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cover crops


Cover Crops: Agriculture's Hero

March 31, 2015 Elizabeth Tatum, Agricultural Marketing Service Botanist

Cover crops are the real heroes in the world of agriculture. Their job starts after a field is harvested and ends just before the next season’s crop is planted. Expectations for cover crops are high because if they don’t produce, the next crop may suffer. After crops are harvested each year...

Conservation

Five Questions Non-Operator Landowners Should Ask their Farmers about Soil Health

February 10, 2015 Elisa O’Halloran, Natural Resources Conservation Service

More farmers, ranchers and others who rely on the land are taking action to improve the health of their soil. Many farmers are actually building the soil. How? By using soil health management systems that include cover crops, diverse rotations and no-till. And when they’re building the soil they’re...

Conservation

Focus on Soil Health Drives Innovation, Moisture Preservation for an Oregon Farmer

February 03, 2015 Ron Nichols, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Without irrigation, it’s hard to imagine growing a cash crop in an environment that receives less than 12 inches of precipitation annually. Welcome to the world of grain farmers in central and eastern Oregon. David Brewer is one of those farmers. But rather than looking to the sky for help, he’s...

Conservation

Cover Crops Provide Multiple Benefits, Higher Yields

January 21, 2015 Ciji Taylor, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Corn and soybean farmers across the nation saw an increase in yields last year thanks in part to soil health-building cover crops. More than 1,900 farmers responded last winter to a survey about cover crops conducted by the USDA’s North Central Region Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education...

Conservation

An Iowa Couple Grows Food, Family and a Community on an Organic Farm

January 20, 2015 Ron Nichols, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Some people are born to farm. Others grow to love it. In Melissa Dunham’s case, she fell in love with a farmer — and now she loves both the farmer and the farm. “I was happily employed in the Twin Cities, but then I fell in love with this wonderful man who told me he was an organic vegetable farmer...

Conservation

Florida Family Farm Adopts Conservation Practices, Helps Gulf of Mexico

January 05, 2015 Doug Ulmer, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Florida

For three generations members of Mitch Holtzclaw’s family has farmed land in Suwanee County, Florida. Today, Holtzclaw grows more than 1,000 acres of peanuts, corn and small grains. His farm is about three miles from the historic Suwannee River, which flows directly into the Gulf of Mexico. The...

Conservation

Strategic Conversations, a Crisis Response at the Grass Roots Level

December 16, 2014 Chris Coulon, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Ohio

As Mark Twain once said, “Let us make a special effort to stop communicating with each other, so we can have some conversation.” Recently, in Ohio, the staff of USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), put that advice to work: rather than trying to communicate broadly, they took their...

Conservation

On the Road with the Hypoxia Task Force

November 06, 2014 Deputy Under Secretary for Natural Resources and Environment Ann Mills

If you ever wonder about the future of agriculture, go no further than Brighton, Illinois. Just 10 minutes with 15-year-old Adlai Schetter will reinforce that stewardship of private working lands is in good hands. It will also convince you that cover crops and second generation biofuels are a...

Conservation

Oregon Farmer Uses Conservation to Grow Farm, Giant Pumpkins

October 30, 2014 Spencer Miller, Natural Resources Conservation Service

Oregon organic farmer David Brown didn’t start off growing 400-pound pumpkins, but every fall they hold a prominent place on Brown’s Mustard Seed Farms. Starting out as a 26-acre farm in Marion County, Oregon, Brown has grown his diverse, organic operation to 80-acres while also achieving large...

Conservation

An Alabama Family Farm Helps Send Cleaner Water to the Gulf of Mexico

October 15, 2014 Fay Garner, Natural Resources Conservation Service, Alabama

Days before planting season in April, up to 26 inches of rain had fallen in southern Alabama over a span of two days. This rain event caused historic flooding in Baldwin County in a coastal part of the state, where farmers had freshly tilled fields in preparation for planting crops. These tilled...

Conservation
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