New Jersey’s corn maze season for 2025 is in full swing, with farms around the state offering visitors an array of agricultural attractions. Several Garden State farms have transformed their ...
Cool Patch Pumpkins in Dixon is celebrating its 24th season with its world-famous corn maze—this year honoring America’s farmers. “Back in the 1700s, 98% of Americans were farmers and now it's only 2% ...
Jim Groverman, the owner of the Petaluma Pumpkin Patch and Amazing Corn Maze, has been building corn mazes for more than 30 years. And he does it all by hand. “I don’t map anything out,” he said. “I ...
Brookshire Farms built a 4.5-acre Sesame Street corn maze attracting hundreds. Callaways plant 900,000 drought-resistant seeds, cut trails and install irrigation. Rising costs force a $1 admission ...
Tesla is now offering a dealer-installed retrofit that replaces the automaker’s unconventional steering-wheel-mounted turn-signal buttons with a traditional turn-signal stalk in Model 3s so equipped.
The American farmer today is asked to pay $1 million for equipment to harvest crops selling at 19th century prices. Star file photo Growing crops is a repetition of planting, growing and harvest ...
For nearly a quarter century, Cool Patch Pumpkins in Dixon, California, has built a massive seasonal corn maze with a themed design. This year's labyrinth which just opened for the autumn season ...
Scientists and seed companies are working on shrinking corn. The subtle difference in height has led to some big changes in how shorter corn can be planted and managed in the Corn Belt. A couple years ...
Get lost — in the corn stalks this fall in the Hudson Valley. Corn mazes abound in the region, part of an autumnal triumvirate with apples and pumpkins that provide the harvest season's sights and ...
As Caleb Hamer evaluated his corn last weekend, he says the crop looked like it flipped a switch and decided it was done growing for the season. “Between the southern rust, some tar spot, and I think ...
Injecting bio-oil made from corn stalks and forest debris into the deep shafts of abandoned crude oil wells could be a viable form of carbon sequestration, a new Iowa State University study found.
Injecting bio-oil made from corn stalks and forest debris into the deep shafts of abandoned crude oil wells could be a viable form of carbon sequestration, a new Iowa State University study found.