Friday, March 18, 2016

Agricultural Lecture in Glogovac

The Jagodina Public Library and the Agricultural Advisory Service of Serbia in Jagodina hosted an agricultural lecture in the Glogovac village library on 18 March 2016. The topics were: Significance of agrochemical analysis of soil and lowering soil acidity“ and „Potato and pepper protection“.

The lecturers were the Agricultural Advisory Service advisors-Milanka Miladinović and Ružica Đukić. These topics were useful for the residents of Glogovac and nearby villages. The advisors have collected the data on soil fertility and the type of agriculture in this area and prepared lectures based on their research.

They talked about lowering soil acidity, and free land fertility control. Also, they talked about the potato and pepper protection during the growing season.

After the lecture, the present farmers discussed with the advisors the most agriculture-related concerns and exchanged business cards that they got from the Library as successful producers and users of Agricultural Libraries services.









Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Social and Internet Marketing



The Jagodina Library representatives attended the workshop “Social and Internet Marketing“ within the ERSTE Foundation NGO Academy. The workshop was held at the Vern University of Applied Sciences in Zagreb. The lecturer was Miroslav Varga, the Internet specialist for online marketing, statistical analysis and data mining. He is the manager and online marketing lecturer in several schools and institutions. He is an expert for online marketing, especially Google AdWords and Google Analytics play-toys.

Google AdWords campaigns, YouTube and Facebook advertising were discussed through examples of good practice. The Jagodina Library team worked on the Google AdWords campaign for the website Agricultural Libraries – AgroLib.

Monday, February 29, 2016

Information Literacy of Farmers

The project Agricultural Libraries – AgroLib and the Opportunity bank organized a seminar for farmers “Agriculture and new information technologies”.


Farmers from the Pomoravski district were trained in computer and the Internet use for advertising and sale of agricultural products. The farmers created their email accounts that can be used for their agricultural business, learned how to connect on social networks and registered their farms on the online marketplace Agrolib: www.onlinepijaca.agrolib.rs/en/
Farmers were satisfied with having a chance to attend this useful seminar and getting a booklet with instructions that can be used for practice and revision of what they learned. They sad that they are aware of the power of Internet and information technologies and that using the Internet in an effective way can help them in the future.







Information Literacy of Farmers

The project Agricultural Libraries – AgroLib and the Opportunity bank organized a seminar for farmers “Agriculture and new information technologies”.


Farmers from the Pomoravski district were trained in computer and the Internet use for advertising and sale of agricultural products. The farmers created their email accounts that can be used for their agricultural business, learned how to connect on social networks and registered their farms on the online marketplace Agrolib: www.onlinepijaca.agrolib.rs/en/
Farmers were satisfied with having a chance to attend this useful seminar and getting a booklet with instructions that can be used for practice and revision of what they learned. They sad that they are aware of the power of Internet and information technologies and that using the Internet in an effective way can help them in the future.







Saturday, February 27, 2016

Lecture on Fruit and Grape Pruning

Within the project “Agricultural Libraries“, the Jagodina Public Library hosted a lecture Fruit and Grape Pruning on Saturday, 27 February 2016.
The lecturer was Igor Andrejić, graduate engineer in fruit science and viticulture. He is the associate of the Agricultural Advisory Service of Serbia (the  regional center in Jagodina)
Mr. Andrejić talked about the choice of adequate pruning tools, best time period for doing it and its aims. Also, he talked about the shape and formation of the grapevine, and proper pruning.
The lecture pointed out the mistakes that are usually made during pruning and showed tools used for pruning.
The advisers of the Agricultural Advisory Service of Serbia – Milanka Miladinović and Miodrag Simić informed the present farmers about free land fertility control in the territory of the Pomoravski district, and importance of agrochemical analysis in general. The adviser Ljiljana Jeremić talked about incentives in agriculture.




Thursday, July 2, 2015

Cooperation with the Opportunity Bank on the AgroLib Project



When, at the beginning of 2015, Vesna Crnković, the Jagodina Library director, was awarded Naj Žena by Blic Žena, the Opportunity Bank awarded her too. The last lines of the article on the Blic Žena portal were: „When she started the project, Vesna didn’t have other projects to replicate, but today others learn from her; therefore rural electronic libraries were revived in Lithuania, Latvia and Macedonia. And there will be more such libraries in Serbia. “

