medal winners

Since 1994, the Georgia Plant Selections Committee has been helping Georgia gardeners improve their landscapes with beautiful, proven plants.

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23 Spread it right

The two basic types of equipment used to apply granular fertilizers or pesticides to lawns are drop and rotary spreaders. Rotary spreaders are typically preferred to cover larger areas.

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24 Fertilizer know-how

From hard-core gardeners to novices, most people know you have to fertilize your plants to get the results you want. But reading a fertilizer bag can be intimidating if you don't understand what you're reading.

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13 Save with containers

It takes a lot of water to keep large beds of flowers looking their best. To save water, think about planting annuals in a few containers instead of in the ground. Done well and properly placed, containerized color can make just as big a splash as large, in-ground beds and require much less water.

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Emergency food supply
The threat of war has some Americans stocking up on home food supplies. Whether you agree with their logic, University of Georgia experts say having an emergency food supply is always a good idea.
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Leery what?
Everyone putting in the landscape plantings at the new middle school had seen it all their lives. But none of them knew for sure how to pronounce "liriope," one of many plants used as ground covers.
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Hungry warriors
They are covert operatives with code names like big-eye, lace wing, lady beetle and pirate. They're not military, but they are hungry. And they secretly fly, crawl and hop through farmers' fields, eating insects and worms that eat their crops.
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Gardening Q&A
Wayne McLaurin answers county extension agents' questions for a living. And after 30-plus years of answering, he's heard most of the questions Georgia gardeners ask county agents. Here are the top 10 questions he's heard, and where to get the answers.
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Spider search
It's brown, armed and potentially dangerous, but very shy, preferring quiet, dark places. It also has eight legs. Have you seen it?