-
Catastrophic Flooding Requires Diverse Crop Systems
(BROOKINGS, SD, July 10, 2024) – Record-breaking rain and floods have devastated fields in areas of Iowa, South Dakota, Minnesota, and Nebraska. Up to 1 million acres of farmland were affected, and farmers and communities have started tackling the aftermath. With many acres completely drowned out and some not planted at all, determining what to do next can be…
-
How Vermont farmers are recovering from last year’s record-wet summer
How Vermont farmers are recovering from last year’s record-wet summer Vermont Public
-
Extreme heat waves broiling the planet in 2024 aren’t normal
Extreme heat waves broiling the planet in 2024 aren’t normal: How climate change is heating up weather around the … The Conversation
-
Forecasting The Impact: Hurricane Beryl’s Remnants Headed To Upstate NY
Forecasting The Impact: Hurricane Beryl’s Remnants Headed To Upstate NY 94.3 Lite FM
-
Weekly Crop Progress and Condition Report
Weekly Crop Progress and Condition Report Morning Ag Clips –
-
Ohio State to lead $10 million effort to accelerate climate-smart farm solutions
Ohio State to lead $10 million effort to accelerate climate-smart farm solutions The Ohio State University News
-
One Year After the Flood: Building Resilience in Agriculture
One Year After the Flood: Building Resilience in Agriculture The University of Vermont
-
Plains area felt beneficial rain
Plains area felt beneficial rain High Plains Journal
-
A dangerous heat wave is scorching much of the US. Weather experts predict record temperatures
A dangerous heat wave is scorching much of the US. Weather experts predict record temperatures The Caledonian-Record
-
Idaho Weather Warning: Boise Area Heatwave Begins!
Idaho Weather Warning: Boise Area Heatwave Begins! KIDO Talk Radio
-
June saw the gamut of weather in the central Plains
June saw the gamut of weather in the central Plains High Plains Journal
-
Drought watch continues for Prince Edward, surrounding counties
Drought watch continues for Prince Edward, surrounding counties – Farmville | Farmville Farmville Herald
-
Columbus weather: Drought conditions continue, but more rain on the way
Columbus weather: Drought conditions continue, but more rain on the way The Columbus Dispatch
-
“Beryl” to take aim at far southern Texas, western-most Gulf by Monday
Hurricane Beryl, which made landfall around daybreak near Tulum, Mexico, will weaken to tropical-storm strength today while crossing the Yucatan Peninsula. However, Beryl may re-strengthen over the Gulf of Mexico before making a final landfall late Sunday or Monday in northeastern Mexico or coastal Texas. Storm-total rainfall associated with Beryl could reach 4 to 8…
-
“Cool,” somewhat drier weather begins to settle into the upper Midwest, western Corn Belt
Across the Corn Belt, a cold front is sparking showers and thunderstorms from the upper Great Lakes region into the lower Ohio Valley. Another round of cool weather trails the front, with Friday’s high temperatures expected to remain below 80°F in the upper Midwest. Meanwhile, warm, humid weather in the lower Midwest favors corn and…
-
A pattern shift to drier in the upper Midwest, gradually warmer/hotter on the Plains
Looking ahead, the 6- to 10-day outlook calls for the likelihood of wetter-than-normal weather in the southern and eastern U.S. which will contrast with below-normal precipitation from the Pacific Northwest into the upper Midwest. Meanwhile, hotter-than-normal conditions nationwide, except for near- or below-normal temperatures from the southern Plains into the middle Mississippi Valley. The post…
-
July forecast brings unclear chances for rain
Farmers keeping a close eye on the summer weather forecast as crops enter critical growth stages.
-
Crop loss not anticipated as Missouri River flooding continues
A climatologist says he doesn’t expect significant crop loss despite the recent heavy rains. Brian Fuchs with the National Drought Mitigation Center says there has been some flooding along the Missouri River corridor. “It will be interesting to see if the flows on the river are at a point where we’re not seeing that big…