Proso, sometimes called hog millet, is receiving attention in the Nebraska Panhandle as a dryland grain crop because of acreage restrictions and limited crop alternatives
Pastures are an important source of feed in the livestock industry. Approximately 70 per cent of the...
No-till farming is gaining acceptance in semiarid areas of the Central Great Plains. Proso millet ca...
Annual crops planted for forage production are increasing throughout Nebraska. Historically, this pr...
Extension Circular 86-111: Producing Proso in Western Nebraska; what is Proso, selecting a field for...
Extension Circular 08-137 discusses producing and marketing proso millet in the great plains
Proso millet, Panicum miliaceum (L.), is a warm season grass capable of producing seed 60 to 90 days...
A feed shortage for hogs, mainly of corn, is a present problem of real importance to most South Dako...
Advantages and disadvantages of various annual forages, results of dryland and irrigated forage tria...
This NebGuide describes wild proso millet and its life cycle and provides recommendations for contro...
This circular is a progress report of proso variety trials conducted by the Panhandle Research and E...
This circular is a progress report of proso and sunflower variety trials conducted by the Panhandle ...
Hog Pastures in South Dakota.Profitable pork production demands the use of good pastures. This circu...
Farmers are more and more realizing that pasture is necessary for the most economical production of ...
Information is provided for various oat production practices including seed selection, fertilizing, ...
The High Plains Ag Laboratory (HPAL) in Sidney, Nebraska is the dryland research site for the Univer...
Pastures are an important source of feed in the livestock industry. Approximately 70 per cent of the...
No-till farming is gaining acceptance in semiarid areas of the Central Great Plains. Proso millet ca...
Annual crops planted for forage production are increasing throughout Nebraska. Historically, this pr...
Extension Circular 86-111: Producing Proso in Western Nebraska; what is Proso, selecting a field for...
Extension Circular 08-137 discusses producing and marketing proso millet in the great plains
Proso millet, Panicum miliaceum (L.), is a warm season grass capable of producing seed 60 to 90 days...
A feed shortage for hogs, mainly of corn, is a present problem of real importance to most South Dako...
Advantages and disadvantages of various annual forages, results of dryland and irrigated forage tria...
This NebGuide describes wild proso millet and its life cycle and provides recommendations for contro...
This circular is a progress report of proso variety trials conducted by the Panhandle Research and E...
This circular is a progress report of proso and sunflower variety trials conducted by the Panhandle ...
Hog Pastures in South Dakota.Profitable pork production demands the use of good pastures. This circu...
Farmers are more and more realizing that pasture is necessary for the most economical production of ...
Information is provided for various oat production practices including seed selection, fertilizing, ...
The High Plains Ag Laboratory (HPAL) in Sidney, Nebraska is the dryland research site for the Univer...
Pastures are an important source of feed in the livestock industry. Approximately 70 per cent of the...
No-till farming is gaining acceptance in semiarid areas of the Central Great Plains. Proso millet ca...
Annual crops planted for forage production are increasing throughout Nebraska. Historically, this pr...