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  • A close-up of a dish of Quick Taco-Mac.

    Easy meals to cook from frozen foods

    As cases of COVID-19 grow around the country, many families are practicing social distancing to protect themselves and others.

    This likely means people will be making fewer trips to the grocery store, cooking at home and using their freezers.

  • Two men in a boat pose with a large fish in their laps.

    MSU biologists age large tripletail fish

  • Small, cardboard containers in trays lie in a row on a workbench while a woman works with the contents of one.

    MSU Extension revises soybean fertilizer info

    Fertilizer recommendations are constantly examined and rarely modified, but change came this year after Mississippi State University research demonstrated higher potassium recommendations increase soybean yields.

  • A single, orange bloom is open against a background of green.

    Time spent gardening yields beauty, benefits

    We are certainly experiencing troubling and scary times right now. “Quarantine,” “pandemic” and “social distancing” have become frequently used words, at least until we get a handle on COVID-19.

    As a result, garden and landscape shows are being cancelled all across the South out of an abundance of caution. But that doesn’t mean that gardening has been cancelled.

  • Extension image

    Extension postpones events, continues operations

  • Scores of purple flower spikes rise from a bed of green foliage.

    Choose a perennial salvia for recurring garden wins

    Sometimes it seems I need a larger garden landscape because, sadly, I don’t have room for every great plant I write about. But one group of plants I make sure to save space for is perennial salvia.

  • Extension offers pesticide training online, in person

    The Dicamba Applicator Training required for individuals who plan to apply dicamba herbicide products in Xtend cropping systems is open online and scheduled at several sites across Mississippi.

    The online modules are available at http://auxintraining.com.

    The face-to-face workshops will be March 16-17 in Tunica, Coahoma, Hinds, Lee and Washington counties.

  • Extension releases latest book on county government

  • A beekeeper teaching three young people about keeping bees while looking at bee hives.

    Bees can thrive in both city and countryside

    Believe it or not, urban landscapes can provide enough plant diversity to sustain honeybee colonies, making beekeeping a suitable hobby for both city and country dwellers. Jeff Harris, beekeeping specialist with the Mississippi State University Extension Service, said both locales have their pros and cons when it comes to growing healthy honeybee hives. “Many urban landscapes contain ornamentals and other flowering plants that provide a better and more diverse diet than monoculture crops,” Harris said. “Just like humans, bees are healthier when their food comes from many different sources, not just cheeseburgers -- or in the bees’ case, 3,000 acres of corn.”

Mississippi State University Extension 130 Bost Drive Mississippi State MS 39762