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Game bird habitat development funds available for landowners

Game bird habitat development funds available for landowners

 

What to do if you find an injured or baby animal

What to do if you find an injured or baby animal

 

Every spring, kind-hearted Hoosiers “rescue” an injured or seemingly abandoned baby wild animal and try to care for it. 

The DNR Division of Fish & Wildlife has one thing to say: Don’t do it. 

“Most baby animals are not abandoned,” said Michelle Cain, wildlife information specialist with the division. “Many animals leave their young alone when searching for food and come back to them throughout the day. They also use this as a way to deter predators, as a predator may follow the mother back to its young.” 

The time is right for termites

The time is right for termites

 

Termites are already swarming in places in the tri-state, according to Larry Caplan, Extension Horticulture Educator for the Purdue Extension Service in Vanderburgh County.

“What we’re seeing are the reproductive adults looking for a new place to set up a nest.  If you see them somewhere outside your home, you may have an infestation in a nearby dead or dying tree, or in your home; however, they could have just flown in from somewhere else,” Caplan writes in his latest newsletter.  “A quick spray of any insecticide labeled for use outdoors or around the foundation will kill off these swarmers.”

Estate and Farm Succession Planning program set

Estate and Farm Succession Planning program set

Purdue Extension is hosting a two part workshop to assist farm families with business communication and dealing with accounting and legal issues during a succession planning program offered at 10 sites in Indiana. This program will be held locally at the Vanderburgh County Fairgrounds Activities building on Tuesday, February 19 and 26 from 8 am to noon each day.  Preregistration is required.      

Tips for saving money on heating your home

Tips for saving money on heating your home

Now halfway through the official winter heating season of November through March, significantly lower natural gas prices have, thus far, helped ease winter bills for Vectren customers. However, given the bitter cold January we are now experiencing, customers should be mindful of ways to use energy wisely through free and low-cost energy efficiency tips.

Energy efficiency tips:

  • Set the thermostat on 68 degrees or lower. Plus, for every 1 degree you lower the thermostat for a sustained, eight-hour period, you could see an additional 1 to 3 percent in savings.
  • Open your curtains during the day to let in the sun. Using the sun’s heat can save up to 2 percent in heating costs.

Gibson County Master Gardener training

Gibson County Master Gardener training

There will be a Master Gardener training class in Gibson County  starting next month.  It'll be a 12-week course starting February 26. 

Cclasses will run from 5:30 pm to 8:30 pm CST.  They will be held at the Azalea Path.

For registration information, please contact Hans at hschmitz@purdue.edu, or by phone at 812-385-3491.

Traps yield no emerald ash borers in Gibson County

Traps yield no emerald ash borers in Gibson County

A survey conducted over the past seven months of the 13 southwest Indiana counties in which emerald ash borer had not been previously detected showed no signs of the invasive insect that kills ash trees.

As part of the survey, traps were strategically located in five southwestern counties—Gibson, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh and Warrick.

“The 82 purple traps placed on the designed grid did not capture any of the beetles,” said Phil Marshall, state entomologist.

Visual surveys were also conducted by DNR experts during spring and summer in the eight other southwestern Indiana counties (Crawford, Daviess, Greene, Knox, Martin, Perry, Pike and Sullivan). No new EAB infestations were detected.