Video Highlights Four Primary Variety Selection Methods Whether you are new to Medius.Re or a seasoned veteran, we strive to make the platform as friendly and intuitive to the user as possible. As with most
What’s Old is New Again Today we look at the Commonwealth of Kentucky. “What’s a commonwealth and how is it different from a state?” you ask. According to Merriam-Webster, there really is no difference between
Panel Discussion Highlights Potato Data Analysis Made Possible by Medius.Re Potato experts from around the world gathered virtually last week for the annual Potato Expo. Potato Expo 2021 was initially slated to take place in
Home of the Chile Pepper Institute Last week, we highlighted the breeding activities of the Aggies of Texas A&M University. This week, we are again focusing on the Aggies, but those of New Mexico State
Happy New Year from Medius Ag With the new year comes new goals. In our professional lives, we like to call them things like benchmarks, metrics, deliverables, etc. In our personal lives, meanwhile, they usually
Cotton, Corn, and Cattle: Everything is Bigger in Texas One only needs to look at a map of the United States to gain at least a preliminary understanding of how important Texas is to the
A Very, Merry Renewable Resource As we enter the heart of the Christmas season, we thought it would be appropriate to write a post that focuses on the U.S. Christmas tree industry and take a
Illinois: Home to the Oldest Experimental Research Plots in the Americas The “I” states are indispensable to American agriculture. Iowa, Illinois, and Indiana have some of the most productive soils on the planet. The states
It is easy to rag on 2020. The year gave us a global pandemic; wildfires that ravaged Australia and the U.S. west coast; an enormous ammonium nitrate fertilizer stockpile explosion that leveled Beirut; nationwide civil
An Agricultural Leader, the Sooner State is More than Livestock Oklahoma is the next stop on our tour of U.S. land-grant universities (LGUs). It is nicknamed the Sooner State after the settlers who literally jumped