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Ag News

How a Former USDA Worker Made Millions!

It was on this day back in 1952 that Clarence Birdseye marketed his first frozen peas to the public consumer. During the summer after his freshman year of college Birdseye worked for the USDA in New Mexico and Arizona as an “assistant naturalist”, at a time when the agency was concerned with helping farmers and ranchers get rid of predators, ...
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Did You Know People Used to Regularly Eat Acorns?

Along with a kaleidoscope of changing leaf colors, acorns are a staple of fall across the United States. The strange little nut is actually the fruit of an oak tree and is sometimes referred to as an oaknut. While they can be found in abundance all across the country, they oddly enough play little to no role at all in ...
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With The Future of Coffee Production in Question… Here comes “Beanless Coffee”

Over the next 30 years, the regions suitable for growing coffee are expected to decline by some 50%, according to some climate models. The decline is primarily the result of an expected increase in annual temperatures in key coffee-producing countries like Brazil, Vietnam, Indonesia, and Colombia. The world could be spared a future in which coffee is a luxury item ...
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After More Than a Century, “Wonder Bread” Remains One of America’s Most Enduring Brands

An interesting story about "Wonder Bread" was on CNBC a while back that talked about how the brand has survived the precipitous decline in white bread popularity. According to the article, in the first half of the 20th century, white bread accounted for as much as 30% of the American diet. But since around 2006, more US households are regularly ...
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Researchers Develop System to Capture and Reuse Nitrate Waste

Researchers at the University of Texas at Austin (UT) have developed a new "smart" farming system that aims to solve a key problem in modern agriculture - the overuse of fertilizers. In tests, the system had the ability to match or increase crop yields over traditional methods while also minimizing environmental impacts.The system uses a copper-based hydrogel that captures excess ...
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Tyson is the Latest Ag Giant to Dive Into Insect Proteins

Tyson Foods is expanding into the insect protein market with a dual investment in startup "Protix." Tyson will take a minority stake in Protix, a Netherlands-based insect ingredients maker. The two companies will also partner on a new U.S. facility that will “upcycle" byproducts from the food industry into insect proteins and lipids for use in livestock feed and pet ...
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What the Heck is “Freight Farms”?

Freight Farms is a Boston-based agriculture technology company and was the first to manufacture and sell "container farms": hydroponic farming systems retrofitted inside intermodal freight containers. I've heard of some larger row-crop producers adding these container units to their farms to create additional revenue streams, so perhaps it might be something to think about or consider depending on your proximity ...
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What Crops are Most at Risk From El Niño?

As the El Niño weather pattern continues to develop, various disruptions to agricultural production are expected around the globe. This year's El Niño follows a rare, three consecutive years of La Niña, which has many of the opposite effects to El Niño on agricultural crop growing conditions. But while El Niño weather years have some general tendencies, no two are ...
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“PepperX” is Officially the Hottest Pepper on the Planet

Ed Currie, founder of aptly named "PuckerButt Pepper Company" in South Carolina, has unleashed a fiery new pepper variety into the world known as "PepperX." According to Guinness World Records, the wrinkly yellow-green pepper is officially the hottest in the world, measuring an average of 2.693 million Scoville Heat Units. The previous record holder, the Carolina Reaper - also developed ...
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How Siberia’s October Snowfall Can Predict How Harsh Winter Will Be in the US

Over the last couple of decades, a theory that the accumulated snow cover in Siberia during October can impact Winter weather in the United States has gained popularity among everyone from weather forecasters and snow plow operators to insurance companies and hedge funds. Even the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration monitors the snow cover in Siberia to craft its ...
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