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  • California fruit farmers try to deal with fewer chill hours

    Pam Knox

    February 18, 2020

    As winters get warmer across the US, chill hours that are essential for fruit farming also decrease. This has a variety of effects on fruit and nut production, including changes in how flowers are pollinated and how many blooms are produced. National Public Radio had an interesting story about these effects…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Fruit
  • Fruit Walls: Urban Farming in the 1600s

    Pam Knox

    February 18, 2020

    If you are interested in how farmers produced fruit and vegetables in the days before modern technology and greenhouses in colder climates, you will enjoy reading this article in Low-Tech magazine. It describes the use of walls to help warm up local areas…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Fruit, History
  • The Quilters and Knitters Who Are Mapping Climate Change

    Pam Knox

    February 18, 2020

    As a quilter, I am always interested in new and innovative ways that needleworkers are using their craft to address important issues in creative ways. This article from Slate.com describes how some artisans are incorporating trends like temperature series…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news
  • Wet/dry pattern expected to persist through February

    Pam Knox

    February 17, 2020

    The month is halfway over, and for most of the month we have been locked in a pattern of wet conditions in northern sections of the Southeast and dry conditions in Florida and southern Georgia. Unfortunately for both regions, this pattern is expected to continue…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate outlooks, Climate summaries
  • How far out can we forecast the weather?

    Pam Knox

    February 17, 2020

    In spite of the old and tired joke that meteorologists have one of the few jobs that allow you to be wrong all the time and still get paid, in reality most weather forecasters get the weather right a lot more often than they whiff. But people tend not to remember the correct forecasts…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news, Climate science
  • Webinar on droughts and floods Tuesday Feb. 18 at 11 AM EST

    Pam Knox

    February 17, 2020

    Do you wonder why your county is not showing up in drought on the Drought Monitor when your producers are clearly hurting? Do you know what a 100-year flood is and how to determine it? I am giving a 1-hour webinar on droughts and floods on Tuesday, February 18…

    Posted in: Events
  • Writer Wendell Berry discusses the urban-rural divide in understanding agriculture

    Pam Knox

    February 16, 2020

    Wendell Berry is one of my favorite authors. He is not only a writer and a poet, but also an activist and a farmer. He rarely grants interviews, so this recent one in Vox.com is a real pleasure to read. Among other things, he discusses the disconnect between urban and rural understandings of food production…

    Posted in: Climate and Ag in the news
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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

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