The University of Maine, founded in Orono in 1865, is the state's land grant and sea grant university. As Maine's flagship public university, UMaine has a statewide mission of teaching, research and economic development, and community service. UMaine is among the most comprehensive higher education institutions in the Northeast and attracts students from Maine and 49 other states, and 62 countries. It currently enrolls 11,404 total undergraduate and graduate students who can directly participate in groundbreaking research working with world-class scholars. UMaine offers more than 100 degree programs through which students can earn graduate certificates, master's, doctoral or professional science master's degrees. The university promotes environmental stewardship, with substantial efforts campuswide aimed at conserving energy, recycling and adhering to green building standards in new construction. For more information about UMaine, visit
Thanks for the breakdown! A bit off-topic, but I wanted to ask: My OKX wallet holds some USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (behave today finger ski upon boy assault summer exhaust beauty stereo over). What's the best way to send them to Binance?
Thanks for the breakdown! Just a quick off-topic question: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (air carpet target dish off jeans toilet sweet piano spoil fruit essay). What's the best way to send them to Binance?
Great video! What is the best type of support wire for grape vines. Right now I am using a thin, plastic-coated swimming pool cover wire and my grape vine strings seem to be avoiding wrapping around the plastic-coated wire. I am considering replacing the wire with clothesline wire that might be aluminum, steel, or stainless steel. Thanks
I had a problem. I had one bud break up at the top then it dessicated, i ended up with the only surviving bud breaking from the bottom of the original woody grow (what was part of the plant when we bought it). I'm extremely worried that the cold will do the same so I'm hoping wrapping it in burlap over the winter will help it survive the cold winter. Hardy Zone 4a, and its a Marquette grape vine. Not 10 feet away, thw Frontenac Gris vine is totally thriving, with some amazing second year growth.
Just what I've been looking for, thank you! I have one large blueberry bush that has nothing but a few berries on it. I'll be sure to trim this one in the spring.
I never dig compost in , always add to surface, made that mistake,it will be eaten up in no time and rob a lot of nitrogen in the process, learnt this the hard way , nature never digs it in always adds to the surface
All that work just grab a blanket and hot water bottle and put over you …buy special blankets just for when your watching TV … windows should have curtains Or blinds to make a room cozy…
I had no idea that I could grow grapes in Maine. I'm very interested in this because I think that I can create a renewable and organic water filtration system that collects rainwater and filters the water using grape vines. Such filtration does have the same limits as carbon filters, in other words they are effective against everything other than viruses so the best bet is still to bowl after to be 100% sure. In case you don't know, not one of the major drinking water manufacturers even bother with that last step because 3% of all consumers worldwide is an acceptable casualty. So realistically, examining the actual competition, straining through a vine is probably safer than what you get from Dasani or Aquafina or any other major brand. This simple education could save millions of lives worldwide so let it grow, let it get into your mind and then do something about it.
Congrats Lydia! Great work!!! Why cant we comment on 1964 World Series video? Is it Ferris striking out Sal Bando? We need more videos of Ferris’ pitching that season! It should be a Netflix Special
Why cant we comment on 1964 World Series video? Is it Ferris striking out Sal Bando? We need more videos of Ferris’ pitching that season! It should be a Netflix Special
Thank you. This is what I wanted to know. I inherited an old and ugly GOLIATH lilac; it should hopefully thrive from the series of prunings I'm going to give it!
Better to pull the out directly and they'll pop out much deeper where the scapes flesh is much softer. Bit of a knack but watch how the commercial harvesters do it!
A few minutes ago I said we had luck with nematodes…..it was milky spore! It takes a long time. If you apply in the fall it may not seem to have that much effect the following summer, but every year we have fewer and in the end it has been a good solution.