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Impacts from one bad weather event can often carry over into later growing seasons. For example, a flood can disturb the natural soil profiles and pull nutrients from the soil. Wind events like hurricanes can take multiple years to recover from, both in rebuilding infrastructure and in replanting crops and orchards. For example, corn from…
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A new fire-mapping online tool is now available for the Southeast. It enables resource managers to improve their regional or local approaches to managing wildfire risk and fire management needs through targeted prescribed burns and training. Fire management helps improve forest ecosystem health, increases timber values, reduces the risk of wildfire damage to life and…
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Climate Change in Extension: Elevating and Amplifying Action, a virtual 3-day forum will take place April 19-21, 2021, starting at noon ET each day. The event will bring together Extension faculty, staff, federal representatives, administrators, interested partners, and constituents to address the question: What can/should the Cooperative Extension System do to advance climate change programming?…
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Once again I have saved a bunch of stories on weather, climate, and agriculture that I thought were interesting over the past week. Maybe you will find one or more of them interesting, too. EarthSky: Awaiting the next historic solar storm Southeast Farm Press: Rebuilding the grain bin destroyed by hurricane then tornado Yahoo News:…
Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news -
This week’s Drought Monitor showed that rain in Alabama has removed the moderate (D1) drought and a good bit of the abnormally dry conditions there. It also reduced dry conditions in Georgia. There are now two small areas of D1 in southern Florida, but overall dry conditions did not expand. There is also a new…
Posted in: Drought -
We will start the next seven days mostly dry as we are under the influence of a big area of high pressure. By midweek, the next system will start to bring rain to western parts of the region, and that will cover most of the region by late next week, although amounts will be moderate.…
Posted in: Climate outlooks -
The latest monthly climate summary, for March 2021, is now available from the North Carolina Climate Office. You can view it at https://climate.ncsu.edu/climateblog?id=337&h=5666e5c1.
Posted in: Climate summaries