And that’s how it happened- the articles in Blic Zena and a short video about awarded women in Serbia encouraged the Opportunity Bank, to propose cooperation with the library on the project AgroLib. After a well-though-out plan with the director Vesna Crnković regarding the cooperation with theOpportunity Bank, whose main clients are farmers just like the Agrolib’s main beneficiaries are farmers; the support of the Opportunity Bank management was guaranteed.
Therefore, the village library in Vrtogoš near Vranje got a computer and financial support for internet connection and agricultural journals from the Opportunity Bank. The mobile library (bookmobile) which visits village around Aleksinac and provides the residents with books, got two lap tops and financial support for internet connection and agricultural journals, and the Glogovac Library near Jagodina got a computer.
The award from the Opportunity Bank enables the Agricultural Libraries (AgroLib) services to be the integral part of the work of Vrtogoš village library and mobile library in Aleksinac.
Opportunity Bank plans educational activities regarding the organization of workshops for financial andcomputer literacy in libraries for bank clients  small farmers in rural areas where there are libraries thathave helped.
Also, the new website http://agrolib.rs/ and new online marketplace http://www.onlinepijaca.agrolib.rs/provides to all libraries in Serbia for their village branches or users who are farmers, who are engaged in old crafts or village tourism to be a part of this project.
Our plan is to offer the website to all colleague-librarians who are interested in the project Agricultural Libraries. That is the reason the website is bilingual (Serbian and English) and for the colleagues in the region it has the option for Latin alphabet. The online marketplace is in Latin alphabet and the offers are translated into English. The creation of the website was funded by the Ministry of Culture and Information of the Republic of Serbia.
We would like to invite all our colleagues to join us and to pay attention to the users in their rural library branches. The website www.agrolib.rs and the online marketplace www.onlinepijaca.agrolib.rs is free and for all.

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Organic wine



According to some data, wine is commonly drunk by people between the age of 21 and 34; women think about healthier wine more than men do; those who earn less are interested in organic wine more than those who earn more money (the rich strive to traditional or probably expensive wine). Otherwise, organic wine, produced and sold now worldwide, is not a threat to those who produce wine in a traditional way.
As estimated, there are 2,000 organic vineyards, of which almost nine hundred are in France. The largest area of organic vineyards is in Italy– about 45,000 ha (45 % in Sicily), then in Spain (21,000 ha) and France (10,000 ha). In Europe there are 92,500 ha, which means that viticulture makes about 1 per cent of entire organic farming. However, although organic wine is more and more talked about, its destiny is entangled in different interpretations of organic farming and organic products. In the European Union until recently it was not allowed to put a label on the bottle „ organic wine“, but only a descriptive note: „made from organic grapes“. At the beginning of 2013, in Brussels, the EU allowed labels „organic wine“. Even more important is that, under these new rules, organic wine can contain sulfites which was unthinkable to for many. It may support claims that sulfites are not harmful to health, but this is all about financial reasons: sulfites allow wine to last longer.
In the European Union the amount of sulfites organic wine can contain is: 100ppm total for red wine, 150ppm for white wine or rosé, as opposed to  the 10ppm allowed in the US (only when naturally occurring). Conventional wines in the US are allowed 350ppm. 
What is organic wine?
Organic wine is made from grapes grown in accordance with the principles of organic
farming, which means the strict application of numerous rules and criteria, and each product labeled organic must obtain a certificate as evidence of compliance with the rules. Viticulture in accordance with the principles of organic farming means production of healthy grapes and quality wine. Biological laws are respected, natural fertility of soil is enhanced and its microbiological activity which contributes to the healthy nutrition of vines is used. Land cultivation is minimized, and use of mineral fertilizers and synthetic pesticides is prohibited. Constant control of production which fits into the protection of environment, organic viticulture ensures the quality, preservation of the environment and human health. The vineyard has to be far from the industrial pollution, high-ways and conventional plantings. In the vicinity of the vineyard should be a belt of planted trees and shrubs because they have a good effect on the presence of beneficial organisms and stability of agro-ecological system. The content of harmful substances in the soil must be below the prescribed value. The decision on the sustainability of land for organic production brings, after the control of land, air and water, is brought by an authorized person from a licensed institution. Since soil is usually poor in organic matters, it is necessary to add humus. For normal development and good yield, soil must have 2.5-3% humus. Only organic fertilizers are used as nutrient.  That can be manure, compost, humus (earthworm), peat and wood ashes.
In addition to organic, biodynamic wine appeared recently. While organic wine cannot contain chemicals that are formed by using fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides, or sulfates, biodynamic wine producers are even tougher: they adopted everything stated above and went a step further by using specially prepared manure (from ox horns, for example), by not using either preservatives, or to defend the vine leaves from pests and most work in the vineyard and the winery is prepared according to the lunar domains. There is no a strict line between these two types of producing grapes. Thus, some individual organic farmers are adopting techniques closer to biodynamics, and they grow plants that attract insects useful for the health of the vine. With special barriers intended for animals that harm plants, allow weed to grow and wild plants to grow between the rows of vines. The use of biodiesel in the vineyards also reduces the risk of emissions of harmful particles, and a plaw and horses are more and more popular. With the increase in global demand, interest in organic wine becomes an obsession of analysts. Careful analysis shows that organic wines do not attract too many consumers yet. Especially, not in these areas, or the region, where the label „ organic wine“ means bad luck, or unstable area for every winemaker, who counts on free access to the market. Even those winemakers who produce wines on their own with a „smell of“ organic, hide that fact instead of proudly putting it on the label! So it appears that organic wines almost do not exist in the region.