- AGRA’s first eight PhD students get to work.
- Papa Andina Regional Initiative assessed by CGIAR CAPrI. Can’t be bothered reading the whole thing? Try this.
- Factsheets for farmers in Kenya and Uganda; Luigi’s MIL not available for comment.
- Tequila for lunch: Jeremy comments: “Wish I could be at this seminar, at the University of California, Davis”.
- Dogon agriculture 101.
- Got yak milk?
Snap a spud, win big
The International Year of the Potato has announced a photographic competition, with big prizes to be won. Details are at the IYP web site, which also sets out all the rules and stuff. I find two things about the competition interesting. Closing date is 1 September 2008. For many places, that means you’ve either already taken the photograph, or you have no plans to photograph a maincrop harvest. And the prizes for professionals — “(people who make their living from photography)” — are bigger than those for amateurs. That doesn’t seem quite right. The competition is supported by Nikon.
And that reminds me, it’s time we wrapped up our own competition …
Nibbles: Donkey, women, bees, databases
- Archaeological evidence of donkey domestication from Egypt.
- Empower women farmers to ensure food security. Sounds like a plan.
- Good reporter visits good bee research centre. Read all about it.
- Genomics blog discovers CGIAR databases, love at first sight.
Nibbles: New Agriculturist, nutrition
- Latest New Agriculturist online with nice piece on the alpaca y mucho mas…
- A call for the consumption of more traditional foods in Botswana — “one-stop shop for the best health and nutrition.”
Nibbles: Gene smuggling, teaching, UG99, fungi, fermentation, horse, livestock
- Customs unit seizes smuggled chromosomes, Sri Lankan academics uncooperative.
- Teachers urged to use Global Seed Vault in lessons; native Memphian available for comment today!
- No UG99 in Pakistan (yet). Optimism abounds everywhere.
- Cool new book: Fungi in the Ancient World.
- And on a related topic: full text (kinda) of old(ish) book on fermented foods.
- New book peddles old how-horse-domestication-changed-the-world (or at least Europe) story. Prof. Renfrew has already commented. Lengthily.
- Livestock need a Svalbard too. Old, but the videos are nice, and I don’t think we linked to this before.