Farm Progress

Vegetable production is focus of August field day

Annual field day features vegetable researchRow crop and forage researchHuman health connection with ag

June 16, 2016

2 Min Read
<p>Vegetable research will be featured at the annual Summer Crops Field Day, near Bushland, Texas.</p>

Vegetables, high tunnels and the human health connection with agriculture are featured highlights of an Aug. 10 Summer Crops Field Day, near Bushland, Texas.

The event is hosted annually by Texas A&M AgriLife Research, the U.S. Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service and West Texas A&M University.

This year the indoor portion of the field day also has a new location, the Cornerstone Ranch Events Center, 1 mile west of Bushland on the north side of Interstate 40.

The tours and research plots will be at the AgriLife Research and the USDA-Agricultural Research Service fields located west of Bushland. Buses will be provided to take attendees on the tours.

Registration will be from 7 to 8:15 a.m. There is no charge and no advanced registration needed.

The program will open at 8:15 a.m. with “Connecting Agriculture with Human Health,” presented by Dr. Angela Burkham, AgriLife Extension regional program director for family and consumer sciences in Amarillo.

Dr. Kyle Grigsby, southwest nutrition manager with J.D. Heiskell & Co. in Friona, will follow with “Forage Quantity and Quality Considerations for Southwest Dairies.”

TOUR TOPICS

The morning tours will run from 9 to11:30 a.m., and will be followed by a luncheon. An afternoon tour with two different stops will take place from 1:15 to 4:15 p.m.

Joseph Bunting, produce director for United Supermarkets in Lubbock, will present “From Farm to Market – How Research and Retail Can Work Together” as the keynote luncheon speech.

He will be followed by Dr. Bill McCutchen, associate director of AgriLife Research in College Station, discussing “Texas A&M AgriLife’s Commitment to Vegetable R&D and Commercialization.”

Morning tours will cover cotton boll production and lint quality, irrigation comparisons, water-use efficiency of corn, greenhouse gas monitoring from livestock operations, cattle diet effect on emissions, high tunnels, integrated pest management and variable rate irrigation. The afternoon tours will look at corn under limited irrigation, weed control in cotton, and corn and sorghum herbicide trials.

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Three Texas Department of Agriculture continuing education units-two general and one integrated pest management-will be offered.

For more information, contact Dr. Charlie Rush, Texas A&M AgriLife Research plant pathologist in Amarillo, at 806-354-5804 or [email protected], or Dr. Susan O’Shaughnessy, USDA-ARS agricultural engineer at Bushland, at 806-356-5770 or [email protected].

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