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1996 News Archive
ENVIRONMENTAL STEWARDSHIP WINNERS "GREEN" ALL OVER
RENO, August 1, 1997 -- What has thousands of legs, rotating pastures, and is "green" all over? The answer is the winning farms and ranches for the National Cattlemen's Beef Association's (NCBA) 1997 regional Environmental Stewardship Award. The program is sponsored by Park Avenue by Buick.
During its summer conference in Reno, NCBA named the six regional winners of its seventh annual Environmental Stewardship Award Program (ESAP). The award honors cattle farmers and ranchers who use innovative practices to improve natural resources while maintaining or increasing the profitability of their businesses.
"By recognizing that their own economic gains are connected to a healthy environment, such as cleaner water and thriving fauna and flora, these winners ensure that their ranching operations will continue to prosper environmentally and financially for a long time," said NCBA President Max Deets of Beloit, Kansas.
Selected by representatives from the Environmental Protection Agency, USDA's Soil Conservation Service, US Fish and Wildlife Service, The Nature Conservancy, American Farmland Trust, American Sportsfishing Association, Texas Tech University, South Utah University and NCBA, this year's winners represent Kentucky, Georgia, Iowa, Oklahoma, Wyoming, and North Dakota.
Following are highlights of each of the winners:
The Williams Family of Marion, Kentucky ensure their cattle are reaching their genetic potential by adding legumes such as cinnamon red clover and lespedeza into pastures, which provides a higher level of nutrition. The thickened vegetative cover also reduces soil erosion. Ed Mitchell of Barnesville, Georgia use intense but shorter periods of grazing to maximize forage production. Since initiating this practice, the grass responds better to stress such as drought and closer grazing during adverse weather. Less continuous grazing also minimizes their need for fertilizers.
Dave Lubben of Monticello, Iowa provides on-farm research and demonstrations for an average of 50 to 60 farmers and agricultural scientists each year to demonstrate farming systems that are ecologically sound, profitable and beneficial to the local community. The Lubbens also recycle tractor tires into portable feed troughs.
John Dunkin of Tulsa, Oklahoma improves vegetative cover in riparian areas by leaving a strip of unharvested wheat or soybeans next to these areas, which helps to prevent erosion and provides wildlife habitat to the fish, deer, turkey and quail that share the land.
Tony Malmberg of Lander, Wyoming took over the ranch for his family when he was just 28. The ranches dependence on fossil fuels has nearly been eliminated by converting intensive haying operations to irrigated pastures, using solar energy in fencing, and relying on horses instead of tractors or trucks.
The Vigens of Killdeer, North Dakota help the soil better absorb water in the semi-arid climate of Killdeer by renovating and adding water sources, which helps reduce concentrated grazing, water run-off, and soil erosion, and provides more water resources to the wildlife on the ranch.
Each winner will receive an expense-paid trip to the January 1998 convention and trade show in Denver, courtesy of Park Avenue by Buick, where the national winner will be announced.
Initiated in 1898, the National Cattlemen's Beef Association is the marketing organization and trade association for America's one million cattle farmers and ranchers. With offices in Denver, Chicago and Washington, DC, NCBA is a consumer-focused, producer-directed organization representing the largest segment of the nation's food and fiber industry.
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