Research Progress Reports
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/2093
2024-03-21T18:59:37ZPeonies for field cut flower production first-year growth
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/5741
Peonies for field cut flower production first-year growth
Holloway, Patricia S.; Hanscom, Janice T.; Matheke, Grant E. M.
2003-10-01T00:00:00ZPeonies for field cut flower production
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/2805
Peonies for field cut flower production
Holloway, Patricia S.; Hanscom, Janice T.; Matheke, Grant E.M.
2005-07-01T00:00:00ZCANOLA QUALITY IN ALASKA (2001 HARVEST)
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/2804
CANOLA QUALITY IN ALASKA (2001 HARVEST)
Geier, Hans
In 2001, approximately eight acres of canola (Brassica campestris/rapa) was planted on the Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station’s Delta Field Research Site. Three Polish varieties were planted, mainly Reward and Colt, with a small amount of Horizon. Approximately ten 1500-pound bags of canola were harvested, totalling a yield of 15,000 pounds, nearly a ton per acre. In July of 2003 a small oil press was set up at the AFES Farm and about 25 gallons of oil was pressed. The oil yield was about 25–30% of the weight of the seed. The products, oil and meal, along with five samples of the canola seed were sent to SunWest Food Laboratory in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, for analysis. This report contains quality data from tests of the canola seed, oil, and meal from the 2001 canola grown on the Delta farm.
2004-01-01T00:00:00ZTRITICALE COMPARED WITH OATS AND WEAL BARLEY AS A FORAGE AT PT. MACKENZIE
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/2803
TRITICALE COMPARED WITH OATS AND WEAL BARLEY AS A FORAGE AT PT. MACKENZIE
Mitchell, W.W.
Trials conducted with entries of oats,
barley, and triticale on the university tract in
1987 and 1988 provided the first research
information on triticale for forage use at Pt.
MacKenzie. Triticale is a hybrid resulting from
a cross between wheat and rye. The rye
ancestry would confer greater acid tolerance
than is possessed by wheat alone. In previous
trials with cereals on the moderately to
strongly acidic soils of Pt. MacKenzie, the
better yielding oat varieties have out produced
barley (Mitchell 1983 and unpublished data).
1989-03-01T00:00:00Z