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The latest Southern SARE newsletter is now available. You can view it here. It lists a variety of workshops and other activities in sustainable agriculture, including livestock and cover crop workshops, that might be of interest.
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In addition to the data access site cli-MATE from the Midwestern Regional Climate Center, there is another web site which provides access to the National Weather Service’s cooperative weather observing network. It’s called xmACIS and contains a lot of the same information as the cli-MATE site (in fact, it’s built on the same datasets). You…
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The latest Drought Monitor was released this morning. It shows that while small areas of drought disappeared in Virginia, it stayed the same or increased in other areas of the Southeast. The biggest increase was in northern Georgia, where the percent of the state in moderate drought increased from 12 to 26 percent of the…
Posted in: Drought -
Last fall Seeker.com posted an article describing the vegetation changes that are being seen in the Florida Everglades due to rising sea levels. The article notes that “Salt-loving mangroves in the Everglades have marched inland in the past decade, while freshwater plants — such as saw grass, spike rush and tropical hardwood trees — lost…
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The Climate Corporation published an article last week describing the impacts of an El Niño on yields of corn and soybeans in the Midwest. Their analysis showed that El Niño has little impact on yields in that region. But how about the Southeast? While we have much smaller acreage planted in those crops, the yields…
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Weather Underground posted a story today about how one winery owner in Virginia uses a personal weather station to help manage his vineyards. It shows the benefits of having hyper-local weather data so you know exactly what is happening in your own fields. You can read the story here. Weather Underground collects weather data from many…
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Today in weather history marks the anniversary of the Mother’s Day tornado outbreak in Georgia in 2008. At least two people were killed in the storms, which hit north and central Georgia. You can read more about the storms from the National Weather Service Office in Peachtree City, which created the map below, and see…
Posted in: History