A website from UGA Cooperative Extension

Climate and Agriculture in the Southeast

  • Home
  • Major hurricane Laura making landfall overnight, next wave is moving off Africa

    Pam Knox

    August 26, 2020

    As I write this at 9:48 pm on the 26th, Major Hurricane Laura is just a few hours from making landfall as expected near Lake Charles LA and the border with Texas. It is just shy of a category 5 storm and could reach that before it makes landfall. In size and intensity, Laura is…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Tropical weather
  • EarthSky: 5 Myths about Lightning

    Pam Knox

    August 26, 2020

    With all of the thunderstorm activity we have been having, many people have noted the high frequency of lightning. But there are a lot of misconceptions about lightning that may make people’s behavior in thunderstorms more hazardous. EarthSky presents five myths about lightning and why they are false here.

    Posted in: Climate science, Severe
  • Heat stress and illness–don’t let this happen to someone you love!

    Pam Knox

    August 26, 2020

    After a too-close call with heat exhaustion with one of our fine UGA extension specialists yesterday (they shall remain nameless–fortunately recovered), it seems like a good time to remind you that high temperatures and high humidity do not do good things to the human body (or livestock, for that matter). This has been a brutal…

    Posted in: Health, Sources of weather and climate data, Uncategorized
  • Hurricane Laura takes aim on the TX-LA coast

    Pam Knox

    August 25, 2020

    Late Wednesday evening or early Thursday morning Hurricane Laura is expected to make landfall as a major hurricane somewhere near the Texas-Louisiana border. The models still show some variation in path, and it could got a little farther west to Galveston-Houston, so the barrier islands there are being evacuated as a precaution along with many…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks, Tropical weather
  • The headache of harvesting wind-damaged crops

    Pam Knox

    August 25, 2020

    You already know about the damage caused by the incredible derecho that blew across the Corn Belt a couple of weeks ago. Now farmers are trying to decide what to do with their storm-damaged crops. Some were completely destroyed, but others may be salvageable for silage or even for grain if they were not too…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Crops, Tropical weather
  • Marco fades away; all eyes now on Laura as it enters the Gulf

    Pam Knox

    August 24, 2020

    As of 11 pm on August 24, Marco is fading rapidly and was just downgraded to a tropical depression. It is not expected to last much longer. The center did make landfall over Louisiana before it turned west, but most of the rain was in the right front quadrant, where it brought scattered heavy showers…

    Posted in: Climate outlooks
  • How farmers and ranchers keep animals safe during hurricanes

    Pam Knox

    August 24, 2020

    As we watch two tropical storms move past us to the west, you might be wondering how livestock producers respond to the passage of a tropical storm or hurricane near their farms. This audio story from Yale Climate Connections describes how beef cattle respond differently to the storm than horses do and how management plans…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Livestock, Tropical weather
«Previous Page
1 … 384 385 386 387 388 … 1,177
Next Page»

Sign up for UGA Climate list

(Get one email per day)

* = required field

Funding provided by…

USDA logo: Southeast Regional Climate Hub
UGA logo, College of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences

Archives

About this blog

The “Climate and Agriculture in the Southeast” blog is provided by the Associate Dean of Extension as a service to Extension agents and agricultural producers across the Southeast US. Come here to find out information about the impacts of weather and climate on agriculture across Georgia and beyond.

Recent Posts

  • Drought expanded in southern and eastern parts of the Southeast
  • NOAA: 2025 was the fourth-warmest year on record for the U.S.
  • Introducing the Late Bloom Index!
  • NOAA: 2025 finishes as 3rd-warmest year on record for globe
  • Another mostly dry week ahead

Categories

University of Georgia Extension
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Instagram
  • YouTube

Administration

Log in

UGA Extension © 2012-2026. All Rights Reserved.
The University of Georgia is an Equal Opportunity Institution.
Privacy Policy | Accessibility Policy