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1. How to cut flea beetle risk in OSR

3. Targeted approach to control pays off: about half of the UK's cropped area is treated with slug pellets each year. Paul Spackman looks at what's available and ways growers could cut their use

6. Five easy ways to reduce downtime and benefit from a speedier workrate: reducing the amount of 'downtime' when spraying is crucial if you're going to make the most of available spray days and apply fungicides at the right time. Paul Spackman gets some tips on how to improve efficiency

8. Understanding diffuse pollution: tighter regulations mean managing diffuse pollution is increasingly important. Paul Spackman hears what speakers at this year's SAC and SEPA conference in Edinburgh reckon are the key issues growers need to be aware of

9. Online grain passports could bring rapid buyer feedback

10. Good residue management cuts slug risk

11. How a breeding technique may benefit UK growers

12. Variable growth regulator approach lifts wheat yields

13. Discover the secrets to successfully growing leeks

14. Get sugar beet off to a good start this spring

15. Plenty of opportunities despite support shake-up: after big changes to renewable energy support there are still opportunities for poultry producers under the revised subsidy regimes

16. How to achieve consistently high yields with beans

17. Cut harvest losses to make sugar beet pay

18. What do your blackgrass test results mean?

19. What's involved in successfully growing carrots

20. Two growers argue hybrid versus conventional OSR

21. Why it still pays to go green: decreasing government support for renewable energy means optimising on-farm energy use is key to making new projects pay

22. Growers seek early vigour to beat neonics ban

23. Boost efficiency to extend spray window

24. The man in the cab is a robot

25. Changes put new bio projects at risk

26. From lab to land the journey of a new active

27. Water trading spreads the cost of securing irrigation supplies

28. Burning demand for straw power

29. Simple steps to improve shed energy efficiency: the large energy requirement for heating, ventilation, lighting and feeding in poultry units means simple energy efficiency measures can yield significant savings, especially in older buildings

30. Oz farmer leads robotic weed spray revolution

32. Lots more choice for the same price

33. Late nitrogen project aims to hit the spot for growers; Late foliar urea is a costly input for many milling wheat crops. Now an ADAS-led project is asking are such applications really necessary, as Paul Spackman discovers

34. Increase in grain output creates haulage worries: a significantly larger wheat crop and fewer hauliers willing to take grain could create difficulties for shifting grain off-farm this harvest, as Paul Spackman discovers

35. Higher prices justify control: wheat growers could have more reason to spray for eyespot this season, as Paul Spackman discovers

36. Time for industry to take initiative on climate change: climate change was on the agenda at two recent conferences. Mike Abram reports from the Norfolk Farming Conference, while Paul Spackman covered Crop Protection in Northern Britain

37. Standing power: Cereal PGRs; Paul Spackman profiles the options to manipulate growth

38. Biofuels will need to prove their carbon footprints: carbon accreditation will be a key requirement for biofuel producers in the future, as Paul Spackman discovered at this year's Cereals event

40. Early warning key to tackling emerging blight threat

41. Early control will help Robigus off to good start ... Alchemy and Robigus account for about 30% of the UK's wheat area this season. Mike Abram and Paul Spackman find out how to manage them

42. Resistance is a real threat: herbicide resistance in wild oats is often overshadowed by the more dominant blackgrass, but as Paul Spackman discovers, the problem is increasing

43. Link up to beat water shortage: collaboration will be crucial if growers are to overcome the threats to water availability, as Paul Spackman heard at this year's UK irrigation association conference in Peterborough

48. Producing seed from grass creates money opportunity

49. Steady pace best to push out pellets

50. HGCA welcomes restructuring

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