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Tennessee Farmer Creates Top-Notch Turkey Habitat While Improving Grazing Lands

March 02, 2016 Mark Bushman, Natural Resources Conservation Service

When it comes to understanding and improving turkey habitat restoration, there are few more knowledgeable than farmer Chuck Borum in Pulaski, Tennessee. Borum bought a few hundred acres a decade ago with the intent of raising cattle, but with time, he saw how he could also establish top-notch turkey...

Conservation

Tribal Conservation Partnership Provides Aquaculture Ponds for Walleye

February 29, 2016 Tivoli Gough, Natural Resources Conservation Service

“The Tribe wants to provide a sustainable supply of walleye for tribal and non-tribal fishing in reservation waters,” said Lac du Flambeau Tribe Natural Resources Director Larry Wawronowicz. “Raising the fish larger is necessary now due to shoreline development, increased competition from in aquatic...

Conservation

Missouri Dairyman Benefits From Happy, Healthy Cows

February 18, 2016 Charlie Rahm, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Missouri

Polk County dairy farmer Nelson Hostetler can think of a ton of reasons to like his new dairy shed and animal waste system. The most obvious reasons are documented in Hostetler’s daily production log. It shows that the 100 cows that formerly resided in a couple of pastures are producing about 2,000...

Conservation

Conservation Partnerships Improve Illinois River

February 16, 2016 Creston Shrum, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Thanks to conservation partnerships, two segments of the Illinois River are off Arkansas’s impaired waters list. Surface erosion and agricultural activities along the river caused high levels of turbidity – or water haziness. Improvement in these conditions from the 2006 listing, led to ten segments...

Conservation

Accountant to Farmer: Finding Moisture in Dry Soil Conditions

February 03, 2016 Jennifer Cole, Natural Resources Conservation Service

“Nothing motivates me quite like being told I can’t do something. They told me no-till doesn’t work here, and you’re not supposed to be able to grow any type of canola. Well, look around. Here we are.” When Douglas Poole speaks, you can hear the passion in his voice for healthy soil and how it has...

Conservation

Chicken Ranching Boosts Pasture Soil Health on Iowa Farm

January 27, 2016 Laura Crowell, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Iowa

When bison roamed the Great Plains, prairie chickens and other fowl played an important role as the clean-up crew. They would follow the herds feasting on the larvae in bison manure. In Doug Darrow’s 160-acre mob grazing system near Oxford, Iowa, his 300 chickens have the same job, but they ride in...

Conservation

High Tunnel Addition Helps Urban Farmer Feed Portland

December 07, 2015 Tracy Robillard, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Portland has become one of the top cities in the nation for its food scene—from trendy neighborhood food carts to fine dining to farm-to-table restaurants. It’s also a place where people embrace eating locally-grown food. Like, seriously, uber-local. That’s why urban farmers like Stacey Givens are...

Conservation Food and Nutrition Farming

Farmer, Conservationists Partner to Build a Bridge for Salmon in Southern Maine

December 02, 2015 Thomas Kielbasa, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Maine

A just-completed project that restored a fish passage in southern Maine may have another benefit – preventing an environmental disaster on important salmon-spawning streams. A new bridge that now crosses the Swan Pond Creek at the Al Dube Quarterhorse Farm in York County was the culmination of a...

Conservation

Taking the Mystery Out of USDA Tools for Organic Agriculture

November 24, 2015 Joseph Heller, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Getting people together to talk can result in great ideas. In June, USDA hosted 100 farmers, ranchers, retailers and producers in Chester, New York, in the Hudson Valley, to discuss opportunities and challenges in organic production, and to share information on USDA programs and services available...

Conservation

New Farmers' Legacy for the Land

November 18, 2015 Jennifer Cole, NRCS Washington, Public Affairs

Some people leave a legacy for their children. Cameron Green and Eric Wittenbach plan to leave theirs to Mother Nature. A philosophy of sustainability guides them on their eight-and-a-half-acre farm in Okanogan, Washington. Green and Wittenbach both come from a background of working the land...

Conservation Food and Nutrition Farming
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