Latest Breaking News On - டென்னிஸ் ஹோல்ப்ரூக் - Page 2 : comparemela.com
The bitter with the sweet: A Texas grapefruit farmer s organic journey | Feast and Field: Food Begins in the Field
newsadvance.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newsadvance.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The bitter with the sweet: A Texas grapefruit farmer s organic journey | Feast and Field: Food Begins in the Field
journaltimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from journaltimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The bitter with the sweet: A Texas grapefruit farmer s organic journey | Feast and Field: Food Begins in the Field
bismarcktribune.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bismarcktribune.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Freeze has taken huge toll on agriculture in Valley
Cayla Harris, San Antonio Express-News
March 1, 2021
FacebookTwitterEmail
1of3
Mani Skaria, founder and CEO of U.S. Citrus, checks out damage done to W. Murcott mandarins at his farm in Hargill, Texas, Feb. 23.Jerry Lara /San Antonio Express-NewsShow MoreShow Less
2of3
Azucena Izaguirre salvages Mexican thornless lime plants at U.S. Citrus in Hargill, Texas, Feb. 22. Crops throughout the Rio Grande Valley sustained widespread damage due to the recent freeze.Jerry Lara /San Antonio Express-NewsShow MoreShow Less
3of3
Mani Skaria has been through this before.
When the temperatures dropped below freezing this month, it was impossible not to think back to the 1989 freeze that wiped out more than 20,000 acres of citrus. He had seen it firsthand, just a year after he moved to the Rio Grande Valley to work as a faculty member at the Texas A&M Citrus Center.
ALBION A segment of a multimillion-dollar energy project runs under the far end of Richard and Barbara English s farm on Old Albion Road in Springfield Township.
Nearly four years ago, in April 2017, the Englishes received a payment in exchange for a right-of-way that allowed a section of the 28.3-mile Risberg natural gas pipeline to be installed on a swath of their property.
The 2,300 feet of pipe went in below the soil near where the Englishes grow corn and soybeans. Court records show the couple got $10 per foot.
Scores of the English s neighbors also granted rights-of-way for the pipeline. So did property owners in Ashtabula County, Ohio. More than 100 landowners in all agreed to provide access.