Archive Nut, Prune and Olive Programs

IGIS: Article

Putting Winter Break to Good Use with Online GIS Training

December 11, 2016
By Shane T Feirer, Sean D Hogan, Robert Johnson, Andy Lyons, Maggi Kelly
For many people, the winter holidays are a good time to catch up on things that you've put off the entire year - that article you've been working on since last summer, your merit and promotion package, and taking your GIS skills to the next level! Fortunately, no matter what you want to learn, there...
View Article
UC Weed Science (weed control, management, ecology, and minutia): Article

About weed seeds and their longevity (WSSA Press Release)

December 9, 2016
By Brad Hanson
A repost and link today to a recent Weed Science Society of America press release entitled: "About Weed Seeds and Their Longevity" Click the link to go to the full article.
View Article
Bug Squad: Article

Behind the Bee Veil: Charley Nye

December 9, 2016
By Kathy Keatley Garvey
Have you ever wondered who's behind the veil? The bee veil, that is. If you enroll in a beekeepers' course at the Harry H. Laidlaw Jr. Honey Bee Research Facility at the University of California, Davis, one of the instructors you're likely to meet is Charley Nye, manager of the facility.
View Article
Bug Squad: Article

Confessions of a Backyard Beekeeper

December 8, 2016
By Kathy Keatley Garvey
Confessions of a Backyard Beekeeper. That's the title of a piece by former-Davis-mayor-turned-beekeeper Ann M. Evans in the newly published Ipinion Syndicate book, Cats, Dogs and Other Things that Poop in the Yard. "Here's what I know about honeybees," she began.
View Article
SJC and Delta Field Crops: Article

SJC and Delta Field Crops Meeting

December 6, 2016
By Michelle M Leinfelder-Miles
UC Cooperative Extension will host the SJC and Delta Field Crops Meeting on Friday, January 6, 2017 from 8:00am to 12:00pm. The meeting location is the Cabral Agricultural Center in Stockton (2101 E.Earhart Ave., Stockton, CA 95206).
View Article
UC Weed Science (weed control, management, ecology, and minutia): Article

Research on waterhyacinth biocontrol in the Sacramento / San Joaquin delta

December 6, 2016
By Guy Kyser
What if you could reduce cover and biomass of invasive aquatic weeds, such as waterhyacinth, all while sitting back with a glass of lemonade and watching nature do its job? No herbicides, no mechanical control, and no clogged up marinas or waterways.
View Article