Month: March 2025

Unique Fruit Crops for Farm Diversification

As climate-related production challenges continue to become more prominent, the need to develop and maintain whole farm resiliency grows. Highly diversified farms enjoy a great deal of innate resiliency, simply due to their mix of commodities. Diversification can take many forms: utilizing new varieties, expanding into a new commodity group, or employing a new production system. One unique opportunity for diversification is to explore alternative, novel, or niche fruit crops. Below is a deeper look at two of the most appealing contenders for diversification. 

Online Gardening Course for Home Gardeners Available

UConn Extension is excited to announce that the Fundamentals of Home Gardening online course, designed to help gardening enthusiasts of all levels cultivate thriving home gardens, is available for home gardeners who want to expand their knowledge and skills. The course is divided into four modules covering essential gardening topics: CORE – Water, Soils, and […]

Blueberry Weed Control and Pre-emergent Herbicides

Thoughtful weed management is essential to maintaining high yields and fruit quality in a blueberry operation. It also serves to reduce other pest issues. Growers continue to face challenges associated with weed management, including the development of herbicide resistance and challenges associated with climate change.  In this factsheet is a brief overview of managing weeds in blueberries, with a special emphasis on pre-emergent materials. 

Put Local On Your Tray Celebrates Ag Week with School Taste Tests

Put Local On Your Tray, a UConn Extension program, partnered with K-12 schools across the region to celebrate National Ag Week through a series of exciting taste tests and educational events. Students had the opportunity to explore fresh, locally grown foods, connecting them with the farmers who grow them and the benefits of eating seasonal […]

Guardians Farm: A Story of Growth, Community, and Education

David Buck and Tamra French began their farming journey in 2014 with chickens and a vegetable garden at their home in Naugatuck. The following year, they added goats and began making homemade soaps and lotions. “We really started making everything for ourselves, and it snowballed from there,” David shared. In 2020, they moved to their […]

Celebrate National Agriculture Week

Why Agriculture Matters Connecticut’s farms and agricultural businesses are essential to the health, economy, and communities of our state. From fresh produce and dairy products to thriving nurseries and innovative urban farms, our farmers provide the food, fiber, and resources that sustain us. During National Agriculture Week (March 16-22, 2025), we take a moment to […]

SPRING is in the Air: Ideas of How to Prepare

After a long season with little color, when Spring arrives it’s great to see the greening of the grass and blooming flowers. Horses shedding definitely is another reminder. As a horse owner, when you think of the word SPRING, it can help bring to mind some tasks to focus on. 

Equine Herpesvirus

Equine herpesvirus infections are very common in horse populations. Familiarity with the types of equine herpesviruses, clinical signs, transmission, diagnosis, treatment and especially, ways to protect your horses from infection are the best practices in managing the disease.  In this fact sheet, we will focus on EHV-1 and EHV4, which are the two that result in serious clinical disease in the horse.

Farm Biosecurity Workshop

UConn Extension Hosts Farm Biosecurity Workshop to Help Protect Livestock, Poultry, and Families Biosecurity is the first line of defense in protecting farms, animals, and communities from the spread of disease. With concerns over avian influenza and other livestock health risks on the rise, UConn Extension is hosting a Farm Biosecurity Workshop to provide practical […]