During the past 30 years sweetclover has changed from its lowly position as a roadside weed to a respectable place among farm crops. The rise in importance of this crop has been the direct result of the realization that sweetclover fills a most important role in building and maintaining our soils—making possible large yields of corn, soybeans and other crops
Few other crops in Iowa have shown such rapid acreage increases as soybeans or proved as advantageou...
Iowa has sprung into soybean production so fast that farmers still have many questions about the cro...
This monthly section presents brief reports on the progress, results and applications of farm and ho...
Sweetclover was introduced into the United States from southeastern Asia in the early 1700s. As late...
The topic was the seeding rate, seeding-year harvest and cultivar effects on sweet clover productivi...
The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service periodically issues revisions to its publications. The mo...
The Vegetable Crops Subsection of the Iowa Agricultural Experiment Station will release the inbreds ...
A variety of oats that promises to turn the poor oats years into good ones will be grown by a few fa...
We have been so involved in producing the crops the government has asked for to help win the war tha...
Extension circular 178 gives general information about Sweetclover (Hubam). Some content has been ...
Sweet corn is the most important canning crop grown in Iowa. The average annual pack in this state f...
Brief announcement of North Dakota farmers harvesting 14,000 acres of sweet clover, a 56% increase f...
One source of “ammunition” for the “war food front” which many an Iowa farmer should seriously consi...
Forage crops need much more attention In Iowa than they have been receiving. Larger acreages of hay ...
As most growers know, high sugar sweet corn has shallow roots and does not germinate well in cold so...
Few other crops in Iowa have shown such rapid acreage increases as soybeans or proved as advantageou...
Iowa has sprung into soybean production so fast that farmers still have many questions about the cro...
This monthly section presents brief reports on the progress, results and applications of farm and ho...
Sweetclover was introduced into the United States from southeastern Asia in the early 1700s. As late...
The topic was the seeding rate, seeding-year harvest and cultivar effects on sweet clover productivi...
The Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service periodically issues revisions to its publications. The mo...
The Vegetable Crops Subsection of the Iowa Agricultural Experiment Station will release the inbreds ...
A variety of oats that promises to turn the poor oats years into good ones will be grown by a few fa...
We have been so involved in producing the crops the government has asked for to help win the war tha...
Extension circular 178 gives general information about Sweetclover (Hubam). Some content has been ...
Sweet corn is the most important canning crop grown in Iowa. The average annual pack in this state f...
Brief announcement of North Dakota farmers harvesting 14,000 acres of sweet clover, a 56% increase f...
One source of “ammunition” for the “war food front” which many an Iowa farmer should seriously consi...
Forage crops need much more attention In Iowa than they have been receiving. Larger acreages of hay ...
As most growers know, high sugar sweet corn has shallow roots and does not germinate well in cold so...
Few other crops in Iowa have shown such rapid acreage increases as soybeans or proved as advantageou...
Iowa has sprung into soybean production so fast that farmers still have many questions about the cro...
This monthly section presents brief reports on the progress, results and applications of farm and ho...