The summit will focus on pollinators and their habitats on the Palouse and beyond.
On Thursday from 2-6 pm, experts will focus on current research and efforts to protect habitats in the future.
The Dean of Agricultural and Life Sciences, experts from the U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service, Palouse Prairie Foundation, and the U of I William F. Barr Entomological Museum will speak.
The summit is free and open to those who register online for individual sessions. Register at https://palousepollinators.wixsite.com/savethebees.
More information is available from summit organizer Iris Mayes at the UI Extension Latah County office at latah@uidaho.edu or 208-883-2267.
MOSCOW â A Pollinator Summit planned online by University of Idaho Extension Feb. 24 and 25 will focus on pollinators and their habitats on the Palouse and beyond.
The summit will begin Wednesday, with a youth summit from 4-5 p.m., followed by a series of short programs from experts about the current status of bees and other pollinators from 6-8 p.m. On Thursday from 2-6 p.m. experts will focus on current research and efforts to protect habitats in the future.
The summit is free and open to those who register online for individual sessions, including the youth summit. Registration is at https://palousepollinators.wixsite.com/savethebees.
A letter to the editor Wednesday, âFear socialism, not climate,â provides an excellent opportunity to consider the big picture, from science to politics, and perhaps beyond. Many people fear that climate change is a false pretense for establishing a one-world, socialistic government. But wha… More Headlines
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Feb 05, 2021
University of Idaho Extension will offer Southern Idaho Annie’s Project, a six-week, online course, to help the region s farm and ranch women to become better business owners and partners beginning Tuesday, Feb. 9.
The course will consist of six, three-hour Zoom sessions to help farm and ranch women by connecting through networks and by managing and organizing critical information. The schedule will also include at least one in-person networking event or farm walk. Registration is $60 and will close on Monday, Feb. 8.
The online sessions will run from 6-9 p.m. Mountain time on consecutive Tuesdays until Tuesday, March 16. The all-woman course focuses on problem solving and decision-making skills to address production, legal, market, human and financial risks in agriculture.