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  • A woman examines some brown bushes in the landscape.

    Watch ornamental plants for signs of freeze damage

    Plants across the state that suffered from the unusually cold weather just days before Christmas will need some help recovering from damage they suffered in the deep freeze. Mike Brown, state climatologist and Mississippi State University meteorologist, said Mississippi’s average late December temperature is 44 degrees on the coast, 38 degrees in central Mississippi and 34 degrees in north Mississippi.

  • A group of people stand in a shop around a woodwork project.

    Master Gardener volunteers reach 1,000 salad tables built

    What started out in 2012 as a small volunteer project to make two accessible gardens for use by residents of a Hattiesburg nursing home grew and multiplied until the group recently completed its 1,000th one. The Pine Belt Master Gardeners offer a service of making what are known as “salad tables” -- small, wooden-framed gardens raised about 3 feet off the ground. They make about 12-14 tables per month.

  • A collage shows a man in three different garden settings.

    A season for everything

    I usually write the Southern Gardening column about how the different seasons change the look of our landscapes and gardens, what seasonal plants look great and when it’s time to transition with new plants for the next season. Just like in the garden, a career has a season for everything, and there comes a point when you realize it’s time for a change.

  • Small plants grow in black plastic trays.

    Gardens helped create society, still important

    Most gardeners start planning their flower and vegetable gardens after the first of the year. This makes sense, as cabin fever from the winter months is compounded by a case of gardening fever due to the appearance of garden catalogs.

  • A photo montage displays soybeans, a chicken and trees.

    Mississippi agriculture hits $9.7B overall value

    Mississippi agricultural producers shattered previous records in 2022 with an estimated $9.7 billion in production value based on high market prices that almost kept pace with higher production costs.

  • Chicken drinks water droplets from a nipple waterer.

    Poultry production value falls just short of $4B

  • Sunlight trickles through a stand of timber.

    Timber ranks third with increased harvest, prices

    RAYMOND, Miss. -- An increase in both the amount of timber harvested and delivered wood prices landed Mississippi’s forestry industry in third place among the state’s agricultural commodities. At an estimated production value of $1.3 billion, timber is up 15% from 2021. Poultry and soybeans ranked first and second, generating an estimated value of $3.8 billion and $1.8 billion, respectively, in 2022.

  • Man with a bull

    Targeted grazing in coastal uplands can remove invasive species

  • Masses of pink flowers border a flower bed.

    Four plants had top 2022 performance

    At the end of each year, I like to look back at what were some of the better performers in my home landscape and in my travels with Southern Gardening. I obviously don’t have enough room here to mention all the great plants I’ve seen and grown in 2022, but I think these four were the cream of the crop.

Mississippi State University Extension Service 130 Bost Drive Mississippi State MS 39762