Category Archives: Uncategorized

Strategies For Drought I

Dealing with Drought During a drought, little can be done to increase forage pasture growth. Proper management can minimize impacts of drought on your operation when it does, and it will, occur. Careful management early in a drought can minimize long term stand damage and help maintain forage yields when rains do come. If pastures are managed properly during times of low moisture, the effects of drought will be less severe and pastures will rebound faster when precipitation is sufficient. Remember, management practices that minimize damage to pastures… Read More →

East Texas Pasture Management February 18th

East Texas Pasture Management Program Virtual February 18, 2022 5 CEUs available (3 general, 1 IPM & 1 Laws & Regulations) The event program will cover the following topics: impact of grazing management on weed production alternative nutrient sources for bermudagrass pesticide safety weed control strategies for pastures and hay fields laws and regulations of pesticide use   Register online at: https://agriliferegister.tamu.edu/Overton For more details see the FLYER.     Vanessa Corriher-Olson Forage Extension Specialist Soil & Crop Sciences Overton, TX vacorriher@ag.tamu.edu Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service Texas A&M… Read More →

Ranchers Leasing Workshop

Leasing property is very common in Texas. Whether you are leasing property for grazing, hunting and/or livestock. If you are looking for more information on leasing property in Texas make sure you attend the… Ranchers Leasing Workshop Hallsville, TX January 10, 2022 Noon- 4:00 pm Registration $50.00 (lunch included) Register online @ https://agriliferegister.tamu.edu/aglaw FLYER     Dr. Vanessa Corriher-Olson, Ph.D. Forage Extension Specialist Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Soil & Crop Sciences Department Overton, TX vacorriher@ag.tamu.edu

Bastard Cabbage – A Widespread Noxious Cool-Season Annual Weed

Bastard cabbage (Rapistrum rugosum) is a cool-season annual, multi-branched, herbaceous plant native to Eurasia that grows from one to five feet or more in height.  It has a robust taproot and dark green leaves that are lobed and wrinkled, but sometimes have a reddish cast.  Bastard cabbage typically flowers from early spring into summer, bearing clusters of small, showy yellow flowers at the tips of its branches.  Bastard cabbage can be identified by its unusually shaped two-segmented seed capsule.  The seed capsule is stalked, with a long beak… Read More →

Upcoming Events

Don’t forget to check out the “Events” tab for upcoming events in Central and East Texas! Events occurring through out the year will be posted under the “Events” tab. Upcoming Events:   Natural Resource Webinar: November 4, 2021 @ noon CT Common Mistakes When Managing Aquatic Vegetation Brittany Chesser TDA Credit: 1 GEN CEU Register here.     Overton Pesticide CEU Program November 19, 2021 Webinar TDA Credit: 5 CEUs (3 general, 1 IPM & 1 L&R) FLYER Register here       Ag in the Evening Series Webinars… Read More →

Silver Leaf Nightshade

Silver Leaf Nightshade (Solanum elaeagnifolium Cav.) is an upright, usually prickly perennial in the nightshade family. It normally grows 1 to 3 feet tall and reproduces by seed and creeping root stalks. Leaves have a silver color (hence the name) with wavy margins and are lance shaped to narrowly oblong. Flowers are violet or bluish (sometimes white) with yellow centers. The fruits are round and yellow and are present from May to October. The plant has poor forage value for livestock and wildlife and can be poisonous to… Read More →

Weed of the Week: Sedges (Yellow Nutsedge, Purple Nutsedge, Globe Flatsedge)

Yellow Nutsedge (Cyperus esculentus) is often referred to as nutgrass or watergrass. Yellow nutsedge is a perennial plant that reproduces primarily by small underground tubers (called nutlets) that form at the end of underground stems (rhizomes). A single plant can produce several hundred of these tubers throughout the summer. Yellow nutsedge can also spread by rhizomes. Yellow nutsedge can be identified by the triangular shape of its stem as can all sedges. You can feel the shape by rolling the stem in your fingertips. One method of control… Read More →

Baleage: What is it and do I need it?

Baleage involves baling forage with 50 to 65 % moisture content, then wrapping the bales in plastic to create an air tight environment. This reduces the weather risk producers commonly face while waiting for the forage to field cure and harvest. Harvesting the forage at higher moisture levels allows for the forage to more readily retain its nutritive value and digestibility compared to conventional hay. Aerobic (free oxygen requiring) bacteria consume the oxygen remaining inside the hay within a few hours. Under these conditions, anaerobic (non-free oxygen requiring) bacteria… Read More →

Weed of the Week: Curly Dock

Curly Dock (Rumex crispus) is a perennial broadleaf plant that usually grows in wet areas and is frequently associated with standing water. Leaves are alternate to one another along the stem forming a rosette. The mature plant stands erect and grows 2 to 5 feet tall. Leaves are alternate to one another along the stem. The small greenish flowers are arranged in dense clusters on elongated stems. The fruiting stem dies back in mid to late summer, and the fruits and stems turn a distinctive rusty brown. New… Read More →

On-Site Brush Pile Burning in Texas

I introduce to you a new publication…”On-Site Brush Pile Burning in Texas” written by Dr. Morgan Treadwell, Associate Professor and Range Extension Specialist and Tiffany Lashmet, Associate Professor and Agricultural Law Specialist. Brush pile burning is something that many of us do yearly to help clean up unwanted or dead plant material. Most of us may not give it enough thought beyond compiling the stack and lighting the match. This publication addresses outdoor burning regulations, time of year, smoke management, weather conditions, and more. I highly recommend reviewing… Read More →